1991–92 Duke Blue Devils men's basketball team

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1991–92 Duke Blue Devils men's basketball
National Champions,
ACC Tournament Champions,
ACC Regular Season Champions
NCAA National Championship Game
vs. Michigan, W, 71–51
Conference Atlantic Coast Conference
Ranking
Coaches #1
AP #1
1991–92 record 34–2 (12–2 ACC)
Head coach Mike Krzyzewski
Assistant coach Mike Brey
Assistant coach Tommy Amaker
Assistant coach Jay Bilas
Home arena Cameron Indoor Stadium
Seasons
« 1990–91 1992–93 »
1991–92 ACC men's basketball standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   PCT     W   L   PCT
#1 Duke 14 2   .875     34 2   .944
#20 Florida State 11 5   .688     22 10   .688
#18 North Carolina 9 7   .563     23 10   .697
Georgia Tech 8 8   .500     23 12   .657
Virginia 8 8   .500     20 13   .606
Wake Forest 7 9   .438     17 12   .586
NC State 6 10   .375     12 18   .400
Maryland 5 11   .313     14 15   .483
Clemson 4 12   .250     14 14   .500
ACC Tournament winner
Rankings from AP Poll



The 1991–92 Duke Blue Devils men's basketball team was a Division I college basketball team that competed in the Atlantic Coast Conference. Led by All-American Christian Laettner and Grant Hill, Duke won its 2nd national championship in as many years to become the first repeating team since UCLA's seven-year dynasty from 1967 to 1973. Although the 1995 Arkansas and 1997 Kentucky teams would come close to successfully defending their national titles, Duke's feat would not be accomplished again in college basketball for another 15 years until the Florida Gators did it in 2007.

Roster

Note: Flags indicate national team eligibility at FIBA sanctioned events. Players may hold other non-FIBA nationality not displayed.

No. Position Player
3 United States G Marty Clark
4 United States G Kenny Blakeney
5 United States G Ron Burt
11 United States G Bobby Hurley
12 United States F/G Thomas Hill
21 United States F Antonio Lang
No. Position Player
23 United States G/F Brian Davis
32 United States F/C Christian Laettner
33 United States F/G Grant Hill
44 United States F/C Cherokee Parks
52 United States C Erik Meek
54 United States F Christian Ast


Expectations

The Blue Devils started the season as the defending National Champions, and were looking to repeat as National Champions for the first time since UCLA did it in 1973. Losing only Greg Koubek to graduation, Duke retained its core players including Laettner, Bobby Hurley, and Grant Hill and was able to add recruits Cherokee Parks and Erik Meek to its lineup.

Regular season

The Blue Devils started the season ranked No. 1 and won its first 17 games. Their unbeaten streak came to an end when they lost a close contest to North Carolina in the Dean Dome by a score of 75–73. However, Duke would only lose another game (to Wake Forest 72–68) for the rest of the season and finished the season with a 25–2 record and the 10th regular-season championship in school history.

Conference Tournament

Duke entered the ACC Tournament as the No. 1 seed. They defeated North Carolina in the ACC title game 94–74 to capture their 9th ACC Tournament Championship in school history. As a result, the Blue Devils received a No. 1 seed in the East Regional of the NCAA Tournament.

NCAA tournament

The Blue Devils had little trouble progressing through the first three rounds, but faced the toughest test of the season in the East Regional Final against sixth-ranked and No. 2 seed Kentucky coached by Rick Pitino. In perhaps the greatest college basketball game in history, Christian Laettner hit a buzzer-beating turnaround jumper on a long inbounds pass from Grant Hill, and Duke got a 104–103 overtime win over Kentucky to earn its fifth straight Final Four appearance. Laettner scored 32 points in that game, making all 10 of his field goal attempts (including 2 three-pointers) and all 10 of his free throws.

After defeating an Indiana team led by Calbert Cheaney, Duke reached the title game for the third consecutive time to face off against Michigan's Fab Five, led by freshmen Chris Webber, Jalen Rose, Juwan Howard, Jimmy King and Ray Jackson. The Blue Devils ended the Fab Five's dream run in a 71–51 contest to become the first team since UCLA 19 years ago to repeat as National Champions. Bobby Hurley was named NCAA Basketball Tournament Most Outstanding Player.

Schedule

Date
Time, TV
Rank# Opponent# Result Record Site (Attendance)
City, State
November 25, 1991*
7:30 PM
#1 East Carolina W 103–75  1–0
Cameron Indoor Stadium (9,314)
Durham, NC
November 30, 1991*
7:30 PM
#1 Harvard W 118–65  2–0
Cameron Indoor Stadium (9,314)
Durham, NC
December 5, 1991*
9:00 PM
#1 vs. #7 St. John's
ACC/Big East Challenge
W 91–81  3–0
Greensboro Coliseum (15,781)
Greensboro, NC
December 7, 1991*
7:30 PM
#1 vs. Canisius W 96–60  4–0
Buffalo Memorial Auditorium (16,729)
Buffalo, NY
December 14, 1991*
3:45 PM
#1 at #18 Michigan W 88–85 OT 5–0
Crisler Arena (13,609)
Ann Arbor, MI
December 31, 1991*
7:30 PM
#1 William & Mary W 97–61  6–0
Cameron Indoor Stadium (9,314)
Durham, NC
January 2, 1992
7:30 PM
#1 at Virginia W 68–62  7–0
University Hall (8,864)
Charlottesville, VA
January 6, 1992
7:30 PM
#1 Florida State W 86–70  8–0
Cameron Indoor Stadium (9,314)
Durham, NC
January 8, 1992
9:00 PM
#1 at Maryland W 83–66  9–0
Cole Field House (14,500)
College Park, MD
January 11, 1992
1:30 PM
#1 #14 Georgia Tech W 97–84  10–0
Cameron Indoor Stadium (9,314)
Durham, NC
January 15, 1992
9:00 PM
#1 NC State W 110–75  11–0
Cameron Indoor Stadium (9,314)
Durham, NC
January 18, 1992*
5:00 PM
#1 Charlotte W 104–82  12–0
Cameron Indoor Stadium (9,314)
Durham, NC
January 21, 1992*
7:30 PM
#1 at Boston University W 95–85  13–0
Walter Brown Arena (4,108)
Boston, MA
January 25, 1992
2:00 PM
#1 Wake Forest W 84–68  14–0
Cameron Indoor Stadium (9,314)
Durham, NC
January 27, 1992
9:00 PM
#1 Clemson W 112–73  15–0
Cameron Indoor Stadium (9,314)
Durham, NC
January 30, 1992
7:30 PM
#1 at #23 Florida State W 75–62  16–0
Tallahassee-Leon County Civic Center (13,610)
Tallahassee, FL
February 1, 1992*
4:00 PM
#1 Notre Dame W 100–71  17–0
Cameron Indoor Stadium (9,314)
Durham, NC
February 5, 1992
9:00 PM
#1 at #9 North Carolina L 73–75  17–1
Dean Smith Center (21,572)
Chapel Hill, NC
February 8, 1992*
2:00 PM
#1 at #22 LSU W 77–67  18–1
Pete Maravich Assembly Center (13,846)
Baton Rouge, LA
February 12, 1992
9:00 PM
#1 at Georgia Tech W 71–62  19–1
Alexander Memorial Coliseum (10,026)
Atlanta, GA
February 16, 1992
1:30 PM
#1 at North Carolina State W 71–63  20–1
Reynolds Coliseum (12,400)
Raleigh, NC
February 20, 1992
8:00 PM
#1 Maryland W 91–89  21–1
Cameron Indoor Stadium (9,314)
Durham, NC
February 23, 1992
2:00 PM
#1 at Wake Forest L 68–72  21–2
Lawrence Joel Veterans Memorial Coliseum (14,673)
Winston-Salem, NC
February 26, 1992
9:00 PM
#1 Virginia W 76–67  22–2
Cameron Indoor Stadium (9,314)
Durham, NC
March 1, 1992*
1:00 PM
#1 at #4 UCLA W 75–65  23–2
Pauley Pavilion (13,023)
Los Angeles, CA
March 4, 1992
#1 at Clemson W 98–97  24–2
Littlejohn Coliseum (11,500)
Clemson, SC
March 8, 1992
#1 #16 North Carolina W 89–77  25–2
Cameron Indoor Stadium (9,314)
Durham, NC
March 13, 1992
#1 vs. Maryland
ACC Tournament Quarterfinals
W 94–87  26–2
Charlotte Coliseum (23,532)
Charlotte, NC
March 14, 1992
#1 vs. Georgia Tech
ACC Tournament Semifinals
W 89–76  27–2
Charlotte Coliseum (23,532)
Charlotte, NC
March 15, 1992
#1 vs. #20 North Carolina
ACC Tournament Finals
W 94–74  28–2
Charlotte Coliseum (23,532)
Charlotte, NC
March 19, 1992*
 CBS
#1 vs. Campbell
NCAA East First Round
W 82–56  29–2
Greensboro Coliseum (15,800)
Greensboro, NC
March 21, 1992*
 CBS
#1 vs. Iowa
NCAA East Second Round
W 75–62  30–2
Greensboro Coliseum (15,800)
Greensboro, NC
March 26, 1992*
 CBS
#1 vs. #19 Seton Hall
NCAA East Regional Semifinal
W 81–69  31–2
The Spectrum (17,878)
Philadelphia, PA
March 28, 1992*
 CBS
#1 vs. #6 Kentucky
NCAA East Regional Final
W 104–103 OT 32–2
The Spectrum (17,878)
Philadelphia, PA
April 4, 1992*
 CBS
#1 vs. #5 Indiana
NCAA National Semifinal
W 81–78  33–2
Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome (50,379)
Minneapolis, MN
April 6, 1992*
 CBS
#1 vs. #15 Michigan
NCAA National Championship
W 71–51  34–2
Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome (50,379)
Minneapolis, MN
*Non-conference game. #Rankings from Coaches' Poll. (#) Tournament seedings in parentheses.

Accomplishments

  • 2nd straight national championship (1991–1992)
  • 3rd straight appearance in national championship game (1990–1992)
  • 5th straight appearance in Final Four (1988–1992)
  • Held AP No. 1 ranking from start to finish throughout season (18 polls)
  • Christian Laettner received several Player of the Year accolades in 1992:
  • Christian Laettner was a unanimous First Team All-American selection.[1]
  • Christian Laettner became the only player to start in four consecutive Final Fours. He also played in a record-setting 23 games in the NCAA Tournament. (To break this record, one would have to play in four consecutive championship games.)
  • Four players received All-ACC honors:
    • Christian Laettner (1st Team)
    • Grant Hill, Bobby Hurley (2nd Team)
    • Thomas Hill (3rd Team)
  • Three players from the 1992 squad (Laettner, Hurley, and Grant Hill) had their jerseys retired by Duke.
  • Mike Krzyzewski was named the Naismith College Coach of the Year

References

External links