BDN previews the Bull City Gridiron Classic

Senior Desmond Scott leads the Blue Devils against his hometown rival NCCU. BDN Photo

NCCU at Duke
7:00 PM ET
Saturday, September 15
Wallace Wade Stadium
Durham, NC
TV: ESPN3
Radio: Blue Devil IMG Sports Network, Sirus/XM 134

 

 

Duke in 2012: 1-1, lost at Stanford 13-50, Saturday 9/8
NCCU in 2012: 1-1, lost at Elon 14-34, Saturday 9/8

DUKE INJURIES
PROBABLE - LB Britton Grier (hand)
OUT - CB Jared Boyd (leg), LB Kelby Brown (leg), LB Kyler Brown (upper body), NG Jamal Bruce (foot), S Jordon Byas (leg),S August Campbell (upper body), TE Braxton Deaver (leg), TE Jack Farrell (leg), LB Brendan Fowler (upper body), DE Justin Foxx (hand), S Corbin McCarthy (shoulder), OG Lucas Patrick (ankle)
OUT FOR SEASON - WR Blair Holliday, DE Allen Jackson (shoulder), S Taylor Sowell (leg)

NCCU INJURIES
OUT FOR SEASON - RB Idreis Augustus (knee), WR Andrew Johnson

HOW DUKE CAN WIN
Duke is the more talented football team, and they have to play like it. The Blue Devils will have to play with intensity from the opening kickoff, and assert their dominance early. The Golden Eagles allowed Elon to score the first 24 points in the game last week. In their week 1 win, NCCU put up 54 points on their own. The Duke defense will need to keep the Golden Eagles off the scoreboard early, putting to rest any hopes for an upset. Duke will be shorthanded on defense, which means that a number of young players will be given an opportunity to step up and make plays. With two freshmen offensive linemen starting, the Duke defense needs to control the line of scrimmage and pressure junior QB Matt Goggans. Offensively, the Blue Devils should be able to move the ball with ease. The offensive line will have to bounce back after a poor performance and contain former Blue Devil John Drew and the Golden Eagle front seven. Duke's running backs should be ready to have a big day, which will open things up for Conner Vernon and Jamison Crowder through the air.

HOW DUKE CAN LOSE
If Duke gets off to another slow start on Saturday, the Golden Eagles will seize the chance for an upset. The Blue Devils have to get off to a fast start in all three phases, and they have to take care of the football. Playing shorthanded, Duke would prefer not to be in a close game late on Saturday. Duke's defense gave up 50 points to Stanford last week, and this NCCU team has already shown that they can put up points, scoring 54 points in their week 1 win. Senior WR Geovonie Irvine is a key player for the Eagles, and Duke will have to contain him both on offense and special teams. John Drew will be looking to disrupt his former teammates' offense, which coughed up four turnovers against Stanford last week.

WHY DUKE WILL WIN
The Duke offense has too many weapons for the Golden Eagles to contain. The Blue Devils know they are better than their week 2 performance, and will be out to prove it against their crosstown rival. Duke's running backs will have a big day, and fans will get a chance to see Shaq Powell and Jela Duncan go to work in the second half. Wearing their black uniforms and with Blair Holliday in attendance, the Blue Devils cruise to a victory, 48-21.

BDN staff picks week 3 college football games against Blue Devil Greats

BDN Staff will test their luck again this week against Blue Devil Greats Bob Harris, Thad Lewis, Vinny Rey, and Matt Daniels. After a few perfect weeks in week 1, reality set in for our experts in week 2. BDN's Patrick Cacchio and Andrew Slater continue to pace the way with 17 points each. After the Blue Devils' crushing defeat at Stanford, the Blue Devil Greats fall behind the BDN staff 65-59 in the overall standings.

Here are this week's standings:

 

 

 

 

 

The week 3 slate of games present several challenges, starting with three non-conference ACC games. It hasn't been pretty, but Maryland is 2-0, and they host a Connecticut team coming off a home loss to NC State. Boston College travels to the midwest to take on Northwestern, and the Tar Heels face another road test at Louisville. Penn State will look to avoid an 0-3 start against Navy, while Stanford looks to pull the upset at home against USC. The Blue Devils, of course, will be looking to rebound against their cross-town rival NCCU. Here are this week's picks:

Patrick Cacchio: The Blue Devils are again limited by injuries, but will bounce back after a poor showing in week 2. Expect Duke to control the line of scrimmage, leading to a big day for the Blue Devil running backs. Duke 48, NCCU 21

Bob Green: Duke will come out motivated and establish dominance at the line of scrimmage. The offense will look to establish the running game and short passing attack, while mixing in the occasional long down field strike. Quarterback Sean Renfree will push the offense to execute the game plan with precision. Renfree will look to involve all his offensive weapons against the Eagles.

On defense, look for Duke to apply pressure early and often in an attempt to frequently place NCCU in 3rd and long situations. This will be a statement game so the defense will be looking to play mistake free football, while forcing NCCU to make mistakes.

My Special Teams crystal ball says look for Duke to have a big play or two when NCCU is punting. Perhaps a blocked punt or a return for a touchdown.

Duke 42, NCCU 14

Andrew Slater: After last week's shellacking, Duke can gain a quick confidence booster against the Eagles of N.C. Central. NCCU has been giving up nearly nine yards per pass against offense much less potent than the Blue Devils. I think Coach Cutcliffe will look to turn up the offense this week heading into the homecoming game against Memphis in the following week. Duke 44-17

Mark Watson: Duke looks to rebound after their loss to Stanford and they will impose their will in all facets of the game versus N.C. Central. Look for Duke to establish the run as the Blue Devils will get back on the winning track against the Eagles. Duke 47-14

Bob Harris: The Devils are mad and will take it out on the Eagles. Look for Renfree to have a monster game, and the defense will lock down NCCU's offense. Duke 49, NCCU 3

Matt Daniels: Duke - by a lot, 42-14. Duke is the better team, simple as that.

Thad Lewis: Duke will beat NCCU. We will rebound from the loss last week, get our mojo back, and click on all cylinders - offense, defense, and special teams.

Vinny Rey: Duke will rebound from last week's game. The offense will explode and the defense will make the plays when needed. Duke 41, NCCU 17

Duke to hold Blair Holliday Ticket Giveaway during NCCU game

Courtesy of GoDuke

DURHAM, N.C. – Duke Athletics will hold the Blair Holliday Ticket Giveaway – including a grand prize of two tickets to the 2013 BCS National Championship in Miami, Fla. – during Saturday’s Bull City Gridiron Classic football game against N.C. Central University. All proceeds from the event will benefit the Blair Holliday Foundation.

Fans attending the Bull City Gridiron Classic are eligible to win one of three prizes, including the grand prize, a VIP experience for Duke’s home football game against North Carolina on October 20 and a football autographed by Blue Devil head coach David Cutcliffe and the team’s four captains – Walt Canty, Ross Cockrell, Sean Renfree and Conner Vernon. Winners must be present and aged 18 years or older, and prizes are non-transferrable.

Tickets for the drawing, which are free of charge, will be distributed at the north, east and west customer service gazebos until the end of halftime. Donations for the Blair Holliday Fund will be accepted at each gazebo as well. The winners will be selected at the conclusion of the third quarter.

A sophomore wide receiver from Sherman Oaks, Calif., Holliday was critically injured in a watercraft accident on July 4, and is currently in a rehabilitation program at the Shepherd Center in Atlanta, Ga.

The Duke-N.C. Central game at Wallace Wade Stadium will begin at 7 p.m. Tickets are available at GoDuke.com or by calling the Duke Athletics Ticket Office at 919-681-2583.

Notre Dame to join the ACC

GREENSBORO, N.C. – The Atlantic Coast Conference Council of Presidents has unanimously voted to accept the University of Notre Dame as a new member. The Irish will compete as full members in all conference sponsored sports with the exception of football which will play five games annually against league programs.

“We are committed to keeping the Atlantic Coast Conference a vibrant and competitive league dedicated to ensuring the appropriate balance of academics, athletics and integrity,” said the ACC Council of Presidents in a joint statement. “The addition of Notre Dame further strengthens the rich tradition and culture of the ACC as well as allowing for future academic collaboration and we enthusiastically welcome them into the league.”

“The ACC was founded on the cornerstones of balancing academics, athletics and integrity,” said Atlantic Coast Conference Commissioner John Swofford. “Our partnership with Notre Dame only strengthens this long-standing commitment. Notre Dame enhances the league’s unique blend of public and private institutions that are international in scope. The collective alumni and fan bases cover the entire country with exceptionally strong roots up and down the Atlantic Coast. This is a terrific milestone in the evolution of the ACC and showcases tremendous solidarity and vision by our Council of Presidents.”

"The ACC is composed of some of the most highly respected universities in the country, and we at Notre Dame look forward to joining them," said Notre Dame President, Rev. John I. Jenkins, C.S.C. "With a mix of institutions – many of which are also private, similar to Notre Dame in size, and committed to excellence in research and undergraduate education – the ACC is an exceptionally good fit for us academically, as well as athletically."

"We have monitored the changing conference landscape for many months and have concluded that moving to the ACC is the best course of action for us," said Jack Swarbrick, Notre Dame Vice President and Director of Athletics. "We are able to maintain our historic independence in football, join in the ACC's non-BCS bowl package, and provide a new and extremely competitive home for our other sports."

With the addition of Notre Dame, the ACC’s future membership includes 11 institutions ranked among the top 58 in the 2013 U.S. News & World Report survey of “America’s Best Colleges”, more than any other conference also competing at the highest level athletically.

In addition to extending an invitation to Notre Dame, the Council of Presidents voted to increase the conference exit fees to three times the annual operating budget. Currently this would equate to an exit fee of over $50 million.

About the Atlantic Coast Conference:

The Atlantic Coast Conference is now in its 60th year of competition, the ACC has long enjoyed the reputation as one of the strongest and most competitive intercollegiate conferences in the nation. Since the league’s inception in 1953, ACC schools have captured 127 national championships, including 67 in women’s competition and 60 in men’s. In addition, NCAA individual titles have gone to ACC student-athletes 145 times in men’s competition and 104 times in women’s action. For more information, visit theACC.com.

Semi Semi Ya: Duke Lands Semi Ojeleye

 

Semi Ojeleye, Copyright BDN Photo

We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, therefore is not an act, but a habit.

-Aristotle

Semi Ojeleye was born in Overland Park, Kansas and his family’s tale is one of the American Dream. His father, Victor, arrived in Kansas from Nigeria, looking to do an internship and residency at the University of Kansas Medical Center. Dr. Ojeleye now operates as a family physician in Ottawa, Kansas, roughly fifty miles south of Kansas City, Kansas, with his wife, Joy, a registered nurse.

The Ojeleyes had two boys, Victor and Semi. Victor, the oldest, was heavily involved in community service, became Ottawa High School’s all-time leading scorer, and was valedictorian of his graduating class. After not receiving much basketball interest coming out of Ottawa high school, he opted to do a postgraduate year in North Carolina, where he played under veteran coach, Chris Chaney. It was there that then Kansas St. assistant coach, Dalonte Hill spotted the 6’5″ Ojeleye and ultimately convinced him to walk-on for his home state Kansas State Wildcats. Victor wound up being a reserve player for the Wildcats, led his teammates in Bible studies, and was an All-Academic Big XII winner in each of his three seasons, culminating in this season’s inaugural Dr. Loge Award for the Big XII Conference’s highest academic honor. Last May, he received his degree in Finance and Accounting before joining Koch Industries.

Semi has the ability to stretch the floor with his three point shot. Photo copyright BDN

Semi Ojeleye was blessed with the same genetics and work ethic as Victor. He’s been a 4.0 student, but will shatter Victor’s basketball records for the Ottawa Cyclones. The 6’6″ wing averaged nearly nine rebounds and thirty-three points per game this season, never scoring below twenty-five in a single game, while leading Ottawa (KS) to a third consecutive Class 4A State Title game. The high water scoring mark for this season came when he knocked down eight three-pointers and hit all ten of his free throws for a fifty point game and a win in front of Missouri Coach Frank Haith.

Last season, Semi, a devout Christian, played all five positions for Coach Jon McKowen’s Cyclones and knocked down seventy-eight three pointers at nearly a forty percent clip on the season. In the state semi-final game, Ojeyele grabbed fourteen rebounds and scored thirty-two points. In, ultimately, a close 56-52 loss to Basehor-Linwood in the Championship game, Ojeleye, who has tried to slowly convert himself from more of a post player to a perimeter force, scored thirty-two points and snagged twelve rebounds. For his efforts, the 6’6″ senior, who now has 1,811 career points and helped his team to a 24-2 final record, earned an All-State distinction.

This AAU season, the versatile wing first caught the eye of the Duke staff for a half of a single game at the Nike EYBL Minneapolis, but it was his performance at the EYBL Boo Williams that was a turning point. According to Semi, Coach K felt he saw a lot of his untapped potential at this event. Rather than get satisfied, Semi continued to improve, mesh with his Mo-Kan Elite teammates, and was, without any college coaches in attendance, the critical player for a run of EYBL wins in Oakland that enabled his AAU squad to earn a trip to the coveted Peach Jam in July.

When June began, Semi and his family came to the Gothic Wonderland in Durham for an unofficial visit. The trip was meant to provide a bit of due diligence and gauge his comfort level with the staff, program, and University. It coincided with the Coach K Academy, a fantasy camp for charity that pairs former Duke players with fans looking to experience a taste of what it's like to play at Duke. By the end of the weekend, Semi was offered a full scholarship to Duke.

Over the next few weeks, Ojeleye played at the NBAPA Top 100 Camp in Virginia and competed alongside fellow Duke recruits Austin Nichols, Julius Randle, Matt Jones, and Theo Pinson at the elite LeBron James Skills Academy in Las Vegas.

At the Peach Jam, which collects twenty-four of the best AAU teams in the country, Semilore Ojeleye elevated his undermanned team to new heights, catapulting his squad to the semi-finals of the ultra-competitive July tournament. His standout Peach Jam game was against Detroit's The Family AAU program, which featured a consensus top ten player in 6'6" James Young. After holding Young, a talented wing, to a woeful five for twenty shooting game by "bodying him up" in a win over The Family in Oakland, Semi once again out-dueled the well-promoted wing in a win at the Peach Jam. In this playoff game, Ojeleye would score a whopping thirty-three points in twenty-nine minutes on a highly efficient ten of thirteen shooting (four of six from beyond the arc) and a perfect nine for nine at the charity stripe, grab eight rebounds, and hold Young to seventeen points.

Versatile Wing Semi Ojeleye, Photo by Andrew Slater

Semi Ojeleye was the first person that Coach Mike Krzyzewski of Duke was scheduled to make an in-home visit with. Yesterday, shortly after the visit with Coach K and Coach Steve "Wojo" Wojciechowski, Ojeleye told the staff that he would like to join Duke's program. There were some efficiently placed phone calls and texts to various services, but none of the three-hat monte, self-indulgent forty minute speeches, dancing cheerleaders, awkward satellite interviews with cable services, or amateurish "off-broadway" productions with teammates that have become somewhat customary amongst elite-level players.  This "old school" way of handling your recruitment was not surprising for a player that is concerned more with the collective measure of success, wins, than his individual game totals.

Duke is getting a cerebral, physical 6'6" wing who has the versatility to defend tall shooting guards, athletic small forwards, and even undersized college power forwards. Offensively, unlike some wings, he brings a comfort level with playing on the inside that speaks to his natural and earned strength, former responsibility as an interior player as a younger player, and fearlessness to the physicality that is relatively commonplace among interior players. He's got good elevation on his jump shot and, although streaky, has improved his three-point shooting to the point that he must be guarded at all times. As a hard worker on and off the court, Semi undoubtedly will continue to work on conditioning as well as skill development, including improving his mid-range game, his left hand, and making his three-point shooting more consistent.