March 22, 2008
Playing within, against the Duke mystique
Advertiser

WASHINGTON - Maybe it's just a crossed wire in this brain.

But I'll bet many of you have the same wiring problem.

We can't think about Duke's basketball team without hearing Dick Vitale's voice.

They aren't the Blue Devils. They're the DOOKIES, BABY!

And at 2:10 p.m. today, they are West Virginia University's NCAA tournament second-round opponent at the Verizon Center.

It's a fascinating matchup because the Mountaineers are facing not only the 28-5 Blue Devils, but also the Duke mystique that's been burned into our brain by Vitale and the rest of our country's great hype producers.

There are the Cameron Crazies. There's coach Mike Krzyzewski, who will also guide our Olympians. There are the many marquee players who have played for the school.

This season, senior guard DeMarcus Nelson was Duke's All-Atlantic Coast Conference first-team pick. There's also scrappy Greg Paulus.

But the blue-blood tradition runs deep. It includes national players of the year like Elton Brand, Shane Battier, Jason Williams and J.J. Redick.

There's Johnny Dawkins and Bobby Hurley. There's Carlos Boozer and even now-analyst Jay Bilas. There's Mike Gminski and everybody's favorite spoiled Duke poster boy, Christian Laettner.

It's never ending.

Krzyzewski has the most NCAA tournament victories (69) in Division I history. That's more than North Carolina's Dean Smith. More than UCLA's John Wooden.

Entering its game with West Virginia, Duke is ranked ninth in the polls. But the school has been ranked No. 1 a total of 79 weeks since 1990, 39 more weeks than the next closest school (North Carolina).

The Blue Devils have been the tournament's No. 2 seed seven times - and went to the Final Four in four of those tournaments.

Which elicits two questions. First: What's it like to be in the midst of Dukedom?

"It's pretty special to be part of it,'' Paulus said Friday. "When I was looking for a school, I wanted to be a part of the tradition and get a chance to play for Coach, which is unbelievable in itself.''

"It's challenging because every time we play, the other team gives us its best game,'' said sophomore guard Gerald Henderson. "The [opposing team] is very loose. It has nothing to lose.

"The other team plays us hard, no matter how good or bad it's been playing before it plays us. But we welcome that challenge.''

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