GREENSBORO, N.C. -- The talk of the Atlantic Coast Conference's basketball media day Sunday was the trouble a player could get into if he talked too much.
Or said the wrong thing, or gestured the wrong way, or celebrated excessively, or did anything else that might be considered "unsporting behavior,'' according to a new zero-tolerance policy approved for this season by the NCAA.
Many of the players and coaches gathered at Greensboro's Grandover Resort bluntly said they either did not like the change, didn't understand why it was necessary, or both. The biggest issue: there is too much room left for the wrong interpretation.
BOSTON -- He looks like a chew toy, or something out of a puppet show. His dreads flop over a headband that would stand out more prominently if not for a midsection best described as doughy. His name is Levance Fields, and sometimes, he'll drive you to exasperation with reckless dribbling into traffic and corkscrew jumpshots heaved for no apparent purpose or reason.
BOSTON -- He looks like a chew toy, or something out of a puppet show. His dreads flop over a headband that would stand out more prominently if not for a midsection best described as doughy. His name is Levance Fields, and sometimes, he'll drive you to exasperation with reckless dribbling into traffic and corkscrew jumpshots heaved for no apparent purpose or reason.
We've covered -- rather extensively, actually -- the level to which Clemson embarrassed Duke Wednesday night in Littlejohn Coliseum. But still, nothing really sums it up the game quite like Trevor Booker's monster dunk on both Kyle Singler and Brian Zoubek. Enjoy.
Headlining: It's obvious, right? Duke tops both polls for the first time since the end of the 2005-06 regular season and we're all depressed ecstatic! I want to say that it's hard to like this Blue Devil team, but when is it easy to like Duke? (Answer: When you're a Duke fan. Or when the Blue Devils are playing Carolina.) That being said, the 2008-09 incarnation isn't nearly as hate-able as previous teams.
Despite Georgetown outshooting Duke from the floor (in terms of percentages anyway), Duke's defense managed to stifle the Hoyas just enough for Gerald Henderson's 23 points and Kyle Singler's double-double to be the difference in a top-15, Saturday afternoon matchup that resulted in a 76-67 Blue Devil win.
The box score doesn't necessarily indicate that Duke's defense was draped all over the Hoyas, but if you watched the game, you realize they were; particularly late in the first half -- and early in the second -- where Georgetown failed to score for over 8.5 minutes at one point.
A run by Georgetown brought them back within striking distance, but a pivotal technical foul on freshman Greg Monroe -- a highly contested recruit whose decision came down to spurning Mike Krzyzewski for the Hoyas -- gave Duke enough momentum to surge back to a large lead and finish off the game.
If you turned on the Duke-Purdue game last night in the second half, you probably saw a familiar situation. Greg Paulus was running the point, getting the ball to Kyle Singler and Jon Scheyer, the team's playmakers. When he wasn't doing that, Paulus was knocking down some jumpers, and finished with a respectable seven points in 22 minutes.
What you didn't catch is Paulus holding down the bench as the starters took the Mackey Arena floor to start the game. Sophomore Nolan Smith has taken the reigns at point guard for Mike Krzyzewski while Paulus, the face of Duke basketball, and a three-year starter, is coming off the bench to contribute.
If you don't know Paulus' story you don't really know what a freak this guy was. A high school product out of Syracuse, N.Y., Paulus was a star athlete in both basketball and football -- and when I say star, I mean, like, four stars. He was a specimen, a quarterback that could have picked just about any big-time football program over Duke basketball and been throwing passes before anyone realized what he'd done.
The Duke Blue Devils are champions of the 2008 2K Sports Coaches vs Cancer Classic. They beat Michigan, 71-56, to seal the deal.
The two will meet again in two weeks at Michigan.
It was a productive trip to New York for Duke. The defense was suffocating this week and sophomore point guard Nolan Smith has started to come into his own. Kyle Singler and Gerald Henderson are also turning into the stars we all thought they'd be.
This is all coming after the Blue Devils were nearly beaten at home by Rhode Island last Sunday. In that game, Duke gave up 54.7% shooting to the Rams and missed on 13 of 17 shots from behind the arc. Duke went on an 18-8 run to end the game and eek out a victory.
It still is sad that Duke wasn't able to play UCLA tonight to see how far along the Devils really are. We may find out in a couple of weeks when they head to Purdue to take on the Boilermakers.
This week, FanHouse is taking an early look at the top teams heading into 2008 with a BlogPoll decided on by our college hoops bloggers. To help with the team capsules, we've brought in some of the top fan bloggers around the internets to give us insights on their teams.
Today, we have enlisted JD King of Duke Basketball Report to break down the Duke Blue Devils.
There has been a perception the last couple of years that Duke is off. If so, that's over. This Duke team is going to be very good.
The only player not back on last year's size-challenged team is DeMarcus Nelson. And Duke has added freshmen Miles Plumlee (6'11) and Olek Czyz (6'8) to returnees Brian Zoubek (7'1") and Lance Thomas (6'8") to the inside rotation. Zoubek is healthier than he has been in some time and Taylor is markedly improved and much stronger than he was last year.
Czyz will play less than the other three, but no matter how you cut it, this frees up 6'8" Kyle Singler to play anywhere he's useful on the court.