Jack White Was First Australian Player To Play For Duke! For Who? Mike Krzyzewski! As Tyrese Proctor Plays For Duke This Upcoming Season He Will Be The Second! Playing For Who? Jon Scheyer!
Jack White was first Australian player to play for Duke!
For who?
Mike Krzyzewski who won Five national championships (1991, 1992, 2001, 2010, 2015)
Six gold medals as head coach of the U.S. Men’s National Team
Nine National Players of the Year (11 honors)
Six National Defensive Players of the Year (nine honors)
10 consecutive top-10 AP poll finishes (1997-06)
12 National Coach of the Year honors (eight seasons)
13 Final Four appearances (most in NCAA history)
14 ACC regular season championships
15 ACC Tournament championships (most in league history)
28 NBA Lottery picks (most in Draft history)
36 NCAA Tournament bids (most by one coach)
38 All-America selections (52 honors)
69 ACC Tournament wins (most in league history)
68 NBA Draft selections, including 42 first-round picks
101 NCAA Tournament wins (most in NCAA history)
127 weeks ranked No. 1 in the AP poll (most by a coach in poll history)
535 ACC wins (most in league history)
575 weeks ranked in the top 10 of the AP poll (most by a coach in poll history)
668 weeks ranked in the AP poll (most by a coach in poll history)
1,129 victories at Duke (most in NCAA history at one school)
1,202 career wins (most in NCAA history)
As a freshman at Duke in 2016 -2017,
Jack White Played in 10 games, averaging 2.1 points and 1.3 rebounds in 6.1 minutes
Scored a season-high five points and grabbed two rebounds in the season-opening win over Marist (11/11)
Had three points in a home win over Grand Canyon (11/12)
Scored four points in Duke's home win over William & Mary (11/23)
Netted four points in the home win over Maine (12/3)
Had three points in Duke's home win over Georgia Tech (1/4)
As a sophomore at Duke in 2017-2018,Jack White Played in 28 games, averaging 5.7 minutes per contest and a career-best 1.5 rebounds per game
Made his season debut in the opener versus Elon (11/10) and played seven minutes with a rebound
Scored his first bucket of the season the next night versus Utah Valley (11/11) and had a pair of rebounds
Logged 12 minutes against Evansville (12/20) with two points, four rebounds, a steal and an assist
In 13 minutes of action versus Pitt (1/10), did not score, but had two rebounds, two assists, two steals and a blocked shot
Had his breakout game versus Notre Dame (1/29), playing a then-career-high 14 minutes and matching his career-high of five points and pulling down a career-best seven boards
Logged a career-high 15 minutes against Louisville (2/21) with four points and five rebounds
Pulled down four rebounds with a blocked shot and a steal against Syracuse (2/24)
Saw seven minutes of action against Iona in the NCAA First Round (3/15) and had three rebounds, a block and an assist
Scored his first career points in the NCAA Tournament with a bucket against Rhode Island in the Second Round (3/17)
As a junior at Duke 2018 -2019,Jack White was
Named captain with teammate Javin DeLaurier
Received CoSIDA Academic All-District First Team and was an All-ACC Academic selection
Appeared in a career-best 35 games, starting in three
Totaled career highs in minutes (20.4), rebounds (4.7), and points (4.1) per game
Opened the 2018-19 season with 11 rebounds, nine points and three assists against Kentucky (11/6)
Grabbed six boards and scored 10 points at home versus Eastern Michigan (11/14)
Followed the EMU win with 12 points and eight rebounds against San Diego State (11/19) in the first round of the Maui Invitational
Averaged 7.0 points and 6.7 rebounds in Maui
Earned a career-high 12 rebounds and tallied nine points and three steals at home versus Yale (12/8)
Came up clutch in the closing minutes of the comeback win over Texas Tech at Madison Square Garden (12/20), hitting a tying three that knotted the game at 45-45 and putting Duke ahead for good with his go-ahead three with six minutes remaining
Finished the Texas Tech game with eight points, five rebounds, two assists, two blocks, two steals and two late free throws that helped ice the win
Registered career-highs in three pointers made (4-for-6) and points (12) against Clemson (1/5)
Followed the Clemson performance up with a career-best five blocks and recorded eight rebounds at Wake Forest (1/8)
Was two points shy of a double-double at home against Wake Forest (3/5) with 10 rebounds and eight points
As a senior at Duke in 2019, 2020,
Jack White was on
All-ACC Academic Team
Played in 30 games with seven starts, averaging 3.1 points and 2.9 rebounds in 15.6 minutes per game
Scored nine points on 3-of-4 shooting and brought in five rebounds at Clemson (1/14)
Potted 11 points on 3-of-5 shooting and added six rebounds against Wake Forest (1/11)
Recorded seven points on 3-of-4 shooting to go with six rebounds, three steals and two blocks at No. 11 Michigan State (12/3)
Logged 10 rebounds and four assists against Georgia State (11/15)
Selected as a team captain for the second year, and joined in captaincy by Javin DeLaurier and Tre Jones
Won the bronze medal with Team Australia in the Summer 2019 at the World University Games
For his career at Duke Jack White was a
A four-year letterwinner for the Blue Devils that was a part of ACC Tournament championship teams in 2017 and 2019
Named a team captain his final two seasons
Played in 103 career games and made 10 starts, averaging 2.7 points and 3.0 rebounds
Earned his Duke degree in sociology in May 2020
Unlike Jack White Tyrese Proctor is going to be playing for a former Duke player, Special Assistant, Assistant Coach, Associate Head Coach and now Head Coach of Duke Jon Scheyer!
As a player at Duke,
Jon Scheyer was one of the most versatile players in Duke history, concluding his playing career as the only player in school history to record at least 2,000 points, 500 rebounds, 400 assists, 250 three-point field goals and 200 steals. He averaged 14.4 points per game while scoring in double figures 114 times (sixth-most in Duke history) and leading the Blue Devils to a 115-29 (.799) record.
A two-time team captain, Jon Scheyer scored 2,077-career points and still ranks 10th on Duke’s all-time scoring list. He ranks third in Duke history in free throws made (608), fourth in free throw percentage (.861) and three-point field goals made (297) and sixth in free throw attempts (706). He played in 144 consecutive games, tied for the second-longest streak in Duke history.
As a senior in 2010 at Duke,Jon Scheyer averaged 18.2 points, 4.9 assists and 1.6 steals per game from the point guard position to spark Duke to a 35-5 record and its fourth national championship. He was a consensus second-team All-American and a first-team All-ACC pick in his final season after starting all 40 contests and scoring in double figures in all but two games on the year.
Jon Scheyer was named MVP of the ACC Tournament as a junior in 2009, averaging 21.7 points and 4.0 rebounds as Duke took home the title.
As a Special Assistant, Assistant Coach, Associate Head Coach Jon Scheyer helped mentor Tyus Jones in Duke’s 2015 national title season, as the Blue Devils finished the year ranked third nationally in adjusted offensive efficiency. Jones was named the Final Four Most Outstanding Player in Indianapolis and was a first-round pick in the 2015 NBA Draft after just one college season.
In 2017, Jon Scheyer helped mold Luke Kennard into a consensus All-American after a breakout sophomore season that saw him rank second in the ACC in scoring and three-point field goal percentage. He also helped develop Frank Jackson into one of the most dynamic young guards in the country during the 2016-17 campaign.
Luke Kennard and Frank Jackson were selected 12th and 31st overall, respectively, in the 2017 NBA Draft.
After Grayson Allen finished his career in 2018 as the 12th-leading scorer in Duke history with 1,996 points, he was drafted in the first round by the Utah Jazz. Allen joined Scheyer as two of just five Blue Devils in history with 1,900 or more points, 400 or more rebounds and 400 or more assists (Grant Hill, Danny Ferry, Johnny Dawkins).
The 2019 campaign saw Tyus’ brother Tre enjoy a breakout year as a freshman by setting the program’s single-season record for assist-to-turnover ratio (3.62), while establishing himself as one of the nation’s premier defensive players. Jones’ classmate, RJ Barrett, finished his remarkable freshman season at Duke as a consensus first-team All-American, the USA Today National Player of the Year, and the overall No. 3 selection in the NBA Draft.
R.J. Barrett broke a myriad of program and ACC records, including both the Duke and conference freshman scoring record with 860 points. His 860 points were surpassed on the program’s single-season scoring list by only J.J. Redick’s 964 points as a senior in 2006. Barrett averaged 22.6 points and was the only major conference player in 2018-19 to score 13+ points in every game of the season.
Under Jon Scheyer’s guidance, Tre Jones parlayed his phenomenal freshman season into a decorated sophomore campaign that ended with him as the 2020 ACC Player of the Year, the ACC Defensive Player of the Year, and an All-American. After two seasons as the starting point guard, Jones declared for the NBA Draft, leaving Duke as the program’s career record-holder in assist-to-turnover ratio (2.88) and ranking third in assists per game (5.8).
Throughout the 2021-22 season, Jon Scheyer worked closely with ACC Freshman of the Year and consensus second-team All-American Paolo Banchero. He also helped guide second-team All-ACC pick Wendell Moore Jr., into performing as one of the nation's most complete players. Moore capped his season winning the Julius Erving Award as the nation's best small forward.
Paolo Banchero capped his collegiate career as the overall No. 1 pick in the 2022 NBA Draft by the Orlando Magic, one of a record five Blue Devils drafted in 2022, including four in the first round. In Scheyer’s time at Duke, he has helped mentor 26 Blue Devils to be drafted – 20 first round selections.“according to Jon Scheyer’s biography on goduke.com”
Tyrease Proctor is a A five-star guard who was originally committed to Duke for the 2023 class
Announced his decision to reclassify in June 2022 to play for the Blue Devils for the 2022-23 season
Attended the NBA Global Academy branch in Canberra, Australia
Starred in the 2021 Australian Under-20 Championships where he averaged 13.8 points and 4.4 assists while competing as one of the youngest players at the event
Also helped lead the New South Wales Metro Under-18 team to a fourth-place finish at the 2018 U-18 Championships, averaging 18.6 points and 3.1 assists
Participated in the 2022 Nike Hoop Summit this past April as a member of the World Team, playing against fellow Duke signees Kyle Filipowski, Dereck Lively II and Dariq Whitehead
Chose Duke over offers from Arizona, Arizona State, Oklahoma and Tennessee
“according to his biography on goduke.com”