No. 1 Duke men's lacrosse cruises past Richmond for 2nd ranked win of season
Duke scored four goals in the first eight minutes Sunday and never looked back.
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Duke scored four goals in the first eight minutes Sunday and never looked back.
Midway through the first half, freshman Nick Pariano scored the Blue Devils’ first goal of the spring season with a breakaway snipe from the right side. His teammates jumped on him and cheers erupted from the bench as the entire team exhaled.
Joe Robertson scored his 100th career goal to complete a hat trick in the first 20 minutes of play Saturday afternoon. Then he decided that wasn’t enough, and scored four more.
Is there an absolute recipe for a perfect lacrosse team? No. But do the Blue Devils have one that makes Martha Stewart look like an amateur? Yes.
Rarely are scoreless games entertaining. But what the Blue Devils couldn’t deliver on the scoreboard Friday evening they certainly delivered in excitement.
You know the names Sowers and O’Neill, but do you know Cameron Badour and Nakeie Montgomery? If you’re keeping up with Duke men's lacrosse this season you may have to start learning more names, because this team is deep.
The views on his highlight videos, posted and reposted ad infinitum on YouTube and Instagram, routinely climb into the tens of thousands, sometimes even hundreds of thousands.
Returning every starter from a top-10 squad while adding the top recruit in the country and the top player in the country sounds like a pretty good recipe for “superteam.” And that’s not even counting the return of the team’s top scorer from 2019, who missed all of the shortened 2020 campaign with a torn ACL, as well as two other preseason All-American transfers.
Duke dominated East Carolina 72-47 Saturday afternoon, led by 24 points from Miela Goodchild. The junior guard notched more than double the number of points of the next-highest scorer on either team, sinking six 3-pointers along the way.
With the Blue Devils' 2020-21 season beginning tomorrow, five of our beat writers break down their predictions for the upcoming campaign. How do you think Duke will fare?
In 2019, six women were hired as NBA assistant coaches, doubling the total number of women to ever coach in the league’s history. Now-Duke womens’ basketball head coach Kara Lawson was one of those women when she was hired as the first female to ever coach for the Boston Celtics in June 2019.
RALEIGH, N.C.—The Blue Devils played with a vengeance after their sloppy loss to North Carolina last week, but their season-long finishing woes found them coming up short yet again.
College basketball season is approaching, and with that the Blue Zone gives you a breakdown of the 2020-2021 women's basketball squad. Be sure to check out the previous previews: Vanessa de Jesus, Uchenna Nwoke, Jiselle Havas, Sara Anastasieska, Jada Claude, Jaida Patrick, Onome Akinbode-James and Miela Goodchild.
CHAPEL HILL—In what’s become the theme of its season, Duke fought throughout but ultimately fell victim in the second half.
CHAPEL HILL—For a while it looked like an ACC tournament semifinal appearance was a realistic possibility.
Duke proved it could compete with one of the best teams in the ACC, but when all was said and done just couldn’t quite do enough to pull out the victory.
The Blue Devils looked to rebound from a disappointing double-header last weekend at Louisville.
An early set piece goal put North Carolina in the lead just three minutes in, and despite a hard-fought contest, Duke wasn’t able to recover.
After a disappointing 2019 season, Duke looked to start the 2020 campaign strong.
Through a grueling 90 minutes of regulation and 19 minutes of overtime, Duke’s home-opener remained scoreless.