Duke's 21-year streak of advancing to the NCAA Tournament came to an end Monday as the Blue Devils did not receive an at-large invitation to the field of 64, when the bracket was released on ESPN. The Blue Devils' 2015-16 campaign will come to a close as Duke will not participate in the WNIT due to a limited roster.The Blue Devils registered a 20-12 overall record, but were saddled with many injuries during the season. Duke advanced to the quarterfinals of the ACC Tournament before falling to top-seeded Notre Dame.On the season, Duke was led by sophomore Azurá Stevens along with redshirt sophomore Rebecca Greenwell , who both were selected All-ACC by the Blue Ribbon Panel and the league head coaches. The Blue Devils were without their dynamic duo together for the last nine contests as Stevens missed seven straight regular season games and then Greenwell missed the two ACC Tournament contests.Stevens returned to action in the ACC Tournament and led the field with a 12.5 rebounds average over a span of two games. The 6-6 matchup nightmare also averaged 16.5 points, 1.0 blocks and 1.0 steals and was selected to the All-ACC Tournament Second Team. A native of Raleigh, N.C., Stevens totaled one of the best individual seasons in school history averaging 18.9 points, 9.6 rebounds, 2.1 blocks, 1.6 assists and 1.3 steals. Her 18.9 points ranked second in the ACC, while her 9.6 boards led the league. Even though she missed seven games with a foot injury, she still led the ACC with 14 double-doubles.A native of Owensboro, Ky., Greenwell averaged 16.0 points, 6.1 rebounds, 2.1 assists and 1.8 steals. She ranked eighth in the ACC in scoring, third in three-point field goals made (2.4/game), third in three-point field goal percentage (41.7) and ninth in free throw percentage (77.1). Her 73 three-pointers made on the year ranked as the third-most in Duke single-season history.Head coach Joanne P. McCallie , who was the 2013, 2012 and 2010 ACC Coach of the Year, had taken her Duke and Michigan State squads to 13 straight NCAA Tournaments prior to 2016. Duke last didn't make the NCAA Tournament in the 1993-94 campaign. The 21-year streak was the fourth-longest active streak in the nation behind Tennessee (34), Stanford (28) and UConn (27).The Blue Devils featured a NCAA RPI of No. 47 overall and 10 of the 12 losses came against teams ranked in the top 49 of the RPI. The other two defeats came at the hands of Wake Forest and Georgia Tech when Stevens was injured.The future looks bring for Duke as the Blue Devils return four starters, 11 letterwinners and welcome the addition of All-America transfer Lexie Brown to the mix in 2016-17. The Blue Devils have also signed top 10 recruit, who will be a freshman at Duke in the fall.“Well, obviously, we are very disappointed, especially for our seniors – for Mercedes [Riggs] and Amber [Henson]. Words can't begin to describe how we feel for those two in particular. All we can do is learn from this and take action on it and keep Mercedes and Amber with us as we move forward to improve, to grow and overcome some of these obstacles.”“Yeah, just again trying to feel that we were prepared for the NCAA given the schedule we played and all that. Given the situation we have had with injuries. You know we will learn from it.”“It is hard for me to comment you know obviously I feel very disappointed for the ACC. I feel very disappointed for NC State. I feel very disappointed for Georgia Tech. I can't speak to it. I wasn't in the room but it is not good for the ACC.”“It is a lot of pain right now. It is a lot of pain. It is a big kick in the gut. Definitely a lot of pain, especially given the season we have had. Soon to turn to motivation.”“Well, I think the lessons learned and knowing how important it is to play every game to the fullest and really grow and change through a season. Really putting your best product out there all the time, I am not sure we always did that. That is something we can learn in terms of the consistency it takes to play at the highest level.”“Very disappointing, but bottom line is we didn't get things done. We had a lot of opportunities to change and project the philosophy that is taught here at Duke. We didn't have anyone step up to lead us in that direction and that is what we needed.”