Early history (1888–1930) The Duke Blue Devils, then known as the Trinity Blue and White, first fielded a football team in 1888, coached by
John Franklin Crowell. The first game against
North Carolina was the first "scientific" game in the state. Trinity finished the first two seasons in their football history with records of 2–1 in 1888 and 1–1 in 1889. The
1891 team went undefeated. Trinity did not compete in football from 1895 to 1919. The Trinity Blue and White resumed football competition in 1920 under head coach
Floyd J. Egan, compiling a record of 4–0–1 that season. In 1921, they finished 6–1–2 were led by
James A. Baldwin, previously the head coach at Maine. In February 1922,
Herman Steiner was selected as the head coach of the Trinity College football team for the 1922 season. During the 1922 football season, Steiner coached the Trinity football team to a 7–2–1 record as the team outscored its opponents 156–57.
E. L. Alexander took over the reins of the Trinity Blue Devils in 1923 and led the team to a 5–4 record. In their first season competing as Duke University,
Howard Jones took over in 1924 and led the Blue Devils to a 4–5 record before leaving for
USC. Former
Indiana head coach
James Herron led the Blue Devils to another 4–5 record in 1925. From 1926 to 1930, the program was led by head coach
James DeHart who compiled a 24–23–2 record during his tenure. DeHart led the Blue Devils, an independent for all of its history up to that point, into the
Southern Conference in 1928.
Wallace Wade era (1931–1950) In late 1930,
Wallace Wade shocked the college football world by leaving national powerhouse
Alabama for Duke. Duke won seven Southern Conference championships in the 16 years that Wade was coach. He also led the team to two Rose Bowls. Wade served a stint in the military in
World War II, leaving the team after the 1941 season and returning before the start of the 1946 season. Wade's achievements placed him in the
College Football Hall of Fame. Despite being 3 to 1 favorites, the Iron Dukes lost 20–16. Wade's final record at Duke is 110–36–7.
William Murray era (1951–1965) Delaware head coach
Bill Murray was chosen to replace Wallace Wade as Duke's head coach in 1951. The football program proved successful under Murray's tutelage, winning six of the first ten
ACC football championships from 1953 to 1962. From 1943 until 1957, the Blue Devils were ranked in the AP Poll at some point in the season. Murray's Duke teams would be last successes the Blue Devils football program would have for another two decades. Bill Murray would be the last Duke head football coach to leave the Blue Devils with a winning record until
Steve Spurrier, Knight hired
Tom Harp as Murray's successor. Harp only achieved a 22–28–1 record in 5 seasons with the Blue Devils. A very successful high school coach, Harp came to Duke after a mediocre stint as
Cornell's head football coach. Harp's teams struggled on the field, only producing one winning season, a 6–5 1970 season that would be Harp's last at Duke,
Mike McGee returned to his alma mater from
East Carolina to serve as head football coach in late 1970. Duke continued in the mediocrity and sub-par on-the-field performances that had been seen under Harp, going 37–47–4 overall. McGee's two best years were 1971 and 1974, in which his Duke teams went a mediocre 6–5.
Elon head coach
Shirley "Red" Wilson replaced McGee and went 16–27–1 as Duke's head football coach. Wilson's teams only won two games in his first two seasons, then had back-to-back 6–5 records. Wilson's teams became known for their innovative passing attack under offensive coordinator
Steve Spurrier, whose 1982 offense featuring quarterback
Ben Bennett set a school record for yardage before Wilson retired and Spurrier left to become the head coach of the USFL's
Tampa Bay Bandits. There was hope when
Steve Sloan was hired that the Duke football program would finally return to its glory days under Wallace Wade. However, Sloan could not translate his successes from those places to Duke. Sloan's Blue Devils teams had a 13–31 overall record in the four seasons he was there, failing to win more than four games in a single season. Sloan resigned after four seasons as Duke head coach to become athletics director at the University of Alabama.
Steve Spurrier era (1987–1989) The Duke Blue Devils football program had a string of successful years under
Steve Spurrier. Duke was Spurrier's first college head coaching position. When Spurrier arrived as Duke's 17th head football coach in program history, he inherited a Duke program that was commonly viewed as the worst football program in the ACC. Unlike most of his predecessors since
Wallace Wade, Spurrier was able to have success as Duke's head football coach. He hired coaches
Ian Goodall,
Joe Jeb, and
Patrick Cooke to serve as assistant coaches. Spurrier led the Blue Devils to a share of the ACC title in 1989, but struggled with a 13–30–1 record in four seasons despite inheriting a team that had shared an ACC championship the season before he became the head coach. Unable to duplicate or build upon the successes of his predecessor, Wilson resigned as head coach after the 1993 season. On December 16, 1993,
Rice head coach
Fred Goldsmith was named Wilson's replacement, becoming the Blue Devils' 19th head football coach. The 1994 Blue Devils raced out to an 8–1 record, and was briefly ranked as high as No. 16 in the country before two consecutive heartbreaking losses to close the season, 24–23 to North Carolina State and 41–40 to arch-rival North Carolina. The 1994 team played in the program's first New Years Day Bowl game since 1961, falling to
Wisconsin 34–21 in the
1995 Hall of Fame Bowl, Goldsmith's teams struggled after that 1994 season, failing to win more than four games in a single season and only notching three more wins in ACC play. Goldsmith's 1996 Duke team went 0–11, the school's first winless record in the modern era and only the second winless season in school history. The Blue Devils compiled a 4–7 record in 1998. On December 1, 1998,
Carl Franks, offensive coordinator at
Florida under former Blue Devils head coach
Steve Spurrier, was hired to replace
Fred Goldsmith and tasked with turning around the Duke football program. A Duke alum, Franks had also served as running backs coach at Duke under Spurrier from 1987 to 1989 and had played running back and tight end for the Blue Devils under
Shirley Wilson from 1980 to 1982. Franks led the Blue Devils to a 3–8 record in 1999. From 2000 to 2001 Duke suffered a 22-game losing streak, with both the 2000 and 2001 seasons being winless 0–11 campaigns, with only four of the 22 losses coming by eight points or fewer. Franks was dismissed mid-season in 2003. Defensive coordinator
Ted Roof was appointed interim head coach. The Blue Devils' 1999–2001 teams were ranked 7th in a list on the 10 worst college football teams of all time by
ESPN's Page 2. Franks finished 7–45 in four full seasons and a partial fifth,
Ted Roof was elevated from defensive coordinator and named interim Duke head coach for the final five games of the 2003 season. The Blue Devils won two of their last three games of the season, Roof's interim tag was removed, and he was named the program's 21st head football coach in 2004. One positive aspect, however, from Roof's tenure was that Duke defenses consistently ranked in the top 30 in tackles for loss for the first time in years.
David Cutcliffe era (2008–2021) In December 2007,
Tennessee offensive coordinator and former
Ole Miss head coach
David Cutcliffe was hired as Duke's 22nd head football coach. Cutcliffe's hire marked the beginning of a new era for Duke football as the school's administration sought to return the football program to respectability after decades of irrelevance. The program used the slogans "It's A Whole New Ball Game" and "Dawn Of A New Day" to promote the team after Cutcliffe's hire to indicate a different direction for Duke football. Duke went 4–8 in 2008 and 5–7 in 2009, the closest the school had come to bowl eligibility since 1994. Cutcliffe fielded back-to-back 3–9 seasons in 2010 and 2011. Duke's 2012 team became bowl eligible for the first time since 1994, finishing the season with a 6–7 record. Duke's 2013 season was a break-out year, as the Blue Devils have continued to cross off many of their infamous losing streaks. On October 26, 2013, Duke achieved its first win over a ranked team since 1994 with a 13–10 victory over No. 14
Virginia Tech. That win over Virginia Tech was also Duke's first road win over a ranked team since 1971. The Blue Devils achieved their first winning season since 1994 with a 38–20 home victory over in-state rival
NC State, and Duke appeared in the AP Poll for the first time since 1994, listed at No. 25 with a record of 8–2. With a 27–25 win over North Carolina on November 30, 2013, Duke locked up their first 10-win season in school history, the Coastal Division title, and a spot in the
2013 ACC Championship Game against
Florida State, during which time Duke was ranked No. 20. The Blue Devils lost that game to the Seminoles, the eventual national champions, by a score of 45–7. David Cutcliffe received the Walter Camp Coach of the Year award in 2013. Duke finished 9–4 in 2014. 2015 would see the Blue Devils finish 8–5 and earn their first bowl victory since 1961, defeating Indiana in the
Pinstripe Bowl. 2015 also marked the beginning of a $100 million renovation project to
Wallace Wade Stadium. Cutcliffe's Blue Devils struggled to a 4–8 record in 2016, though they did earn notable wins over Notre Dame and rival North Carolina. Duke finished 7–6 in 2017.
Mike Elko era (2022–2023) On December 10, 2021, former
Texas A&M Aggies defensive coordinator
Mike Elko was hired as the Blue Devils 23rd head football coach. Under Elko, the Blue Devils amassed 16 wins in two years, including a stunning upset over ninth-ranked
Clemson to begin the 2023 season. Clemson was the highest-ranked opponent the Blue Devils had defeated in over three decades. Elko also led Duke to a win in the
2022 Military Bowl. Elko returned to Texas A&M as their head coach in November 2023. After his departure,
Trooper Taylor served as the head coach of the Blue Devils in their
2023 Birmingham Bowl victory, before following Elko to Texas A&M to serve as running backs coach.
Manny Diaz era (2024–present) On December 8, 2023, former
Penn State defensive coordinator
Manny Diaz became the 24th head coach of Duke football. Buoyed by a strong recruiting class and the transfer of former
Texas quarterback
Maalik Murphy, the Blue Devils finished
Diaz's first season 9–4, including an appearance in the
Gator Bowl and a sweep of in-state rivals North Carolina, NC State, and Wake Forest. In 2025, Manny Diaz led the Blue Devils to the ACC Championship Game, their second in program history. Duke defeated Virginia in overtime by a score of 27–20, securing the school's first ACC title since 1989 and their first outright ACC title since 1962. The
2025 squad followed up their ACC championship with a win in the
Sun Bowl over
Arizona State, giving the Blue Devils arguably their most prestigious bowl victory since the
1961 Cotton Bowl. ==Conference affiliations==