Tag Archives: Alabama Football

Does Duke Football Have Any Great Players?

David Cutcliffe came into yesterday’s media luncheon in his usual suit and tie and gripped the podium.

“I’m holding this thing because I’m tired,” he said “My eyes are in a million different places. I’m about as active as this old body can be.”

Maybe his lack of sleep brought out an extra dose of frankness. Cutcliffe didn’t mince any words, offering honest assessments of his players and a few others:

  • “I don’t know if I would give anybody a ‘great’ status yet,” Cutcliffe said when asked how many great players are on the Blue Devils squad. “We’ve got some guys that probably border on good that are striving to be great. They’ll strive a little harder. Great players are talked about when their careers are done. We can talk when a guy graduates from here, but I think you have to be very careful to talk about ‘great’ players before their day is done.” Cutfcliffe did go on to say that Duke does have some “exceptional” players.
  • Continuing with the good vs. great label debate, when a reporter asked a question about the great Alabama defense, Cutcliffe interrupted him. “Good defense,” he said. “I’m not going to call them great. They’re a good defense, we found that out last week. We made them look a little better than they were.”
  • While the coaching staff was “perplexed” by Sean Renfree’s sudden rush of turnovers, Cutcliffe isn’t putting too much emphasis on one game’s mishaps. “I explained to Sean that Forrest Gump supposedly invented this slogan, if y’all remember while he was out running…” he let the sentence hang as laughter filled the room. (In case you’re not up on your 90s culture references, the slogan, to borrow CBS’s abbreviation for the word, is “$#*! Happens”.)

Clearly his lack of sleep is not affecting his affable sense of humor.

LIVE BLOG: Duke 13, Alabama 62 (FINAL)

DUKE 13, ALABAMA 62, FOURTH QUARTER, FINAL

With that, the game is mercifully over. I’ll be going to the Alabama locker room to hear if Saban was more content with his team’s defensive effort in the second half.

DUKE 13, ALABAMA 62, FOURTH QUARTER, 5:43 REMAINING

Brandon Connette connected with Jay Hollingsworth on his first pass attempt of his career. The true freshman followed that up by scrambling for a first down to the Duke 49. There is one fan in the stadium with a Connette 18 jersey sitting four or five rows back at midfield—I’d put money on that being his dad. Connette completed another pass on the drive that would stall when he was sacked back at the Alabama 38. Duke tried to take a delay of game penalty to give King  more space, but the Crimson Tide declined to accept the call. King’s punt landed a few yards in the end zone.

Watching  Connette go down reminded me of a positive Duke could draw from this game—Renfree didn’t take many hits and will be healthy heading into the Army contest.

DUKE 13, ALABAMA 62, FOURTH QUARTER, 11:47 REMAINING

In the Chron Pod preview of this game, I predicted Saban would have too much respect for Cutcliffe to run up the score. Well, I was wrong, as Alabama continues its aerial assault. Lacy added yet another seven to Alabama’s total with a 1-yard touchdown run.

Almost every Duke student has abandoned the stadium. The official attendance for today’s contest was 39, 042—the largest at Wallace Wade since November 19, 1994, when Duke lost to UNC 41-40.

Continue reading

Outtakes from The Chronicle’s Duke-Alabama Series

Over the past two days, The Chronicle ran a two-part series in anticipation of this Saturday’s 3:30 p.m. matchup versus Alabama at Wallace Wade Stadium. Part one highlighted the history the two programs share, and part two focused on how, exactly, it is possible this game is coming to Durham.

In part two, I mentioned that head coach David Cutcliffe carries with him a copy of legendary Alabama coach Paul “Bear” Bryant’s favorite poem. Here’s the poem in full:

This is the beginning of a new day. God has given me this day to use as I will. I can waste it, or I can use it for good. What I do today is very important because I am exchanging a day of my life for it. When tomorrow comes, this day will be gone forever, leaving something in its place I have traded for it. I want it to be a gain, not loss. Good, not evil. Success, not failure, in order that I shall not forget the price I paid for it.

The Blue Devils will be looking to seize the day on Saturday. Check back later today for my thoughts in a Chron Pod preview of this weekend’s contest.

A Look at Duke’s Schedule

Johnny Williams and the rest of the Blue Devils have a tough road ahead of them.

If head coach David Cutcliffe wanted to test his team’s improvement over the past few years, he sure picked the right schedule.

When the Preseason USA Today Top 25 Coaches’ Poll was released two weeks ago, one might notice a startling number of the nation’s 25 best teams are also included in Duke’s list of opponents this season. In the coming months, the Blue Devils will see themselves challenged by some of the finest talent in college football.

The schedule should prove to be a formidable test for the Blue Devils, who are coming off a 5-7 season where they lost to every ranked opponent that they played against.

By far the most formidable name on Duke’s schedule is Alabama. The reigning national champions and and current preseason No. 1 are home to Heisman-winning running back Mark Ingram and a stellar cadre of four and five star high school recruits. Look for Ingram to take advantage of a Duke defensive line that suffered the loss of Ayanga Okpokowuruk and Vince Oghobaase after last season.

In addition, Duke will face No. 6 Virginia Tech, the ACC’s leading contender for a national championship run. Although the Hokies lost six defensive starters, they will return an offensive arsenal that is more than qualified to pick up the slack. For the first time in recent memory, this Virginia Tech team will rely more on its offense than defense for success. Returning senior quarterback Tyrod Taylor and ACC Rookie of the Year Ryan Williams could prove to be a dangerous combination for the Blue Devil defense.

Also on Duke’s schedule are No. 13 Miami, No. 17 Georgia Tech and No. 18 North Carolina.

While the Blue Devils may be the consistent underdog in these contests, they have proven themselves able to compete with these teams. One may remember last season’s game against then-No.6 Virginia Tech, where Duke stayed tit-for-tat with the Hokies throughout the match, including a controversial call taking away Leon Wright’s supposed interception in the end zone, giving Virginia Tech a touchdown.

Time set for Duke-Alabama matchup

Get your DVRs set football fans: the highly anticipated matchup of Duke versus defending national champion Alabama now officially has been set for Sept. 18 at 3:30 p.m. ABC will regionally televise the game. The announcement was part of an ACC press release which gave details for the first three weeks of the football season. In addition to Duke-Alabama game, 18 other ACC games will be televised in the early season, including 10 which will see the national TV spotlight.

The times for the Blue Devils’ first two games, including their ACC opener against Wake Forest, were also announced. Duke will kick off its season under the lights with a 7 p.m. start against Elon on Sept. 4 and then have a 12 noon start against Wake Forest the next week on Sept. 11. The Elon game will be broadcast on the Internet at ESPN3.com, and the ACC’s regional football syndicator, Raycom Sports, will televise the matchup against the Demon Deacons.

Duke To Open 2010 Season With Elon

David Cutcliffe will kick off his third season at Duke with a Sept. 4 home game against in-state FCS squad Elon, the school announced yesterday. The Phoenix finished last year with 9-3 and in the FCS Top 10, where it was joined by Richmond, the FCS team that spoiled the Blue Devils’ 2009 opener in Wallace Wade Stadium. Elon head coach Pete Lembo called his team’s 2010 slate “the most challenging schedule” he had put together, pinpointing the matchup with Duke as the highlight of the schedule.

As ACC Now noted, Cutcliffe has started every Duke season with an FCS opponent. In his first game at Duke, he led the Blue Devils to a resounding 31-7 win over James Madison before dropping last year’s opener against Richmond, 24-16.

Although Duke has not officially released its schedule yet, it will also feature non-conference games against Army, Navy and defending BCS champion Alabama, which comes to Wallace Wade Stadium with the reigning Heisman Trophy winner Mark Ingram Sept. 18. That seems distant, especially in the middle of basketball season, but for Alabama fans, there is no offseason. Tickets are already up for auction.