UNC’s Greg Little says he was ‘naive’

Former North Carolina receiver Greg Little called his suspension “a pivotal point in my life” and said Wednesday that he regretted how his actions contributed to undermining what could have been “a special season” for Carolina in 2010.

Little was one of 12 UNC products at the recent NFL combine in Indianapolis. Carolina had more players there than any other school, but many, like Little, did not play for the Tar Heels last fall.

“On paper we had the best team in the country,” Little told 620 The Buzz on Wednesday morning. “We were going to put together a special season.”

Instead, Carolina endured a bizarre year in which key players like Little, Robert Quinn and Marvin Austin never played as the NCAA investigated the program. Little was ruled permanently ineligible by the NCAA student reinstatement committee in October. The NCAA determined he received $4,952 in extra benefits, including diamond earrings and travel accommodations for the Bahamas, Washington, D.C., and two trips to Miami, among other benefits.

“That was a pivotal point in my life,” Little told hosts Mike Maniscalco and Mark Thomas. “It was a defining moment. I did some soul searching and understood you are going to make mistakes, but that it is what you do after that that defines who you are.”

Little, who played at Hillside, said he has spoken to students at his former school and other young people to encourage them to be more careful.

“Don’t let things like that happen to you” Little said. “Don’t let things like that become a part of your life or put yourself in the situation or around the people where those things can happen.”

Little said he realized what he was doing was wrong, but that he just had not realized he could be caught and penalized.

“It’s just me being so naïve and being so ignorant of the fact that you can be so invincible and not get caught,” Little said.

Barnes’ late three stops Florida State, sets up rematch with Duke

When the game is on the line, get it to Harrison Barnes and clear out.

That strategy worked for the fifth time this year as Barnes got the ball with 10 seconds left and his North Carolina team down 70-69. The Tar Heels spread out as Barnes dribbled up high. He tried to penetrate the lane, couldn’t, so he stopped at the top of the key and popped in a three with three seconds left to give the Heels a 72-70 victory at Florida State.

“It’s very exciting to shoot a last-second shot and have the game in your hands,” Barnes said. “You’re either the hero or the goat. Tonight I made it.”

The win moves Carolina to 13-2 and sets up a game for the ACC regular season title at home against Duke on Saturday. The victory also ensures UNC of at least a second-place finish and a bye in the first round of the ACC tournament.

If looked a little iffy there for a while – what with Tyler Zeller and Dexter Strickland in foul trouble and Reggie Bullock out of the season with a knee injury. There are only five other scholarship players on the roster.

Plus, Carolina turned the ball over 15 times, including a handful in the last few minutes when the Heels blew a 67-60 lead.

But this was a well-played game that ended in spectacular fashion on the Barnes three with three seconds left.

Threes and free throw shooting are becoming big for the Tar Heels, who rank near the bottom of the ACC in both categories.

In addition to the late Barnes three, a pair of threes by Leslie McDonald brought the Heels from behind to take a five-point lead that they held until the last few seconds.

The Tar Heels hit 14 of 18 free throws including a seven of eight performance by John Henson, who has struggled from the line all year. His inability to shoot free throws has landed him on the bench in late-game situations, until the Florida State game. It was big to have his presence in the game late.

For more on the Florida State game, please click here.

N.C. State deserves better than lousy year in basketball, other sports

N.C. State fans can give thanks for football. Other than that, this year has illustrated how new athletics director Debbie Yow has her work cut out for her in West Raleigh.

It’s hard to imagine a more disappointing men’s basketball season. State stumbled out of the gate yet again Tuesday night and lost at Virginia, 69-58. This is a Cavaliers team that could barely score Saturday against Boston College, and yet they ran right over N.C. State.

As one Wolfpack fan said recently, the team isn’t even “relevant.”

The media picked N.C. State for fourth in the ACC in preseason, a lofty assessment based on a strong recruiting class. But State is now 10th in the ACC and, as we predicted last month, in danger of having a losing season. The Pack is 15-14 going into Saturday’s home finale with Florida State.

A loss there, and then in Greensboro’s ACC play, puts the Wolfpack under water for the year. State fans should be outraged, but even a fan base with an amazing commitment to its school is greeting this season with a collective shrug.

For whatever reason, Sidney Lowe has not been able to elevate this program, and a season that looked promising has been greeted with deafening indifference from Wolfpack fans.

The football team, obviously, was a bright spot this season.  But other than that, it’s almost comical how low N.C. State is across the board in ACC sports.

  • The women’s basketball team is in 10th place despite a huge win over North Carolina
  • The men’s swimming and diving team and the women’s swimming and diving teams both just finished eighth in the ACC championships in February
  • The wrestling team is in fifth place among the six teams that compete in the ACC – ahead of only lowly Duke – heading into this weekend’s ACC championships
  • The volleyball team finished 11th in the ACC at 4-12 in league play
  • Men’s soccer was eighth out of nine teams at 1-5-2 in ACC play
  • Women’s soccer was 10th of 11 teams at 0-9-2 in the conference

Baseball, softball and tennis are the spring sports that are underway, and State has some potential in those. The Wolfpack does not compete in lacrosse or field hockey, and heck, that’s a good thing for Pack fans who are tired of suffering.

N.C. State has had brighter days – much brighter days, in fact. But Yow has a big job ahead when it comes energizing an athletics program that is struggling to gain traction across the board. And nothing – nothing at all – would do more for the spirit of the school than to find the right man to energize the basketball program and get N.C. State headed toward respectability again in that critical sport.

UNC’s Bullock out for the season

The knee injury that has plagued UNC freshman forward Reggie Bullock has ended his season. UNC announced this afternoon that Bullock has a torn lateral meniscus and will have season-ending arthroscopic surgery.

This will be the second surgery the Kinston native has had on that left knee. Bullock, while in a slump lately, is the sixth leading scorer on the team with six points a game.