John Blackwell Could Put Duke On The Verge Of Something Historic

Can John Blackwell propel Duke to an unprecedented streak of Wooden Award victories while leading them to national glory?

John Blackwell arrives at Duke with a chance to do something no program has ever pulled off.

The Wisconsin transfer was the headline addition of the Blue Devils’ offseason, and Jon Scheyer beat out the field to land one of the portal’s biggest names. Blackwell brings the kind of on-ball scoring Duke has been missing in recent seasons, and he’s walking into Durham with the kind of expectations usually reserved for the centerpiece of a national title contender.

That instantly puts him in the National Player of the Year mix, and the first odds are already out. DraftKings opened Blackwell at +1200 for the Wooden Award, third on the board behind Michigan State’s Jeremy Fears Jr. (+850) and Florida’s Thomas Haugh (+1000).

For Duke, the bigger story is what a Blackwell win would mean historically.

The Blue Devils have already done something rare by winning the Wooden Award in back-to-back seasons with Cooper Flagg in 2025 and Cameron Boozer in 2026. No school has ever made it three straight. If Blackwell finishes the job, Duke would stand alone.

That would place the Blue Devils in even more exclusive company. They’re one of only four programs to produce consecutive Wooden winners, and one of just two to have done it with two different players in back-to-back seasons.

Purdue’s Zach Edey won in 2023 and 2024, Virginia’s Ralph Sampson took the award in 1982 and 1983, and St. John’s had Chris Mullin in 1985 followed by Walter Berry in 1986.

Duke’s current run is actually its second straight-season Wooden streak. The first came with Shane Battier in 2001 and Jay Williams in 2002. That’s as close as any program has come to three in a row, with Elton Brand’s 1999 award making it three Duke winners in four seasons.

Since the Wooden Award began in 1977, there have been 49 winners. Duke has claimed eight of them. Blackwell could make it nine out of 50 - and give the Blue Devils a piece of college basketball history no one else has reached.

The catch is that he’ll have to do it in a deep, balanced lineup. Blackwell is expected to lead Duke in scoring, but the roster around him could make piling up the kind of numbers that win this award a little tougher.

Still, the move to Duke was made with one clear aim in mind:

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