To me, this was an issue of light gathering capability, where IQ was secondary. There are no super wide zooms that I know of, they stop at 2.8 max -- with some minor exceptions in the 2.4-2.8 variable ranges on some 3rd party lenses.
Anyhow, I believe that IQ is relative (you need just enough to do your job better than anyone else) when considering light and the ability to even capture an image.
My point simply was that even with the best hi iso units we now have, 2.8 indoors may not cut it. There may be times when you compromise one technology over another, i.e., apperture over zoom for example. Where theres not enough light, no amount of zoom versatility will help you get the shots you need/want. And because I dont not know how much light is available in the example given by the poster, and I've shot sports for many years, indoor, without flash, my experience tells me that in some cases 2.8 is not wide enough.
That said, if your arenas are well lit, as are nfl stadeums and prime time sports, you can shoot 2.8 and even 4 at times, but with poorly lit arenas the only way to get good results is with big lenses and high ISO. ISO 1600 or higher on the d300 at 125th does not produce images that I can publish. . .
So, hence the need for 2.0. (BTW, I've given up shooting poorly lit indoor because I dont own the 2.0 although I have used it). I could do without the IQ as good as it is with the 200 f2, but in some cases I cant even get a usable image with a 2.8.
If you have the light I would go with the 70-200 vr, without the light or better iso the ONLY choice is flash, or bigger glass. . .