USANEWSBEST

Sports

Duke’s Jon Scheyer: Cooper Flagg Made ‘Zion Kind of Play’ on Viral Dunk vs. Pitt | News, Scores, Highlights, Stats, and Rumors

Grant Halverson/Getty Images

The Duke men’s basketball team defeated Pittsburgh 76-47 on Tuesday, but it was one play that stood out more than the final score.

Freshman Cooper Flagg stole a pass near the baseline on the defensive end, drove the length of the floor and then unleashed a one-handed tomahawk slam to fire up the crowd at Cameron Indoor Stadium.

ESPN @espn

COOPER FLAGG JUST WENT COAST-TO-COAST AND POSTERIZED THE DEFENDER 😱🔥
ABSOLUTELY RIDICULOUS 🤯 pic.twitter.com/Z5jcZ756ew

“We’ve had a few guys through the years to make a couple plays that just spark everybody in the building,” Scheyer said. “That was one of those moments tonight.”

It was a fitting comment considering Williamson had “a Zion kind of play” of his own when he returned to the floor from a hamstring injury for the New Orleans Pelicans for Tuesday’s game against the Minnesota Timberwolves.

He broke free in transition and threw down a 360 windmill dunk:

It likely won’t be long until Flagg joins Williamson in the NBA, as B/R’s Jonathan Wasserman projected the Duke star as the No. 1 overall pick in his latest 2025 mock draft. Ironically, it is Williamson’s Pelicans with the No. 1 pick in that mock draft, so Duke fans may have to buy some New Orleans gear if that becomes a reality.

The rims will also be on notice when the Pelicans take the floor if that hypothetical becomes a reality.

okaygteam

About Author

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You may also like

Sports

MLB Power Rankings Week 25: Wild-card teams on the move

Sep 19, 2024, 07:00 AM ET We have our first official playoff teams! The Brewers clinched the season’s first postseason
Sports

Jets RT Morgan Moses suffers left knee injury, ruled out after getting rolled up on against Patriots

Getty Images New York Jets starting right tackle Morgan Moses limped off the field in the closing seconds of the