1995: This Duke not those Blue Devils
Published 9:54 pm Friday, January 6, 2017
By Joedy McCreary
AP Sports Writer
DURHAM (AP) — Simply mentioning “back surgery” and “Mike Kryzyzewski” in the same sentence is enough to give even the most dedicated Duke fan — or hater — a flashback to 1994-95.
With Kryzyzewski sidelined for the final 19 games of that year, those Blue Devils finished 13-18 and became the only Duke team since 1983 to miss the NCAA Tournament.
But this is 2017 and just about everything around the Duke program has changed in the 22 years since the last time Krzyzewski took such a prolonged break. The coach had what his doctor calls successful surgery Friday to remove a fragment of a herniated disk in his lower back.
Dr. Allan Friedman said in a statement issued by the school that the procedure “went exactly as planned.”
With Jeff Capel’s season debut as acting head coach coming Saturday against Boston College, here are some differences between that 1994-95 season and now:
BETTER PLAYERS
The 1994-95 team had more future coaches than NBA players. The backcourt featured Northwestern coach and former Duke guard Chris Collins, Capel and future Marquette coach Steve Wojciechowski but only two players on that team — Trajan Langdon and Cherokee Parks — went on to play in the NBA. This team has four potential one-and-done freshmen in Harry Giles, Jayson Tatum, Frank Jackson and Marques Bolden, as well as preseason AP All-American Grayson Allen and legitimate national player of the year candidate Luke Kennard.
HE’LL BE BACK
Krzyzewski’s surgery in 1994 was to repair a ruptured disk, and it generally takes six weeks to recover from that procedure. Back surgeries can be tricky, but the school estimates his recovery time to be just four weeks. Coach K is no young pup anymore, but if that prognosis holds up, that’s early February — just in time for the annual visit from rival North Carolina and more than enough time to prepare for a deep NCAA Tournament run.
MORE EXPERIENCED STAFF
The main lesson Krzyzewski learned was the importance of empowering his assistants. That wasn’t the case back then. Collins called the mid-1990s Krzyzewski “Mr. Everything” because he micromanaged virtually every aspect of a program he molded into a then-two-time national champion and perennial Final Four team. The current group is accustomed to hearing the voice of Capel — who won 175 games and reached three NCAA Tournaments in nine years at Virginia Commonwealth and Oklahoma, and who led Duke past Georgia Tech last year in the only road trip Krzyzewski has missed since 1995.
‘SMARTER’ COACH K
Krzyzewski has intimated that the big problem in 1994-95 wasn’t necessarily the surgery itself, but his premature comeback from it. This time, he says, “I’m hopefully smarter and not as bull-headed” as he was at age 47 for his surgery in October 1994. He only missed some of preseason practice before hurrying back to the team, and promptly found himself back in the hospital in January ‘95 with exhaustion. By the end of that month, he was gone and the team was in assistant Pete Gaudet’s hands. Now a month from his 70th birthday, Krzyzewski says this time he’s “got to let it happen and take my time.”
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