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  • No. 9 Duke pulls away from NC State, sets up showdown with UNC :: WRALSportsFan.com

    No. 9 Duke pulls away from NC State, sets up showdown with UNC :: WRALSportsFan.com

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    — NC State showed again Monday night that it can hang with a top-10 ACC rival for much of the game.

    But No. 9 Duke — like North Carolina on Saturday — proved too much in the end for the Wolfpack, pulling away in the final minutes for a 79-64 win at PNC Arena in Raleigh.

    It was the final regular-season home game for NC State, which honored seniors DJ Burns, DJ Horne, Casey Morsell and Alex Nunnally before the game.

    Duke improved to 24-6 overall and 15-4 in the ACC. The Blue Devils host No. 7 North Carolina on Saturday in Durham. ESPN’s “College GameDay” will originate from Cameron Indoor Stadium on Saturday.

    “We showed poise, which you have to show against these guys, and a lot of toughness,” Duke coach Jon Scheyer said.

    NC State fell to 17-13 and 9-10 in the ACC. The Wolfpack’s final regular-season game is Saturday at Pittsburgh.

    In its previous game, NC State led North Carolina by 10 early in the second half — only to see the Tar Heels roar back for a nine-point win.

    The Wolfpack scored the game’s first nine points Monday night against the Blue Devils. And NC State led 46-45 with 12:10 left after Mohamed Diarra’s transition lay-up.

    But Duke followed that with a 10-1 run, and the Wolfpack never got closer than five points the rest of the way. NC State coach Kevin Keatts said the Wolfpack had several defensive issues during that stretch.

    “You can’t have those breakdowns,” NC State coach Kevin Keatts said. “… I thought they made us pay for the mistakes we made down the stretch.”

    Jeremy Roach led Duke with 21 points. Guard Jared McCain scored 14 of his 16 points in the second half.

    Freshman forward Sean Stewart had 12 points, five rebounds and three blocks in a season-high 26 minutes for the Blue Devils. He scored 16 points against LaSalle, the only other time he scored in double figures this season.

    “He’s just gotten better and better,” Scheyer said. “Sean provides something we don’t have — he’s our best athlete, his versatility on defense, his touch around the basket, he’s a lob threat.”

    Forward Kyle Filipowski was limited to four minutes in the first half after picking up two quick fouls. He didn’t score in the first half, but added nine points in the second.

    Burns had a team-high 27 points, along with five rebounds and four assists, but NC State had just three pointers. Diarra (10 points) was the only other Wolfpack player in double figures.

    Duke had 19 offensive rebounds and NC State had 13 offensive rebounds.

    “In March, you have to find a way to win to win ugly sometimes,” Scheyer said. “You have to find a way to win when you’re not at your best and that’s what we did.”

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  • Hahn’s exit another part of Tobacco Road’s lost grip on the ACC :: WRALSportsFan.com

    Hahn’s exit another part of Tobacco Road’s lost grip on the ACC :: WRALSportsFan.com

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    — The college sports landscape is evolving, with some change coming so swiftly, it’s hard to keep track of all the comings and goings. Between TV networks, conference realignment, NIL dynamics and year-to-year roster turnover, some of the traditions of personalities, leagues and rivalries have weakened.

    In Raleigh, NC State fans have taken comfort in the familiar voice of radio announcer Gary Hahn.

    Hahn, 71, is going through his own transition. He recently lost his mother and is planning to retire after the 2023-24 basketball season.

    Hahn arrived in Raleigh in 1990 and is one of the last men standing from the golden age of the ACC – when a Tuesday night basketball game in January was still one of the main vessels for entertainment in the area. In 2024, some Triangle fans feel left out by a league that’s no longer centered around North Carolina and expanding to the far reaches of the west coast, thus deprecating the “Tobacco Road” brand that bolstered the formerly basketball-driven conference.

    Hahn’s exit is a small part of the vast changes taking place in sports media and in the college game overall.

    Hahn has called more than 420 football games (missing one in 2009 after undergoing surgery for prostate cancer) and more than 1,000 basketball games in 34 years behind the mic. His association with State is as strong as Bob Harris was with Duke and the late Woody Durham with UNC-Chapel Hill. Harris retired in 2017 and Durham died a year later.

    Hahn will call his final regular season home basketball game for the Wolfpack Monday night against Duke. He announced his retirement in October and called his last football game in December.

    Hahn spoke with WRAL News about where college sports is going, his retirement plans and favorite NC State players he’s covered.

    Q: Have you had much time to reflect on how this is it?

    A: I haven’t really spent a lot of time thinking about it because I’ve had so many other things going on. It may hit me when it’s all over. I think it’s been a good run – 34 years in one place. That’s a blessing. The Lord opened up some incredible doors for me to come here 34 years ago, and he’s protected me while I’m here.

    Q: What do you make of all the changes around college sports like conference realignment, NIL and TV network deals that’s making it a new experience for the fans?

    A: Growing up in Cumberland, Maryland, we had cable TV and because of that, I was able to get the ACC Game of the Week in 1963 with Bones McKinney and Jim Thacker. I started watching that and immediately, I was hooked. I really thought this was exciting stuff, and I liked to play basketball. So I got a taste of what the ACC was even before I had any inkling I’d be part of it. There’s been a golden age, and I think what started the process of maybe getting away from that was conference expansion and conference realignment. When there were just eight or nine teams, everybody played everybody twice, you knew you were going to have tough games at certain places. You knew you were going to have to have a decent non-conference schedule, but even if you didn’t have one of those, you could make it up by playing ACC basketball. It used to be that if you had an even record in the ACC, you had a good chance at making the NCAA Tournament. All that’s different now.

    You can’t get away from change. It’s gonna happen, but I think the changes now that are happening in college athletics, I don’t know how they’re going to come out, but I’m not in favor of quite a few of them, and I’ll just leave it at that.

    Q: Who are your favorite three Wolfpack football and basketball players since you’ve been in Raleigh?

    A: I think one of my favorite football players was a guy who played in the early 90s at quarterback and then wide receiver. His name was Charles Davenport. He was a cool guy to be around. When you interviewed him, you got it right from the heart. He just cut loose, and he was very good and very jovial, a people person.

    I really liked Torry Holt. He was the first guy there, he was the last one to leave. He was just a great guy – friendly, outgoing – I’d have to say I liked Torry Holt a lot.

    Dantonio Burnette, who’s the strength coach now, he was sort of the same way. He just told you the way it was and was very friendly and outgoing. I always liked him.

    I’m probably leaving some out, because there’s been a lot of nice guys who have played football at NC State who were very cooperative, friendly and outgoing and weren’t scared of the media. They knew I was there not to kick them in the butt, but to usually give them a positive spin on things. These guys don’t try to fail. They don’t try to fumble the football. They don’t try to throw an interception. They’re trying their best. A lot of fans, I think, lose sight of that.

    Basketball-wise, Todd Fuller would be one from the mid-90s. The thing about Todd is he was a perfect student. He never got a B. It was absolutely incredible. With the time limits that are put on these guys, he was just brilliant. I admired him a lot.

    When I first got here, there was Chris Corchiani and Rodney Monroe. Rodney was a little more reserved. Chris was a little more outgoing but I certainly liked them.

    Tom Gugliotta was another basketball player that was sort of reserved, but as I was there longer and he got better, we hit it off really good.

    The nicest person I have ever met in college athletics is Mike O’Cain. I just talked to him this morning. He found out that my mom passed away and he gave me a call at the house. That’s the kind of person Mike O’Cain is.

    Q: You called games for Louisville and Ohio State, which are big programs with supportive fan bases, before coming to Raleigh. Did you know what you were in for when you came here in 1990 as far as a college sports-driven environment?

    A: If you go to the state of Kentucky, there’s a lot of Louisville fans and a lot of Kentucky fans, and it matters there, too. If you go to Ohio, Ohio State-Michigan is a big deal along with the rivalries they have in the Big Ten. I had a pretty good idea of what a rivalry was when I came here. I was just looking forward to ACC basketball. Everywhere else I’d been, everybody knew ACC basketball was at a very high level. Even at Louisville, the fans, I won’t say envy, but they knew that the ACC was up there and maybe the Metro Conference wasn’t quite as high. So if they played an ACC team and were able to beat them, it was a big deal. I knew ACC basketball was something special.

    Q: You had a misstep during the 2022 Duke’s Mayo Bowl broadcast that led to a suspension. Was there a moment where you thought you’d lose your job from the reaction? Was there self-reflection from that?

    A: All I was trying to do was make some irreverent humor, but that’s about all I’m going to say about it, because I’ve been told not to comment. But I did learn one thing.

    I can remember going back from the game and everyone’s deadly quiet in the car, no one wants to say anything. My phone’s blowing up with all this stuff. I just said ‘guys, you can talk. I’ve made a decision. I’m gonna let Jesus Christ fight my battle for me and whatever the outcome is, that’s going to be his will. And I’m cool with that.’ I found out the next couple of weeks that 90 percent of people out there love me. Ten percent hate my guts. The 10 percent called me every name in the book and 90 percent love me. That was the biggest thing I learned from that. I never knew how people felt about me. I knew they must have accepted me because I’m still there for, at that point, 33 years. But I never really thought of how they felt about me as a person and how I represented the university and all of that. It turned out that something that most people would think is a terrible, embarrassing moment actually, to me, turned out to be a blessing.

    Q: What’s been some consistent traits you’ve tried to bring to each broadcast?

    A: The key is to be able to do a good job when the game is not good. I’ve always tried to do that, stick with the facts and paint a picture with the audience that, if they could just close their eyes, they’d have some idea of what was going on. That’s tough to do on radio and a lot of people can’t do it. I think I’ve been able to, by the grace of God, do that.

    Q: Will you still follow NC State sports as closely in retirement?

    A: I think I’ll still be a Wolfpack fan. I’ll care. I don’t think you can be someplace for 34 years and know all the people that I’ve known and all the players that have come through and all that and not have some affinity. You just can’t turn your back on something like that. But for the next two years, I’ve got a lot to do. I don’t think I’ll be playing in a lot of charity golf tournaments.

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  • ACC women’s basketball tournament bracket is set. Here are the matchups

    ACC women’s basketball tournament bracket is set. Here are the matchups

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    N.C. State’s Zoe Brooks shoots over Virginia Tech’s Olivia Summiel and Georgia Amoore during the first half of the Wolfpack’s 72-61 loss on Thursday, Feb. 8, 2024, at Reynolds Coliseum in Raleigh, N.C.

    N.C. State’s Zoe Brooks shoots over Virginia Tech’s Olivia Summiel and Georgia Amoore during the first half of the Wolfpack’s 72-61 loss on Thursday, Feb. 8, 2024, at Reynolds Coliseum in Raleigh, N.C.

    kmckeown@newsobserver.com

    Coaches and media picked the N.C. State women’s basketball team to finish eighth in a stacked ACC before the 2023-24 season began.

    The Wolfpack served notice early in the season that it was playing with a chip on its shoulder, and it did something about it, earning several impressive wins against ranked teams and climbing into the AP Top 25 Poll’s top five.

    The Pack’s record has taken some hits in the past month as it has navigated a tough schedule through a deep conference, but Sunday, N.C. State put an exclamation point on its regular season, downing Wake Forest at home to secure the No. 2 seed in the upcoming ACC women’s tournament.

    The Pack (25-5) defeated the Demon Deacons (6-24), 75-57, using a 27-point fourth quarter to propel itself to a win after the defense allowed 31 in the third.

    The Wolfpack already clinched the double bye on Thursday after its overtime win over Syracuse (23-6), but the weekend victory decided the seeding.

    Virginia Tech, which has also been steady all season, had the No. 1 seed locked up before Sunday’s slate of games — a good thing since it lost to Virginia on Sunday. Syracuse, which sat in second to start the day, had already completed its schedule and could only watch as the Wolfpack passed it by.

    Notre Dame and Louisville clashed Sunday, and with the win — its fifth in a row — the Irish locked down the fourth seed in the tournament and the coveted double-bye.

    “[It] wasn’t always pretty, but this team has seemed to be able to find a way to win most of the time,” N.C. State coach Wes Moore said Sunday. “Just glad to get that behind us and now wipe the slate. We start a new season this week. Hopefully, we can go over there and play the way we’re capable.”

    Louisville will remain in fifth.

    Florida State held off Clemson in an overtime thriller to take the sixth seed. The Seminoles and Tigers appeared headed to a second overtime when Clemson attempted to call a timeout with one second on the clock in overtime — but the Tigers were out of timeouts. The resulting technical foul gave Florida State two free throws, and eventually the win.

    Duke remained in seventh position despite a loss at rival UNC on Sunday. The Tar Heels and Blue Devils finished with identical records, and split the season series, but Duke remained in front of UNC in the standings by virtue of a better record against the No. 1 overall seed, Virginia Tech.

    UNC is eighth and will face Miami in its first game, Thursday at 1:30 p.m. Duke will play at 5 p.m. that same afternoon against an opponent to be determined by early-round games.

    With its double-bye as the No. 2 seed, N.C. State will open its quarterfinal quest Friday at 5 p.m. If Duke wins its Thursday game, the Blue Devils will face the Wolfpack.

    “It is a different backdrop, it is a different ball, and it is a different environment,” Duke coach Kara Lawson said after the loss to UNC. “There’s more urgency when you play in the postseason, because you get one chance. That is what we’re going to hopefully have to work ourselves through, not after the game but while the game is going on, because it’s gonna be the first ACC tournament for a lot of my players.”

    Georgia Tech (16-14) beat Miami on Sunday, giving the Yellow Jackets the No. 10 seed over No. 11 Virginia.

    The Hokies are the defending champions, while N.C. State won the previous three ACC women’s titles.

    See the full schedule below:

    ACC tournament schedule

    Wednesday’s first round

    Game 1 — No. 12 Clemson vs. No. 13 Boston College, 1 p.m. (ACCN)

    Game 2 — No. 10 Georgia Tech vs. No. 15 Pittsburgh, 3:30 p.m. (ACCN)

    Game 3 — No. 11 Virginia vs. No. 14 Wake Forest, 6:30 p.m. (ACCN)

    Thursday’s second round

    Game 4 — No. 5 Louisville vs. Game 1 winner, 11 a.m. (ACCN)

    Game 5 — No. 8 UNC vs. No. 9 Miami, 1:30 p.m. (ACCN)

    Game 6 — No. 7 Duke vs. Game 2 winner, 5 p.m. (ACCN)

    Game 7 — No. 6 Florida State vs. Game 3 winner, 7:30 p.m. (ACCN)

    Friday’s quarterfinals

    Game 8 — No. 4 Notre Dame vs. Game 4 winner, 11 a.m. (ACCN)

    Game 9 — No. 1 Virginia Tech vs. Game 5 winner, 1:30 p.m. (ACCN)

    Game 10 — No. 2 N.C. State vs. Game 6 winner, 5 p.m. (ACCN)

    Game 11 — No. 3 Syracuse vs. Game 7 winner, 7:30 p.m. (ACCN)

    Saturday’s semifinals

    Games 12 and 13 — Semifinals, noon and 2:30 p.m. (ACCN)

    Sunday’s final

    Game 14 — Championship, 1 p.m. (ESPN or ESPN2)

    This story was originally published March 3, 2024, 8:07 PM.

    Related stories from Raleigh News & Observer

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    Jadyn Watson-Fisher

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  • UNC upsets No. 6 NC State at home. Three takeaways from the Tar Heels’ win

    UNC upsets No. 6 NC State at home. Three takeaways from the Tar Heels’ win

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    Call it Carmichael Chaos, because that’s exactly what it felt like.

    North Carolina (18-9, 10-5 ACC) upset No. 6 N.C. State (23-4, 11-4 ACC), 80-70, on Thursday night in Chapel Hill, with almost everything going right for the Tar Heels. The victory extended UNC’s win streak to three games and snapped N.C. State’s four-game road win streak.

    “We locked in on Tuesday, and we were very clear with how we wanted to play,” UNC coach Courtney Banghart said. “I’m so proud of them. They played exactly how we wanted to play on both ends.”

    The Wolfpack led by as many as seven points early in the first quarter, but it never came back after North Carolina took a lead at the end of the period. The defense, which averaged 59.8 opponent points per game, couldn’t stop the Heels. UNC finished with its highest point total since defeating Virginia, 81-68, on Jan. 14.

    N.C. State, however, gave up at least 80 points for the second consecutive game, despite holding Notre Dame under 50 a week ago.

    “Maybe we read press clippings too much after the Notre Dame game. That’s all we heard, ‘Oh, man, what a great defensive job,’” head coach Wes Moore said. “Well, we’ve come back down to earth now.”

    North Carolina’s Alexandra Zelaya is fouled by N.C. State’s Aziaha James during the second half of the Tar Heels’ 80-70 win on Thursday, Feb. 22, 2024, at Carmichael Arena in Chapel Hill, N.C.
    North Carolina’s Alexandra Zelaya is fouled by N.C. State’s Aziaha James during the second half of the Tar Heels’ 80-70 win on Thursday, Feb. 22, 2024, at Carmichael Arena in Chapel Hill, N.C. Kaitlin McKeown kmckeown@newsobserver.com

    Five UNC players finished in double figures, led by Lexi Donarski with 23 points. Alyssa Ustby added 11 points and 13 rebounds for her 15th double-double of the season. Deja Kelly finished with just nine points but dished out eight assists.

    The Tar Heels moved the ball well, recording 17 total assists on 32 made shots. They went 32-63 from the field (50.8%) and 11-21 (52.4%) from the perimeter.

    North Carolina limited its turnovers as well. It finished with just seven, a far cry from the 24 it committed against Wake Forest.

    “It starts with us. It starts with defense. We’ve got to turn it up,” guard Saniya Rivers said. “We’ve got to figure out what we’re gonna do, because we don’t have that much time.”

    N.C. State finished with four players in double figures. Aziaha James led all scorers with 24 points. Mimi Collins went 11 points, 10 rebounds for her fourth double-double of the season. James and Madison Hayes both logged nine rebounds, just one off a double-double.

    N.C. State’s Aziaha James drives to the basket against North Carolina’s Maria Gakdeng and Indya Nivar during the second half of the Wolfpack’s 80-70 loss on Thursday, Feb. 22, 2024, at Carmichael Arena in Chapel Hill, N.C.
    N.C. State’s Aziaha James drives to the basket against North Carolina’s Maria Gakdeng and Indya Nivar during the second half of the Wolfpack’s 80-70 loss on Thursday, Feb. 22, 2024, at Carmichael Arena in Chapel Hill, N.C. Kaitlin McKeown kmckeown@newsobserver.com

    The Pack’s efficiency wasn’t perfect, but Moore feels fine about the offense. It recorded 17 second-chance points, logged 11 assists and got to the line. It was really just the defense.

    “Seventy points ought to win a game. Eighty-five should win a game,” Moore said. “We’re fine there. We gotta guard somebody.”

    Here are three takeaways from the game.

    Wolfpack sags in second quarter

    Both teams got out to a hot start, shooting 50% or better in the first quarter, but only one team continued its consistency from the field and broke away.

    N.C. State made just three shots in the second quarter, going 3 of 21 (14.3%) from the field and making one 3-pointer. The Wolfpack missed nine straight buckets, leading to a 4:18 scoring drought to end the half.

    North Carolina’s Alyssa Ustby pressures N.C. State’s Madison Hayes during the first half of the Tar Heels’ game on Thursday, Feb. 22, 2024, at Carmichael Arena in Chapel Hill, N.C.
    North Carolina’s Alyssa Ustby pressures N.C. State’s Madison Hayes during the first half of the Tar Heels’ game on Thursday, Feb. 22, 2024, at Carmichael Arena in Chapel Hill, N.C. Kaitlin McKeown kmckeown@newsobserver.com

    The Pack couldn’t stop the Tar Heels on the opposite end, especially in the paint. It gave up 12 points and it didn’t matter who was in the post. N.C. State allowed six points when River Baldwin played at the five and when she sat on the bench.

    UNC scored 8 of 17 in the second quarter and recorded five assists on its made shots. The Heels took a 42-35 lead into halftime.

    The Wolfpack cut the Carolina lead to just three points twice in the third, but its defensive struggles allowed the Heels to respond each time.

    “We had plenty of opportunities to overcome the second quarter, but we didn’t do it and they kept hitting shots,” Moore said. “They kept executing and getting shots. You’ve got to play better than that on the road in this league. It’s a tough league, and they’ve got a lot of talent over there, folks. They’ve got a lot of nice players, so give them credit.”

    Zelaya, Donarski come in clutch

    Alexandra Zelaya and Donarski deserve a lot of credit for the Tar Heels’ performance, hitting clutch threes in the win.

    Zelaya recorded a career-high 12 points, which doubles her previous season high. Donarski tied her season high of 23 points, hitting five 3-pointers.

    The duo combined for 9-of-16 shooting from the perimeter. Two of Zelaya’s shots came in the first quarter, cutting the Wolfpack lead to one possession. Then, Donarski made a corner 3 with 19 seconds left in the first half, giving the Tar Heels their first lead.

    North Carolina’s Lexi Donarski reacts after knocking down a three-point basket during the second half of the Tar Heels’ 80-70 win over N.C. State on Thursday, Feb. 22, 2024, at Carmichael Arena in Chapel Hill, N.C.
    North Carolina’s Lexi Donarski reacts after knocking down a three-point basket during the second half of the Tar Heels’ 80-70 win over N.C. State on Thursday, Feb. 22, 2024, at Carmichael Arena in Chapel Hill, N.C. Kaitlin McKeown kmckeown@newsobserver.com

    The duo added a flurry of shots in the second half, including two straight from Donarski to put North Carolina up 11.

    N.C. State knew it couldn’t leave Donarski open, but it did and the Tar Heels executed.

    Zelaya said her job is to “stay ready,” and that’s a role she takes seriously. It’s also a role the team encourages. Zelaya said Donarski and Anya Poole constantly encourage her to take shots.

    “It’s almost like they’re threatening me. It’s like, ‘You better shoot or else,’” Zelaya said. “But I’m telling you, that mindset of, ‘My girls have my back’ — I feel like I could fly at that moment.”

    Emotions run high

    Some North Carolina fans like to say N.C. State isn’t its rival; that’s Duke. The highly charged matchup on Thursday night seemed to disprove that notion.

    Officials gave Banghart a technical foul 5:24 into the second half.

    Moore emphatically motioned to the officials after a no-call on River Baldwin, his face nearly matching the color of his team-issued pullover.

    N.C. State head coach Wes Moore reacts on the sidelines during the first half of the Wolfpack’s game against North Carolina on Thursday, Feb. 22, 2024, at Carmichael Arena in Chapel Hill, N.C.
    N.C. State head coach Wes Moore reacts on the sidelines during the first half of the Wolfpack’s game against North Carolina on Thursday, Feb. 22, 2024, at Carmichael Arena in Chapel Hill, N.C. Kaitlin McKeown kmckeown@newsobserver.com

    Fans erupted in displeasure when the officials called Kelly for her third personal foul with 1:10 remaining in the first quarter.

    And there was plenty of shoving, hands in faces from both teams — not just normal defense — and stomping from the benches when the players didn’t agree with an official. Moore’s passion — and outspoken nature — continued throughout the game. He pounded his fist on the scorer’s table with 14.2 seconds in the third quarter after James picked up her second foul.

    It could be argued there’s a lot to play for. There is. But it felt like more than that and UNC came out on top.

    This story was originally published February 22, 2024, 11:16 PM.

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    Jadyn Watson-Fisher

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  • NC State basketball looking for a NET gain against Clemson, despite two recent losses

    NC State basketball looking for a NET gain against Clemson, despite two recent losses

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    N.C. State head coach Kevin Keatts speaks with his team during the first half of the Wolfpack’s game against Wake Forest on Saturday, Feb. 10, 2024, at Lawrence Joel Veterans Memorial Coliseum in Winston-Salem, N.C.

    N.C. State head coach Kevin Keatts speaks with his team during the first half of the Wolfpack’s game against Wake Forest on Saturday, Feb. 10, 2024, at Lawrence Joel Veterans Memorial Coliseum in Winston-Salem, N.C.

    kmckeown@newsobserver.com

    N.C. State basketball coach Kevin Keatts learned a hard lesson about the NET rankings and NCAA tournament rankings in 2019.

    The Wolfpack was 33rd in the NET used by the NCAA selection committee to help determine the field. With a win over Clemson in the ACC Tournament, the Pack appeared to have done enough.

    And then the Pack was left out. St. John’s, No. 73 in the NET, made it.

    N.C. State’s nonconference strength of schedule was ranked No. 353 that season, the worst in Division I. Strength of schedule also was factored into the NET formula, not that it mattered.

    The lesson learned by Keatts: schedule better or the NCAA committee can find a way to keep you out.

    Here’s another way: stand 80th in the NET rankings. That’s where the Wolfpack sits after an 83-79 loss Saturday at Wake Forest.

    Keatts noted Monday the Pack (15-9, 7-6 ACC) did not drop in the NET rankings despite being the loser. Wake Forest, the winner, moved down a few slots, he said.

    “There’s something a little flawed with that,” Keatts said.

    One thing the Wolfpack can not dodge is its 0-6 record against Quad-1 opponents. Put up an “oh-for” in that category and nothing else may not matter as far as making the NCAAs, and the Pack missed out on one Saturday at Wake.

    The NET factors in both offensive and defensive efficiency, with a margin of victory component that has many coaches, including Keatts, saying it encourages teams to run up the score on weaker opponents.

    “This thing has become a complete numbers game, and unfortunately I think it takes away from sportsmanship,” Keatts said. “Our games become ‘Hey, you’ve got to try to beat the heck out of people’ just to improve your NET.”

    Both Keatts and his players said Saturday that the NCAA Tournament remains the goal, that Quad-1 opportunities remain on the schedule. The Pack plays at Clemson on Saturday and later has games against North Carolina and Duke. Then, there’s the ACC Tournament.

    “We can still be there in March,” guard D.J. Horne said Saturday.

    After a two-game ACC losing streak, Keatts said this week’s practices would be “more about us.” The Pack, he said, needed some defensive work. The extra time also could give guards Jayden Taylor and Casey Morsell some rest time and perhaps a freshness that could help solve their shooting woes in the losses to Wake Forest and Pitt.

    Horne has been stringing together strong offensive games, the transfer guard putting up 20 or more points in his last four games. He had a season-high 31 points against Wake and is averaging 26.5 points over the four-game span.

    Keatts said after the Wake game that Horne was playing aggressively, with a “chip on his shoulder.”

    “He’s carried us the last three, four games,” Keatts said Monday. “He has played elite basketball. I do not know where we would be without him.”

    Taylor had 21 points in a win over Georgia Tech but did not score in a 67-64 loss to Pitt. He then was 3-of-15 from the field at Wake Forest, missing seven of eight 3-point shots.

    Morsell had seven points against the Deacons and is a combined 5-of-15 in the two losses.

    Guard Michael O’Connell, who has moved into the starting lineup, also has not been as effective. He had two points in each of the two losses and played just 11 minutes at Wake Forest.

    “We’ve got to get a few of our guys playing better, making some shots,” Keatts said.

    Clemson (16-7, 6-6 ACC) has won its last two after a one-point loss to Virginia. First, they went into Chapel Hill and knocked off North Carolina 80-76. The Tigers then shot 61% from the field in beating Syracuse, offsetting 21 turnovers in a 77-68 win

    The Pack lost three times to Clemson last season and had blowout defeats in both its last home game and in the ACC Tournament. The Pack went to the 2023 NCAA Tournament. The Tigers, who had a better ACC record than N.C. State last season plus the tournament win, were left out.

    In more than 40 years at The N&O, Chip Alexander has covered the N.C. State, UNC, Duke and East Carolina beats, and now is in his 15th season on the Carolina Hurricanes beat. Alexander, who has won numerous writing awards at the state and national level, covered the Hurricanes’ move to North Carolina in 1997 and was a part of The N&O’s coverage of the Canes’ 2006 Stanley Cup run.

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    Chip Alexander

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  • Wolfpack’s DJ Horne embraces the challenge in close loss to Wake Forest

    Wolfpack’s DJ Horne embraces the challenge in close loss to Wake Forest

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    If you had seen D.J. Horne standing outside the N.C. State locker room Saturday and didn’t know if the Wolfpack had won or lost, he wouldn’t have given off any clues.

    He wasn’t upset. He wasn’t complaining. There was a bit of disappointment in his eyes but otherwise Horne was composed, showing a degree of maturity that can be rare in some college athletes when questioned after a tough loss.

    The Pack was still winding down from an 83-79 loss to Wake Forest at Joel Coliseum. Horne had scored 31 points, but missed a shot with three seconds left that would have tied the score and likely led to overtime.

    Instead of any anger about the game, Horne used the word “fun” a few times.

    “We knew we beat them earlier in the season and we knew there would be a lot of energy coming from their end today,” the Wolfpack guard said. “As a player, you get up for these types of games. I have in my career and I felt like I was definitely up and prepared for this game.

    “I trust my work and when I saw shots going in, that’s always fun.”

    Horne saw 13 shots go in against the Deacons and four were 3-pointers. The Joel Coliseum crowd of 12,571, the vast majority Wake Forest fans and loud and engaged all game, groaned a bit when Horne went off.

    Some were more vocal than others. After Horne scored one first-half basket, he turned to the crowd and put his forefinger to his lips. The response was some jeers, and one Wake Forest fan stood to give Horne the middle finger.

    “Yeah, man, the crowd was talking to me a little bit, chirping,” Horne said, smiling. “I’m sure everybody knows why.”

    Horne didn’t say it but the “why” was a reference to him being reprimanded by the ACC for directing both middle fingers toward a referee late in the Pack’s 83-76 win over Wake Forest in Raleigh.

    “I definitely wanted to come out here and match anything they were giving me, whether that was on the court or in the stands,” Horne said.

    Horne had 19 points in the first half as the Pack took a 45-39 lead, bouncing around the floor, enjoying himself. With Mohamed Diarra coming off the bench and playing with some fire and energy, the Wolfpack ran the floor, rebounded well and generally contained a team coming off 29-point ACC demolitions of Syracuse and Georgia Tech.

    The Deacs at times had Cameron Hildreth, a 6-4 junior, matched up against Horne in the second half although the Deacs threw in some double teams, looking to make Horne give up the ball.

    Horne and Hildreth both were called for technical fouls late in the first half after some cross words. And their chirping continued after halftime, not that Horne made a big issue of it

    “He’s a good defender and we definitely had that going,” Horne said. “With a good defender, I feel like he’s definitely trying to get in my head and try to slow me down a little on offense.”

    After Andrew Carr’s inside score over Diarra with 17 seconds left in regulation pushed Wake ahead 81-79, Wake coach Steve Forbes called a timeout. Wake Forest, which had been called for four fouls in the second half, used one with 13 seconds remaining when Boopie Miller fouled Michael O’Connell.

    When the Pack got the ball in-bounds, everyone in the building knew who would get it.

    Would he take a 3 for the win or just look to score and tie it?

    “We were just looking for the first available shot, trying to get a quick one just in case we did miss it, so we could get the rebound and we’d have a second opportunity,” Horne said

    “It wasn’t like we were going for a specific shot.”

    Horne took the ball on the right side, made a move to get past Hildreth, and took a jumper from near the foul line with Deacs center Efron Reid coming out at him. The shot was well short, the ball grazing the front of the rim.

    “They made him take a tough shot,” NCSU coach Kevin Keatts said.

    So ended something of a scoring duel between Horne and Wake’s Hunter Sallis, who had a game-high 33 points and made two free throws with three seconds left to end it.

    Horne and the Wolfpack (15-9, 7-6 ACC) will have a week to mull it over and analyze it. The next game is at Clemson on Saturday, the ACC path a hard one for State.

    “I do believe this game can help us in the next one,” Horne said. “It was a very close game and came down to the wire. I felt like when we go back and watch the film, we’ll see a lot of mental mistakes where we kind of lost focus, where we can clean things up.”

    Is the NCAA tournament still a realistic goal?

    “Yes, it is,” Horne said. “We’ve got a lot of Quad-1 opportunities left. It’s going to be tough but I definitely think we can do it.”

    In more than 40 years at The N&O, Chip Alexander has covered the N.C. State, UNC, Duke and East Carolina beats, and now is in his 15th season on the Carolina Hurricanes beat. Alexander, who has won numerous writing awards at the state and national level, covered the Hurricanes’ move to North Carolina in 1997 and was a part of The N&O’s coverage of the Canes’ 2006 Stanley Cup run.

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    Chip Alexander

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