Heels survive chaos for crucial win with little plays at the end

By R.L. Bynum

CHAPEL HILL — “We’ve been here before; we’re not losing this game.”

North Carolina coach Hubert Davis said his players repeatedly said that during late timeouts as the Tar Heels played through another heart-thumping finish.

“Just hearing that consistently amongst a number of people, you could just see the confidence in them that they could pull through and make the play that they needed in order to get the win,” Davis said after the Tar Heels’ 67–66 victory Saturday at the Smith Center they had to have to keep their NCAA tournament hopes alive.

RJ Davis’ short step-back jumper with 50.4 seconds left on his way to a game-high 18 points held up as the game-winning shot to move UNC to 6–4 in one-possession games, but only after chaos at the end.

RJ Davis, sinking the game-winning jumper, said that UNC’s inspiration level was high. (Photo courtesy of UNC Athletics)

“I think our desperation level is just more so just wanting to win and knowing what’s at stake for us,” RJ Davis said. “Just trying to make one last push. And one thing about this team is that we’re not going to go down without a fight.”

Carolina won despite missing the front end of one-and-ones twice in the last 19 seconds. The Tar Heels (14–10, 7–5 ACC ) survived another last-second potential shot from an opponent. Like in the wins over UCLA, Notre Dame and N.C. State, Elliot Cadeau’s defense was huge on the last play.

“It felt really good, because we feel like we’ve been in that position so many times, and we’ve been on the wrong side of it, so it feels good to be on the good side of it now,” Cadeau said.

Pitt’s Ishmail Leggett drove to the lane, and his off-balance shot bounced off the front of the rim. UNC had survived another crazy finish.

“I think one of the things that gives them confidence is that they’ve been in the situation before,” Coach Davis said. “Obviously, sometimes it hasn’t gone our way, but there have been times that it has. And one of the things I’ve told them, I said, ‘You know, you guys have the answers to the test. We’ve just got to write them down on the paper.’ We knew what we needed to do in terms of getting stops [and] executing on the offensive end.”

The Tar Heels did it by making little plays they hadn’t executed while losing four of their previous five games, including Drake Powell’s late deflection on defense and Seth Trimble and Powell diving on the floor to take more time off the clock.

“Those are things that are not going to show up in the highlight reel, but those are little things that make big things happen,” Coach Davis said.

Trimble was just eager to make up for missing one of those front ends of one-and-ones.

“I was mad at myself for missing the free throw, but I just wanted to win the game,” he said. “We have been in these situations. We’ve lost them in these same exact situations. We know what it takes, but you just know you want to win these types of dirty, grimy games. You have to make that extra effort. I feel like those last two minutes Ven-[Allen Lubin] was incredible with his effort plays. Drake was incredible. I made a couple of my own. We did what it takes to come out on top.”

The Tar Heels needed only 10 minutes to score 24 points and made 11 of their first 14 shots, but they required 20 more minutes to score their next 24 and made 15 of 40 the rest of the way.

But they found a way.

“It’s not something we really work on, but when the clock hits the five-minute mark, it’s winning time,” Powell said. “So, it’s time to tighten the screws and be sharp on everything. The intensity we had throughout the game, I think that showed down the stretch.”

After struggling mightily against switching defenses in the second half of the loss at Pittsburgh on Jan. 28 and a week earlier at Duke, UNC made adjustments and took advantage of mismatches early.

“They really attacked our switching,” Pitt coach Jeff Capel said. “They were very prepared for us and really hurt us early.”

Lubin scored a season-high 17 points, netting nine in a 12–0 early run as he got the ball down low against guards.

“We try to really take advantage of teams playing like that,” Lubin said. “Just trying to put a big down low. We worked on it all week.”

UNC was so good against the switching that Pittsburgh (14–9, 5–7) stopped switching — for the most part — after the second television timeout of the first half.

The Vanderbilt transfer said that the last few seconds were tense.

“It was scary because we’ve been in the situations where it doesn’t really end well with us. It was a great relief,” Lubin said of when the last shot didn’t go in. “We were able to breathe. I could just feel the whole gym, even myself, holding our breath. The ball’s in the air … hoping for the ball to go in the hoop.”

Trimble found the perimeter shooting range, scoring 15 points and making two 3-pointers. This was his first time with multiple 3s since the loss to Auburn on Nov. 26.

“It felt really good today,” Trimble said. I’ve been working my tail off each and every day just to get back in rhythm and get going from three again. So today was a huge step for me.”

After Jaland Lowe scored a 3-pointer in the game’s first 27 seconds, Lubin scored nine points during a 12–0 UNC run before Pitt went on a 9–2 run. A Powell jumper and transition layup capped a 14–5 UNC run to push the lead to 11 after 11 minutes.

A 10–0 Pitt run that chopped UNC’s lead to one with 2:08 left in the first half before a Trimble put-back ended a nearly five-minute Tar Heels scoring drought, but a Brandin Cummings 3-pointer tied it. Three UNC free throws in the last 1:17 gave the Heels a 35–32 halftime lead.

Pitt went up by two points when it opened the second half with a 7–2 run. UNC responded with eight straight points — including 3s from Trimble and Davis — to go up by six. Pitt went up by three with a 10–1 run capped by a Zack Austin 3-pointer with 10:07 left.

A corner Powell 3-pointer ended a more than six-minute UNC field-goal drought and started an 8–4 run to give UNC a one-point lead on another Powell 3 with 6:69 left.

After Pitt had taken a two-point lead, Trimble’s driving three-point play gave UNC a 63–62 lead with 3:41 left before the teams traded leads. A Lowe layup gave Pitt a one-point edge with 2:03 remaining before Davis’ jumper gave UNC the lead for good.

Cameron Corhen led Pitt with 17 points and Lowe added 15.

NOTES — Carolina gets a day off before playing at Clemson at 7 p.m. Monday (ESPN) in a Quad 1 game. The Tigers (19–5, 11–2) upset No. 2 Duke 77–71 at home on Saturday night. … The game was within five points at the five-minute mark in the second half for the 12th time in 24 games. … It was Davis’ ninth game this season with at least three 3-pointers. … On Jan. 28 at Pitt, the Tar Heels committed 14 turnovers, leading to 22 Pitt points. Saturday, the Tar Heels committed only six turnovers, leading to six Pitt points. … This was the first time in six games the opponents scored fewer than 10 points off turnovers. … Jalen Washington came out early in the second half with blood over his left eye. … Cadeau has at least three fouls in 12 of the last 15 games. … Ian Jackson was scoreless for the first time this season, going 0 for 3 from the floor. His previous season-low was five points. … Trimble, Jackson and Lubin started for the fourth consecutive game, although the public address announcer incorrectly announced Washington as a starter instead of Lubin. … Carolina’s early 12–0 run was its longest since a 15–0 run on Jan. 15 against California. … After consecutive questionable first-half fouls against UNC in which Tar Heels fell to the court, Linda Ronstadt’s “When Will I Be Loved,” including the lyrics, “I’ve been put down; I’ve been pushed ’round,” played on the public-address system. … Antawn Jamison was at the game. … UNC is 9–2 in the Smith Center this season. … Carolina has won three of the last four meetings with Pitt and leads the series 18–9, including 7–3 in the Smith Center. … This is the first time UNC has won multiple games in a season by one point since 2007–08. Carolina beat Notre Dame 74–73 on Jan. 4.


UNC 67, Pitt 66


UNC season statistics


ACC standings

TeamLeagueOverallNET
No. 2 Duke12–120–32
Clemson11–219–530
Louisville11–218–628
Wake Forest10–318–660
SMU9–318–539
Stanford8–516–878
North Carolina7–514–1045
Virginia Tech6–711–13152
Florida State5–714–987
Pittsburgh5–714–947
California5–812–12128
Virginia5–812–12105
Georgia Tech5–811–13127
Syracuse5–811–13146
Notre Dame4–810–1397
Boston College2–1010–13221
N.C. State2–109–14120
Miami1–115–18225

Saturday’s results
North Carolina 67, Pittsburgh 66
Virginia Tech 65, Notre Dame 63
Louisville 88, Miami 78
Syracuse 95, Boston College 86, 3 OTs
Wake Forest 76, California 66
Virginia 75, Georgia Tech 61
Clemson 77, No. 2 Duke 71
Stanford 74, N.C. State 73
Monday’s game
North Carolina at Clemson, 7 p.m., ESPN
Tuesday’s games
Syracuse at Miami, 7 p.m., ACCN
Pittsburgh at SMU, 9 p.m., ACCN
Wednesday’s games
Stanford at Georgia Tech, 7 p.m., ACCN
Florida State at Wake Forest, 7 p.m., ESPNU
Louisville at N.C. State, 7 p.m., ESPN 2
Notre Dame at Boston College, 9 p.m., ESPNU
California at No. 2 Duke, 9 p.m., ACCN
Saturday’s games
Clemson at Florida State, noon, The CW
Miami at Pittsburgh, noon, ESPN2
Virginia at Virginia Tech, 2 p.m, The CW
Boston College at N.C. State, 2 p.m., ACCN
Stanford at No. 2 Duke, 4 p.m., ABC
California at Georgia Tech, 4 p.m., ACCN
North Carolina at Syracuse, 6 p.m., ESPN
Wake Forest at SMU, 6 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. 1 Auburn4–2
27WednesdayL, 94–91, OTNo. 7 Michigan State4–3
DecemberACC/SEC
Men’s Challenge
4WednesdayL, 94–79vs. No. 4 Alabama4–4
—————————
7SaturdayW, 68–65vs. Georgia Tech5–4,
1–0 ACC
14SaturdayW, 93–67vs. LaSalle6–4
Jumpman Invitational
in Charlotte
17TuesdayL, 90–84No. 5 Florida6–5
CBS Sports Classic
at Madison Square Garden
21SaturdayW, 76–74UCLA7–5
—————————
29SundayW, 97–81vs. Campbell8–5
January
1WednesdayL, 83–70at No. 21 Louisville8–6, 1–1
4SaturdayW, 74–73at Notre Dame9–6, 2–1
7TuesdayW, 82–67vs. SMU10–6, 3–1
11SaturdayW, 63–61at N.C. State11–6, 4–1
15WednesdayW, 79–53vs. California12–6, 5–1
18SaturdayL, 72–71vs. Stanford12–7, 5–2
21TuesdayL, 67–66at Wake Forest12–8, 5–3
25SaturdayW, 102–96, OTvs. Boston College13–8, 6–3
28TuesdayL, 73–65at Pittsburgh13–9, 6–4
February
1SaturdayL, 87–70at No. 2 Duke13–10, 6–5
8SaturdayW, 67–66vs. Pittsburgh14–10, 7–5
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. 2 DukeESPN
11–
15
Tues.–Sat.ACC tournament
Spectrum Center, Charlotte

Photos courtesy of UNC Athletics

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