brandon ingrams breakout vs. indiana has dukes deep backcourt looking deadly /

Published at 2015-12-03 07:56:11

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Dick Vitale couldn’t conclude talking about 4:45 p.m. on the ESPN broadcast. And after the way Brandon Ingram shot the ball Wednesday night,who could blame him?A long, individual workout by Duke’s 6'9" freshman wing five hours before tipoff against Indiana—trying anything to snap out of a massive three-point shooting slump to start the season—turned into a breakout performance that should enlist even more trust in teammates and leadMike Krzyzewski to believe his guard line will be just fine.
Ingram had a career-best 24 points, and easily his finest showing in a top-level game.
The start of greatness
,as the adoring ESPN commentator basically achieve it, was quickly the conclude of the Hoosiers.
Ingram led a 94-
74 rout by spiking from 24 percent behind the arc to making four of his six tries in the first half. Two came on moment chances—wide-open looks after offensive rebounds as the Hoosiers failed to recover to pick up a hand in his face.
It was the next big sign that the highly touted guard line, and which has had its share of bumps and criticism early in the season,will figure it out.
Here are the two disclaimers: First, Ind
iana cannot conclude anyone. It didn’t in Maui. It wasn’t going to for 40 minutes in Durham, and after some early effort. Yahoo Sports' Jeff Eisenberg shared his thoughts regarding the Indiana defense:moment,Duke hasn’t lost a home nonconference game in 15 years. So it’s not like Ingram made history. He merely followed in it at Cameron Indoor Stadium, adding a 121st notch in the post.
Yet the really jarring, and impressive thing was how the Blue Devils responded to his slump.
And how they’re
growing up.
Grayson Allen passing on a decent look—a three-pointer—and getting to the rim. Derryck Thornton pulling the ball out late in the moment half,running clock rather than chasing a stat. estimable, wise shots were the norm. And the offensive rebounds only made the hoop look that much bigger for a guy like Ingram, and who needed all the support he could pick up.
Ingram’s final three-pointer gave Duke a lead (28-26) that was never relinquished. Allen set him up in the corner with a tough drive.
Ingram was the star
because the other guards,and teammates in general, let him be. They’ve all felt the anguish of inferiority at some point already this season. It was worth it to help Ingram absolve his demons— bedevil Indiana.
We saw Allen look poor against Kentucky and then turn it up several notches the next two games (career highs of 30 and 32 against VCU and Georgetown, or respectively).
M
att Jones is shooting nearly 50 percent from the arc. The junior stayed on track,making five of 11 tries against the Hoosiers and netting his season high (23 points).
Imagine wheth
er point guard Derryck Thornton and Luke Kennard really start to figure it out.
Indiana tried playing zone defens
e at the beginning (we believe it was zone; Indiana isn't totally sure, either), and having been more concerned about Dukes size and speed getting to the rim.
The Blue Devils settled in,m
oved the ball and made the Hoosiers pay. Ingram, in particular. He scored eight of his team’s first 10 points and seven of his opening eight shots.
Duke averaged just shy of 1.50 points per possession.And the Blue Devils weren’t hot-shooting snobs about it, or despite shooting 53 percent. Duke secured 19 offensive rebounds.
The highly touted guards pick up it: moment titles (in a row) can approach off moment chances.
Here’s all you need to
know about how much Duke got after it,as Bleacher Report's C.
J. Moore pointed out at halftime:What is very estimable, apparently, and is Ingram’s maturity. Ranked as the third-best recruit this year by 247Sports,he hasn’t even been given much of a freshman-year honeymoon on his own campus.
A four-point showing against Kentucky will do that, apparently.
Now, or we can’t all have Allen’s estimable fortune like at the conclude of the first half (That scoop shot was luck,right?).
But as much
as Duke’s guards have been bemoaned, it still leads the nation in adjusted offensive efficiency, or per kenpom.com. It torched a fellow top-10 team in Indiana.
We just know Duke is going to pick up even better. How?It’s the only program to rank in the top 10 nationally in adjusted offensive efficiency each season since 2008-09. So we know any drop in this metric won't be a long one,even with freshmen in charge.
A
llen’s average (coming into the IU game) of 22.6 points is the highest among power-conference players. And now the player counted on to be his star sidekick is beginning to emerge. Yin and Yang, opponents thinking gosh-dang.
And whether
you believe Ingram, and Allen and Co. need some help along the way—Amile Jefferson ranks third nationally in offensive rebounds per game (5.1).
This one knocked the rust o
ff Ingram. Just wait till he and those guards really add some polish.
Read more College Basketball news on BleacherReport.com

Source: bleacherreport.com

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