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Duke, for all the hoopla, isn't immune to the various ills plaguing college athletics- from compromised academic standards in admissions to student-athletes misbehaving once they are admitted.
--Jason Zengerle, MSN Slate
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| Welcome to TruthAboutDuke.com! |
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| posted on Friday September 3, 2010 | |
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| Coach K really should rethink his mentoring program. |
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| posted on Wednesday May 26, 2010 | |
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Former Dook star Jeff Capel is having some difficulties as head coach of Oklahoma University.
"The past few months haven't been pretty for Oklahoma men's basketball.
The school's worst record in almost three decades.
Three underclassmen gone to the NBA, and two others gone from the team.
Two assistant coach departures.
And an NCAA investigation, which prompted one national columnist this week to write the program was deserving of the "death penalty.""
Click here to read the article in it's entirety.
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| posted on Saturday April 3, 2010 | |
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Congratulations to Duke for making the Championship game!
This is a good article on this year's Duke team, from Deadspin:
This team had no villains. Kyle Singler wasn't Christian Laettner, stomping on players and blowing kisses to the crowd. Jon Scheyer wasn't J.J. Redick, flashing the shocker in Chapel Hill. Nolan Smith wasn't Greg Paulus, flopping on a fast break
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| Newspaper casts Coach K as the Devil! |
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| posted on Friday April 2, 2010 | |
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Link
The Indianapolis Star pulled some editions of its newspaper - and its sports editor apologized to a Blue Devils spokesman - after about 30,000 copies of the paper were delivered with a photo illustration that poked fun at the dislike of the Duke program.
On a photo of coach Mike Krzyzewski, the illustrator drew in blue ink sketch that included a bulls-eye on the forehead, horns, glasses, moles and a mustache. 'LOSE!' is inked in seven times around his neck tie.
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| More on Dook's "magic carpet ride" |
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| posted on Tuesday March 16, 2010 | |
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An article in the New York Daily News exposes the NCAA's lack of integrity:
Whatever the reason, whether it be image, history, its coach Mike Krzyzewski (long ago, he crossed over to the non-hoops crowd through his appearances in national TV commercials) or successful myth-making, Duke has a huge, loyal national following. The fact that networks covering college basketball - like CBS and ESPN - have put, and kept, Duke on a pedestal, even during lean years, has contributed to its ratings consistency.
Which, apparently, is well worth the magic carpet the selection committee has equipped Duke with.
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| Why did Dook receive a favorable seed? |
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| posted on Monday March 15, 2010 | |
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Columnist Jason Whitlock on Dook's draw:
The experts on CBS and ESPN were not at liberty Sunday night to explain to you why the NCAA Tournament selection committee treated Duke like the No. 1 overall seed rather than Kansas, the nation's best basketball team.
The explanation is simple: Duke is television ratings gold, and the NCAA is in the process of negotiating a new TV contract for its prized tournament.
CBS, the current rights holder, and ESPN, America's 24-hour national sports network - along with several other networks - are currently participating in the contract negotiations. It's a high-stakes affair. CBS paid $6 billion to exclusively broadcast the event for the last 11 years.
In an effort to hoodwink a TV network into again overpaying for the Big Dance, the NCAA is considering expanding the tourney to 96 teams.
So it's only logical that the selection committee provided the Blue Devils - tournament-chokers for most of the last decade - a relative cakewalk to the Final Four. Duke, the alleged third No. 1 seed, is in the bracket with the weakest No. 2 (Villanova) and No. 3 (Baylor) and No. 4 (Purdue).
Meanwhile, the Jayhawks draw No. 2 seed Ohio State, the team many believe deserved a No. 1, and No. 3 Georgetown and No. 4 Maryland. Every expert I heard Sunday stated the obvious: Kansas is in the toughest bracket in the tournament, and Duke is in the easiest.
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| posted on Monday March 8, 2010 | |
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Remember this guy who played for Coach K in the late 90s? He was an assistant coach for Tom Crean, and was just fired.
McLeod played at Duke and in the NBA, and was a lead recruiter for Crean. The timing indicates that there was a major mistake made by McLeod or a personality conflict somewhere.
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| ACC Player of the year update! |
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| posted on Thursday March 4, 2010 | |
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From the Washington Post's D.C. Sports Bog:
And so, if you wanted to construct a sequence in which Greivis Vasquez would definitively pass Jon Scheyer as the front-runner for this year's conference honor, it might go like this: The Duke media relations staff leaves a huge pile of glossy brochures pushing Scheyer's candidacy in the Maryland media lounge, the two players both play key roles in a tremendous nationally televised basketball game that's destined to come down to the final few minutes, and when it finally gets to be crunch time, Vasquez hits a truly absurd shot while being defended by Scheyer, who then goes down and misses at the other end
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| posted on Thursday March 4, 2010 | |
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DOOK IS POISED FOR YET ANOTHER DISMAL NCAA TOURNAMENT!
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| Dook Vitale thirteen years ago |
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| posted on Saturday February 27, 2010 | |
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| posted on Wednesday February 10, 2010 | |
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| posted on Saturday January 30, 2010 | |
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Here we go again! Stewart Mandel of Sports Illustrated has an article up about Dook's "game" vs. Georgetown:
Different season, same story.
Every year, it seems, we're led to believe the Duke Blue Devils have transformed themselves back into a legitimate Final Four contender. Some years, it's because of their tough perimeter defense. This year, it's purportedly because they've finally got some size and a legitimate point guard.
But take them out of the familiar confines of the ACC, put them in a rowdy venue like the grayed-out Verizon Center on Saturday against an elite non-conference foe like seventh-ranked Georgetown, and you find out real quickly that not much has changed about Mike Krzyzewski's team.
They're still not that athletic. They're still limited up front. And, despite what that No. 8 ranking before their name would indicate, they're still not ready for a run to Indianapolis.
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| posted on Saturday January 30, 2010 | |
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Georgetown and The Big East exposes Dook...again
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| Why the Blue Devils can't win it |
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| posted on Tuesday January 26, 2010 | |
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From a Pat Forde article:
We've seen this movie before. Duke blazes impressively out of the gates, is confronted by its limitations (size, depth or athleticism) in the latter third of the regular season, then hits the wall in March. The Devils haven't won more than two games in an NCAA tournament since 2004, despite having No. 1 seeds twice and No. 2 seeds twice as well.
This is yet another good Duke team, with yet another set of apparent flaws. The big men (the young Plumlee brothers, Lance Thomas, Brian Zoubek) are still nothing special. The leading men, Jon Scheyer and Kyle Singler, are still overworked. (Scheyer hasn't played fewer than 36 minutes in a game since December, and Singler has gone the full 40 in each of Duke's last two games.)
The Minutes will believe Duke might have a chance to win it all when it sees the Blue Devils actually advance past the Sweet 16 for the first time since Chris Duhon was in uniform.
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| posted on Thursday January 21, 2010 | |
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A 7ft heralded recruit is being out-rebounded by a perimeter player, and he's an "Under the Radar Senior"?
link
The 7-1 Zoubek is making the most of his minutes. Zoubek is Duke's second-leading rebounder after Kyle Singler. The feat is more impressive considering he averages seven rebounds in 16 minutes per game. Alas, he also collects his share of fouls in that short amount of time. He has fouled out or picked up four fouls in 11 games this season. Still, rebounding was a problem going into the season, and Zoubek's performance has been a big surprise.
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Dean Smith vs. Coach K -
Dean Smith:
Wikipedia link
Smith is one of the most prominent liberals in North Carolina
politics. Politically, he is best known for promoting desegregation.
In 1964, Smith joined a local pastor and a black UNC theology student
to integrate The Pines, a Chapel Hill restaurant. He also integrated
the Tar Heels basketball team by recruiting Charlie Scott as the
university's first black scholarship athlete. In 1965, Smith helped
Howard Lee, a black graduate student at UNC, purchase a home in an
all-white neighborhood.
He opposed the Vietnam War and, in the early 1980s, famously recorded
radio spots to promote a freeze on nuclear weapons. He has been a
prominent opponent of the death penalty. In 1998, he appeared at a
clemency hearing for a death-row inmate and pointed at then-Governor
Jim Hunt: "You're a murderer. And I'm a murderer. The death penalty
makes us all murderers." As head coach, he periodically held UNC
basketball practices in North Carolina prisons.
While coach, he was recruited by some in the Democratic Party to run
for the United States Senate against incumbent Jesse Helms. He
declined. But in retirement, he has continued to speak out on issues
such as the war in Iraq and gay rights.
Coach K:
New Republic Link
Granted, Brodhead is just the latest in a long line of Duke presidents
to kiss Krzyzewski's ring. Even before 1992, when Duke had just won
back-to-back national titles and the school's New York alumni group
pointedly told the school's then-president Keith Brodie that it wanted
Coach K, not Brodie, to address its next gathering, Duke realized that
Krzyzewski was its most important employee--and one to whom homage
must be paid. The basketball court at Duke's Cameron Indoor Stadium is
now called "Coach K Court." The area outside Cameron where Duke
students camp out for tickets has been officially dubbed
"Krzyzewskiville." Krzyzewski has a faculty appointment at Duke's
business school. He even has an institution within the
B-school--something called the "Coach K Center of Leadership &
Ethics."
In addition to paying Coach K homage, Duke has paid him deference.
While it's true that Krzyzewski runs a clean program--his players stay
out of trouble, they go to class, they aren't paid under the
table--he's hardly an angel. Although Krzyzewski is always happy to
field softballs from Dick Vitale, he rarely grants less obsequious
journalists an audience and when he does, he gives them clipped, testy
answers. He's even harder on student journalists. In 1990, angered by
a mid-season report card issued by Duke's student newspaper that gave
his team a B-plus, Krzyzewski summoned the student journalists to a
meeting and, in front of his players, cursed out the students for not
giving the team straight As.
Krzyzewski is similarly abusive to referees, constantly berating
them--usually in florid language--for their apparent shortcomings. In
March, after his team blew an 11-point lead to lose to Connecticut in
the Final Four, Krzyzewski barked over and over at the refs, "You
killed us, you killed us." A favorite pastime for Duke detractors is
to count how many times each game Coach K is caught on camera
dropping, as they call them, "F-bombs." Krzyzewski has even abused his
position for partisan politics, hosting a fundraiser for North
Carolina Republican Senate candidate Elizabeth Dole that--because the
event was called "Blue Devils for Dole" and was held at a
university-owned facility--gave the impression that Duke was endorsing
Dole. In all of these cases of misbehavior, Duke has simply looked the
other way.
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