UNC’s starters with Trimble back still unclear

By R.L. Bynum

CHAPEL HILL — Who will Coach Hubert Davis start with the return of Seth Trimble and the continued ascent of freshman Ian Jackson?

That was far from settled based on Trimble coming off the bench in Tuesday’s 82–67 home win over SMU because the junior guard had only practiced once and hadn’t played since Dec. 21.

“I felt it was better for him to come off the bench and find his rhythm,” Davis said, citing those two factors. “What it will look like [Saturday], I’m not sure. But I will say this — Seth will be on the floor a lot because he has earned it and because we need it.”

Trimble showed a bit of rust, missing all three shots and going scoreless in 26 minutes with two rebounds and three assists.

If Trimble returns to the starting lineup for UNC (10–6, 3–1 ACC) at 4 p.m. Saturday at N.C. State (9–6, 2–2), it isn’t clear who else will start.

There are clues from the lineup combinations against the Mustangs, but Elliot Cadeau’s early foul trouble muddles how much you can draw from them.

Early on, Trimble came in for Cadeau, playing with Jackson, RJ Davis, Drake Powell and a center. That group played 4½ minutes later in the first half, the first four minutes of the second half and late in the second half. Jackson and Trimble played two first-half minutes with Powell, Withers and a center.

“It was great having him back out there on the floor,” Coach Davis said of Trimble. “He’s such a big piece of our team in terms of what he can do on both ends of the floor, his ability to three-level score, his ability to defend. He’s a bigger, stronger guard. He can guard multiple positions. He’s a junior, he’s an experienced player who has gone through and been through a number of different situations, and those are the type of players that you want out there on the floor.”

Jackson’s high-level play in the last few games demands plenty of playing time and that’s obviously going to continue. He’s averaged 23.6 points and 2.6 3-pointers in the last five games, including becoming the first freshman in program history to score at least 23 in four consecutive games.

His defense continues to improve, and Jackson showed he can be a force under the boards by pulling down a team-high seven rebounds against SMU.

“The rebounding, especially over the last couple of games — he has stepped it up,” Coach Davis said. “He’s done a really nice job on the defensive boards, getting in the lane, and helping us rebound the basketball. He sees the benefit of it, not only for himself, but how it helps out the team. That’s a sign of growth in Ian, and it’s something that he’ll continue to do the remainder of the season.”

However, Jackson’s tremendous offensive skills continue to get the most attention and are putting him up higher on opponents’ scouting reports, which is no doubt giving RJ Davis more of a chance to make plays.

Coach Davis said having another dangerous scorer has been huge for the Tar Heels.

“It comes really easy for him,” Davis said. “His ability, his quickness, his size, his athleticism, shooting the ball from 3, mid-range, getting to the basket. I also think he’s doing a really good job of attacking the basket and getting fouled and getting to the free throw line.

“Where I’ve seen him grow the most is his leadership, his talking, his defense, just playing with tremendous energy and enthusiasm and playing at a really high level right now,” Davis said.

Coach Davis played down going up against former UNC player Dontrez Styles, who transferred to N.C. State in the offseason after one season at Georgetown. Davis said that may not be as big of a deal to him because he got traded three times in the NBA and often faced former players and coaches.

When asked if N.C. State was a rival, Davis said, “I consider everybody a rival. I don’t look at anybody differently. When you’re competing, I’m ready to go. So, it doesn’t matter where you’re from, what conference you’re in, my approach and the way that I want our team to compete is indifferent toward one team or one program compared to another. It’s one approach, and for us to compete at the highest level.”

N.C. State lost key players from last season’s Final Four team in D.J. Horne, D.J. Burns, Casey Morsell and Mohamed Diarra.

Senior Bowling Green transfer Marcus Hill, a 6–4, 185-pound guard, leads the Wolfpack in scoring (12.8 points per game). Senior 6–4, 195-pound guard Jayden Allen, a returnee, is scoring 12.2 points per game, with a team-high 18 steals.

Styles is averaging 9.6 points and Ben Middlebrooks is averaging 9.4.

Taking over at center for N.C. State is 6–10, 240-pound senior Brandon Huntley-Hatfield (8.9 points, team-leading 5.1 rebounds), who collected 15 points and six rebounds last season for Louisville in the Cardinals’ 86–70 loss on Jan. 16 in Chapel Hill.

Although the Wolfpack roster has changed, Davis said that State still has a similar approach.

“From a defensive standpoint, they’ve always been a team that applies tremendous pressure on the ball,” Davis said. “They do a fantastic job of getting steals and deflections. After made baskets, dead-ball situations, full court, after free throws. Very physical. They do a terrific job of scoring in the paint, attacking the paint, getting to the free throw line, versatility and athleticism.”

Here’s what Davis said on other subjects:

— On Jalen Washington getting half of his 18 blocks in the last two games:
“It’s not only his ability to block shots, but also to alter shots as well. There have been times — especially at the beginning of the year — where we’re giving up too many points in the paint, whether it was Michigan State or Kansas or Auburn. Having somebody in the lane who can block and alter shots — which J-Wash has been doing over the last couple of games — has been a huge benefit for us defensively. It’s something that he can do on a consistent basis, and I expect him to do the remainder of the season. And it really helps us out on the defensive end.”

— On Cadeau’s habit of getting into foul trouble:
“Obviously, he’s a huge piece for us as a team. And recently, and at times throughout the year, he’s gotten early foul trouble, and that’s not good for us. We are a better basketball team when Elliot is not in foul trouble and he’s out there on the floor, and so we’ve had a number of conversations about him continuing to be aggressive on the defensive end, but not put himself in a position where he’s fouling. And that’s going to be huge for us against N.C. State because, with their pressure, one of the things that has allowed us to have some success against them is having multiple ballhandlers out there. So, having Elliot and Seth and RJ out there is a huge benefit for us, and being able to handle their pressure.”

— On playing a tighter rotation:
“Whatever gives us the best chance to win, those are the guys who will be out there on the floor.”

NOTES — This will be UNC’s 10th game away from Chapel Hill out of 17, while it will be N.C. State’s 11th home game out of 16. … In the last week, Notre Dame has lost by one point to UNC (74–73) and N.C. State (66–65), with Markus Burton missing a last-second shot in each game. … Carolina leads the series 166–81 (the most wins against any opponent), including 69–48 in Raleigh and 19–6 in the arena now called the Lenovo Center. That’s the second-highest winning percentage in the arena of a current ACC team (76%), behind only Boston College’s Conte Forum (10–1). … Wes Durham and Dan Bonner will be on the ACC Network call, with Tyler Zeller, the Tar Heel Sports Network analyst.


UNC season statistics

NC2Clr_w_g

N.C. State season statistics


KenPom comparison

CategoryUNCN.C. State
Overall ranking3090
Offensive efficiency117.3 (25)111.3 (79)
Defensive efficiency98.1 (50)103.4 (120)
Effective FG%53.5 (82)51.2 (153)
Turnover %15.2 (45)14.9 (32)
Offensive rebound %27.2 (260)29.9 (192)
FTA/FGA39.1 (54)37.8 (72)
Strength of schedule5157

Series: UNC 166, N.C. State 81

Results since 2004


ACC standings

TeamLeagueOverall
No. 4 Duke5–013–2
Clemson4–112–4
Louisville4–111–5
Pittsburgh3–112–3
Wake Forest3–111–4
North Carolina3–110–6
Florida State2–211–4
SMU2–211–4
N.C. State2–29–6
Georgia Tech2–38–8
Stanford2–210–5
Boston College1–39–6
California1–38–7
Virginia1–38–7
Notre Dame1–37–8
Virginia Tech1–36–9
Syracuse1–37–8
Miami0–44–11

Tuesday’s results
North Carolina 82, SMU 67
No. 4 Duke 76, Pittsburgh 47
Louisville 74, Clemson 64
Syracuse 62, Georgia Tech 55
Wednesday’s games
N.C. State 66, Notre Dame 65
Florida State 80, Miami 65
Stanford 70, Virginia Tech 59
California 75, Virginia 61
Saturday’s games
Notre Dame at No. 4 Duke, noon, ESPN
Louisville at Pittsburgh, noon, ESPN2
Florida State at Clemson, 2 p.m., ACCN
Syracuse at Boston College, 3 p.m., The CW
Georgia Tech at SMU, 4 p.m.
Virginia at Stanford, 4 p.m.
North Carolina at N.C. State, 4 p.m., ACCN
Wake Forest at Miami, 5:15, The CW
Virginia Tech at California, 6 p.m., ACCN
Monday’s game
Boston College at Notre Dame, 7 p.m., ACCN
Tuesday’s games
Louisville at Syracuse, 7 p.m., ACCN
Clemson at Georgia Tech, 9 p.m., ACCN
Miami at No. 4 Duke, 9 p.m., ESPN
Wednesday’s games
Stanford at Wake Forest, 6:30, ESPN News
N.C. State at Virginia Tech, 7 p.m., ESPNU
California at North Carolina, 7 p.m., ACCN
Pittsburgh at Florida State, 9 p.m., ESPNU
SMU at Virginia , 9 p.m., ACCN


DateMonth/dayTime/
score
Opponent/event
(current ranks)
TV/
record
October
15TuesdayW, 84–76at No. 19 MemphisExhibition
27SundayW, 127–63vs. Johnson C. SmithExhibition
November
4MondayW, 90–76vs. Elon1–0
8FridayL, 92–89at No. 11 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. 16 Michigan State4–3
DecemberACC/SEC
Men’s Challenge
4WednesdayL, 94–79vs. No. 5 Alabama4–4
—————————
7SaturdayW, 68–65vs. Georgia Tech5–4,
1–0 ACC
14SaturdayW, 93–67vs. LaSalle6–4
Jumpman Invitational
in Charlotte
17TuesdayL, 90–84No. 8 Florida6–5
CBS Sports Classic
at Madison Square Garden
21SaturdayW, 76–74No. 22 UCLA7–5
—————————
29SundayW, 97–81vs. Campbell8–5
January
1WednesdayL, 83–70at Louisville8–6, 1–1
4SaturdayW, 74–73at Notre Dame9–6, 2–1
7TuesdayW, 82–67vs. SMU10–6, 3–1
11Saturday4 p.m.at N.C. StateACCN
15Wednesday7 p.m.vs. CaliforniaACCN
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. 4 DukeESPN
8Saturday4 p.m.vs. PittsburghESPN or
ESPN2
10Monday7 p.m.at 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
or ESPNU
8Saturday6:30vs. No. 4 DukeESPN
11–
15
Tues.–Sat.ACC tournament
Spectum Center, Charlotte

Photo courtesy of UNC Athletics

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