Heels clamp down in the 2nd half to beat Pack 79-70

North Carolina trailed by eight at the half but clamped down defensively, allowing no field goals over a 10-minute stretch in the second half, to ease by N.C. State 79-70 in Chapel Hill. (3/2)

The Wolfpack shot lights out in the first half, going for 57.5 percent from the floor with seven three pointers. State rallied from a 36-31 deficit to a 45-37 lead at the break.

But Carolina came back quickly in the second half, tying the score at 48-all in the first four minutes of the second half after Elliott Cadeau converted an acrobatic basket on the run between three defenders.

Over the next seven minutes, Carolina outscored the Pack 18-4 to take control of the game. During that stretch State big man mostly sat on the bench after picking up his fourth foul. RJ Davis started the run with the three from the right win and Harrison Ingram ended it with a three from the left side.

The Tar Heels’ 13-point lead dwindled however as Carolina failed to score on eight of nine possessions. A Michael O’Connell three in transition and two free throws a few seconds later cut the State deficit to five at 73-68 with under three minutes to go.

It never got closer as Davis hit a jumper and a couple of free throws, and Cadeau wrapped it up with driving layup at the end of the shot clock.

State’s DJ Horne, who had 16 in the first half, ended with 20 points as the Heels’ Cormac Ryan kept him in check in the second half.

“Cormac’s on-ball defense against DJ Horne really helped us,” UNC coach Hubert Davis said. “Cormac has size and he made DJ work really hard in the second half.”

Horne said that the Wolfpack lost their focus during the 10-minute stretch where they failed to hit a field goal (although they did score from the free throw line). “We were getting frustrated with the ball not going in the basket,” he said.

Coach Davis also thinks a couple of tussles between players worked to Carolina’s advantage. “Once things got a little chippy I thought that got us going too,” he said. “We were fired up but we kept within our emotions.”

After one dust-up that involved Cadeau, the Heels went from three down to seven ahead in about six minutes.

Ingram led UNC with a season-high 22 points while Cadeau had one of his best games with 15 points and seven assists. Davis, who scored just two points in the first half, finished with 14 points while Armando Bacot finished out the double-figure scorers with 13 points.

The Wolfpack, now 17-12 and 9-9 in the ACC, was led by Jayden Taylor’s 22 points.

The Tar Heels, who host Notre Dame Tuesday night, improve to 23-6 and 15-3 in the ACC. A victory will ensure at least a share of the regular season title with a regular season finale at Duke looming.

For a box score and more on the game, please click here.

UNC rides Davis’ 42 points to close win over Miami

UNC’s RJ Davis, coming off a one of 14 performance, scored a Smith Center record-setting 42 points to lead the Tar Heels to a narrow 75-71 victory at home against Miami. (2/26)

“He put the entire team on his back,” said UNC coach Hubert Davis, who was visably upset that it took such an effort from one player to win the game. “He was unbelieveable on both ends of the floor… There are very few times I’ve seen a peformance like that whether it be here or in the NBA.”

Half of Davis’ 14 baskets were threes but he also came up with four steals and six rebounds. His 42 points were the 10th most by a Tar Heel in a game. The last player to score more was All-America legend Charlie Scott, who scored 43 in 1970.

The Hurricanes, now losers of seven games in a row, stroked 14 three pointers to hang with the Tar Heels.

Back-to-back threes from Davis gave the Heels what seemed like an insurmountable lead at 70-57 with just over four minutes to play.

But the Tar Heels went the rest of the way without scoring another field goal and they missed five straight free throws down the stretch.

Meanwhile, Miami went on an 11-0 run – which included three triples – over a two-minute period to pull within a basket at 72-70.

Davis hit three of four free throws before missing those five in a row. It took Jae’lyn Withers, who rebounded a missed free throw from Seth Trimble, to wrap up the game with a pair of free thows with less than three seconds to go for the four-point final margin.

No other Tar Heel besides Davis scored in double figures; however, Armando Davis got 12 rebounds while Harrison Ingram had 10 boards.

Miami, now 15-14 and 6-12 in the ACC, was led by Norchad Omier’s 22 points and Bensley Joseph’s career-high 21 points. The pair hit nine of Miami’s 14 threes.

The Tar Heels, who host N.C. State Saturday at 4 p.m., improve to 22-6 and 14-3 in the ACC.

For a box score, video highlights and more analysis on the game, please click here.

Tar Heels get up early, hold Cavs at bay

Once Cormac Ryan hit his first of six three pointers to put the Tar Heels ahead early in the game, North Carolina never trailed and held off the deliberate Virginia squad 54-44. (2/17)

It was the first time since Feb. 25 of 2012 that Carolina has won in Charlottesville.

Ryan, who led the Tar Heels with 18 points, hit five threes in the first half as UNC got up by as much as 13 points and led 26-16 at the half in the low scoring affair.

The Heels, who had a week to work on their game, did what they wanted to do – tighten the screws defensively. The Cavaliers shot just 27 percent from the floor as Carolina held them to just two of 14 from beyond the arc.

“The week off gave us a chance to work on us,” UNC coach Hubert Davis said. “I thought defensively we were tied together today. Our defensive effort was really good.”

That was particularly impressive considering that Armando Bacot, one of Carolina’s best defensive players and leading rebounder, sat the last 12-plus minutes of the first half in foul trouble. Bacot still managed another double-double as he finished with 10 points and 13 rebounds.

Ryan said that the Tar Heels were locked in defensively because of a great week of practice. “We were well prepared,” he said. “We made them make tough shots and we made them take the shots we wanted them to take.”

Virginia made things tough on Carolina as well as the Tar Heels managed to shoot only 32 percent themselves, the lowest output of the season. The usual top scorer, RJ Davis, made just one of 14 shots on the day but he did hit nine of 10 free throws, including four in a row after the Wahoos pulled to within five points with 2:13 to go.

“Whatever it takes,” Coach Davis said about Carolina winning at Virginia. “I’m proud of what the guys did – to come in this environment against a good team. This was a huge win for us.”

Virginia, now 20-8 and 11-6 in the ACC, was led by James Minor’s 12 points and 10 rebounds.

The Tar Heels, now a game up in first place following Wake Forest’s victory over Duke, improves to 21-6 and 13-3 in the ACC. Carolina starts a three-game homestand Monday night against Miami.

For a box score and more on the game, please click here.