Category Archives: Duke Women’s Basketball

Blue Devil Women close in on regular season title by defeating Maryland

DURHAM, N.C.—Junior Karima Christmas registered a career-high 25 points as the eighth-ranked Blue Devils downed Maryland, 71-59, on Sunday afternoon in Cameron Indoor Stadium.  The Blue Devils won their 15th straight ACC game at home and are now one victory away from clinching first place in the ACC.

Joy Cheek added 17 points and junior Jasmine Thomas became the 26th player in Duke history to register 1,000 career points as she finished with eight.

Duke will next host Virginia on Friday, Feb. 26 at 8:30 p.m., which will mark senior night for Cheek, Keturah Jackson and Bridgette Mitchell.

For a full recap, click on www.GoDuke.com

Duke Head Coach Joanne P. McCallie

Opening statement:

“Just really proud of our fight in a 40-hour turnaround. We had a tough game at Georgia Tech and coming back to play. I’m really proud of our team’s poise and focus and their maturity in dealing with a situation where you don’t really have a practice per se before you play again. So, I’m very proud of our team, our effort, our fight especially in the second half in particular I thought we did some very good things there.  Karima [Christmas] was outstanding. She was attacking at all times, very aggressive, very confident, and showed a tremendous amount of leadership on the floor, which was just so fun to watch. And Joy [Cheek] was incredible playing the three, playing the four, running different out of bounds plays from different spots when Jas[mine Thomas] was on the bench or KJ [Keturah Jackson] was out. We had enormous foul trouble; leadership was critical to this game, and Joy just stepped right into that role whether she was passing, whether she was scoring, or whether she simply was telling everybody what to do out there, or what defense to be in. It was a good game for us. We can play better, certainly, but it was a good game especially considering the circumstances.”

On this game’s similarities to the previous tough match-up at Georgia Tech:

“I think they look to each other, they’re a very confident group. I think KJ [Keturah Jackson] said it in the locker room. She said, ‘Our huddles are tight,’ she was sort of joking about it because I think they might have knocked heads or something. But, what I mean by that is I think our huddles are tight. I think this team is very focused, they’re all looking in the same direction, and they’re excited by the challenge at hand. We all know it’s not going to be easy. You can’t get thinking at all that lopsided scores are the way things go. You can have some lopsided games, but those are really not at all what it boils down to especially in the NCAA tournament. So, the bottom line is that you’ve got to love a fight, and I think this team keeps the huddles tight and loves the fight.”

On scores down the stretch off of offensive rebounds:

“I think we had great shots. I don’t view that as a struggle in any way. I thought we got to the foul line. I think an offensive rebound is as good a play as any play, and I like that we got put backs in different places that were necessary. I thought it was a great finish.”

On Karima Christmas’ play today:

“Karima can be a monster on the boards. She’s incredible that way. I just think it was her attack; she was not satisfied. She did hit some great shots as you saw, but she wasn’t just playing from the outside in, I think she played from the inside out meaning she was going off the dribble, going around people. Karima is so athletic that she has that ability in midair to sort of change directions. So, she could get around people at the rim and finish at the rim, and I think that’s very important. It was great to see. And like I said, Karima never looked tired either, and that was the beauty of it. Considering our situation, I really thought the team looked tough and strong, and actually got better as the game went. That’s what it appeared to me. The first half was a little funny feeling; we had to sort of dust ourselves off after the first half. But in the second half I thought we got better as the game went on.”

On finishing up ACC play strong:

“It’s all for the same thing: getting better, growing as a team, taking out team’s best players if we can, and getting ready for next. It’s all about March and building and getting better as a team, so we’ve got formidable opponents. We’ve got a nice hard finish here. As you know we’ve got Virginia coming in and then we’ve got an away game, so it’s all about getting better. And I think we are getting better, but we’ve got a lot to do on this rebounding. I don’t like these rebounding stats. We haven’t been rebounding to well, and we’re going to need to change that. So, we’ve got another opportunity in next game to try and get that changed around.”

Senior Joy Cheek

On how physical the game was:

“It doesn’t bother me. It was about as physical as the last team played that was physical. [Lynetta] Kizer’s very physical. I got checked a few times from her. It was a battle down there, but you know we came on top.”

On what got her going offensively:

“Just to be productive. You can’t play minutes and not do anything. So that was just my mind mindset. When I had a shot open a lot of times I hesitate. But tonight, I didn’t hesitate I just took the shots that were open and they were falling for me. I was trying to get on the boards the best I can and just make things happen. Pass the ball, whatever, to get our offense going.”

On the team’s outside shooting:

“I think that was credit to us just taking the shot. Like Karima said, we were thinking open is in. So we saw the basket, we didn’t have a defender, and we just shot the ball. And we had confidence that it was going in, and if it didn’t go in, we were trying to get on the boards. It was just shooting and taking open shots.”

On making the best pass:

“We always talk about that. Make the next pass because it will be the better pass. We always talk about moving the ball and getting the best shot that we can. I think we definitely did that during our position.”

On the intensity of the crowd:

“I actually thought about that. When Jasmine [Thomas] stole the ball and went in for the layup, it was loud. You need that because you can see their faces just drop. Even when we’re away, you feel that when a crowd gets pumped. And when you’re at home you need that. You want to shush them and get them worrying and make them tense. I can’t remember who I was looking at but remember thinking, ‘yeah we got them shook.’”

Junior Karima Christmas

On how physical the game was:

“Yes, it’s always fun to have a battle and go back and forth at each other. And obviously we work hard in the weight room so it shows off when we can be able to battle with other people.”

On how her confidence changed after her first 3-pointer:

“I think I just stayed focused. If I was open and I had the opportunity to shoot, I just shot like it was a regular shot. It wasn’t really confidence boosting, I just took the open shot.”

Head Coach Brenda Frese

Opening Statement:

“Like I told the team in the locker room, I’m really proud of our young team. To have five freshmen and four sophomores come in here and battle the No. 7 team in the country the way we did, in terms of the physicality of the game, the aggressiveness. Like I told them, the first 36 minutes, we were there. The last four minutes, you saw veterans for Duke step up and provide great leadership. And I thought the last four minutes of the game was the difference – the offensive rebounds, the fouls, the put-backs – things we could control, they did a tremendous job. Obviously, I think the five-point play – the first I think I’ve ever seen in my coaching career. Probably it was the difference in the game in terms of that play being made. But credit Duke’s defense. I thought they really were aggressive, forced us into a lot of turnovers.”

On Maryland’s play in the second half:

“Obviously, we had to play small. We were in serious foul trouble to have two players foul out. It changes the strategy in terms of what you’re doing. But you credit Bridgette Mitchell as a senior. She seems at both our place and here, I mean she just always seems to make a big play, and that’s what seniors do – they step up and make big plays, just like Lori [Bjork] has for us all season. But for us, we only have one senior on the roster. So that just was the difference in the game, I thought, in the second half.

On what the team can learn from the loss:

“I told them after the game, I still love where we’re playing at. There were moments and stretches in this game where I’m watching our defense and I’m watching our intensity, and we’re matching it on the road at Duke against a team that I think is really physical and extremely tough, and the ranking is deserving. Absolutely, and I feel like there’s still so much of the season left for us to be able to continue to gain momentum from this game with what we have left.”

On Maryland’s progress this season:

“When you look at our first ACC game to where we are now, and I think that’s the thing I’m most proud of, is that there was a point in this season this team could have folded. It just shows great character to be able to come out every single day to practice and just want to improve and want to get better.”

On getting a bid to the NCAA tournament:

“I think we just continue to take one day at a time. I think there’s a lot of basketball left for us – with the two games we have left, with the ACC tournament. When you play hard and you compete like we did today, those things will all take care of itself.”

On matching up with Duke:

“I think, first of all, our team believes we can beat them. I think that’s the first thing when you watch teams come in here and kind of lay an egg. We have the confidence because we’ve done it in the past. We love the matchup. It brings out the best in us. But I think rebounding-wise, we can match it, especially with the way they like to go to the offensive end. So, I think from that end, it’s been an area that’s helped us be successful against them.”

On limiting Duke’s Jasmine Thomas:

“If you would have told me before we started the game if we held Jasmine to eight points you were going to lose, I wouldn’t have believed you. I thought [Karima] Christmas was spectacular. Those three’s she hit from the three-point line, it was Christmas for her. I just thought she did a tremendous job and was a big difference, obviously, for them, stepping up and making those plays while Jasmine was in foul trouble.”

On Maryland’s defensive play:

“Minus those four minutes that got away from us – I think obviously, when you lose Diandra [Tchatchouang], which we did, and you lose that kind of 6-3 presence inside on the glass, we had to go smaller in terms of the zone and even our man matchups. I think that’s what hurt us. But absolutely, I feel like this team can rebound with anybody.”

Sophomore Center Lynetta Kizer

On the atmosphere at Cameron:

“It was a great atmosphere. All week we just talked about embracing it, and I think that’s what we did today – just embrace the atmosphere.”

Senior Guard Lori Bjork

On the rivalry with Duke:

“It’s a lot of fun. This is why, I think, everybody in a red uniform, why we came to Maryland. We wanted to play in these types of matchups, so it’s something that, like Lynetta said, we definitely embraced it and we wanted to play in it.”

On Duke limiting her in the second half:

“I think every team at this point knows that if they leave me wide open, I’m probably going to shoot it, and I might make it. They do a good job of identifying me. I just thought in the second half, their pressure didn’t necessarily give our guards a chance to even find me, because I thought they upped their pressure another level, and it was very hard to find me even when I was open.”

On Duke’s pressure late in the game:

“They were forcing us to take time off the clock, obviously, at the end, in the last four minutes or so. We’ve just got to attack the basket, and I thought we showed some signs of doing that, and that’s what we have to build off of.”

#8 Duke Women dominate #18 North Carolina 79-51

Durham, N.C. - The Duke Blue Devils took command of the current ACC  standings by defeating arch rival North Carolina 79-51 and in the process pushed their record to 7-1 in the conference and 19-4 overall.

The Blue Devils jumped on the Tar Heels early on taking a 10-0 lead which translated into a 42-33 advantage at the half.  In fact, UNC never threatened Duke past a run where they cut the lead to 7 points.

The 28 point victory was the largest over UNC since the 2003 season.

UNC, who was picked in the pre season to win the conference was never really in the contest and they seemed disjointed as the Blue Devils scored inside and out.

At one point the UNC coach held here arms in the air as the Crazies came to their feet after Duke forced another turnover.  Quite simply, Duke was the aggressor

Duke seemed inspired for this game getting solid performances from several players.

The win was a  special one for Coach P's program in that they payed  UNC back for their season sweep a year ago.  The Blue Devils never let up and had their way in the paint for most of the game.

Duke put six players in double figure scoring led by Bridgette Mitchell and Kenturah Jackson with 12 each and Krystal Thomas with 11.  Jasmine Thomas and Shay Selby added 10 each and freshman Allison Vernerey got her first career start and put up impressive numbers of 10 points and 6 rebounds.

The Blue Devils second half run was one which will be remembered for they outscored the Tar Heels by 37-18 margin and outrebounded their opponent by a whopping 35-12 margin.

Duke held an edge in points off turnovers with a 25-11 margin aided by 25 Tar Heel turnovers.  They also outscored UNC in the paint by a 40-24 score.

Duke next takes on te N,C. State Wolfpack in Cameron Indoor Stadium at 7:00 Thursday evening.

For some extended coverage on the game, may I suggest going to my friends Rob Clough's site - DW Hoops

Game Notes - This was Duke's 13th consecutive ACC win at home.  Selby's two three pointers tied her career high.  Vernerey registered her 8th double double.  Hatchell took a shot at officiating saying that her team would have to practice with the football team to play in a game as physical as tonight's.  She also said she didn't know what was going on in Chapel Hill saying it was "a plague or something."  UNC dropped to 4-4 and 16-6 on the season.

Tobacco Road Matchup Set for Monday: Duke-UNC at 7 PM

#9/15 North Carolina (16-5, 4-3 ACC) at #6/6 Duke (18-4, 6-1 ACC)
Monday, Feb. 8, 2010 at 7:00 PM
Durham, N.C. • Cameron Indoor Stadium (9,314)

Kathleen Scheer had two treys in the last game at Boston College
Courtesy: Duke Photography

One of the biggest rivalries in college sports will resume on Monday, Feb. 8 as sixth-ranked Duke (18-4, 6-1 ACC) women's basketball will host ninth-ranked North Carolina (16-5, 4-3 ACC) in Cameron Indoor Stadium at 7:00 p.m. The game will be aired live nationally on ESPN2 Big Monday with Bob Wischusen (PBP) and Stephanie White (Color) calling the action.

Fans can also hear the Blue Devils on the Duke ISP Radio Network at www.GoDuke.com with Steve Barnes (PXP) and Morgan Patrick (Color) on the air. Duke is currently ranked No. 6 in both the Associated Press and the ESPN/USA Today Division I Coaches Polls, while North Carolina is No. 9 in the AP and No. 15 in the coaches poll.

Immediately following the Duke/UNC contest, senior Joy Cheek will be recognized for reaching the 1,000-point mark on Jan. 29 against Florida State.

Noting Duke...

Duke has notched a 129-10 record at Cameron the last 10 years ... during the first 11 games of the year, Duke only took five charges, but over the last 11 contests the players have taken 14 (Allison Vernerey - 4, Karima Christmas - 4, Shay Selby - 3) ... the Blue Devils are the only team in the ACC to have beaten a ranked non-conference opponent this season (No. 3 OSU and No. 25 JMU) ... the Blue Devils hold a 790-380 points in the paint advantage on the year ... Duke has been listed in the top 25 of the AP poll for 200 straight weeks, which is the longest current streak in the ACC and third nationally.

A Look At North Carolina...
North Carolina enters the contest on Monday with a 16-5 overall and 4-3 league mark. The Tar Heels have lost two straight games in league play to Florida State and Miami. So far on the season, UNC is 2-4 in road games and are 1-2 in ACC road contests.

Leading the Tar Heels on the year has been Italee Lucas (16.6 points, 3.7 rebounds, 38 treys), Cetera DeGraffenreid (13.2 points, 112 assists) and Chay Shegog (8.6 points, 5.8 rebounds). Head Coach Sylvia Hatchell is in her 35th season as a head coach and 24th year at UNC.

The Series With North Carolina...
The Blue Devils and Tar Heels will meet for the 77th time on Monday with North Carolina leading the overall series 45-31. Duke has won 18 of the last 28 games.

As of late, it has been a series of streaks since 2000 -- Duke won 12 in a row, UNC won five in a row, Duke won two in a row and UNC won four in a row before the Blue Devils won the last meeting in Cameron Indoor Stadium. In games played in Durham, N.C., the Blue Devils own a 18-13 overall record and have won nine out of the last 12.

Duke and UNC will play each other for the first time since Feb. 21, 1997 when the two squads are coming off losses. North Carolina won that contest, 81-61. The first time they played after coming off losses was on Jan. 29, 1981 as the Tar Heels won 77-65. The last Duke win with both teams coming off losses was on Feb. 15, 1989 with a 58-56 victory at home. UNC holds a 7-1 advantage all-time when both teams are coming off losses.

Blue Devil Head Coach Joanne P. McCallie will face North Carolina for the eighth time over her 18 years as a head coach. McCallie has a 1-6 record against the Tar Heels. She lost two of those contests while as head coach at Maine. McCallie's squad faced North Carolina in the 2000 NCAA Tournament in Santa Barbara, Calif., and fell 62-57 on March 18. The Black Bears also lost, 68-52, on Dec. 28, 1996 on a neutral site. Since joining the Blue Devils, McCallie has notched a 1-4 mark.

Storylines/Other Blue Devil Notes...

  • When Duke is the higher-ranked team in the series with UNC, the Blue Devils own a 18-9 record. UNC owns a 19-5 record when it is ranked higher. The higher ranked team has won 37 of 51 games.
  • The Blue Devils will look to avoid back-to-back ACC regular season losses on Monday for the first time since the 1999-2000 campaign when Duke fell to Virginia and Maryland.
  • Junior Jasmine Thomas will go up against her former AAU teammate, Chay Shegog. Thomas is from Fairfax, Va., while Shegog is out of Stafford, Va., and they played for the Fairfax Stars.
  • Duke has won 11 straight ACC games in Cameron Indoor Stadium, which dates back to the 2007-08 season.
  • In three out of the last five games, Duke has registered only one double-figure scorer, which was Jasmine Thomas. In those games, the Blue Devils have notched a 1-2 record with the victory coming at Maryland (other games were UConn and BC).Even though senior Joy Cheek has struggled shooting from the field recently, she has been making up for it on the boards as she has averaged 7.0 rebounds the last six games. She pulled down 11 boards at Miami, had 11 at Maryland and posted nine against Florida State in that stretch.
  • Over her first three years at Duke, senior Bridgette Mitchell registered eight double-figure scoring games, while this year the 6'0 wing has collected eight games with double-digit scoring.
  • In her three years at Duke, junior Jasmine Thomas has increased her field goal percentage, three-point field goal percentage, free throw percentage and scoring each year.
  • During the month of January, junior Karima Christmas struggled with a finger sprain on her right pointer finger. This happened in practice following the Temple game and she reinjured it at Clemson on Jan. 7. She scored in double-figures only one time in January.
  • Senior Keturah Jackson has a career high with five three-pointers made in a single season. Over her four years, she has hit 10 treys. She hit her fifth of the year at Boston College.
  • To show how tough Duke's schedule has been this year, the Blue Devils went up against eight undefeated teams this season -- Connecticut (17-0), Ohio State (8-0), James Madison (7-0), Stanford (7-0), Western Kentucky (3-0), Georgia Southern (1-0), Houston Baptist (0-0) and Texas A&M (0-0).
  • In three years at Duke, Head Coach Joanne P. McCallie has notched four victories against top-five ranked teams -- #3/3 Ohio State in 2009-10, #3/4 Stanford in 2008-09, while knocking off #4/3 Rutgers and #5/4 Maryland in 2007-08.
  • Duke is currently ranked No. 6 in the latest RPI by Jeff Sagarin -- Connecticut (107.84), Stanford (100.81), Nebraska (98.89), Tennessee (97.64), Notre Dame (96.98) and Duke (95.31). The next closest ACC school is Florida State at No. 14 (88.73).
  • Junior Jasmine Thomas has hit 43 three-pointers in only 22 games this season. As a freshman, she hit 24 in 35 games and as a sophomore she hit 28 in 30 games.
  • Junior Krystal Thomas has moved into eighth place on Duke's all-time blocked shots list with 111. She is 19 blocked shots shy of seventh place all-time on the Blue Devil charts.
  • The Coach P Radio Show will next take place on Tuesday, Feb. 16 at 6:00 p.m. The show will be stationed at Satisfaction Restaurant in Durham at Brightleaf Square. Make sure you get there early to secure a seat.
  • Follow DukeWBBSID on and CoachPDuke on Twitter to get the latest updates on Duke women's basketball. Also, join the "Official Duke Women's Basketball Group" on Facebook to get the latest video, pictures and more. Join both now as they are free! You can win free prizes each week on both Twitter and Facebook so make sure you follow closely.

What Happened Last Time We Met...
Jasmine Thomas scored 19 points and Abby Waner hit the go-ahead 3-pointer with 45.8 seconds remaining in overtime to lead No. 10 Duke past No. 9 North Carolina 81-79 on March 1, 2009, in Cameron Indoor Stadium.

Karima Christmas had 18 points, Carrem Gay added 15 points and 12 rebounds and Bridgette Mitchell finished with 13 points for the Blue Devils (24-4, 11-3 ACC), who snapped a four-game losing streak to their most hated rivals in dramatic fashion, won for the fifth time in six games and clinched the No. 3 seed in this week's ACC tournament.

Rashanda McCants had 24 points to lead the Tar Heels (25-5, 10-4). They shot 45 percent but slipped to the No. 4 seed in the league tournament because they couldn't overcome 33 turnovers.

And Waner - who had missed 14 straight shots during her final game at Cameron Indoor Stadium - cashed in on the most important one.

Joy Cheek stole Cetera DeGraffenreid's pass to the block and hustled up court before dishing off to Waner in the left corner, and the senior swished a 3 to put Duke up 78-76.

Thomas, who scored eight points in overtime, hit two free throws on Duke's next possession and Christmas added a foul shot to make it a five-point game with 10.8 seconds left.

Duke Players Vs. North Carolina...
Over the last three games against UNC, junior Jasmine Thomas has averaged 15.0 points, 3.3 rebounds, 2.3 assists and 1.7 steals. She has notched double-digit scoring in three consecutive games (16, 10, 19). In the last contest, Thomas hit 8-of-17 field goals, had four rebounds, three assists and two steals. She scored 10 out of Duke's final 16 points in the second half/overtime to give the Blue Devils the victory.

In the last game against the Tar Heels, Bridgette Mitchell notched a career best 13 points as she hit 6-of-10 field goals. Junior Karima Christmas is coming off posting 18 points, seven rebounds, two steals and two assists in 27 minutes.

Home Sweet Home...
Duke has registered a 10-1 overall record at home this season and are outscoring opponents by a 21.1 margin in those contests. The Blue Devils are averaging 4,331 fans at home this season, which ranks second in the ACC.

The Blue Devil defense is holding the opposition to only 35.9 percent shooting, forcing 23.1 turnovers and pulling down an 11.7 rebounding margin.

Jasmine Thomas is averaging 17.2 points, 3.8 rebounds, 4.0 assists and 2.4 steals at home this year, while hitting 40.7 percent of her three-pointers. At home against ranked opponents, Thomas is averaging 20.5 points, 4.5 rebounds, 3.5 assists and 2.0 steals. She has hit 9-of-19 treys for a 47.4 percentage.

Cheek Nets 1,000 Points...

Senior Joy Cheek became the 25th player in Duke history to register 1,000 career points on Jan. 29 against Florida State. She has appeared in 123 games and missed only one in her career, while playing in 110 straight contests.

Cheek will be recognized immediately following the Feb. 8 home contest against North Carolina for reaching the milestone.

Junior Jasmine Thomas is also approaching 1,000 points as she is 58 shy of hitting the milestone.

Duke Women hold off Maryland to remain undefeated in the ACC

du-MD WHCOLLEGE PARK, Md. - Playing for the third time in seven days, No. 6 Duke could have really used a breather against struggling, rebuilding Maryland.

Instead, the weary Blue Devils were forced to expend every bit of their remaining energy to squeeze out a 58-57 victory Sunday night.

Jasmine Thomas scored 20 points and Bridgette Mitchell made the go-ahead basket with 1:29 left for Duke, the lone remaining unbeaten team in Atlantic Coast Conference play.

The victory capped a week in which the Blue Devils were soundly defeated by Connecticut before defeating Virginia Tech.

"I'm extremely proud of our team's character," coach Joanne McCallie said. "A lot of things were working against us throughout. I thought Jasmine showed incredible poise in terms of what she did defensively and, of course, offensively."

Thomas accounted for more than a third of the Blue Devils' points, grabbed three rebounds and had three steals.

Duke (17-3, 5-0) frittered away an 11-point lead and trailed 54-53 before Mitchell hit a runner in the lane as the shot clock expired.

After a missed shot by Maryland, Duke's Joy Cheek made two free throws with 20 seconds remaining for a three-point cushion. Anjale Barrett then missed a 3-point attempt for the Terrapins, and Thomas made one of two free throws before Barrett connected on a 3 at the buzzer.

"We did more than survive," McCallie insisted. "I thought we really handled adversity well. A lot of teams don't play Connecticut. We did. Then we had a great game against Virginia Tech and you've got to travel. I think we really blossomed as a team in the sense of our toughness. Not everything was going our way - at all."

Lori Bjork scored 11 points for Maryland (14-6, 2-4), which committed 19 turnovers. The Terrapins, who had their 48-game home winning streak broken by Miami on Thursday, have lost three straight overall - matching their longest skid since February 2004.

It's also the first time since February 2006 that Maryland has lost two in a row at home.

"Obviously, there are no moral victories. But I am proud of this team," coach Brenda Frese said. "I think it's a great statement game for us, the fact that our teams knows they can play with anybody."

Maryland trailed 30-25 early in the second half before Lynetta Kizer made a layup to ignite a 9-0 run that gave the Terrapins their first lead since 2-0.

Mitchell then scored on a putback, and Thomas scored the Blue Devils' next 13 points to make it 45-38.

"I really was just taking the shots that were there," Thomas said. "In the first half, I forced a lot of things, over-penetrated and passed up a few shots I should have taken. They were still there in the second half, and I just hit them."

After Thomas' scoring spree, the lead expanded to 51-40. Bjork then hit consecutive 3-pointers to begin a 14-2 surge that put Maryland back in front.

Following a series of missed shots and turnovers, Mitchell hit her pivotal shot.

Although the Blue Devils battled fatigue, they had more fight left at the end than the Terrapins.

"Credit Duke," Frese said. "I thought in the second half they just came back stronger. I think their physicality wore us down."

Cheek had nine points and 11 rebounds for Duke. She needs one more point to become the 25th player in Duke history to score 1,000.

Duke led 27-25 at halftime, mostly because Maryland shot 31 percent, went 5 for 13 at the free throw line and committed 10 turnovers.

Both teams had trouble shooting early, although the Blue Devils were a bit more protective of the ball in taking an 8-3 lead. Duke opened 3 for 13 from the field, but the Terrapins were even worse over the first nine minutes, going 1 for 9 from the floor with six turnovers.

Duke Women crush Clemson on the road by a 67-41 margin

Jasmine Thomas (5)CLEMSON, S.C. (AP) - This time, it was the Duke women's turn to show Clemson how the Blue Devils play defense.

No. 9 Duke used a first-half run and relentless defense to open Atlantic Coast Conference play with its 13th straight victory over the Tigers, 67-41 on Thursday night.

The win, Blue Devils' sixth straight this season, came after the school's Top 10 men locked down Clemson at Cameron Indoor Stadium on Sunday night in a 74-53 victory.

"We take after the men, they take after us," Duke forward Joy Cheek said. "We all represent Duke, so we all want to go hard and get those wins."

Cheek was a big reason why the Blue Devils (13-2) got this victory. She and Jasmine Thomas had 15 points each. The two helped Duke to a 21-6 first-half run to take control, while the Blue Devils defense did the rest.

"I think tonight, we really let our defense trigger everything," Thomas said.

Clemson's point total was the lowest in its history against Duke. The Tigers missed 13 shots in a row during one stretch and finished shooting 25 percent (13 of 52) from the field.

The Blue Devils got 15 steals and forced the Tigers into 23 turnovers.

The effort looked like a replay of Duke-Clemson men's game from a few nights earlier. In that one, the Blue Devils gave the Cameron crazies plenty to cheer about as they moved in front 30-12 and held the Tigers to a 5-of-30 shooting in the first half.

"I guess were both 1-0 against Clemson in ACC play," Thomas said, laughing.

The Blue Devils have not lost a league opener since Dec. 9, 2000 - also the last time they lost to the Tigers (9-8).

Shaniqua Pauldo scored 12 points to lead Clemson, which has lost its last 38 games against ranked opponents.

Bridgette Mitchell added 12 points and 10 rebounds for the Blue Devils.

Duke came in with its top 10 ranking, a solid winning streak this season and a run of success against Clemson that has lasted nearly a decade.

But the Blue Devils couldn't find their rhythm early on, going 3 of 9 from the field and leading 6-5 seven minutes in.

"It's okay to have a slow start if you're defending," Duke coach Joanne P. McCallie said.

Then Duke showed off the talent that's made it one of the ACC's top women's programs in the country.

Thomas got the run started with a driving basket and a foul shot, and Cheek followed with two straight jumpers.

Cheek added a 3-pointer that increased the lead to 22-9, then Thomas followed with a long-range basket of her own. By the time Karima Christmas made two foul shots, Duke lead 27-11 to all but wrap the game up.

Clemson hasn't beaten a Top 25 program in more than six years, and the Tigers lose their latest chance with some awful first-half shooting.

The Tigers have shot less than 40 percent in three of its past four games.

"Now, it's more in their heads," Clemson coach Cristy McKinney said. "It is confidence in my mind and they just need the reps and seeing it go in the hole."

That might be difficult since the Tigers face ranked opponents Georgia Tech, Florida State and North Carolina their next three games.

Clemson also couldn't handle Duke's size, getting outrebounded 48 to 31.

The Blue Devils opened the second half with a 17-9 run and the lead eventually stretched to reached 30 points, prompting McCallie to send her starters to the bench.

Duke's intensity didn't let up, though. When reserve guard Chelsea Hopkins took a charge on Clemson's Keyrra Gillespie with less than six minutes left, McCallie led the cheers on the Blue Devils' bench.

"Finally, we got a charge," McCallie said.

Hardy, Clemson's leading scorer, was held to eight points - six fewer than her average - on 3 of 15 shooting. Reserve Jasmine Tate finished with nine rebounds and five blocks for the Tigers

Duke Women throttle NC Central 117-28

Duke photo
Duke photo

DURHAM, N.C.  Duke coach Joanne P. McCallie challenged her players to focus on details coming out of Christmas break.

They heeded her advice, playing hard every possession.

Joy Cheek scored 16 points to help No. 8 Duke defeat North Carolina Central 117-28 on Monday night in the biggest rout in school history.

Karima Christmas added 15 points for the Blue Devils (10-2), whose 89-point margin of victory was the sixth biggest in women's Division I basketball over the past 10 years according to STATS.

A school-record nine players scored in double figures for Duke, which posted season-high figures for points, field-goal shooting (58.8 percent), assists (35) and 3-pointers (10).

"I have really never seen a stat sheet like this in my 18 years - or 17 1/2 years - of head coaching, in terms of nine people in double figures," McCallie said. "That's kind of unusual, and I think it's a credit to the team to share the ball like everybody did."

Alexis Rogers had 13 points for Duke, which scored the first 22 points of the game and closed the first half with another 22-0 run. Jasmine Thomas, Krystal Thomas and Kathleen Scheer added 12 points to help the Blue Devils beat their city rival.

The Blue Devils led 65-9 at halftime, setting a school record for biggest halftime lead and tying the school record for points in a first half.

"We hadn't played a game in a few days or a week or so, and we just wanted to come out sharp," Cheek said.

Danielle DeBerry and J'Mia Pollock scored six points apiece to lead the Eagles (1-10), who had more turnovers (45) than field-goal attempts (41).

N.C. Central sputtered without guard Joanna Miller, who served a one-game suspension for violating team rules. Miller had been averaging a team-best 17.7 points and 2.8 assists per game for the Eagles, who are in their third year of reclassification to NCAA Division I.

"I think the kids came out and were a little rattled at the beginning of the game," N.C. Central coach Joli Robinson said. "But they kind of settled down and did some things we were looking for them to do. It lets us know that we've got a long ways to go."

Duke smothered the Eagles from the start, forcing turnovers on N.C. Central's first three possessions. The Blue Devils finished with a school-record 31 steals, converting many of those opportunities into easy baskets.

Duke outscored N.C. Central 66-4 in the lane and owned a 60-1 advantage in points off turnovers.

"Everyone was very efficient with the time on the floor and attacking," McCallie said. "That's really important to us to build our depth and to get better, and I definitely thought we got better tonight."