Category Archives: Duke Basketball

Coach K to return to Team USA for 2016 Olympics

In a reversal or previous statements, Duke basketball head coach Mike Krzyzewski will return to USA Basketball to coach the team for the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro, according to multiple reports.  

Coach K led Team USA to gold medals in 2008 (Beijing) and 2012 (London) but had said the London Olympics would be his last as head coach. Krzyzewski brought back life to the program that finished with a disappointing bronze at the 2004 Olympics in Athens.

He has a 62-1 record with the Americans and will now lead the team to both the 2016 Olympics and the 2014 FIBA World Championships in Spain.

The World Championships will be a particularly tough test because the Americans typically do not have their full A-squad for the World Championships while they will be playing a tough Spanish team on their home turf.

 

Rasheed Sulaimon invited to try out for USA U19 World Championship Team

Duke guard Rasheed Sulaimon is one of 24 players selected for the USA Basketball Men’s U19 World Championship Team Training Camp. The camp will take place June 5-12 at the U.S. Olympic Training Center in Colorado Springs, Colo.

Rising sophomore Rasheed Sulaimon has been invited to try out for the USA U19 World Championship Team.

Rising sophomore Rasheed Sulaimon has been invited to try out for the USA U19 World Championship Team.

Of the players selected to try out, 12 will be selected to represent the United States at the 2013 FIBA U19 World Championship in Prague. Sulaimon was an All-ACC Freshman team selection and started 33 games as a freshman for the Blue Devils. The Houston native averaged 11.6 points, 3.4 rebounds and 1.9 assists per game.

Other ACC players invited to the training camp include Robert Carter and Marcus Georges-Hunt from Georgia Tech, Devin Thomas from Wake Forest and Virginia’s Mike Tobey.

Also competing for spots on the team are Duke 2014 targets Jahlil Okafor and Justise Winslow.

Duke basketball 2014 target Theo Pinson chooses North Carolina

The No. 13 recruit in the class of 2014, according to ESPN, has chosen North Carolina.

The 6-foot-6 wing player was said to be debating between North Carolina and Indiana, but was also considering Duke, Louisville and Georgetown. It had been wrongly reported earlier this month that Pinson had dropped the Blue Devils as a potential school, but the story was later recanted.

Pinson joins a talented Tar Heel recruiting class that includes small forward Justin Jackson and combo guard Joel Berry.

According to Fox Sports’ Evan Daniels, North Carolina is handily leading the 2014 recruiting race.

After securing a commitment from 2014 wing player Grayson Allen last month, Pinson was not a critical recruit for the Blue Devils. Duke’s top 2014 recruits remain Jahlil Okafor and Tyus Jones.

Shane Battier, Miles Plumlee last Blue Devils standing in the playoffs

And then there were two.

When the NBA playoffs kicked off last month there were 10 former Duke players who were hoping to hoist the Larry O’Brien Trophy. Now that 12 teams have been eliminated, there are just two Blue Devils still hoping to be champions.

Chris Duhon, Mike Dunleavy, Grant Hill, Dahntay Jones, Shavlik Randolph and J.J. Redick all were eliminated in the first round of the playoffs, with Duhon’s Lakers and Dunleavy and Redick’s Bucks swept in four straight games.

In the Conference Semifinals, Bulls teammates Luol Deng and Carlos Boozer were sent home. While Boozer was productive throughout the playoffs, averaging 16.4 points and 9.6 rebounds per game, Deng was on the sidelines for the entirety of the Conference Semifinals due to illness and then complications from a spinal tap.

Miles Plumlee's Indiana Pacers are still in the playoffs, though Plumlee hasn't played in any postseason games. Julia May/The Chronicle

Miles Plumlee’s Indiana Pacers are still in the playoffs, though Plumlee hasn’t played in any postseason games. Julia May/The Chronicle

With eight Blue Devils down, the only representatives from Duke remaining are rookie Miles Plumlee of the Indiana Pacers and Shane Battier of the reigning champion Miami Heat.

Plumlee’s Pacers won a physical series against the Knicks to earn the right to play the Heat in the Conference Finals, but Plumlee has yet to appear in a single playoff game. He only appeared in 14 games this season for Indiana.

Battier took a much more active role in his team’s road to the Conference Finals, helping the Heat defeat the Milwaukee Bucks and Chicago Bulls. Though Battier’s offense has slumped in the playoffs—he’s averaging 5.6 points on lowly 26 percent shooting—he is an invaluable part of the Heat defense. Battier will surely see plenty of Indiana forward and Most Improved Player of the Year Paul George when the Eastern Conference Finals begin Wednesday night.

If the Pacers defy odds and win the NBA championship, Plumlee will become just the third Blue Devil from the Mike Krzyzewski era to win the title, joining Danny Ferry (2003 with the San Antonio Spurs) and Batter, who won last season. Battier, should Miami repeat, will be the first Duke player to win titles in back-to-back seasons.

ChronChat: Did Duke basketball miss out on Tarik Black?

Duke was among the finalists to land Memphis-transfer Tarik Black, but yesterday the 6-foot-9, 262-pound big man announced that he would play out his final year of eligibility at Kansas.

The Chronicle’s Daniel Carp and Andrew Beaton sat down to discuss how Duke’s roster could shape out without a dominant post player and how that could impact the team’s style of play next season.

Andrew Beaton: Dan, Duke was in on the biggest transfer of the summer and missed out. What was your reaction to the news?

Daniel Carp: This has to be a deflating feeling for Duke. After failing to land a true post player in this year’s recruiting class, the Blue Devils had a chance to land what many believe is the final piece to their championship puzzle. As Duke looks forward to the 2013-14 season, the team is still stocked with young talent but has a lot of questions about its size and physicality in the post.

AB: The three true frontcourt players—Josh Hairston, Marshall Plumlee and Amile Jefferson—have a lot to prove going forward. A proven body up front would’ve been great, no doubt.

But when you look to how next year’s team will play, missing out on a 260-pound forward who doesn’t excel in running the floor isn’t the worst thing in the world.

It may be unconventional, but I think we’ll see lots of lineups next year that won’t include any of those three. Jabari Parker and Rodney Hood may be the two most talented players on next year’s team and are both 6-foot-8. Put them on the floor with Andre Dawkins, Rasheed Sulaimon and Quinn Cook and it’ll be the most exciting show in college basketball. That includes Kansas and Kentucky.

DC: If one thing is for sure, you know that Mike Krzyzewski is familiar with running this system. Tyson Chandler was Coach K’s only true center on the 2012 Olympic team, and that team was a prime example of a squad that played to its own strengths. They ran the floor and utilized their superior athleticism by using Carmelo Anthony and LeBron James at power forward and even center. It was a scheme that gave opposing defenses nightmares.

It is likely that Coach K will model this year’s team after that system. By no means are Parker and Hood true, back to the basket post players. But players that talented will create matchup problems regardless of their size.

Luckily for Duke, the ACC has seen somewhat of an exodus in terms of its dominant big men this season—no more Alex Len at Maryland, no more Kenny Kadji or Reggie Johnson at Miami, no more CJ Leslie or Richard Howell at N.C. State. If the Blue Devils can take consolation in one thing, it is that although they are getting smaller, so is everyone else.

AB: And this makes no mention of Alex Murphy who is also a wing-forward who has size and has put on muscle during his two years at Duke. Incoming freshman Semi Ojeleye is a physical specimen as well.

That brings up another reason why it’s OK to have missed out on Black: this team already has 12 players who expect to be getting minutes on next year’s team. Parker is the only incoming freshman that will be a shoe-in for playing time, but Matt Jones and Ojeleye are top recruits too. Then there’s Murphy, Tyler Thornton, Dawkins and a number of other guys who can rotate in and out. Lots of mouths to feed next year for Chef Krzyzewski.

The team may be small, but it has the depth and talent to run-n-gun.

Pinson to announce Wednesday, Okafor notes

Class of 2014 commitments are heating up with Theo Pinson expected to announce his decision Wednesday at 12:15 p.m.

Pinson, the No. 13 player in the class according to ESPN, is considering Duke, Georgetown, Indiana, Louisville and North Carolina. Pinson attends Wesleyan Christian Academy in North Carolina, so Duke and North Carolina were thought to be the early frontrunners for his services. But Indiana appears to be the consensus favorite going into the announcement.

Pinson has visited Duke unofficially many times throughout his high school career. Pinson and high school teammate Harry Giles, a member of the class of 2016 and perhaps the top player in his year, were at Cameron Indoor Stadium for this year’s Duke-North Carolina game, a 73-68 comeback win for the Blue Devils. Giles is also a Duke target, though he is a freshman and does not yet hold an official offer. The Duke staff, however, has been keeping close tabs on the 6-foot-8 forward.

Pinson was also in town for this year’s Countdown to Craziness with fellow 2014 Duke targets Tyus Jones and Jahlil Okafor, who remain Duke’s top targets in that class.

With guard Grayson Allen already in the fold for Duke in 2014, Pinson—a 6-foot-6 wing player—appears to be less of a priority. Though last week it was inaccurately reported that Pinson cut Duke from his list of schools, it would be a surprise if he decided to pick the Blue Devils at this point.

Theo Pinson, at the right, poses for photo with Jahlil Okafor, left, and Tyus Jones, next to Pinson, at Duke's Countdown to Craziness in October. (Photo credit: Brady Buck/The Chronicle)

Theo Pinson, at the right, poses for photo with Jahlil Okafor, left, and Tyus Jones, next to Pinson, at Duke’s Countdown to Craziness in October. (Photo credit: Brady Buck/The Chronicle)

The other 2014 commits who already have offers from Duke in addition to Pinson and Allen: Okafor, Jones, Devin Booker, Kevin Looney, Trey Lyles and Justise Winslow.

Okafor, a 6-foot-10 center ranked No. 1 in the class, recently opened up for his USA Today blog. The schools in the mix for Okafor are Duke, Kentucky, Kansas, Michigan State and Ohio State.

In regards to Kansas, Okafor wrote about liking Andrew Wiggins decision to go there, dispelling the notion that Kansas isn’t a school for one-and-done players.

Okafor also says he has heard from Kentucky and head coach John Calipari a lot lately. He added this on his talks with Coach Cal:

 Then he was telling me about how he gets disrespected by a lot of the other coaches in recruiting, which is actually true because I’ve heard a few things myself.

He really explained a lot to me and I learned a lot.

He also had very favorable things to say about his talks with the Duke basketball staff:

Coach (Mike) K (Krzyzewski) texted me on Sunday on Mother’s Day and that meant a lot to me because he was checking on me because he knows that my mother passed. I thought that was really cool of him.

All of the coaches at Duke hit me up; Coach (Jeff) Capel and Coach (Steve) Wojo.

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