UNC rallies from 21-point deficit but falls short at FSU

By R.L. Bynum

No. 20 North Carolina took many of No. 21 Florida State’s best punches over the first 2½ quarters but the Seminoles had trouble delivering the knockout punch.

Deja Kelly wouldn’t let that happen as she ensured the Tar Heels fought back … until she fouled out on a questionable call with 5:05 left. Kelly, who picked up two fouls in the first 1:18 of the game, wasn’t happy with the officiating.

Kelly broke out of a shooting slump to score 23 points and help the Heels cut a season-high 21-point deficit to five. An Anya Poole free throw with 1:41 left pulled UNC within three, but No. 21 Florida State scored the last five points to hold on for a 70–62 victory in Tallahassee, Fla.

“Every game we play on our schedule is an opportunity, so this feels like we gave one away,” Carolina coach Courtney Banghart said. “We knew we had a big challenge, and I’m even more inspired by what’s in that locker room after a night like tonight.”

The terrific defense that typified the five-game win streak for UNC (11–5, 3–1 ACC) was absent until midway through the second half when Carolina went on a 29–14 run to get back into the game.

“We don’t give up,” Kelly said. “Our main discussion was that we knew we could come back, and we knew we just had to fight and do the things that we were supposed to do coming into this game, which was attack with purpose on the offensive end and really lock into the defensive end and get stops. We weren’t really doing either on the first half.”

Carolina wouldn’t have had a shot at a rally without the play of Kelly, who was 10 of 22 from the floor with three rebounds and three assists.

“I know she hasn’t been shooting well, but she’s been leading well, and her team’s been playing well,” Banghart said. “For a kid like that, I think her leadership gets under under-represented. We’ll get what we need from her. We needed a lot.”

Carolina got another big contribution off the bench from sophomore Indya Nivar with 10 points, eight rebounds and a team-high five assists, while Paulina Paris added eight points.

The Tar Heels were hit with foul trouble again. In addition to Kelly, Alyssa Ustby (six points, nine rebounds) finished with four fouls and both Paris and Teonni Key had three.

Kelly tweeted the below apology after being critical of the officiating after the game.

It was a guess what call was about to be made for both teams when a referee’s whistle blew.

“I think the game was a little fast for anybody, but especially for the refs today,” Banghart said. “I wasn’t super-trusting no matter what was called.”

Kelly said the difference in the second half was finally getting some transition baskets.

“I think we just weren’t pushing pace like we normally do and how we want to,” Kelly said. “They were making shots and hitting shots offensively. So, I think that also slowed down our transition game a little bit. In the second half, we definitely saw the shift of us getting a lot of open looks in transition and running.”

Despite UNC holding sophomore guard Ta’niya Latson, the ACC’s leading scorer, to eight points, Florida State never trailed.

“We wanted other guys to beat us, and they did,” Banghart said.

The Seminoles (13–4, 4–1) poured in 10 3-pointers, five from guard Sara Bejedi, who led the Seminoles with 23 points.  

“They were really aggressive, and the basket looked really big for them at home, and I think it kind of stunned our guys, so it affected how we played offense,” Banghart said. “We were able to settle in after halftime. There’s a lot in that locker room, a lot of toughness, obviously.”

Banghart said that she didn’t make big adjustments in the second half; it was just a case of her team executing the game plan better.

“We were very certain on how they were going to defend us in the post,” Banghart said of Florida State’s double-teaming. “We just kept throwing it in there anyway and had so many turnovers. So I reminded them of what we had told them before the game to utilize the pre-help to get open shots and to attack long closeouts. So we just did that.

“In the second half, we took better care of the basketball,” Banghart said. “We wanted to set our screens lower. We knew they would go under them, which would give us a lot of openings. And so in the second half, we set up our screens better and went under them.”

Kelly sat out eight first-half minutes with those two early fouls but had 11 points before halftime. She provided most of UNC’s offense as the Heels trailed 41–26 at halftime.


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It was the most points Carolina has given up in a first half this season, but the Heels went from nine turnovers in the first half to only two in the second half.

“We were aggressive,” senior center Anya Poole said of UNC. “We fought. There were a lot of things that we didn’t do in the first half that we kind of talked about during halftime.”

FSU opened the game with a 13–4 run. Two Nivar layups capped a 6–0 UNC run to cut its deficit to three, but an O’Maria Gordon 3-pointer gave the Seminoles a 19–12 lead after one quarter.

Bejedi scored nine straight points to push FSU’s lead to nine in the first 2½ minutes of the second quarter. A Carla Viegas 3-pointer gave the Noles a 15-point halftime lead after UNC went scoreless for the final 3:09.

By the time a Paris 3-pointer with 4:57 left in the third quarter ended a nearly 9½-minute UNC field-goal drought, that only cut the Tar Heels’ deficit, which was 21 points, to 17.

A Key layup capped an 11–3 run to slice UNC’s deficit to 11 with 59 seconds left in the third quarter. A Kelly jumper cut UNC’s deficit to 58–47 after three quarters.  

Kelly’s jumper with 7:33 left capped a 6–0 UNC run to trim the deficit to five. Ustby’s inside bucket with 3:19 left cut the lead to four before Poole’s free throw cut it to three.

Gordon had 12 points, and Makayla Timpson added 11 points and 14 rebounds for the Seminoles.

NOTES — UNC returns home at 4 p.m. Sunday to face Virginia on Alumni Day when the 1994 national championship team will be honored. The Cavaliers (8–7, 0–4) lost 93–66 at N.C. State on Thursday night. … UNC leads the all-time series 34–18, but the Seminoles have won eight of the last nine meetings. … While Carolina made only seven of 13 free-throw attempts, Florida State hit 16 of 17.


No. 21 Florida State 70, No. 20 UNC 62


TeamLeagueOverallNET*WAB*
No. 13 Duke16–221–81013
No. 12 Louisville15–325–61310
No. 16 North Carolina14–425–61914
N.C. State13–520–92327
Syracuse12–622–74031
Virginia Tech12–622–84134
Notre Dame12–620–92423
Clemson11–720–104440
Virginia11–719–103649
California9–918–135360
Stanford8–1019–124256
Miami8–1016–135865
Georgia Tech7–1012–1776109
Florida State5–1310–20107138
Wake Forest4–1414–16121134
SMU2–169–21220209
Pittsburgh1–178–23262238
Boston College1–175–26247283

* — Through Sunday games
Thursday’s results
No. 16 North Carolina 82, Virginia 70
No. 12 Louisville 69, Georgia Tech 50
Notre Dame 72, Syracuse 62
Miami 79, Pittsburgh 58
N.C. State 65, Wake Forest 58
No. 13 Duke 80, Florida State 52
Stanford 87, SMU 57
Clemson 70, California 63
Sunday’s results
No. 16 North Carolina 74, No. 13 Duke 69
Virginia Tech 83, Virginia 82
Georgia Tech 79, Miami 49
N.C. State 93, Pittsburgh 43
Stanford 85, Clemson 50
Syracuse 90, Boston College 65
Notre Dame 65, No. 12 Louisville 62
Florida State 77, Wake Forest 74, OT
California 78, SMU 34
End of regular season
ACC tournament
Gas South Arena
Duluth, Ga.
March 4–8


DateDay/monthTimeOpponent/event
(current ranks)
TV/
record
October
30ThursdayL, 91–82No. 4 South Carolina
in Atlanta
Exhib.
November
3MondayW, 90–42vs. N.C. Central1–0
6ThursdayW, 71–37vs. Elon2–0
WBCA Challenge
Las Vegas
13ThursdayL, 78–60vs. No. 2 UCLA2–1
15SaturdayW, 82–68vs. Fairfield3–1
———————————
20ThursdayW, 85–50at N.C. A&T4–1
23SundayW, 94–48vs. UNCG5–1
Cancun Challenge
Cancun, Mexico
27ThursdayW, 83–48vs. South Dakota St.6–1
28FridayW, 85–73vs. Kansas State7–1
29SaturdayW, 80–63vs. Columbia8–1
DecemberACC/SEC
Women’s Challenge
4ThursdayW, 79–64at No. 3 Texas8–2
———————————
7SundayW, 82–40vs. Boston Univ.9–2
14SundayL, 76–66, OTvs. No. 13 Louisville9–3,
0–1 ACC
17WednesdayW, 84–34vs. UNCW10–3
21SundayW, 93–74vs. Charleston Southern11–3
29MondayW, 90–38at Boston College12–3,
1–1 ACC
January
1ThursdayW, 71–55vs. California13–3, 2–1
4SundayL, 77–71, OTvs. Stanford13–4, 2–2
11SundayL, 73–50at No. 22 Notre Dame13–5, 2–3
15ThursdayW, 73–62vs. Miami14–5, 3–3
18SundayW, 82–55at Florida State15–5, 4–3
22ThursdayW, 54–46at Georgia Tech16–5, 5–3
25SundayW, 77–71, OTvs. Syracuse17–5, 6–3
February
2MondayW, 61–59at N.C. State18–5, 7–3
5ThursdayW, 53–44vs. Clemson19–5, 8–3
8SundayW, 84–56vs. Wake Forest20–5, 9–3
12ThursdayW, 94–42vs. SMU21–5, 10–3
15SundayL, 72–68at No. 8 Duke21–6, 10–4
19ThursdayW, 66–63, OTat Virginia Tech22–6, 11–4
22SundayW, 78–50vs. Pittsburgh23–6, 12–4
26ThursdayW, 82–70at Virginia24–6, 13–4
March
1SundayW, 72–69vs. No. 8 Duke25–6, 14–4
ACC
tournament
Gas South Arena,
Duluth, Ga.
6FridayW, 85–68Quarterfinal vs. Va. Tech26–6
7SaturdayL, 65–57Semifinal vs.
No. 13 Louisville
26–7
NCAA tournament
1st two rounds
in Chapel Hill
21FridayW, 82–51First round:
vs. Western Illinois
27–7
23SundayTBASecond round:
No. 17 Maryland
TBA
27, 29 Fri., Sun.TBAFort Worth 1 RegionalTBA
April
3, 5Fri., Sun.Final Four
Phoenix
ESPN (Fri.);
ABC (Sun.)

Photo courtesy of UNC Athletics

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