Duke’s Back Court Rises to Occasion Versus Wake Forest

Final Four veteran Jeremy Roach and Aussie native Tyrese Proctor combined for 38 points, seven rebounds, four assists and two steals Tuesday night inside Cameron Indoor stadium in a 75-73 payback victory against Wake Forest – avenged their 81-70 December 20th loss to the Demon Deacons. Proctor and Roach provided much-needed efficiency and leadership, two things the Blue Devils will need as they head into the tail end of conference play.

Efficiency

Tuesday night’s victory was Proctor’s most efficient game since December 10th. From the field he shot 54.5 percent, including 42.9 percent from the perimeter. The only blemish on the stat sheet were his four turnovers. With his 6’5 frame, Tyrese’s continuous improvement attacking the lane and looking to score gives Duke another dimension offensively, especially after missing Dariq Whitehead the last two games due to a lower leg injury. The freshman continues to adjust to the physicality of the American game, something the Australian native talked about wanting to do before the season.

Leadership

Jeremy Roach came out the gates assertive and aggressive, started the game shooting 70 percent in the first half for 17 points – leading the Blue Devils to a 41-34 halftime lead. For Duke to excel, Roach’s persistent and instant offense should be a focal point for an offense that ranks just 9th in the league at 72.9 points per game. Defensively the Blue Devils rank second in the ACC, behind Virginia, giving up an average of just 63.9 points per contest. Holding the Demon Deacons to just 29 percent from the perimeter, its lowest since a 72-70 loss to LSU back in December, was a difference-maker on Tuesday night.  

“That’s when we’ve been at our best, when [Jeremy Roach] is just playing instinctively and playing aggressive,” head coach Jon Scheyer said after the win. “I think he had 17 in the first half. We weren’t in a great flow offensively and Jeremy was the guy that kept us going. I like the look that he had. He drew the toughest assignment guarding Appleby, as well.”

Photo: Duke Basketball

“Tyrese is such a natural,” Scheyer continued. “He’s a smart player. He makes things easier. He made some uncharacteristic turnovers tonight, but Jeremy we needed in attack mode and that’s what we need to continue him to do.”

The Blue Devils will regroup and set their eyes on a match-up, that not only ended Coach K’s career but their season in New Orleans, against North Carolina in what’s widely considered one of the biggest games of the year. Duke will need another complete effort from its revamped and improved back court come Saturday night.

Game Notes

Up Next

North Carolina at Duke Saturday 6:00 PM February 4th.

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