DURHAM, N.C. -- After he had buried jumpers and slashed into the lane       and drawn fouls and grabbed just as many rebounds as any of the big guys       on the Michigan State roster, Kyrie Irving glanced into the Duke       student section, shrugged his shoulders and smiled.    
His classmates called his name in unison.    
Now we have to figure out what to call him going forward.    
The nation's best freshman?    
Best point guard?    
Best player, period?    
Label Irving any of those things, and you'll get no argument from me.    
The first-year star was terrific in Duke's 84-79 victory against       Michigan State late Wednesday here at Cameron Indoor Stadium, and now       the nation knows why those of us who watched Irving throughout high       school had no issues ranking the Blue Devils No. 1 this preseason. Yes,       they lost three starters from last year's national championship team,       but they still upgraded in talent.    
Irving is a top-tier prospect who operates at a different level. Almost       everybody agreed he would be good. But I'm not sure anybody expected him       to be this good this quickly -- to drop 31 points, six       rebounds and four assists in the seventh game of his career against a       veteran backcourt from a talented team coached by the basketball genius       who is Tom Izzo.    
"It felt good," Irving said. "It felt really good to play this well in a       big game like this."    
I guess so.    
The wildest thing about Irving's monster statistical performance -- his       31 points represents the second highest by a freshman in Duke history --       was how it mostly came in the normal flow of the game. He rarely lost       control, rarely took bad shots, rarely forced things that weren't there.       He was just running his team and exploiting the other team's weaknesses,       pushing when it was time to push and pulling back when it was time to       pull back.    
In other words, he was being a real point guard because he is a       real point guard, and he's slowly -- quickly, actually -- developing       into the go-to player for the nation's top-ranked team despite the fact       that it's a top-ranked team featuring two senior All-Americans.    
"In practices he'll tell somebody, 'Get out of the way, I've got it,' "       said Nolan Smith, one of those senior All-Americans. "You don't really       hear that too often -- a freshman telling two seniors on the wings to       get out of the way. But we have no problem sitting back and letting him       do it, because we know he can."    
Michigan State now knows, too.    
"He's a great player," said Spartans point guard Korie Lucious, who       finished with 20 points and eight assists in the loss. "Coach K knows       how to recruit great guards, and he's one of them."    
Next up for Irving is a trip to his home state of New Jersey for a       neutral-court showdown Saturday against Butler that'll be a rematch of       last season's title game -- in name only. The Bulldogs and Blue Devils       are much different teams than the teams the nation watched play at Lucas       Oil Stadium on that memorable Monday in April, and by different, I mean       Butler isn't nearly as good and Duke might possibly be better.    
Either way, there's a good chance Irving will put on another show on       national television, and if he does, you can rest assured that talks of       a Player of the Year Award will start to intensify.    
How will Irving handle it?    
Can he handle it?    
My prediction is that he'll handle it the same way he handles       everything: calmly. Odds are he'll continue to take charge on the court       -- gather teammates, demand the ball, direct traffic, etc. -- and play       it cool away from it just the way he did late Wednesday, when he sat in       a chair in the Duke locker room and downplayed his significance whenever       somebody asked about it.    
"I'm just trying to find my place," Irving said. "I'm just trying to       fill a role."    
Best I can tell, that role is the role of superstar.    
So far, he seems to be filling it well.
extracted from cbssports.com
Duke super-frosh Irving already worthy of superstar status
 3:34 a.m.
3:34 a.m.


 







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