NCAAB

Virginia Cavaliers at Duke Blue Devils

· T. Rowe Price ACC Tournament - Final
29-5, 8-2 Away
Final
70 - 74
32-2, 15-0 Home

No. 1 Duke beats No. 10 Virginia 74-70 for 2nd straight ACC Tournament title under Jon Scheyer

Cayden Boozer makes a highlight reel slam for Duke

Cayden Boozer had 16 points, and Tournament MVP Cameron Boozer overcame a poor shooting night to finish with 13 points, eight rebounds and eight assists as the Blue Devils extended their winning streak to 11 games heading into the NCAA Tournament, where they're expected to be the No. 1 overall seed.

Malik Thomas had 18 points and Sam Lewis had 17 for Virginia in a game in which neither team led by more than seven points and featured 16 lead changes.

“That was a heavyweight fight,” Scheyer said amid the confetti at midcourt at the Spectrum Center after the game. “And I think people know that Virginia is really good, but I don’t think everybody does. So they tested us in every way. Man, I was just so proud of our guys, the competitive spirit we had down the stretch.”

Duke (32-2) won despite tying a season low shooting 38% from the field and Cameron Boozer, the ACC player of the year, making just 3 of 17 shots from the field.

Four of his shots were blocked by Virginia center Ugonna Onyenso, who finished with nine for the game and an ACC Tournament-record 21 over three games, shattering Tim Duncan's record of 14 which stood for 31 years. He had seven blocks in the second half.

“It proves that we can fight through adversity,” Cameron Boozer said. “We won ugly. Obviously being down two guys (due to injuries to starters Caleb Foster and Patrick Ngongba II) was tough, but we found a way. ... We wanted to make a statement — whether we have nine guys, seven guys or five guys, we are going to find a way.”

Despite the loss, the Cavaliers (29-5) were upbeat about their chances heading into the NCAA Tournament.

“I feel like we are going to make a run,” Onyenso said.

Virginia's first-year head coach Ryan Odom was proud of how his team defended Cameron Boozer and was competitive until the end after getting blown out by the Blue Devils 77-51 two weeks ago at Cameron Indoor Stadium.

Odom said it is “brutal" trying to prepare a defense to stop Cameron Boozer.

“He's just a special player,” Odom said. “He has the ability to beat you in a multitude of ways, whether it is driving against a bigger guy, his physicality as he gets closer to the rim, banging the shot from beyond the arc, getting to the free throw line or making the pass. He made several key passes where they got layups.”

The Cavaliers fell to 1-33 all-time against No. 1-ranked opponents — and 0-18 against top-ranked Duke teams.

Virginia never looked intimidated despite last month's blowout loss.

Even after Duke threatened to pull away late in the first half after building a 36-29 lead, the Cavaliers were able to regroup and take a 4-point lead in the second half.

It was back and forth from there until Cayden Boozer put back a weakside rebound to put the Blue Devils up for good at 68-66 with 2:50 left. The Cavaliers couldn't get a shot off in time in their next possession and Duke seized the momentum with Evans, who played high school basketball 20 minutes from the arena, hitting two free throws for a 70-66 lead.

Onyenso scored low to cut the lead to two and Cameron Boozer missed two free throws opening the door for Virginia. Thomas had a chance to tie the game after being fouled on the other end, but missed the front end of a one-and-one.

Onyenso blocked Cameron Boozer for a fifth time, but Boozer was able to get his own rebound and wisely passed the ball back outside where the Cavaliers fouled Evans. He sank both free throws with 12.3 seconds left to put Duke up by four.

Thomas made a layup and Virginia again fouled Boozer, who made amends for his earlier misses by calmly sinking two free throws to seal the win.

“He did a good job and never showed any (frustration),” Onyenso said of Boozer.

Up next Both teams will await their seed in the NCAA Tournament. It's expected Duke will be a No. 1 seed and play in Greenville, South Carolina — the closest site to its Durham campus.

This story has been updated to show Ugonna Onyenso blocked four of Cameron Boozer’s shots, not five, and he had 21 blocks for the tournament, not 20.

How can I watch Virginia vs. Duke?

  • TV Channel: Virginia at Duke 2021 College Basketball, week 19, is broadcasted on ESPN.
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Recent Plays

2nd 0:00 End of Game 70 - 74
2nd 0:00 End of 2nd half 70 - 74
2nd 0:03 Cayden Boozer Steal. 70 - 74
2nd 0:03 Devin Tillis bad pass turnover 70 - 74
2nd 0:03 Devin Tillis subbing in for Virginia 70 - 74

Statistics

https://a.espncdn.com/combiner/i?img=/i/teamlogos/ncaa/500/258.png&h=100&scale=crop&w=100&location=originUVA https://a.espncdn.com/combiner/i?img=/i/teamlogos/ncaa/500/150.png&h=100&scale=crop&w=100&location=originDUKE
24-54 FG 25-65
44 Field Goal % 38
8-24 3PT 8-25
33 Three Point % 32
14-16 FT 16-20
88 Free Throw % 80
31 Rebounds 41
10 Offensive Rebounds 20
21 Defensive Rebounds 21
9 Assists 15
3 Steals 6
12 Blocks 1
12 Turnovers 9
1 Team Turnovers 0
12 Total Turnovers 9
0 Technical Fouls 0
0 Total Technical Fouls 0
0 Flagrant Fouls 0
9 Points Off Turnovers 11
11 Fast Break Points 10
32 Points in Paint 34
18 Fouls 13
6 Largest Lead 7
16 Lead Changes 16
29 Percent Led 57

Game Information

Venue: Spectrum Center

Location: Charlotte, NC
Attendance: 17,781 | Capacity:

2025-26 Atlantic Coast Conference Standings

TEAM CONF GB OVER
Duke 17-1 - 32-2
Virginia 15-3 2 29-5
Miami 13-5 4 25-8
North Carolina 12-6 5 24-8
Clemson 12-6 5 24-10
Louisville 11-7 6 23-10
NC State 10-8 7 20-13
Florida State 10-8 7 18-15
California 9-9 8 21-11
Stanford 9-9 8 20-12
SMU 8-10 9 20-13
Virginia Tech 8-10 9 19-13
Wake Forest 7-11 10 17-16
Syracuse 6-12 11 15-17
Pittsburgh 5-13 12 13-20
Notre Dame 4-14 13 13-18
Boston College 4-14 13 11-20
Georgia Tech 2-16 15 11-20
Full Standings