NCAA Basketball: Duke at Arizona
USATSI

TUCSON, Ariz. — What was supposed to be the best matchup of the weekend in college basketball instead turned into a grinder of a game and a really good sign for Duke's Final Four chances. 

After losing to Kentucky in dispiriting fashion on Nov. 12, the Blue Devils learned, recovered and rallied on a level few could have expected. 

Jon Scheyer's team dictated the terms at McKale Center late Friday night, winning 69-55 and handing Arizona a rare home loss — made even more rare by how anemic U of A's offense was. The Wildcats' 55 points ties a program-low under Tommy Lloyd, matching the No. 15-over-No. 2 seed upset vs. Princeton in the 2023 NCAA Tournament.

Jon Scheyer is now 24-16  in road and neutral games since getting the Duke job. That's winning at a 60% clip when not playing at home, a percentage just about any coach in the country would take. Duke's win snapped a four-game losing skid against ranked teams and also ended a three-game slide against Arizona. This game was the back half of a home-and-home, and it was driven by revenge. Arizona won at Cameron Indoor Stadium last year, now Duke gets a huge road victory and returns the favor. 

Here are my takeaways from Tucson:

Duke's D has a chance to be the best in college hoops

Arizona was held to .81 points per possession in its house? There's almost no chance the Wildcats play this badly on offense the rest of the season, especially at home. Lloyd's been running one of the best and most reliable offensive schemes in the sport since he got this job a few years back. 

"It helps when you have individual defenders to begin with," Scheyer said. "Our team is a roster of guys that can guard the ball, good positional size." 

Sure, but 55 points? 

Duke's defense exposed Arizona, but more than that, it validated the Blue Devils' prowess to be among the best defensive units in the sport. Cooper Flagg is the always-looming presence as a shot swatter. Maliq Brown is a one-on-one menace on the wing who can guard 1 through 5 and do so in the post, on the perimeter — it doesn't matter. Khaman Maluach's rim protection is always a looming warning. Kon Knueppel's physicality and discipline to face-guard any guard or wing is nearly as good as Tyrese Proctor's defense, which Scheyer said on Friday is as good as anyone on the perimeter. 

A stellar showing, emphasized all the more by Duke's work on the boards. The Blue Devils' 35.1% offensive-rebound rate more than doubled Arizona's (16.7%), which was the No. 1 goal for Jon Scheyer's group heading in: stopping Arizona on the glass. The Wildcats have rated near the top in offensive rebounding (and overall rebounding) under Lloyd. On Friday, they looked mid-major. 

To that end: Duke didn't allow Arizona to hit 50 until 3:40 was left. 

"To get tested this early in the season on the road, I find incredible value in it," Scheyer said.

Flagg grinds out another MVP performance

It wasn't good for the 17-year-old early on. He started the game 2-of-11 and had a pair of turnovers. Some shots were forced. It was only because of his misses that Arizona had any kind of hope at the half, when it was 34-27. Then Flagg found his footing and chipped away at any of Arizona's hope, scoring 16 of his game-high 24 points after the break. 

I asked Flagg if he felt a little shaken to start, given he'd never played a game this big, this loud, this meaningful to this point in his life. 

"I think in the first half I was a little bit soft," Flagg said. "It's a high-level college basketball game, like coach said, really physical. I kind of found my footing and played off two feet a little better."

There was a sequence midway through the second half that Flagg was a part of that stunted Arizona's hope at a comeback. Caleb Love hit a second-chance 3-point after an offensive rebound with 10:51 left to make it 46-38. The fans finally had a reason to really make the McKale Center a party. 

Flagg made an in-air adjustment on the next play to deftly drop a layup in and get it back to 10. 

On the next possession, Arizona freshman Carter Bryant hit a 3-pointer 48-41, keeping hope alive

A few seconds later, Flagg sank a floater over the 7-2 Motiejas Krivas to make it 50-41. 

For more on Flagg's night, read here.

Arizona can't rely on Caleb Love any longer

The fifth-year senior has had some big moments against Duke, but his final one was his worst. Just eight points on 13 shots, including 1-of-9 from beyond the arc. Arizona wanted to get Love a couple of easy looks and morale-boosting buckets in the first few possessions, but Duke shut that down. The opportunities weren't there. 

He also had a team-high three turnovers. 

The Wildcats never found a groove thereafter starting out with a 7-2 lead. 

"Caleb has a well-documented story and he's my guy and he's not playing great right now, I gotta be honest," Lloyd said. "I got to hang with him."

Love's shooting a woeful 21.4% from 3-point land and averaging fewer than 10 points. He was a preseason All-American. He'll have more good games to come, but at this point it's fair to say Arizona's got to figure out a new mode of attack. Love is not reliable enough to build a Final Four-level offense around. Any lingering doubt about that was killed off Friday night.

"I gotta figure out why pieces aren't fitting together the way I would like or what we're used to," Lloyd said. 

Arizona's high-major drought continues

Here's a mini wow: Arizona has not won a game vs. a high-major team with an above-.500 record since it beat Oregon on March 2. It's had seven games vs. high-major teams in that span and either lost to the good ones or beaten the bad ones. Time for panic? Not exactly, but it's fair to say Arizona was quite overrated heading into the season. 

After losing to Wisconsin a week ago — and allowing 103 points, which is almost as stunning as only scoring 55 vs. Duke — this team has no business being ranked at present. If you're looking for a silver lining, taking a loss like this can serve as a wakeup call to Arizona's roster well in advance of the Big 12 slate. 

Before that: Battle 4 Atlantis. The Wildcats will fly nearly 3,000 miles to the Bahamas in a few days and attempt to be ready to play in a field that includes No. 3 Gonzaga and No. 16 Indiana. We can't call Arizona the favorite, no way.  

"Don't be stubborn," Lloyd said of Friday night's learning experience. "If there's adjustments to be made, let's figure it out."

This marks the first time Lloyd's team has lost back-to-back games since he became coach of the Wildcats in 2021. 

"The hardest things get the better, because I think I'm built for it," he said, adding: "I'm a realistic optimist."

"This is a tough night for me and the program," Lloyd said, and that's putting it lightly. Arizona is not in Duke's class. Maybe it gets there down the road, but not tonight.