DURHAM, N.C. -- Fourth-ranked Duke had 11 days to dwell on the loss that cost the Blue Devils their No. 1 ranking -- and more importantly, 11 days to finally spend some quality time on the practice court.
They wasted no time taking out their frustrations on Evansville.
Duke routed the Purple Aces 104-40 on Wednesday night behind a season-best 27 points from freshman Wendell Carter Jr. -- who said the team practiced every day during the break.
Practice time was scarce before that, with the Blue Devils playing 12 games and criss-crossing the country from Nov. 10-Dec. 9.
"We just zeroed in on what we need to do as a team, and we just practiced that," Carter said. "Everybody got familiar with what we're going to do as a team, no matter what."
Marvin Bagley III added 18 points and Grayson Allen finished with 16 to help the Blue Devils (12-1) bounce back from their lone loss with one of their best defensive performances of the season.
Duke blocked nine shots, forced a season-best 21 turnovers and turned them into 39 points against a slow-paced Evansville team.
Dainius Chatkevicius had 12 points to lead the Purple Aces (10-3), who had their five-game winning streak snapped. Evansville entered allowing an average of 61.9 points per game. The Blue Devils nearly had that at halftime, leading 58-18 the break.
Gary Trent Jr. scored 13 points to help Duke put this one out of reach early. The Blue Devils needed just 13 1/2 minutes to build a 20-point lead and 2 1/2 more minutes to go up by 30.
They hit 12 of their first 16 3-point attempts and finished with a season-high 16 3s after shooting 27 percent from long range in the 89-84 loss at Boston College on Dec. 9.
BIG PICTURE
Evansville: The Purple Aces like to play slowly -- frequently milking the shot clock into the low teens or longer before taking their first shot or, more often, stumbling into a turnover -- and that deliberate style worked against them as the Blue Devils methodically stretched their lead into the 20s and well beyond.
"We got no excuses," coach Marty Simmons said of a team missing key scorers Ryan Taylor and Dru Smith. "We knew what we were getting ready to play. We just didn't do a good enough job as coaches, as players. They took us out of everything we wanted to do. We couldn't get into anything."
Duke: The Blue Devils had 11 days to stew on the loss that knocked them from No. 1. Duke allowed the Eagles to hit 15 3-pointers in that game, but clamped down against an Evansville team that makes 49.4 percent of its 3s -- the best in Division I. Evansville was just 5 of 14 from long range.
INJURY REPORT
Not that he was needed in the slightest, but the Blue Devils played without injured sophomore forward Javin DeLaurier, after coach Mike Krzyzewski said he had a tight hamstring. Big man Marques Bolden and freshman guards Alex O'Connell and Jordan Goldwire were the first players off the bench for the Blue Devils.
STAR WATCH
Don't sleep on Carter's long-range touch. The freshman big man entered with three 3-pointers all season and surpassed that in this one, hitting 4 of 7 from long range. That was a big part of the season-best nine field goals he hit. "We kind of rolled the dice," Simmons said, "and he made us pay."
UP NEXT
Evansville: The Purple Aces host Illinois State on Saturday in their Missouri Valley Conference opener.
Duke: The Blue Devils have another extended break, this one lasting nine days before Florida State comes in Dec. 30 for their first home ACC game.
---
More AP college basketball: https://collegebasketball.ap.org and https://twitter.com/AP-Top25