The pick is finally in for two of the most consequential prospects in the 2025 class.
Cameron Boozer and Cayden Boozer, the twin sons of former Duke National Champion Carlos Boozer, have committed to the Blue Devils and head coach Jon Scheyer. The Boozer twins picked Duke over the Miami Hurricanes.
Contrary to popular belief, this is a major coup for Duke, who entered this recruitment as underdogs, but ultimately beat out Miami and Florida for the Boozer twins.
What shifted the recruitment were the unofficial visits the Boozer twins took during late August and September. During that time period, Florida fell out of contention and Duke emerged as the leader.
Miami made a late push which created a back-and-forth duel between the Hurricanes and the Blue Devils. But it was Scheyer & Co. who won out.
This is the biggest commitment of the 2025 cycle so far. Not only does Cameron, the No. 2 prospect in the country, come off the board, but Duke lands two top-25 players.
The decision of the Boozer twins to commit to Duke will have major ramifications across the landscape of the 2025 class and with several of the elite players left on the board.
Beyond how this impacts the rest of the 2025 class, the Blue Devils are getting two potentially generation talents.
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The Boozer twins are in the midst of one of the most dominant runs through grassroots basketball that we have seen in the modern recruiting service era. They have won three consecutive Nike EYBL Peach Jam Championships and three consecutive Florida high school state championships.
Cameron is arguably the best player in high school basketball right now with his ability to impact winning on the biggest stages of grassroots. He’s a mismatch nightmare because he can impact the game inside and out. Cameron is a strong, physical and highly competitive prospect who owns the boards, scores at the rim, can attack bigs off the bounce and can stretch the floor out to three.
His twin brother, Cayden, is a 6-foot-4 point guard who is among the best floor generals and facilitators in the 2025 class. He racks up big assist numbers with how he sets the table for those around him but has made significant strides in his ability to shoot the ball.