A balanced Duke attack survived FSU’s upset bid to reach the ACC Tournament semifinals. The Blue Devils face Clemson, who eliminated North Carolina in an 80-79 thriller Thursday night at Spectrum Center in Charlotte. Tip is tonight, March 13, at 9:30 p.m. EDT. Duke enters without injured starters Caleb Foster and Patrick Ngongba II; Clemson plays without leading rebounder Carter Welling after his season-ending ACL tear.
| Metric | Clemson Tigers | Duke Blue Devils |
|---|---|---|
| Record (Conf) | 24-9 (12-6) | 30-2 (17-1) |
| Points Per Game | 74.5 (216th) | 82.8 (41st) |
| Points Allowed | 66.5 (26th) | 63.0 (3rd) |
| Offensive Rating | 112.9 (106th) | 123.0 (7th) |
| Defensive Rating | 100.8 (52nd) | 93.6 (2nd) |
| 3-Point % | 34.3% (168th) | 35.1% (119th) |
| Assists/G | 12.8 (253rd) | 17.3 (24th) |
| Offensive Rebounds/G | 9.3 (305th) | 12.3 (64th) |
| Steals/G | 6.3 (221st) | 8.0 (58th) |
| Defensive Rebounds/G | 25.2 (132nd) | 27.9 (13th) |
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Key Advantage
Ball Movement Gap: Duke generates 17.3 assists per game against Clemson’s 12.8 reflect a selfless offense that finds quality looks against pressure. Watch whether Clemson’s turnover-averse approach can sustain its scoring without Welling’s interior passing outlet.
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Market Analysis
The total sits at 135.5 points with Duke a -10.5 (-110) favorite; the moneyline implies roughly 82% win probability for the Blue Devils against Clemson’s 18%. Duke’s 123.0 top marks in offensive rating and 93.6 defensive rating explain the heavy favorite pricing. The 135.5 total reflects Duke’s 63.0 points allowed against Clemson’s 66.5, pricing defensive resistance from two units that rank in the top 60 nationally in points allowed.
Duke’s Defensive Identity Without Its Anchors
Duke’s defense cratered against Florida State, allowing 52% from the field and 79 points in a one-point escape. That was the first time the Blue Devils allowed 70 or more points since January 10 against SMU. Duke’s 93.6 defensive rating ranks second nationally, but that number was built with Foster and Ngongba rotating through the backcourt and paint. Freshman Cayden Boozer now runs the offense exclusively, and Duke’s depth has compressed to seven regular rotation players.
Cameron Boozer has met the moment, averaging 22.8 points and 10.2 rebounds across 32 games this season. His 57.8% field goal percentage and four-plus assists per game give Duke a versatile hub. Isaiah Evans has erupted for 32 points against Florida State, matching J.J. Redick’s ACC Tournament record with seven three-pointers. The Boozer-Evans tandem has combined for 55 points in Duke’s last game while no other Blue Devil reached double digits. That concentration is a vulnerability Clemson can attack.
Clemson’s Interior Void and Perimeter Response
Clemson faces Duke without Carter Welling, whose 5.4 rebounds and 10.2 points per game anchored the Tigers’ frontcourt. Welling produced 12 points and five rebounds in the first meeting, a 67-54 Duke win in February, where the Blue Devils held Clemson to 35% shooting. Nick Davidson stepped up with 17 points off the bench against North Carolina, part of a balanced six-player attack that scored in double figures.
The Tigers’ offensive limitations are structural. Clemson generates just 9.3 offensive rebounds per game, and their 12.8 assists per game reflect a stagnant, isolation-heavy approach. Duke’s 27.9 defensive rebounds per game and 8.0 steals per game create a possession squeeze that will test Clemson’s ball security. The Tigers commit just 9.5 turnovers per game, and protecting the ball is their clearest path to extending possessions against Duke’s pressure.
