The Duke Blue Devils are heavily favored to beat Kentucky, per ESPN BPI

Duke basketball plays Kentucky in Atlanta on Tuesday night, and ESPN Analytics think the Blue Devils should be heavily favored.

The Duke Blue Devils play their first ranked opponent of a grueling non-conference schedule when they battle the Kentucky Wildcats in Atlanta on Tuesday night, and ESPN Analytics thinks they’ll start that stretch with a win.

According to the ESPN Matchup Predictor, the Blue Devils have a 70.8% chance to dispatch the Wildcats and new head coach Mark Pope.

Duke has won each of its first two games by at least 30 points thanks to its freshman tandem of [autotag]Cooper Flagg[/autotag] and [autotag]Kon Knueppel[/autotag].

Knueppel, the ACC Rookie of the Week, paced the Blue Devils in scoring against Maine and Army to average 18.5 points per game. Flagg, the top-ranked freshman and presumed No. 1 pick in next year’s NBA draft, has averaged 15.5 points, 9.0 rebounds, 4.0 assists, 2.5 steals, and 1.5 blocks against the Black Bears and Black Knights.

There’s more to the team than those two, however. Six different Blue Devils scored at least 10 points in both games, something that had never happened under head coach [autotag]Jon Scheyer[/autotag] in his previous two seasons.

The Wildcats reached triple digits in both of their first two games under Pope, defeating Wright State 103-62 and Bucknell 100-72. Koby Brea, who transferred to Kentucky from Dayton this offseason, paces the team with 19.0 points per game to start the year.

Duke basketball freshman Kon Knueppel named ACC Rookie of the Week

Duke basketball freshman Kon Knueppel earned ACC Rookie of the Week honors on Monday after his first two collegiate games.

Duke basketball freshman [autotag]Kon Knueppel[/autotag] didn’t take long to impress the nation, and on Monday, he was declared the ACC Rookie of the Week after his first two collegiate games.

Knueppel led the Blue Devils in scoring against both Maine and Army, dropping 22 points in the opener against the Black Bears before scoring 15 more against the Black Knights. He scored 13 of the team’s first 23 points against Maine, and he’s shooting 50.0% on 3-pointers despite averaging seven attempts.

He also averaged 3.0 rebounds, 2.0 assists, and 1.0 steals.

The Wisconsin native became a fan favorite in the offseason when every single one of his teammates called him the most impressive player from offseason workouts. CBS Sports reporter Jon Rothstein singled him out as a star when he attended a practice, and ESPN draft analyst Jonathan Givony moved him within his top 10 NBA prospects after seeing him play.

If the first two games of the season are any indication, Knueppel and teammate [autotag]Cooper Flagg[/autotag] might be passing this trophy back and forth between them all season. Flagg, the top-ranked player in the Class of 2024, finished the opening week with 15.5 points, 9.0 rebounds. 4.0 assists, 2.5 steals, and 1.5 blocks despite dealing with cramps in the second half of both games.

College basketball analyst Andy Katz includes Duke among his top five teams

College basketball analyst Andy Katz thinks the Duke Blue Devils are one of the five best teams in the country.

The Duke Blue Devils narrowly missed out on the top five of the USA TODAY Sports Coaches Poll and the AP Poll on Monday, and college basketball analyst Andy Katz thinks the team deserves a little more credit.

Katz shared his updated Power 37 rankings through social media, and he slotted the Blue Devils in fifth behind the Kansas Jayhawks, Alabama Crimson Tide, Gonzaga Bulldogs, and Connecticut Huskies.

Katz had some kind words for the team during the week as well, saying that the Blue Devils had championship hopes if returning starters Caleb Foster and Tyrese Proctor could provide veteran leadership.

“I don’t think there is a great team this season,” he said. “There’s a lot of good teams, and Duke is one of them.”

The Auburn Tigers jumped above the Blue Devils into the top five of most national rankings after upsetting Houston, but Katz kept Duke one spot above the SEC heavyweight.

The Kentucky Wildcats, the next team on Duke’s schedule, jumped all the way to 15th.

Duke basketball rises one spot to sixth in updated AP Poll with Kentucky on the horizon

The Duke Blue Devils moved up one spot in Monday’s AP Poll after starting the 2024-25 season with two straight wins.

The Duke Blue Devils started their 2024-25 men’s basketball season on the right foot, beating Maine by 34 points and the Army Black Knights by 42, and the Associated Press rewarded them slightly in Monday’s updated rankings.

Duke shuffled up one spot to sixth, the same spot the Blue Devils earned in the USA TODAY Sports Coaches Poll.

Head coach Jon Scheyer and his team will have plenty of chances to prove themselves over the next month with four top-20 opponents in the non-conference schedule. Duke’s next opponent, the Kentucky Wildcats, moved up four spots to 19th, and the Arizona Wildcats (No. 9), Kansas Jayhawks (No. 1), and Auburn Tigers (No. 5) all appear on the slate before December 4th.

The North Carolina Tar Heels, who lost to the Jayhawks on the road last week, slipped down one spot to 10th. No other ACC teams broke into the top 25, but the Wake Forest Demon Deacons, Miami Hurricanes, and Clemson Tigers all received at least 10 votes.

Duke basketball drops one spot to sixth in USA TODAY Sports Coaches Poll

Despite two dominant wins to start the season, the Blue Devils dropped one spot to sixth in the latest USA TODAY Sports Coaches Poll.

The Duke Blue Devils opened the 2024-25 men’s basketball season with comfortable wins over Maine and Army, but events around the country still dropped head coach [autotag]Jon Scheyer[/autotag] and his team down one spot to sixth in the USA TODAY Sports Coaches Poll.

The Kansas Jayhawks, Alabama Crimson Tide, and two-time defending champion Connecticut Huskies remained the top three teams in order, but big wins for the Auburn Tigers and Gonzaga Bulldogs jumped them into the top five.

Auburn beat the Houston Cougars, who started the season fourth in the rankings, and the Bulldogs beat the Baylor Bears by 38 points in one of the more emphatic statements of the opening week.

The Blue Devils play the Jayhawks and Tigers in the next month. The Kentucky Wildcats, whom Duke plays on Tuesday, shuffled up to 18th, and the Arizona Wildcats stayed within the top 10 ahead of next week’s road matchup.

Check out the complete coaches poll below:

Ranking Team Record Points
1 Kansas 2-0 759 (21)
2 Alabama 2-0 724 (4)
3 UConn 2-0 702 (3)
4 Auburn 2-0 660 (2)
5 Gonzaga 2-0 651 (1)
6 Duke 2-0 608
7 Iowa State 1-0 576
8 Arizona 2-0 516
9 Tennessee 2-0 502
10 Houston 1-1 488
11 North Carolina 1-1 456
12 Purdue 2-0 437
13 Creighton 2-0 385
14 Baylor 1-1 328
15 Marquette 2-0 308
16 Indiana 2-0 234
17 Cincinnati 2-0 230
18 Kentucky 2-0 182
19 Florida 2-0 179
20 Illinois 2-0 151
21 Arkansas 1-1 150
22 Ohio State 1-0 148
23 Texas A&M 1-1 99
24 Rutgers 1-0 84
25 St. John’s 2-0 79

Dropped Out

No. 19 Texas; No. 22 UCLA; No. 25 Ole Miss

Receiving Votes

Texas Tech 75; Ole Miss 60; Texas 54; Xavier 38; Oregon 37; Michigan State 29; BYU 29; UCLA 18; UCF 17; Wake Forest 12; Saint Mary’s 12; Kansas State 9; Clemson 9; New Mexico 8; Dayton 8; North Florida 7; Maryland 5; Providence 4; Mississippi State 4; Nevada 2; San Francisco 1; Grand Canyon 1

The Duke basketball offense is deeper than it ever has been under Jon Scheyer

Through the first two games of the 2024-25 season, the Duke Blue Devils aren’t just prolific on offense. They’re unprecedentedly deep.

Maybe this shouldn’t be a surprise given the anticipation that surrounded this Duke basketball roster, but this is the deepest unit to play at Cameron Indoor Stadium in years.

The Blue Devils beat the Army Black Knights 100-58 on Friday, and through two games of the regular season, Duke is averaging 98.0 points per game. A big part of that success stems from the fact that every member of the team can stack points at any moment.

Six different players scored at least 10 points on Friday, the second time that has ever happened under head coach Jon Scheyer. The first time? Monday’s victory over Maine.

Despite the hype surrounding potential No. 1 overall pick [autotag]Cooper Flagg[/autotag] or fellow five-star freshman [autotag]Kon Knueppel[/autotag], no one Blue Devil has complete control of the offense.

Against the Black Bears on Monday, Knueppel scored 13 of the first 23 team’s points but only scored nine the rest of the way. All 13 of Flagg’s points on Friday came in the first 16 minutes. Those two are the only Duke players averaging more than 12.0 points per game, but Tyrese Proctor, Sion James, Caleb Foster, Mason Gillis, and Khaman Maluach are all averaging at least 8.5.

The offensive potency becomes even more dangerous when defenses remember how many perimeter shooters Scheyer collected this offseason. Exactly half of the Blue Devils’ attempts have come from behind the arc, and six different players have attempted at least six triples.

Those six players are shooting a combined 42.9% from distance.

This depth will come in incredibly handy once the postseason rolls around and elimination hangs in the balance every night. Oh, Flagg hasn’t scored in 20 minutes? Knueppel missed multiple 3-pointers in a row? Yeah, that happened against Army, and Duke still won by 42.

The Hydra-style offense gives the Blue Devils an incredibly high floor, and considering the fact that only Proctor and Foster played here last year, it should only improve with more minutes.

Duke basketball coach Jon Scheyer says team ‘has got to help’ Cooper Flagg with cramping

Cooper Flagg struggled with cramps for the second straight game on Friday night, and Jon Scheyer sounded determined to figure that out fast.

Superstar freshman [autotag]Cooper Flagg[/autotag] looked the part of a future No. 1 overall pick during the first half of Friday night’s game against Army, scoring 13 points and adding 10 rebounds before the opening 20 minutes were up.

However, he could only play 25 minutes of the game after he suffered from more cramps in the second half. He also sat out the final minutes of Duke’s Monday win over Maine with similar problems, insisting after the game that he felt hydrated and prepared before tipoff.

With the Kentucky Wildcats, Arizona Wildcats, and Kansas Jayhawks all on the November schedule, there’s unfortunately not much time for Flagg to ease his way into a collegiate workload or diagnose the issue. Understandably, head coach [autotag]Jon Scheyer[/autotag] sounded determined to figure something out fast after the game.

“We’ve got to help him,” Scheyer said. “I’m not happy about it for him. We’ve got to help him, and we will.”

“Right after this, I can promise you, I’m going to be meeting, I don’t care if it’s all night, we can’t have that happening. Bottom line.”

Despite the cramps, Flagg leads the Blue Devils in assists (4.0), steals (2.5), and blocks (1.5) to start the season. He’s also second on the roster in scoring (15.5) and rebounding (9.0) after his Friday double-double.

“I thought he had it going, too,” Scheyer added. “That first half, he was really just controlling the whole game with his rebounding, his passing, his playmaking, his scoring, he was assertive shooting the ball.”

Duke plays Kentucky, another team within the preseason top 25 of the USA TODAY Sports Coaches Poll, in Atlanta on Tuesday.

“We’re going to fix that,” Scheyer concluded about the cramping problem.

Cooper Flagg’s cramps have Duke’s Jon Scheyer concerned: ‘We got to help him’

Flagg had a double-double in the first half of Duke’s win over Army.

Cooper Flagg probably could’ve had more than the 13 points and 11 rebounds he finished with in No. 7 Duke’s 100-58 rout of Army on Friday night. All of Flagg’s points and all but one rebound came in the first half of the decisive victory for the Blue Devils.

But Flagg was unable to stuff the stat sheet in the second half because he spent the majority of it on the bench. The 17-year-old freshman – a preseason AP All-American projected by many to be the top pick in the 2025 NBA Draft – played just a bit more than five minutes in the second half as he dealt with cramping for the second straight game of his collegiate career.

Flagg exited the game at the 15:39 mark in the second half and began guzzling Gatorade – whom he has a NIL sponsorship deal with – and using a massage tool on the areas above his knees. Flagg reentered the game four minutes later but lasted only a minute before he was back on the bench, grimacing, rubbing his hamstrings, drinking various liquids and talking to a trainer. Flagg didn’t reenter the game, playing less than 25 minutes.

“We got a plan in place, we’re going to follow it,” Flagg said. “We’re going to figure it out, for sure.”

Luckily for Duke, they didn’t need Flagg at full capacity to beat Army as five other Blue Devils scored in double figures in the lopsided win.

But the Blue Devils’ schedule is about to get a whole lot tougher. Of Duke’s next six games, four are against AP-ranked opponents – No. 23 Kentucky, No. 10 Arizona, No. 1 Kansas and No. 11 Auburn. And of those four, three are away from the cozy confines of Cameron Indoor Stadium and Duke’s Crazies.

Simply put, Duke is going to need Flagg healthy to be competitive in those marquee matchups.

And third-year Duke coach Jon Scheyer is going to do everything in his power to make that happen.

“We got to help him. I’m not happy about it, for him. We’ve got to help him, and we will. And right after this, I can promise you I’m going to be meeting (with staff), I don’t care if it’s all night,” Scheyer said. “We can’t have that happening – bottom line. I thought he had it going too. You know, that first half, he was just really controlling the whole game with his rebounding, his passing, his playmaking, his scoring, was assertive shooting the ball. So, that can’t happen. I’m not happy with it, we’re going to fix that.”

Flagg’s first half of play saw him throw down an alley-oop and swish a pair of 3-pointers. He finished the game with three assists, three blocks and two steals in addition to his first collegiate double-double.

In the second half, the expression on his face read “yuck” as he was drinking whatever trainers handed him.

“I’m not even sure what it was,” Flagg said of the shot of seemingly unknown liquid that made his face sour. “There was a couple of things… We had a little pickle juice too, which is something I’ve tried in the past.”

Flagg dealt with cramps in his Duke debut earlier this week too, leaving the Blue Devils’ season-opener against Maine on Monday with under four minutes to play due to cramping in his left calf.

In the postgame press conference, Scheyer put the blame squarely on the shoulders of himself and Duke’s coaching and support staff. And he seemed like a coach willing to try just about anything to make sure he’s getting the most out of his prized star recruit.

“It’s on all of us. It’s me, it’s our coaches, it’s our medical team and sports performance – it’s all of us,” Scheyer said. “He’s doing everything that he needs to in preparation. It’s not like there’s something that he’s not doing. He prepares his butt off. He drinks, he’s eating the right way, he does everything he needs to. We got to help him take care of this now.”

Somewhat strangely, this isn’t the first time in recent memory that a star Duke freshman has dealt with cramping. Paolo Banchero received an IV during a game, more than once, because of it.

How many points did Cooper Flagg score against the Army Black Knights?

Here’s how Duke freshman phenom Cooper Flagg performed against Army.

[autotag]Cooper Flagg[/autotag] is already making a habit of impressive dunks through the first two Duke basketball games of his career.

Junior guard Tyrese Proctor lobbed a ball up to Flagg for an alley-oop dunk early in the first half of Friday’s game against Army, a highlight-reel play that came just days after his one-handed hammer against Maine in the season opener.

Despite a slow offensive start for the Blue Devils as a whole, Flagg notched 13 points and 10 rebounds before the end of the opening half against the Black Knights. The top-ranked freshman looks like a complete player despite being just 17 years old, averaging 4.0 assists, 2.5 steals, and 1.5 blocks to open his debut season, and fellow first-year forward Kon Knueppel is the only Duke player with more points through two games.

Here’s a breakdown of Flagg’s Friday performance as he prepares for three ranked opponents in his next four games.

Cooper Flagg points scored vs. Army:

Flagg finished Friday’s game against the Black Knights with 13 points, the third-most on the team. All of his scoring came in the opening 16 minutes as he dealt with some second-half cramping for the second straight game, but he did log his first career double-double with 11 rebounds.

He also tallied three assists, three blocks, and two steals. He made five of his 10 shots from the floor and two of his four 3-point attempts.

Did Duke win?

The Blue Devils beat Army 100-58 thanks to a 27-5 run late in the first half sparked by both of Flagg’s 3-pointers.

Cooper Flagg’s next game:

The Duke Blue Devils will return to the court on Tuesday in Atlanta for a ranked game against the Kentucky Wildcats.

Duke basketball overcomes slow shooting start in home victory over Army

The Duke Blue Devils struggled from long range early on Friday, but a monster night from freshman Cooper Flagg helped them put Army away.

The Duke basketball fans in attendance at Cameron Indoor Stadium probably felt like the Blue Devils couldn’t make anything to start Friday’s game against Army, but seemingly in the blink of an eye, [autotag]Cooper Flagg[/autotag] and his team opened up a massive lead late in the first half once the shots started to fall.

Duke got off to a slower start against Maine in Monday’s season opener, only leading by 11 points at the midway mark, and it was much of the same for the first 10 minutes on Friday.

The Blue Devils made just one of their first 11 3-point attempts despite most of them coming with plenty of space. Junior guard Tyrese Proctor missed multiple shots from the corner on one possession, and sharpshooters like Kon Knueppel and Mason Gillis found iron instead of nylon on routine looks.

However, while the perimeter offense took some time to settle in, Flagg got going downhill before the end of the first half. Proctor found him for an alley-oop on a transition possession in the opening minutes, and he made two 3-pointers with another 3-point play in a five-minute span later on in the half.

Those nine points, part of Flagg’s 13 on the night, sparked a run that took all the drama out of the room. After the Black Knights remained within one point at the 14:00 mark of the first half, the Blue Devils scored 27 of the next 32 points to make it a 36-13 game with four minutes until the intermission.

Flagg finished with 11 rebounds as well, and if not for some second-half cramping (for the second straight game) that limited him to 25 minutes on the court, he could have stocked some monster numbers.

The Duke defense, like Flagg, showed up from the opening bell. The Black Knights could only score 20 points in the first half after making six of their 28 shots from the floor, including two of their 15 3-point attempts. A few breakdowns gave Army more open looks after the break, but the visitors still only finished with 58 points for the game.

True to form with a team as talented as the Blue Devils, the shooting improved as the game continued. Duke buried 16 of their final 27 3-point attempts with eight combined makes from Knueppel and Proctor. Freshman center Khaman Maluach notched his first career double-double with 11 points and 14 rebounds, and Knueppel led the team in scoring for the second straight game with 15.

Duke shot 67.7% from the floor for the second half, and six different players scored at least 10 points for the second straight game en route to the 100-58 final margin

The Blue Devils now get the weekend to prepare for the Kentucky Wildcats. That ranked matchup takes place in Atlanta on Tuesday night.