North Carolina

A win is a win: 3 takeaways from UNC basketball’s victory over Georgia Tech in ACC opener

North Carolina guard Seth Trimble (7) puts up a shot against Georgia Tech’s Lance Terry (0) in the first half on Saturday, December 7, 2024 at the Smith Center in Chapel Hill, N.C
North Carolina guard Seth Trimble (7) puts up a shot against Georgia Tech’s Lance Terry (0) in the first half on Saturday, December 7, 2024 at the Smith Center in Chapel Hill, N.C rwillett@newsobserver.com

Before Saturday, at least, North Carolina’s basketball tribulations could be rationalized, to a degree. The Tar Heels’ four losses had all come against formidable competition — three of them against opponents with legitimate Final Four aspirations, in Kansas, Auburn and Alabama. UNC’s growing pains could be attributable to the challenges natural to a new season, and new roster.

But there can be no rationalizing much of the Tar Heels’ performance at the Smith Center Saturday against Georgia Tech. UNC simply looked dreadful for long stretches of both halves, amid a splendor of brutal and ugly basketball: missed shots, turnovers, empty possessions on offense to go along with defensive miscues that allowed a supposedly-inferior opponent to hang around and build confidence.

North Carolina guard Seth Trimble (7) drives to the basket against Georgia Tech’s Lance Terry (0) in the first half on Saturday, December 7, 2024 at the Smith Center in Chapel Hill, N.C
North Carolina guard Seth Trimble (7) drives to the basket against Georgia Tech’s Lance Terry (0) in the first half on Saturday, December 7, 2024 at the Smith Center in Chapel Hill, N.C Robert Willett rwillett@newsobserver.com

This had the makings of a bring-your-own energy kind of affair from the start. A sleepy and late-arriving (or never-arriving, in a lot of cases) crowd didn’t provide much of it. But neither did the Tar Heels, who entered Saturday on a three-game losing streak and in need of something good to happen.

And did it? Well, UNC persevered through its slumber for a 68-65 victory. There was that. And that a win came amid such a performance left Hubert Davis thankful, given the alternative and also how long it’d been — not since Nov. 25 — that the Tar Heels had won a game.

“I told them I was really proud of them,” Davis, the UNC coach said, “that through the hardness of this game — yes, there’s some things, a number of things we didn’t do very well or to the liking of the way that we would we would want to perform, in terms of having 18 turnovers.

“But there were some good things that we did tonight, and I wanted them to have a smile on their face.”

And so there were some smiles, even after the sort of underwhelming performance that further underscored the Tar Heels’ deficiencies through the first month of the season. Indeed, a win is a win — even if it came in the kind of game in which one of the loudest roars of the day came upon Georgia Tech missing consecutive free throws and thus ensuring free cookies for everyone in attendance.

One for the school’s basketball museum next door, this was not. Still, UNC is 1-0 in conference play after its first ACC game of this young season.

Here are three takeaways from the Tar Heels’ victory:

UNC never really woke up

The home crowd kept waiting for it.

And waiting. And waiting.

And ... waiting. And waiting some more.

Waiting, for the Tar Heels to wake up. Waiting, for UNC to impose its will against a team that, like UNC entered Saturday with a 4-4 record — but unlike UNC, hadn’t played nearly the level of collective competition the Tar Heels have. Georgia Tech earlier this season lost by 12 points against North Florida.

But there the Yellow Jackets were with five and a half minutes left on Saturday, tied at 55 with UNC and giving many of those in attendance — who had little to cheer all day — palpitations. The Tar Heels found a way. That was the positive, for them. They found a way on a day when they didn’t have their “C” game, let alone their “A” or “B” game.

North Carolina guard R.J. Davis breaks to the baskets against Georgia Tech’s Baye Nidongo (11), to give the Tar Heels a four point lead in the second half on Saturday, December 7, 2024 at the Smith Center in Chapel Hill, N.C. Davis scored 16 points in the Tar Heels’ 68-65 victory.
North Carolina guard R.J. Davis breaks to the baskets against Georgia Tech’s Baye Nidongo (11), to give the Tar Heels a four point lead in the second half on Saturday, December 7, 2024 at the Smith Center in Chapel Hill, N.C. Davis scored 16 points in the Tar Heels’ 68-65 victory. Robert Willett rwillett@newsobserver.com

After it was tied at 55, Jalen Washington scored on a dunk, off a nifty pass from Elliot Cadeau. RJ Davis then finished a fast break with a layup that put the Tar Heels ahead by four, and offered a smidge of breathing room.

So, OK, everyone thought — here’s where UNC finally pulls away, right?

Not quite. Georgia Tech cut it back to two, and had a chance to take the lead before Cadeau’s 3 pushed UNC by five with two and a half minutes remaining. And the Yellow Jackets never really went away after that, even after falling behind by as much as seven with 71 seconds remaining. Another way to put that: UNC had difficulty putting Georgia Tech away.

The one bright spot for UNC: Seth Trimble, who finished with 19 points on only six attempts from the field. His teammates were hardly as efficient, and the Tar Heels made just 39 percent of their attempts.

“It has indeed felt like forever,” Trimble said, on how long it’d been since he and his teammates had won a game before Saturday. “I was telling the guys on the team in the locker room, it almost felt like two months. I know it’s only been like two weeks, but you start losing, you know, these days get longer.

“So, glad we finally got back on the winning track.”

Lineups — starting and otherwise — a work in progress.

Hubert Davis used the same starting lineup through his team’s first seven games, before making a change before the defeat against Alabama on Wednesday night. He made another change on Saturday, and gave transfer forward Ven-Allen Lubin the start at center in place of Washington, the junior who’d started the first eight games.

If the on-court performance and rotations didn’t make it obvious enough, Davis is clearly still trying to figure out what starting lineup works best for the Tar Heels — and which combinations work best even after that. Lubin didn’t necessarily make a splash on Saturday, especially in the first half (zero points and a turnover in 10 minutes, but also four rebounds) but neither did Washington, when he entered the game.

“We haven’t gotten off to good starts in the first half,” Davis said. “It’s nothing more than that, just trying different combinations to see what sticks, what works, what’s better. And so I don’t know who’s going to start against La Salle, but we’ve got to find a way where we’ve got the right rotations in the right groups on the floor that can play at a high level.

“And so it’s nothing more than that, just trying things.

Washington, who started the second half, missed a layup not long after he came off the bench for the first time and also played a role in a few of UNC’s sloppier possessions in a highly-sloppy first half. He committed two turnovers. Meanwhile, Jae’Lyn Withers, the graduate forward who started UNC’s first seven games, played just five minutes in the first half and 16 overall, and for now his role appears to be declining.

North Carolina coach Hubert Davis has a word with Jae’Lyn Withers (24) in the second half against Georgia Tech on Saturday, December 7, 2024 at the Smith Center in Chapel Hill, N.C.
North Carolina coach Hubert Davis has a word with Jae’Lyn Withers (24) in the second half against Georgia Tech on Saturday, December 7, 2024 at the Smith Center in Chapel Hill, N.C. Robert Willett rwillett@newsobserver.com

The Tar Heels’ frontcourt situation does not make this easy for Davis. UNC missed on essentially every one of its primary frontcourt targets in the transfer portal, which left the Tar Heels especially thin down low and with an imbalance roster whose most talented players are all guards or wings. Drake Powell, the 6-foot-6 freshman from Pittsboro, started for the second consecutive game on Saturday, and seems to have secured his role as a starter — despite a rough Saturday (zero points in 15 minutes).

Among Lubin, Washington and Withers, though, Davis and the Tar Heels are searching for someone to emerge and provide a reason as to why they should play more. They combined for nine points and none of them was particularly effective offensively, though they all finished with at least six rebounds — and Lubin had eight.

Tar Heels seem to be regressing

This version of UNC, which sleepwalked through most of Saturday, is not the same one that erased a sizable deficit at Kansas’ Allen Fieldhouse last month. It’s not even the same one we saw last week in Maui where, yes, the Tar Heels lost two of their three games but still had a chance to win, at least, against Michigan State.

Hubert Davis said his team “has been wounded” by its recent struggles, and that a break — with UNC not playing again until Dec. 14 — comes at a perfect time. Both Trimble and RJ Davis, meanwhile, said they and their teammates have been putting a lot of pressure on themselves, which has led to undesirable outcomes.

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“I think for us to play it like I know we can, we’ve just got to relax a little bit,” said RJ Davis who finished with 15 points but missed 10 of his 15 attempts from the field. “I think we’re trying to be too perfect, even for myself.”

Davis said he and his teammates “just go out there and play basketball, play together.

Still, it’s worth wondering how the Tar Heels were caught so flat on Saturday. After three consecutive losses, including a one-sided defeat against Alabama just a few days earlier, the motivation to get back into the win column should have been easy to find.

Judging from UNC’s performance, though, it was not. There were missed layups galore, at least one alley-oop attempt that was far more oops than alley and enough blunders to fill a Worst of Tar Heels Basketball VHS tape (so a good thing, perhaps, that everything’s digital these days).

Off nights happen. Even good teams go through lulls. But given the circumstances — and the need for a strong bounce-back showing amid a losing streak — this was a puzzling performance for the Tar Heels, and one that did not exactly deliver a sense of confidence in this team’s potential.

As Hubert Davis said, a week-long break between games comes at a good time.

This story was originally published December 7, 2024 at 4:25 PM.

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Andrew Carter
The News & Observer
Andrew Carter spent 10 years covering major college athletics, six of them covering the University of North Carolina for The News & Observer and The Charlotte Observer. Now he’s a member of The N&O’s and Observer’s statewide enterprise and investigative reporting team. He attended N.C. State and grew up in Raleigh dreaming of becoming a journalist.
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