Virginia carries a 13-1 stretch into Saturday’s ACC Championship Game against Duke, yet the Cavaliers’ lone loss during that run was a 77-51 dismantling by these same Blue Devils. The rematch moves to Spectrum Center in Charlotte tonight, March 14, at 8:30 p.m. EDT, with Virginia seeking to avoid a season sweep and Duke hunting its third conference tournament title in four years under coach Jon Scheyer. Cameron Boozer’s 22.8 points per game and Virginia’s Thijs De Ridder’s 15.8 points and 6.2 rebounds per game anchor contrasting offensive approaches. The Cavaliers’ 6.3 blocks per game lead Division I, but Duke’s 93.7 defensive rating is second nationally.
| Metric | Virginia Cavaliers | Duke Blue Devils |
|---|---|---|
| Record (Conf) | 29-4 (15-3) | 31-2 (17-1) |
| Points Per Game | 81.0 (67th) | 82.5 (47th) |
| Points Allowed | 68.2 (42nd) | 62.9 (3rd) |
| Offensive Rating | 119.3 (27th) | 122.8 (7th) |
| Defensive Rating | 100.6 (47th) | 93.7 (2nd) |
| 3-Point % | 36.0% (65th) | 35.2% (113th) |
| Blocks/G | 6.3 (1st) | 3.3 (181st) |
| Steals/G | 6.5 (192nd) | 7.8 (68th) |
| Offensive Rebounds/G | 13.3 (17th) | 12.2 (71st) |
| Assists/G | 16.8 (34th) | 17.0 (29th) |
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Key Advantage
Interior Volume: Virginia’s 6.3 blocks per game lead Division I and directly challenge Duke’s 19.6 two-point field goals per game. Watch whether the Cavaliers’ rim protection forces the Blue Devils into contested mid-range attempts or early-clock threes.
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Market Analysis

Duke is set as the obvious favorite here, listed at -6.5 (-110) with a 139.5 total. The moneyline implies roughly a 71% win probability for the Blue Devils against Virginia’s 29%. Duke’s 93.7 defensive rating and 62.9 points allowed per game anchor the favorite pricing, with the neutral-site setting compressing what would be a larger number in Durham. The 139.5 total implies a per-team average of 69.75 points, below Virginia’s 81.0 scoring mark and below Duke’s 82.5, reflecting the elite defensive resistance both offenses face.
Boozer-Evans Duo Tests Virginia’s Perimeter Containment
Duke wing Isaiah Evans torched Virginia for 19 points on 63.6% shooting in the first meeting, connecting on three triples before the first media timeout. His backcourt pressure with Cameron Boozer, who added 18 points, established the tone that Virginia never matched. The Cavaliers’ 308th-ranked opponent three-point percentage allowed suggests vulnerability to exactly this approach. Virginia’s 6.5 steals per game lag well behind Duke’s 7.8 indicate limited backcourt disruption to slow the Blue Devils’ ball movement.
Cayden Boozer’s career-high 16 points against Clemson on Friday demonstrate Duke’s secondary creation depth. Nikolas Khamenia’s 14 points on three triples against the Tigers adds a floor-spacing threat that Virginia must track. The Cavaliers’ 10.8 turnovers per game are manageable, but Duke’s active hands generate transition opportunities that punish conservative defensive positioning. Virginia’s 36.0% three-point shooting is its clearest path to offensive balance, yet Duke holds opponents to 30.4% from deep.
Neutral Site and Pace Compression
The Spectrum Center setting removes Cameron Indoor’s capacity to amplify defensive intensity, though Duke’s 31-2 record reflects performance quality independent of venue. Virginia’s 29-4 mark includes neutral-site tournament experience that should reduce environment shock. Both teams operate at sub-1.0 pace factors, suggesting a possession-controlled game that rewards half-court execution over transition volume.
The 139.5 total assumes compressed scoring despite both teams clearing 80 points per game this season. Virginia’s 119.3 offensive rating indicates the capacity to exploit defensive lapses, while Duke’s 122.8 rating is top-10 nationally. The first meeting produced 128 total points on Virginia’s season-low 51-point output; regression toward season averages creates total upside if Virginia’s shot distribution improves. Thijs De Ridder’s foul trouble limited him in the first meeting; De Ridder’s availability for 30-plus minutes narrows Virginia’s interior disadvantage and extends offensive possessions through his 6.2 rebounds per game.
