Duke women's basketball uses its size to create a matchup nightmare
By Brian Pollack | March 24, 2014With two All-American caliber guards out of commission due to injury, the Blue Devils had no choice but to pound the post.
With two All-American caliber guards out of commission due to injury, the Blue Devils had no choice but to pound the post.
Ka’lia Johnson started the season as Duke’s sixth guard in the rotation. Come NCAA tournament time, she found herself in a pivotal role.
Duke’s new-look defense will be put to the test Monday in its final home game of the season.
You cannot teach height and you cannot teach length, but the Blue Devils are lucky enough to have plenty of both.
There is no place like home. Especially in the postseason.
After the men’s team suffered a shocking upset in their first NCAA tournament game, Duke's women’s squad will look to avoid a similar early exit.
Exiting the NCAA tournament for the second time in the past three seasons, this year Duke did so as one, cohesive team.
Duke head coach Mike Krzyzewski visited Mercer's locker room after his teams was upset in its NCAA tournament opener.
Live by the three, die by the three. By that logic, the Blue Devils should have had no problem Friday afternoon. Mercer had other ideas.
Duke is embroiled in a close one in Raleigh against the No. 14 seed Mercer Bears.
In its first NCAA tournament game of the season, Duke will need to crash the glass, avoid looking ahead and slow down Langston Hall.
Rasheed Sulaimon needs a bounce-back game after struggling against Virginia for Duke to play to its potential Friday.
The road to Dallas and the Final Four runs 1,180 miles from Cameron Indoor Stadium. The Blue Devils only have to travel 21 for the first leg.
Monday through Thursday this week, The Blue Zone will be breaking down each region in this year's NCAA Tournament. Today we finish with the Midwest.
A Blue Devil tribute to the most ridiculous Buzzfeed quizzes on the internet.
According to recent NCAA champion precedent, a title run isn’t in the cards for Duke: Its defense isn’t good enough.
Duke has as much talent as any team in the NCAA tournament, but that matters little if those talented players can't stay on the court.
Rasheed Sulaimon's sophomore season has been nothing short of a roller coaster.
Jabari Parker came to Duke because he wanted to be part of a culture where basketball was celebrated.
A closer look at the Tennessee Volunteers' prospects for the 2014 NCAA tournament