Perfect for Duke fans who think they already know everything 100 Things Duke Fans Should Know & Do Before They Die is the ultimate resource guide for true fans of the Blue Devils. Whether you're a die-hard booster from the days of Mike Gminski or a new supporter of Jahlil Okafor, these are the 100 things all fans need to know and do in their lifetime. It lists figures from the Vic Bubas era to the current Coach K era—with stories on each of his four national championships and the players involved. The book also features the places all Duke fans needs to visit, such as the Angus Barn, and provides background on the university, including how it was founded and what makes the famed chapel such a special structure. Every essential piece of Blue Devils knowledge and trivia is here, as well as must-do activities, all ranked from 1 to 100, providing an entertaining and easy-to-follow checklist as you progress on your way to fan superstardom. Johnny Moore is a producer for the radio and television networks at Duke University, has been involved with Duke athletics for nearly 40 years, and is the coauthor of The Blue Divide . He lives in Durham, North Carolina. Mike Gminski was a first-team All-American and ACC Player of the Year at Duke before becoming a nationally known broadcaster. He resides in Charlotte, NC. 100 Things Duke Fans Should Know & Do Before They Die By Johnny Moore Triumph Books Copyright © 2015 Johnny Moore All rights reserved. ISBN: 978-1-60078-980-9 Contents Foreword by Mike Gminski, Introduction, 1. Cameron Indoor Stadium, 2. Coach K, 3. The Shot, 4. Upsetting UNLV and K's First Title, 5. Johnny Dawkins, 6. 1992 National Championship, 7. Cameron Crazies, 8. 2015 National Championship, 9. Christian Laettner, 10. 2001 National Championship, 11. Bobby Hurley, 12. Danny Ferry, 13. 2010 National Championship, 14. Shane Battier, 15. Grant Hill, 16. Jason Williams, 17. J.J. Redick, 18. Art Heyman, 19. Go Camping at Krzyzewskiville, 20. Jeff Mullins, 21. Bill Foster, 22. Duke Chapel, 23. How the Blue Devils Got Their Name, 24. Eddie Cameron, 25. Smell the Flowers at the Sarah P. Duke Gardens, 26. Dick Groat, 27. Dukies on TV, 28. The Legend of Fred Lind, 29. The Dominating 1999 Team, 30. Coach K and USA Basketball, 31. Gman, 32. The Fight, 33. The War of 1989, 34. Dennard and Banks — So Long and Thanks, 35. Wojo's Senior Day, 36. Washington Duke, 37. The Duke Brothers, 38. Dedication Day, 39. The 7–0 Game, 40. Duke vs. Shaq's LSU Tigers, 41. Black Sunday, 42. Siler City — The Beginning of the Carolina Hatred, 43. Dine at Angus Barn, 44. The Missoula Mountain, 45. Bill Werber, the First All-American, 46. Capel's Shot, 47. Austin Rivers' Game-Winner and the One-and-Dones, 48. Cap Card, 49. The Architects of Cameron, 50. C.B. Claiborne, 51. Ferry Scores 58, 52. Miracle Minute, 53. Red Auerbach, 54. Duke-Carolina Pranks, 55. Renovations to Cameron, 56. Gerry Gerard, 57. Harold Bradley, 58. Visit the Nasher Art Museum, 59. Visit East Campus, 60. Stay at Washington Duke Inn & Golf Club, 61. Jay Bilas, 62. Read "The Chronicle", 63. Madison Square Garden and the Meadowlands, 64. Early All-Americans, 65. Visit the Duke Basketball Museum, 66. Attend Countdown to Craziness, 67. Johnny Dawkins' Epic Weekend, 68. Boozer's Injury, 69. K's First Win Over No. 1, 70. Wallace Wade, 71. Bucky Waters, 72. Coach K and the Legacy Fund, 73. Wojo, 74. Jon Scheyer, 75. Nate James, 76. Jeff Capel, 77. Chris Collins, 78. Tom Butters, the Man Who Hired Coach K, 79. Make a Fist, 80. Billy King, 81. Snow Day, 82. Jim Spanarkel, 83. Tinkerbell, 84. The Alaskan Assassin, 85. Bob Verga, 86. Jack Marin, 87. Just Say No to L.A., 88. Randy Denton, 89. Elton Brand, 90. The Landlord, 91. Carlos Boozer, 92. Mark Alarie, 93. Kyle Singler, 94. The Lost Season of 1994–95, 95. Tate Armstrong, 96. Chris Duhon, 97. Steve Vacendak, 98. Tommy Amaker, 99. Mike Dunleavy, 100. Chris Carrawell, Acknowledgments, Sources, CHAPTER 1 Cameron Indoor Stadium A classic venue and the crown jewel of college basketball, Cameron Indoor Stadium originally opened in 1940 as Duke Indoor Stadium. Heading into the 2015–16 season, it has been the site of 832 men's basketball victories. More than a few of those victories have been influenced by the electric atmosphere within its Gothic halls. Well before $2 million renovations in the 1980s, legend has it that it all began with a book of matches. For a town and a school founded on local tobacco fortunes, that seems a fitting way to start. On the cover of a matchbook, Eddie Cameron and Wallace Wade first sketched out the plan for Duke Indoor Stadium in 1935. The story may be a myth (the matchbook has never been found), but then the Indoor Stadium that emerged from those first scribblings lends itself to the propagation of myths. For seven decades, spectators, players, and coaches