Duke

Duke basketball plays up to No. 1 ranking. Observations from win at Notre Dame

Key Takeaways
Key Takeaways

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  • Duke, No. 1, routed Notre Dame 100-56 on the road.
  • Freshman Cameron Boozer had 24 points and 13 rebounds.
  • Injuries and cold shooting worsened Notre Dame’s slide and ACC tournament risk.

When you’re No. 1, in any sport, you get the other team’s best shot.

No. 1 teams know it, expect it. Duke knew it coming into its road game Tuesday against Notre Dame.

But sometimes, the other team’s best shot isn’t enough against No. 1. The Blue Devils, who took over the top spot in the AP poll on Monday, cruised to a 100-56 victory at Purcell Pavilion at the Joyce Center, handing Notre Dame its most lopsided home loss in modern program history.

For Duke, there would be no letdown or lack of focus after their hard-earned 68-63 win over Michigan, then No. 1, on Saturday in Washington, DC.

“I was really proud of our maturity and readiness coming in,” Duke coach Jon Scheyer said. “I thought it was our defense in the beginning and establishing the paint.

“We have a saying, defense travels. It starts with our defense.”

By the first media break, the Blue Devils had a 16-4 lead, sapping a lot of energy out of a packed arena filled with Irish fans wanting to take out No. 1, maybe storm the court.

But Duke made its first five shots. Everyone was touching the ball on offense, and it was apparent from the start the Irish had no one to match up or slow Cameron Boozer.

Boozer had 20 points and 9 rebounds – at halftime. By game’s end, the freshman’s numbers were 24 points, 13 rebounds and the two assists, playing about 24 minutes.

Make it another double-double, which have become routine for the big man, who was 12-of-14 at the foul line as the Irish pounded on him in the paint.

“He’s a robot,” Scheyer said, grinning. “He’s a machine, man. He’s the same way regardless of who you’re playing or what time the game is at. He has such a competitive spirit, a will to be the best, and he throws himself into winning.

“Tonight, he’s just trying to dominate. He’s not going for numbers. He’s just trying to win the game.”

It was 20-4, Duke, before the Irish finally got a 3-pointer to drop by Brady Koehler and create a few cheers. But Notre Dame missed 11 of their 13 shots from distance in the opening half while the Devils were 8-of-16 on 3’s in taking a 54-22 lead.

The Blue Devils (26-2, 14-1 ACC), who host No. 11 Virginia on Saturday, had a few sloppy turnovers and were called for several touch fouls applying their defense. It wasn’t always pretty basketball but easily winning basketball this night at snowy Notre Dame.

It’s been a tough go, a most challenging season, for Notre Dame (12-16, 3-12) and third-year coach Micah Shrewsberry. The Irish now have dropped 12 of their last 14 games, a losing streak that has them in jeopardy of missing the ACC tournament in Charlotte.

The toughest of the spate of losses was a 100-97 double-overtime thriller against Virginia at Purcell Pavilion. That one really stung, and the Irish have been playing most of the year without injured guard Markus Burton, who likely will not suit up again this season.

Jalen Haralson, a 6-7 freshman who has had a solid first season, also was out Tuesday with an injury. With their top two leading scorers – Burton 18.5 points a game and Haralson 15.5 – the Irish did not have enough offensive firepower and hurt themselves by missing free throws.

Koehler and Cole Certa each had 14 points for Notre Dame, but Braeden Shrewsberry missed all seven of his shots and did not score.

“Obviously that’s not Notre Dame’s team. They’ve had terrible injuries this year,” Scheyer said. “The guys they have are playing very hard. We knew Shrewsberry and Certa, how dangerous those guys are. And we’re all aware that’s not the team Notre Dame came into the year with.”

Scheyer was able to go to his bench often and switch things up. He also used a timeout with four seconds left in the first half – Notre Dame fans booing with the score 51-22 – to set up a play.

Caleb Foster, open on the left wing, promptly swished a 3-pointer and the Devils headed to the locker room with a 32-point lead. It was 81-41 with 10 minutes to play as Duke continued to have its way against the outmanned Irish, who did compete for 40 minutes.

Some observations from the game:

No hangover effect from Michigan

Hangover? What hangover?

Beating top-ranked Michigan was impressive and it was an intense, gritty, emotional game for both teams, both national contenders looking to prove a point.

SOUTH BEND, INDIANA - FEBRUARY 24: Patrick Ngongba #21 of the Duke Blue Devils dunks the ball during the first half against the Notre Dame Fighting Irish at Purcell Pavilion on February 24, 2026 in South Bend, Indiana. (Photo by Michael Hickey/Getty Images)
SOUTH BEND, INDIANA - FEBRUARY 24: Patrick Ngongba #21 of the Duke Blue Devils dunks the ball during the first half against the Notre Dame Fighting Irish at Purcell Pavilion on February 24, 2026 in South Bend, Indiana. (Photo by Michael Hickey/Getty Images) Michael Hickey Getty Images

But Duke has been a good team at staying on task, not looking back or ahead. It was an ACC road game to be won at Notre Dame and the Blue Devils did it methodically.

“We’re not satisfied,” Boozer said after the game. “Obviously that was a great win but we wanted to make a statement, for sure. We’re playing for something bigger and we’ve got to keep growing.

“Big win tonight, big game Saturday. But we’re taking steps in the right direction, for sure.”

The Blue Devils’ defense may not have been as sticky and stifling in the second half but the game had been decoded and the Irish loose after coming off slightly dazed in the first 10 minutes of the game.

Everyone plays, contributes

One thing about a blowout win is that everyone gets their minutes.

The Devils had gone nine deep by halftime as Scheyer liberally substituted. Guard Darren Harris, who did not see the floor against Michigan, was the ninth in the game and quickly got in on the scoring.

Harris drained a 3-pointer in the second half and lightly popped himself in the face in celebration -- a homage of sorts, he said, to the NBA’s Russell Westbrook. The 6-5 sophomore was getting a chance to play and contributing, albeit in a romp.

Later in the half, Harris made a quick move to the paint and found Foster open on the wing for a 3. Harris was one of six Duke players in double figures with 16, hitting two free throws to get Duke to 100 points.

Tough to lose Burton

Notre Dame’s Markus Burton is one of the ACC’s most dynamic players and an injury has robbed him of all but 10 games this season.

Burton had 23 points and knocked down four 3’s at Duke last season. He can carry an offense and make electrifying plays and a variety of moves and shots.

Shrewsberry said this week that just a few games left, it was probably best to keep Burton, who had ankle surgery in December, out the remainder of the season. But it had to be killing Burton to sit and watch the Blue Devils beat up the Irish on Tuesday.

Shrewsberry has called it the “season from hell” -- he had his left foot in a boot -- but he said he has enjoyed being around his players, despite the losses

“I can’t wait to get back to practice and try to win on Saturday,” he said.

Notre Dame has eight wins over teams ranked No. 1, ending UCLA’s 88-game win streak in 1974. But No. 9 will have to wait.

This story was originally published February 24, 2026 at 9:13 PM.

Chip Alexander
The News & Observer
In more than 40 years at The N&O, Chip Alexander has covered the N.C. State, UNC, Duke and East Carolina beats, and now is in his 15th season on the Carolina Hurricanes beat. Alexander, who has won numerous writing awards at the state and national level, covered the Hurricanes’ move to North Carolina in 1997 and was a part of The N&O’s coverage of the Canes’ 2006 Stanley Cup run.
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