Duke football leads FBS in sacks after dominant Week 1 game against Elon

After a dominant eight-sack game against Elon on Friday, the Duke Blue Devils currently lead the FBS in sacks.

As of Sunday morning, no college football team has more sacks than the Duke Blue Devils.

With only two games left on the Week 1 slate, no FBS team matched Duke’s eight sacks from Friday night’s victory over Elon. Junior edge rusher Vincent Anthony Jr. was one of just 23 players with multiple sacks on opening weekend, and nine different Blue Devils recorded at least 0.5 sacks.

The Blue Devils defense also racked up 16 tackles for loss, tied for the most among Power Four programs. Only East Carolina finished with more for the weekend, and only 22 programs reached double-digits in their opening game.

Head coach Manny Diaz preached the importance of negative plays all offseason, and the former Penn State defensive coordinator should know. The Nittany Lions led the country with 49.0 sacks as a team last season, three more than any other Power Five program.

Duke’s star-studded defense hopes to keep the momentum rolling against Northwestern next Friday.

Duke football cruises to an easy victory over Elon in season opener

Thanks to a new career-high from quarterback Maalik Murphy, the Blue Devils beat Elon 26-3 on Friday to start the 2024 football season.

The first game of the [autotag]Manny Diaz[/autotag] era got the Blue Devils off on the right foot on Friday, defeating Elon 26-3 for an opening win.

Diaz previously served as the Penn State defensive coordinator, and his team showed their prowess on that side of the ball early and often. The Duke defensive line ended opening night with eight sacks, including three in the Phoenix’s first two drives, and 16 tackles for loss.

The Blue Devils even blocked a punt on special teams, albeit after a botched snap from their opponents. Elon’s offense gained 29 total yards of offense on its first 19 plays, and the Blue Devils only gave up 140 yards for the night.

While Duke’s defense pitched a near-perfect game, the offense looked a little more mercurial.

In his first game with the program, quarterback [autotag]Maalik Murphy[/autotag] came out firing with five completions in his first six passes, marching the Blue Devils into the red zone with ease. All of the offseason conversations about how offensive coordinator Jonathan Brewer wanted to play up-tempo, aggressive football seemed prescient.

However, Duke had to settle for a field goal, and the offense stalled a little from there. Murphy and his teammates kept trying to connect downfield and kept coming up empty, and he completed just four of his next nine passes.

Elon had a field-goal attempt to tie the game in the closing minutes of the first half, but the 49-yard effort came up short and bounced off the crossbar. Two plays later, Murphy found veteran receiver Eli Pancol over the middle of the field for a 55-yard catch-and-run into the red zone. Running back Jaquez Moore got the ball on the ensuing snap, cutting outside the tackle box and into the end zone for the team’s first touchdown.

Despite that opening score, Duke struggled to run the ball for most of the night. Moore and New Mexico State transfer Star Thomas combined for 25 yards on 13 carries over the first two quarters, and the Blue Devils finished with 59 yards on 27 attempts.

That score did somewhat remove the lid from the Blue Devils offense, however, and Murphy and Brewer didn’t look back from there. After a field goal on the first drive of the second half stretched the lead to 13, Murphy and his wideouts finally synced up downfield when he found [autotag]Jordan Moore[/autotag] for a 48-yard gain down to the 1-yard line.

The long connection emphasized a dominant night for Moore, who could become Duke’s first 1,000-yard receiver since Jamison Crowder in 2014. That third-quarter highlight put him over 100 yards for the night, and he finished with 112 yards on seven receptions.

Murphy got his first touchdown pass in a Duke uniform on the next play, a bootleg pass to tight end Jeremiah Hasley that made it a 19-0 game.

The redshirt sophomore threw another touchdown in the final five minutes, a short dart to Pancol. He finished his first Blue Devils game with a career-high 291 yards, two touchdowns, and an interception after completing 26 of his 40 passes.

Duke now has a week to prepare before its second game of the season, a Friday road trip to Northwestern.

Duke football coach Manny Diaz thinks his defensive line talent can create negative plays

Few things create more value than a tackle for loss, Duke football coach Manny Diaz says, and he thinks the Blue Devils defensive line can rack those up.

Duke football coach Manny Diaz built one of the fiercest and most formidable defenses in college football back at Penn State over the last two years. The Nittany Lions allowed 13.5 points (the third-fewest in the country) and 247.6 yards (the second-fewest in the country) last season.

In Diaz’s eyes, a large part of that success came down to tackles for loss forcing opponents behind the chains. He went into more detail during his Wednesday press conference at the ACC Football Kickoff.

“If you can create a negative play on a drive, the points per drive goes way down,” Diaz said. “The game is all about either avoiding third downs or what the distance is on third down. Football’s not complicated.”

During a later appearance on ACC Network, one host asked Diaz to talk about his defensive talent. The new Blue Devils head coach couldn’t stop naming names.

“Our defensive end room is very deep,” Diaz said. “They could be the strength of our defense. We think Wesley Williams could be a star, VJ Anthony is a whole different guy than he was a year ago, great set of skills.”

Diaz also highlighted members of his back seven, notably 2023 leading tackler Tre Freeman and upperclassmen defensive backs Chandler Rivers and Jaylen Stinson, but it’s clear success for Diaz starts up front.

“If you can roll eight on that front line, and we’ve got some questions on who seven and eight are, but if you can roll eight and keep those guys fresh, all of the best defenses we’ve had have usually started from there,” he said.