Georgia Tech 73, UNC 71
Yellow Jackets vs Tar Heels boxscore
This is getting eeriely familiar. UNC falls behind early to a team with good rebounding and a hot hand from behind the arc. Sometimes they fight back in the second half (today, and against Virginia Tech) and sometimes they don't (Clemson). Today the comeback wasn't good enough, as Carolina left the court with their third loss in the last four games.
Let's look at what went well. UNC shut down Tech's big freshmen players, keeping Derrick Favors on the bench in foul trouble for most of the game and rendering Mfon Udofia a nonfactor; Drew and Strickland both had good defense on the point guard throughout the game. The second half defense on a whole was good as well, keeping the ball out of the hot hands of Iman Shumpert and Gani Lawal, and towards Zach Peacock, who despite his late game heroics was 3-10 from the field. The Heels also adjusted and limited their turnovers to six in the second half. It's amazing how much easier it is to make a comeback when you can score on consecutive possessions.
And then there was the engine of that comeback, Will Graves. Graves' utility to the team is... hotly contested, to say the least, but today he was behind every big basket, scoring a career high 24 points, fifteen of which came from behind the arc. He also had seven rebounds, most in the second half, and there wasn't a play during the comeback where he was beginning or ending the possession. I'm still not sold on how smart a lot of those shots were, most of which came from well behind the arc with a hand in his face, but without him, this game could have slipped into another Clemson debacle.
As for the bad? Nothing you haven't seen before. The first half turnovers were abysmal, and the UNC rebounding advantage of team's past is still absent. Teams shouldn't be able to shoot 43.1% from the field and beat Caroina, but they can when they pull down as many offensive rebounds as the Yellow Jackets did. Lawal pulled down four, typically from a crowd of blue jerseys, but more often there were tips out to Shumpert and Udofia for the opportunity to reset the offense. Shumpert of course, spent the first half going off, scoring 17 of his career-high 30 points and making a mockery out of Marcus Ginyard.
In fact, I was surprised to see Ginyard had 27 minutes of playing time, compared to Leslie McDonald's 14 and Stricklands 10. He was a non-entity for most of the game, not scoring until 2:45 to play and rarely showng up in any category of the box score. I'll also be curious to hear Williams' thoughts on Drew's late-game drive to the basket and miss; it came pretty early in the shot clock and left the Heels so out of position that Tech drained a good ten seconds before drawing the foul. The team is still playing out of control, taking bad shots and acting generally out-of-sync. I'm not really sure how Williams can fix it.
If nothing else, I hope this game will end the meme of UNC being a different team at home and away. While I'm sure the crowd helped in stretches today, it's the same team. It's just the opponents, with the exception of Michigan State in December, aren't the same quality. Now that good teams are coming to Chapel Hill – and Tech was, don't forget, ranked, and will remain so – that home/away split will soon fade. Hopefully because of wins on the road, not losses in the Dean Dome.
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Had to DVR this game and watch it later
I hope Roy changes the starters. You can’t have the same guys going out there to start the game and putting us in a hole every time.
Little better play inside today. Still seem to be a lot of problems with the fundamentals. We still need to have guys moving to the ball and helping out the man with the ball, that has been a problem all season and really shows up when teams put any kind of pressure on us. The bigs need to position themselves better when the ball is brought in to help out the shooter, as well as give them a passing opportunity and get in better rebound position. Still hard to believe a team can be this big and rebound so poorly.
I’ve like Graves for most of this season, even when he’s been off on his shooting. He seemed to be one of the few guys who wasn’t just waiting for someone else to do something and showed some leadership. He drives well and even when he misses, he’s typically waited for someone to be in position to get a rebound. One thing I liked was to see him giving Wear a pat on the back for one of his good defensive plays. I’d like to see Marcus or Deon doing that as well.
I think this team would do better to slow down and play more half court. They don’t seem to run the break well. It’s not just the PG, a lot of times it looks like he’s there alone, with no one in position to give him a passing option. I don’t know what the deal is there, but they seem to do better when they slow down and don’t push as hard.
"If at first you don't succeed, try, try again. Then give up. There's no use in being a damn fool about it." ---W.C. Fields
I’m working on a post suggesting that UNC needs to slow it down. It really struck me during the ESPN pregame stuff when they were heralding the quick shot (eight seconds or so into the shot clock). That’s not really the traditional secondary break, and it more often than not leads to a horrible shot and the ball quickly going the other way.
I agree
TH and Big Chief, I have been saying that all season. Slow the ball down, when Drew or Strickland push the basketball they end up turning the ball over, forcing a bad shot etc. We really do need to take a page from the Book of Calhoun/Boeheim. Play tough defense*, don’t be afraid to walk the ball up the court and #run the offense to get a good shot. Its better to win a game 59-50 than to lose 73-71.
*I know, i know defense has and never will be Roy’s strong suit. That frustrates a football first guy like myself to no end.
#Do we even have an offense that can exist solely in the halfcourt? It seems like that would be Larry Drew’s strength. He’s capable of deliberate in the halfcourt but when he goes too fast trouble happens.
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