A Personal Recollection
When I arrived on campus in the fall of 1968, the rivalry between Duke’s football and basketball programs was still in its formative years, a far cry from the basketball‑centric identity the university would later adopt.
My first game at Wade Stadium pitted the Blue Devils against a storied Michigan squad, a matchup that underscored the ambitious schedules Duke football had embraced, facing powerhouses such as Ohio State and Alabama.
The Basketball Visionary
Vic Bubas, who had taken a pay cut to join Duke in 1959, was already weaving a recruiting machine that would soon deliver the school’s first ACC title and two early NCAA tournament victories in 1960, laying a foundation that would later blossom under coaches like Mike McGee.
Football’s Ambitious Slate
The football team routinely scheduled games against giants like Michigan, Ohio State, and Alabama, a tradition that began in the late 19th century when football often eclipsed basketball at many institutions.
In 1966, Tom Harp’s squad achieved a rare feat: a victory over West Virginia, the only time Duke ever beat coach Bobby Bowden’s team, a moment that still surfaces in alumni memories.
Mike McGee’s tenure produced signature wins over Florida, Stanford, and Tennessee, illustrating the occasional bright spots that punctuated a generally tough schedule.
Broader Context
Even legendary coaches such as Bear Bryant left Kentucky to avoid being eclipsed by Adolph Rupp’s basketball prowess, while Eddie Cameron’s transition from football to basketball and his successor Gerry Gerard reflected the shifting priorities of the era.
By the time I graduated in 1972, the basketball program, bolstered by Bubas’s early successes and later coaches, was beginning to outshine football in campus culture, a reversal that echoed earlier exceptions in New York and Philadelphia where basketball had long reigned.