M College BB
Scores/Schedules
Rankings
Standings
Statistics
Transactions
Injuries
Weekly lineup
Teams
Recruiting
 Tuesday, February 29
Ailing Dunleavy sent home to Oregon
 
Associated Press

 DURHAM, N.C. -- Mike Dunleavy Jr. has been sent home to recover from mononucleosis, meaning Duke's top reserve probably will miss next week's Atlantic Coast Conference tournament.

The 6-foot-7 freshman is to rest in Oregon, and coach Mike Krzyzewski said Tuesday he hopes Dunleavy will be back in time for the NCAA tournament.

It can take weeks and sometimes months to recover from mononucleosis, a blood condition that leaves a person fatigued.

"He is still a ways from being with us," Krzyzewski said. "He is still tired. You just can't get a handle on it. I doubt very seriously that he'll be back for the ACC tournament."

The No. 4 Blue Devils (22-4) are 1-1 since the Dunleavy was diagnosed with the illness. He was averaging 9.5 points and 4.2 rebounds in 25 minutes.

Even if Dunleavy can return by mid-March, his effectiveness could be limited after missing more than three weeks of practice and games.

"I think the reality now is we don't have Dunleavy and that changes the roles of everybody and it changes our team," Krzyzewski said. "But we have to adjust to that because we're not certain he is coming back. Mononucleosis is very difficult to pin down and how quickly a kid can recover."

The absence of Dunleavy added minutes to an already overworked trio of Chris Carrawell, Shane Battier and Jason Williams. Carrawell and Williams played 40 minutes each in an 83-82 loss to St. John's on Saturday, while Battier logged 38.

"We're trying to work everybody in, but you know what, there's nobody like Dunleavy," said Krzyzewski, whose team closes the ACC regular season schedule this week against Clemson and North Carolina.

Freshman Nick Horvath scored 13 points off the bench against Wake Forest last week in Duke's first game without Dunleavy. However, Krzyzewski used the 6-10 forward for only nine minutes against the Red Storm.

"We have to make sure not to let this Dunleavy situation make us feel like we've already accomplished what we can accomplish," Krzyzewski said. "I want our team to understand the season is not over."