Quantcast The Chronicle
College Media Network


Duke closes season with familiar feeling

Season Wrapup

By: Tim Britton

Issue date: 3/22/07 Section: M Basketball
Last update: 3/22/07 at 5:51 AM EST
  • Page 1 of 1
Josh McRoberts lifts up Greg Paulus after his three-point heave at the buzzer against VCU missed the target.
Media Credit: Jianghai Ho
Josh McRoberts lifts up Greg Paulus after his three-point heave at the buzzer against VCU missed the target.

Jon Scheyer was one of four scholarship freshmen on this year's roster, as the Blue Devils were the youngest they have been since World War II.
Media Credit: Jianghai Ho
Jon Scheyer was one of four scholarship freshmen on this year's roster, as the Blue Devils were the youngest they have been since World War II.

Greg Paulus and the Blue Devils cannot be blamed for getting a feeling of déjà vu as the buzzer sounded on their season Thursday night.

It was the same situation in which Duke had found itself on the first Thursday in February at Virginia. Just like in the Blue Devils' season-ending loss to VCU, Paulus' last-second three fell harmlessly to the floor, resulting in a heartbreaking loss for Duke.

The two images of Paulus-devastated after losses to two Virginia schools-encapsulate Duke's season and stand as the bookends to a tumultuous six weeks that eventually ended with the Blue Devils' earliest exit from the NCAA Tournament in 11 seasons.

The overtime loss to the Cavaliers started a four-game losing streak that pushed Duke into the middle of the ACC standings. The loss to the Rams in the first round of the NCAA Tournament capped a second four-game losing streak-this one pushing the Blue Devils into a long offseason.

"This is the hardest loss I've ever had," freshman Jon Scheyer said after the VCU game. "Obviously, it's not an easy way to lose at any point in the season, especially not in the last game."

It is fitting that Duke's struggles in the final moments of that game ended its season prematurely. All year long, an inability to pull out close games defined the Blue Devils.

"We just didn't do the tough things down the stretch," junior DeMarcus Nelson said last Thursday.

Nelson could have been talking about any of the 11 games Duke lost this season, the most defeats for a Blue Devil team since 1996-which was also the last time the team failed to win a postseason game.

In every loss-even the four games Duke dropped by double digits-the Blue Devils had their chances in the final 10 minutes. But offensive droughts and a lack of timely defensive stops cost Duke repeatedly.

The offense had shouldered the blame throughout much of the season, as field goal droughts at inopportune times cost the Blue Devils in games against Marquette and Virginia among others.

In the final four games, however, it was the defense that let Duke down. After giving up 59.0 points per game through the first 29 contests of the year, the Blue Devils allowed an average of 83.8 points in the final four games of the season.

In its postseason losses to N.C. State and VCU, Duke was particularly incapable of coming up with stops at the end of the game. The Wolfpack scored on every possession in overtime in its 85-80 upset of the Blue Devils in the first round of the ACC Tournament, exploiting Duke's lack of depth on the interior.

The Rams, meanwhile, scored on their final five possessions to knock the Blue Devils out of the NCAA Tournament. VCU point guard Eric Maynor scored six of those points, including the game-winning jumper with 1.8 seconds left.

Maynor, like Sean Singletary before him, came through in the clutch when Duke could not.

The Blue Devils, however, would not have been in that situation if they had not surrendered a 13-point lead. In fact, Duke had let a 13-point lead slip away in the loss to Virginia, as well. For the season, the Blue Devils lost four games in which they held a double-digit lead.

"We have to put teams away and protect our leads," sophomore Josh McRoberts said after the Virginia loss in February. "We were up [13] at some point and we let them back into it. When you put yourselves in that position, bad things are going to happen, and that's what happened to us."

Many of Duke's struggles can be attributed to the team's youth. Nelson was the only upperclassmen to receive substantial playing time, and the team relied heavily on its freshman class. Although that inexperience showed in some of the season's most crucial moments, the Blue Devils plan to build upon this year's foundation for 2007-08-starting with the memory of their most painful defeats.

"You hope that everything you do that didn't turn out as well as you would have liked, you can use as a source of motivation," head coach Mike Krzyzewski said. "Our kids have always been wanting to get better, so we use an experience like this. And it hurts. When you lose in the last few seconds, after playing so hard all game, it's not an easy thing to forget. I think we should use it as a motivation to get better, so that's what we'll use it as."
Page 1 of 1

Article Tools

Viewing Comments 1 - 9 of 11

NBA for Josh

posted 3/22/07 @ 11:55 AM EST

Well it looks like Josh is headed to the NBA...

At least he'll be leaving Duke on top...I mean, at least he was a strong leader...err...at least he took this team on his shoulders. (Continued…)

Chris S

posted 3/22/07 @ 1:05 PM EST

The NBA will probably pass on McRoberts. I think he'll be lucky to cash his check in Euros next year.

(2 replies)   Details   Reply to this comment

Chris S

posted 3/22/07 @ 3:24 PM EST

Yeah, I obviously don't have good taste in NBA bench warmers. I prefer to pay people what they're worth, and 13 points per game from and average college player isn't my cup of tea. (Continued…)

coachkkkk

posted 3/22/07 @ 9:25 PM EST

Well I guess I need to find a good replacement for Josh. Maybe I need a good forward coach to keep these boys around. I doubt I win a title with 3 point guards. (Continued…)

john schneider

posted 3/22/07 @ 11:41 PM EST

awesome.

chris

posted 3/23/07 @ 12:53 AM EST

"Many of Duke's struggles can be attributed to the team's youth."
Never seen so much failure blamed on youth. What an excuse. The problem was (and is) a lack of talent. (Continued…)

Ben Armstrong

posted 3/23/07 @ 10:36 AM EST

I have been a Duke fan my entire life but this is the oddest feeling to be relieved that our "star" player is leaving to the NBA. He lacks the charisma and poise that typical Duke players posess and although he lacks NBA ability will fit in perfect in the NBA (nothing but attitude). (Continued…)

T Vaughn

posted 3/23/07 @ 3:09 PM EST

With out Josh McRoberts we would not have won half our games. Some games we may not have gotten the ball across half court. We would not have hit double figures in rebounds in most games and we would not have hit double figures in blocked shots for the year without him. (Continued…)

Jay Roulhac

posted 3/24/07 @ 1:05 AM EST

Im a hardcore Duke fan and will always be but Josh McRoberts is not ready for the NBA he can't even score in the low post he has no post up game he needs to work on his shot and also I think that he want's to be a guard the main reason Duke didn't have a low post presence cause he thinks he is a guard, he should at least stay one more year and work on his shot and low post game. (Continued…)

Post a Comment

  • NOTE: Email address will not be published

Type your comment below (html not allowed)

  I understand posting spam or other comments that are unrelated to this article will cause my comment to be flagged for deletion and possibly cause my IP address to be permanently banned from this server.

Advertisement



Read the current issue online



Also in this issue:


Advertisement

Become a fan or join our group discussion on Facebook today!


Read the current issue online




Ad Supplements

Senior Ad