Tar Heels exploit height but can’t blow out inferior opponent

The Tar Heels could never put the NCAA tournament game against Long Island out of reach but North Carolina did manage to win by 15 at 102-87 tonight in Charlotte.

Long Island didn’t shoot well (36.5 percent) but the Blackbirds were scrappy. The 18 turnovers hurt the Tar Heels but it especially hurt them because of the type of turnovers they were. Probably half of them were long, ill-advised passes that resulted in runouts and scores by the Blackbirds.

I think the turnovers were an anamoly, caused by the team’s inexperience in NCAA tournament play and the aggressive style of the Blackbirds that might have surprised the Carolina players a bit.

But the three-point shooting is going to have to improve for Carolina to go any further. Leslie McDonald’s shooting was abysmal as he went zero for seven including five misses from three-point land. Harrison Barnes was only two of 10 from beyond the arc.

Tyler Zeller and John Henson were dominant inside with career highs of 32 and 28 respectively but that won’t continue against taller and more talented teams. To Carolina’s credit, though, the Tar Heels exploited the matchup.

For more on the game itself, please click here.

GQ magazine is ugly in describing the ugliest fans; Duke 8th

GQ magazine, which chose Duke basketball fans as the eighth worse in sports, uses graphic descriptions and foul language to blast fans who blast others. While it’s hard to argue with the inclusion of most fans on the list, the article is kinda like hearing one of the “Housewives of Orange County” talk trash about another one.

Los Angeles Lakers’ fans are described as “Starf*ckers” except without the “*.” Oakland Raiders fans are stereotyped as “criminals.” Philadelphia Eagles and Phillies fans are called “savages.” And Duke fans are considered “dicks.”

Here’s what GQ has to say about the “Silver-spoon bullies” otherwise known as Duke fans: “Duke fans who complain that everyone hates them because they’re too good are like cheerleaders who complain that everyone hates them because they’re too pretty. Sorry, princess! Soaked with arrogance (and Dick Vitale tongue baths), the Dukies have hit NC State with the chant ‘If you can’t go to college, go to State!’ while UNC has gotten the blunter ‘We’re smart! You’re dumb!’ This from the crowd who interminably claim to be the classiest in all of basketball. Here’s what the most reviled fans in college sports don’t understand: When everyone already resents you for being a perennial national champion, brainstorming new ways to make fun of people doesn’t make you clever. It makes you a dick.”

A lot of people probably agree with that assessment – and it actually could have included acts more classless than that. But I thought it was funny that GQ disputes Duke fans’ claim that they are disliked because they are “too good” but then admits that people resent Duke “for being a perennial national champion.” By the way, the Blue Devils are not perennial national champions – yet.

I also don’t hear Duke fans claim they are the classiest in all of basketball. The author might be confusing Duke fans with Carolina fans. (By the way, when Dean Smith was coach and didn’t allow signs, waving behind baskets and personal chants against players, Carolina fans were the classiest yet they were loud and supportive of their team. But they have fallen victim to trying to out-Duke Duke.)

The worse fans from 15th to 1st, GQ says, are Los Angeles Lakers, Oregon basketball, Wisconsin football, Dallas Cowboys, Montreal Canadiens, LSU football, New York Yankees, Duke basketball, Penn State football, Boston Red Sox, Maryland basketball, Oakland Raiders, West Virginia Mountaineers, and tied for first are the Philadelphia Eagles and Philadelphia Phillies.

Those appearing on the list aren’t big surprises but the order is somewhat surprising. For instance, Red Sox fans “worse” than Yankees fans? Do you have others that might have appeared on the list?

Sporting News: Sean Miller not leaving for NCSU

The Sporting News is reporting that Arizona coach Sean Miller will not leave for N.C. State. Miller is a former Wolfpack assistant who is from Pennsylvania and played at Pittsburgh.

His brother, Archie, is one of his assistants at Arizona. Archie Miller is a former Wolfpack point guard from the Herb Sendek era.

By the way, Sean Miller and his wife do not have North Carolina ties. The couple met when they were in high school in Pennsylvania. They have three children.

One Arizona paper has dismissed speculation that Miller would leave, noting that he makes $2 million a year with the Wildcats and has an outstanding recruiting class on the way.

Duke’s Irving may return Friday but is that best?

Duke super frosh Kyrie Irving may play in the NCAA tournament after missing months and 26 games.

Irving injured his right big toe Dec. 4 and has only recently returned to any basketball practice. If he doesn’t play in the tournament though, he may have already played his last game as a Blue Devil as he sits atop most NBA draft charts because of his potential.

Coach Mike Krzyzewski said if he does return to play against Hampton in the first round of the tournament Friday afternoon, Irving would not start and would only play a few minutes. A decision probably won’t be made until after practice on Thursday in Charlotte.

Duke certainly doesn’t need Irving to beat Hampton but the Devils have to win six games to win the national title. If Irving gets back up to speed, he could certainly help the cause. But he could also, despite what teammates are saying, mess up the chemistry and rotation that players and coaches have gotten comfortable with.

Irving was leading the Blue Devils in scoring over the first eight games of the season with a 17 points per game average. But Duke has all the shooters they need to win a championship – Nolan Smith, Kyle Singler, Seth Curry and Andre Dawkins. If Irving were a big man, then we’re talking a big difference maker. The Devils could use help inside. That being said, Irving is a point guard that could make the big men look better on offense.

The blogosphere is already burning up that, with Irving in the lineup, you can just hand the NCAA trophy to Duke again. While I’m sure Coach K will work him in gradually so that the Duke engine is roaring by the Final Four, I’m just not sure the Devils will make it to the Final Four.

They should win the first two games handily but it could take a while for Irving to work in smoothly plus all it takes for a three-point shooting team like Duke to be ousted is to have one bad shooting game. By the time Irving is about settled in again, the Devils may have bowed out.

On the other hand, if the shooters can avoid a one-game slump, by game six of the NCAA tourney, Irving (if truly healthy) and the Devils should be playing at their peak. This season, that could be enough to take it all – but I wouldn’t bet on it just yet.

Richmond coach is one to watch as N.C. State replaces Lowe

N.C. State fans lost faith in the program before the school’s administration did, and that’s one critical reason the school made a change Tuesday. Wins matter, athletics director Debbie Yow said, but wins are only part of the equation.

State averaged 13,779 per game this season, about 6,000 under capacity, and you could see hundreds of empty seats at many Wolfpack games. Yow, according to The News & Observer, said those unsold seats add up to between $3.5 and $4 million in lost revenue.

That means, of course, you have to make a change.

How N.C. State tried to couch that is a bit ironic. Even Yow, in a message to Wolfpack fans from the athletics department, refused to say Lowe was forced out.

“It is with mixed emotions that I share with you that Sidney Lowe has stepped down from his position as head men’s basketball coach,” Yow wrote. “Sidney is, and will always be, an important and valued member of the Wolfpack Family.”

He’s just not at the head of the table any more. And who will be? Yow said she keeps a list of names for potential coaches, and that list is “not long.” In fact, she said, the list is in single digits.

She made an interesting point about how certain coaches seem to win regardless of their level. And one coach to watch is Chris Mooney, a 1994 Princeton graduate who is having a great run at Richmond. Mooney, according to his bio, Has been a part of setting the school record for single-season wins at every stop in his playing and coaching career since high school. The Spiders’ 27-7 record is a school record for wins.

Hansbrough says he’d pull for Notre Dame over Carolina

Tyler Hansbrough, the leading scorer in North Carolina basketball history, said it might “piss a lot of people off” but he’s rooting for Notre Dame in the NCAA tournament and would have no qualms pulling for Notre Dame against the Tar Heels.

Real family is thicker than basketball/alma mater family but it might have been nice had Hansbrough said he hated to do it or he would have conflicting feelings but he would have to cheer for his brother or something a tad gentler.

Granted Buck Williams who played at Maryland isn’t my brother but he invited me to sit behind the Maryland bench for a game against North Carolina. I cheered for North Carolina and I cheered for Buck. People must have thought I was schizophrenic but I hoped that Buck scored 40 and hauled in 20 rebounds … and that the Tar Heels won the game.

I frankly think it’s perfectly ok and understandable that Hansbrough would pull for his brother’s team though but if I were him, I would at least say that I hope the two teams don’t face each other because it would be difficult to watch.

Instead, Hansbrough said, “Notre Dame, I hope they win it all. I’m a UNC fan but my brother plays for Notre Dame so that’s who I’m going with this year.” When asked if he had any qualms rooting for Notre Dame if they come up against the Tar Heels, he said “No question I’m pulling for the Irish. It might piss a lot of people off but that’s the way it is.”

Miller would be a good choice as Wolfpack coach

Sean Miller, the coach at Arizona, would be a good choice to replace Sidney Lowe as N.C. State Wolfpack head basketball coach.

After the experiment of hiring an alum in Lowe, there probably aren’t any appropriate former Wolfpack players State would want to try. Monte Towe, the current associate coach at State, would give some continuity in case some players are considering jumping ship. But Towe only did fair as a head coach for five years at New Orleans going 70-78. Plus, you’d think most State supporters would want to start fresh.

With Miller, although only 42, you get a proven head coach who did very well at Xavier, taking them to four NCAA berths in five years and compiling a 120-47 mark there. In addition, as coach of Arizona for the past two years, he has brought the Wildcats program back to national prominence. His first recruiting class was ranked 12th nationally and this season he led Arizona to the regular season conference championship and an NCAA berth with a 27-7 record. In so doing, he was named coach of the year in the Pac-10.

In addition, Miller has a fairly substantial connection to N.C. State. He was an assistant to Herb Sendek at N.C. State for five years from 1996 to 2001. Miller was a point guard in college at Pittsburgh too. I’m partial to point guards as head coaches but, then again, Lowe was a point guard.

It’s a shame the Lowe experiment didn’t work out but, after five years, it just didn’t. Names being bandied about include Rick Barnes of Texas. Wolfpack fans might enjoy that hate-Carolina mentality that many believe he has or had when he coached at Clemson. But Barnes probably wouldn’t accept the position and I’m not sure he would be a better choice than a young up-and-comer like Miller.

Duke has to play out West but has an easier road than Heels

Duke and North Carolina both get to play first round games in Charlotte but the Tar Heels have a much tougher road to the Final Four.

Duke got a No. 1 seed but after playing two games in Charlotte that the Devils should win – against Hampton and either Michigan or Tennessee – they are shipped out to Anaheim to try to get a couple more wins to reach the Final Four. San Diego St., at 32-2, is the No. 2 seed in the West, followed by Connecticut and Texas.

San Diego St. has never won an NCAA tournament game. Connecticut, a young team, had to win five grueling games to take the Big East tournament. Texas has not played well lately, losing three of its last five games.

If Carolina can get through two wins in Charlotte – against Long Island and either hot Washington or Georgia -they’ll get to play closer to its fan base in the regional finals (Newark, N.J.) than Duke. The bad news is that, top to bottom, the East region is the toughest.

The tournament’s overall No. 1 seed Ohio State is in the East region as are Syracuse and Kentucky. Syracuse saw its six-game winning streak end Friday, with an overtime loss to UConn in the Big East semifinals while Kentucky handled Florida in the finals of the SEC tournament finals.

If Washington is the Tar Heels second-round opponent, it could prove to be a tough game. The Huskies, winners of three straight, talk like they still have something to prove after surprisingly winning the Pac-10 conference tournament.

The ACC got four teams in the tournament – Duke, UNC, Florida State and Clemson – with Virginia Tech and Boston College being left out, as was Colorado which was thought to be a lock. Two inferior teams – UAB and VCU – made the tournament ahead of those three teams.

Despite three additional at-large teams being added to the field this year, Virginia Tech is outside looking in for the fourth straight season.

Hokie coach Seth Greenberg understandably isn’t happy about it. “You almost wonder if someone in that room has their own agenda and that agenda doesn’t include Virginia Tech. Just plan and simple,” he said in a released statement. “I totally wonder if someone in that room has an agenda. The explanation was so inconsistent with the result that it was almost mind-boggling.”

Tar Heels get No. 2 seed in East, play Friday in Charlotte

NEWS RELEASE – North Carolina (26-7) is the No. 2 seed in the NCAA Tournament East Regional and will open play on Friday in Charlotte against No. 15 seed Long Island University (27-5).

The winner of that contest will advance to face the winner of Friday’s game between No. 7 seed Washington and No. 10 seed Georgia on Sunday in Charlotte. The East also includes No. 1 seed Ohio State, No. 3 Syracuse and No. 4 Kentucky.

Roy Williams on 2011 NCAA Tournament selection:
“I am ecstatic about the making the NCAA Tournament field once again. It was kind of hard to enjoy the Tournament last year as it was the only time in 23 years that one of our teams had been eligible to make the field and did not. Tonight our guys were very excited when they saw `North Carolina’ show up early on the selection show. Of course, it was a little reserved because of the fact we had just lost to Duke about three hours before the show came on, but we have to congratulate the Blue Devils for playing so well.

“After we were selected, I looked around and realized that there were only two players in the room that had ever played in an NCAA Tournament game (juniors Tyler Zeller and Justin Watts in 2009). It shows how the culture of college basketball has changed. Two years ago we were the national champions and now after missing just one season we will go into the Tournament with such a young and inexperienced team.

“But I am extremely proud of my team and I congratulate them on the great run they’ve had since mid-January. Not many people would have thought that when we left Atlanta after the loss to Georgia Tech that we would have won the ACC regular-season championship, played in the ACC Tournament final and earned a number two seed in the NCAA Tournament. Now we have to get back to work and play better than we did this weekend in Greensboro.”

Duke receives No. 1 seed in NCAA tournament

NEWS RELEASE – Fresh off a victory in the ACC Tournament Championship game, the Duke men’s basketball team found out they would be awarded the No. 1 seed in the West Region for the 2011 NCAA Tournament.

Duke will play its first round game in Charlotte against Hampton on Friday. It will be the first ever meeting between the two schools. The Pirates are 24-8 and defeated Morgan State, 60-55, in the MEAC Championship game. The winner of that game would face the winner of the 8/9 game between Michigan (20-13) and Tennessee (19-14).

It is the 12th time in school history the Blue Devils have been a No. 1 seed and second straight season. All 12 times they have been a top seed have come under head coach Mike Krzyzewski. Since 1998 Duke has been a No. 1 seed 10 times. Overall the Blue Devils have a 43-8 record as a No. 1 seed in the tournament with three of the school’s four national championships coming as the top seed in the region (1992, 2001 and 2010).

Duke will be making its 16th consecutive NCAA Tournament appearance and 35th in school history. The Blue Devils have a 94-30 (.758) all-time record in the tournament with a NCAA-record 77 (77-22) of those wins coming under Krzyzewski.

When playing in the state of North Carolina during the NCAA Tournament, the Blue Devils boast a record of 30-4, including an 8-3 record in Charlotte. The last time Duke traveled to Charlotte for the NCAA Tournament was 2005 when they defeated Delaware State and Mississippi State as a No. 1 seed to advance to the Sweet 16.

This will be just the fourth season Duke has been placed in the West region. The Blue Devils are 2-3 all-time when playing in the West region. The last time was 2008 when Duke lost in the second round to West Virginia. The Blue Devils also were in the West Region in 2003 when they advanced to the Sweet 16 before losing to Kansas in Anaheim, Calif., the site where Duke would play if advancing to the Sweet 16 this season.

This season Duke is 30-4 overall, the third straight 30-win season for the program. The Blue Devils are just the sixth program in NCAA history to win 30 or more games in three straight seasons. On Sunday Duke defeated North Carolina, 75-58, to claim its third consecutive ACC Tournament Championship.