UNC survives upset bid, late gaffe as Kelly keeps Heels unbeaten on the road

By R.L. Bynum

CLEMSON, S.C. — The road resembled Easy Street for No. 13 North Carolina most of the season until the Tar Heels veered into a path full of potholes Sunday, including a self-inflicted one at the end.

The Tigers had lost seven of their previous eight games but didn’t play like it. Add to that UNC’s offensive struggles and poor shooting, and it produced a much more challenging-than-expected 53–51 victory at Littlejohn Coliseum.

“You’ve got to win a lot of different ways in a conference as hard as this, and to win ugly is part of it,” UNC coach Courtney Banghart said. “And today, we won ugly.”

UNC (21–4, 9–3 ACC) is 7–0 on the road, its best road start since the 2005–06 team won all 12 road games, finished 33–2 and made the Final Four. The Tar Heels are one of three teams in the country undefeated on the road.

“The fact that they’re undefeated on the road, it shows that defense travels,” Banghart said. “It shows an enormous amount of toughness and togetherness, which I think really does speak to our team.”

Needing late roadside assistance, the driver of Carolina’s offense was again Reniya Kelly, whose short jumper on a late-shot-clock drive with 40.2 seconds left gave UNC its final margin of victory. Kelly finished with a team-high 17 points to go with a career-high eight rebounds and three assists.

But freshman guard Lanie Grant gave Clemson an extra chance to tie the game or win it in the final minute.

With UNC clinging to that two-point lead, Clemson’s Hannah Kohn missed a 3-point attempt with 25.4 seconds left. Kelly snagged the rebound and barely stayed inbounds to give UNC possession.

But, after a timeout, Grant dribbled toward the wrong side of the court, leading to a half-court violation and giving Clemson the ball with 23.5 seconds left.

“Lexi [Donarski] looked at me, Reniya, and all of them were like, ‘It’s OK, coach, we’ll get a stop,’ ” Banghart said. “And that’s what this team’s about, right? One mistake doesn’t drown us.”

Kelly came to the rescue again, snagging the inbound pass after it was deflected by Donarski and Maria Gadkdeng.

“When she took off, I’m like, ‘Wait a second, this is wrong,’ ” Clemson coach Shawn Poppie said of Grant’s mistake. “We were all kind of thrown off, even the referee. I have never seen that. I really wish we would have taken advantage of it.”

When Grant came off the court after her mistake, Banghart’s first words were that her teammates would make fun of her as a result. When the game was over and, much to Grant’s relief, her mistake hadn’t cost UNC the game, she was smiling as she walked off the court.

“I told Lanie after the game that I trust you enough to have you in,” Banghart said. “You’ve made a lot of big free throws for us this year. We knew they had to foul. I trust you enough to be in, and it’s going to take a whole lot more than that to make me lose my trust in you.”

Banghart’s trust in Kelly continues to soar. Kelly seemed determined not to let Carolina be an upset victim on the same court where Clemson’s men’s team took down No. 2 Duke the night before.

“She plays the hardest position on the floor, and it takes a lot of communication and connection between coach and player and trust for her to run our team,” Banghart said. “I trust her, and she continues to deliver on both ends. And then I asked her to rebound more, and she did that, too. … There’s a real, clear sense of what we need from her, and she trusts the work, and she’s becoming a lot of people’s favorite for good reason.”

In a game where Carolina was 3 of 18 from 3-point range, Kelly — who scored two threes — assessed the situation when Carolina had to have a bucket with the score tied late.

“Obviously, the three wasn’t going at first,” said Kelly, who has scored double-digit points in four consecutive games, “so I need to touch paint a lot more, get to my pull-up. The pull-up was just there. I feel like the post players can’t really guard me, so I think just attacking that post player was the best option.”

Carolina was sloppy with 14 turnovers, but the Tar Heels dominated the boards 42–25, led by 13 rebounds from Alyssa Ustby, who scored eight points. Gakdeng, at times matched up with former teammate Anya Poole, collected 12 points and nine rebounds.

Grace Townsend had another huge game off the bench with eight points, three rebounds and two steals. She and Kelly played together for many minutes on Sunday.

“I thought, in this particular game, Grace brought an aggressiveness at the rim that we really needed,” Banghart said. “She attacked off the dribble and put pressure on the defense, which we needed. We were kind of playing a little bit around the arc a little bit too much, and she does a really good job attacking.”

Banghart said having Townsend take over some of the point guard duties allowed Kelly to rest a bit while still playing.

Poppie said Poole’s knowledge of Banghart’s system was helpful as he scouted the Tar Heels.

“She gave us some of that knowledge, which I felt was helpful,” Poppie said of Poole, who had two points and one rebound in 11 minutes. “I thought she had little nuances of just what each kid may try to do they — she likes to break a play here compared to what the normal set supposed to be. So she gave us that knowledge. But I also think it took her attention off being an emotional game where you put so much pressure on yourself.”

UNC led early by four points, but Clemson scored four 3-pointers — two each from Kohn and Maddi Cluse — in a 12–3 run to take a five-point lead. A Grant jumper cut UNC’s deficit to 15–12 heading to the second quarter after the Tar Heels shot 22.2% in the opening quarter.

After Clemson (11–13, 4–9) made 4 of 8 3-point attempts in the first quarter, it was only 2 of 10 the rest of the way.

Clemson went nearly eight minutes without a field goal, but UNC also went scoreless for six minutes. That allowed the Tigers to take a three-point lead on a Loyal McQueen bucket with 1:42 left. Kelly ended the Tar Heels’ scoring drought with a 3-pointer with 2:12 left in the first half, and her jumper with six seconds left cut Clemson’s halftime lead to 25–22.

Carolina opened the second half with a 9–0 run — six of those points at the free-throw line — to take a three-point lead with 5:56 left in the third quarter. Clemson had a pair of one-point leads before a transition Ustby layup gave UNC a 37–36 lead entering the fourth quarter.

A driving layup late in the shot clock and a jumper by Grace Townsend during a 7–2 UNC run 2½ minutes into the final period put the Heels up by five. Clemson quickly tied it with a Kohn 3-pointer and a Cluse layup on a baseline out-of-bounds play.

Two driving Townsend layups pushed UNC’s lead to four. Three Kohn free throws and a Madi Ott 3-pointer put Clemson up by two before a Gakdeng layup with two minutes left tied it before Kelly’s game-winning bucket.

McQueen led three Clemson players to score in double figures with 17 points.

NOTES — Carolina plays its first home game in 18 days on Thursday, facing Virginia Tech. The Hokies (16–8, 7–6) rolled to an 87–62 victory Sunday at Virginia. … UNC tied its season-low point total, which it also scored in a 53–36 win over Villanova on Nov. 24 and a 53–36 overtime win on Jan. 9 over Duke. … Carolina fell one spot in the NET rankings to 14th after Sunday’s win. … There were 10 ties and 12 lead changes. … Ustby passed Marion Jones (1,716 points; 1994–95, 1997) for 16th on the all-time UNC scoring list with 1,718 points. … UNC guard Tray Crisp missed her eighth consecutive game with a lower-body injury. … UNC has won the last nine meetings with the Tigers and leads the series 64–28, including 21–15 at Clemson. … Chancellor Lee Roberts, Athletics Director Bubba Cunningham and a large contingent of UNC fans were at the game. … Because of Saturday night’s men’s basketball game, UNC didn’t get into Littlejohn Coliseum until 12:30 Sunday afternoon.


No. 13 UNC 53, Clemson 51


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
Fort Worth 1 Regional
21FridayW, 82–51First round in Chapel Hill:
vs. Western Illinois
27–7
23SundayW, 74–66Second round in Chapel Hill:
No. 17 Maryland
28–7
27Friday5 p.m.Sweet 16 in Fort Worth, Texas:
vs. No. 1 UConn
ESPN

Photo courtesy of UNC Athletics

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