Cooper Flagg Suiting Up For Duke As Duke Is Opposing Louisville Saturday Night With Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament Championship At Stake?
Duke was trailing Georgia Tech 31-26 at halftime when Cooper Flagg sustained left ankle injury on Thursday in the Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament.
On Friday Cooper Flagg was sidelined with the ankle injury when Duke advanced with 74-71 win over tobacco road rival North Carolina in semifinals!
With that in mind,
This question comes to mind!
Cooper Flagg suiting up for Duke as Duke is opposing Louisville Saturday night with Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament Championship at stake?
Duke Head Coach Jon Scheyer said Cooper Flagg is doing better . All the imaging came back negative but he sprained it pretty good . It’s a good sprain . I’m not breaking any news he’s not going to play Saturday.
According David Hale ‘s ESPN articlehttps://www.espn.com/mens-college-basketball/story/_/id/44258036/cooper-flagg-doing-better-saturday-jon-scheyer-says
Duke comes into the Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament Championship with record of 30-3 because they knocked off North Carolina 74-71 Friday Night in semifinals without the services of Cooper Flagg who has sprained ankle to advance to Atlantic Coast Conference Championship Game Saturday night.
To oppose who?
Louisville!
As Duke knocked North Carolina 74-71 Friday night without the services of Cooper Flagg who has sprained ankle to advance to Atlantic Coast Conference championship game Saturday as a team Duke shot 49.1 % on field goals, 22.7 % on 3 pointers , 68.2 % on free throws. Five players scored in double figures. Khaman Maluach was 6-8 on field goals , 1-2 on 3 pointers , 0-1 on free throws to go along with 9 rebounds, 2 blocks , 13 points. Kon Knueppel was 5-11 on field goals , 3-5 on 3 pointers , 4-5 on free throws to go along with 4 rebounds , 3 assists, 1 steal , 17 points. Tyrese Proctor was 4-11 on field goals , 0-5 on 3 pointers , 3-5 on free throws to go along 3 rebounds, 1 assists , 2 steals , 11 points. Sion James was 4-7 on field goals , 1-3 on 3 pointers , 3-4 on free throws to go along 4 rebounds, 2 assists , 12 points. Patrick Ngongba II was 6-6 on field goals to go along with 3 rebounds , 2 assists , 1 block, 12 points.
According to espn app
Following Duke knocking off North Carolina 74-71 Friday night without the services of Cooper Flagg who has sprained ankle advancing to the championship game where they’re going to oppose Louisville Isaiah Evans who was 0-3 on field goals , 0-3 on 3 pointers to go along with 2 rebounds , 2 assists , 2 points had this to say!
It was just about getting the win. It wasn’t nothing I didn’t know already he was friendly but clear . This is my team. I feel like I’m more with them than ya’ll so maybe ya’ll don’t know but I know we’re like that .
Following Duke knocking off North Carolina 74-71 Friday night without the services of Cooper Flagg who has sprained ankle advancing to the championship game where they’re going to oppose Louisville Kon Knueppel who was was 5-11 on field goals , 3-5 on 3 pointers , 4-5 on free throws to go along with 4 rebounds , 3 assists, 1 steal , 17 points had this to say about battling adversity this season!
It’s awesome for us to have this type of adversity ,’’ To be honest, we haven’t had a bunch of it this season so it’s great . We don’t want the injuries , that sucks but having close games , close battles down the stretch are big.
Following Duke knocking off North Carolina 74-71 Friday night without the services of Cooper Flagg who has sprained ankle advancing to the championship game where they’re going to oppose Louisville Duke Head Coach Jon Scheyer. This team was built to win even without the best player in America . Overall I thought our guys did a good job adjusting on the fly , and then we trust even when Cooper isn’t out there - Tyrese (Proctor) , Kon (Knueppel ) , Isaiah (Evans) , Sion (James) we have other playmakers besides Coop . But obviously , it’s different having him out there . I mean , of course.
According to Alex Zietlow News & Observer article https://www.newsobserver.com/sports/college/acc/duke/article302114294.html
Louisville comes into the Atlantic Coast Conference Championship with record 27-6 because knocked off Clemson 76-73
Louisville advanced to the Atlantic Coast Conference Championship game Saturday night by knocking off Clemson 76-73 Friday night where as a team Louisville shot 43.6 % on field goals , 27.3 % on 3 pointers.
Four players scored in double figures!
Noah Waterman was 3-6 on field goals , 2-5 on 3 pointers , 2-4 on free throws to go along with 2 rebounds , 1 block , 10 points. J’Vonne Hadley was 6-9 on field goals , 2-3 on 3 pointers , 6-7 on free throws to go along with 9 rebounds , 2 assists , 1 steal, 1 block, 20 points. Terrence Edwards Jr. was 6-17 on field goals to go along with 8 rebounds, 3 assists , 1 block, 21 points . Chucky Hepburn was 4-13 on field goals , 1-5 on 3 pointers , 3-4 on free throws to go along 5 rebounds , 5 assists, 6 steals , 12 points.
Following Louisville to the championship game Louisville Pat Kelsey had this to say about Clemson their Head Coach Brad Brownell his coaching staff!
I want to give a lot of credit and shout-out to Clemson and Brad (Brownell) and his staff,It's a very, very good team, a very, very well-coached team. They're tough. They're physical. We knew it was going to be a tough, physical game, and it exceeded anything that I even thought it would be. I told our guys in the locker room, standing on the sidelines, that was as physically demanding of a game as I've ever coached in. From the very beginning, it was established early on how the game was going to go and how it was going to be called, and both teams accepted that challenge. They're a championship-caliber team, and they fought."
According to Jolly Patel article https://gocards.com/news/2025/3/15/mens-basketball-louisville-survives-clemson-to-advance-to-championship
Duke and Louisville opposed each other once during 2024-2025 regular season on Sunday December 8, 2024 in Louisville Kentucky.
Then 9th ranked Duke was behind 37-33 at halftime at Louisville Sunday night!
Though, 9th ranked Duke was behind 37-33 at halftime to Louisville Sunday night in Louisville Kentucky Duke came back to win 76-65 to win Atlantic Coast Conference opener.
As 9th ranked Duke came back to win at Louisville 76-65 to win Atlantic Coast Conference opener as a team Duke shot 45.2 % on field goals 26.7 % on 3 pointers , 85.7 % on free throws. Four players scored in double figures. Cooper Flagg was 8-17 on field goals 1-3 on 3 pointers, 3-3 on free throws to go along with 12 rebounds , 1 assists, 2 steals , 1 block, 20 points before fouling out of the game.Kon Knueppel was 4-12 on field goals , 2-9 on 3 pointers , 2-2 on free throws to go along with 1 rebound , 6 assists , 12 points . Tyrese Proctor was 6-13 on field goals , 1-6 on 3 pointers to go along with 2 rebounds , 1 assists , 13 points. Sion James was 2-5 on field goals , 1-2 on 3 pointers , 6-6 on free throws to go along with 3 rebounds , 1 assists , 1 steal , 11 points.
According to espn app
Following Duke coming back to win at Louisville 76-65 to win Atlantic Coast Conference Duke graduate transfer Maliq Brown who previously played in the Atlantic Coast Conference for Syracuse had this to say about his teammate Mason Gillis who like him is a graduate transfer though unlike him Mason Gillis is a graduate transfer from Purdue!
Following Duke coming back to win at Louisville 76-65 to win Atlantic Coast Conference Duke Head Coach Jon Scheyer had this to say about his team!
This team is way more than one player,”It’s way more than just a couple of players.”“He came in and set the tone, told us, you know, we’ve got to get locked in and just get a stop.”
According to Stephen Wiseman News & Observer article https://www.newsobserver.com/sports/college/acc/duke/article296480109.html
Tip off is set for 8:30pm from Spectrum Center home of NBA’s Charlotte Hornets!
The game is going to be televised on ESPN with Dave O’Brien, Cory Alexander , Dick Vitale, Angel Gray commentating!
Dave O’Brien, who has been in the industry since 1987, including 15 years at ESPN, will call play-by-play alongside former NFL Live studio analyst Hasselbeck and former NBA sideline reporter Katie George for ACC Network Primetime Football.
The Massachusetts native worked for ESPN from 2002-17, handling play-by-play for a variety of sports, including MLB, NBA, college basketball and soccer. He became the voice of the Red Sox on the Boston Red Sox Radio Network in 2007 and has been with NESN since 2016 as the primary play-by-play announcer for Red Sox telecasts.
Cory Alexander joined ESPN in 2009, working as college basketball analyst on ESPN and ACC Network.
Before joining ESPN, Alexander worked as an analyst for the University of Virginia radio network and was an ACC Network commentator for Raycom Sports. He launched the Cory Alexander Basketball School in August 1995 and he still operates it as the owner and president.
His last season in the NBA came with the Charlotte Bobcats in 2004-2005, and he previously played for the Orlando Magic and Denver Nuggets. His first three seasons were spent with the San Antonio Spurs after they drafted him 29th overall in the first round of the 1995 NBA Draft.
A 1995 graduate from the University of Virginia with a bachelor of science degree in psychology, Alexander is a native Waynesboro, Va. A four-year letterwinner, he ranks eighth in UVA history with 401 assists and 24th on their all-time scoring list with 1,286 points. Alexander earned second-team All-ACC honors and a gold medal at the FIBA U21 World Championship in 1993. Alexander was a McDonald’s All-American and Parade First Team All-American in 1991 at Oak Hill Academy (Va.).
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Dick Vitale, college basketball’s top analyst and ambassador, joined ESPN during the 1979-80 season—just after the network’s September 1979 launch—following a successful college and pro coaching career. In 2008, Vitale received the sport’s ultimate honor when he was selected as an inductee into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame.
His thorough knowledge of the game is brought forth in an enthusiastic, passionate, sometimes controversial—but never boring—style.
Vitale called ESPN’s first-ever major NCAA basketball game—Wisconsin at DePaul on Dec. 5, 1979 (a 90-77 DePaul win). Since then, he’s called over a thousand games.
He has been profiled by a wide array of national magazines, ranging from Sports Illustrated, Sport and The Sporting News to People, Playboy and Travel & Leisure. He received eight CableACE nominations, and captured awards in 1994 and 1995.
“I’m living the American dream,” Vitale once said. “I learned from my mom and dad, who didn’t have a formal education, but had doctorates of love. They told me that if you gave 110 percent all the time, a lot of beautiful things will happen. I may not always be right, but no one can ever accuse me of not having a genuine love and passion for whatever I do. And ESPN has been grateful enough to recognize this.”
And while his knowledge, preparation and enthusiasm are unparalleled, his “Vitale-isms” have unwittingly taken on a life of their own. Just a few of his many household phrases: “Awesome, Baby!,” “Get a TO, Baby!” (call a timeout), “PTP’er” (prime-time player), “M & M’er” (a mismatch), “Rolls Roycer” (a flat-out superstar), “diaper dandy” (freshman star), “All-Windex Performer” (ferocious rebounder) and “Maalox time” (the final minutes of a close game). Vitale credits Hall of Fame broadcaster Jim Simpson, who he teamed with in the early 80’s, in helping him develop his broadcast style.
But Vitale’s roots are in teaching the game he’s loved since a child. Following college, he got a job teaching at Mark Twain Elementary School (Garfield, N.J.) and coaching junior high school football and basketball. He began coaching at the high school level at Garfield High School, where he coached for one season (1963-64). He then earned four state sectional championships, two consecutive state championships, and 35 consecutive victories during his seven years at his alma mater—East Rutherford, NJ, High School (1964-70). He joined Rutgers University for two years (1970-72) as an assistant coach, helping to recruit Phil Sellers and Mike Dabney, two cornerstones on an eventual NCAA Final Four team (1976).
Vitale then coached at the University of Detroit (1973-77), compiling a winning percentage of .722 (78-30), which included a 21-game winning streak during the 1976-77 season when the team participated in the NCAA Tournament. Included in the streak was a victory in Milwaukee over Al McGuire’s eventual national champion Marquette team. In April 1977, Vitale was named Athletic Director at Detroit and later that year was named the United Fund’s Detroit Man of the Year. In May 1978, he was named head coach of the NBA’s Detroit Pistons, which he coached during the 1978-79 season prior to joining ESPN.
Vitale is also quite the philanthropist. He’s on the Board of Directors of The V Foundation, a non-profit organization dedicated to finding a cure for cancer and founded in 1993 by ESPN and the late Jim Valvano (an organization which has since raised over $200 million for cancer research). He hosts the annual “Dick Vitale Gala” in Florida benefiting the V Foundation, which has raised 25.2 million to date, gathering numerous celebrities to raise money and honor individuals such as Krzyzewski, Bob Knight and Pat Summitt, Billy Donovan, Tom Izzo, Jay Wright and Nick Saban and Robin Roberts.
For many years he has awarded five scholarships annually to the Boys & Girls Club of Sarasota (Fla.). His involvement with the organization was highlighted in April 1999 with the “Dick Vitale Sports Night,” an annual banquet that has raised more than $1 million. In April 2000, in recognition of Vitale’s support for the Boys and Girls Club, it was announced that a new building would be named The Dick Vitale Physical Education and Health Training Center. A statue of him stands in front of the Training Center. Vitale was inducted into the Sarasota’s Boys and Girls Club Hall of Fame at the 2001 Dinner. In 2002, Sarasota magazine named him one of the area’s most influential citizens.
He participates on selection committees for the Naismith and Wooden Awards and is a member of The Associated Press voting panel for the Top-25. He is also a voter for the Hall of Fame’s Bob Cousy Awards.
And Vitale is a popular figure even outside of sports television. He’s made cameo appearances in several movies as himself: The Naked Gun: From The Files of Police Squad! (1988, starring Leslie Nielsen), Hoop Dreams (1994 award-winning documentary), Blue Chips (1994, Nick Nolte), The Sixth Man (1997, Marlon Wayans and Kadeem Hardison), He Got Game (1998, Denzel Washington and Ray Allen) and Love and Basketball (2000). In 1995’s Jury Duty with Pauly Shore and Tia Carrere, he played “Hal Gibson.” And in 1992, he teamed with Jim Valvano to play furniture movers (“V&V Movers”) on the hit series The Cosby Show.
He was even the subject of a David Letterman Top-10 list—“Top Ten Signs Dick Vitale Is Nuts!”— in 1996—where he even read the list on the show (a couple of gems: “I’ve referred to everything as baby, except an actual baby” and “I keep repainting the roof of my house to match Dennis Rodman’s hair”). In March 1999, HBO’s Real Sports profiled Vitale.
Vitale’s also authored several books, including the most recent — Dick Vitale’s Mount Rushmores of College Basketball-Solid Gold Prime Time Performers From My Four Decades at ESPN, and It’s Awesome, Baby!: 75 Years of Memories and a Lifetime of Opinions on the Game I Love.
Vitale graduated from Seton Hall University with a Bachelor of Science degree in business administration. He also earned a master’s degree in education from William Paterson College and has 32 graduate credits beyond the master’s degree in administration.
A few of Vitale’s recent prestigious honors: In 2000, Vitale was recognized with the NABC Cliff Wells Appreciation Award for outstanding service to the college basketball coaching community and college basketball in general, and in 2001, the College Sports Information Directors of America (CoSIDA) presented him with the Jake Wade Award, for contributions to college athletics and in 2008, CoSIDA honored Vitale with the prestigious Keith Jackson Eternal Flame Award given to an individual who, or an organization which, has made a lasting contribution to intercollegiate athletics, has demonstrated a long and consistent commitment to excellence and has been a loyal supporter of CoSIDA and its mission. Additionally, as part of the Washington Speakers Bureau, he has spoken at many corporate events about his efforts as a broadcaster and philanthropist.
In 2002, the Florida Association of Community Corrections presented him with their President’s Humanitarian Award for his work with young people, while in 2003, Vitale was honored with the first-ever Ethics and Sportsmanship in Sports Media Award given by the Institute for International Sport, as well as the National Pathfinder Award, co-presented by Indiana Sports Corporation and Indiana Black Expo, to individuals who have demonstrated a dedicated commitment to improving the lives of America’s youth. In 2008, he was selected as the recipient of the 2008 Naismith Men’s Outstanding Contributor to Basketball (pays tribute to individuals who made a significant impact on college basketball). The Tampa Bay Sports Commission awarded Vitale with their Lee Roy Selmon Lifetime Achievement Award in 2011 for his incredible support in the Tampa Bay sports community. In 2012, the Tampa Bay Business Journal honored Vitale as Philanthropist of the Year during their annual Health Care Heroes event. In the same year, Vitale was also named one of 13 Magnetic Men by PARC, a non-profit organization whose mission is to provide opportunities for children and adults with developmental disabilities. In addition to being inducted into their hall of fame in 2013, the National Sportscasters and Sportswriters Association named Vitale the Sportscaster of the Year. In 2014, he earned several awards, including the Vincent T. Lombardi Memorial Award, presented by UNICO, the Man of the Year Award from the American Cancer Society, and the Humanitarian of the Year from his alma mater Seton Hall University. The AutoZone Liberty Bowl recognized Vitale with the Distinguished Citizen Award in 2015 for his work raising money for cancer research. Vitale was also recognized by the National Association of Basketball Coaches with the Man of the Year Award. In 2023, Vitale was recognized with the Lifetime Achievement Award from Nancy Lieberman’s Dream Ball Gall, the same year he was presented with the Knute Rockne Inspiration Award.
In addition, he’s been selected for 13 halls of fame: National Italian Sports Hall of Fame, the Elmwood Park, N.J., Hall of Fame (his hometown), the Sarasota Boys and Girls Club Hall of Fame (inducted in inaugural class of 2001), the Five-Star Basketball Camp Hall of Fame (2003), the University of Detroit Hall of Fame, the Florida Sports Hall of Fame in 1996 (he’s a resident of the state), the East Rutherford, N.J., Hall of Fame (1985), the National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame (2008), the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame (2008), Sarasota Community Archives Hall of Fame (2009), the Little League Museum Hall of Excellence (2012), the National Sportscasters and Sportswriters Association Awards (NSSA) Hall of Fame (2013), Wooden Cup Award (2017) and the National Sportscasters Hall of Fame (2018).
Dick Vitale was born in Passaic, New Jersey and resided in his youth in Garfield and Elmwood Park, New Jersey. He and his wife Lorraine now reside in Lakewood Ranch, Florida (Sarasota-Bradenton area), and have two daughters, Terri and Sherri, who both attended Notre Dame on tennis scholarships, and who both graduated with MBAs from the Golden Dome.
The Vitale’s proud involvement with Notre Dame includes the endowment of the Dick Vitale Family Scholarship, presented annually to Irish undergraduates who participate in Notre Dame Sports and activities that do not provide financial aid. Recipients over the years have included the school’s Leprechaun mascot, cheerleaders, and band members.
According to https://espnpressroom.com/us/bios/dave-obrien/
https://espnpressroom.com/us/bios/cory-alexander/
https://espnpressroom.com/us/bios/vitale_dick/