By Bob Sutton
The defensive effort for the North Carolina women’s basketball team was fitting all the way through its ACC road opener Sunday afternoon.
The No. 17 Tar Heels were relentless in churning out a 69–60 victory against Miami in Coral Gables, Fla.
Even though UNC (13–2, 1–1 ACC) managed to score only seven fourth-quarter points, it didn’t matter. By then, the tone had been fully established.
“I liked how we were defending,” Coach Courtney Banghart said. “They weren’t getting any look that they wanted in the fourth quarter. So I was using the clock and the time and trusting our defense even more so than our offense.”
Miami (11–2, 1–1) was stuck with a season-low point total. The Hurricanes’ previous low mark came in a 61–56 victory against Oregon State.
“This group really locked into communicating [on defense],” Banghart said. “I could hear them all throughout the game which mattered.”
There was enough offense for the Tar Heels, with Maria Gakdeng cranking out 14 of her 21 points in the first half. Alyssa Ustby had 17 points and 13 rebounds and Indya Nivar added 11 points. Gakdeng, who shot 7 of 11 from the field, pulled in a season-high 12 rebounds.
“Our group as a whole did a really good job at assessing the game in live time and continuing making Miami pay on the inside because they had no answer for Maria,” Ustby said. “Just really good all-around team offense to figure out where we needed to score.”
Gakdeng said she realized she had to be productive.
“Being relentless, always calling for the ball, knowing they were looking for me,” she said. “We practiced that. We make sure we work on post passes.”
The turnover count was most telling. Miami gave it up 15 times compared to Carolina’s season-low four.
That made up for the Tar Heels’ 6-for-29 shooting on 3-point attempts.
“Our guard play was a bit rusty coming out of the break, understandably,” Banghart said of the shooting. “Fortunately, they really took care of the basketball. If you’re not going to shoot well, there’s lots of ways to impact this game. … We didn’t shoot well enough at the perimeter spot, but we did other things well enough.”
Miami closed within 56–45 before Lanie Grant’s 3-pointer for North Carolina’s final field goal of the third quarter.
The contributions from Gakdeng and Ustby stood out the most.
“Each game has its own feel,” Banghart said. “This one will go down that we’ll really credit [Gakdeng and Ustby] for finding a way for us.”

Carolina built a 39–29 halftime lead. Miami’s nine first-half turnovers boosted the Tar Heels, who held a 17-point edge at one point.
The Hurricanes notched the final seven points of the half, holding North Carolina scoreless for the last three minutes. Banghart said the Tar Heels bolstered their defensive rebounding in the second half.
A potential trouble spot was foul trouble with starters Lexi Donarski with three and Ustby and Reniya Kelly with two each.
“I was worried about the foul trouble,” Banghart said. “Because when they’re not aggressive, we’re not good. I was a little worried about that. … It’s not great when you have so many of your guys that you lean on with a lot of experience in foul trouble. We like our bench. We trust them.”
By game’s end, no North Carolina player had accumulated more than three fouls. The Tar Heels used six players off the bench.
In the first half, Miami’s Haley Cavinder had 12 of her 19 points. Jasmyne Roberts also finished with 19 points for the Hurricanes, who shot 40.4% from the floor.
That was better than North Carolina’s 39.1% mark.
With two 3-pointers, Grant was the lone Tar Heel with more than one long-range basket.
Kelly was back in the starting lineup after missing the Dec. 21 matchup with Norfolk State because of a lower-body injury. She had five points.
NOTES — The Tar Heels won in Miami for the first time since 2015. … The Tar Heels and Hurricanes split two meetings last season, with North Carolina winning at home and Miami claiming an ACC Tournament second-round matchup. … North Carolina takes a three-game winning streak going into a three-game homestand vs. No. 3 Notre Dame (Jan. 5), No. 14 Duke (Jan. 9) and Boston College (Jan. 12).
Bob Sutton is a veteran ACC sports writer who is the former North Carolina Sportswriter of the Year and was the sports editor of the Burlington Times-News for 25 years.
No. 17 UNC 69, Miami 60


| Team | League | Overall | NET* |
|---|---|---|---|
| No. 16 Louisville | 2–0 | 12–3 | 14 |
| N.C. State | 2–0 | 8–4 | 28 |
| Syracuse | 1–0 | 11–1 | 41 |
| Stanford | 1–0 | 10–2 | 33 |
| No. 20 Notre Dame | 1–0 | 8–2 | 19 |
| Virginia | 1–0 | 9–3 | 30 |
| Duke | 1–0 | 6–6 | 32 |
| Wake Forest | 1–1 | 10–3 | 122 |
| Virginia Tech | 1–1 | 9–3 | 53 |
| Clemson | 1–1 | 8–4 | 47 |
| Miami | 1–1 | 7–4 | 48 |
| No. 18 North Carolina | 0–1 | 10–3 | 16 |
| California | 0–1 | 8–4 | 69 |
| Pittsburgh | 0–1 | 7–6 | 2270 |
| SMU | 0–1 | 6–6 | 155 |
| Boston College | 0–1 | 4–10 | 207 |
| Florida State | 0–2 | 5–9 | 127 |
| Georgia Tech | 0–2 | 4–9 | 128 |
* — Through Thursday games
Thursday’s results
Virginia Tech 79, Florida State 54
Miami 64, Wake Forest 61
Pittsburgh 98, Saint Francis 46
N.C. State 87, Georgia Tech 58
Duke 97, South Dakota State 54
Friday’s games
Syracuse 106, Mercyhurst 40
Northeastern 73, Boston College 67
SMU 73, Sam Houston 69
Stanford 67, No. 22 Washington 62
Saturday’s games
No. 16 Louisville 89, No. 17 Tennessee 65
Virginia 88, Winthrop 53
Florida State 77, South Carolina State 36
Duke 76, Belmont 46
Sunday’s games
Charleston Southern at No. 18 North Carolina, noon, ACC Network
Radford at Virginia Tech, noon, ACCN Extra
Kennesaw State at Miami, noon, ACCN Extra
N.C. State at Davidson, noon, CBS Sports Network
Pittsburgh at Duquesne, 1 p.m., ESPN+
North Florida at Clemson, 2 p.m., ACCN Extra
Bellarmine at No. 20 Notre Dame, 5 p.m., ACCN Extra
Southern at SMU, 5 p.m., ACCN Extra
Oregon vs. Stanford in San Francisco, 6 p.m., ESPN
No. 19 USC vs. California in San Francisco, 8:30, ESPN
Monday’s game
Gardner-Webb at Wake Forest, 1 p.m., ACCN Extra

| Date | Day/month | Time | Opponent/event (current ranks) | TV/ record |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| October | ||||
| 30 | Thursday | L, 91–82 | No. 3 South Carolina in Atlanta | Exhib. |
| November | ||||
| 3 | Monday | W, 90–42 | vs. N.C. Central | 1–0 |
| 6 | Thursday | W, 71–37 | vs. Elon | 2–0 |
| WBCA Challenge Las Vegas | ||||
| 13 | Thursday | L, 78–60 | vs. No. 4 UCLA | 2–1 |
| 15 | Saturday | W, 82–68 | vs. Fairfield | 3–1 |
| ——————————— | ||||
| 20 | Thursday | W, 85–50 | at N.C. A&T | 4–1 |
| 23 | Sunday | W, 94–48 | vs. UNCG | 5–1 |
| Cancun Challenge Cancun, Mexico | ||||
| 27 | Thursday | W, 83–48 | vs. South Dakota St. | 6–1 |
| 28 | Friday | W, 85–73 | vs. Kansas State | 7–1 |
| 29 | Saturday | W, 80–63 | vs. Columbia | 8–1 |
| December | ACC/SEC Women’s Challenge | |||
| 4 | Thursday | W, 79–64 | at No. 2 Texas | 8–2 |
| ——————————— | ||||
| 7 | Sunday | W, 82–40 | vs. Boston Univ. | 9–2 |
| 14 | Sunday | L, 76–66, OT | vs. No. 16 Louisville | 9–3, 0–1 ACC |
| 17 | Wednesday | W, 84–34 | vs. UNCW | 10–3 |
| 21 | Sunday | Noon | vs. Charleston Southern | ACCN Extra |
| 29 | Monday | 8 p.m. | at Boston College | ACCN |
| January | ||||
| 1 | Thursday | Noon | vs. California | ACCN |
| 4 | Sunday | 1 p.m. | vs. Stanford | ESPN |
| 11 | Sunday | 1 p.m. | at No. 20 Notre Dame | ESPN |
| 15 | Thursday | 7 p.m. | vs. Miami | ACCN Extra |
| 18 | Sunday | 2 p.m. | at Florida State | The CW |
| 22 | Thursday | 8 p.m. | at Georgia Tech | ACCN |
| 25 | Sunday | 2 p.m. | vs. Syracuse | The CW |
| February | ||||
| 2 | Monday | 6 p.m. | at N.C. State | ESPN2 |
| 5 | Thursday | 7 p.m. | vs. Clemson | ACCN |
| 8 | Sunday | 2 p.m. | vs. Wake Forest | ACCN |
| 12 | Thursday | 6 p.m. | vs. SMU | ACCN |
| 15 | Sunday | 1 p.m. | at Duke | ABC |
| 19 | Thursday | 6 p.m. | at Virginia Tech | ACCN |
| 22 | Sunday | Noon | vs. Pittsburgh | ACCN |
| 26 | Thursday | 7 p.m. | at Virginia | ACCN Extra |
| March | ||||
| 1 | Sunday | Noon | vs. Duke | ESPN |
| ACC tournament | ||||
| 4–8 | Wed.-Sun | Gas South Arena, Duluth, Ga. | ||
| NCAA tournament | ||||
| 20–24 | Fri.-Mon. | First, second rounds | ||
| 27–30 | Fri.-Mon. | Regionals Fort Worth, Texas, and Sacramento, Calif. | ||
| April | ||||
| 3, 5 | Fri., Sun | Final Four Phoenix |
Photo courtesy of UNC Athletics
