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No. 8 Duke blanks Baylor to reach NCAA tennis quarterfinals

The eighth-seeded Duke men’s tennis team advanced to the quarterfinal round of the NCAA Championship for the first time since 2001 with a 4-0 Round of 16 victory over No. 25 Baylor Friday afternoon at the McWhorter Courts at the Dan Magill Tennis Complex. The Blue Devils improved to 25-5 on the year for the program’s highest number of wins in a season since the 1999-2000 campaign.

“We were just really prepared,” said head coach Ramsey Smith. “Baylor is a tough out and they were playing their best tennis of the year going into this tournament, so we were ready for a battle. I’m just really proud of our guys.”

Duke (25-5) got off to a quick start in doubles, posting wins on courts two and three to claim the point for the 22nd time this season. In the No. 2 contest, senior David Holland and sophomore Fred Saba went up a break at 2-all against 45th-ranked Kike Grangeiro and Roberto Maytin of Baylor (19-12). The Blue Devil duo also broke the Bears at 6-4 and held serve to lead Duke off the courts with an 8-4 victory. Holland and Saba earned their fourth consecutive win in postseason doubles play while moving to 8-3 on the season.

Senior Torsten Wietoska and freshman Raphael Hemmeler also grabbed an early break in their No. 3 match against the Bears’ Julian Bley and Marko Krickovic, jumping out to a 3-1 lead on their way to an 8-2 win. Wietoska and Hemmeler improved to 15-5 overall and 13-3 this spring at the No. 3 position.

The match on court one went unfinished with the Bears’ Diego Galeano and Mate Zsiga leading the 16th-ranked tandem of junior Henrique Cunha and sophomore Chris Mengel, 7-5.

“David Holland has been our leader in terms of energy with doubles,” Smith said. “He just gets the guys going, and it was a phenomenal start in doubles. With the format in the tournament here, the doubles point is so key and against our singles, it makes it really tough to have to win four matches.”

While singles play started out tight across the board, Duke went on to take first sets on five of the six courts. Freshman Jason Tahir extended the Blue Devils’ advantage in the match to 2-0, cruising to a 7-5, 6-0 victory over Bley in the No. 6 spot. Tahir recorded the second NCAA Championship win of his collegiate career and pushed his overall record to 26-8.

In a battle of top-20 players on court one, fifth-ranked Cunha and No. 17 Zsiga traded breaks throughout the first set with Cunha coming out on top, 6-4. The Duke junior then took the second set by a 6-1 margin to garner his 23rd win over a ranked opponent. Cunha also moved to 38-8 this season in singles action with a 24-4 ledger at the top spot in the lineup.

Hemmeler battled to a 6-4, 5-4 advantage against Galeano of Baylor in the No. 5 matchup, but it was 38th-ranked Mengel who would close out the 4-0 victory for the Blue Devils. Mengel defeated No. 86 Maytin, 7-5, 6-4, to clinch his sixth match of the season and improve to 31-12 overall on the year.

“That was awesome. I haven’t really had a great ending to the year, so that was important for me individually,” Mengel said. “Baylor is a good team – they’re definitely under-ranked – so we needed the doubles point to make things a little easier on us.”

The win sets up a quarterfinal meeting with top-seeded and three-time reigning champion USC Sunday, May 20 at 12 p.m. on the Henry Feild Courts at the University of Georgia’s Dan Magill Tennis Complex. The Blue Devils will make an appearance in the tournament’s quarterfinals for the seventh time in program history and the first time since 2001.

“USC is the team to beat,” Smith said. “They certainly have some pressure on them – I think this is the first year they’ve been seeded No. 1. We have beat them the last two years. They got us pretty handily at National Indoors but we know we can beat them … We’re in a really good place right now so we’re going to give them everything we’ve got and we’re looking forward to it.”

– News release

State’s Choi tied for first in golf championship, keeping Pack alive

Sophomore Albin Choi’s 5-under 66 on Friday kept NC State’s chances of advancing to the NCAA Championship alive as the club sits seventh in the field after two rounds of the NCAA Ann Arbor Regional at U-M Golf Course.

The low five teams advance to the championship. The Wolfpack fired a 2-under 282 during Friday’s second round, and owns a 36-hole score of 4-over 572. State will begin Saturday four shots out of fifth place, currently occupied by fellow ACC member Virginia.

Choi had one of the most amazing rounds of golf in his brief, but successful collegiate career. Hovering at even par with four holes left, the Freshman All-America eagled back-to-back par-4’s, and then birdied the next par-3 to record a 2 on three-straight holes.

He drove the green on the 309-yard par-4 sixth and made a 10-footer for the first eagle, and then holed out from 40 yards from the fairway on No. 7. Choi is the only player in the field to eagle the 378-yard par-4 so far in the regional.

Choi is tied atop the leader board at 7-under 135 with TCU’s Julien Brun. A group of four golfers are one-shot behind at -6. Two of them, Virginia’s Ben Kohles and Oregon’s Daniel Miernicki, posted 65’s today, the only rounds better than Choi on Friday.

Seniors Chad Day and Graham Baillargeon, and junior Mitchell Sutton all posted rounds of 1-over 72 on Friday.

Sutton is tied for 30th at 3-over 145. He had three birdies today on his card.

Day had a very steady morning with one birdie and two bogeys, and is tied for 46th through 36 holes at 7-over 149. He has recorded 25 pars so far in 36 holes, which is among the top figures in the field.

Baillargeon had four birdies and five bogeys through his trek around the course today and is tied for 55th at 9-over 151.

Senior Mark McMillen had a tough day with an 81, despite posting three birdies on Friday. He is tied for 59th at 10-over 152.

Southern California stormed up the standings with a 12-under 272 and leads at 7-under 561. Pac-12 mate Oregon, Kent State and TCU are all one-shot back at 6-under 562.

Virginia is fifth at even-par 568, Notre Dame is sixth at 1-over 569, and NC State is seventh.

The low five teams at the regional and the low individual not on a qualifying team will advance to the NCAA Championship, to be held May 29-June 3 at The Riviera Country Club in Pacific Palisades, Calif.

NC State begins Saturday’s final round at 7:30 a.m., off hole No. 10 for the third-straight day. The Wolfpack will play with Oklahoma State for the second day in a row, and Kennesaw State.

Team Results
1. Southern California 289-272=561 (-7)
T2. Oregon 288-274=562 (-6)
T2. Kent State 286-276=562 (-6)
T2. TCU 278-284=562 (-6)
5. Virginia 287-281=568 (E)
6. Notre Dame 291-278=569 (+1)
7. NC State 290-282=572 (+4)
8. Oklahoma State 290-283=573 (+5)
9. Kennesaw State 287-290=577 (+9)
10. Purdue 291-293=584 (+16)
11. Baylor 296-297=593 (+25)
12. Ohio State 305-297=602 (+34)
13. Navy 322-306=628 (+60)

NC State Individual Results
T1. Albin Choi 69-66=135 (-7)
T30. Mitchell Sutton 73-72=145 (+3)
T46. Chad Day 77-72=149 (+7)
T55. Graham Baillargeon 79-72=151 (+9)
T59. Mark McMillen 71-81=152 (+10)

Heels win 12th straight with regular season finale Saturday

Freshman Shell McCain connected on his first career home run to break up a no-hitter in the fifth inning and Benton Moss did the rest to help Carolina claim a series win over Virginia Tech with a 2-1 win Friday night. The win was Carolina’s (41-13, 21-8 ACC) 12th straight and Moss improved to 6-3 on the year, while Virginia Tech fell to 34-20 on the year and 11-18 in ACC play.

Carolina fell in an early 1-0 hole when the Hokies pushed across an unearned run in the first but freshman Benton Moss responded by allowing just three hits over the next six scoreless frames.

Virginia Tech’s starter Joe Mantiply was just as good as he kept the Tar Heels in check by retiring the first 12 batters he faced in the contest.

Cody Stubbs broke up the perfect game in the bottom of the fifth as he battled to a six-pitch walk with one out in the inning.

Freshman Shell McCain stepped in and was sitting fastball and sent a shot into left field. Virginia Tech’s Tyler Horan ran to the wall and attempted to pull the ball back into the field of play but it sailed narrowly over his glove for a game-changing two-run home run. The long ball was the first of McCain’s career and gave Carolina a 2-1 lead.

Moss responded with a scoreless inning in the sixth before the Tar Heels nearly added to their lead in the bottom half.

Carolina had the first two men reach when Parks Jordan was hit by a pitch and Chaz Frank dropped down a bunt single. A failed hit and run cut down Joran at third before Michael Russell dropped a single into center field to put runners at the corners.

With Carolina’s three and four hitters due up the chance to score runs looked promising but Mantiply picked up a strikeout and a ground out to end the threat.

Moss kept the momentum in Carolina’s favor in the seventh inning as he needed just six pitches to retire the Hokies. Moss capped off the inning with his eighth strikeout of the night.

Moss retired the first two batters in the eighth inning before departing in favor of left-hander R.C. Orlan. The junior came on to face the ACC’s second-leading home run hitter in Tyler Horan.

Orlan made quick work of Horan as he threw four pitches to retire the slugger via the strikeout and keep the Tar Heels in front, 2-1.

Closer Michael Morin shut the Hokies down in the ninth to cap off the victory and earn his 17th save of the season which moved him within one of the single season school record of 18.

McCain paced the offense on a night that the Tar Heels managed just four hits as he connected on a home run in the fifth and a double in the seventh.

Moss finished the night allowing the lone unearned run and surrendered just four hits, while striking out eight for the sixth time this season.
Carolina will be aiming for its fifth sweep of the ACC season on Saturday as the Tar Heels will celebrate senior day. Seniors Jimmy Messer and Jacob Stallings will be honored on the field before their final regular season contest at Boshamer Stadium.

Duke lacrosse beats Syracuse to advance to NCAA quarterfinals

Redshirt senior midfielder Justin Turri had three goals and two assists while junior goalkeeper Dan Wigrizer posted 12 saves as third-seeded Duke defeated visiting Syracuse, 12-9, in NCAA Men’s Lacrosse Tournament action on Saturday afternoon in front of 3,672 fans at Koskinen Stadium.

“I think it was our most complete game to date,” head coach John Danowski said. “Certainly as a coach we saw a lot of areas where we could be better. I thought in the clearing game we threw the ball away several times where situations we need to look at and practice. I thought the fourth quarter we handled very well. During the past we hadn’t handled fourth quarters very well. And I thought the seniors, Robert Rotanz and Justin Turri, led the charge with some great decision making on the offensive end of the field.”

While improving to 14-4 on the season, the Blue Devils advance next Sunday’s quarterfinal round to meet the winner of Massachusetts-Colgate at PPL Park in Chester, Pa. Duke has won 17 of its last 22 NCAA Tournament games dating back to 2005 and today picked up the program’s first postseason victory over Syracuse in four tries.

“The NCAA tournament filled with tough teams,” Danowski said. “Whoever you are going to play is going to be terrific. When we heard that it was Syracuse I think it got everybody’s attention immediately. So the focus in practice all week was undeniable in terms of the guys’ readiness to accept whatever it is that the coaching is going to throw at them. I thought that we had a great week of preparation. It’s Syracuse. It’s very hard to say that this is a different team. It’s not. They are talented, athletic with a great coaching staff and a tremendous tradition. They are who we want to be one day. With all their championships and what they’ve accomplished in our sport. I thought their kids played hard. They played for 60 minutes. It was a hell of a Division I lacrosse game.”

The Orange concludes the 2012 campaign with a 9-8 overall ledger.

The Blue Devils, who pushed their nation’s best current home winning streak to 10 games and are now 59-6 (.908) at home under head coach John Danowski, jumped on top 3-0 in the first five minutes of action with Turri sandwiching two markers around a goal by Jordan Wolf. Syracuse’s Scott Loy broke the ice for the Orange with 37 seconds left in the opening period.

After Duke received goals from Robert Rotanz and Christian Walsh to claim a 5-1 advantage, Syracuse countered with a four-goal spurt to tie the contest at 5-5 just 25 seconds into the third period when Kevin Drew scored on a feed from Matt Harris. The Blue Devils then responded with four consecutive goals of their own as Rotanz tallied twice while Josh Dionne and Walsh netted one marker apiece.

“We were attacking from X,” Rotanz said. “Jordan Wolf and Jake Tripucka were doing a great job of finding the open guy. They were throwing great through passes to shooters up top and we just did a great job of shooting and getting it on net and finding spots where the goalie couldn’t save. Obviously when you have the ball that much because of faceoffs it makes it easier to get in the flow offensively.”

The two teams would trade the next six goals, with Dionne’s second of the afternoon pushing Duke ahead, 12-8, at the nine minute mark of the fourth quarter. Matt Harris scored for the Orange with two seconds on the clock to account for the final margin.

Duke received a huge lift from Brendan Fowler and Greg DeLuca at the face-off X as the teammates – who both played for the Blue Devil football team last fall – combined to win 17-of-24 draws. Fowler secured 12-of-17 face-offs with six ground balls while DeLuca chipped in five-of-seven draws with three grounders and one assist.

“I have to give Ron Caputo a ton of credit who works with our faceoff guys,” Danowski said. “They’ve been working hard all year, Greg [DeLuca] and Brendan [Fowler]. They just happened to get their shot today. I think originally the plan was we could bring CJ in kind of like a sixth man kind of thing. But because Brendan and Greg were doing so well it wasn’t necessary today.”

Now with 22 career points (13g & 9a) in NCAA Tournament play, Turri moves into seventh place on Duke’s all-time chart past Brad Ross, who had 21 points (17g & 4a). Turri also moves into fifth place on Duke’s all-time post-season assists list and into a tied for ninth place on the school’s career NCAA chart for goals. With one more assist this year, Turri will become just the fourth player in Duke history to reach double figures in both goals and assists in NCAA action, joining Matt Danowski (25g & 32a), Zack Greer (35g & 17a) and Ned Crotty (17g & 31a).

Rotanz and Walsh finished with three goals each while Wolf had one goal and two helpers. The Blue Devils scored on 12-of-34 (.353) shots, marking their fourth-best percentage effort of the year and top mark since a 13-of-33 (.394) showing at Georgetown on March 23.

In goal, Wigrizer logged 12 saves against eight goals allowed for his 10th win of the year. The 12-save effort marked Wigrizer’s second-highest total in NCAA play, trailing only a 14-save performance against Notre Dame in the 2011 quarterfinal round. Michael Manley aided the defensive unit with five ground balls and a game-best three caused turnovers. CJ Costabile posted a game-high eight ground balls for the Blue Devils.

Syracuse was paced by Tommy Palasek’s one-goal, two-assist performance. Drew and Loy each scored twice while goalkeeper Bobby Wardwell was credited with 10 saves.

Duke is now 23-14 (.622) all-time in NCAA Tournament action and next week will look to advance to the program’s sixth straight national semifinal. Under Danowski, the Blue Devils are 14-4 (.778) in post-season play.

“We talk a lot about playing for one more week,” Turri said. “As a fifth-year senior this could be my last week of playing Duke lacrosse. So just to come out every day in practice and put on the pads, come out one more time next weekend in Philly, that’s just what’s driving me and the seniors. Hanging out with the guys for one more week and not looking past the day. Whether it’s practice, a meeting a team meal and cherishing every moment we have with these guys. Because who knows we may never be as one group again so I’m not looking past anything.”

NCSU women’s golf advances to first-ever NCAA championship

NC State women’s golf advanced to its first-ever NCAA Championship by finishing seventh of 24 teams at the NCAA Central Regional on an 12-over par 300 final round, Saturday at Ohio State’s par 72, 6,264 yard Scarlet Course.

The 2012 Wolfpack solidified its case as the best team in the program’s history by securing its first championship berth ever on its highest finish ever at an NCAA Regional, bettering the previous record of 10th set in 2008.

Augusta James also made history by finishing tied for 10th, improving on Colby Cobb’s school-record 13th place finish in the 2002 NCAA East Regional. James scaled the individual leaderboard with a 1-under 71 over the final round, for a 6-over 222 total.

Brittany Marchand also landed in the top-20 with her best round of the tournament, a 2-over 74 to end up in 18th at 10-over with a 226.

Amanda Baker fired a 4-over 76 to finish 43rd, equaling her first round to finish with a 15-over 231. Vivian Tsui rounded out the Pack’s team scorecard with a 7-over 79, good for a 16-over 232 to finish 45th. Ana Menendez wrapped up her regional with an 8-over 80 to finish 88th.

State finished third in its group with Ohio State and Tennessee, but climbed in front of Oregon and held off a charge by Arkansas to qualify for the championship. Southern Cal won the regional by 25 strokes with a 10-over 874 total, bolstered by a final round 286. Southern Cal’s Lisa McCloskey shared medalist honors with Florida State’s Maria Salinas at 3-under 213.

The Wolfpack represents one of 24 teams nationwide to move on to the NCAA Championship, held May 22-25 at the Vanderbilt Legends Club in Franklin, Tenn. Live scoring for the NCAA Championship will be available on Golfstat.com.

Turner steals 50th base as Pack wins 12th in a row

For the second time Saturday, Ryan Mathews provided No. 13 NC State’s game-winning hit, blasting a two-run shot with two outs in the seventh to push the Wolfpack ahead en route to a 6-2 win over Virginia Tech at English Field.

The Wolfpack (36-12, 18-8 ACC) took a 1-0 lead in the top half of the third before Virginia Tech (32-18, 10-16 ACC) answered with a pair in the bottom half to take a 2-1 lead. State tied the game in the fifth, then Mathews’s two-run blast made it 4-2 in the seventh. Another pair of runs came in during an error-riddled ninth to make the final margin 6-2.

The victory extends the Pack’s current winning streak to 12 games, the longest run since State won 16 in a row in 2003. State’s 18 conference wins ties the most in a single season, matching 2008.

Trea Turner stole a pair of bases in the to improve to 50-for-52 on the year and become only the third player in ACC history to steal 50 bases in a single season, joining Georgia Tech’s Ty Griffin (50 in 1986) and UNC’s Brian Roberts (63 in 1997). Turner finished the game 2-for-4 with two runs and an RBI, marking the 15th-consecutive game the freshman has scored at least one run.

Heels lacrosse upset at home in first round of NCAA tourney

Led by Mark Matthews and Jeremy Noble, 2011 NCAA Tournament semifinalist Denver began another run for a Final Four bid, outlasting eighth-seeded North Carolina 16-14 Saturday night before 1,344 fans at Fetzer Field. The Pioneers improved to 9-6 on the season while the Tar Heels’ season ends at 11-6.

After trailing by four goals early, the Tar Heels rallied to lead by two goals at the half but a 5-0 scoring run by Denver in the third and fourth quarters proved to the be difference as it was able to stave off one last gasp effort by UNC which almost produced a tying goal.

Denver was dominant in the face-off circle as the Pioneers produced 15 extra offensive possessions behind the work of Chase Carraro who went 22 of 30 and had a Fetzer Field facility record 17 ground balls in the game. He was backed by brilliant offensive performances by Mark Matthews who matched his career high with five goals and by Jeremy Noble who had three goals and seven assists for a career high 10 points. We Berg has three ground balls and two assists for Denver.

Overshadowed was the play of UNC’s Marcus Holman who matched his career high for goals in a game with six and also had two assists to lead Carolina with eight points, two short of his career high. Holman finished the year with 74 points, the third most in a single season for a Tar Heel and the most since Dennis Goldstein had 75 points in 1991.

Jimmy Dunster and Chad Tutton each had a pair of goals for UNC and Joey Sankey led the Tar Heels with three assists while Ryan Creighton had two.

The Pioneers led in virtually every statistical area, outshooting the Tar Heels 42-35, winning the ground balls 37-35 and winning 23 of 31 face-offs. In a losing cause, UNC goalkeeper Steven Rastivo had one of his best efforts of the season making 15 saves. Ryan LaPlante had nine saves for Denver. Carolina scored on 40 percent of its shots, its second best shooting effort of the season.

Denver outshot the Tar Heels 15-7 in the first quarter and took a 5-2 after the opening 15 minutes. A goal by Alex Demopoulos with 12:17 left in the half gave the Pioneers their biggest advantage of the first half at 6-2. Over the final 12:07 of the second quarter, UNC went on an 8-2 scoring run, getting their eight goals on nine shots in the period. Holman had four goals in the second quarter and his extra-man tally off an assist by Nicky Galasso with 1:22 left in the second quarter gave the Tar Heels their first lead since it was 2-1.

Chad Tutton scored with three seconds left in the second quarter and Holman notched his sixth and final goal 13 seconds into the third quarter, giving the Tar Heels their biggest lead at 13-10. Denver answered with two goals before Greg McBride scored off an assist by Holman with 11:31 to play in the third period. That, however, would be Carolina’s last goal for over 20 minutes. Denver went on a 5-0 run from 8:14 left in the third quarter to 7:17 left in the fourth period with five different players scoring in the run. Noble had one of the goals and he assisted on the other four.

The Pioneers then had to survive a late game rally by UNC. Jimmy Dunster scored for the Tar Heels with 6:30 to play and Jimmy Bitter had a goal wiped out with 4:33 to play for a crease violation. That goal would have pulled the Tar Heels within a single goal.

Denver had the ball and was running out the clock before Eric Law turned the ball over with 1:32 to play. The Tar Heels got a goal on the other end by Chad Tutton with 48 seconds to play. Denver won the ensuing face-off but Mark Staines forced a turnover by Carraro and with 25 seconds to play his shot hit the left post, denying the Tar Heels the tying goal. Staines tracked down the ground ball and the Tar Heels called timeout with 20 seconds left for one last effort.

John Zurlo of Denver forced a turnover and Denver scored an empty net goal at the other end with one seconds remaining by Eric Law.

Denver now advances on to play Loyola next Saturday in Annapolis, Md., in the NCAA quarterfinals.

ESPN and ACC extend exclusive, multi-platform agreement through 2026-27

ESPN and the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) have announced an extension to their exclusive agreement through 2026-27 which will now feature several new elements designed to bring added value to ESPN and ACC fans, including more title sponsorship rights, more men’s regular-season and conference tournament basketball games, more conference football games, and dozens more Olympic sports competitions. The deal will provide premier content to numerous ESPN multimedia platforms, including ESPN, ESPN on ABC, ESPN2, WatchESPN.com, ESPNU, ESPN3, ESPN 3D, ESPN Mobile TV, ESPN GamePlan, ESPN FULL COURT, ESPN Buzzer Beater/Goal Line, ESPN International, ESPN Deportes, ESPN Classic and ESPN.com.

Increased Inventory

The conference’s planned increase to an 18-game conference men’s basketball schedule and the additions of Pittsburgh and Syracuse will bring an increase of 30 conference men’s basketball games per year and two more conference tournament games. In football, 14 more conference-controlled games will be televised each year. Per the extension, ESPN has the right to televise three Friday ACC football contests annually which will include a standing commitment from Boston College and Syracuse to each host one game as well as an afternoon or evening game on Thanksgiving Friday. Also, more women’s basketball and dozens more Olympic sports competitions will be covered on ESPN platforms representing the conference’s 25, soon to be 26, sponsored sports.

Sponsorship and Enhancements

For the first time, ESPN has acquired title sponsorship rights, subject to conference approval, beyond football to all other conference championships including the men’s and women’s basketball tournaments. The ACC Men’s Basketball Tournament, televised in its entirety on ESPN networks and its syndication partner Raycom, has never been sponsored in its 59-year history.

John Skipper, president, ESPN and co-chair, Disney Media Networks, said, “This expansion and extension of our exclusive agreement brings tremendous value to our company and to ACC fans everywhere. We look forward to showcasing this premier conference across all platforms through 2027.”

“We are excited to have further enhanced our partnership with ESPN through the extension of our multimedia contract,” said ACC Commissioner John Swofford. “We are proud that ESPN has invested so deeply in the ACC both from a resource and exposure standpoint. As we look to the future, this relationship will be tremendous for our schools, fans, coaches and student-athletes.”

ACC on ESPN

ESPN has been televising ACC content since 1979 and has exclusive rights to every conference-controlled football and men’s basketball game, plus women’s basketball and Olympic sports matchups, and all ACC championship events. ACC content is distributed on the widest array of multi-media platforms in the sports industry. ACC on ESPN highlights:

· Football on national TV: Extensive regular-season action on Saturday afternoon and nights, primetime Thursdays, three Fridays including Thanksgiving Friday, Labor Day Monday and the ACC Football Championship Game;

· Men’s basketball on national TV: The most comprehensive coverage of regular-season games and the entire conference tournament produced and distributed via ESPN; regular-season matchups of the storied Duke-North Carolina rivalry each year; full national telecasts on all games televised on an ESPN platform; a weekly ACC Sunday Night Basketball franchise on ESPNU;

· Women’s basketball: Numerous women’s regular-season basketball games and the entire conference tournament;

· Olympic sports: An extensive commitment to the league’s soon to be 23-sponsored Olympic sports with regular-season and championship telecasts, highlighted by baseball, softball, lacrosse, and men’s and women’s soccer;

· Digital media: Exclusive ACC football, men’s and women’s basketball, and Olympic sports games as well as simulcasts on ESPN3. Live ACC games, including football and basketball, on ESPN Mobile TV;

· ESPN 3D: Select live ACC action on ESPN 3D;

· Additional outlets: Select ACC action on ESPN International, ESPN GamePlan, ESPN FULL COURT, ESPN Classic and ESPN Deportes; and extensive content rights for ESPN.com.

USTA pro tennis circuit returns to Raleigh

The Raleigh Women’s Challenger returns to Raleigh, May 6-13, for the fifth consecutive year and eighth overall. It is offering $25,000 in prize money for the first time since 2008 after offering $50,000 the last three years; it is the final clay-court USTA Pro Circuit women’s event prior to the 2012 French Open and the last clay-court USTA Pro Circuit women’s event until mid-June. It is also the only USTA Pro Circuit event for either men or women held in the state of North Carolina.

Those players entered in the main draw this week include: Grace Min, the 2011 US Open girls’ singles champion, who trains full-time at the USTA Training Center Headquarters in Boca Raton, Fla., and who won the first women’s USTA Pro Circuit title of 2012 in Innisbrook, Fla., and reached the final at the $25,000 event in Clearwater, Fla., in March; Julia Cohen, the highest ranked U.S. player in the field, who earned All-American honors at both the universities of Florida and Miami and who reached the semifinals of two of the last three $50,000 USTA Pro Circuit women’s events; and former US Open girls’ runner-up Alexa Glatch, who qualified for the main draw at Wimbledon in 2011, and ho propelled the U.S. to the 2009 Fed Cup final by winning two of the U.S.’s three points in its semifinal victory against the Czech Republic.

Also in the main draw are: Ashley Weinhold, the 2007 USTA Girls’ 18s national champion, who won her second career professional title in 2011 at the $25,000 event in Rancho Mirage, Calif.; former Top 20 player Alexandra Stevenson, who reached the semifinals of Wimbledon as a qualifier in 1999; and Alexandra Mueller, who won the inaugural US Open National Playoffs in 2010 to earn a wild card into the 2010 US Open Qualifying Tournament.

Those players receiving main draw wild cards include: Alison Riske, who qualified for the 2012 Australian Open, and who, in 2011, reached the quarterfinals at the WTA event in Birmingham, England, and competed in the main draws at the US Open, Australian Open and Wimbledon; and current University of Pennsylvania standout Chieh-Yu (Connie) Hsu, who won three ITF Circuit titles in 2011 with victories in Taiwan and Turkey.

Americans competing in qualifying include: Asia Muhammad, who reached the quarterfinals of $50,000 events here and in Boston in 2011, and who learned tennis at the Andre Agassi Boys and Girls Club in Las Vegas; Alexandra Kiick, the daughter of former Miami Dolphin Jim Kiick, who won her first professional title in 2011 at the $10,000 event in Amelia Island, Fla., and who captured the prestigious International Spring Championships junior title last month; Beatrice Capra, a standout freshman at Duke University who reached the third round of the 2010 US Open after winning a USTA playoff to earn a wild card into the main draw; and Kyle McPhillips, who won her first professional title in 2011 at the $10,000 event in her hometown of Cleveland, and who will play collegiately at UCLA in the fall. Many current WTA and USTA Pro Circuit standouts have competed in Raleigh. 2009 singles champion Melanie Oudin used her victory in Raleigh as a springboard to her breakthrough summer that year, where she defeated former world No. 1 Jelena Jankovic en route to the fourth round at Wimbledon and upset former US Open runnerup Elena Dementieva as well as three-time Grand Slam tournament singles champion Maria Sharapova en route to the quarterfinals of the US Open. Oudin also won the 2011 US Open Mixed Doubles title with fellow young American Jack Sock. 2008 Raleigh singles champion Chelsey Gullickson won the 2010 NCAA Division I singles title to become the University of Georgia’s first NCAA women’s singles champion since 1994. In turn, she received a wild card into the 2010 US Open, where she faced No. 1 seed Caroline Wozniacki in the first round. Kristie Ahn and Nicole Gibbs, the 2010 doubles champions, are now teammates and standout players at Stanford University.

Hubert Davis leaves ESPN for his alma mater, Carolina

Former University of North Carolina guard, 12-year NBA veteran and ESPN analyst Hubert Davis is the Tar Heels’ newest assistant men’s basketball coach, head coach Roy Williams announced today. Not sure who the other candidates were but this was a strong choice – he’s a player that surprised people, overachieved and was a class act at Carolina.

Davis has spent the past seven years with ESPN as a highly regarded college basketball analyst and co-host of College GameDay. He is replacing Jerod Haase, who spent nine years on Williams’ staff at Carolina prior to being named the head coach at UAB.

“I am very excited, thankful and honored to re-join the Carolina basketball program as an assistant to Coach Williams,” says Davis. “I loved being a part of college basketball during my time at ESPN by attending practices and games and developing relationships with players and coaches. Now I will have the opportunity to do this on a more personal level at a university and with a basketball program that I have loved my entire life.”

The Burke, Va., native played in 137 games as a Tar Heel from 1988-92, during which time UNC went 102-37, won the 1989 and 1991 Atlantic Coast Conference Tournaments and played in the 1991 Final Four. He scored 1,615 points, an average of 11.8 per game, and holds the UNC record for career three-point percentage at .435 (197 of 453). He scored in double figures 80times, had 23 games with 20 or more points, including 25 against Kansas in the 1991 national semifinals.

Davis averaged 21.4 points and earned second-team All-ACC honors as a senior. He scored in double figures in 32 of 33 games that season, including 20 games with 20 or more points and 30 or more in four games. He netted a career-high 35 points at Duke on March 8, 1992.

As a junior, Davis made 64 of 131 three-pointers, a percentage of .489 that is second-best in UNC history. He shares the UNC single-game record for three-pointers, as he made eight at Florida State as a senior.

“I am ecstatic to announce that Hubert Davis will be joining our program as an assistant coach to replace Jerod Haase,” says Williams. “Jerod was phenomenal as a player and assistant and I am elated that I can fill this spot with Hubert. I helped recruit him to Carolina in 1988, coached him in the World University Games in 1991 and have always admired him on and off the court. I knew the day would eventually come when I would need to replace staff members as they moved on. For the last four or five years Hubert has alwaysbeen on my mind in case a spot did come open. I didn’t know if I could get him to come back, but I knew I wanted him to be the first option. Coaching is about teaching, relationships and passion and I feel Hubert is the perfect choice. Our student-athletes will benefit greatly from what he adds to our staff.

“I really was overjoyed by the interest from former players and I knew I wanted the hire to be a former Tar Heel. I considered several current college coaches as well as people wanting to get into college coaching – it was a fabulous group. Guys like Shammond Williams are not in college coaching now, but is going to be great when his time comes. We also had interest from NBA assistants, so it truly was a diverse group, but Hubert is taking the job and I know all former Tar Heels will be extremely happy.

“Again, I am ecstatic to make this announcement and look forward to working with Hubert. My entire staff and team are excited about Hubert and his family being with us.”

The New York Knicks selected Davis in the first round of the 1992 NBA Draft. He played in 12 seasons in the NBA, scoring 5,583 points, an average of 8.2 per contest. He made 728 three-point field goals and prior to the 2011-12 season was third in NBA history in three-point percentage at .441.

Davis and his wife, Leslie, have three children – Elijah, Bobbie Grace and Micah.