Losing attitude plagues non-competitive Duke
By Jordan Koss | October 17, 2005Coming into the 2005 Duke football season, there was reason to be optimistic.
Coming into the 2005 Duke football season, there was reason to be optimistic.
CORAL GABLES, Fla.
CORAL GABLES, Fla. - In losing their first two ACC games against then-No. 7 Virginia Tech and then-No. 23 Virginia by an average of 38 points, the Blue Devils never gave up.
After Duke's loss to Navy Oct. 1, head coach Ted Roof and several defensive players were quick to point part of the blame for the defeat at the high-yardage plays the Midshipmen made on offense.
Duke not only lost to Navy Saturday, but the last-minute defeat also left four more top offensive players with injuries.
Despite giving up more than 30 points per game coming into Saturday's matchup against Navy, Duke's defense has received little criticism this season.
The life of a varsity athlete is difficult. Most of the weekend is spent on long bus rides or plane trips. Early-morning practices disrupt sleep schedules.
CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va.-Sometimes even the opening kickoff can serve as a good indication of how a football game will turn out.
CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. - In ACC play this year, the state of Virginia has been merciless to Duke.
Midway through the third quarter of Saturday's game against Virginia Military Institute, head coach Ted Roof gave Blue Devil fans a glimpse of the future of Duke football.
Saturday's game against VMI featured several season firsts for the Blue Devils: It marked the first 100-yard rushing game by a Duke running back, the first touchdown pass by a Blue Devil...
The list of two-sport collegiate athletes ranges from hall-of-fame lacrosse and football player Jim Brown to Pro Bowler Julius Peppers, who played both football and basketball at North Carolina, to...
Things were looking good for the Blue Devils at the beginning of the second half.
After the final 2004 rankings placed Duke last in total offense in Division I-A football, the Blue Devils knew some changes had to be made.
When Jim Moravchik starts Saturday against East Carolina, he will not only be sporting a new position—the fifth-year senior moved from left tackle to left guard—but also a new number, 55.
North Carolina head coach John Bunting entered the 2004 season in the hot seat, having won five games combined in the previous two seasons.
Most Duke fans will notice Boston College’s arrival to the ACC on the basketball court, but the Eagles should make an impact on the gridiron as well.
When Ralph Friedgen took the head coaching position at Maryland in 2001, he adopted a 5-6 football team which hadn’t finished in the top four of the conference in a decade.