RJ Davis, Heels can’t sustain first-half magic against Duke

By R.L. Bynum

CHAPEL HILL — Carolina put up a fight few expected against No. 2 Duke and RJ Davis produced some senior day magic that made for a memorable first half.

The crowd was loud and crazy, and the anticipation was building. While that didn’t last, UNC showed with its competitiveness that the six-game win streak was no fluke and that the Tar Heels are a different team than before that streak, despite falling 82–69 on senior night Saturday at the Smith Center.

“I think we did a good job of just battling throughout the whole game,” Davis said, “and it just wasn’t enough in the second half. They got a lot of buckets. [We] let some guys open threes, and we just couldn’t convert when needed on the offensive end.”

Carolina (20–12, 13–7 ACC) likely hasn’t done enough to make the NCAA tournament. The Tar Heels head to the ACC tournament for a 2:30 p.m. Wednesday second-round game at Charlotte’s Spectrum Center against the winner of Tuesday’s Notre Dame-Pittsburgh first-round game.

After scoring 15 first-half points, Davis only netted five in the second half as Duke erased a seven-point second-half deficit with a 20–5 run.

“Obviously hurt not winning the game in my last time playing on this floor,” Davis said. “A lot of thoughts going through my head right now.”

Davis felt he in a groove in the first half, when he was 5 of 8 with three 3-pointers and had the building rocking.

“It’s what you live for,” Davis said. “You prepare for these types of moments. It was something I envisioned in my head. And, you know, I just was able to come, just go out and display it.”

The game flipped when Davis, dealing with cramps, came out with UNC leading by four with 14:23 left. When he returned nearly three minutes later, Duke tied it and the Tar Heels never led again.

“He was giving a lot of effort out there, and I wanted to give him a break, and he needed one,” UNC coach Hubert Davis said. “During that stretch, I felt like offensively, [we] just couldn’t get to the basket. I felt like we took some quick jump shots and long shots led to long rebounds, and they were able to get out in transition.  I thought that was a key stretch.”

“I thought our energy, our effort, was on point,” Coach Davis said. “I felt like defensively, our pressure, especially on the ball, either sped them up or created turnovers, and we forced them into 14 turnovers. Just wasn’t able to sustain that, midway through the second half, towards the end of the game.”

UNC forced Duke (28–3, 19–1) into 14 turnovers, the most since it had 16 against Wake Forest, but only five came in the second half.

Two features of the win streak that ended Saturday were rebounding dominance and balanced scoring. The much-taller Duke team won the boards 39–26, and Ven-Allen Lubin was the only other Tar Heel to score in double figures, scoring 11 points and a team-high six rebounds.

“I think that we showed a lot of toughness on both ends of the floor,” Lubin said. “We didn’t let their size intimidate us. We tried to get what we wanted. On the defensive end, we showed that we can be the tougher team, too.”

It was the 12th time this season that the Tar Heels had trailed by double-digits, falling to 2–10 in those games, but they didn’t let Duke put them away after the Blue Devils built a 15-point first-half lead.

Drake Powell (7 points, 2 rebounds) had a strong start with a steal, a 3-pointer and five points as UNC kept it close early. The Blue Devils led by eight after an 8–2 run, then went up by 15 on a 13–2 run as Duke made 6 of its first 8 3-point attempts, with a couple rattling in with kind bounces.

RJ Davis scored nine points during an 18–5 UNC run to cut the lead to one on his 3, then and a drive with 1:49 left.

Jae’Lyn Withers had two layups during the run, and drew a charge foul on Cooper Flagg with 3:18 left in the first half. It was the third foul for the sensational freshman, who only played nine first-half minutes.

Flagg never picked up another foul and finished with 15 points and 9 rebounds.

A Davis jumper with 41 seconds remaining in the first half cut Duke’s halftime lead at 43–42.

Davis scored five points in a 14–2 run over the first 4:16 of the second half to give UNC a seven-point lead on a Lubin layup, before the game turned with him on the bench.

Two Flagg free throws tied it after Davis returned. Duke took a six-point lead when it it had a 12–0 run, topped of by a Maliq Brown transition dunk. 

UNC had a few defensive lapses and hit a cold shooting streak.

Suddenly, Davis’ perimeter shots weren’t falling, the offense got stagnant and Duke began to pull away. A 22–5 Duke run shoved the lead to 11 on a Sion James steal and layup. Brown was 2 of 9 from 3-point range entering the game, but his second 3 with 2:24 gave the Blue Devils an 11-point lead.

Kon Kneuppel led the Blue Devils with 17 points and three 3-pointers.

NOTES — UNC honored Pro Football Hall of Famers Lawrence Taylor and Julius Peppers during a first-half timeout. … Carolina introduced Isaiah Denis, Derek Dixon and Caleb Wilson, incoming freshmen next season, during a second-half timeout. … Duke swept UNC for the first time since 2023, but the Blue Devils trail the all-time series 145–119, including 66–40 in Chapel Hill and 21–20 at the Smith Center. … RJ Davis’ 170th game broke the ACC and UNC all-time records previously held by Armando Bacot. With 1,163 points, Davis is the second leading scorer in Smith Center history (behind Tyler Hansbrough’s 1,321) and made the most 3-pointers (159). … Carolina’s 27 second-half points were its fewest in a half since scoring 25 in the first half at Duke on Feb. 1. … Carolina shot 39.1%, its lowest percentage since shooting 39% against Georgia Tech on Dec. 7.


No. 2 Duke 82, UNC 69


ACC standings

TeamLeagueOverallNET
No. 2 Duke19–128–31
No. 14 Louisville18–225–625
No. 11 Clemson18–226–522
North Carolina13–720–1238
SMU13–722–945
Wake Forest13–721–1072
Stanford11–919–1282
Georgia Tech10–1016–15108
Florida State8–1217–1489
Pittsburgh8–1217–1460
Virginia8–1215–16102
Virginia Tech8–1213–18164
Notre Dame8–1214–17101
Syracuse7–1313–18141
California6–1413–18125
N.C. State5–1512–19128
Boston College4–1612–19198
Miami3–177–24227

Saturday’s results
No. 2 Duke 82, North Carolina 69
Miami 72, N.C. State 70
No. 14 Louisville 68, Stanford 48
Wake Forest 69, Georgia Tech 43
Florida State 76, SMU 69
Notre Dame 112, California 110, 4 OTs
Clemson 65, Virginia Tech 47
Pittsburgh 93, Boston College 67
Syracuse 84, Virginia 70
ACC tournament

Spectrum Center | Charlotte
Tuesday’s first round (ACCN)
No. 12 Notre Dame vs. No. 13 Pittsburgh, 2 p.m.
No. 10 Virginia Tech vs. No. 15 California, 4:30
No. 11 Florida State vs. No. 14 Syracuse, 7 p.m.
Wednesday’s second round
No. 8 Georgia Tech vs. No. 9 Virginia, noon, ESPN
Notre Dame-Pitt winner vs. No. 5 North Carolina, 2:30, ESPN
VT-Cal winner vs. No. 7 Stanford, 7 p.m., ESPN2/U
FSU-Syracuse winner vs. No. 6 SMU, ESPN2/U
Thursday’s quarterfinals
Noon Wednesday winner vs. No. 1 Duke, noon, ESPN/2
2:30 Wednesday winner vs. No. 4 Wake Forest, 2:30, ESPN/2
7 p.m. Wednesday winner vs. No. 2 Louisville, 7 p.m., ESPN/2
9:30 Wednesday winner vs. No. 3 Clemson, 9:30 ESPN/2
Friday’s semifinals
Wednesday afternoon winners, 7 p.m., ESPN/2
Wednesday evening winners, 9:30, ESPN/2
Saturday’s championship
Semifinal winners, 8:30, ESPN


DateMonth/dayTime/
score
Opponent/event
(current ranks)
TV/
record
October
15TuesdayW, 84–76at No. 16 MemphisExhibition
27SundayW, 127–63vs. Johnson C. SmithExhibition
November
4MondayW, 90–76vs. Elon1–0
8FridayL, 92–89at No. 17 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. 8 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. 3 Florida6–5
CBS Sports Classic
at Madison Square Garden
21SaturdayW, 76–74UCLA7–5
—————————
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
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
10MondayL, 85–65at No. 13 Clemson14–11, 7–6
15SaturdayW, 88–82at Syracuse15–11, 8–6
19WednesdayW, 97–73vs. N.C. State16–11, 9–6
22SaturdayW, 81–66vs. Virginia17–11, 10–6
24MondayW, 96–85at Florida State18–11, 11–6
March
1SaturdayW, 92–73vs. Miami19–11, 12–6
4TuesdayW, 91–59at Virginia Tech20–11, 13–6
8SaturdayL, 82–69vs. No. 2 Duke20–12, 13–7
ACC tournament
Spectrum Center, Charlotte
12Wednesday2:302nd-round:
vs. winner of Tuesday
Pittsburgh-Notre Dame game
ESPN
13Thursday2:30Quarterfinal (with win):
vs. Wake Forest
ESPN or
ESPN2

Photo courtesy of UNC Athletics

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