Showing posts tagged “Eliot Williams”

Coach K solves Paulus-Smith dilemma … with Williams

Matt Saldaña · 20 Feb 2009, 5:40 PM · Comment


In the Indy’s basketball preview issue last December, we took a position-by-position look at Duke’s roster. Sophomore Nolan Smith had recently replaced senior Greg Paulus as the team’s starting point guard, but we noted that Coach Mike Krzyzewski seemed content to keep a rivalry between the two brewing. At the time, Coach K insisted that Paulus would either play “with [Smith], or for him.” Indeed, following Duke’s 27-point loss to Clemson, Paulus replaced Smith in the starting rotation, reclaiming his role as the team’s leader–in what would, apparently, be a brief coup d’etat.

After squeaking by Miami in overtime, a Paulus-led Duke team went on its first losing streak in a calendar year, falling consecutively to UNC and BC. Yesterday, Coach K turned to his number three option on the flow-chart to start against St. John’s: freshman McDonald’s All-American Eliot Williams, who we said in December could “provide relief–and bursts of energy–down the stretch.” We meant, like, mid-way through the second half, not the season. Nevertheless, Duke won, 76-69, and Williams went 5-for-6 for a neat 11 points. He’s scrappy, and not the best defender (certainly not as good as Smith), but he gives it his all, approaching his defense much like a linebacker. His eyes are always on the ball, even if he’s not quite sure where his feet are. According to the AP recap, Coach K said he was impressed by Williams’ “verve” in practice.

There was one thing missing from Williams’ performance yesterday, however: he didn’t log a single assist. We suspect that may have been intentional–or at least tolerable–on the part of Coach K. (He also played Smith for 20 minutes, at both guard positions, and, as usual,  power-forward Kyle Singler led the team in assists.) In fact, as we predicted back in December, the point position may be “less about dropping dimes, and more about leading the team up the court with confidence.” Make that, leading the team up the court, and getting the ball into the hands of Singler, Gerald Henderson or John Scheyer (all of whom have been known to dribble the ball up-court themselves). All three can pass, and create shots, on their own, and they’ve been at the core of Duke’s successes this season. The problem is, 3-out-of-5 dependable starters hasn’t quite cut it. In any case, we’ll be anxious to see who Coach K starts at the one-spot versus Wake, and–more importantly, perhaps–if he utilizes that player as a true point guard.

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Duke 78, Montana 58; With Smith at helm, Blue Devils advance to 6-0

Matt Saldaña · 24 Nov 2008, 12:20 PM · Comment


CAMERON INDOOR STADIUM/DURHAM After beating Michigan to clinch the Coaches v. Cancer Classic title on Saturday, a tired Duke team returned to Durham on Sunday to face the lowly Montana Grizzlies–who, last season, finished fifth in the Big Sky conference. For the first time this year, former starting point guard Greg Paulus sat out the entire game, and did not participate in a shoot-around at the half. That left sophomore standout Nolan Smith–who led Duke with 16 points and 4 assists in the Michigan win–to take the reins, beyond a nominal starting position over Paulus, who has had several nagging injuries this season. In the end, Smith split ball-handling time with shooting-guard Jon Scheyer (14 points, 0 assists), in a Jordan-Pippen two-guard format, while Coach Mike Krzyzewski also subbed in freshman Eliot Williams (4 points, 3 assists) at the point. Smith finished with a team-high 14 points and one assist (along with 3 turnovers) in the 78-58 victory.

“I had to pick it up vocally,” Smith said after the win. “I realized, the day without Greg in there, I had to speak.”

Though his stat line may not have shown it, Smith demonstrated confidence on Sunday as a playmaker on the court. Described by teammates as quiet, Smith–with some encouragement from Krzyzewski–began to order the troops.

“He led our team in the second half,” said power forward Kyle Singler (13 points/5 rebounds/3 assists), who was tournament MVP in the Coaches v. Cancer Classic. “Nolan I think matured, and took a new step tonight.”

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