Joaquim Boumtje Boumtje keeps making the hype look conservative.
The 17-year-old turned in his best performance yet at the FIBA U17 World Cup on Thursday, powering the USA to a 67-point win over Puerto Rico in the quarterfinals. In just 21 minutes, he piled up 31 points, 16 rebounds, four assists, two blocks and one steal while going 11-for-13 from the field and 6-for-8 from three. That shooting stretch has pushed him to 55% from deep in the tournament.
For Duke fans, the latest outburst only sharpened the conversation around what comes next. When Boumtje Boumtje committed to Duke, the expectation in some circles was that he would ease in as a reserve as a freshman before becoming a bigger piece later on. That idea has started to feel less like a plan and more like a wishful guess.
This isn’t a one-game spike, either. Boumtje Boumtje has been rolling all summer, and scouts reportedly saw him as the best player in Team USA practice despite a roster stacked with five-star talent. The production at the U17 World Cup has only reinforced that impression.
However Duke handles his arrival, his role already looks hard to keep small. He could start next to Patrick Ngongba or come off the bench behind Cameron Williams, but either way he projects as an immediate difference-maker for Jon Scheyer’s team. Even if the staff wanted to bring him along slowly, Boumtje Boumtje has the kind of game that can force its way onto the floor.
That’s part of why some are already talking about him as a potential No. 1 pick in the 2028 NBA Draft, the first year he’s eligible to declare.
The USA now moves on to Australia in the semifinals on Saturday. If it gets through that one, it will play one of Lithuania, Serbia, France or Turkey in Sunday’s championship game. After that, Boumtje Boumtje will head to Duke and begin practicing with the Blue Devils.
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The bigger question now is how all of those pieces fit once the games actually matter. There is real intrigue around the backcourt rotation, what kind of production Duke gets up front and who settles into the role of the late-game option, but the conversation has clearly moved beyond simple hype. For a program that is used to being measured by championship standards, that is usually the sign of a team people are beginning to take very seriously. [Read more 🡒]
Duke Is Suddenly Everywhere In The NBA Offseason Again
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The pipeline does not stop there, either. A fresh wave of Duke names is headed to Summer League, with Cameron Boozer, Isaiah Evans, Maliq Brown, Trevor Keels, Cam Reddish, DJ Steward and Sion James all set to suit up for different teams, while former Duke captain Amile Jefferson will coach Bostons Summer League group. For a program that has long measured its reach by how often its players show up in the league, this is one of those stretches that keeps Duke visible everywhere at once. [Read more 🡒]
