Poor OJ Mayo, forgotten.
My recollection is OJ Mayo was the most well known coming out of high school (cool name and he definitely had a marketing team behind him), but for most of that college year it was all about Michael Beasley. Dude was a beast. Pulling straight from wikipedia's write up:
In the 2007–2008 regular season, Beasley was one of the most dominant players in the country. His 26.2 points (3rd in the nation) and nation-leading 12.4 rebounds were the most by a Big 12 player in any season. His 866 total points and 408 rebounds ranked third and second among all freshmen in NCAA history. He also led the nation in double-doubles (28), 40-point games (three), 30-point, 10-rebound games (13), and 20-point, 10-rebound games (22). His 28 double-doubles broke the freshman double-double record previously held by Carmelo Anthony who had 22 double-doubles in his only season at Syracuse in 2002–03. On February 23, 2008, Beasley scored a Big 12 record 44 points in a 92-86 loss at Baylor. (This mark has since been matched by Kansas State's Denis Clemente.) Beasley became known as an unstoppable force when shooting, finishing the season shooting 53.7 percent from the field (282 of 525). He also finished the season shooting 39.5 percent from 3-point range.
Beasley holds 30 Kansas State career, single-season and freshman records as well as 17 Big 12 single-game and single-season marks.
Rose played on a great Memphis team (36-2) that wasn't loaded with lottery talent like future Calipari teams, and had a nice tournament run. Chicago, drafting #1, also had recently drafted guys like Tyrus Thomas, Luol Deng, and Joakim Noah in the top 10 occupying the forward spots, plus had Ben Gordon at SG. A PG like Rose would be the perfect fit next to all those guys.
Plus Beasley, rightfully so, had some knucklehead concerns.
But I think a lot of teams would have taken Beasley #1. Dude was expected to come into the league kind of like Blake Griffin.
All that too say Beasley had exceeded Mayo in hype going into that draft.