ERA VIII2022–

Scheyer Era

The post-K era begins. Cooper Flagg. Can the Brotherhood continue?

37 of 46 profiles complete
Complete

Spencer Hubbard

Guard5'8"2020–25

The smallest Blue Devil with the biggest heart.

Complete

Jaylen Blakes

Guard6'2"2021–24

He just needed the court.

Complete

Stanley Borden

Center7'0"2021–25

The seven-foot walk-on from Istanbul who never scored a point — and became a Cameron Indoor legend anyway.

Complete

Kale Catchings

Forward6'6"2022–23

The Catchings family conquered basketball. Kale is conquering the business of basketball.

Complete

Kyle Filipowski

Center7’0”2022–24

Two years in the post-K era.

Complete

Jacob Grandison

Guard/Forward6'6"2022–23

Oakland to Exeter to Illinois to Duke to the world.

Complete

Max Johns

Guard6'4"2022–23

The kid Coach K stared down at camp came back with a Princeton degree and a Duke jersey.

Complete

Dereck Lively II

Center7’1”2022–23

Born in Philadelphia. Raised in Bellefonte. Coached by his mother. Lost her two months before the Finals.

Complete

Mark Mitchell

Forward6'9"2022–24

Scheyer’s first signature recruit. McDonald’s All-American. ACC Tournament champion. A story still being written.

Complete

Tyrese Proctor

Guard6'6"2022–25

From Sydney to Durham — the Australian who became Duke's floor general.

Complete

Christian Reeves

Center7'2"2022–24

The 167th-ranked recruit who kept going — from Duke's bench to Charleston's frontcourt.

Complete

Jaden Schutt

Guard6'5"2022–24

17 threes in a game at fifteen, 14 games in two years at Duke, 599 days without basketball — then Virginia Tech.

Complete

Dariq Whitehead

Forward6'7"2022–23

The Naismith Player of the Year whose body wouldn't cooperate — from McDonald's MVP to the G League at twenty-one.

Complete

Ryan Young

Center6'10"2022–24

The pickup game guy who did it in the ACC.

Complete

Neal Begovich

Forward6'9"2023–25

Three brothers, two programs, one family — the San Francisco walk-on who followed his brother's coaching career to Durham.

Complete

Caleb Foster

Guard6'5"2023–present

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.

Complete

Jared McCain

Guard6’3”2023–24

Three shots on a ten-foot hoop. TikTok star. Painted nails. Pluto energy. The kid who wouldn’t choose between basketball and everything else.

Complete

TJ Power

Forward6'9"2023–24

From Duke's bench to 44 points in the Ivy League championship — the five-star who found his stage.

Complete

Sean Stewart

Forward6'9"2023–24

He jumped higher than Zion. Then he went looking for minutes.

Complete

Maliq Brown

Forward6'8"2024–26

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.

Complete

Isaiah Evans

Guard/Forward6’6”2024–26

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.

Complete

Cooper Flagg

Forward6’9”2024–25

Born in Newport, Maine. Raised by headlights. The #1 pick.

Complete

Mason Gillis

Forward6'6"2024–25

Six years, two programs, one of the best locker room guys in college basketball.

Complete

Darren Harris

Guard6’6”2024–26

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 waited two seasons for a breakout that never quite arrived, entered the transfer portal on April 7, 2026, and committed to Indiana six days later to play for Darian DeVries.

Complete

Sion James

Guard6'6"2024–25

The glue guy who does everything the stat sheet can't measure.

Complete

Kon Knueppel

Guard/Forward6’7”2024–25

Five brothers. Five trophies. A Nintendo Wii taught him to love basketball. Milwaukee’s finest shooter.

Complete

Khaman Maluach

C7'2"2024–25

From war-torn South Sudan to a Ugandan refugee community to his first basketball game in Crocs — the most improbable journey in Brotherhood history.

Complete

Patrick Ngongba II

C6'11"2024–26

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.

Complete

Cameron Sheffield

Guard6’6”2024–26

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.

Complete

Cameron Boozer

Power Forward6’9”2025–26

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.

Complete

Cayden Boozer

Point Guard6’5”2025–26

The loud twin. The passer in a family of scorers. My brother’s keeper — since the day he was born.

Complete

Brock Davis

Guard/Forward6'4"2025–26

A championship legacy hiding in plain sight at the end of the bench.

Complete

Nikolas Khamenia

G/F6'8"2025–26

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.

Complete

Dame Sarr

G/F6'8"2025–26

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.

Complete

Jack Scott

Guard6’6”2025–26

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.

Complete

Ifeanyi Ufochukwu

Center6’11”2025–26

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.

Complete

Sebastian Wilkins

Forward6’8”2025–26

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.

Pledged

John Blackwell

Shooting Guard6'4"2026–27

The portal answer. Wisconsin's leading scorer leaves Madison for Durham — one year, one chance, son of an Illini four-year starter, raised to be a point guard, finally about to be one.

Pledged

Joaquim Boumtje Boumtje

Center7'0"2026–27

Sixteen years old, seven feet tall, and the son of an NBA second-round pick from Cameroon. The lefty FC Barcelona center who reclassified from 2027 — and would have been the No. 1 overall prospect in either class.

Pledged

Bryson Howard

Shooting Guard6'4"2026–27

Josh Howard's son. An elite shooter with springs. The first Duke commit in the 2026 class — and the one who might shoot them back to the Final Four.

Pledged

Maxime Meyer

Center7'1"2026–27

Seven-one from Toronto. The long-term project at center. The first Canadian Blue Devil since Dan Meagher in 1985.

Pledged

Deron Rippey Jr.

Point Guard6'2"2026–27

The most explosive player in the 2026 class. Brooklyn burst meets Durham Brotherhood.

Pledged

Drew Scharnowski

Power Forward6'9"2026–27

The Illinois late bloomer who grew six inches in high school and ended up the All-MVC First Team forward Duke needed. Maliq Brown's job description, redshirt sophomore eligibility, and a chip the size of Nashville.

Pledged

Jacob Theodosiou

Guard6'4"2026–27

Loyola Maryland transfer, Waterloo Ontario native, lifelong Duke fan. Attended Coach K's basketball camp as a kid. Now arrives in Durham as veteran depth on the deepest roster in the country.

Pledged

Cam Williams

Power Forward6'11"2026–27

The next face-up four. The third straight #1 class centerpiece. Cameron Boozer's successor at the position — not his shadow.

Pledged

Nick Arnold

Point Guard5'11"2026–27

The May 14, 2026 surprise. A 5'11" Davidson Day point guard with Navy and the Citadel as his offer sheet — and a Brotherhood ticket waiting on the other side of one social-media post.