March 12, 2000
Box Score
POSTGAME AUDIO
Duke: Jason Williams |
Chris Carrawell |
Mike Dunleavy
Nate James |
Shane Battier
Maryland: Juan Dixon |
Terence Morris |
Lonny Baxter |
Mike Mardesich
By DAVID DROSCHAK
AP Sports Writer
CHARLOTTE, N.C. - No. 3 Duke expected a long, inspirational speech from
Chris Carrawell when the team's lone senior called a meeting before Sunday's
ACC tournament title victory over Maryland.
The message was more to the point.
"There was a revenge factor, I'm not going to lie," Carrawell said
following an 81-68 victory over the only ACC team to beat the Blue Devils in
the last two seasons. "I was like, `Look, we're not going to lose this game.
It was embarrassing, they beat us at home, celebrated on our court."
The Blue Devils (27-4) secured a No. 1 seed in the NCAA tournament and
probably the nation's top ranking with their convincing win over No. 20
Maryland, who was making its first championship game appearance in 16 years.
Duke should ascend to No. 1 after losses by Cincinnati and Stanford - teams
ahead of the Blue Devils in the poll.
"I thought we won the tournament because of our defense, not our offense,"
said Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski, who brought one of the nets to his postgame
news conference.
Duke's freshmen led the way this time when Jason Williams scored a
season-high 23 points and Carlos Boozer added 21 as the top-seeded Blue Devils
became the first program since the 1973 and 1974 North Carolina State teams to
win consecutive outright ACC regular-season and tourney titles.
Krzyzewski won his fifth ACC crown. The veteran coach pulled his starters
with 33 seconds left and gave each a bear hug near the bench.
Juan Dixon led the second-seeded Terrapins (24-9) with 19 points.
"We struggled a little bit with our rotation, getting the right people in
the right spots," said Maryland coach Gary Williams. "That's going to happen
sometimes during a game, but against a team as good as Duke, you're going to
pay the price."
Maryland had to go the final 32 1/2 minutes without starting forward Danny
Miller, who injured his left ankle trying to block a shot on a breakaway layup
by Mike Dunleavy.
"When you lose a guy that's averaging 33 minutes a game, it affects your
game time," Gary Williams said of Miller's loss.
The Blue Devils' home loss to the Terrapins a month ago snapped their ACC
regular-season record 31-game winning streak, but the second half belonged to
Duke and the team's youngsters this time.
Williams, the team's point guard, scored 15 of his points in the second half
and got Duke's outside game going with a 3-pointer to open the half. Boozer
scored 11 points after the break, taking care of Duke's inside game.
"We wanted to go into Carlos, and he responded in an amazing way,"
Krzyzewski said of the 6-foot-9 Boozer. "It is kind of nice when your best
game is in a championship game. That was his best game against a great player
in (Lonny) Baxter."
After struggling from the outside in the opening 20 minutes and leading by a
point at halftime, the Blue Devils came out by hitting their first three
3-pointers to begin pulling away. They made 64 percent of their shots in the
second half.
Maryland trimmed a 10-point lead to four at 56-52 with 8:50 left, but
Williams hit a 3-pointer and got a goaltending call, and Boozer converted a
three-point play and Duke was en route to its 11th ACC crown.
"We got a 10-point lead and I thought we lost our focus," Krzyzewski said
of a timeout he called to regroup his team for the stretch run. "I tried to
stress poise in that time, and boy they showed it from then on. We almost
scored just about every time we had the ball after that."
Williams' previous career high was 22 against North Carolina A&T on Dec. 12,
1999.
"I've had a lot of roller coasters as everyone can see with my six
turnovers today, but when you have players around you that give you an extra
boost, and who are always on you to be the best, they help you out," said
Williams, who became only the fourth freshman to win the tourney MVP award.
Duke made a combined 30 of 59 3-pointers in its first two games of the
tourney, but struggled from long range in the opening 20 minutes, going
1-for-11.
But Maryland's offense was just as ineffective early as the Blue Devils took
a 25-13 lead 8:50 before the break, going on an 11-2 run as four different
players scored.
The Terrapins countered with an 8-0 run of their own as Dixon and Terence
Morris sank 3-pointers 34 seconds apart as both teams began to heat up from the
field.