Duke Blue Devils Dominate Army Black Knights On Veterans Day
In a game dripping with nostalgia and historical weight, the No. 4 ranked Duke Blue Devils returned to the hallowed grounds of West Point and delivered an absolute shellacking to Army, winning 114-59. But this Veterans Day matchup was never really about the final score. It was a homecoming, a tribute, and a powerful reminder of where one of college basketball’s greatest legends got his start.
The Pregame Ceremony
The man of the hour, of course, was Mike Krzyzewski. Before the game, “Coach K,” ever the tour guide, walked his young Duke squad through the historic academy, pointing out spots that shaped him as a young cadet under the fiery tutelage of Bobby Knight. It was a full-circle moment, a pilgrimage back to the place that laid the foundation for his monumental career.
During a pregame ceremony that felt more like a family reunion than a prelude to a basketball game, Army honored its most famous alum. A banner celebrating Coach K’s staggering 1,202 wins and five national titles was unfurled in Christl Arena.
Eleven of his former Army players stood at attention, saluting the man who led them decades ago. It was a genuinely moving scene. You could see the emotion on his face as he absorbed the moment, a living legend returning to where it all began.
“Sixty years ago, when I was 18, I came here as a cadet to the best leadership school in the world. It taught me how to be a leader,” Krzyzewski said. “All the success we’ve had is really a result of the foundation and everything I learned here at the Academy.”
Duke’s Offensive Onslaught
From the jump, Duke looked like a team on a mission. The Blue Devils, who had struggled with slow starts in their previous games, came out firing on all cylinders. They opened the floodgates with a torrent of scoring that Army simply couldn’t contain.
The story of the night was the emergence of a new sharpshooting duo. Freshmen Dame Sarr and Isaiah Evans put on a clinic from beyond the arc. Sarr, in what was undoubtedly his breakout performance, dropped a career-high 19 points. Evans wasn’t far behind with 17 of his own. These two were lighting it up, and every time the ball left their hands, you just knew it was going in.
A Tale Of Two Halves For Army
Army kept it close for about four minutes. Then Duke decided the friendly part of the evening was over. The Blue Devils went on a blistering 18-6 run, quickly turning a tight contest into a laugher. By halftime, Duke had built a commanding 49-30 lead, feasting on turnovers and fast-break points.
If the first half was bad for the Black Knights, the second was a massacre. Duke opened the half with a soul-crushing 17-0 run. At one point, it felt like the scoreboard operator for Army could have taken a nap. The Blue Devils’ defense was suffocating, their offense was relentless, and the lead ballooned to an eye-watering 55 points.
This was more than just a win for Duke; it was a statement. On a night dedicated to their former coach, the current crop of Blue Devils showed that the program Krzyzewski built is still a dominant force. As for Coach K, he sat courtside, a spectator armed with a stat sheet, watching the two programs that defined his life battle it out. You have to think, under that stoic exterior, he was one proud graduate.
