Paulus Works Out For Packers
UPDATE, 8 p.m. TUESDAY:
Use the fields below to perform an advanced search of The Chronicle's archives. This will return articles, images, and multimedia relevant to your query. You can also try a Basic search
846 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
UPDATE, 8 p.m. TUESDAY:
For more of Sam Sheft's photos from Duke's win over No. 1 Virginia, check out a photo slideshow by following this link.
North Carolina isn't a state that's traditionally known for its football talent. So why focus on recruiting North Carolina when you could turn your attention to Georgia, Florida or Texas?
The Chronicle's Sports Blog's third part of a three-part video series recapping Duke's 2008-2009 basketball season. This segment deals with what to expect from next year's Blue Devils—which, of course, can change with the decisions of John Wall and Gerald Henderson.
As one of the Blue Devils’ top talent hawks, Duke wide receivers coach Scottie Montgomery rarely gets a break from life on the recruiting trail. But the tireless drive and efforts of the 31-year old have paid off. The lone holdover from former head coach Ted Roof’s staff to be retained by David Cutcliffe after he took over in December 2007, Montgomery has played a crucial role in a string of recent recruiting successes.
Seth Curry's transfer to Duke is finally official.
Besides training with the Tar Heels during his campaign, President Barack Obama had another reason to root for North Carolina Monday night: He picked them to win The First Bracket. And when the Tar Heels did make POTUS look like a seer—or someone with about as much common sense as many others—Obama repaid the favor, calling Roy Williams from aboard Air Force One Tuesday night.
The first part of our three-part series on building a football program at Duke deals with David Cutcliffe's recent focus on in-state recruiting. Here's the one statistic you should care about, even if you don't read the story:
The Chronicle's Sports Blog's second part of a three-part video series recapping Duke's 2008-2009 basketball season. This segment deals with what went wrong in the Blue Devils' season and why they were eliminated before the Final Four for the fifth straight year.
The Chronicle's Sports Blog's first part of a three-part video series recapping Duke's 2008-2009 basketball season. The first part touches on the highlights of the Blue Devils' season, including the emergence of Gerald Henderson and an ACC Tournament title.
In deciding whether to declare early for the NBA Draft, Gerald Henderson already has a chorus of advisers. Now, the junior has another choir urging him to stay at Duke for another year: his classmates.
For the second straight season, Duke will open its home slate under the lights.
If Gerald Henderson decides to leave Duke early for the NBA Draft, he will at least go out with All-American recognition.
For months, Duke had been in the John Wall sweepstakes, even though Mike Krzyzewski had never formally offered the nation's top-ranked point guard from Raleigh.
When Seth announced his intention to transfer, did you know he wanted to come to Duke?
Just three days after losing in the NCAA Tournament, Duke is already beginning to reload not only for next year, but also for the 2010-11 season.
Mike Krzyzewski, in his underwear, in a national commercial for Guitar Hero.
After his team's season ended in the NCAA Tournament Thursday, Mike Krzyzewski conceded that the Blue Devils needed a point guard, in addition to a post player.
Earlier today, we brought you The Chronicle's prediction for tonight's Sweet 16 game between Duke and Villanova. And although our call is certain to be right—or at least Tim Britton's will be, whenever he gets hooked up to the Internet in Boston to provide us with his sage wisdom—we're more than willing to offer a few more predictions from around the Web.
On Wednesday, The Chronicle received its advance copy of "The Gold Standard: Building a World-Class Team," Mike Krzyzewski's forthcoming memoir about coaching Team USA to an Olympic gold medal in Beijing. We'll have a full review up in a few days, but before then, we'll try to post a few pertinent excerpts.