Duke men's basketball wins ACC tournament championship with win against Virginia
GREENSBORO, N.C. ā Duke men's basketball found itself in a familiar place Saturday at the Greensboro Coliseum, cutting down nets in celebration of a 22nd ACC Tournament championship.
No program in league history has won more tournament titles than the fourth-seeded Blue Devils, who secured a wire-to-wire 59-49 victory against second-seeded Virginia on Saturday for their first ACC championship since 2019.
After a controversial loss at Virginia in February, the 21st-ranked Blue Devils (26-8) had ample motivation and never trailed against the 14th-ranked Cavaliers (25-7). Itās the ninth time Duke has raised a trophy in Greensboro.
Jon Scheyer is the third rookie coach to win the ACC Tournament, joining Dukeās Vic Bubas (1960) and UNCās Bill Guthridge (1998). Heās the first person to win tournament MVP (2009) and coach a team to a title.
Kyle Filipowski, the ACC Rookie of the Year, had 20 points and 10 rebounds to pace the Blue Devils. Junior captain Jeremy Roach supplied 23 points.
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Kyle Filipowskiās MVP performance
Filipowski was the best player on the floor in each of Dukeās three games at the ACC Tournament. On Saturday, the 7-footer had as many points (7) as Virginia in the first 11 minutes.
After a scoreless performance that included five turnovers in Dukeās OT loss at Virginia, Filipowski had 11 points and five rebounds in the first half. The freshman turned things up in Dukeās first two games.
He hit 16 of his first 19 shots in the ACC Tournament, scoring 22 points against Pitt before adding 17 points, 11 rebounds and a career-high five assists against Miami. His 15 double-double performances leads all Division I freshmen
Dukeās interior defense
In its rout of Clemson, Virginia scored 40 points in the paint. Duke limited the Cavaliers to six points in the paint in the first half.
The Blue Devils made a point to keep Virginia from being comfortable on the interior, forcing the Hoosā guards away from the rim and daring them to shoot over 7-1 center Dereck Lively, who had two blocks in the first half after not recording a block in the loss at Virginia.
By the end of the first half, the Cavaliers were shooting 27% (6 of 22) and Duke had a 24-17 lead.
Staff writer Rodd Baxley can be reached at rbaxley@fayobserver.com or @RoddBaxley on Twitter.