Tag Archives: Jabari Parker

#AskChron: Duke basketball 2013-14 and the NBA Draft

With Duke gearing up for the 2013-14 season and the NBA Draft less than a month away, we took to Twitter to answer some questions our readers submitted to @dukebasketball.

There’s a lot to talk about now, so let’s dive in:

Bobby Colton: As we learned last season, the starting lineup can change without any warning whatsoever. All through the exhibition season we were led to believe Quinn Cook and Alex Murphy would both start, yet when Duke opened up the season it was Tyler Thornton and Rasheed Sulaimon running with the first unit. As far as I can tell, there will be four guarantees in the starting lineup. Cook will be the team’s starting point guard. The 6-foot-1 guard out of Washington D.C. earned the assignment after averaging 11.7 points and 5.3 assists per game last season. Cook proved to be a true distributor and displayed a refined 3-point shot that made defenses stay honest. Sulaimon will start on the wing due to his ability to be an impact two-way player. He could very well be Duke’s best offensive and defensive player this season. Jabari Parker, the freshman ranked No. 2 in his class by ESPN, will start at one forward spot and could very well be the team’s best player this year. Sophomore transfer Rodney Hood also has a forward spot locked in. In his freshman year at Mississippi State, Hood showed considerable potential by averaging 10.3 points and 4.8 rebounds for the Bulldogs.

That leaves one more spot in the front court. The candidates for that spot include sophomore Amile Jefferson, redshirt sophomore Marshall Plumlee and senior Josh Hairston. I expect this spot in the starting lineup to be fluid all year, but my guess is that head coach Mike Krzyzewski will give a vote of confidence to his senior and start Hairston opening day. There will be an open competition this offseason between the three players, and though Hairston may be the least skilled of the trio, he provides experience that neither of the other two can offer.
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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.

Duke commit Semi Ojeleye named Parade Magazine’s Boys Basketball Player of the Year

Semi Ojeleye is bringing in accolades even before starting his freshman season with the Blue Devils.

Semi Ojeleye was named Parade Magazine's Boy Basketball Player of the Year. (Photo Credit: Andrew Beaton/Chronicle File Photo)

Semi Ojeleye was named Parade Magazine’s Boy Basketball Player of the Year. (Andrew Beaton/Chronicle File Photo)

Parade Magazine gave out its 57th annual Boys Basketball Player of the Year award this week, and Ojeleye was its choice. The Ottawa, Kan. native beat out Kansas commits Andrew Wiggins and Conner Frankamp, Oklahoma State commit Stevie Clark and Arizona signee Andrew Gordon.

Ojeleye averaged more than 38 points, nine rebounds, two assists and two steals per game during his senior year at Ottawa High School, leading the Cyclones to a perfect 25-0 record and a state title.

The magazine lauds both Ojeleye’s considerable talent on the court as well as his talent in the classroom, saying that the 6-foot-6 forward—who is also valedictorian of his high school class—could be “the most impressive winner yet.”

This year, Ojeleye was one of the nation’s most prolific prep scorers, averaging more than 38 points per game for Ottawa High School, located just outside of Kansas City in the basketball-crazy state of Kansas. The 6-foot-6 small forward has signed a letter of intent with Duke—his 4.0 grade-point average and membership in the National Honor Society making him a nice fit at a school known for its blend of academics and basketball excellence.

Duke associate head coach Steve Wojciechowski tweeted out his congratulations to the Blue Devil to be.

Ojeleye will compete for frontcourt time with Josh Hairston, Amile Jefferson, Alex Murphy and fellow freshman Jabari Parker throughout the 2013-14 season.

Andrew Wiggins picks Kansas

Ending arguably the most highly anticipated recruitment in recent memory, Andrew Wiggins committed to Kansas this afternoon.

Duke basketball will play Kansas in November’s Champions Classic in Chicago, the hometown of Duke’s top recruit Jabari Parker.

Wiggins, the No. 1 recruit in the nation according to ESPN, was also considering Florida State, Kentucky and North Carolina. Wiggins did not hold a press conference and signed with classmates, family and friends. The 6-foot-7 swingman’s recruitment has been extremely private throughout as experts struggled to get info on which way he was leaning.

Although Wiggins may be the most highly touted recruit in the country—and that hype only grew with his late decision date—Parker got some praise on Twitter today from Sports Illustrated senior writer Pete Thamel:

Wiggins joins a stacked Kansas recruiting class that also has: Joel Embiid (No. 6 recruit in the nation), Wayne Selden (No. 14), Conner Frankamp (No. 46) and Brannen Greene (No. 47).

Jabari Parker inks Duke basketball letter of intent, making it official

Jabari Parker signed his official national letter of intent yesterday, more than four months after orally committing to Duke.

The surprise: at first, he pulled out a Florida shirt, not a Duke one. The crowd’s reaction? They didn’t realize it was a joke.

Chicago Tribune reporter Colleen Kane adds that Parker has been communicating with assistant head coach Jeff Capel regularly as he prepares to transition to the collegiate game.

The No. 2 recruit in the nation, Parker won four state championships in four years at Simeon and was named Mr. Basketball of Illinois twice.

“We’re excited for Jabari and his family to join our family here at Duke,” Duke head coach Mike Krzyzewski said in a press release. “We are confident he will have a great career, and we are glad to have him in our program.”

Duke basketball coaches watch numerous recruits during the first live April evaluation period

The Duke basketball recruiting frenzy is back in full swing.

Following the team’s banquet Friday night in Durham, the Blue Devil coaching staff hit the road recruiting for the first live April evaluation period.

The first session of the Nike EYBL in Los Angeles had the largest contingent of Duke prospects.

Here is a breakdown by class of the players that head coach Mike Krzyzewski and his staff saw over the weekend along with their statistics across the four games played in Los Angeles.

2014 point guard Tyus Jones, Howard Pulley Panthers (offered): 20 points, eight assists and three rebounds per game.

2014 center Jahlil Okafor, Mac Irvin Fire (offered): Did not play with due to an ankle sprain.

2014 wing Justise Winslow, Houston Hoops (offered): 14.5 points, 6.8 rebounds, 4.3 assists and 2.3 steals.

2014 forward Trey Lyles, Spiece Indy Heat (offered): Did not play

2014 combo guard Grayson Allen of the Southern Stampede (offered): 9.7 points, 2.7 rebounds and 2.3 assists per game.

2014 wing Theo Pinson, CP3 All Stars (offered): 12.3 points, 1.5 assists and 6.5 rebounds per game.

2015 center Elijah Thomas, Team Texas (no offer): 16.5 points, 1.8 rebounds and 2 assists per game.

Away from Southern California, the Blue Devil coaching staff closely tracked two coveted prospects from Wisconsin: Kevin Looney (2014) and Diamond Stone, who is the No. 1 player in the class of 2015.

Krzyzewski will be in Milwaukee Wednesday to conduct an in-home visit with Looney, who is a versatile 6-foot-7 forward and is ESPN’s No. 7 overall player in the class of 2014.

Duke is among a host of schools to make contact with Rutgers transfer Eli Carter, according to Adam Zagoria. Carter is a 6-foot-2 guard that averaged 14.9 points, 2.8 rebounds and 2.1 assists per game before sustaining a season-ending injury in February.

Class of 2013 commit Jabari Parker capped off his brilliant prep career last Saturday night at the Nike Hoops Summit in Portland, Ore. The 6-foot-8 hybrid forward finished with a team-high 22 points in a losing effort to the World team.

Here are some highlights of the game:

Class of 2016 standout forward Harry Giles—a talented 6-foot-9 North Carolina native—promises to be one of the most heavily recruited players in the country over the course of the next several years. This weekend news surfaced that North Carolina has officially offered the 14-year old a scholarship, which is the first time that Tar Heel head coach Roy Williams has extended an offer to a player this young.

Expect Duke to make the same move in the near future as Giles appears to be one of the better basketball prospects to come along in recent years.

The Blue Devil coaching staff will be out and about again this weekend for another evaluation period.

Hampton, Virginia will play host to the second session of the Nike EYBL this weekend.