It was the sixth annual K Academy, and the tents recognized three-year attendees, the ball was bouncing during games between eight teams coached by 26 former Duke players, the retired jerseys and banners honored past K Academy players and championship teams, the media room was occupied by attendees after their games, and the stats helped summarize every K Academy contest.
Also present was the trademark Duke intensity, with coaches working hard on the sidelines drawing up plays, encouraging their players (all at least 35 years old) and battling to bring home the coveted K Academy Cup. Stated Matt Hancock, a two-time K Academy attendee and the all-time single-season scoring leader according to the in-depth K Academy Media Guide, “You can’t fake intensity, right? It’s either there or it’s not. I think it extends through everything they do, whether it’s coaching a bunch of misfits like us for a week or trying to win a national championship. There’s no line drawn there.”
K Academy VI got started officially on Wednesday with around 80 attendees (the players) registering at the Washington Duke Inn in the morning. Also checking in were former Blue Devil players of all ages, from Coach K’s first Duke team (Kenny Dennard, Gene Banks, Vince Taylor) all the way to almost his entire Class of 2006 (Shelden Williams, J.J. Redick, Sean Dockery, Shavlik Randolph), merging three decades of championship basketball with friendship, good times and shared experiences.
After evaluation games on Wednesday afternoon at the brand-new K Center, the K Academy VI teams and coaching staffs were revealed at a draft on Coach K Court in the evening complete with video highlights and personalized graphics of each returning player as his name was called.
After an in-depth Thursday morning lecture by Coach K discussing USA Basketball, the eight K Academy teams opened play with two games. Former Duke players and attendees alike were excited to reunite and continue to build friendships fostered during the previous five K Academies. The day closed with a meal at Duke Gardens where each four-year player was recognized with a personalized highlight video cut to their favorite songs similar to the videos Duke seniors receive at the season-ending team banquet.
“It was a lot of fun to win it and see all of the guys,” said champion coach Nate James. Although Duke’s newest assistant coach had nearly lost his voice from all of his passionate coaching (eight games in four days), he added with his trademark smile and a hoarse tone, “It is cool to earn bragging rights in the office for a while too.”
At the auction the evening before Nate and his squad cut the nets down, Coach K encouraged Academy attendees to take that open shot and attempt the plays they dream of inside Cameron Indoor Stadium. By annually bringing in around 25 of his former players and assembling a talented and creative staff, the Hall of Fame coach sets the stage for highly successful men from all over the nation (20 states and three countries this year) to bring their basketball fantasies to life.
However, Coach K also recognized that the camp has allowed his family and basketball program to bring fantasies to life. In addition to serving as a reunion of sorts that has helped to grow and cultivate the Duke Basketball family, the event has helped raise several million dollars with proceeds assisting the development of Duke Basketball and the Emily K Center.
When K Academy made its debut in 2003, Coach K remarked that the Duke Basketball program did not have a practice facility and Durham did not have one of the finest community centers in the nation. Now, the Duke team has arguably the best basketball training center in all of college hoops complete with two courts, a massive weight room, cardio room, theater, video room, study areas, and a locker room for former players. Down the road, the state-of-the-art Emily K Center currently serves the Durham community and helps economically-disadvantaged local youth engage in a life-changing cycle of dreaming, doing, and achieving.
The K Academy has become a high-level fantasy facilitator and this year’s most memorable stat was not the number of Duke jersey retirees in the house (five) or the number of consecutive games decided in overtime during a string of thrilling games on Saturday (three). It was the amount of money raised for the Emily K Center during Saturday’s auction night alone — An eye-opening total of $464,640.
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“The Summer We’ve Been Preparing For”
At a press conference yesterday in Chicago, Coach K and USA Basketball Managing Director Jerry Colangelo announced the 12-man squad that will represent America at this summer’s Olympics in China. Coach K will lead a talented and balanced squad that has combined for 38 NBA All-Star selections. Said Coach K, “I’m one of a bunch of guys so excited to be coming together. The players want to represent the United States. They want to play together and do a good job. This is the summer we’ve been preparing for, now it’s here.”
Restoring the Glory
After winning the bronze medal in the 2004 Olympics with a 5-3 record, USA Basketball decided it was time for a change. With a goal of not only winning Gold but establishing a culture that represents the nation at the highest level, USA Basketball turned to Jerry Colangelo and Coach K. For the first time ever, a true U.S. National Head Coach was established, with Coach K taking the reigns for a three-year period (2006-2008) culminating with the Olympics in China. Stated Coach K, “It’s really the world’s game. We feel we are the best at playing that game. But until we show the respect to the rest of the world that it is the world’s game, I don’t think we’ll ever reach the point that we need to, to do this right. We feel like we are going to be ready to go.” He added, “I’m as excited as I’ve ever been as a coach. We have a program right now worthy of winning. In order to win, you need to be worthy of winning, have the respect for the game, know it, know how to respect each other.”
The Olympic Team
2008 Olympic Roster by the #s
38: Combined NBA All-Star selections by 2008 U.S. Olympians
32: Combined All-NBA honors earned by 2008 U.S. Olympians
50-0: Jason Kidd’s all-time record with USA Basketball teams
5: 2008 Olympians among NBA’s top 10 in scoring in 2007-08
4: 2008 Olympians who also played in 2004 (including Carlos Boozer)
9: 2008 Olympians selected to the 2008 NBA All-Star Game
7: 2008 NBA All-Star Game starters on the 2008 Olympic roster
58.3: Combined 2007-08 NBA scoring by Carmelo/LeBron (top 2 in NBA)
9: NBA lottery picks among the 12-man Olympic Team roster
14.2: Dwight Howard’s 2007-08 rebounding average (best in NBA)
11.6: Chris Paul’s 2007-08 assists average (best in NBA)
Carlos Boozer Named to Olympic Team
2002 Duke All-American and two-time NBA All-Star Carlos Boozer will make his second straight Olympics appearance. After winning the bronze in 2004 in Greece, Carlos will be reunited with Coach K this summer in Beijing. Said Boozer, “This chance for athletes doesn’t come along very often. We don’t take this lightly. We relish the opportunity and it may not come around again. I’m going to try to take in as much as I can, and at the same time be focused on winning the gold medal. This is the time when we get a chance to prove it. There’s going to be some phenomenal teams out there and I guarantee we’ll be up for the challenge. And, playing for Coach K again, that’s something I want.”
In the News
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Team James, coached by Nate James, Jason Williams and Ricky Price, proved to be the best squad all week at K Academy. After finishing with a regular-season best record of 4-1, Nate’s squad marched through Sunday’s championship, single-elimination tournament. Team James cut the nets down after defeating Team Wojo 40-23 in the finals. Rick Schnall took home MVP honors and Nate improved to 22-10 all-time as a coach at the K Academy.
Alaa Abdelnaby (NBA TV Analyst)
Mark Alarie (Principal – CrossHill Financial)
Gene Banks (Greensboro Smith High School Head Coach)
Kenny Blakeney (Harvard Basketball Assistant Coach)
Robert Brickey (Director of Elite Sports Training in NC)
Chris Carrawell (Duke Basketball Grad Assistant)
Marty Clark (Coach/Director of Next Level Basketball in CO)
Chris Collins (Duke Basketball Associate Head Coach)
Kenny Dennard (Managing Partner at DRG&E)
Sean Dockery (Pro Basketball Player – Most recently in France)
Mike Dunleavy (Indiana Pacers forward)
Chip Engelland (San Antonio Spurs Assistant Coach)
Mike Gminski (College Hoops TV Analyst)
David Henderson (Cleveland Cavaliers Scout)
Nate James (Duke Basketball Assistant Coach)
Christian Laettner (Real Estate Entrepreneur)
Reggie Love (Personal Assistant for Barack Obama)
Roshown McLeod (Head Basketball Coach at Woodward Academy)
Ricky Price (Sports Agent)
Shavlik Randolph (Philadelphia 76ers forward)
JJ Redick (Orlando Magic guard)
Quin Snyder (Head Coach of NBDL’s Austin Toros)
Vince Taylor (Minnesota Basketball Assistant Coach)
Jason Williams (24 Fitness Director and TV Analyst)
Shelden Williams (Sacramento Kings forward)
Steve Wojciechowski (Duke Basketball Associate Head Coach)
*Basking the environment at K Academy
*It gets intense at basketball fantasy camp
Thrilling Finishes
Saturday boasted three of the best all-time games in K Academy history and they occurred back to back to back…
Team Gminski upsets Team Laettner… Fred Perpall was the hero in this one. The Georgia resident scored a game-high 19 points including one of two free throws with 5.6 seconds left to give Team Gminski the 36-35 lead. Then, after a Team Laettner timeout, Perpall came out of nowhere to block an open layup attempt at the buzzer to secure the win.
Team James defeats Team Collins in OT… Team James’ Tom Dunstan forced overtime by sinking a 16-foot jumper as time expired in regulation. In the extra session, with Team Collins up by two, Team James’ Rob Forcelli buried a three-pointer with 11.8 seconds left and his squad held off a last second drive to take the victory by the score of 37-36.
Team King rallies past Team Wojo… In a game many K Academy veterans now consider the most exciting of all-time, Team King rallied from a 14-5 halftime deficit to beat Team Wojo. Trailing by three at the end of regulation, Team King pushed the ball the length of the floor in the final seconds, finding Tom McConnell open in the corner where he buried a game-tying three-pointer to force OT. In the extra session, with Team King up by two, Team Wojo’s Ted Virtue drew a foul with 5.4 seconds on the clock. After sinking the first, Team King called timeout but Virtue calmly drilled the second attempt as well to tie the game at 36. In the ensuing inbounds play, Team King heaved the ball towards center court after struggling to get the ball in play. Team King’s Rich Grodin saved the pass from going out of bounds by blinding heaving the ball over his head with both hands before falling into the scorer’s table. Miraculously, the ball again found the hands of McConnell, who sank a jumper from the corner as time expired. McConnell’s only two field-goal attempts of the game will long be remembered in K Academy lore and Grodin’s one assist in the game overshadowed his impressive 22-point, 12-rebound outing.



