Williams happy with victory despite injury to Henson

After the 85-69 victory over Maryland in the first round of the ACC Tournament, UNC coach Roy Williams said the Heels were “as happy as we can be.” He said he was especially happy for Kendall Marshall who had 12 assists en route to breaking the ACC single-season assist record.

Having to play four freshman at one point due to foul trouble and an injury to John Henson isn’t normally a recipe for being as happy as you can be. But Carolina got 29 solid minutes off the bench from James Michael McAdoo, 15 productive minutes off the bench from P.J. Hairston and nine important minutes from Stilman White, spelling Marshall.

This game could have been a killer for Carolina, considering foul trouble on Marshall and especially Zeller along with the injury to Henson. No one player took on the load but it was a team effort with five guys in double figures.

Still, the Tar Heels will need John Henson if they intend to win the ACC Tournament and the NCAA Tournament. Henson’s wrist is not broken but only time will tell have much the sprain affects him.

For more on the Maryland game, please click here.

Early thoughts on the ACC tourney: Hess honored, small crowd

Despite the first game of the ACC basketball tournament being a good one, the attendance could hardly be called a crowd. As one Twitter said, “I’ve seen bigger crowds for noon Canes-Thrashers games in this building than this ACC game.”

The three referees working the Wake Forest-Maryland opening game have “KH” written with white tape on their shoes, evidently in tribute to Karl Hess, who came under fire for ejecting two former NC State players from the stands of a game earlier this season.

John Clougherty, head of ACC officials, says that Hess is not going to work the ACC tournament because he didn’t want to be a distraction.

Back to the attendance issue: The ACC’s regular-season attendance declined for the fourth consecutive year in 2011-12, with the average home crowd falling to 9,632. Attendance has dropped 13.8 percent from 2005-06, which was the first season the ACC had the current 12 teams.

Only Virginia and North Carolina saw increases in attendance this season.

The reasons are varied – including rising ticket prices, strange times and days to accommodate TV, and convenience of watching all the games in high definition rather than fighting traffic to get to games.

But, in relation to the ACC tournament, the main problem is playing the games in Atlanta. If the tournament were in Greensboro, it would be a happening and a lot more people would be there.

Canes finally pull off an overtime victory

The Carolina Hurricanes, unsuccessful in overtime this season, finally pulled off a two-point overtime victory at Washington. The Hurricanes came into the game 2-12 in overtime. The 14 overtime games are the most of any NHL team this season. The overtime failure is a main reason the Hurricanes are at the bottom of the East standings. Before Tuesday night, the Canes had managed just two points out of 32 possible overtime points. A Brandon Sutter to Justin Faulk “fastbreak” goal in overtime gave the Canes a much-needed two points.

Sutter also scored a goal in the third period and Eric Stall now has a career-high 12-game point streak. Goalie Cam Ward had 46 saves.

The Hurricanes are on the road until a March 15 home game against St. Louis.

Phil Ford chosen for induction into NCB Hall of Fame

Georgetown’s dominating center Patrick Ewing, Kansas legend Clyde Lovellette and North Carolina’s star guard Phil Ford headline the National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame induction class of 2012. Joining them for enshrinement will be coaches Joe B. Hall and Dave Robbins, players Kenny Sailors, Earl Monroe and Willis Reed and contributors Jim Host and Joe Dean.

The Class of 2012 will be inducted into the National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame Sunday, November 18, 2012, at the Midland Theatre in Kansas City as part of a three-day celebration of college basketball. The hall of fame is located in the College Basketball Experience, a world-class entertainment facility that provides a multifaceted interactive experience for fans of the game. On November 19-20, Kansas, Saint Louis, Texas A&M and Washington State will compete at Sprint Center in the CBE Classic.

The first freshman to start the first game of his North Carolina career under Hall of Fame coach Dean Smith, Phil Ford led UNC to the 1975 Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament championship and was the first freshman in ACC history to win the Everett Case Award as the most valuable player in the ACC Tournament. Carolina won 99 of 124 games with Ford, reached the NCAA tournament every year and advanced to the NCAA championship game in 1977. He scored 2,290 career points, was a first team All-ACC and All-America selection for his final three seasons and, as a senior, won the Wooden Award and was the consensus National Player of the Year.

One of college basketball’s most spectacular backcourt performers, Earl Monroe starred for Hall of Fame coach Clarence “Big House” Gaines at Winston-Salem State. His ball handling and shooting skills dazzled crowds as he led Winston-Salem to the NCAA Division II championship in 1967, averaging an incredible 41.5 points per game and was named the NCAA Division II Player of the Year.

In 2006 the first class was inducted into the newly formed National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame. That class included the game’s inventor, James Naismith, and possibly its greatest coach in John Wooden. Since that time, five more classes have traveled to Kansas City for a weekend of festivities. Those classes have included the likes of Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Danny Manning, Larry Bird and Earvin “Magic” Johnson.

The National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame was founded by the National Association of Basketball Coaches Foundation, Inc., to honor and celebrate those who have made extraordinary contributions to the game of men’s college basketball. Located at the College Basketball Experience in Kansas City, Mo., the National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame inducted its first class in November, 2006, with a Founding Class consisting of Dr. James Naismith, who invented the game; former University of North Carolina head coach Dean Smith; Oscar Robertson, considered by many to be the most outstanding all-around player in the history of college basketball while playing at Cincinnati; Bill Russell, who led the University of San Francisco to two NCAA championships and is one of the game’s greatest defensive players; and John Wooden, an All-America player at Purdue and long-time coach at UCLA, where he led the Bruins to 10 NCAA titles, including seven in a row.

Each year, a Blue Ribbon committee, composed of long-time coaches, administrators, former players, broadcasters and basketball writers selects a class of inductees including players, coaches and contributors.

Zeller is ACC player of the year while Henson is ACC’s top defender

University of North Carolina forward Tyler Zeller is the 2012 Atlantic Coast Conference men’s basketball Player of the Year and forward John Henson is the ACC’s Defensive Player of the Year, the Atlantic Coast Sports Media Association announced Tuesday.

Zeller, a senior from Washington, Ind., is the 13th Tar Heel to win ACC Player of the Year honors and the third in the last five years. He is the first UNC senior to win the award since point guard Phil Ford in 1978. He is the third senior to win the award in as many years, joining Maryland’s Greivis Vasquez in 2010 and Duke’s Nolan Smith in 2011.

“This is just phenomenal,” says head coach Roy Williams. “It’s an outstanding recognition of an outstanding young man who has been playing big time basketball for us all year. He performed at a high level on extremely consistent basis and did so in every phase of the game.”

Zeller leads the Tar Heels in field goal percentage (.549) and is second in scoring (16.4), rebounds (9.3), free throw percentage (.803) and blocks (44). In ACC play, he led the league in field goal percentage (.569) and offensive boards (4.0), was second in rebounds (9.7), third in scoring (18.5) and sixth in free throw percentage (.833). In all games, he is first in the ACC in offensive rebounds, second in field goal percentage and rebounding, fifth in scoring and eighth in free throw accuracy. He posted 11 double-doubles, second-most in the ACC behind Henson.

The 2012 Academic All-America of the Year averaged 19.4 points and 10.7 rebounds and shot 63.3 percent from the floor (50 for 79) against Duke (two games), Florida State, Virginia (two games) and NC State (two games), the second, third, fourth and fifth seeded teams in the ACC.

“It’s a very special honor, something you dream about when you are a young player,” says Zeller. “I am so proud to know that as a result my jersey will go in the rafters (at the Smith Center), which is another great honor. You look up there and see the names of the Tar Heels who came before you and you know that it’s a tremendous honor that my jersey will be up there with them.

“My first two years were rough because of the injuries, but I learned a lot, I gained weight and got stronger. These last two years have been great and to be part of the team we’ve had is extraordinarily fun. I am proud to be part of the Carolina Basketball program and I thank my teammates and coaches, because this award goes to all of them, as well.

“My parents were extremely proud when the Academic All-America of the Year was announced because they always raised my brothers and me to understand that academics came first. But they also gave me the support and guidance to excel in basketball, too, so I want to thank them for all that they have given me. I know this means a lot to our family.”

Zeller has scored 20 or more points nine times with highs of 31 against Appalachian State and 30 against Maryland. He’s grabbed 10 or more rebounds in 14 games and graded out as UNC’s defensive player of the game a team-high 11 times.

Carolina’s ACC Players of the Year include Lennie Rosenbluth (1957), Pete Brennan (1958), Lee Shaffer (1960), Billy Cunningham (1965), Larry Miller (1967 and 1968), Mitch Kupchak (1976), Phil Ford (1978), Michael Jordan (1984), Antawn Jamison (1998), Joseph Forte (co-winner in 2001), Tyler Hansbrough (2008), Ty Lawson (2009) and Zeller.

Henson is the second repeat winner as ACC Defensive Player of the Year, joining Duke’s Shelden Williams, who won the award in 2005 and 2006. The 6-10 junior from Tampa, Fla., leads the ACC in blocked shots with 93 and is averaging 3.0 blocks per game, the third-highest in UNC single-season history.

Henson also leads the ACC in rebounding at 10.3 per game and is the only player in the conference averaging double figures in both scoring (14.3) and rebounding. He has an ACC-best 16 double-doubles in 31 games.

Led by Henson, the Tar Heels are first in the nation in rebound margin, seventh in blocked shots and 11th in the country and second in the ACC in field goal percentage defense (.386).

Henson blocked a career-high nine shots against Michigan State in the opening game on the USS Carl Vinson in San Diego and has blocked multiple shots in 22 other games this season. Earlier this season, he moved into second place in UNC history in blocks and currently has 271 career blocks.

Henson averages an ACC-leading 7.6 defensive rebounds per game and has grabbed 10 or more defensive rebounds in seven games this year, including 21 in two games against Duke.

“John is a game-changing presence on defense, someone who has a direct impact on the opposition’s ability to score in every game,” says Williams. “He blocks at least three shots and probably alters at least that many that result in missed shots. Plus, he cleans up so many misses that help us start our break. He’s been a big factor for us.”

– release

Pucillo to speak at Raleigh Sports Club luncheon

Lou Pucillo, the 1959 ACC Player of the Year, will speak at Wednesday’s Raleigh Sports Club luncheon.

Pucillo played guard for legendary NC State coach Everett Case. Pucillo played professional basketball for a while and later coached freshman basketball at NC State for three seasons before leaving to enter private business. Pucillo was inducted into the NC Sports Hall of Fame in 1991. There will be a short highlight video featuring Pucillo.

Buffet lines open at 11:30 a.m. The Forks Cafeteria will continue to cater a Southern Buffet. The meeting location will again be at Highland UMC at 1901 Ridge Road at the intersection of Lake Boone Trail, just inside the Beltline. Annual dues for the 2011-12 season will remain $60. Weekly attendance fee will remain $14 and applies whether the member plans to eat lunch or not. All guests fees will be $20 per guest. Pick sheets and door prizes will be held.

Three Tar Heels make All-ACC basketball first team; Marshall left off

North Carolina’s front court made the All-Atlantic Coast Conference first team today but they might not have had it not been for assist man Kendall Marshall who failed to make the first team. Tyler Zeller was the leading vote getter followed by Mike Scott of Virginia. UNC teammate John Henson was next followed by Duke’s freshman Austin Rivers with Tar Heel Harrison Barnes rounding out the first team.

Marshall led the voting for the second team followed by Maryland’s Terrell Stoglin, Florida State’s Michael Snaer, N.C. State’s C.J. Leslie and Virginia Tech’s Erick Green.

Those 10 players as the top 10 are hard to argue but I would have put Kendall Marshall on the first team over Austin Rivers or Harrison Barnes. Yes, I thought Barnes was the fourth best player on the Tar Heels this year.

I imagine voters didn’t like the idea of putting four Tar Heels on the first team but Barnes scored more points than Rivers and had a better field goal percentage than Rivers. Marshall had 100 assists more than anyone else in the league and his assists to turnover ratio was far ahead of anyone else. I also think Rivers shot in Chapel Hill to defeat the Tar Heels – that one shot – was worth enough points to put him on the first team.

My top 10 in order would be Tyler Zeller, Mike Scott, John Henson, Kendall Marshall, Harrison Barnes, Austin Rivers, Michael Snaer, Terrell Stoglin, C.J. Leslie and Erick Green. Zeller should definitely be player of the year in the ACC.

FIRST TEAM
Tyler Zeller, North Carolina (186)
Mike Scott, Virginia (184)
John Henson, North Carolina (170)
Austin Rivers, Duke (164)
Harrison Barnes, North Carolina (153)

SECOND TEAM
Kendall Marshall, North Carolina (151)
Terrell Stoglin, Maryland (131)
Michael Snaer, Florida State (127)
C.J. Leslie, NC State (99)
Erick Green, Virginia Tech (70)

THIRD TEAM
Seth Curry, Duke (65)
C.J. Harris, Wake Forest (57)
Lorenzo Brown, NC State (52)
Kenny Kadji, Miami (45)
Mason Plumlee, Duke (43)

HONORABLE MENTION
Bernard James, Florida State (42); Andre Young, Clemson (35); Travis McKie, Wake Forest (26); Durand Scott, Miami (26).

ACC ALL-DEFENSIVE TEAM*
John Henson, North Carolina (61)
Bernard James, Florida State (54)
Jontel Evans, Virginia (39)
Michael Snaer, Florida State (31)
Andre Young, Clemson (29)

ACC ALL-FRESHMAN TEAM*
Austin Rivers, Duke (61)
Ryan Anderson, Boston College (61)
Dorian Finney-Smith, Virginia Tech (53)
Shane Larkin, Miami (43)
Nick Faust, Maryland (41)

59th annual ACC basketball tournament pairings/times announced

Wake Forest opens up the ACC tournament as the No. 9 seed against No. 8 seed Maryland Thursday at noon. N.C. State, as the No. 5 seed, takes on Boston College, the No. 12 seed, at 2 p.m. Thursday. North Carolina, the regular season champs, and Duke, the runner-up, don’t start tournament play until Friday. The Tar Heels play at noon against the winner of Wake-Maryland while the Blue Devils play at 7 p.m. against the winner of Clemson-Virginia Tech.
Here’s a rundown:

First Round – Thursday, March 8

#8 Maryland vs. #9 Wake Forest………………………… Noon (ESPNU/ACC Network)

#5 NC State vs. #12 Boston College……………………. *2:00 (ESPNU/ACC Network)

#7 Clemson vs. #10 Virginia Tech…………………………. 7:00 (ESPNU/ACC Network)

#6 Miami vs. #11 Georgia Tech………………………….. *9:00 (ESPNU/ACC Network)

Quarterfinals – Friday, March 9

#1 North Carolina vs. 8/9 winner………………………. Noon (ESPN2/ACC Network/ESPN3)

#4 Virginia vs. 5/12 winner………………………………… *2:00 (ESPN2/ACC Network/ESPN3)

#2 Duke vs. 7/10 winner……………………………………… 7:00 (ESPN2/ACC Network/ESPN3)

#3 Florida State vs. 6/11 winner………………………… *9:00 (ESPN2/ACC Network/ESPN3)

Semifinals – Saturday, March 10

Game 9 (game 5 & 6 winners)……………………………… 1:00 (ESPN/ACC Network/ESPN3

Game 10 (game 7 & 8 winners)………………………….. *3:00 (ESPN/ACC Network/ESPN3)

Finals – Sunday, March 11

Game 11 (championship game)…………………………… 1:00 (ESPN/ACC Network/ESPN3)

*Denotes tentative game time

Team W L Pct. Hm Rd W L Pct. Hm Rd Nu Streak
N Carolina 14 2 .875 7-1 7-1 27 4 .871 17-1 8-2 2-1 Won 7
Duke 13 3 .813 5-3 8-0 26 5 .839 13-3 8-1 5-1 Lost 1
Fla. State 12 4 .750 7-1 5-3 21 9 .700 15-2 5-5 1-2 Won 2
Virginia 9 7 .563 5-3 4-4 22 8 .733 13-3 7-4 2-1 Won 1
NC State 9 7 .563 4-4 5-3 20 11 .645 13-6 5-4 2-1 Won 2
Miami 9 7 .563 6-2 3-5 18 11 .621 13-3 4-8 1-0 Won 1
Clemson 8 8 .500 6-2 2-6 16 14 .533 11-5 4-8 1-1 Lost 1
Maryland 6 10 .375 5-3 1-7 16 14 .533 13-4 1-8 2-2 Lost 3
Wake 4 12 .250 3-5 1-7 13 17 .433 9-7 3-8 1-2 Lost 2
Va Tech 4 12 .250 3-5 1-7 15 16 .484 11-7 3-8 1-1 Lost 4
Ga Tech 4 12 .250 3-5 1-7 11 19 .367 7-8 3-9 1-2 Won 1
Boston C. 4 12 .250 4-4 0-8 9 21 .300 8-9 0-9 1-3 Lost 1

Hokies weren’t much competition but State’s win could put Pack in NCAAs

It was Senior Night for Virginia Tech but the Hokies main senior player Victor Davila was unable to play due to a groin pull and the stands were half empty because students are on a break. Furthermore, the below-.500 Hokies played sloppily and could not shoot, even open shots. But N.C. State’s 70-58 victory over a team that was actually favored in Las Vegas may be enough to help the Wolfpack get into the NCAA tournament.

Scott Wood and C.J. Leslie led the Pack scoring with 19 and 18 points respectively as State won its 20th game for the first time since 2006. The Wolfpack, now 20-11 and 9-7 in the ACC, also stopped a four-game losing streak to Virginia Tech.

The win also puts the Pack in the No. 5 position heading into the ACC tournament Thursday at 2 p.m. against No. 12 Boston College.

The Wolfpack has been considered a bubble team but a winning record in the ACC (tied for fourth in the league) should be enough to get the Pack in the NCAA under first-year head coach Mark Gottfried. A win over BC in the ACC tourney would likely sew up a trip to the NCAAs.

Hurricanes end homestand with only one point, losing in overtime

The Carolina Hurricanes’ six-game homestand ended on an especially sour note, as they fell 4-3 to the Tampa Bay Lightning in overtime. It wasn’t necessarily the result that stings, but how it happened. Steven Stamkos, the National Hockey League’s leading scorer, netted his second of the game and 47th goal of the season on a 4-on-3 advantage in overtime to win the fourth straight game for the Bolts. It was how the Lightning got that power play that was questionable, to say the least.

Let’s talk about that penalty call. Brandon Sutter was rushing into the offensive zone, looking to make a play on a rebound. Stamkos was trailing him, reached his arm out, engaged him and pushed him into goaltender Mathieu Garon. Sutter made every attempt he could – he tried jumping over Garon, who was a good few feet out of his crease – to avoid the goaltender. Yet, he was called for roughing. “Couldn’t get out of the way. Just tried going to the net,” he said. “Obviously the goalie was out pretty far of his crease, and I got pushed in.” He continued later, “No question, I hit the goalie. I ran into him, and there was contact,” he said. “Like I said, I was clearly pushed into him. Terrible call. That’s it.”

Head coach Kirk Muller didn’t have much to say about the penalty call. “What am I going to say?” he said. “Next question.”

On the bright side, Eric Staal extended his point streak to 11 games, tying his own Carolina franchise (since relocation) record. He had two assists tonight, which also extends his assist streak to 10 games, tying Dave Keon’s franchise record set in 1979. His two assists also gave him his third straight multi-point game and sixth in his 11-game point streak. He’s been the best offensive player for the Hurricanes for weeks now, and he’s making those around him better. “Staalsy, again, played great,” Muller said. “I thought tonight was one of our best games as a team.”

Anthony Stewart saw a first-line promotion, as Muller rewarded his work ethic. That move paid off, as Stewart netted two goals, his first multi-point game of the season. He had a few chances to net the hat trick, and he seemed to be feeding off the energy that Staal and Jiri Tlusty brought, and vice versa. “Guys are down, but we can’t feel sorry for ourselves,” he said. “We just have to look forward to the next game.”

The next game will be on the road, the first of five away from Raleigh for the Hurricanes. This is when March will begin to pick up, as the team will play just two of their next 12 games at what will be PNC arena. “Our guys have been really resilient,” Muller said. “We’ve gone through a lot lately, both good and bad.”

– Carolina Hurricanes