WASHINGTON — Duke’s 11th victory in program history over the No. 1 team in the AP Top 25 was already secure when Isaiah Evans elevated for a dunk at the buzzer and screamed in joy toward the Blue Devils fans along the baseline.
The basket was ultimately waved off for being a fraction of a second too late, but No. 3 Duke had already made its point by outhustling and outplaying top-ranked Michigan for a 68-63 win Saturday night before a riveted crowd of 20,537 in the nation’s capital.
‘’That was a game that didn’t feel like it was played in February,’’ Duke coach Jon Scheyer said. ‘’That felt like a March or April game.’’
Evans, freshman star Cameron Boozer and the Blue Devils could be back inside Capital One Arena five weeks from now, playing in the East Regional of the NCAA Tournament. Duke was projected earlier Saturday as the No. 1 seed in the East, and now it can make the case as the top overall seed.
Fans traded chants of ‘’Let’s go Duke!’’ and ‘’Let’s go Blue!’’ for the rare must-see matchup in a city starved for meaningful basketball. ESPN’s ‘’College GameDay’’ was broadcast from inside the arena during the teams’ morning shootaround, and tickets for upper-level seats were selling in the $600 range in the hours before the game, with courtside seats upwards of $6,000.
‘’This game helped us understand what a tournament environment is all about,’’ Scheyer said. ‘’I’m thankful for this, just this whole event, because I think it really simulates what it’s going to be. And whether we have an opportunity to play in Washington or not, this helped us a lot.’’
Further complicating the top of the March Madness bracket, No. 2 Houston also lost Saturday, falling at home to No. 4 Arizona. It was the first time since Feb. 8 of last year that the top two teams in the AP poll lost on the same day.
Two weeks removed from losing at rival North Carolina on a buzzer-beater, the Blue Devils ended the 11-game winning streak of another blueblood — one they hadn’t faced in a dozen years. Michigan fell to 0-7 in neutral-site meetings with Duke, a series that includes the 1992 national title game, when the Wolverines’ ‘’Fab Five’’ freshmen were blown out by Grant Hill, Christian Laettner and the experienced Blue Devils.