Through four games, no one can throw the ball against the Duke Blue Devils

The Duke Blue Devils have held every opposing quarterback under 4.6 yards per attempt through the first four games of the year.

Through the first four weeks of the college football season, nobody has an answer for the Duke pass defense.

Middle Tennessee quarterback Nicholas Vattiato, fresh off a 456-yard performance against Western Kentucky, managed just 127 yards on 33 attempts against the Blue Devils.

He became the fourth straight quarterback that Duke has held under five yards per attempt, and no offense has thrown for more than 156 yards against first-year head coach Manny Diaz, defensive coordinator Jonathan Patke, and their experienced secondary. Through Week 4, the Blue Devils are giving up just 132.0 yards per game and 4.2 yards per attempt through the air with more interceptions (three) than passing touchdowns allowed (two).

Any nightmarish defense starts in the trenches, and it seems like Diaz and his staff assembled one of the best four-man fronts in the conference. Duke sacked Vattiato five times and backup quarterback Roman Gagliano once, boosting the team total to 15 for the year.

Edge rusher Wesley Williams notched two sacks and a forced fumble by himself on Saturday, and he’s now one of three Duke defenders with at least 2.5 sacks in 2024. Liberty transfer Kendy Charles and team captain Aaron Hall disrupted the MTSU offense constantly from the defensive interior, combining for four tackles and 1.5 tackles for loss.

If you factor in sack yardage, the Blue Raiders finished Saturday’s game with 87 net passing yards.

Even if an opponent reaches the second level, Youngstown State transfer linebacker Alex Howard waits for them. One of the most unheralded stars in the Power Four this season, Howard led the team with eight tackles and 3.5 tackles for loss on Saturday.

Even when that pass rush doesn’t get home, however, the vice grip of this experienced secondary doesn’t loosen. Starting defensive backs Chandler Rivers, Joshua Pickett, Jaylen Stinson, and Terry Moore are all upperclassmen with starting experience, and each one has already made multiple game-changing plays. Pickett has broken up five passes, Moore has two interceptions, and Rivers forced a fumble against Connecticut one week after a huge open-field tackle for loss in overtime against Northwestern.

Between that veteran discipline and a deep pass-rush rotation, it’s hard to find the answers for opponents even with conference play on the horizon. Five of the team’s eight ACC opponents already average fewer than 230 yards per game through the air, including the North Carolina Tar Heels. If Duke can maintain this form, it could be the difference between six wins and eight.

Video shows Duke football player doing ‘Bull City’ gesture in EA Sports College Football 25

A Duke fan shared a clip of a Blue Devils football player making the team’s iconic ‘Bull City’ hand gesture in EA Sports College Football 25.

EA Sports really put all the details a college football fan can think of in College Football 25.

Fans who preordered the Deluxe Edition can access the game a few days early, so the content was already hitting social media on Monday night. The game features the expanded 12-team playoff, ratings for individual players, and all the bells and whistles.

One Duke fan posted about getting to play as the Blue Devils on X (the social media platform formerly known as Twitter) and found an iconic detail.

In the brief clip shared to social media, Duke cornerback Joshua Pickett ran up to the camera and put his fists together with his thumbs sticking out on either side, forming the Blue Devils’ ‘Bull City’ gesture.

EA Sports already confirmed that the hand gesture, along with dozens of other specific celebrations for other fanbases, would be in the game earlier in the summer, but actually seeing it makes it so much more real.

Wallace Wade Stadium already appeared in the College Football 25 trailer for Duke fans’ first sneak peek, and the team posted a video revealing all of their uniform combinations in the game.

Duke statistical leaders through four games

Does anyone on this list worry you?

There are few programs college football fans are buying more stock in right now than Duke. Maybe the only program that has turned more heads is the Deion Sanders-led Colorado. ESPN decided that there’s enough interest in the Blue Devils that the next episode of “College GameDay” will be broadcast from Durham. For once, people on Duke’s campus are excited and not about men’s basketball.

It is there that Notre Dame will play this weekend coming off the toughest of losses to Ohio State. The Irish will be facing a team trying to prove it’s for real and belongs with the best of college football. Plus, a raucous crowd at Wallace Wade Stadium likely will be waiting for them. Only they will be able to put a damper on the celebratory mood.

Here are the players who have gotten it done for the Blue Devils so far and will look to continue to do so against the Irish: