Frustration, disbelief from Tar Heels after rallying to lead but not finishing off Gators

By R.L. Bynum

CHARLOTTE — His face was etched with frustration. Several long pauses, as North Carolina coach Hubert Davis tried to explain his team’s latest failure to finish, spoke volumes.

The high-energy second-half surge could have flipped the early trajectory of North Carolina’s season with a signature win, but instead, it added more heartbreak.

After one long stretch of reflection toward the end of an answer, Davis just said, “We didn’t play well.”

After halftime, UNC brought energy and defensive intensity to take control of the game. The Heels fell behind again by double digits in the first half and led by four with 4:03 left. 

But unbeaten No. 7 Florida scored the last seven points as the Gators pulled out a 90–84 victory Tuesday at the Jumpman Invitational at Charlotte’s Spectrum Center after blowing a 17-point lead.

Much like the game at then-No. 1 Kansas, UNC (6–5) wilted at the end. Not even a resurgent performance from fifth-year guard RJ Davis (20 points, 3 3-pointers, 4 steals) was enough. He hit three 3-pointers, but the rest of the team was 2 of 17 from outside the arc.

“If we played the way we played the second half and apply that for 40 minutes, I think there will be, what will be a different outcome,” RJ Davis said. “It’s frustrating because, obviously, it’s my last year. I’m still positive. At the end of the day, I’m still gonna have good spirits around this team and make sure everyone else is good. But we have to dial in.”

RJ Davis poured in 29 points and three 3-pointers but was only left frustrated by the end result. (Photo by Smith Hardy)

Carolina let the game get away under the boards, with Florida (11–0) getting seven of the last eight rebounds, amplifying a season-long concern. One or two more Tar Heels rebounds probably would have turned the game into a win.

“You can stay down. You can point fingers. You can whine and complain, make excuses,” Coach Davis said. “Or you can get your tail back up and step forward.  You’re going to get knocked down in life. Not everything’s going to go your way, and so the only thing you really have control over is how you react and how you respond.”

UNC coach Hubert Davis had a hard time explaining why his team can’t play with the needed intensity for 40 minutes.
(Photo by Smith Hardy)

Sophomore point guard Elliot Cadeau (11 points, 7 assists, 4 turnovers) played better after a tough stretch of games but was in tears as he left the court.

“I was just being really hard on myself,” Cadeau said. “I feel like I made some plays toward the end that didn’t help the team.”

UNC has fallen behind by at least eight points in the first half against every power conference opponent (and Dayton) and by at least 10 to every power conference opponent outside the league.

“I can’t explain … to play with that type of energy and effort in the second half and to not have that consistency in the first half or for an entire game,” Davis said.

Davis said the spark after halftime came from having “our backs against the wall,” a situation with which the Tar Heels are all too familiar.

“That’s how you have to play,” Davis said. “That’s how you have to prepare. You always have to be that way. And once this team gets there, then it’s going to be fun to watch.”

There were plenty of second-half moments to give Carolina hope, including dazzling drives from freshman guard Ian Jackson (11 points). You could hear cheers of anticipation from the crowd whenever the ball got into his hands, although he was a team-low -12.

“I was locked in, man,” Jackson said. “I didn’t really hear the crowd and the anticipation. If they were, I appreciate it. I was just playing my game.”

Because of Florida’s size and length, Carolina had to swarm the Gators’ big men inside, opening up perimeter chances they efficiently exploited. They hit big 3s many times when UNC got close. The Gators only scored one 3-pointer in the last 12 minutes, though.

“We’re too far in the season just to continue to show flashes of how good we can be,” Seth Trimble (11 points, 7 rebounds, 3 steals) said. “But we’ve shown it, so that belief is still there, and that faith and trust and love for each other, so that will never go away.”

Seth Trimble said that it’s time for the Tar Heels to stop just showing flashes of good play and to do it consistently.
(Photo by Smith Hardy)

With poor defense, perimeter shooting and box-outs under the boards, Florida’s combination of 3-point shooting and inside strength made it a forgettable first half for Carolina.


UNC missed eight of its first nine shots, falling behind 10–2 on Will Richard’s 3-pointer 3:39 into the game. The Florida lead ballooned to 15 on Alijah Martin’s bucket at 10:58.

After going scoreless for nearly the first 10 minutes, RJ Davis scored 10 straight UNC points, and UNC cut the lead to 11 on a driving transition layup just before the eight-minute TV timeout during that stretch.

Carolina missed its first 11 3-point attempts before Cadeau swished one in at 4:05 to trim a lead that had bumped back up to 17 down to 11. Again, Florida went up by 17; this time, UNC went on a 9–2 run to cut it to 12 on a Trimble inside bucket in the last minute, and the Gators led 46–34 at halftime.

With defensive intensity, overplaying passing lanes with intense ball pressure, UNC scored the first 11 points of the second half, with Ven-Allen Lubin’s put-back dunk and a Davis jumper slicing the lead to one at 17:35.

“That’s really the first time all year where we’ve allowed a team to dictate the terms of the game,” Florida coach Todd Golden said. “Credit to them, though, I thought they were really a lot more aggressive defensively and then trying to get downhill, driving the ball in the second half. And to their credit, they made it a great game.”

Florida’s lead went to seven before a Jackson 3-pointer and Jae’lyn Withers three-point play on a baseline drive seven minutes into the second half pulled UNC within three. Three Jackson buckets, all on incredible moves, trimmed the Gators’ lead to one.

Trimble’s steal and left-handed layup for a three-point play gave UNC its first lead since the game’s first 2½ minutes during a 7–0 Heels run to go up by four on a Davis bucket with 7:23 left.

During the next few minutes, the lead changed hands three times. But two Cadeau assists, for a Davis layup and a lob for a Jalen Washington transition dunk, gave UNC an 81–77 lead with 4:02 left.

Alijah Martin scored Florida’s first 3-pointer in 13 minutes (and only its third of the second half) to tie it with 2:29 left. Cadeau’s layup 16 seconds later accounted for UNC’s final points.

Richard’s follow shot gave Florida an 86–84 lead with 54 seconds left, and Davis missed a 3-point attempt at the other end. Thomas Haugh’s two free throws with 7.9 seconds left after another big offensive rebound put the game away.

NOTES — Carolina heads to Madison Square Garden in New York for the CBS Classic on Saturday, facing No. 18 UCLA at 3 p.m. (CBS). The Bruins (10–1) beat Prairie View A&M 111–75 on Tuesday. … UNC is 2–1 in the Jumpman Invitational after beating Michigan 80–76 in 2022 and Oklahoma 81–69 in 2023. … UNC has already allowed at least 90 points more times this season (five) than in the previous two seasons combined (three). Tennessee was the only opponent to do that last season. … Carolina is 168–28 in Charlotte and 18–3 in the arena now called the Spectrum Center. … UNC has lost two of its last three meetings with Florida but leads the series 4–3. … Florida is 4–0 against the ACC, also winning at Florida State 87–74 on Nov. 5, vs. Wake Forest 75–58 on Nov. 28 at a neutral site and at home against Virginia 87–69 on Dec. 4.


No. 7 Florida 90, UNC 84

ACC standings

TeamLeagueOverall
No. 5 Duke1–09–2
Pittsburgh1–09–2
SMU1–09–2
No. 5 Duke1–09–2
Stanford1–09–2
No. 25 Clemson1–09–3
Wake Forest1–09–3
N.C. State1–07–4
North Carolina1–06–5
Notre Dame1–06–5
Florida State0–19–3
Boston College0–17–4
California0–17–4
Virginia0–16–4
Louisville0–16–5
Syracuse0–15–5
Virginia Tech0–15–6
Georgia Tech0–14–6
Miami0–14–7

Tuesday’s results
No. 7 Florida 90, North Carolina 84
No. 5 Duke 68, George Mason 47
South Carolina 91, No. 25 Clemson 88, OT
Florida State 82, Winthrop 64
Wake Forest 75, James Madison 58
Stanford 74, Merrimack 68
Wednesday’s games
No. 21 Memphis at Virginia, 7 p.m., ESPN2
UMBC at Georgia Tech, 7:30, ACCN Extra
Saturday’s games
Maryland vs. Syracuse at Gotham Classic in Brooklyn, noon, ESPN2
No. 5 Duke at Georgia Tech, noon, ACCN
SMU at Boston College, noon, The CW
Virginia Tech vs. Saint Joseph’s in Holiday Hoopfest at The Palestra, noon, CBSSNSN | Noon
Sam Houston State at Pittsburgh, 1 p.m., ACCN Extra
Wake Forest at No. 25 Clemson, 2 p.m., ESPN
Louisville at Florida State, 2 p.m., The CW
Mount St. Mary’s at Miami, 2 p.m., ACCN Extra
No. 18 UCLA vs North Carolina in CBS Sports Classic at Madison Square Garden, 3 p.m., CBS
No. 10 Oregon vs Stanford in San Jose Tip-Off, 8 p.m., BTN
California vs No. 23 San Diego State, 10:30, ACCN
Sunday’s games
American at Virginia, 2 p.m., ACCN
Rider at N.C. State, 3 p.m., ACCN
Le Moyne at Notre Dame, 6 p.m., ACCN


DateMonth/dayTime/
score
Opponent/event
(current ranks)
TV/
record
October
15TuesdayW, 84–76at MemphisExhibition
27SundayW, 127–63vs. Johnson C. SmithExhibition
November
4MondayW, 90–76vs. Elon1–0
8FridayL, 92–89at No. 8 Kansas1–1
15FridayW, 107–55vs. American2–1
22FridayW, 85–69at Hawai’i3–1
Maui Invitational
25MondayW, 92–90Dayton4–1
26TuesdayL, 85–72No. 2 Auburn4–2
27WednesdayL, 94–91, OTNo. 20 Michigan State4–3
DecemberACC/SEC
Men’s Challenge
4WednesdayL, 94–79vs. No. 6 Alabama4–4
—————————
7SaturdayW, 68–65vs. Georgia Tech5–4,
1–0 ACC
14SaturdayW, 93–67vs. LaSalle6–4
Jumpman Invitational
in Charlotte
17TuesdayL, 90–84No. 7 Florida6–5xxx
CBS Sports Classic
at Madison Square Garden
21Saturday3 p.m.No. 18 UCLACBS
—————————
29Sunday8 p.m.vs. CampbellACCN
January
1Wednesday6 p.m.at LouisvilleACCN
4SaturdayNoonat Notre DameCBS
7Tuesday9 p.m.vs. SMUACCN
11Saturday4 p.m.at N.C. StateACCN
15Wednesday7 p.m.vs. CalACCN
18Saturday2:15 vs. StanfordThe CW
21Tuesday9 p.m.at Wake ForestESPN
25Saturday2:15 p.m.vs. Boston CollegeThe CW
28Tuesday9 p.m.at PittsburghESPN
February
1Saturday6:30 p.m.at No. 5 DukeESPN
8Saturday4 p.m.vs. PittsburghESPN or
ESPN2
10Monday7 p.m.at No 25 ClemsonESPN
15Saturday6 p.m.at SyracuseESPN
19Wednesday7 p.m.vs. N.C. StateESPN or
ESPN2
22Saturday4 p.m.vs. VirginiaESPN
24Monday7 p.m.at Florida StateESPN
March
1SaturdayNoonvs. MiamiESPN or
ESPN2
4Tuesday7 p.m.at Virginia TechESPN, ESPN2
orESPNU
8Saturday6:30vs. No. 5 DukeESPN
11–
15
Tues.–Sat.ACC tournament
Spectum Center, Charlotte

Photos by Smith Hardy

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