DURHAM, N.C. — It wasn't long after sixth-ranked Duke finally fought off a pesky Georgia Tech team that coach Jon Scheyer pointed to the lesson emerging from the Blue Devils' Atlantic Coast Conference opener.
"I think for our guys ... they're learning very quickly that from this point forward, you've got to fight, scrap and claw for every game you play," Scheyer said.
It's a message set to apply across the ACC considering the league is on better footing compared to this time last year as the conference slate takes hold.
Notably, the ACC had a stronger showing in marquee nonconference matchups and has shown more depth of quality teams compared to last year with Duke operating as a one-team show on the way to the Final Four. And that means more games ahead for teams to help their postseason résumés in league play, something that wasn't happening last year as the ACC faced a dwindling number of March Madness bids before posting its lowest haul in a dozen years.
''I just feel like the league as a whole, it's so much better,'' said Terrence Oglesby, a college basketball and NBA TV analyst who played at Clemson. ''Maybe not top to bottom, but top to about 13, 14 (teams). It's a league that should stand up pretty well on Selection Sunday just because of how the metrics are going to work.''
Numbers up
The ACC stumbled through a rough 2024-25, a low point amid a multiyear discussion about getting men's basketball back in line with its tradition-rich history as a calling-card sport for the league. By last March, the 18-team ACC had secured just four tickets to March Madness, the lowest since getting four as a 12-team conference in 2013 and part of the larger decline from a record nine bids in both 2017 and 2018.
The four bids in 2025, though, was a reasonably predictable outcome at this time last year based on indicators like the number of AP Top 25 teams, NET rankings and Quadrant 1 wins that top a postseason résumé. That's why the numbers stand out now as the ACC shifts into conference play (all data runs through Dec. 29 for both years):