2004–05 Duke Blue Devils men's basketball team

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Jump to: navigation, search
2004-05 Duke Blue Devils men's basketball
Duke text logo.svg
ACC Tournament Champions
NCAA Tournament, Austin Regional Semifinal L 54–62 vs. Michigan State
Conference Atlantic Coast Conference
2004-05 record 27–6 (11–5 ACC)
Head coach Mike Krzyzewski (25th year)
Home arena Cameron Indoor Stadium
Seasons
« 2003-04 2005-06 »

The 2004–05 Duke Blue Devils men's basketball team represented Duke University during the 2004-05 men's college basketball season. Mike Krzyzewski had turned down a $40 million offer in the offseason to become the head coach of the Los Angeles Lakers to return for his 25th season and rebuild a team that lost Chris Duhon to graduation, Luol Deng to the pros and recruit Shaun Livingston altogether for the NBA Draft. For the first time in five years, Duke was not picked to win the ACC.[1]

Schedule

Date
Time, TV
Rank# Opponent# Result Record Site
City, State
November 5
St. Francis/Xavier (Canada)
Exhibition
W 107–56 
Cameron Indoor Stadium 
Durham, NC
November 11
North Carolina Central
Exhibition
W 95–58 
Cameron Indoor Stadium 
Durham, NC
November 20*
#11 Tennessee-Martin W 88–46  1-0
Cameron Indoor Stadium 
Durham, NC
November 22*
#11 vs. Davidson W 74–61  2-0
Charlotte Coliseum 
Charlotte, NC
November 27*
#9 UNC-Greensboro W 98–44  3-0
Cameron Indoor Stadium 
Durham, NC
November 30*
#10 #11 Michigan State
ACC–Big Ten Challenge
W 81–74  4-0
Cameron Indoor Stadium 
Durham, NC
December 4*
#10 vs. Valparaiso W 93–61  5-0
United Center 
Chicago, IL
December 12*
#9 Toledo W 82–54  6-0
Cameron Indoor Stadium 
Durham, NC
December 14*
#7 Illinois-Chicago W 88–55  7-0
Cameron Indoor Stadium 
Durham, NC
December 18*
5:00 p.m.
#7 vs. Oklahoma
Dreyfus Classic
W 78–67  8-0
Madison Square Garden 
New York, NY
January 2
#6 Clemson W 62–54  9-0
(1-0)
Cameron Indoor Stadium 
Durham, NC
January 5*
#5 Princeton W 59–46  10-0
Cameron Indoor Stadium 
Durham, NC
January 8*
#5 Temple W 82–74  11-0
Cameron Indoor Stadium 
Durham, NC
January 13
#5 at North Carolina State W 86–74  12-0
(2-0)
RBC Center 
Raleigh, NC
January 16
#5 Virginia W 80–66  13-0
(3-0)
Cameron Indoor Stadium 
Durham, NC
January 19
#4 at Miami (FL) W 92–83  14-0
(4-0)
BankUnited Center 
Coral Gables, FL
January 22
#4 at Florida State W 88–56  15-0
(5-0)
Donald L. Tucker Center 
Tallahassee, FL
January 26
#2 Maryland L 66–75  15-1
(5-1)
Cameron Indoor Stadium 
Durham, NC
January 30
#2 Virginia Tech W 100–65  16-1
(6-1)
Cameron Indoor Stadium 
Durham, NC
February 2
#4 at #7 Wake Forest L 89–92  16-2
(6-2)
Lawrence Joel Veterans Memorial Coliseum 
Winston-Salem, NC
February 5
#4 #25 Georgia Tech W 82–65  17-2
(7-2)
Cameron Indoor Stadium 
Durham, NC
February 9
#7 #2 North Carolina
Carolina–Duke rivalry
W 71–70  18-2
(8-2)
Cameron Indoor Stadium 
Durham, NC
February 12
#7 at Maryland L 92–99  18-3
(8-3)
Comcast Center 
College Park, MD
February 17
#7 at Virginia Tech L 65–67  18-4
(8-4)
Cassell Coliseum 
Blacksburg, VA
February 20
#7 #5 Wake Forest W 102–92  19-4
(9-4)
Cameron Indoor Stadium 
Durham, NC
February 23
#7 at Georgia Tech W 60–56  20-4
(10-4)
McCamish Pavilion 
Atlanta, GA
February 26*
#7 at St. John's W 58–47  21-4
Madison Square Garden 
New York, NY
March 3
#6 Miami (FL) W 83–59  22-4
(11-4)
Cameron Indoor Stadium 
Durham, NC
March 6
#6 at #2 North Carolina
Carolina–Duke rivalry
L 73–75  22-5
(11-5)
Dean Smith Center 
Chapel Hill, NC
March 11*
#5 vs. Virginia
ACC Tournament • Quarterfinals
W 76–64  23-5
MCI Center 
Washington, D.C.
March 12*
#5 vs. North Carolina State
ACC Tournament • Semifinals
W 76–69  24-5
MCI Center 
Washington, D.C.
March 13*
#5 vs. Georgia Tech
ACC Tournament • Final
W 69–64  25-5
MCI Center 
Washington, D.C.
March 18*
#3 vs. Delaware State
NCAA Tournament • First Round
W 57–46  26-5
Charlotte Coliseum 
Charlotte, NC
March 20*
#3 vs. Mississippi State
NCAA Tournament • Second Round
W 63–55  27-5
Charlotte Coliseum 
Charlotte, NC
March 25*
#3 vs. #15 Michigan State
NCAA Tournament • Regional Semifinals
L 68–78  27-6
 
Austin, TX
*Non-conference game. #Rankings from AP Poll. (#) Tournament seedings in parentheses.

[2]

References

  1. "No. 11 Duke Cruises Past Tennessee-Martin, 88-46." Published November 20, 2004. Retrieved January 16, 2013.
  2. [1]

<templatestyles src="Asbox/styles.css"></templatestyles>