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FOOTBALL

Dominique Long Is Transferring To Duke After Playing Four Seasons At Michigan State

Dominque Long played four seasons at Michigan State!

Where?

On the gridiron!

As a freshman in 2017,

Dominque Long who is a safety played in all all 13 games, primarily on special teams . . . made the transition from safety to cornerback . . . tallied 12 tackles, including a team-best 11 on special teams . . . ranked first on the team with eight tackles on kickoffs . . . recorded a career-high three tackles vs. Rutgers . . . had two stops vs. Michigan

As a sophomore in 2018,

Dominque Long played in all all 13 games, primarily on special teams . . . made the transition from safety to cornerback . . . tallied 12 tackles, including a team-best 11 on special teams . . . ranked first on the team with eight tackles on kickoffs . . . recorded a career-high three tackles vs. Rutgers . . . had two stops vs. Michigan.

As a junior in 2019,

Dominque Long was named to the CoSIDA Academic All-District Team . . . earned Academic All-Big Ten accolades for the second consecutive year . . . received MSU’s Downtown Coaches Club Award for most outstanding player on special teams . . . had a career-high 16 tackles (13 solo, 3 assists), one pass break-up and one blocked punt in seeing action in all 13 games . . . played a total of 49 snaps on defense . . . led Spartans with 12 tackles on special teams (four kickoff, eight punt) . . . had one tackle in New Era Pinstripe Bowl against Wake Forest . . . posted one stop on kickoff coverage in Maryland game . . . notched one tackle at Rutgers, making textbook tackle on punt return coverage, just after return caught ball for a 0-yard return . . . posted pair of stops in Illinois game, with one on defense and one on punt coverage . . . recorded one tackle at Ohio State, as well as downing punt at OSU 5 . . . tallied two tackles in Indiana game with one on a kickoff and one on punt coverage . . . posted pair of stops at Northwestern with solo tackle on a punt and another solo stop late in game . . . logged one solo tackle in Arizona State game . . . registered two stops (both solo) and one pass break-up against Western Michigan . . . tallied two tackles and blocked punt in season opener vs. Tulsa, blocking punt on first play of second quarter, setting up MSU’s first field goal of game, putting Spartans ahead, 10-0 . . . it marked MSU’s first blocked punt since 2013.

As a senior in 2020,

Dominque Long Had 13 tackles in seven games with one start at cornerback (Indiana), including four tackles on special teams (one on kickoff coverage, three on punt return) . . . academic standout was named a semifinalist for the William V. Campbell Trophy by the National Football Foundation . . . recorded career-high tackle totals in two out of three games played with four at Michigan, then topping it with six vs. Indiana . . . posted pair of stops, both on punts, in Ohio State game . . . made first start of Spartan career in Indiana game and logged career-high six tackles, topping previous career-high of four tackles with five solo stops alone, and added pass break-up . . . logged career-high four stops at Michigan, with one special teams tackle . . . tallied one tackle in season opener vs. Rutgers, on a punt return . . . was named the program’s Scholar-Athlete Award winner in April 2020 by MSU Student-Athlete Support Services for having the highest cumulative grade-point average on the team.

Turns out that the 2020 season would be his last at Michigan State!

Why?

Because Dominque Long is transferring to Duke!

Dominque Long had this to say about transferring to Duke recently!

Excited to announce that I have committed to Duke!! I am beyond grateful for the experiences MSU has provided me! Looking forward to this new chapter in life!! #BuisnessTrip !!

“according to his page on Twitter”

At Duke Dominque Long is going to play for Head Coach David Cutcliffe who n 12 seasons at Duke and owns an overall head coaching ledger of 116-108 (.518). Cutcliffe’s 72 victories in 12 years with the Blue Devils are 62 more than the program’s total in the previous eight seasons (2000-07) combined and 53 more than the program’s total in the previous 11 seasons (1997-2007) combined.

In addition to guiding the Blue Devil gridiron program, Cutcliffe serves on the American Football Coaches Association’s (AFCA) Board of Trustees.

Duke’s return to prominence in college football has been spearheaded by Cutcliffe, who took over the program prior to the 2008 campaign after the Blue Devils had won just 10 total games in the previous eight seasons. Cutcliffe’s vision has come together in the last eight years with 57 victories, six bowl appearances, three bowl championships and the 2013 ACC Coastal Division championship.

Highlights from the last seven years include the program’s first bowl victory since 1961, three consecutive bowl victories for the first time in program history, a pair of NFL Draft first round picks in Laken Tomlinson (2014) and Daniel Jones (2019), an eight-game winning streak in 2013 (Duke’s longest since 1941), the program’s first appearance in the BCS standings in 2013 and in the College Football Playoff rankings in 2014 and final national rankings in both polls in 2013 (22nd by USA Today/Coaches & 23rd by Associated Press) to mark Duke’s first showing in a final poll since 1962. Cutcliffe directed the 2013 Blue Devils to a school record four fourth-quarter victories as well as, for the first time since 1971, two wins over nationally-ranked opponents. A year later, Cutcliffe had Duke as high as No. 19 in both the USA Today and Associated Press polls, its highest AP ranking since November 12, 1994. Duke also won two or more games as a ranked team in consecutive years for the first time since the 1954-55 seasons.

Academically, Duke continues to pace the ACC in honors. Over the past eight seasons (2012-19), the Blue Devils have produced as many Academic All-America selections — seven — while the rest of the ACC programs have combined for eight. In addition, during the same time span, Duke earned 519 ACC Academic Honor Roll citations, outpacing the remainder of the conference’s programs by at least 220 selection, while also leading the league in Academic All-ACC selections, National Football Foundation Scholar-Athletes, National Football Foundation Hampshire Society selections and ACC Jim Tatum Award recipients. In 2014, David Helton became Duke’s first National Football Foundation William V. Campbell Trophy winner as the nation’s top college football student-athlete.

Cutcliffe remains an avid advocate of community service, and since his arrival at Durham, a total of 10 Blue Devils have been named to the annual Allstate AFCA Good Works Team. Recipients of the honor from Duke in the Cutcliffe Era include Re’quan Boyette (2008), Bryan Morgan (2010), Sean Renfree (2012), Dave Harding (2013), Tomlinson (2014), Kelby Brown (2015), DeVon Edwards (2016), Gabe Brandner (2017), Johnathan Lloyd (2018) and Koby Quansah (2019). Additionally, Lloyd was selected as the Freddie Solomon Community Spirit Award recipient in 2018.

The 2019 season was highlighted by a Senior Day victory over Miami, signifying Duke’s second consecutive triumph over the Hurricanes, as well as a 45-10 win in Blacksburg over Virginia Tech. The win over the Hokies – the Blue Devils’ third in the last four trips to Lane Stadium – marked Duke’s largest winning margin in an ACC game since 1989. Individually, Damond Philyaw-Johnson matched an NCAA single-game record with two kickoff returns for touchdowns against Wake Forest, Noah Gray emerged as one of the top tight ends in the country after catching 51 passes and earning All-America recognition from the prestigious Walter Camp Foundation, Chris Rumph II received first team All-America honors after posting 13.5 tackles for loss including 6.5 sacks, and Quentin Harris concluded his career as Duke’s all-time leader in touchdown-to-interception ratio.

Some of Cutcliffe’s finest work in the Bull City was conducted in 2018 as 15 Blue Devils with starting experience missed at least one game due to injury. Duke began the campaign with four consecutive wins, two of which were quarterbacked by Quentin Harris after Jones went down with a fractured clavicle in week two. The Blue Devils reached No. 22 in the Associated Press poll with their 4-0 start, returning to the rankings for the first time since October 25, 2015. Duke secured bowl eligibility with a 20-12 victory at Miami, marking the program’s first win in Miami since 1976. One week later, the Blue Devils downed North Carolina 42-35, marking Duke’s third consecutive win over its chief rival, a first for the program since 1987-89, and back-to-back home victories against the Tar Heels for the first time since 1951-53-55. Duke capped the year with a dominant second half en route to a 56-27 victory against Temple in the Walk-On’s Independence Bowl, earning a third consecutive bowl title, a first for the program.

Cutcliffe’s mentorship of former quarterback Jones led him to being the No. 6 overall pick in the 2019 NFL Draft by the New York Giants. Jones, a 6-5, 220-pound native of Charlotte, N.C., became the highest Blue Devil draft pick since Mike Junkin went fifth overall to the Cleveland Browns in 1987, and just the seventh Duke player to be selected in the opening round of the draft.

The 2017 campaign displayed an unparalleled level of resiliency as the Blue Devils, after winning the first four games of the year, endured a six-game losing streak. Needing wins in the final pair of regular season games to reach bowl eligibility, Duke used a balanced offensive attack and dominating second-half defense to post victories over Georgia Tech and Wake Forest to conclude the year. The Blue Devils then responded to postseason play with a resounding 36-14 win over Northern Illinois in the Quick Lane Bowl to give Duke its second set of consecutive bowl victories in the history of the program.

In 2016, the Blue Devils earned a road win at Notre Dame and with their 28-27 triumph over No. 15 North Carolina in front of a national television audience on ESPN, defeated a nationally-ranked opponent for the fourth consecutive campaign. Other season highlights included Jones setting or matching 23 school records en route to finishing second in the balloting for ACC Rookie of the Year, A.J. Wolf becoming just the second multi-year first team Academic All-America in school history and a league-best 14 selections to the Academic All-ACC team.

Cutcliffe’s 2015 squad continued the elevation of the program as it captured eight wins, marking the first time in school history the Blue Devils posted three consecutive seasons with eight-plus victories. In addition, the season capped the most successful three-year stretch in Duke history with 27 total wins while the Blue Devils earned a berth in an unprecedented fourth straight bowl game, defeating Indiana, 44-41 in overtime, in the New Era Pinstripe Bowl.

Under Cutcliffe’s guidance in 2015, Jeremy Cash became the first player in Duke history to earn first, second or third team All-America honors in three seasons (2013-14-15). A finalist for the Nagurski Trophy, an honor presented each year to the nation’s top defensive player, Cash also became Duke’s fourth straight recipient of the Jim Tatum Award, an annual honor for the ACC’s top senior scholar-athlete for football.

In 2014, Cutcliffe was honored as the AFCA’s Region I Coach of the Year after guiding the Blue Devils to a 9-4 campaign and appearance in the Hyundai Sun Bowl. In addition, wide receiver Jamison Crowder finished his career in 2014 with 283 receptions, tied with former Blue Devil wideout Conner Vernon (2009-12/283) for the Duke and ACC career records. A fourth round pick of the Washington Redskins in the 2015 NFL Draft, Crowder also capped his career with the second most receiving yards in program history (3,641 — third most in the ACC) and joined Clarkston Hines (1987-88-89) as the only ACC players with three 1,000-yard seasons. Another record breaker in 2014 under Cutcliffe’s tutoring was quarterback Anthony Boone, who won 19 games as a starter for the most victories by a Duke signal caller in program history.

In 2013, Cutcliffe guided the Blue Devils to a school record 10 wins, including the ACC Coastal Division championship and an appearance in the 46th annual Chick-fil-A Bowl where Duke’s matchup with Texas A&M registered nearly nine million viewers to rank as ESPN’s most-watched non-BCS bowl game. For his efforts, Cutcliffe was named the National Coach of the Year by five outlets — American Football Coaches Association, Bobby Dodd Foundation, Maxwell Football Club, Sporting News and Walter Camp Foundation — while earning his second consecutive ACC Coach of the Year citation.

Cutcliffe’s 2013 squad featured three All-America selections — Cash, Crowder and kickoff returner DeVon Edwards — as well as a school-record 11 All-ACC picks. A perfect November record of 4-0 included wins over N.C. State, Miami, Wake Forest and North Carolina and propelled the Blue Devils to the Dr Pepper ACC Championship Game for the first time in school history. In addition, Duke enjoyed a perfect 5-0 record on the road — the program’s best mark since 1962 — and won four-plus home games and four-plus away games in a season for just the third time in school history, joining the 1939 and 1941 teams, all after being a consensus last place projection in the conference standings.

Duke’s 2013 club became the first ACC squad to lose its first two conference games and win the division championship. Other highlights included a league-high 21 selections to the Academic All-ACC team, numerous school records including most points and total offensive yards and cornerback Ross Cockrell being selected in the fourth round of the 2014 NFL Draft by the Buffalo Bills.

In 2012, Cutcliffe was named the ACC Coach of the Year after leading the Blue Devils to the program’s first bowl game appearance since 1994. Duke enjoyed the year with nine players earning All-ACC recognition including first team selections Cockrell, punter Will Monday and Vernon.

In addition, quarterback Sean Renfree, who threw for over 3,000 yards for the second time in his career, achieved numerous post-season accolades including the National Football Foundation Scholar-Athlete Award, the Pop Warner National College Football Award and the ACC’s Jim Tatum Award while earning a spot on the prestigious AFCA Good Works Team. Renfree went on to be a seventh round pick of the Atlanta Falcons in the 2013 NFL Draft.

Cutcliffe’s innovative offensive scheme was again put on display during the 2012 season as the Blue Devils scored a then school single-season record 410 points and became just the second team in ACC history to boast two receivers — Vernon and Crowder — with at least 1,000 receiving yards apiece. The Crowder-Vernon combination established a conference record for most combined receptions (161) while becoming the first duo in league history to post 75 or more receptions each.

Vernon closed his career as the ACC’s all-time leader in both pass receptions (283) and receiving yards (3,749) while Crowder etched his name into the NCAA record book with a 99-yard touchdown reception from Renfree against Miami.

The 2011 season – Cutcliffe’s fourth in Durham – featured outstanding play from safety Matt Daniels, a first team All-ACC and second team All-America selection who represented Duke in the annual East-West Shrine Game. The Fayetteville, Ga., native posted 128 tackles, 14 pass breakups and two interceptions in his final year. Following the campaign, Duke had a then ACC-record 19 players named to the league’s academic all-conference squad. The Blue Devils broke the record a year later in 2012 with 20 selections.

In 2010, the Blue Devil offense produced an average of 381.3 yards per game — Duke’s highest total since 1989 — as Renfree became just the fourth player in school history to throw for over 3,000 yards. In addition, kicker Will Snyderwine was a first team All-America honoree after booting a then school single-season record 21 field goals and compiling 95 points to post the then second-highest single-season total in Duke history.

Cutcliffe’s second campaign at Duke — 2009 — yielded a 5-7 ledger to give the program its most wins in a season since 1994. Quarterback Thaddeus Lewis, a two-time All-ACC selection who started the regular season finale for the Cleveland Browns in 2012 before throwing for 1,092 yards for the Buffalo Bills in 2013, led the conference in passing after throwing for 3,330 yards and 20 touchdowns against just eight interceptions. Lewis concluded his career with 10,065 yards to rank first at Duke and second in ACC history in passing yardage.

In 2008, Cutcliffe led the Blue Devils to four victories — matching the school’s win total from the previous four seasons combined.

Duke’s fan support also has increased since Cutcliffe took the helm of the gridiron program. In his first season, Duke set a school single-season record with four home crowds of 30,000 or more spectators. Twenty-eight of Duke’s 73 home dates in the Cutcliffe Era have reached 30,000 fans — compared to just four of the previous 47 home games prior to his arrival. In 2010, Duke established a school record for attendance with 201,248 total spectators at Wallace Wade Stadium.

Cutcliffe, born September 16, 1954, came to Duke after serving the previous two seasons as assistant head coach and offensive coordinator at the University of Tennessee. His head coaching experience includes a six-year stint at the University of Mississippi from 1999-2004 where he compiled a 44-29 (.603) ledger with five winning seasons, five bowl game appearances and a share of the SEC Western Division championship in 2003. Cutcliffe was named the SEC Coach of the Year in 2003 after leading the Rebels to a 10-3 record including a 31-28 victory over Oklahoma State in the Cotton Bowl.

Cutcliffe has participated in 28 bowl games including the 1982 Peach, 1983 Florida Citrus, 1984 Sun, 1986 Sugar, 1986 Liberty, 1988 Peach, 1990 Cotton, 1991 Sugar, 1992 Fiesta, 1993 Hall of Fame, 1994 Florida Citrus, 1994 Gator, 1996 Florida Citrus, 1997 Florida Citrus, 1998 Orange, 1998 Independence, 1999 Independence, 2000 Music City, 2002 Independence, 2004 Cotton, 2007 Outback, 2008 Outback, 2012 Belk, 2013 Chick-fil-A, 2014 Hyundai Sun, 2015 New Era Pinstripe, 2017 Quick Lane and 2018 Walk-On’s Independence. He owns a 7-4 record as a head coach in bowl tilts with wins over Oklahoma, Nebraska, Oklahoma State, Texas Tech, Indiana, Northern Illinois and Temple.
Though,

In 2020 Duke’s season wasn’t so great as they finished with record of 2-9!