North Carolina Tar Heels 2020 Preview: previewing, predicting, and looking ahead with what you need to know.
Photo Credit: Jeremy Brevard-USA TODAY Sports
Sports blog information from USA TODAY.
North Carolina Tar Heels 2020 Preview: previewing, predicting, and looking ahead with what you need to know.
Photo Credit: Jeremy Brevard-USA TODAY Sports
North Carolina Tar Heels 2020 Preview: previewing, predicting, and looking ahead with what you need to know.
Photo Credit: Jeremy Brevard-USA TODAY Sports
North Carolina Tar Heels 2020 Preview: previewing, predicting, and looking ahead with what you need to know.
Photo Credit: Jeremy Brevard-USA TODAY Sports
North Carolina Tar Heels 2020 Preview: previewing, predicting, and looking ahead with what you need to know.
Photo Credit: Jeremy Brevard-USA TODAY Sports
The four-team CBS Sports Classic will be extended with Ohio State basketball continuing to participate. It’ll play North Carolina in 2020.
If you’ve been following college basketball over the last few years, you are keenly aware that the CBS Sports Classic has pitted Ohio State, North Carolina, Kentucky, and UCLA against each other in rotating years. The format first appeared in 2014, and was extended through this past season after the 2017 matchups.
We now know that the CBS Sports Classic will again be extended according to a report from CBS Sports’ Jon Rothstein. There are no dates or venues scheduled yet, but we do know that Ohio State will face North Carolina this coming season, then UCLA in 2021, and Kentucky in 2022.
This is great news for college basketball fans, especially for the four teams that take part in the annual event.
Updated CBS Sports Classic matchups for next three seasons, per release:
2020: UCLA/Kentucky, North Carolina/Ohio State
2021: UCLA/Ohio State, Kentucky/North Carolina
2022: UCLA/North Carolina, Kentucky/Ohio State
— Jon Rothstein (@JonRothstein) April 27, 2020
And remember, many singled out Ohio State as the program that didn’t fit in this matchup. Of the four, those that don’t know much about the history of college basketball railed on a Buckeye program getting invited to this party.
The Buckeyes have equated themselves fine enough thank you very much, going 3-3 overall. The only team with a winning record in the Classic is North Carolina at 4-2. Kentucky is 3-3, and UCLA has finished just 2-4.
As we know more about dates and venues, we’ll be sure to pass on further information.
The Texans Wire spoke to North Carolina Head Coach Mack Brown about newly drafted Houston Texans offensive lineman Charlie Heck.
The Houston Texans have made a number of moves around the board during the 2020 NFL Draft, one of which included trading up to the 126th overall pick where they selected offensive tackle, Charlie Heck.
Earlier today, the Texans Wire spoke with North Carolina Tar Heels head coach Mack Brown about his now-former starter:
We couldn’t be prouder of Charlie and want to congratulate him on this accomplishment. It didn’t take long for us to see why Charlie would be successful, both in football and in life. He worked hard. He was a leader. He played through injury when he didn’t have to. He’s just a good young man, who handles himself with class and integrity. The Texans got a good one in Charlie and I expect him to have a long and successful career.
Heck brings with him an NFL pedigree. The son of former NFL OL Andy Heck, current offensive line coach for the Kansas City Chiefs, the Texans appear to have found themselves the backup swing tackle they’ve been looking for.
The 23-year old fits the mold of a Bill O’Brien Texans lineman perfectly. At just shy of 6-8, 311 pounds he will suit the big-bodied line that O’Brien and offensive line coach Mike Devlin is building.
The Badgers conquer Carolina
The last game the Wisconsin Badgers played in the 2014 NCAA Tournament was their Final Four national semifinal against Kentucky. Wisconsin was seeded several notches higher than Kentucky, but the Wildcats were a blue-blood, and blue-bloods have a way of carrying themselves in big moments. Kentucky might have been a No. 8 seed at that tournament, but in the Final Four, the Cats were a newly confident team. They had overcome the problems which dogged them during the regular season. Kentucky played like a No. 2 seed, so when the Wildcats met the second-seeded Badgers, it felt like a battle of equals, as opposed to a game in which one team was several leagues better than the other.
Kentucky was a good team to play in the 2014 regular season, but not in the NCAA Tournament. The Wildcats came alive and played like an elite team. Wisconsin engaged UK in a superb Final Four game, but the Wildcats hit the last and biggest shot to advance to the national championship game.
With this memory in mind, Wisconsin entered the 2015 Sweet 16 against a lower-seeded blue-blood, the North Carolina Tar Heels. North Carolina had a decent but hardly spectacular regular season. The Tar Heels were a No. 4 seed, which is not what North Carolina coaches, players, or fans expect. Carolina was emerging from a brutal two-year period in which nothing went right for the program and people wondered if Roy Williams had lost his fastball.
North Carolina came into that Sweet 16 game as a diminished version of itself, but in one game, one moment, the Tar Heels had a chance to reinvent themselves, much as Kentucky did in the 2014 NCAA Tournament.
Midway through the second half, Carolina’s revival effort was in very good shape.
The Tar Heels led Wisconsin, 53-46. The Badgers, as a No. 1 seed for the first time in the school’s NCAA Tournament history, had to once again respond to adversity. The good news was that Wisconsin faced this kind of adversity against Michigan State in the Big Ten Tournament final, a week and a half earlier. The bad news was that continuing to tempt fate the way the Badgers did in March of 2015 can lead to ultimate ruin and heartbreak.
Once again, the 2015 Badgers refused to accept a lesser fate. They reeled off a 19-7 run with a slightly injured Frank Kaminsky (he had been hit by a Carolina player) on the bench. Zak Showalter steadied the team. Sam Dekker scored 23 points. The Badgers rallied around themselves — and rallied against North Carolina — to defeat the Tar Heels, 79-72, in Los Angeles.
Wisconsin took a blue-blood’s best punch and punched back. The 2015 Badgers were enormously skilled, but their skill was matched by their resilience and competitive greatness. That’s why they went to the national championship game — the resolve, not the talent.
The roadsides of history are littered with broken dreams from talented teams which didn’t know how to fight when the going got tough. The Badgers had smooth, velvet-glove skill, but they also had rugged iron-fist determination. That latter quality helped them past North Carolina and back to the Elite Eight for a second straight season in 2015.
Analyzing North Carolina at Duke sports betting odds and lines, with college basketball betting picks and tips.
The North Carolina Tar Heels (13-17, 6-13 in the ACC) visit their Atlantic Coast Conference rival, the Duke Blue Devils (24-6, 14-5 in the ACC), Saturday for a 6 p.m. ET tip-off at the Cameron Indoor Stadium. We analyze the North Carolina-Duke odds and betting lines, with college basketball betting advice and tips around this matchup.
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Odds via BetMGM; access USA TODAY Sports’ betting odds for a full list. Lines last updated at 10:00 a.m. ET.
Duke 78, North Carolina 70
North Carolina (+475) out-rebounded and shot better from the field than Duke -667 in their first meeting. The Tar Heels’ major flaw in that game was committing 18 turnovers to the Blue Devils’ 11. Both teams are stacked with well-recruited talent. The key matchups of Duke’s PG Tre Jones and C Vernon Carey Jr. versus North Carolina’s PG Cole Anthony and PF Garrison Brooks were essentially draws. It’s hard to fathom the Tar Heels scoring an upset in Duke after blowing a double-digit lead in their own home. We certainly aren’t spending the exorbitant Duke moneyline price. PASS ON THE MONEYLINE.
North Carolina +11.5 (-125) have covered five consecutive games, and six out of seven, against Duke -11.5 (+105). Plus Duke has been struggling lately losing two of its last three games and are 4-6 ATS in their last 10 games. The Tar Heels get up for tough teams on the road—they are 6-4 ATS versus winning teams. Also, Duke is 1-3 ATS when laying 10-12 points.
I LIKE NORTH CAROLINA +11.5 (-125).
The last North Carolina-Duke game went Over the projected total, snapping a six-game Under streak. I think Saturday’s game will go Under, but it’s only a slight LEAN toward UNDER 152.5 (-110). It’s only a lean though because Duke has a 21-9 Over/Under record on the season, and both the Tar Heels and Blue Devils went Over the projected total in five of their previous six games.
Want some action on this matchup? Place a bet at BetMGM now. For more sports betting picks and tips, visit SportsbookWire.com.
Follow @Geoffery_Clark and @SportsbookWire on Twitter.
Gannett may earn revenue from audience referrals to betting services. Newsrooms are independent of this relationship and there is no influence on news coverage.
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Tom Brady, Julian Edelman and Jimmy Fallon had courtside seats Saturday for North Carolina-Syracuse.
Ahh, the lives of entertainers and athletes. They can be found almost anywhere and everywhere. Even in Syracuse on Feb. 29.
Syracuse faced North Carolina in an ACC game on Saturday and there was an impressive trio in attendance: New England Patriots QB Tom Brady and WR Julian Edelman were with late-night NBC host Jimmy Fallon.
Edelman seemed to enjoy himself, too, mouthing to the camera the impending free-agent quarterback wasn’t leaving New England. “He’s coming back” the former Super Bowl MVP wideout appears to be saying.
VIDEO: Julian Edelman, sitting next to Tom Brady at Syracuse game, says “He’s coming back. He’s coming back.” Then Brady gives him a look. Returning to #Patriots?? #Lipreading pic.twitter.com/lxHWUKeXJw
— Geoff Herbert (@deafgeoff) February 29, 2020
That expression seems to say, “I will strangle you. I will. I don’t want to. But I will.” https://t.co/QS1uzhzKm0
— Tom E. Curran (@tomecurran) February 29, 2020
Legendary Orange coach Jim Boeheim shook hands with the G.O.A.T. at the Carrier Dome.
Brady is friends with Adam Weitsman, the owner and Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Upstate Shredding-Weitsman Recycling in Central New York, and was invited to the Carrier Dome and brought Fallon and Edelman with him.
Tom Brady shakes hands with Jim Boeheim at the Dome. Brady is courtside with Julian Edelman and Tonight Show host Jimmy Fallon pic.twitter.com/jkBLfumkU5
— Mike Catalana (@MikeCatalana) February 29, 2020
Tom Brady, Julian Edelman and Jimmy Fallon are at the Carrier Dome for today's Syracuse-UNC matchup 🤩 pic.twitter.com/Tsp7aAa0fo
— Sports Illustrated (@SInow) February 29, 2020
Tom Brady, Julian Edelman and Jimmy Fallon are sitting court side at the UNC/ Syracuse basketball game this afternoon 🐏 🍊 pic.twitter.com/txs7jSNb4H
— Jordan Moore (@iJordanMoore) February 29, 2020
Previewing Monday’s North Carolina Tar Heels at Notre Dame Fighting Irish sports betting odds and lines, with college basketball picks.
The North Carolina Tar Heels (10-15, 3-11 ACC) travel north to meet the Notre Dame Fighting Irish (15-10, 6-8 ACC) in a Monday night ACC clash at Purcell Pavillion at the Joyce Center for a 7 p.m. ET tip-off. We analyze the North Carolina-Notre Dame odds and betting lines, with college basketball betting advice and tips around this matchup.
1. The Fighting Irish are coming off back to back losses to Duke (94-60) and Virginia (50-49 in overtime) and look to right the ship on their home hardwood where they average 79.9 points per game. The Tar Heels head into this game on a five-game losing skid. UNC has trailed throughout four of those five losses.
2. Seniors G Brandon Robinson being out with an ankle injury hurts North Carolina. Robinson has been UNC’s primary threat from 3-point range where he’s a 35% shooter. The fourth-year letterman has averaged a career-high 13.1 PPG in 16 starts this season. The Tar Heels have shot just 26.2% from 3-point-land over their last 11 games.
3. UND is coming off its worst two back-to-back shooting games this season. The Irish shot a combined 34.7% from the field over losses to Duke and Virginia. Over three home games from Jan. 29-Feb. 5, Notre Dame shot 45.6% from the floor and a robust 37.7% from distance.
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Odds via BetMGM; access USA TODAY Sports’ betting odds for a full list. Lines last updated at 11:30 a.m. ET.
Notre Dame 76, North Carolina 71
Notre Dame (-175) is expected to win this Monday home game over North Carolina (+145). We’ll PASS on the moneyline with better value available on the spread.
The Fighting Irish are 6-1 ATS in their last seven games overall, and they are 6-2-1 ATS in their last nine home games. The home teams is 7-2 ATS over the last nine games of the UNC-UND series.
Look for the Fighting Irish to take good care of the basketball. A low-turnover game will mitigate a UNC edge on the boards, making UND a solid play to win by a couple scores. BACK NOTRE DAME (-2.5, -129) to win by at least 3 points.
The Over is 7-2-1 across Notre Dame’s last 10 games. The Under is 3-13 over North Carolina’s last 16 road tilts.
The number here is a respectable one, and we’ll PASS on the projected total of 147.5 (Over: -110, Under: -110).
Want some action on this matchup? Place a bet at BetMGM now. For more sports betting picks and tips, visit SportsbookWire.com.
Follow @SportsbookWire on Twitter.
Gannett may earn revenue from audience referrals to betting services. Newsrooms are independent of this relationship and there is no influence on news coverage.
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The Ohio State men’s tennis team fell to No. 5 North Carolina in the semifinals of the ITA Indoor Championship Sunday.
The Ohio State men’s tennis team fell short of defending its ITA Indoor national title Sunday, falling to the North Carolina Tar Heels 4-0 in the semifinals.
For the first time all season, the Buckeyes dropped the doubles point to get off on the wrong foot. John McNally and Robert Cash fell 2-6 to William Blumberg and Brian Cernoch of UNC. James Trotter and Justin Boulais then lost a tight 4-6 contest to Simon Soendergaard and Mac Kiger, resulting in a 1-0 lead for North Carolina.
In singles, things didn’t go much better. Justin Boulais fell to Rinki Hijitaka 2-6, 2-6 to give the Tar Heels a quick 2-0 lead. Robert Cash then lost 1-6, 2-6 to Simon Soendergaard and the Buckeyes were suddenly in a huge 3-0 hole. James Trotter then lost a tight one 4-6, 5-7 to Brian Cernoch and the run was over.
For Ohio State, it was bound to happen at some point. The Buckeyes had been on an unbelievable run of knocking off top-ten opponents, but it was not meant to be Sunday as the Buckeyes were off their game at the wrong time.
Final from Madison
Buckeyes 0, Tar Heels 4
— Ohio State M Tennis (@OhioStateMTEN) February 16, 2020
OSU will try to rebound when it’s next in action against Notre Dame in South Bend, Indiana on February 22.
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Did referees blow these crucial calls at the end of Duke-UNC?
The greatest rivalry in college basketball provided all-timer on Saturday in Chapel Hill, which featured ridiculous endings to regulation and overtime.
Duke overcame a 10-point deficit with just over two minutes to play, and guard Tre Jones saved the Blue Devils at the buzzer with an intentionally missed free-throw that enabled him to hit a game-tying buzzer beater.
Tre Jones just did that. WOW. pic.twitter.com/6zc52B52c9
— Kyle Boone (@Kyle__Boone) February 9, 2020
The ending to overtime was every bit as wild. North Carolina fell behind early in the overtime period but fought back to lead by five with just 21 seconds remaining. Buckets from Jones and Wendell Moore cut the Tar Heels’ lead to one point with 13 seconds left, and the Blue Devils got the ball back on a controversial inbounds play that resulted in a North Carolina turnover.
UNC inbounded the ball to Andrew Platek, and Duke’s Moore lunged for the ball as Platek caught it. The ball was knocked loose and went out of bounds, and Platek hit the floor after taking slight contact from Moore – but officials did not call a foul on the play, and ruled on the court that the ball was off of Platek.
10 seconds left, UNC up 1, no foul called here on the inbound. Duke gets ball and wins at buzzer #DUKEvsUNC pic.twitter.com/tJHt7ABayB
— Bad Sports Refs (@BadSportsRefs) February 9, 2020
ESPN commentator Jay Bilas couldn’t believe the no call, arguing that Moore clearly fouled Platek. Officials went to a replay review to determine who touched the ball last, but there wasn’t clear evidence that the ball was off Moore, so they stuck with the original call.
Duke got the ball to Jones, who drove to the basket and drew a foul. Jones hit the first shot to tie the game at 96-96 – but missed the go-ahead shot. Moore tipped the ball back out and Duke retained the ball, allowing Jones to try and attempt a game-winner before the clock expired. Jones missed his off-balance attempt, but Moore caught the airball and put it in off the glass to win the game.
WOW! WHAT AN ENDING!
NO. 7 DUKE WINS IN STUNNING FASHION AGAINST UNC! pic.twitter.com/OZ50X9eQcF
— SportsCenter (@SportsCenter) February 9, 2020
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