Duke makes sure Coach K’s farewell tour starts off on a high note with


NEW YORK — At any other game, in any other year, fans who come to an arena to watch Duke play wouldn’t lay eyes on Mike Krzyzewski until a few minutes before the starting lineups were announced. That’s customary. But at this game, in this year, the winningest coach in Division I history actually walked to mid-court here inside Madison Square Garden 90 minutes earlier than normal so that he could be publicly honored by ESPN at halftime of the Champions Classic opener between Kansas and Michigan State.

That was the first sign this was a different deal,.

Coach K has spent basically every week since he announced his plan to retire at the end of this season explaining how he wouldn’t waste much time focusing on the end of his legendary career. And I’m sure that’s his intention. But it’s been clear for months, and it was undeniable Tuesday night, that Krzyzewski’s so-called “Farewell Tour” will be the dominant storyline of this season regardless of whether he wants it to be or not. It’s unavoidable and in your face — so much so that at halftime of Duke’s eventual 79-71 season-opening victory over Kentucky, the in-house televisions at MSG aired what amounted to a pre-taped Zoom call of John Calipari, Tom Izzo and Bill Self casually discussing Krzyzewski’s impact on the sport.

It seemed to go on forever.

When it was finally over, Duke took over.

The Blue Devils opened the second half on a 30-19 run and built a 15-point lead that they never completely relinquished, in part because their most high-profile freshman, Paolo Banchero, looked every bit the part of somebody who seems like the leading candidate to be the first overall pick of the 2022 NBA Draft. The 6-foot-10, 250-pound forward did things men his size don’t normally do (because they can’t). He took 11 shots, made seven of them and finished with 22 points, seven rebounds and two steals.

“I think a big thing for Paolo is how strong and comfortable he is with the ball,” Krzyzewski said. “To have his size and [and skill], it’s just unique. And he’s got a good head. He’s got good parents. They raised him hard.”

I wrote a column that published Monday night in which I made the point that there’s nothing crazy about thinking Krzyzewski’s final game on the sideline could come in New Orleans in the Final Four, and what happened Tuesday night only reinforced that belief. Duke looked bigger, more talented, and just generally better than Kentucky, and this is a Kentucky team that was recently picked to win the SEC. Kentucky is not bad as much as Duke is just really good, a preseason top-10 that might’ve been underrated. Yes, the nation’s top-ranked recruiting class, according to 247Sports, belonged to another school (Memphis), and the nation’s top-ranked prospect (Chet Holmgren), according to 247Sports, enrolled at another school (Gonzaga). But Duke was still the only program, according to 247Sports, to enroll three five-star prospects.

That showed up against UK.

Five-star freshman AJ Griffin, who was sidelined for part of the preseason with a knee injury, only played 10 minutes. But Duke’s other five-star freshman, Trevor…



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