2000–01 Duke Blue Devils men's basketball team

2000–2001 Duke Blue Devils men's basketball
National Champions,
ACC Tournament Champions,
ACC Regular Season Co-Champions
NCAA National Championship Game
vs. Arizona, W, 82–72
Conference Atlantic Coast Conference
Ranking
Coaches No. 1
AP No. 1
2000–2001 record 35–4 (13–3 ACC)
Head coach Mike Krzyzewski (21st year)
Assistant coach Johnny Dawkins
Assistant coach Chris Collins
Assistant coach Steve Wojciechowski
Home arena Cameron Indoor Stadium

The 2000–01 Duke Blue Devils men's basketball team was a Division I college basketball team that competed in the Atlantic Coast Conference. Under the leadership of All-American duo Shane Battier and Jason "Jay" Williams, coach Mike Krzyzewski's Blue Devils won their third national championship in program history.

Roster

Note: Flags indicate national team eligibility at FIBA sanctioned events. Players may hold other non-FIBA nationality not displayed.

No. Position Player
3 United States F Nick Horvath
4 United States C Carlos Boozer
5 United States G Ryan Caldbeck
12 United States G/F Andre Sweet
13 United States G J.D. Simpson
14 United States F/G Nate James
15 United States G Andre Buckner
20 United States C Casey Sanders
No. Position Player
21 United States G Chris Duhon
22 United States G Jason Williams
31 United States F Shane Battier
34 United States G/F Mike Dunleavy, Jr.
40 United States F/C Andy Borman
41 United States F Matt Christensen
42 United States F Reggie Love

Expectations

Shane Battier entered his senior season as the remaining member of Duke's heralded recruiting class of 1997 which included Elton Brand and William Avery and had nearly led Duke to a championship two years earlier. (Brand and Avery, along with Corey Maggette would become the first Duke underclassmen to leave early for the draft that year.) Despite losing the reigning ACC Player of the Year Chris Carrawell to graduation, the Blue Devils still retained sophomores Jason Williams, Mike Dunleavy, Jr., and Carlos Boozer and welcomed the addition of freshman Chris Duhon to their lineup.

Regular season

On January 27, 2001, the second-ranked Blue Devils played at eighth-ranked Maryland Terrapins in what would become the first of four contests between these two ACC rivals that year. With Duke trailing by 10 points with 54 seconds left in regulation, Williams scored eight points, including two three-pointers, in a 13-second span and James hit two free throws to send this game into overtime. In overtime Battier blocked a layup by Juan Dixon at the baseline with 4 seconds left to preserve a 98–96 victory.[1]

However, the Blue Devils stumbled in the next game at home against their archrival, fourth-ranked North Carolina by a score of 85–83.[2] A month later, Maryland would avenge their previous home loss to Duke when the No. 16 Terrapins defeated the No. 2 Blue Devils 91–80 on Shane Battier's Senior Night in Cameron Indoor Stadium. After center Carlos Boozer had to leave with a foot injury in that game,[3] coach Krzyzewski decided to change his game strategy, favoring a smaller, quicker lineup by having Duhon start at point guard and moving Williams over to shooting guard. His plan was successful in his next game at North Carolina, when Duke defeated the No. 4 Tar Heels 95–81 to claim a share of the regular season championship.[4] With many pundits having written Duke off after Boozer's injury, the new-look Blue Devils in fact went on to win all 6 of its following games before Boozer rejoined the team in the Sweet Sixteen of the NCAA Tournament.

Conference Tournament

Duke finished the regular season with a 26–4 record entering the ACC Tournament as a No. 2 seed. In the tournament semifinals, they met Maryland for the third time this season. In another thrilling contest, after Maryland had rallied from a 14-point, second-half deficit, the Blue Devils defeated the Terrapins 84–82 when Nate James tipped in the game-winner with 1.3 seconds left[5] to advance to the title game against North Carolina. In the third game between Duke and UNC that season, the Blue Devils emerged victorious as ACC Tournament champions by the score of 79–53[6] and received a No. 1 seed in the East Regional of the NCAA Tournament.

NCAA tournament

The Blue Devils would travel the same path they took nine years ago when they claimed their last championship in 1992, from Greensboro to Philadelphia to Minneapolis, where they met Maryland for the fourth time that season, this time in the Final Four with a berth in the championship game at stake. Finding themselves down 39–17 with 6:57 to play in the first half and down 49–38 at the half, Duke went on to stage a comeback against the Terrapins and win 95–84 to advance to the championship game. Duke's 22-point deficit and 11-point halftime deficit marked the largest comeback in Final Four history.[7]

Facing fifth-ranked Arizona led by Gilbert Arenas and Richard Jefferson and coached by Lute Olson, who had lost his wife to cancer earlier during the season, Duke was able to stave off a comeback attempt in the second half and clinch the title by a final score of 82–72. With his third national championship, coach Mike Krzyzewski tied his mentor Bob Knight for third place behind Adolph Rupp (4) and John Wooden (10). Battier was named the NCAA Basketball Tournament Most Outstanding Player.[8]

2000–01 schedule and results

Date
Time, TV
Rank# Opponent# Result Record Site (Attendance)
City, State

November 14, 2000*
9:00 PM, ESPN
No. 2 Princeton W 87–50  1–0
Cameron Indoor Stadium (9,314)
Durham, North Carolina

November 17, 2000*
7:00 PM, ESPN
No. 2 Villanova W 98–85  2–0
Cameron Indoor Stadium (9,314)
Durham, North Carolina

November 22, 2000*
9:00 PM, ESPN
No. 2 vs. Texas
Preseason NIT
W 95–69  3–0
Madison Square Garden (11,449)
New York City

November 24, 2000*
9:00 PM, ESPN
No. 2 vs. Temple
Preseason NIT
W 63–61  4–0
Madison Square Garden (12,989)
New York

November 25, 2000*
9:00 PM, HTS
No. 2 Army W 91–48  5–0
Cameron Indoor Stadium (9,314)
Durham, North Carolina

November 28, 2000*
9:00 PM, ESPN
No. 1 vs. No. 9 Illinois
ACC–Big Ten Challenge
W 78–77  6–0
Greensboro Coliseum (17,966)
Greensboro, North Carolina

December 2, 2000*
7:00 PM, ESPN
No. 1 at No. 17 Temple W 93–68  7–0
First Union Center (19,455)
Philadelphia

December 5, 2000*
7:00 PM, FSS/HTS
No. 1 Davidson W 102–60  8–0
Cameron Indoor Stadium (9,314)
Durham, North Carolina

December 9, 2000*
9:00 PM, ESPN
No. 1 Michigan W 104–61  9–0
Cameron Indoor Stadium (9,314)
Durham, North Carolina

December 19, 2000*
10:00 PM
No. 1 at Portland W 97–64  10–0
Rose Garden (15,341)
Portland, Oregon

December 21, 2000*
9:00 PM, FSN/HTS
No. 1 vs. No. 3 Stanford
Pete Newell Challenge
L 83–84  10–1
The Arena in Oakland (19,804)
Oakland, California

December 30, 2000*
1:30 PM, RJ
No. 3 North Carolina A&T W 108–73  11–1
Cameron Indoor Stadium (9,314)
Durham, North Carolina

January 4, 2001
7:00 PM, ESPN2
No. 3 at Florida State W 99–72  12–1
Tallahassee–Leon County Civic Center (4,337)
Tallahassee, Florida

January 7, 2001
1:30 PM, RJ
No. 3 Clemson W 115–74  13–1
Cameron Indoor Stadium (9,314)
Durham, North Carolina

January 10, 2001
9:00 PM, ESPN
No. 2 at North Carolina State W 84–78  14–1
Entertainment & Sports Arena (18,263)
Raleigh, North Carolina

January 13, 2001
3:30 PM, ABC
No. 2 No. 10 Virginia W 103–61  15–1
Cameron Indoor Stadium (9,314)
Durham, North Carolina

January 16, 2001*
7:30 PM, ESPN2
No. 2 No. 25 Boston College W 97–75  16–1
Cameron Indoor Stadium (9,314)
Durham, North Carolina

January 20, 2001
12:00 PM, ESPN
No. 2 at Georgia Tech W 98–77  17–1
Alexander Memorial Coliseum (10,000)
Atlanta

January 24, 2001
9:00 PM, RJ
No. 2 No. 9 Wake Forest W 85–62  18–1
Cameron Indoor Stadium (9,314)
Durham, North Carolina

January 27, 2001
8:00 PM, ESPN
No. 2 at No. 8 Maryland W 98–96 OT 19–1
Cole Field House (14,500)
College Park, Maryland

February 1, 2001
9:00 PM, ESPN2
No. 2 No. 4 North Carolina L 83–85  19–2
Cameron Indoor Stadium (9,314)
Durham, North Carolina

February 4, 2001
1:00 PM, RJ
No. 2 Florida State W 100–58  20–2
Cameron Indoor Stadium (9,314)
Durham, North Carolina

February 7, 2001
9:00 PM, ESPN
No. 3 at Clemson W 81–64  21–2
Littlejohn Coliseum (10,700)
Clemson, South Carolina

February 11, 2001
3:30 PM, ABC
No. 3 North Carolina State W 101–75  22–2
Cameron Indoor Stadium (9,314)
Durham, North Carolina

February 14, 2001
7:00 PM, ESPN
No. 3 at No. 12 Virginia L 89–91  22–3
University Hall (8,242)
Charlottesville, Virginia

February 18, 2001*
12:00 PM, CBS
No. 3 at St. John's W 91–59  23–3
Madison Square Garden (19,580)
New York

February 21, 2001
7:00 PM, ESPN
No. 4 Georgia Tech W 98–54  24–3
Cameron Indoor Stadium (9,314)
Durham, North Carolina

February 24, 2001
1:00 PM, CBS
No. 4 at No. 24 Wake Forest W 82–80  25–3
Lawrence Joel Veterans Memorial Coliseum (14,400)
Winston-Salem, North Carolina

February 27, 2001
8:00 PM, RJ
No. 2 No. 16 Maryland L 80–91  25–4
Cameron Indoor Stadium (9,314)
Durham, North Carolina

March 4, 2001
3:30 PM, ABC
No. 2 at No. 4 North Carolina W 95–81  26–4
Dean Smith Center (21,750)
Chapel Hill, North Carolina

March 9, 2001
7:00 PM, ESPN
No. 3 vs. North Carolina State
ACC Tournament Quarterfinals
W 76–61  27–4
Georgia Dome (40,083)
Atlanta

March 10, 2001
4:15 PM, ESPN
No. 3 vs. No. 11 Maryland
ACC Tournament Semifinals
W 84–82  28–4
Georgia Dome (40,083)
Atlanta

March 11, 2001
1:15 PM, ESPN
No. 3 vs. No. 6 North Carolina
ACC Tournament Finals
W 79–53  29–4
Georgia Dome (40,083)
Atlanta

March 15, 2001*
7:45 PM, CBS
No. 1 vs. Monmouth
NCAA East First Round
W 95–52  30–4
Greensboro Coliseum (18,932)
Greensboro, North Carolina

March 17, 2001*
1:15 PM, CBS
No. 1 vs. Missouri
NCAA East Second Round
W 94–81  31–4
Greensboro Coliseum (18,500)
Greensboro, North Carolina

March 22, 2001*
7:30 PM, CBS
No. 1 vs. No. 15 UCLA
NCAA East Regional Semifinal
W 76–63  32–4
First Union Center (20,270)
Philadelphia

March 24, 2001*
7:00 PM, CBS
No. 1 vs. USC
NCAA East Regional Final
W 79–69  33–4
First Union Center (20,270)
Philadelphia

March 31, 2001*
 CBS
No. 1 vs. No. 11 Maryland
NCAA National Semifinal
W 95–84  34–4
Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome (45,406)
Minneapolis

April 2, 2001*
 CBS
No. 1 vs. No. 5 Arizona
NCAA National Championship
W 82–72  35–4
Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome (45,994)
Minneapolis
*Non-conference game. #Rankings from AP Poll. (#) Tournament seedings in parentheses.

Accomplishments

References

External links

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