2004–05 Duke Blue Devils men's basketball team

The 2004–05 Duke Blue Devils men's basketball team represented Duke University during the 2004-05 men's college basketball season. Mike Krzyzewski had turned down a $40 million offer in the offseason to become the head coach of the Los Angeles Lakers to return for his 25th season and rebuild a team that lost Chris Duhon to graduation, Luol Deng to the pros and recruit Shaun Livingston altogether for the NBA Draft. For the first time in five years, Duke was not picked to win the ACC.[1]

2004–05 Duke Blue Devils men's basketball
ACC Tournament champions
NCAA Tournament, Sweet Sixteen
ConferenceAtlantic Coast Conference
Ranking
CoachesNo. 7
APNo. 3
2004–05 record276 (115 ACC)
Head coachMike Krzyzewski (25th season)
Home arenaCameron Indoor Stadium
2004–05 ACC men's basketball standings
Conf  Overall
TeamW L PCT  W L PCT
No. 2 North Carolina142 .875  334  .892
No. 5 Wake Forest133 .813  276  .818
No. 3 Duke115 .688  276  .818
Virginia Tech88 .500  1614  .533
No. 25 Georgia Tech88 .500  2012  .625
Miami (FL)79 .438  1613  .552
NC State79 .438  2114  .600
Maryland79 .438  1913  .594
Clemson511 .313  1616  .500
Florida State412 .250  1415  .483
Virginia412 .250  1415  .483
2005 ACC Tournament winner
Rankings from AP Poll

Roster

Name Number Position Height Weight Year Hometown
Patrick Davidson 41 G 6–1 190 Sophomore Melbourne, Arkansas
Sean Dockery 15 G 6–2 185 Junior Chicago, Illinois
Daniel Ewing 5 G 6–3 185 Senior Houston, Texas
Patrick Johnson 51 C 6–9 250 Senior Atlanta, Georgia
Reggie Love 30 F 6–4 225 Senior Charlotte, North Carolina
David McClure 14 F 6–6 215 Freshman Ridgefield, Connecticut
Lee Melchionni 13 F 6–6 205 Junior Lancaster, Pennsylvania
DeMarcus Nelson 21 G 6–4 200 Freshman Elk Grove, California
Tom Novick 50 F 6–6 190 Sophomore Charlotte, North Carolina
Joe Pagliuca 45 G 6–2 185 Sophomore Weston, Massachusetts
Ross Perkins 40 G 6–4 200 Junior Greensboro, North Carolina
Shavlik Randolph 42 F 6–10 240 Junior Raleigh, North Carolina
JJ Redick 4 G 6–4 190 Junior Roanoke, Virginia
Shelden Williams 23 F 6–9 250 Junior Forest Park, Oklahoma

Schedule

Date
time, TV
Rank# Opponent# Result Record Site (attendance)
city, state
Exhibition
November 5
St. Francis/Xavier (Canada) W 10756 
Cameron Indoor Stadium 
Durham, NC
November 11
North Carolina Central W 9558 
Cameron Indoor Stadium 
Durham, NC
Regular season
November 20*
No. 11 UT Martin W 8846  1–0
Cameron Indoor Stadium 
Durham, NC
November 22*
No. 11 vs. Davidson W 7461  2–0
Charlotte Coliseum 
Charlotte, NC
November 27*
No. 9 UNC Greensboro W 9844  3–0
Cameron Indoor Stadium 
Durham, NC
November 30*
No. 10 No. 11 Michigan State
ACC–Big Ten Challenge
W 8174  4–0
Cameron Indoor Stadium 
Durham, NC
December 4*
No. 10 vs. Valparaiso W 9361  5–0
United Center 
Chicago, IL
December 12*
No. 9 Toledo W 8254  6–0
Cameron Indoor Stadium 
Durham, NC
December 14*
No. 7 UIC W 8855  7–0
Cameron Indoor Stadium 
Durham, NC
December 18*
5:00 p.m.
No. 7 vs. Oklahoma
Dreyfus Classic
W 7867  8–0
Madison Square Garden 
New York, NY
January 2
No. 6 Clemson W 6254  9–0
(1–0)
Cameron Indoor Stadium 
Durham, NC
January 5*
No. 5 Princeton W 5946  10–0
Cameron Indoor Stadium 
Durham, NC
January 8*
No. 5 Temple W 8274  11–0
Cameron Indoor Stadium 
Durham, NC
January 13
No. 5 at NC State W 8674  12–0
(2–0)
RBC Center 
Raleigh, NC
January 16
No. 5 Virginia W 8066  13–0
(3–0)
Cameron Indoor Stadium 
Durham, NC
January 19
No. 4 at Miami W 9283  14–0
(4–0)
BankUnited Center 
Coral Gables, FL
January 22
No. 4 at Florida State W 8856  15–0
(5–0)
Donald L. Tucker Center 
Tallahassee, FL
January 26
No. 2 Maryland L 6675  15–1
(5–1)
Cameron Indoor Stadium 
Durham, NC
January 30
No. 2 Virginia Tech W 10065  16–1
(6–1)
Cameron Indoor Stadium 
Durham, NC
February 2
No. 4 at No. 7 Wake Forest L 8992  16–2
(6–2)
Lawrence Joel Veterans Memorial Coliseum 
Winston-Salem, NC
February 5
No. 4 No. 25 Georgia Tech W 8265  17–2
(7–2)
Cameron Indoor Stadium 
Durham, NC
February 9
No. 7 No. 2 North Carolina
Carolina–Duke rivalry
W 7170  18–2
(8–2)
Cameron Indoor Stadium 
Durham, NC
February 12
No. 7 at Maryland
College GameDay
L 9299  18–3
(8–3)
Comcast Center 
College Park, MD
February 17
No. 7 at Virginia Tech L 6567  18–4
(8–4)
Cassell Coliseum 
Blacksburg, VA
February 20
No. 7 No. 5 Wake Forest W 10292  19–4
(9–4)
Cameron Indoor Stadium 
Durham, NC
February 23
No. 7 at Georgia Tech W 6056  20–4
(10–4)
McCamish Pavilion 
Atlanta, GA
February 26*
No. 7 at St. John's W 5847  21–4
Madison Square Garden 
New York, NY
March 3
No. 6 Miami (FL) W 8359  22–4
(11–4)
Cameron Indoor Stadium 
Durham, NC
March 6
No. 6 at No. 2 North Carolina
Carolina–Duke rivalry
L 7375  22–5
(11–5)
Dean Smith Center 
Chapel Hill, NC
ACC Tournament
March 11*
No. 5 vs. Virginia
Quarterfinals
W 7664  23–5
MCI Center 
Washington, D.C.
March 12*
No. 5 vs. NC State
Semifinals
W 7669  24–5
MCI Center 
Washington, D.C.
March 13*
No. 5 vs. Georgia Tech
Final
W 6964  25–5
MCI Center 
Washington, D.C.
NCAA Tournament
March 18*
No. 3 vs. Delaware State
First Round
W 5746  26–5
Charlotte Coliseum 
Charlotte, NC
March 20*
No. 3 vs. Mississippi State
Second Round
W 6355  27–5
Charlotte Coliseum 
Charlotte, NC
March 25*
No. 3 vs. No. 15 Michigan State
Sweet Sixteen
L 6878  27–6
Frank Erwin Center 
Austin, TX
*Non-conference game. #Rankings from AP Poll. (#) Tournament seedings in parentheses.

[2]

References

  1. "No. 11 Duke Cruises Past Tennessee-Martin, 88-46." Published November 20, 2004. Retrieved January 16, 2013.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.