Record-Setting Day Feb. 29, 1952 DURHAM– In his final home appearance, guard Dick Groat hit 19 of 37 field goals and 10 of 11 free throws for 48 points (then a record) to pace a 94–64 destruction of North Carolina. The effort bested his previous school mark of 46 set two weeks earlier, as well as the Big Four mark of 47 held by N.C.
State’s Sam Ranzino. Groat’s parents and two sisters arrived from Pennsylvania just before tipoff to see him pump in 17 points as Duke opened up a huge halftime lead. When UNC rallied to within 58–50 in the second half, Groat promptly hit eight straight shots to help his team regain control.
Scoring 22 points in the fourth quarter, he was removed from the game with 15 seconds left to a prolonged standing ovation from the crowd of 7,000. Groat broke down in tears as his teammates swarmed him, and again in the locker room as he accepted congratulations from the Blue Devils and Tar Heels for the second-highest-scoring game in Southern Conference history. Before leaving the floor at the end of the game, Groat took the microphone and spoke to the crowd, a senior tradition that remained popular fifty years later. “As captain of the team, I would like to thank you fans for your support during the season,” he said. “We are sorry that we lost five games but we hope we can win the conference championship for you.” Groat’s scoring record was not the only significant achievement in the contest. Sophomore forward Bernie Janicki collected an astonishing total of 31 rebounds, a single-game school record that still stands. Duke (94) – Janicki 13, Fleming 6, Crowder 7, Groat 48, D’Emilio 14, Deimling, Latimer, Glasow 2, Lacy, Johnson 4, Shabel North Carolina (64) – Lifson 16, Wallace 5, Deasy 21, Grimaldi 3, Phillips 6, Gaines, Likins 3, Schwartz 1, Redding, Taylor 9 Fabulous Fred March 2, 1968 DURHAM – Fred Lind had scored only 12 points all year, but his work off the bench in the Duke-Carolina game in 1968 turned him into a legendary figure in Blue Devil basketball history. Game pes 2008 highly compressed 10mb.
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A 6–8 junior forward, Lind hadn’t seen a minute of action against UNC since scoring 20 points on the Tar Heel junior varsity his freshman year. But with star center Mike Lewis plagued by foul trouble, coach Vic Bubas called Lind’s number and saw his reserve make play after play in an 87–86 triple-overtime thriller that some regard as the most exciting Duke-Carolina game ever staged at the Indoor Stadium.
Lind played 31 minutes, scored 16 points, and had nine rebounds. When Lewis fouled out with 3:54 to go, Lind went the rest of the way. He hit a pair of foul shots at the end of regulation to force overtime, and knocked down an 18-footer with seven seconds left in the first OT to force the second one.
He came up with several key rebounds in the second OT. In the final five minutes he nailed a hook shot, blocked a shot by the Tar Heels, and grabbed another critical rebound—all to the delight of his fellow students, who carried him on their shoulders when he was the last to emerge from the locker room.
Duke (87) – Kennedy 14, Vandenberg 13, Lewis 18, Golden 13, Wendelin 8, Lind 16, Barone 5, Claiborne, Kolodziej, Teer North Carolina (86) – Miller 15, Scott 14, Clark 15, Bunting 14, Grubar 17, Brown 9, Fogler 2 Bubas Says Goodbye March 1, 1969 DURHAM – An unheralded Duke team with a 12–12 record pulled off a major upset, defeating second-ranked North Carolina 87–81 in coach Vic Bubas’s last game at the Indoor Stadium. Senior Steve Vandenberg, relegated to reserve duty for much of his final year, had a Senior Day to remember with a career high of 33 points. He made 10 of 14 field goals and 13 of 13 foul shots while also claiming 12 rebounds.
He had plenty of help from four other seniors, as Fred Lind, Dave Golden, C. Claiborne, and Warren Chapman all had Duke at an emotional peak. Duke was able to ride that momentum to the ACC Tournament, where it reached the championship game and had a nine-point halftime lead on UNC until Charlie Scott erupted to save the Tar Heels. Duke (87) – Vandenberg 33, Lind 18, Denton 6, Golden 10, DeVenzio 13, Chapman 5, Claiborne 2 North Carolina (81) – Bunting 15, Scott 22, Clark 11, Grubar 16, Fogler 6, Dedmon 10, Delany 1, Brown, Tuttle Dedication Day Jan. 22, 1972 DURHAM – On the day Duke renamed its stadium in honor of retiring athletics director Eddie Cameron, the Blue Devils enjoyed one of their most dramatic and exciting finishes to beat North Carolina 76–74.