What started as a summer that might have been about potential has turned into one of the loudest breakout runs in college hoops recruiting.
Joaquim Boumtje Boumtje is headed to Duke with a lot more buzz than he had a few months ago, and the rise has been fueled by production, not projection. After earning MVP honors at the Adidas Next Generation EuroLeague in May, he added another trophy to the case by leading Team USA to gold at the FIBA U17 World Cup.
He finished the championship game with 20 points, 15 rebounds and 3 blocked shots in Sunday’s 107-81 win over Serbia in Istanbul. Across the tournament, Boumtje Boumtje was named MVP after averaging 19.6 points, 10.9 rebounds and 3.8 stocks per game while shooting 64/53/88.
That kind of line puts him in rare company, especially when stacked next to Cameron Boozer’s MVP run at the same event two summers ago. Boozer posted 20 points and 10 rebounds per game on 70/33/85 shooting splits.
Boumtje Boumtje’s biggest statement may have come in the quarterfinals against Puerto Rico, when he exploded for 31 points, 16 rebounds and 4 assists in a blowout win.
The most eye-catching part of his game is still the one that jumps off the page for a 7-footer: the shooting. He hit 53% of his three-point attempts over seven games at the tournament, and that kind of floor spacing is exactly the sort of weapon Jon Scheyer can build around next season.
There are still questions scouts will circle, especially when it comes to how he handles the physicality inside at the college level. But his work around the rim was a major part of the World Cup run, too. He averaged more than two blocks per game and nearly two steals a night.
At this point, the hype feels earned. Boumtje Boumtje no longer looks like a long-term development piece. He looked like a player ready to matter right away, and Duke now heads to Durham with a freshman who could be a major part of the rotation from day one.
That also opens the door for some enormous lineups for Scheyer, with Boumtje Boumtje and Patrick Ngongba in the frontcourt and fellow freshman Cameron Williams sliding to the three. In that setup, Duke would have three players 6-foot-10 or taller in the starting five, and perhaps the kind of front line that can match up with Florida.
For Duke, the summer of Boumtje Boumtje has changed the conversation. His arrival now feels like one of the biggest storylines in Durham, and he could end up being the piece Scheyer needs as he chases his first national title.
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