Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Duke’s Allen not worried about ‘redemption story’

- By Joedy McCreary

DURHAM, N.C. » Grayson Allen came back to Duke to win again — not necessaril­y to clear his name.

A series of tripping incidents had fans and enemies scrutinizi­ng every move the polarizing guard made and led to the embarrassi­ng loss of his team captaincy a year ago.

But instead of bolting early to the NBA, like many of his teammates, Allen returned for his senior season while reclaiming his position as a team captain.

Allen insisted Tuesday that he’s “not worried about any type of redemption story or anything like that.”

Consider it the final chapter of a complicate­d four-year character arc that spans from ebullient freshman to lightning rod to something of an elder statesman.

His wide-spanning reservoir of experience is a key reason why Allen earlier this week was announced as a team captain once again after losing the job last year.

“He deserves the opportunit­y to lead,” Hall of Fame coach Mike Krzyzewski said. “And a lot of times, the best leader is the one that’s gone through the most experience­s because they can have empathy for highs and mediums and lows.”

Allen had plenty of them during the past couple of seasons, and the most significan­t of those was ultimately his responsibi­lity — his tripping of an Elon player during a December game in Greensboro that earned him an indefinite suspension that turned out to be for one game . He tripped two other opponents during the previous season, earning a flagrant foul for one of them and a reprimand from the Atlantic Coast Conference for the other.

He vowed it won’t happen again because “my focus this year is going to be on the team.

“That’s what I have to do as the leader,” he added. “What I’ve learned is ... I can’t focus on the one-onone stuff with someone on that team. If I get angry, I’ve got to turn that to my team. ... Not an individual battle that’s, in the end, meaningles­s to the whole game. That’s where I’ve grown, and that’s what I’m learning to do this year.”

Those incidents made Allen even more polarizing than the average Duke basketball player generally is.

With seemingly every game after that, fans on social media analyzed video and screengrab­s of Allen, trying to discern whether there was any malice in any of his encounters with opposing players. The frenzy reached a point that a Florida State assistant felt obligated to log onto Twitter to absolve Allen of any wrongdoing after the Duke guard collided with him on the bench.

He finished last season with a scoring average of 14.5 points — down significan­tly from his 21.6-point average in 2015-16 — and with most of his other stats down from his sophomore season as well, his NBA draft stock no doubt took a huge hit.

Still, he easily could have followed his teammates out the Cameron Indoor Stadium door and tried to make it in the pros — where the criticism would at least come with a paycheck. Instead, he willingly chose to come back for another dose of it.

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