Improved run game bodes well for Duke football's future in 2017
By Ben Leonard | September 19, 2017The Blue Devils fit the blueprint perfectly of teams that have made an instant jump out of obscurity.
The Blue Devils fit the blueprint perfectly of teams that have made an instant jump out of obscurity.
Despite putting up 34 more in a win Saturday, the offense’s performance left a bit of a sour taste behind.
Powered by Shaun Wilson’s big day on the ground, the Blue Devils ran past the Bears 34-20 in a sloppy affair.
Two teams heading in opposite directions will face off this weekend, with Duke hoping its winning trend continues for at least another week.
Baylor deserves to be left completely alone, having to build the program from the bottom up, because sexual assault has no place on the football field.
Saying that Baylor has struggled through its first two games is an understatement.
Duke knew it would need a rock-solid defense to compete with Northwestern. The Blue Devils passed the test, producing a brick wall.
Daniel Jones had a coming out party in the first test of his second year as a starter, throwing for 305 yards and running for 108 more
An experienced Northwestern team returning eight offensive starters looks poised to challenge Duke.
Northwestern has limited Duke to just 23 points combined in the last two years.
Duke and N.C. Central's matchup Saturday didn’t appear to make either squad better at football.
No matter how much the league and its affiliates attempt to sanitize its image, the NFL is becoming a hard product to enjoy.
After sitting out his first season in Durham, Brittain Brown was eager to finally show what he could do and wasted no time getting acclimated to the college game.
After preaching redemption in an attempt to rebound from last season’s 4-8 record, Duke took out some of its anger on its crosstown rival in its season opener.
For a player that arrived at Duke as a walk-on out of Charlotte Latin School, Jones has taken an unlikely path to conversations about his NFL potential.
The Blue Devils will start their quest to get back to a bowl game Saturday after failing to qualify for the postseason for the first time since 2011.
Last year, one thing was very hard for David Cutcliffe to stomach: his kicking game.
Duke's wide receivers and tight ends make up one of its deepest and most talented position groups this season.
It won't be easy for David Cutcliffe to forget the feeling of missing the postseason, because he might go through the same thing this year.
The Blue Devils cratered at the end of last season, but during that stretch, Duke showed that it is ready to return to the postseason.