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N.C. State head coach Will Wade went on his second tirade in three games.
The first time he publicly criticized his team’s lack of effort, intensity and attention to detail in a now-viral postgame press conference.
Following Wednesday’s 70-57 win over Wake Forest, Wade came to the defense of one of his key players. His statements picked up steam online almost immediately.
Wade was locked and loaded with a fiery response, despite a measured demeanor on the previous question, when asked about his concern level regarding Darrion Williams.
“Absolutely zero,” Wade said. “I’m tired of hearing about frickin’ Darien. He’s [expletive] playing well, all right? It’s a terrible question. Let me be frank with you, he affects winning, and everybody’s out here [expletive] about him and all this stuff.”
Williams finished the Ole Miss game plus-13 in the plus/minus statistic, Wade said, without making a shot. The senior went 0 for 8 and made one free throw in the win. It was the first time on the high major level, and third time in his career, that he didn’t make a field goal. Wade said everyone was acting like “the world’s caving in.”
The forward only has one game since mid-November with at least 15 points. He scored 17 in the N.C. State’s one-point overtime loss to Kansas.
On Wednesday against Wake Forest, Williams scored eight points on 3 of 12 shooting. He added six rebounds — third on the team — and four assists without a turnover. Williams also contributed one block and one steal. He was plus-13 in the Wolfpack’s second straight double-digit win over a Power Four opponent.
Since Nov. 26, Williams has averaged eight points in seven games. He was picked as the Preseason ACC Player of the Year.
Wade is tired of people picking on Williams, he said.
“The guy’s a damn good player,” Wade said. “Everybody needs to shut the hell up about him.”
Sure, Williams was paid a lot of money to join the program, Wade said. It’s unclear exactly how much he’s making, but Wade said other schools have paid just as much or more than the Wolfpack offered.
“I understand that the kid’s not perfect, but he is a damn good player, and we’re lucky to have him at N.C. State,” Wade said. “He picked us over a lot of schools with a lot better situations than we had at the time he picked us. Let’s be freaking appreciative. Let’s support the kid. Let’s help the kid. And, he affects us winning games. Even when he doesn’t make shots. He helps us win. Teams are game planning for him.”
According to the advanced analytics, Williams finished the Wolfpack’s matchup against Wake Forest with a game-high 93.9 stop percentage and seven total stops. Ven-Allen Lubin was the only other Wolfpack player with more stops (9) than Williams.
The Texas Tech transfer drew six fouls and finished with a 40% assist rate.
Also, in N.C. State’s recent seven-game stretch, Williams recorded 26 assists and nine turnovers for a 2.8 assist-to-turnover ratio.
Williams finished with four or more rebounds in five games. His 17-point and 10-rebound double-double against the Jayhawks put the Wolfpack in position to potentially upset the Big 12 foe.
Entering the ACC opener, Williams among the ACC’s top 25 players in assist-to-turnover ratio, total assists, assists per game, double-doubles, field goal percentage, total field goals, points per game and made 3-pointers.
“He does a lot of winning stuff, and he’s taking a lot of unfair heat right now,” Wade said. “He does a lot of winning stuff. At the end of the day, it’s our job to win for N.C. State. He helps N.C. State win. Period. End of discussion.”
The senior came to N.C. State after averaging 15 points and 5.5 rebounds per game with the Red Raiders in 2024-25. A season prior, he averaged 11.4 points and 7.5 rebounds. He contributed 7.7 points and 7.3 rebounds as a freshman at Nevada.
Williams has consistently finished with a positive assist-to-turnover ratio, including a 2:1 ratio for his career.
He started the year scoring 14 points or more in the first four games and surpassed 25 points against UNC-Greensboro and VCU.
Wade also mentioned Williams’ shoulder injury, calling it “really bad” and complimented the player on his toughness. Instead of sitting out for multiple games, which some players would do, Williams only missed the Texas Southern matchup.
“He laid it on the line for N.C. State for five games with a [expletive] shoulder, and gave us a chance to win some of these games, and people are just piling on his [expletive],” Wade said. “It’s not right. He’s a damn good player. He’s going to help us win a lot of games in the ACC, so I’m tired of it.”
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Jadyn Watson-Fisher
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