Duke wide receiver Jordan Moore named to 2024 Maxwell Award Watch List

The Maxwell Award, given to the best player in college football, released its watch list on Monday and included Duke wideout Jordan Moore.

The Maxwell Award Watch List came out on Monday, offering dozens of preseason candidates for the honor, and Duke wideout [autotag]Jordan Moore[/autotag] made the cut.

The Maxwell Award is given to the most outstanding player in college football, won last year by Washington quarterback Michael Penix Jr.

Moore led the Blue Devils with 62 receptions, 835 yards, and eight receiving touchdowns last season. He made it to the end zone three times in a single game against North Carolina, and he surpassed 80 receiving yards in six different games. He even eclipsed the 100-yard mark in back-to-back games against Virginia and Pittsburgh, reaching a season-high 117 yards against the Cavaliers.

Moore, who started as a quarterback recruit before switching to the receiver room ahead of the 2022 season, also racked up 656 yards and five touchdowns as a sophomore. At the ACC Football Kickoff last week, coach [autotag]Manny Diaz[/autotag] and his teammates praised his work ethic and preparation ahead of games.

Moore could become Duke’s first 1,000-yard receiver since Jamison Crowder in 2014. The chase kicks off on August 30 against Elon.

Duke quarterback Maalik Murphy hopes the Blue Devils wide receivers ‘stay underrated’

When asked if Duke’s wide receiver room was underrated, quarterback Maalik Murphy smiled and said he hoped they stayed that way.

ACC football fans might not think of Duke among the conference’s best offenses heading into the 2024 season, but the team thinks it can catch people by surprise.

During a Wednesday press conference at ACC Football Kickoff, quarterback Maalik Murphy fielded a question about his ‘underrated’ receiving room. He offered a smile and a fun answer.

“I want them to stay underrated,” Murphy said. “I feel like that’s in our favor, them flying under the radar, us as an offense kind of flying under the radar.”

The Blue Devils lost longtime weapon Jalon Calhoun to the NFL this offseason, but leading receiver Jordan Moore is back for a third year on the perimeter. He and Sahmir Hagans combined for 92 receptions and 1,095 yards a season ago.

Then you add in Eli Pancol, who will return after missing the 2023 season due to injury. He compiled 347 yards in 2022. You can’t forget about Old Dominion transfer Javon Harvey, whom Grayson Loftis called ‘a quarterback’s best friend,’ either.

The Duke offense looks, to steal a word Loftis and Murphy used to describe offensive coordinator Jonathan Brewer’s system, explosive.

“People are not really aware of what our OC can do just because he hasn’t been in this position before,” Murphy continued. “I’m excited. Super excited for the guys that we have, I feel like we’re going to do great things.”

Preparation helped Duke football star Jordan Moore move from quarterback to receiver

“That shouldn’t be easy, going from quarterback to wideout. And he’s made it look easy.” On Jordan Moore, questions, and hard work.

The Duke football team will enter 2024 with a different starting quarterback and a new offensive coordinator, but the Blue Devils passing attack won’t be entirely reinvented. Everything still runs through wide receiver Jordan Moore.

Moore ended the 2023 season with 62 receptions and 835 yards, leading the Blue Devils in both statistics, and he hauled in eight of the team’s 14 passing touchdowns. Last November, he caught three touchdown passes against North Carolina before surpassing 100 yards in each of the next two games against Virginia and Pittsburgh.

The former three-star prospect came to Wallace Wade Stadium with the intent of dominating the team’s passing game. Just from the other end of it. Moore committed to the Blue Devils as a top-50 quarterback prospect in the Class of 2021 but changed positions ahead of his sophomore season. He found massive success and found it immediately, and according to his teammates and coaches, there’s no secret to his breakthrough beyond hard work and preparation.

After four years at Loyola Blakefield, Moore started the 2021 season as one of six quarterbacks on the Duke roster. Despite the depth at the position and his status as a freshman, he still found the ball in his hands routinely. He ran the ball 44 times for 221 yards and completed nine of his 19 attempts for 95 yards. He scored four touchdowns, three with his legs and one with his arm.

With fellow quarterback Riley Leonard on the roster, however, an opportunity for expanded playing time seemed unlikely. Mike Elko came to Durham as the head coach ahead of the 2022 season, and Moore started practicing at wide receiver.

He hasn’t thrown a pass since.

Moore established himself as a receiving threat from the opening bell during his sophomore campaign. He caught six passes for 77 yards and a touchdown against Temple in the season opener, and he found the end zone in each of the next two games as well.

The 2022 Pittsburgh game elevated Moore from a promising young wideout to one of the best weapons in the ACC. The Blue Devils trailed by 14 points with 10 minutes left on the clock before Leonard found a wide-open Moore over the top of the defense for a 49-yard touchdown. The Panthers held on for a 28-26 win, but Moore caught 14 passes for 199 yards.

He ended that sophomore season (again, his first playing wide receiver) with 60 catches for 656 yards, the second-most on the roster in both categories, as well as a team-high five touchdowns.

[autotag]Grayson Loftis[/autotag], who broke out as a freshman last season after a handful of promising starts, spoke about his teammate during the ACC Football Kickoff on Wednesday. Part of what makes Moore so good, he said, is that same positional background he left behind two years ago.

“As a quarterback, he knows every detail about a play,” Loftis said during an ACC Network appearance. “He knows coverages, he knows techniques.”

It’s clear Loftis felt some immediate trust in the now-veteran wideout. That three-game streak from the top of the story, with three touchdowns against the Tar Heels, started once Loftis took over the offense. The duo combined for 311 yards and four touchdowns in their first three full games together.

Just when it felt like the ground under Moore’s feet started to settle, however, the foundation shook again. Elko left for Texas A&M last winter, bringing Manny Diaz to Durham as Moore’s third head coach in four years. Diaz, in turn, brought in former Texas quarterback [autotag]Maalik Murphy[/autotag] from the transfer portal to compete with Loftis for the starting job. Even the playcalling changed with former SMU quarterbacks coach Jonathan Brewer now running the offense.

Murphy and Loftis talked about how Brewer’s offense emphasizes a fast tempo and pushing the ball downfield, something very different from the football Loftis and Moore played last season. With such a constant cycle of new teammates and coaches, how does a player like Moore ever find success in a new position, much less sustain it? The answer sounds more straightforward than one might expect.

“He’s just continuously asking questions,” Loftis said. “He wants to know everything about how you prepare for a game, what you’re looking for, how you want everything run.”

While Loftis focused on praising Moore’s mental prowess, Diaz started off his admiration for the wideout on much simpler terms.

“He just wills things to happen with his work ethic,” Diaz said in an ACC Network appearance of his own later that morning. “He is, if you asked our players, probably the hardest worker on our football team.”

The first-year Blue Devils head coach hinted that, despite Moore surpassing 60 receptions in each of the last two seasons, the senior’s workload could increase yet again in 2024.

“That shouldn’t be that easy, going from quarterback to wideout,” Diaz said. “And he’s made it look easy.”

Moore’s third season in the Duke wide receiver room gets underway on August 30 against Elon.

Four Duke football players named to East-West Shrine Bowl Watch List

Duke football stars Jordan Moore and Jaquez Moore, along with two other teammates, made the East-West Shrine Bowl Watch List on Friday.

The first season of the [autotag]Manny Diaz[/autotag] era in Durham still holds some star power.

On Friday afternoon, four Duke football players were named to the East-West Shrine Bowl Watch List. Running back Jaquez Moore, wide receivers Jordan Moore and Javon Harvey, and safety Jaylen Stinson all made the preliminary list.

The two Moores served as key motors for the Blue Devils offense in 2023. Jazquez finished second on the team with 674 rushing yards last season, and with leading rusher Jordan Waters now playing for NC State, he seems poised to dominate the Duke backfield. Jordan paced the passing game with 62 receptions, 835 yards, and eight touchdowns, leading the team in all three categories.

Stinson, a leader of the 2023 defense, finished with 88 tackles last season, the second-most on the team. He also snagged an interception against North Carolina.

Harvey, who transferred from Old Dominion this offseason, finished his three-year stint with the Monarchs with 70 catches, 1,063 yards and eight touchdowns.

The game, meant to let the best seniors in college football show themselves as NFL talents ahead of the draft, takes place in early February.

Two Duke football players make Phil Steele Preseason All-ACC team

The Phil Steele Preseason All-ACC teams were revealed on Wednesday, and two Blue Devils made the Second Team ahead of the 2024 season.

The Phil Steele Preseason All-ACC teams were revealed on Wednesday, and two Duke football stars made the Second Team.

Wide receiver Jordan Moore and linebacker Tre Freeman both made the preseason squad ahead of head coach [autotag]Manny Diaz[/autotag]’s debut season.

Moore led the Blue Devils with 835 yards and eight receiving touchdowns last season. He set a season-high with 117 yards against the Virginia Cavaliers and caught three touchdowns against the North Carolina Tar Heels.

He also put together another 100-yard game against Pittsburgh the week after the Virginia game. Across his last three regular-season games, Moore had 23 receptions for 311 yards and four touchdowns.

On the defensive side, Freeman ended the season with 106 total tackles, the first Duke defender to reach triple digits since Koby Quansah in 2019. He also created five tackles for loss, recorded an interception, and broke up three passes. 

After an offseason that saw Duke lose more than a half-dozen starters to the NFL and the transfer portal, no other Blue Devils made the preseason team.

Duke’s season begins on August 30 against Elon.

Duke football among Power 4 teams with least returning production, ESPN calculates

ESPN’s Bill Connelly ranked all 134 FBS college football teams by returning production from 2023, and the Duke Blue Devils came in well below the median.

No one in Durham needs to be told the 2024 football team with first-year head coach [autotag]Manny Diaz[/autotag] will look different from 2023, but just how different could be a surprise.

ESPN’s Bill Connelly shared a ranking of the 134 FBS college football teams by what percentage of their 2023 production returns for the 2024 season. The Blue Devils finished 91st with just 56% of its 2023 work still in town.

The most notable departures, head coach Mike Elko to Texas A&M and quarterback Riley Leonard to Notre Dame, take the headlines. However, the Blue Devils also lost multiple starting offensive linemen and First Team All-ACC defensive tackle DeWayne Carter to the NFL draft. A handful of other defensive linemen also left the school, with edge rusher RJ Oben joining Leonard on the Fighting Irish and tackle Ja’Mion Franklin signing with his hometown NFL team.

However, a few 2024 stars stayed in the building. Wide receiver Jordan Moore, who finished with a team-high 835 yards, made an impressive touchdown catch during the spring game over star corner Chandler Rivers. Running back Jaquez Moore, whose 674 rushing yards in 2023 were the second-most on the team, will lead the backfield once again.

Duke’s 2024 season gets underway on August 30 against Elon.

Duke defense prevails in Blue & White Game

The spring headlines for Duke football centered around as the quarterback battle, but the Blue Devils defense showed it’s still the heart of the team on Saturday.

All of the attention for Duke football centered around the quarterbacks this spring, from new transfer Maalik Murphy to returners Grayson Loftis and Henry Belin IV.

However, during the Blue & White Game on Saturday, the Blue Devils defense proved it won’t go away in the 2024 season with a 24-16 win over the offense.

Last year under former head coach Mike Elko, Duke surrendered just 19.0 points per game, the best mark in the ACC. Elko left for Texas A&M this winter, but former Penn State defensive coordinator Manny Diaz took his place and the defense looks like it won’t lose a step under his eye.

Murphy and Loftis split time under center, and while the stats won’t reflect anything due to the informal nature of the scrimmage, Murphy did toss the only touchdown of the game to star wideout Jordan Moore.

However, the defense won almost every other series. Junior defensive back Chandler Rivers fought with Moore for that touchdown catch, nearly wrestling it away for an interception. True freshman Vontae Floyd, a Virginia native, did intercept Loftis for the game’s lone turnover later in the second half.

Duke’s football season gets underway on August 30 against Elon.

WATCH: Maalik Murphy throws first touchdown in Duke uniform to Jordan Moore

Maalik Murphy, who transferred from Texas this winter, notched his first touchdown at Wallace Wade Stadium with a long heave to star receiver Jordan Moore.

Duke fans got their first looks at the Blue Devils 2024 football team on Saturday afternoon during the spring Blue & White Game.

For most fans, the biggest headlines revolved around new quarterback Maalik Murphy, who transferred from Texas over the winter. Murphy got his chances to lead the Duke offense during game scenarios, and the redshirt sophomore showed off his dizzying arm talent over and over again.

It took until the second half of Saturday’s scrimmage for Murphy to toss his first touchdown in Duke colors, but he threw it to the most expected target.

With a little more than eight minutes left on the clock, the new Blue Devils signal-caller turned toward the right sideline and launched an arching pass toward star receiver Jordan Moore. Moore, blanketed by top corner Chandler Rivers, made an eye-popping contested catch for the first trip to the end zone.

Rivers made Moore work for it, wrestling with him for the ball on the ground for nearly a minute, but the touchdown stood. The score pulled the Duke offense within four points of the defense, who still led 17-13 after the touchdown.

Projecting the five highest-rated Blue Devils in EA Sports’ College Football 25

With EA Sports College Football 25 on the horizon, here’s our ranking of who we think will be the five highest-rated Duke players in the game.

EA Sports has officially done it. They have successfully built the momentum for the latest installment in their beloved college football video game series. It’s been a long wait, but with the teaser trailer they dropped earlier in February and the confirmation early this week that every FBS team had opted in for the video game, it’s finally starting to feel real. The official reveal of the game will come in May.

According to ESPN, Thursday was also the first day that college football players could begin opting to participate in the video game. The report said players would receive $600 and a free game copy.With the momentum of this game hitting a fever pitch and the fact that we are getting closer to release, we decided to look at how Duke may look when the game is released.Without further ado, here’s a look at who we think will be the five highest-rated Blue Devils in the new game when it releases this summer.

Notre Dame defensive lineman Jordan Botelho ejected for targeting

Oof.

Notre Dame has had a tough time with Duke in the second half, and it just got even tougher. Defensive lineman [autotag]Jordan Botelho[/autotag] has been ejected after called for targeting against Blue Devils quarterback Riley Leonard deep in Irish territory. Naturally, this means Botelho will not be eligible for the first half of the next game against Louisville.

The Blue Devils quickly made the targeting call hurt as Leonard hit Jordan Moore for the game-tying touchdown. They then took a 14-13 lead on the point-after kick, and the Irish have an uphill battle ahead of them. Durham is up for grabs right now as the home team might be on the verge of another upset victory that would merit storming the field.

The Irish have time to stop the celebration, but they haven’t shown much indication that they’ll snap out of their funk. If that doesn’t happen, forget about a national championship this year.

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