Duke

Duke basketball holds on to beat Clemson, 71-69. Bench comes up big for Blue Devils

Injury and foul trouble rendered No. 9 Duke less than its best against Clemson on Tuesday night.

So the Blue Devils needed help from an unexpected place. Joey Baker provided it.

The senior reserve forward scored 11 points, including a basket in the lane with 2:16 to play that put the Blue Devils on top for good in a 71-69 ACC basketball win over Clemson at Cameron Indoor Stadium.

Baker’s late basket was part of a 6-0 Duke run that erased the 65-63 lead Clemson had built with 3:19 to play. Jeremy Roach tied the game for Duke with a jumper at 3:04 before Baker drove across the lane and sank a runner for a 67-65 Duke lead.

Paolo Banchero sank a baseline jumper with 1:28 left and Duke lead 69-65 and added a tough shot in the lane with 10 seconds to play giving Duke a 71-67 lead.

“It was winning time,” Banchero said of those two baskets.

Despite being limited to nine minutes of first-half play due to picking up two fouls, Banchero paced the Blue Devils with 19 points. Baker scored nine of his 11 points in the first half.

“We made mention of that in front of the team,” Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski said. “That’s how you win, when other people step up. A big thing tonight was Joey, Bates (Jones) and Jeremy.”

Roach scored eight points, with five of them coming in the final 4:40 of the game. He collected nine of Duke’s 18 assists.

Mark Williams, Duke’s 7-1 sophomore center had 10 points and 10 rebounds for the Blue Devils (16-3, 6-2 ACC). Wendell Moore scored 13 points for Duke.

PJ Hall paced Clemson (11-9, 3-6 ACC) with 14 points. Hunter Tyson had 13 points and Chase Hunter had 12 points for the Tigers, who missed the lone free throw they were awarded in the game.

The Blue Devils played their second game in a row without starting guard Trevor Keels, the 6-5 freshman who is out with a calf injury on his right leg. Keels was not in uniform but took a few shots during pre-game warmups, a sign he continues to progress toward a return.

Keels’ absence and Banchero’s foul trouble meant Duke had to go deeper into its bench in the first half and the Blue Devils offense was not its usual potent self most of the game.

But, Banchero led a Duke surge early in the second half as the Blue Devils moved in front. Over the first six minutes of the half, Banchero scored seven points, grabbed three rebounds and dished out an assist as the Blue Devils took a 55-48 lead.

Moore played a big role in that stretch, too, with eight points. That included a play where Banchero passed out of a triple-team across the court to a wide-open Moore, who sank a 3-pointer.

With 9:25 to play, Banchero drilled a 3-pointer from the corner right in front of the Duke bench to put the Blue Devils up 60-53.

Clemson, though, responded with five in a row on a Tyson 3-pointer and Hunter’s slam dunk in transition leaving Duke up 60-59 with 7:26 to play. After Moore left a layup short and missed a 3-pointer, Nick Honor’s 3-pointer with 6:08 to play gave the Tigers a 61-60 lead.

Clemson led by as many as five points in the first half before the teams ended the half tied at 36.

The Blue Devils hurt themselves with nine turnovers in the first half, which is why they couldn’t build a lead over the Tigers even while hitting 6 of 10 3-pointers.

With Banchero in foul trouble, Duke received strong minutes off the bench from Bates Jones. The transfer from Davidson scored five points and recorded a steal in his nine first-half minutes. Baker’s nine points, also in a reserve role, paced Duke over the first half.

This story was originally published January 25, 2022 at 9:03 PM.

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Steve Wiseman
The News & Observer
Steve Wiseman was named Raleigh News & Observer and Durham Herald-Sun sports editor in May 2025. He covered Duke athletics, beginning in 2010, prior to his current assignment. In the Associated Press Sports Editors national contest, he placed in the top 10 in beat writing in 2019, 2021 and 2022, breaking news in 2019, event coverage in 2025 and explanatory writing in 2018. Before coming to Durham in 2010, Steve worked for The State (Columbia, SC), Herald-Journal (Spartanburg, S.C.), The Sun Herald (Biloxi, Miss.), Charlotte Observer and Hickory (NC) Daily Record covering beats including the NFL’s Carolina Panthers and New Orleans Saints, University of South Carolina athletics and the S.C. General Assembly. He’s won numerous state-level press association awards. Steve graduated from Illinois State University in 1989. 
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