Against zone, Donarski in zone shooting, scores 23 as UNC wins ACC opener

Photo courtesy of UNC Athletics

By R.L. Bynum

CHAPEL HILL — It’s been clear from the start of the season that No. 24 Carolina has enough perimeter shooting to really flourish offensively if the Tar Heels can shoot consistently from outside the arc.

Graduate transfer Lexi Donarski kick-started that with five of her six 3-pointers in the second half, as that shooting prowess produced a season-high 11 3-pointers. The Tar Heels led by 10 late and held on for an 82–76 win over Clemson in their ACC opener Sunday at Carmichael Arena.

“I just think it’s one more way for us to make our offense really hard to guard if we’re able to shoot it a little bit better from three,” said Donarski, who broke loose for a season-high 23 points, and tied her season-high for 3s. “We’ve been working on it a lot, so it feels good to see that success.”

Carolina (8–4, 1–0 ACC) led by 10 with 1:48 left, and Clemson (8–6, 1–1) came within five before the Tar Heels put the game away with six free throws in the last 21 seconds.

“We knew they would be hard to guard,” said Banghart, who gave a shoutout to the crowd of 3,820 with the students home for the holidays. “They’ve got fifth-year seniors. They’re dangerous. They can score off the bounce. They can shoot from 3. They have really good post players. We knew it was going to be a battle. Shows you how great our league is.”

Alyssa Ustby added 21 points, 11 rebounds, two assists and two steals (her sixth double-double of the season and 28th of her career), and Deja Kelly scored 12 of her 15 points in the second half, tying her career-high with eight assists.

UNC hadn’t seen much zone this season, and, knowing that the Tigers would unleash an aggressive matchup zone, Coach Courtney Banghart talked to her team about being shot-ready — particularly in this game, and for the rest of the season — and Donarski did that beautifully.

“To me, it means getting my feet behind the ball on every catch and catching it and literally being shot-ready,” Donarski said. “My first thought is, ‘I can shoot this. I can get it off. I have enough time,’ rather than catching it to scan the floor, see if our bigs are open.”

Donarski hasn’t always released her shots that quickly this season, but she seemed to be better with that against the Tigers.

“We worked on it a lot in my individual workouts and practice and everything,” Donarski said. “It’s definitely something we’ve been focusing on. Because I personally want to make sure it’s at a really high level, and I know that I need to continue to get better.”

Carolina’s passing was impressive, slinging the ball around the perimeter to get to the ball to open shooters, and assisting on 16 of 27 field goals.

Ustby, who shuttled in and out in the final minute with four fouls, snagged the rebound after many perimeter misses on an afternoon when the Heels shot 33.3% from outside the arc, the fourth-highest this season.

Alyssa Ustby produced her sixth double-double of the season and 28th of her career. (Photo courtesy of UNC Athletics)

“I just keep telling the guards, whenever I can, to keep shooting because I’d love to rebound,” said Ustby, who has at least 20 points in two of the last three games. “I don’t know why. It’s just a fun thing for me.”

The Tar Heels navigated the zone by playing two posts players with Ustby at the three at times, with junior transfer Maria Gakdeng (five points, nine rebounds, two steals), senior Anya Poole (four points, four rebounds) and redshirt sophomore Teonni Key (three points, one block) each getting time as the only post player.

“We adjusted to some ball-screen coverages and did a better job attacking from high post,” Banghart said. “Did a better job of attacking from the high post and getting paint touches in transition.”

Ustby scored half the points during a 16–2 run to give UNC a 14-point lead late in the first quarter before Clemson scored the last six points to trim its deficit to 19–11 entering the second quarter.

The Tigers took a 23–22 lead when Eno Inyang’s layup capped a 10–0 run with 6:12 left in the first half. UNC retook the lead on Kelly’s 3-pointer 49 seconds later, part of an 11–4 run. Another late-quarter Clemson surge sliced UNC’s halftime lead to 35–34.

“I thought we still got a lot of good looks in the first half; they just didn’t follow as much,” Donarski said. “But we really sat down with each other, and we were like, ‘Come on guys, we’re in ACC play now. We need to expect more from each other and more from ourselves, and we need to go out there and get a win.’ And so it was just really collective, and we all came together and had people step up and made shots when we needed them to.”

Donarski scored 3-pointers in three consecutive possessions as UNC opened the second half with a 9–3 run. Ustby drew her third foul, and MaKayla Elmore made two free throws with 4:55 left in the third to cut the lead that was eight to four.

“We made a lot of 3s, and we went on a huge run and that run was what put us in a better position to win the game,” Donarski said. ‘We were very unselfish and we were getting the shots in transition and on attacks, the shots that we wanted.”

Two Kelly jumpers, one a 3-pointer, shoved the lead back to nine, and an Indya Nivar 3 (one of six from UNC in the third quarter) put the lead at 11 before the Heels took a 57–46 edge into the final quarter.

Graduate forward Amari Robinson’s layup cut Clemson’s deficit to three with 6:33 left. A Donarski 3 highlighted an 11–4 run that ballooned the lead to 10 on a pair of Ustby layups, the second with 2:33 left.

Ruby Whitehorn’s layup with 22.6 seconds left cut UNC’s lead to five, but pairs of free throws from Donarski, Poole and Kelly secured the win.

Robinson scored 21 points, and Dayshan Harris had 19 to lead Clemson.

“When Harris puts her head down, they’ve got nothing to lose,” Banghart said. “There’re going straight downhill. I didn’t feel like it wasn’t in our control.”

NOTES — Carolina plays at home again at 6 p.m. Thursday (ESPN3) against Syracuse (11–1, 1–0) before visiting No. 13 Notre Dame (9–2, 0–1) at 5 p.m. Sunday (ESPN2). The host Orange upset the Irish 86–81 Sunday. … UNC’s previous best 3-point game was 10 against Gardner-Webb. … Deja Kelly also dished out eight assists on Dec. 17, 2020, against Syracuse and Dec. 6, 2023, against UNC Greensboro. … Freshman guard Reniya Kelly, who suffered a concussion in the first half of the Dec. 10 loss to UConn, missed her third consecutive game. … Redshirt sophomore guard Kayla McPherson missed her fifth consecutive game in what appears to be a long-term knee issue. … UNC has won eight straight against Clemson, and leads the all-time series 63-28, including 30–9 at Carmichael. … Tigers coach Amanda Butler is 0–7 against UNC and Banghart is 6–0 against the Tigers. … Carolina is 4–1 in ACC home openers under Banghart, with the only loss coming last season 78–71 against Florida State.


No. 25 UNC 82, Clemson 76


UNC lineup combinations

ScoreTime12345Segment
score
Starters10:00KellyParisDonarskiUstbyGakdeng11–5
11–52:53Poole2–0
13–52:42ParisDonarskiUstbyKey6–2
19–739.6Nivar0–4
19–119:13
(2nd)
KellyNivarUstby1–0
20–119:13PooleGakdeng2–8
22–196:57DonarskiNivarUstby0–4
22–236:00ParisDonarski7–2
29–254:58Key6–9
35–3433.9ParisDonarskiNivarGakdeng0–0
35–34HalfKellyParisDonarski16–8
51–422:59Nivar6–7
57–49End
3rd
DonarskiNivarUstby0–2
57–518:00UstbyPoole2–5
59–566:32ParisDonarskiUstbyPoole15–10
74–6643.8DonarskiNivar0–0
74–6638.0ParisDonarskiNivar0–0
74–6633.6DonarskiNivarUstby1–1
75–6732.1ParisDonarskiNivar0–2
75–6929.5DonarskiNivarUstby5–2
80–71:15Key2–5
82–76Final

ACC standings

TeamLeagueOverall
No. 11 Virginia Tech14–423–6
No. 10 N.C. State13–525–5
No. 20 Syracuse13–523–6
No. 14 Notre Dame13–523–6
No. 24 Louisville12–623–8
Florida State12–621–9
Duke11–719–10
North Carolina11–719–11
Miami8–1018–11
Georgia Tech7–1116–14
Virginia7–1115–14
Boston College5–1313–18
Clemson5–1312–18
Pittsburgh2–168–23
Wake Forest2–166–24

Sunday’s games
North Carolina 63, Duke 59
Boston College 84, Pittsburgh 58
No. 10 N.C. State 75, Wake Forest 57
No. 14 Notre Dame 74, No. 24 Louisville 58
Georgia Tech 71, Miami 66, OT
Florida State 82, Clemson 79
Virginia 80, No. 11 Virginia Tech 75
ACC tournament
Greensboro Coliseum
Wednesday-Sunday


UNC season statistics


DateDay/monthScoreOpponent/event
(current rank)
Record
November
8WednesdayW, 102–49vs. Gardner-Webb1–0
12SundayW, 74–70vs. Davidson2–0
15WednesdayW, 62–32vs. Hampton3–0
18SaturdayW, 68–39vs. Elon4–0
Gulf Coast Showcase
in Estero, Fla.
24FridayW, 54–51Vermont5–0
25SaturdayL, 63–56No. 15 Kansas State5–1
26SundayL, 65–64Florida Gulf Coast 5–2
ACC/SEC
Women’s Challenge
30ThursdayL, 65–58vs. No. 1 South Carolina 5–3
December
6WednesdayW, 81–66vs. UNC Greensboro6–3
Hall of Fame
Women’s Showcase
in Uncasville, Conn.
10SundayL, 76–64No. 10 Connecticut6–4
———————
15FridayW, 96–36vs. Western Carolina7–4
Jumpman Invitational
in Charlotte
19TuesdayW, 61–52No. 18 Oklahoma8–4
ACC season
31SundayW, 82–76vs. Clemson9–4,
1–0 ACC
January
4ThursdayW, 75–51vs. No. 22 Syracuse10–4,
2–0 ACC
7SundayW, 61–57at No. 9 Notre Dame11–4,
3–0 ACC
11ThursdayL, 70–62at Florida State11–5,
3–1 ACC
14SundayW, 81–68vs. Virginia12–5,
4–1 ACC
18ThursdayW, 73–68at Georgia Tech13–5,
5–1 ACC
21SundayW, 79–68vs. No. 23 Louisville14–5,
6–1 ACC
25ThursdayW, 66–61vs. Miami15–5,
7–1 ACC
28SundayL, 81–66at Virginia15–6,
7–2 ACC
February
1ThursdayL, 63–59at No. 11 N.C. State15–7,
7–3 ACC
4SundayL, 70–61, OTvs. No. 13 Virginia Tech15–8,
7–4 ACC
11SundayL, 68–60, OTat Duke15–9,
7–5 ACC
15ThursdayW, 75–62vs. Pittsburgh16–9,
8–5 ACC
18SundayW, 58–50at Wake Forest17–9,
9–5 ACC
22ThursdayW, 80–70vs. No. 11 N.C. State18–9,
10–5 ACC
25SundayL, 74–62at No. 13 Virginia Tech18–10,
10–6 ACC
29ThursdayL, 78–74at Boston College18–11,
10–7 ACC
March
3SundayW, 63–59vs. Duke19–11,
11–7 ACC
ACC tournament
Greensboro Coliseum
7ThursdayL, 60–59Second round:
vs. Miami
19–12
NCAA tournament
Columbia, S.C.
22 Friday W, 59–56First round:
Michigan State
20–12
24SundayL, 88–41Second round:
No. 1 South Carolina
20–13

Photos courtesy of UNC Athletics

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