Duke's Irving Will Play On Friday

Duke's Irving will play on Friday. Wow! the news that Duke's Irving will play on Friday is good news as we watch Kyrie Irving zipping down the floor toward an empty front court and fired a pass to an expecting teammate for an easy and sure basket. This is what you get with Irving on the floor. Even during a simple drill with the reserves, the electrifying and of course dashing point guard once again had Duke expecting the best this season. Now the Blue Devils will soon realize and I'm pretty sure be pleasantly surprised on how well he’ll have them zooming in a game.

Indeed, the news that Duke's Irving will play on Friday is good news since the No. 1 seed Duke’s will be pitted against the no. 16 seed Hampton on Friday's NCAA tournament opener in the West Regional. This opener will mark Irving’s return to the court. The popular and flashy freshman has been out since Dec. 4 with an injury relating to a bad big toe on his right foot which made him go limp even while walking. Concerned about his on-going condition, coach Mike Krzyzewski plans to play him limited minutes, just to make sure he won't aggravate the condition of his big toe.




“He hasn’t played in a long, long time, but he’s the type (of) player, you give him the ball, he’s going to get out there and he’ll help us if he gets on the court,” guard Nolan Smith said. “He’s that good a player.”

With the unfolding return of Irving, the present national champions will be reintroducing another elite talent to a superbly charged group that already includes the most outstanding player of last year’s Final Four, Kyle Singler, and Smith, the Atlantic Coast Conference’s player of the year.

“We want to play the way we’ve been playing and integrate him into what we’re doing,” Krzyzewski said.

Still, Duke clearly doesn’t want to expect too much too soon from Irving. At the time of his injury, Irving had Duke at 8-0 and was averaging a then-team-best 17.4 points while orchestrating the team’s uptempo attack. Irving admits his current conditioning isn’t where he wants it, but he says he’s able to do nearly everything he could before he was hurt. He pronounced himself 95 percent healthy, said “the other 5 percent will come when I actually play out there” and admitted to being even more nervous than he was for his Duke debut back in November.

“It’s even more nerve-racking, just the amount of pressure on Duke and just the aura of the NCAA tournament,” Irving said. “This is a special occasion for me, and I just want to enjoy it with my teammates.”

Especially since Krzyzewski and the Blue Devils never expected him back -- at least, not publicly. Not long after Irving was hurt, Coach K said he was prepared to play the rest of the season without him. Irving spent roughly two months in a protective hard cast with his right foot in a boot after that while Duke rolled up a 22-4 record in his absence and claimed a third consecutive ACC tournament title and a second consecutive No. 1 seed in the NCAA tournament.

Speculation on Irving’s possible return started to pick up last week at the ACC tournament when he worked out in public in uniform shorts and sneakers before a game, then said last Sunday that there was a chance he could return for the tournament.

Krzyzewski downplayed it at the time, then acknowledged the possibility two days later but said he wanted to see how Irving’s toe responded to practice. They have insisted Irving’s return wouldn’t threaten the chemistry they have developed over the past three months without him.

“I’m a pretty good basketball player, and I’m not a selfish one, at that,” Irving said.

His return has all but overshadowed a second-round matchup that figures to be one-sided. Duke enters as a 23-point favorite against Hampton (24-8), which won the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference tournament in Winston-Salem five days ago and is in the round of 64 for the first time since 2002.

“It’s a good chance to measure where you are as a program,” Hampton coach Edward Joyner Jr. said.

Then again, the Pirates have pulled off a stunner before. Almost exactly 10 years ago, they knocked off then-No. 2 seed Iowa State as a No. 15 to match the biggest upset according to seeding in the history of the NCAA tournament. At the time, Joyner was on the staff at Johnson C. Smith University, the Division II school in Charlotte where he was a player.

“Ten years later, I got the opportunity to possibly, you know, make history again,” Joyner said. “No disrespect to Iowa State, they ain’t Duke. We’re going to go out there and try.”

Well people or more particularly NCAA fans, now that the news is out that Duke's Irving will play on Friday, is a very much welcome news, right?
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