Scheyer Era
The post-K era begins. Cooper Flagg. Can the Brotherhood continue?
Spencer Hubbard
The smallest Blue Devil with the biggest heart.
Kyle Filipowski
Two years in the post-K era.
Dereck Lively II
Born in Philadelphia. Raised in Bellefonte. Coached by his mother. Lost her two months before the Finals.
Jared McCain
Three shots on a ten-foot hoop. TikTok star. Painted nails. Pluto energy. The kid who wouldn’t choose between basketball and everything else.
Cooper Flagg
Born in Newport, Maine. Raised by headlights. The #1 pick.
Kon Knueppel
Five brothers. Five trophies. A Nintendo Wii taught him to love basketball. Milwaukee’s finest shooter.
Isaiah Evans
Showtime Slim. JV as a freshman. Didn’t make his seventh-grade team. Bought his own cones. Single mother believed in the slow build. 48 points in the state quarterfinal — 21 in a row.
Cameron Boozer
Born via IVF to save his brother’s life. Four state titles. First since LeBron to win Mr. Basketball USA twice. Carlos Boozer’s son — but now Carlos is known as Cameron’s dad.
Cayden Boozer
The loud twin. The passer in a family of scorers. My brother’s keeper — since the day he was born.
Jaylen Blakes
He just needed the court.
Stanley Borden
The seven-foot walk-on from Istanbul who never scored a point — and became a Cameron Indoor legend anyway.
Mark Mitchell
Scheyer’s first signature recruit. McDonald’s All-American. ACC Tournament champion. A story still being written.
Tyrese Proctor
From Sydney to Durham — the Australian who became Duke's floor general.
Ryan Young
The pickup game guy who did it in the ACC.
Dariq Whitehead
The Naismith Player of the Year whose body wouldn't cooperate — from McDonald's MVP to the G League at twenty-one.
Jacob Grandison
Oakland to Exeter to Illinois to Duke to the world.
Jaden Schutt
17 threes in a game at fifteen, 14 games in two years at Duke, 599 days without basketball — then Virginia Tech.
Christian Reeves
The 167th-ranked recruit who kept going — from Duke's bench to Charleston's frontcourt.
Kale Catchings
The Catchings family conquered basketball. Kale is conquering the business of basketball.
Max Johns
The kid Coach K stared down at camp came back with a Princeton degree and a Duke jersey.
Neal Begovich
Three brothers, two programs, one family — the San Francisco walk-on who followed his brother's coaching career to Durham.
Ifeanyi Ufochukwu
From Benin City, Nigeria, to free lunches at an after-school academy, to a bachelor’s and MBA from Rice, to five games in Duke blue before a season-ending knee injury on the number-one team in the country. Trust God. Work Hard. Stay Humble.
Caleb Foster
Three high schools. Two broken feet. One unwavering commitment to Duke. The quiet kid from Harrisburg who became the Brotherhood’s elder statesman at 20.
Sean Stewart
He jumped higher than Zion. Then he went looking for minutes.
Cameron Sheffield
A Georgia state champion and Rice starter who chose Duke for a graduate chapter — earning an MBA at Fuqua while wearing the jersey, proving that the Brotherhood has room for the players who come to compete, contribute, and build a life beyond the court.
Jack Scott
Princeton royalty — the son of a Tigers head coach and a Tigers point guard — who played in the Sweet 16, transferred twice, and landed at Duke to close out a college career that reads like a basketball family’s love letter to the game.
TJ Power
From Duke's bench to 44 points in the Ivy League championship — the five-star who found his stage.
Sion James
The glue guy who does everything the stat sheet can't measure.
Khaman Maluach
From war-torn South Sudan to a Ugandan refugee community to his first basketball game in Crocs — the most improbable journey in Brotherhood history.
Maliq Brown
A three-star from the Virginia countryside who made history at Syracuse, chose Duke, fought through injuries, and became the best defender in the country.
Patrick Ngongba II
Son of a Central African Republic immigrant and a Hurricane Hugo survivor who played in the WNBA — both parents played at GWU, and their son became Duke’s starting center.
Mason Gillis
Six years, two programs, one of the best locker room guys in college basketball.
Darren Harris
The first commit in Duke’s generational 2024 class — a Peach Jam MVP and Virginia Player of the Year from the Paul VI pipeline who chose to stay and grow while the spotlight chased his classmates to the NBA.
Dame Sarr
Born in small-town Italy to Senegalese immigrants, played for FC Barcelona at 16, defied the club to attend the Nike Hoop Summit, and landed at Duke as a EuroLeague veteran.
Nikolas Khamenia
Both parents emigrated from Belarus for basketball. He watched Space Jam every morning before pre-school, won three USA gold medals, and chose Duke over the school ten miles from his house.
Sebastian Wilkins
A Boston kid who scored 1,000 points by sophomore year, dominated the Hoophall Classic, reclassified a year early to chase a childhood dream, and is redshirting his first season at Duke — betting on himself the way he always has.
Brock Davis
A championship legacy hiding in plain sight at the end of the bench.