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Tag: Cameron Boozer

  • Duke basketball outlasts shorthanded SMU to stay unbeaten in ACC play

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    Duke’s Isaiah Evans (3) celebrates after hitting a three-pointer with 1:15 left in the game to give Duke a 76-70 lead during Duke’s 82-75 victory over SMU at Cameron Indoor Stadium in Durham, N.C., Saturday, Jan. 10, 2026.

    Duke’s Isaiah Evans (3) celebrates after hitting a three-pointer with 1:15 left in the game to give Duke a 76-70 lead during Duke’s 82-75 victory over SMU at Cameron Indoor Stadium in Durham, N.C., Saturday, Jan. 10, 2026.

    ehyman@newsobserver.com

    First came the steal. Then, a screeching dive across the floor. Then, the battle for the ball.

    Duke’s Dame Sarr would not be denied on the play, the slender 6-8 freshman knocking the ball away from SMU’s B.J. Edwards. Sarr, like a sprinter coming out of the blocks, made a quick diving move as the ball skittered across midcourt. Beating Edwards for possession, he got the ball to a teammate.

    It was just the kind of effort and intensity the No. 6 Blue Devils needed Saturday at Cameron Indoor Stadium. Shaking off another sluggish start that had them playing from behind after the opening minutes, the Devils worked their way to an 82-75 victory over No. 24 Southern Methodist.

    Isaiah Evans had 21 points, Cameron Boozer scored 18 and Patrick Ngongba tied his career high with 17 points for the Blue Devils (15-1, 4-0 ACC), who have won 26 of their last 27 ACC games.

    The Mustangs (12-4 overall, 1-2 ACC) came into Cameron off a loss at Clemson but also mindful of how they had already knocked off North Carolina a week ago. More importantly, they did not have senior guard Boopie Miller, who was held out of the game with an illness.

    Duke’s Cameron Boozer (12) slams in two over SMU’s Samet Yigitoglu (24) during Duke’s 82-75 victory over SMU at Cameron Indoor Stadium in Durham, N.C., Saturday, Jan. 10, 2026.
    Duke’s Cameron Boozer (12) slams in two over SMU’s Samet Yigitoglu (24) during Duke’s 82-75 victory over SMU at Cameron Indoor Stadium in Durham, N.C., Saturday, Jan. 10, 2026. Ethan Hyman ehyman@newsobserver.com

    Miller was averaging 20.6 points, fourth in the ACC, and playing 34.7 minutes a game. He’s SMU’s floor leader and earned ACC experience at Wake Forest before his transfer.

    Without Miller, a lot rested with Edwards, a 6-3 senior who was at Tennessee before moving on to SMU. Edwards finished with 20 points and five assists for the Mustangs but also had six of SMU’s 21 turnovers.

    It was Sarr’s fierce defense that was factored into Duke slowing Louisville guard Ryan Conwell in the second half Tuesday in taking an 11-point road win. He added more of the same Saturday, using his length and quick-twitch defense against Edwards.

    The Mustangs ran their offense efficiently enough to stay close in the second half after flailing behind by 12 early in the half. Jaden Toombs, a 6-10 freshman, continued to make shots — he had 21 points — and Duke’s lead was 73-70.

    Duke’s Maliq Brown (6) steals the ball from SMU’s B.J. Edwards (0) during the second half of Duke’s 82-75 victory over SMU at Cameron Indoor Stadium in Durham, N.C., Saturday, Jan. 10, 2026.
    Duke’s Maliq Brown (6) steals the ball from SMU’s B.J. Edwards (0) during the second half of Duke’s 82-75 victory over SMU at Cameron Indoor Stadium in Durham, N.C., Saturday, Jan. 10, 2026. Ethan Hyman ehyman@newsobserver.com

    Until an Evans’ 3-pointer. Evans’ swish from left of the key with 1:15 left gave Duke some breathing room, and Cameron Boozer soon followed with two free throws with 42.3 seconds remaining in the game for an eight-point lead.

    Corey Washington’s 3-pointer for SMU with 31 seconds showing trimmed the lead, but Evans followed with two free throws with 20 seconds left.

    Here are observations from Duke’s win

    Another slow start for Devils

    Another game, another slow start for Duke. It’s becoming a trend.

    SMU came out of the locker room taking and making shots, knocking down five early for an 11-0 lead. One almost had to take a double-take at the scoreboard. Eleven to nothing.

    Duke’s Dame Sarr (7) dives after a loose ball in front of SMU’s Jaden Toombs (10) during the first half of Duke’s game against SMU at Cameron Indoor Stadium in Durham, N.C., Saturday, Jan. 10, 2026.
    Duke’s Dame Sarr (7) dives after a loose ball in front of SMU’s Jaden Toombs (10) during the first half of Duke’s game against SMU at Cameron Indoor Stadium in Durham, N.C., Saturday, Jan. 10, 2026. Ethan Hyman ehyman@newsobserver.com

    Duke, meanwhile, had trouble getting anything to drop. There also were some sloppy turnovers. In other words, it was a lot like the start at Louisville on Tuesday, when the Devils trailed by nine at halftime before controlling the second half.

    Evans finally got Duke started with a 3 with 17:25 left in the half and a 12-2 run later pushed the Devils ahead but it was a slow build.

    SMU became the latest team to shoot better than 50% in the half – 57.7%. Toombs did not miss a shot, going 6-6 from the field and 2-2 at the line in the half.

    SMU did have 14 first-half turnovers that Duke turned into 16 points. Sarr had three of Duke’s nine steals in the half.

    New look to the lineup

    Duke coach Jon Scheyer continues to reshape his starting lineup depending on the opponent.

    After starting the Boozer brothers with Foster, Evans and Patrick Ngongba for a few games, the Blue Devils had Cameron Boozer, Foster and Evans with Maliq Brown and Sarr starting Saturday.

    Foster, so aggressive in the second half against Louisville, had a slow start and soon came out for Cayden Boozer. Foster played six minutes in the first half and Boozer 14 minutes, and Boozer made them effective.

    Sarr took on Edwards as his defensive assignment, and the Devils looked to double up on the SMU guard at times. Edwards had some shaky moments in the first half – Sarr once blocked a shot at the end of the shot clock – but steadied in the second half as the Mustangs stayed close in the final 10 minutes.

    Remembering 2001 champions

    Has it been 25 years? Duke’s 2001 national champions were honored at halftime, conjuring up some hoops memories.

    Shane Battier, Mike Dunleavy, Chris Duhon and Carlos Boozer (Cameron and Cayden’s father) were on hand for the reunion. Some looked like they could still throw in a jersey and play.

    Jay Williams, who still gets plenty of air time, was the last player to be honored. Then, Mike Krzyzewski. For Coach K and Duke, the 2001 title was the third of five.

    Speaking of flashbacks, SMU had not played at Cameron since November 1978, when Duke was ranked No. 1 and won, 86-80.

    Chip Alexander

    The News & Observer

    In more than 40 years at The N&O, Chip Alexander has covered the N.C. State, UNC, Duke and East Carolina beats, and now is in his 15th season on the Carolina Hurricanes beat. Alexander, who has won numerous writing awards at the state and national level, covered the Hurricanes’ move to North Carolina in 1997 and was a part of The N&O’s coverage of the Canes’ 2006 Stanley Cup run.

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  • Duke basketball leans on Cameron Boozer, and he leans on Arkansas in 80-71 win

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    There had not yet been a night when Duke had to lean on Cameron Boozer, to ask him to be the star he is supposed to be. Most games, he’s played fewer than 30 minutes, still scoring more than 20 points in three of those, but generally idling as the Blue Devils cruise.

    Then came Thursday against Arkansas, when no one else seemed to be able to do much on offense. Isaiah Evans and Dame Sarr had embarrassing airballs. Patrick Ngongba Jr. hit the side of the backboard, although he eventually tapped in his own miss. And if that was bad, Duke’s defense was somehow worse, letting the Razorbacks back into a game Duke should have put away early in the second half.

    Boozer put down his shoulder, bullied his way toward the basket and dragged Duke to victory. The Razorbacks never had an answer for him. He was too big, too strong, too determined. It was just a question of Boozer taking control, which he did in the tensest moments of any second half the Blue Devils have yet played.

    Without him, without a performance like this, Duke is no longer undefeated. Without all that, the Blue Devils don’t beat Arkansas 80-71 in this post-turkey tilt with the Hogs to move to 8-0 after their third true test of the season. They don’t pass this one without Boozer.

    “We realized that they weren’t helping from the other big and they don’t really have an answer for me,” Boozer said. “So, I mean, coach is on me, ‘Get downhill, get to the rim. They can’t stop you.’ I did a lot of that second half for sure.”

    Duke’s Cameron Boozer (12) celebrates with Caleb Foster against the Arkansas Razorbacks during the first half of the CBS Thanksgiving Classic at the United Center on November 27, 2025 in Chicago, Illinois.
    Duke’s Cameron Boozer (12) celebrates with Caleb Foster against the Arkansas Razorbacks during the first half of the CBS Thanksgiving Classic at the United Center on November 27, 2025 in Chicago, Illinois. Michael Reaves Getty Images

    At one point, he grabbed a defensive rebound and went the length of the court for a dunk, a one-man unstoppable offense the Blue Devils couldn’t do without. He hit two 3-pointers, but it wasn’t his outside game that got Duke through, it was what he did in the lane, backing down opponents, leaning into them, pushing and shoving his way into spots where he could get the ball into the basket. Once, even, by accident. In the first half, he accounted for a personal 10-0 run, scoring three baskets and setting up the fourth.

    “As soon as he figured out, ‘I can put my shoulder in this guy’s chest and move him,’ that’s all he did,” Arkansas coach John Calipari said. “You can try 12 different things, or do what you do well and just do it over and over and over.”

    On this night, the numbers truly reflected his impact on the game: 35 points, nine rebounds and three assists, while drawing seven fouls in 36 minutes — the most he’s played in a Duke uniform, because the Blue Devils hadn’t needed him like this before. And in this moment of need, he delivered.

    “What he’s done, it’s been incredible,” Duke coach Jon Scheyer said. “I think him and I both know there’s been more there, as crazy as that sounds, and I still think there’s a lot more there. For me, the biggest difference for a freshman is learning how to play through contact and the decision-making, the decisiveness. He can do so many different things.”

    Duke coach Jon Scheyer  talks with Cayden Boozer during action against the Arkansas Razorbacks during the first half of the CBS Thanksgiving Classic at the United Center on November 27, 2025 in Chicago.
    Duke coach Jon Scheyer talks with Cayden Boozer during action against the Arkansas Razorbacks during the first half of the CBS Thanksgiving Classic at the United Center on November 27, 2025 in Chicago. Michael Reaves Getty Images

    It was only the third time Boozer cracked the 30-minute mark this season, and the other two aren’t surprising: Duke’s other two neutral-site showcases against quality opposition, against Texas in Charlotte and against Kansas at Madison Square Garden.

    Because of his father, and because of his decision to follow him to Duke along with twin brother Cayden, and because of his own reputation, Cameron Boozer arrived on campus as a new phenomenon, perhaps not as preternaturally marketable as Cooper Flagg, his immediate predecessor as Duke’s anointed freshman, but a sensation in his own right.

    If he hadn’t had a game like this yet, it was perhaps only because Duke hadn’t needed it from him yet. But with the Blue Devils out of sorts, they leaned on Boozer and he leaned on the Razorbacks, over and over again. It wasn’t the 35 he scored against Indiana State, but that was a 38-point win. This was a one-possession game with as few as three minutes to go, and the Blue Devils trailed by as many as seven midway through the second half. And it wasn’t until the final minutes that Duke really seemed to dig in on defense.

    Duke’s Cameron Boozer (12) celebrates with Caleb Foster against the Arkansas Razorbacks during the first half of the CBS Thanksgiving Classic at the United Center on November 27, 2025 in Chicago, Illinois.
    Duke’s Cameron Boozer (12) celebrates with Caleb Foster against the Arkansas Razorbacks during the first half of the CBS Thanksgiving Classic at the United Center on November 27, 2025 in Chicago, Illinois. Michael Reaves Getty Images

    Combine all of that from Boozer with a big late 3-pointer from Caleb Foster, with 15 points and a career-high eight assists in the same building where he set his career-high for scoring as a freshman — “good vibes,” Foster said — and it was enough to keep Duke undefeated at the beginning of the toughest stretch of the Blue Devils’ schedule.

    From here, it’s back home to play Florida on Tuesday and then a trip to Michigan State — undefeated after a 16-point win over North Carolina earlier Thursday — before a return to the Garden to play Texas Tech. (There’s a home game against Lipscomb in there, too, which is threatening only as a potential trip game, no offense to the Bisons.)

    Talented freshmen like Boozer don’t come along often, even if they come along more often at Duke than anywhere else. They don’t always take over games, or flash the true depth and dimension of their talent and ability. But there are nights like this, when the best player on the floor is truly the best player on the floor, when the opposing coach says “Cameron was a beast,” when one player can rise above and be the difference between winning and losing.

    And was.

    Never miss a Luke DeCock column. Sign up at www.newsobserver.com/newsletters to have them delivered directly to your email inbox as soon as they post.

    This story was originally published November 27, 2025 at 10:48 PM.

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    Luke DeCock

    The News & Observer

    Sports columnist Luke DeCock joined The News & Observer in 2000 and has covered nine Final Fours, the Summer Olympics, the Super Bowl and the Carolina Hurricanes’ Stanley Cup win in 2006. He is a past president of the U.S. Basketball Writers Association, was the 2020 winner of the National Headliner Award as the country’s top sports columnist and is a three-time North Carolina Sportswriter of the Year.

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  • Kansas’ defense poses new questions for Duke, which digs deep for answers

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    Caleb Foster (1) of the Duke Blue Devils dribbles against Elmarko Jackson (13) of the Kansas Jayhawks during the first half in the 2025 State Farm Champions Classic at Madison Square Garden on November 18, 2025 in New York City.

    Caleb Foster (1) of the Duke Blue Devils dribbles against Elmarko Jackson (13) of the Kansas Jayhawks during the first half in the 2025 State Farm Champions Classic at Madison Square Garden on November 18, 2025 in New York City.

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    There were Duke players who had literally never seen anything like this. The big, strong, tough, swarming defense Kansas plays, annually, regardless of changing names and faces, was not only a significant step up in competition five games into some very young careers, it was an awakening.

    For Cameron and Cayden Boozer, for Dame Sarr and Nik Khamenia, their first trip to Madison Square Garden with the Blue Devils was a portal into a new world, where the ease with which Duke had dispatched its first four opponents — even Texas — seemed far away.

    Even their more veteran teammates didn’t have to carry the load in the past the way they did Tuesday night, thrown into the maw with no escape on the bench. And still. Another test faced. Another test passed.

    Duke’s 78-66 win over Kansas in the Champions Classic demanded of Duke some answers to questions the Blue Devils had not yet faced, especially on offense where the easy baskets and open shots Duke had become accustomed to were nowhere in evidence.

    Duke’s Isaiah Evans (3) goes to the basket as Kansas’ Tre White (3) during the first half of the Champions Classic at Madison Square Garden on November 18, 2025 in New York City.
    Duke’s Isaiah Evans (3) goes to the basket as Kansas’ Tre White (3) during the first half of the Champions Classic at Madison Square Garden on November 18, 2025 in New York City. Getty Images

    For the first time, the Blue Devils had to grind out a win, nursing a single-digit second-half lead to the finish, against the best team they have faced yet. Cameron Boozer had 18 points, 10 rebounds and five assists for Duke, while Isaiah Evans added 16.

    “A lot of people might say that because we’re a young team, we might be soft, we might not be ready for games like this,” Cameron Boozer said. “But I think we’ve shown that we are. Just through our toughness and our competitiveness. We’ve shown it in spurts every game. I don’t think we’ve put together a full 40 minutes of it yet, but when we do it’s going to be special.”

    When Kansas big man Flory Bidunga picked up his second foul with 6:40 to go in the first half, the Blue Devils were down five and grinding their gears on offense, finding the going all but impassable. Duke hadn’t seen anything like Kansas’ defense, especially in the post, where the Jayhawks extracted a toll on every drive the Blue Devils had become accustomed to finishing in their games to date.

    Then Patrick Ngongba II drew a second on Bidunga and suddenly the path to the rim was unobstructed. The Blue Devils finished the first half on a 21-7 run capped by an Evans bomb that would have counted for 3 if the Knicks were playing instead.

    “I noticed (Melvin) Council was stretched out across the 3-point line,” Evans said. “So I just stepped out a little farther.”

    Bidunga announced his presence with authority to start the second half, spinning off Ngongba for a dunk out of nothing, but Duke stretched its eight-point halftime lead to 10 before Kansas made a push of its own, staying within single digits for much of the second half, trying to close the gap, but never closer than three.

    The Blue Devils found offense from unexpected places as the Jayhawks tested them: A pair of Cayden Boozer drives and Ngongba’s second high-low assist. The first was to Cameron Boozer on the opening possession, a set play for an easy slam. The second was a back-door feed to Maliq Brown for a dunk when Duke desperately needed it. An Evans corner 3-pointer as the shot clock expired put Duke up eight with less than four minutes to go, and that was enough.

    “Those aren’t easy situations to be in, especially if it’s your first time in the Garden like some of these guys, or if it’s your second or your third,” Duke coach Jon Scheyer said. “You need to show great poise, great togetherness. I thought especially down the stretch, some of those plays, we just showed great poise. It’s what it’s all about.”

    The win moved Duke to 5-0 to extend a remarkable start to the basketball season across the Triangle — a combined 14-0 record among Duke, North Carolina and N.C. State — and apply some pressure on the Wolfpack to keep up. The Blue Devils beat Kansas by 12 in New York. The Tar Heels beat Kansas by 13 in Chapel Hill. The Wolfpack hosts Kansas in Raleigh on Dec. 13.

    Cameron Boozer (12) of the Duke Blue Devils dribbles against Flory Bidunga (40) of the Kansas Jayhawks during the first half in the 2025 State Farm Champions Classic at Madison Square Garden on November 18, 2025 in New York City.
    Cameron Boozer (12) of the Duke Blue Devils dribbles against Flory Bidunga (40) of the Kansas Jayhawks during the first half in the 2025 State Farm Champions Classic at Madison Square Garden on November 18, 2025 in New York City. Sarah Stier Getty Images

    Still, the stiffest opposition the Blue Devils have faced yet did raise some questions for which Duke does not yet have answers. Cameron Boozer — admittedly, in his fifth college game — was unable to impose his will against Kansas’ front line the way he has against lesser competition. Too often, he shot-faked himself into corners, lacking a Plan B against players more his equal. He was better in the second half, pounding the boards the old-fashioned way.

    “I have to take what the defense gives me,” Cameron Boozer said. “They were doubling me a lot in the first half and the second half they weren’t doubling me as much. So in the first half those passes were there, and in the second half I was able to be more aggressive.”

    Scheyer added: “I still don’t even think he played, like, incredible. That’s the thing that’s really exciting.”

    Duke also found it more difficult to protect the ball against a more active defense, going to an early two-point look with Caleb Foster and Cayden Boozer both on the floor in an attempt to stem the early turnovers that led to easy Kansas buckets. That too is an area for improvement.

    If Bidunga had stayed out of foul trouble, or if Self hadn’t been hesitant to re-insert Bidunga late in the first half, things might have been different for Duke. As it was, Kansas wasn’t quite at Duke’s level offensively — especially without injured point guard Darryn Peterson, denying the nightcap a showcase of freshman future NBA stars — but its defense was a new experience that required adjustment to surmount.

    “It’s the reason we played Tennessee in the exhibition game,” Scheyer said. “Texas was very physical. Kansas did a great job protecting. The thing for us, we’re working through — we have actions we want to go to in critical moments and the way we want to play, but also some randomness, being able to read the defense, understand what’s next, understand how we have to fight for the paint. I thought at the end of the first half and moments in the second half we just did that.”

    They are young. They are learning. They are not going to win every game by 15. But they haven’t lost yet, either.

    Never miss a Luke DeCock column. Sign up at www.newsobserver.com/newsletters to have them delivered directly to your email inbox as soon as they post.

    This story was originally published November 18, 2025 at 11:19 PM.

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    Luke DeCock

    The News & Observer

    Sports columnist Luke DeCock joined The News & Observer in 2000 and has covered nine Final Fours, the Summer Olympics, the Super Bowl and the Carolina Hurricanes’ Stanley Cup win in 2006. He is a past president of the U.S. Basketball Writers Association, was the 2020 winner of the National Headliner Award as the country’s top sports columnist and is a three-time North Carolina Sportswriter of the Year.

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  • Duke basketball wallops WCU. What we learned from the Blue Devils’ big win

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    Duke’s Cameron Boozer (12) heads to the basket as Western Carolina's Abdulai Fanta Kabba (7) defends during the first half of Duke’s game against Western Carolina at Cameron Indoor Stadium in Durham, N.C., Saturday, Nov. 8, 2025.

    Duke’s Cameron Boozer (12) heads to the basket as Western Carolina’s Abdulai Fanta Kabba (7) defends during the first half of Duke’s game against Western Carolina at Cameron Indoor Stadium in Durham, N.C., Saturday, Nov. 8, 2025.

    ehyman@newsobserver.com

    Duke’s game Saturday against Western Carolina wasn’t so much about the score as the moments.

    Or, for the No. 6 Blue Devils, some floor-burn moments.

    Playing their first home game of the season at Cameron Indoor Stadium, the Blue Devils ran over the Catamounts, 95-54, as Cameron Boozer had 25 points and eight rebounds.

    It was Cayden Boozer and then Darren Harris skidding across the court hustling after a loose ball. It was Nikolas Khamenia saving the ball as he fell out of bounds, leading to a score. It was Cameron Boozer going to the floor to keep a possession alive, getting the ball to Maliq Brown and resulting in Harris shooting three free throws after being fouled.

    The Duke bench including Caleb Foster (1), Patrick Ngongba (21) and Isaiah Evans (3) celebrate after Jack Scott hit a three-pointer during the second half of Duke’s 95-54 victory over Western Carolina at Cameron Indoor Stadium in Durham, N.C., Saturday, Nov. 8, 2025.
    The Duke bench including Caleb Foster (1), Patrick Ngongba (21) and Isaiah Evans (3) celebrate after Jack Scott hit a three-pointer during the second half of Duke’s 95-54 victory over Western Carolina at Cameron Indoor Stadium in Durham, N.C., Saturday, Nov. 8, 2025. Ethan Hyman ehyman@newsobserver.com

    Later, WCU’s Marcus Kell made a nice baseline move and tested Boozer under the rim. Bad idea. Boozer easily swatted away the shot.

    Not everything went smoothly in the first half for the Blue Devils, but it mattered little against a WCU team that was 8-22 last season and lost its opener by 31 points at Cincinnati earlier in the week. The Devils, favored by 36 points, had the Catamounts outquicked and outnumbered, and that was reflected in the final score.

    The Blue Devils struggled through most of the first half of their opener, against Texas on Tuesday in the Dick Vitale Invitational in Charlotte. Against WCU, they led by 24 points.

    Duke’s Nikolas Khamenia (14) and Western Carolina's Marcus Kell (23) go after a loose ball during the second half of Duke’s 95-54 victory over Western Carolina at Cameron Indoor Stadium in Durham, N.C., Saturday, Nov. 8, 2025.
    Duke’s Nikolas Khamenia (14) and Western Carolina’s Marcus Kell (23) go after a loose ball during the second half of Duke’s 95-54 victory over Western Carolina at Cameron Indoor Stadium in Durham, N.C., Saturday, Nov. 8, 2025. Ethan Hyman ehyman@newsobserver.com

    Duke used some tight defense in the second half to roll past the Longhorns, 75-60. The defense never rested Saturday in the second half as the Devils continued to contest everything.

    Western Carolina was limited to 30.6 percent shooting — 4-for-26 on 3-pointers — and had 14 turnovers.

    What did we learn about the Blue Devils in their second game?

    Shooting the 3-pointer

    The Blue Devils have a lineup of players who believe they can shoot the 3. Some can better than others, but many believe they can.

    Isaiah Evans has the green light at all times and the guy they call “Slim” can light it up from the 3-point line. Darren Harris has a nice touch from 3.

    But there are some who may have to be more judicious as the season moves along. With the inside threats of Cameron Boozer and Patrick Ngongba II and a number of slash-to-the-rim types, the Devils might look to attack the paint more and ease up on the 3s.

    Duke was 3-of-17 from 3 in the first half Saturday. Cameron Boozer had five 3-point shots and missed four, getting most of his 14 first-half points on his inside strength and five made free throws.

    Duke finished 10-for-32 on 3s.

    Duke’s Cameron Boozer (12) blocks the shot by Western Carolina's Marcus Kell (23) during the first half of Duke’s game against Western Carolina at Cameron Indoor Stadium in Durham, N.C., Saturday, Nov. 8, 2025.
    Duke’s Cameron Boozer (12) blocks the shot by Western Carolina’s Marcus Kell (23) during the first half of Duke’s game against Western Carolina at Cameron Indoor Stadium in Durham, N.C., Saturday, Nov. 8, 2025. Ethan Hyman ehyman@newsobserver.com

    Boozer builds a game

    Much was made of Cameron Boozer’s start in his first college game. The freshman forward was scoreless in the first half against Texas and showed hints of irritation.

    In Saturday’s game, Boozer began with a poor pass insider to Ngongba that was a turnover, then fouled WCU’s Marcus Kell on a drive.

    But Boozer, as he did against Texas, built a game. The numbers came. By halftime he had 14 points and six rebounds and just missed a second double-double to start the season.

    In the second half, he nailed a trio of 3-pointers, two from the left of the key and then a corner shot. He also finished with five assists.

    One thing about both Boozers, large and small: they have a stoic demeanor, letting little bother them on the court. It will be interesting to see how that holds up in the big games to come.

    Duke’s Patrick Ngongba (21) pulls in the rebound from Western Carolina's Marcus Kell (23) during the first half of Duke’s game against Western Carolina at Cameron Indoor Stadium in Durham, N.C., Saturday, Nov. 8, 2025.
    Duke’s Patrick Ngongba (21) pulls in the rebound from Western Carolina’s Marcus Kell (23) during the first half of Duke’s game against Western Carolina at Cameron Indoor Stadium in Durham, N.C., Saturday, Nov. 8, 2025. Ethan Hyman ehyman@newsobserver.com

    A different look to the rotation

    Duke coach Jon Scheyer said Tuesday that the Devils still were “figuring out” the rotations and had an interesting one Saturday: Cayden Boozer and Caleb Foster playing together.

    Cayden Boozer can run the offense and Foster can look to add offense. The two competed through preseason practice and Foster started both games as Boozer came off the bench.

    But Boozer is always in sync with his twin brother on the court as the two play off each other so well. Foster, the 6-5 junior, can match up with taller guards and can share the ballhandling duties with Boozer.

    Foster had two points at halftime Saturday but picked it up in the second half with some strong moves the basket and had six rebounds.

    Cayden Boozer had 14 points, seven rebounds and five assists. At 6-4, he’s the shortest player on the Duke roster but he can help on the boards, as he did Saturday.

    Late in the game, Boozer simply yanked the ball out of the hands of a WCU player. Fouled, he added two free throws.

    This story was originally published November 8, 2025 at 3:58 PM.

    Chip Alexander

    The News & Observer

    In more than 40 years at The N&O, Chip Alexander has covered the N.C. State, UNC, Duke and East Carolina beats, and now is in his 15th season on the Carolina Hurricanes beat. Alexander, who has won numerous writing awards at the state and national level, covered the Hurricanes’ move to North Carolina in 1997 and was a part of The N&O’s coverage of the Canes’ 2006 Stanley Cup run.
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  • Blue Devils welcome back Johnny Dawkins and take exhibition win over UCF

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    It was quite the Duke homecoming Tuesday for Johnny Dawkins.

    For the first time since 2008, the former Blue Devils All-America was back in Cameron Indoor Stadium, where his retired jersey — No. 24 — hangs in the rafters. He was a driving force, literally and proverbially, in Mike Krzyzewski’s first Final Four team in 1986 and an assistant coach on Coach K’s staff on the 2001 national championship team .

    But while greeted warmly and loudly, Dawkins came back to Cameron not to take few bows but as the Central Florida coach, back to play Duke in the Blue Devils’ first exhibition game of the 2025-26 season.

    Krzyzewski, his old coach, gave Dawkins a big hug before the game. The Blue Devils, ranked No. 6 in the preseason poll in Jon Scheyer’s fourth year as coach, then defeated Dawkins and the Golden Knights, 96-71, as Duke freshman Cameron Boozer showed out with 33 points and 12 rebounds.

    Former Duke head coach Mike Krzyzewski bows to UCF head coach Johnny Dawkins during a ceremony before Duke’s exhibition game against UCF at Cameron Indoor Stadium in Durham, N.C., Tuesday, Oct. 21, 2025. Duke head coach Jon Scheyer is to the right.
    Former Duke head coach Mike Krzyzewski bows to UCF head coach Johnny Dawkins during a ceremony before Duke’s exhibition game against UCF at Cameron Indoor Stadium in Durham, N.C., Tuesday, Oct. 21, 2025. Duke head coach Jon Scheyer is to the right. Ethan Hyman ehyman@newsobserver.com

    “I didn’t have a goal for myself, just to win the game and we did that,” Boozer said. “I mean, at the end of the day, as long as I’m competing, playing to win, all of those things are going to show up. “

    The Blue Devils had a strong start, but the Golden Knights settled into the game and had the lead early in the second half before a 16-2 run pushed Duke into 64-50 lead. The Duke lead continued to grow.

    “I would argue that Johnny Dawkins was as important a player who ever came to Duke and in what’s he done,” said Scheyer, who said he was recruited to Duke by Dawkins. “It was an honor to have him back. His team is older, athletic and gave us a lot of problems, which is good.

    “I learned more about our team. It’s time to get on the floor and learn about your team. There’s a ton we have to work on, a lot we have to get better at, but I liked the competitiveness. I did like the fire that we showed.”

    Cam Boozer leads the Blue Devils

    Much is expected this season from the Boozer twins, Cameron and Cayden, and Cameron Boozer gave a preview of what could come in his first — and perhaps only — college season.

    “Obviously, in your first game it’s natural to have jitters,” Cayden Boozer said. “But for him to have that confidence and belief in himself, to have a game like he had, doesn’t surprise me. I know the kind of player he is. He’s the best player in the country, in my opinion.”

    Duke’s Cameron Boozer (12) celebrates after making the basket after being fouled during the first half of Duke’s exhibition game against UCF at Cameron Indoor Stadium in Durham, N.C., Tuesday, Oct. 21, 2025.
    Duke’s Cameron Boozer (12) celebrates after making the basket after being fouled during the first half of Duke’s exhibition game against UCF at Cameron Indoor Stadium in Durham, N.C., Tuesday, Oct. 21, 2025. Ethan Hyman ehyman@newsobserver.com

    A load inside at 6-foot-9 and 250 pounds, Boozer was too tough for the Golden Knights to handle. He scored on set plays, on lobs, on putbacks and hustle plays. He also slipped outside for a few 3-pointers and knocked down four to further fuel the crowd.

    “It was a pretty good game,” Scheyer said, smiling. “He’s a warrior, man. I think that’s the best thing I can say about him. He’s a warrior, competitor. He’s just a big-time winner.”

    It wasn’t a Duke blowout, as many might have expected in a first exhibition game against a UCF team that had completely remade its roster. The Blue Devils had a 40-39 halftime lead and trailed early in the second half.

    The Blue Devils got off 21 shots from the 3-point line in the first half — including 13 of Duke’s first 15 shots — causing Scheyer to quip, “I thought we were going to break a record there for a second.”

    Duke’s Isaiah Evans (3) drives between UCF’s Jamichael Stillwell (4) and Riley Kugel (2) during the second half of Duke’s 96-71 exhibition victory over UCF at Cameron Indoor Stadium in Durham, N.C., Tuesday, Oct. 21, 2025.
    Duke’s Isaiah Evans (3) drives between UCF’s Jamichael Stillwell (4) and Riley Kugel (2) during the second half of Duke’s 96-71 exhibition victory over UCF at Cameron Indoor Stadium in Durham, N.C., Tuesday, Oct. 21, 2025. Ethan Hyman ehyman@newsobserver.com

    The Blue Devils were 6-of-14 on 3’s in the second half, when they shot 54.8 percent from the field after a 33.3 percent first half.

    “We settled in more in the second half,” Scheyer said.

    Duke misses two injured players

    While much has been made of Duke losing five players to the NBA after last season, led by Cooper Flagg, the Golden Knights have 13 newcomers and are one of five Power 4 teams that do not return a player who scored a point (at UCF) last season.

    Dawkins, starting his 10th UCF season, was asked before the game about having so many new guys and quipped it can cause a coach to lose his hair — Dawkins already being bald.

    The Blue Devils did not have senior Maliq Brown or freshman Dame Sarr available Tuesday. Brown continues to work his way back from a preseason knee procedure and Sarr was sidelined with an oblique injury.

    Duke’s starting lineup had junior point guard Caleb Foster and sophomore Isaiah Evans in the backcourt, Patrick Ngongba II at center, with Boozer and freshman Nikolas Khamenia. Cayden Boozer and Darren Harris were the first two substitutes off the bench.

    Khamenia, a rugged 6-8 forward from Los Angeles and another 5-star recruit, had 14 points and 8 rebounds and took a few hard falls as he drove to the basket.

    Duke’s Nikolas Khamenia (14) is pressured by UCF’s John Bol (7) and Devan Cambridge (35) during the first half of Duke’s exhibition game against UCF at Cameron Indoor Stadium in Durham, N.C., Tuesday, Oct. 21, 2025.
    Duke’s Nikolas Khamenia (14) is pressured by UCF’s John Bol (7) and Devan Cambridge (35) during the first half of Duke’s exhibition game against UCF at Cameron Indoor Stadium in Durham, N.C., Tuesday, Oct. 21, 2025. Ethan Hyman ehyman@newsobserver.com

    The Blue Devils bolted to a 16-4 lead as both teams were banging bodies on the defensive end but Duke was making some shots — Evans with a pair of 3’s and Harris another.

    Cameron Boozer, who opened the game with a 3-point play, had 15 first-half points. That was offset by the good shooting of UCF’s Jordan Burks, a transfer from Georgetown who had 18 of his 21 points in the half.

    Duke has a second exhibition game Oct. 26 at Tennessee before opening the season Nov. 4 against Texas in the Dick Vitale Invitational in Charlotte.

    “I think we have a really deep team,” Cayden Boozer said. “It’s going to be somebody else’s night every game. We’re going to do the best we can, and whoever that guy is, we’re going to find him.”

    This story was originally published October 21, 2025 at 10:26 PM.

    Chip Alexander

    The News & Observer

    In more than 40 years at The N&O, Chip Alexander has covered the N.C. State, UNC, Duke and East Carolina beats, and now is in his 15th season on the Carolina Hurricanes beat. Alexander, who has won numerous writing awards at the state and national level, covered the Hurricanes’ move to North Carolina in 1997 and was a part of The N&O’s coverage of the Canes’ 2006 Stanley Cup run.

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    Chip Alexander

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