Former NBA All-Star Carlos Boozer shares wholesome family pic following the Boozer twins' commitment news
After Cameron and Cayden Boozer announced their decision to commit to Duke on Friday, many are still celebrating as the North Carolina-based school has already secured its top targets early. One of them is none other than their father Carlos Boozer, who helped the Blue Devils win the national championship in 2001.
Carlos took to Instagram and posted a photo of himself with the rest of his family, including Cameron and Cayden, as well as his other son Carmani, and his wife CeCe.
He also posed with Carmani separately, whom he called a "Grown A** Man."
Carlos Boozer helped the Blue Devils win the NCAA title alongside Jay Williams and Mike Dunleavy Jr., among others. He then left for the NBA after his junior year but went back to school after his professional career and graduated with a bachelor's degree from the Trinity College of Arts and Sciences at Duke University in 2020.
Carlos Boozer's sons, Cameron and Cayden, are bringing a winning record to Duke
While their father has already proven he could win at the collegiate level, he also won an Olympic gold medal for the United States in Beijing in 2008 and the FIBA U21 world championship in 2001. His sons could follow in his footsteps after dominating the high school circuit.
The twins won three straight Florida state championships during their time at Christopher Colombus High School in Miami and are poised to capture a fourth consecutive title for Los Explorers. They also won titles with their AAU team, the Nightrydas Elite: the Peach Jam championships at the 15U, 16U, and 17U levels.
Like their father, they have had international basketball success, winning the FIBA U16 Americas gold medal in 2023 and the FIBA U17 gold medal this past summer.
The twins have proven that they can work together and are a well-oiled machine when they share the court. While Cameron controls the paint as a power forward, Cayden acts as the floor general.
Cameron is the No. 2 player overall prospect in the country. He is expected to take over the starting power forward spot should Cooper Flagg choose to leave Duke for the NBA in 2025. Meanwhile, Cayden is the No. 17 overall prospect, though he may have some competition for the starting point guard spot at Duke.