Duke’s No. 1 Pick History
Alright, letโs break this down Duke style. No stiff, Wikipedia-level nonsense. Weโre talking about Duke Blue Devils who were drafted No. 1 overall in the NBA Draft. And yeah, Cooper Flagg just joined the party, so letโs get into it. Get comfy, this is basketball royalty.
Art Heyman (1963)
Dukeโs OG #1. Picture this. The early โ60s, short shorts, no three-point line. Heyman was a straight-up bucket. He dropped 25 a night, grabbed nearly 11 boards, and dragged Duke to its first Final Four. He gets picked by the Knicks, goes All-Rookie, then, well, stuff happens (letโs call it โhis hot-headed tendencies. The 60s Boogie Cousins plus injuries). He flamed out of the NBA fast and bounced around the old ABA but at Duke? Heโs still a legend. The original.
Elton Brand (1999)
“Big E.” Two years at Duke, almost 17 and 9 a game, an All-American, and a Final Four. He was a beat. The Bulls, fresh off the whole Michael Jordan hangover, snatched him at No. 1 in a stacked draft (seriously, All-Stars everywhere). Brand put in the work. He was Co-Rookie of the Year, a two-time All-Star, and for a minute, he even made the Clippers relevant. Injuries slowed him down, but he was a problem in the paint for a solid 15 years. Not bad, Elton. Not bad at all.
Kyrie Irving (2011)
Kyrieโs Duke career? More like a cameo with just 11 games (thanks, foot injury). Still, he balled out averaging 17.5 points and showed off his crazy handles, and total floor general vibes. The Cavs needed a savior post-LeBron, so they drafted him. He was the Rookie of the Year, has nine All-Star nods, and oh yeah that shot in 2016. You know the one. The guyโs a walking highlight reel (and, letโs face it, a walking headline), but you canโt deny the talent. Straight wizard with the rock.
Zion Williamson (2019)
The human cheat code. Zion at Duke was like watching a video game. Dunks, blocks, windmills. Everything. He averaged 22 and 9 a game at Duke, was the National Player of the Year, and an ACC champ. The Pelicans had no choice, he was the obvious top pick. Since then? When heโs healthy, heโs a monster. He is an All-Star, All-NBA caliber, and puts up mid-20s in points like itโs nothing… when healthy. The only thing stopping Zionโฆ is, well, Zion. Still, if he stays on the court, heโs a superstar.
Paolo Banchero (2022)
This guyโs smooth. He averaged 17 and 8 in college and carried the Blue Devils to the Final Four. Orlando took him No. 1. He won Rookie of the Year, became an All-Star, and looks like the Magicโs new face. Heโs got that modern big-man swag. He can shoot, pass, and score from anywhere. As of 2025, heโs dropping 20+ a night and looking like a problem for years. Orlando’s franchise player.
Cooper Flagg (2025)
The new kid on the block. Flagg showed up at Duke with all the hype. Like, โfuture of basketballโ hype. Heโs got size (6โ9โ), freaky athleticism, and can do anything on the court. Everyone saw him going No. 1 before he even played a college game. He did not disappoint. As the 2025 top pick, heโs bringing that Duke swagger to the league, and expectations are sky-high. Weโll see, but the dudeโs got โsuperstarโ written all over him.
Duke vs. the Field:
So, howโs Duke stack up? Five No. 1 picks before Flagg, now six. Kentucky and UNC are always in the mix, but Dukeโs got the edge for sheer star power and NBA-ready dudes. Just look at the names. Legacy? Oh, itโs real. Blue Devils arenโt a college powerhouse only, they are an NBA pipeline. That pipeline is still wide open.
