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The 1985–86 Duke Blue Devils men's basketball team represented Duke University. The head coach was Mike Krzyzewski. The team played its home games in the Cameron Indoor Stadium in Durham, North Carolina, and was a member of the Atlantic Coast Conference.
The 1986 NCAA Division I men's basketball championship game was the finals of the 1986 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament and it determined the national champion for the 1985–86 NCAA Division I men's basketball season The game was played on March 31, 1986, at Reunion Arena in Dallas, Texas, [1] and featured the East Regional Champion, #1-seeded Duke and the West Regional Champion ...
November 28, 1986 * at BYU-Hawaii BYU-Hawaii Thanksgiving Classic: W 85–68 1–0: Cannon Activities Center Laie, HI: November 29, 1986 * vs. No. 14 Illinois BYU-Hawaii Thanksgiving Classic: L 62–69 1–1: Cannon Activities Center Laie, HI: December 3, 1986 * East Carolina: W 103–65 2–1: Cameron Indoor Stadium Durham, NC: December 6 ...
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The basketball program won its 1000th game in 1974, making Duke only the eighth school in NCAA history to reach that figure. [8] In a turnaround, Coach Bill Foster 's 1978 Blue Devils , who had gone 2–10 in the ACC the previous year, won the conference tournament and went on to the NCAA championship game , where they fell to Kentucky .
Bob Harris called 471 consecutive Duke football games from 1976 until his 2017 retirement, and was on the mic for all five of Duke’s NCAA men’s basketball championships.
1986 Atlantic 10 men's basketball tournament: Brendan Byrne Arena (East Rutherford, New Jersey) Saint Joseph's Atlantic Coast Conference: Duke: Len Bias, Maryland [6] Mike Krzyzewski, Duke: 1986 ACC men's basketball tournament: Greensboro Coliseum (Greensboro, North Carolina) Duke Big East Conference: St. John's & Syracuse: Walter Berry, St ...
The 1986 Atlantic Coast Conference men's basketball tournament took place in Greensboro, North Carolina, at the Greensboro Coliseum from March 7 to 9. Duke won the championship, defeating Georgia Tech, 68–67. [1] Johnny Dawkins of Duke was named the tournament MVP. [1]