The Commercial Appeal

Is Duke good enough to go undefeated this year?

- Scott Gleeson USA TODAY

When even five-time NCAA champion coach Mike Krzyzewski is surprised at how ridiculous­ly good his team is on opening night, it puts into perspectiv­e just how mind-blowing Duke looked in its 34-point win against Kentucky on Tuesday night

"You start four freshmen, no matter how talented they are, you never know what they're going to do in this environmen­t against an outstandin­g team and great program. And they responded," Krzyzewski told reporters after the Champions Classic in Indianapol­is. Boy did they. The Blue Devils' elite freshmen were everything as advertised – and then some. The three-headed monster of R.J. Barrett (33 points), Zion Williamson (28 points) and Cam Reddish (22 points) combined for 83 of Duke's 118 points.

But the stat sheet only tells half the story. It was how these teenagers introduced themselves to the college basketball world. Barrett, who has ample internatio­nal experience playing for Canada, got to the basket at will and used his versatilit­y and smooth lefty stroke to shred Kentucky's defense. Williamson, a dunking folk hero before Tuesday night, proved he's more than just an athletic specimen and a pretty darn complete player – poignantly evidenced with a monstrous block and then pinpoint bounce pass to Barrett.

There was no shortage of highlight reels in the dominant performanc­e, but it was really the pace of Tuesday night's game that proved to be the difference­maker. This team absolutely thrives in transition, forcing turnovers and getting out in the open court. That starts on defense, but it's also worth noting how cohesive this freshmen-laden group looks already in both half-court and full-court scenarios — on Day 1. Point guard Tre Jones dished out seven assists with no turnovers and looks to be the ideal general to glue this team together.

In the big scheme of things, though, what does one dominant night mean? Sure the Blue Devils impressed and even surpassed the preseason hype. But they drubbed a Kentucky team that's also young and still figuring it out. That said, the way No. 1 Kansas stumbled late in its Champions Classic opener against Michigan State, it begs the question of how different the outcome would've been against a team like KU with more experience and overall weaponry than Kentucky.

In reality, Duke lost virtually every relevant player from last season and played like it brought back several AllAmerica­ns. Granted, the potential top three picks in the 2019 NBA draft on one roster will wash away the Grayson Allen era pretty quickly, but at the end of the day these are still a group of youngsters playing like veterans and showing a team chemistry that usually doesn't blossom until January or February.

“I don’t think age makes much of a difference with this team,” Reddish told USA TODAY Sports ahead of the 2018-19 tip-off. “Everybody’s unselfish, and our coaching staff is going to help us (mature) fast."

Early judgments from one glimpse of a young team usually won't forecast March net-cutting, but this Duke team is the exception. Seriously. Of all the teams that have wowed us in the past decade of the one-and-done era (John Calipari's nearly-undefeated 2014-15 Kentucky team among them), this Duke squad has a different anatomy.

With Barrett, Williamson and Barrett all around 6-7 and multidimen­sional, the Blue Devils can play a unique brand of position-less basketball, posing nightmaris­h matchup problems against any opponent. This group showed some weaknesses against Kentucky, letting its foot off the gas at points and getting into foul trouble. But not even a lack of overall depth or size (UK had plenty more Tuesday) can take away the fact that Duke has three – and maybe four players – who Coach K can give the ball to at the end of the game in crunch-time situations. The preseason prospectus pinned this team at No. 3 in the coaches poll and No. 4 in the Associated Press poll. Suffice it to say Duke was underrated before.

 ??  ?? Duke forward Zion Williamson (1) walks off the floor to the locker room after the game against the Kentucky Wildcats. BRIAN SPURLOCK/USA TODAY SPORTS
Duke forward Zion Williamson (1) walks off the floor to the locker room after the game against the Kentucky Wildcats. BRIAN SPURLOCK/USA TODAY SPORTS

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