Tagged: Basketball RSS

  • shwineka 3:02 pm on March 4, 2010 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: ari gold, Basketball, , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,   

    Carolina Has Opportunity to Dethrone Devils 

    I was more excited for last night’s game between Maryland and Duke thanI’d ever been for a non-UNC basketball game. Honestly, I daydreamed about it during work.

    As much as Greivis Vasquez makes me want to throw my TV, I was just waiting for he and the Terps to stick it to the Dookies and have their rude fans hurl insults that would make Ari Gold cringe.

    And much to my delight, that all happened. Every last part of it. Vasquez hit essentially the game-winner and I distinctly heard chants of “F*** You, Scheyer.”

    The best part of last night? The result put the Gothic Goonies in a tie with UMD for first place in the conference, and both teams have one game left on their schedules — Duke’s last contest is UNC. That means the Heels have the chance to save their season on Saturday by denying Duke the regular season conference title, assuming that Maryland beats Virginia.

    What better way to cap an end-of-season win streak than crushing the hopes and dreams of your arch rival? The Heels haven’t exactly dominated in the past two games, but their gritty efforts will serve as good practice for playing Duke, which usually results in a gritty game anyway. They seem to be understanding team effort much better as well. John Henson pointed this out after the Miami game.

    Playing in Cameron will be tough, but Greg Paulus will tell you it’s also tough to beat UNC when they’re hyped up for a game in Durham.  And adding the prospect of dethroning the devils has me (and likely the Tar Heels) daydreaming again already.

     
  • shwineka 5:28 pm on January 27, 2010 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , Basketball, , , , , , , , , , , ,   

    Guess Who’s Back? 

    (photos by Ethan Hyman of the N&O)

    Well, Ed Davis was back first of all, but more so, it was Carolina. I guess Roy makes a mean bologna sandwich, because last night the young Heels won on the road and had to come back in the second half, no less.

    Mimicking the formula of  UNC teams in recent years, the Heels went back and forth with a feisty over-performing opponent in the first half, and then pulled away to a double digit win. It’s both a blessing and a curse that UNC seems to get every team’s best shot. A curse for obvious reasons, and a blessing because of the past achievements that merit every team’s best shot.

    This far in the season we’ve seen more of the curse part.

    But not in Raleigh last night. The boys didn’t rattle at the raucous crowd, and I’m sure it was loud in there. As I’ve said before, it’s the sole purpose in a State fan’s life to beat Carolina.

    So sorry to disappoint.

    The point is things are looking up if the Heels continue to play at this speed. From Deon Thompson’s slick power-step-to-jam drive to John Henson’s weak-side blocks, things were just clicking. I wanted to say the block party had returned, but it was actually only Henson doing any blocking in his seven minutes of PT. Oh, don’t worry, I’ll repeat that stat below.

    Takeaways

    • The bench is getting shorter. All five starters played 28 minutes or more last night, and only Dexter Strickland and Travis Wear got double digit minutes off the bench.
    • Emergence of John Henson? Henson looked good in his limited time on the floor. He notched 2 pts, 2 rebs and 3 blocks. It’s nice watching this guy develop throughout the season. (I’m talking about his skills obviously —  kid is a beanpole.)
    • D-FENCE. UNC held NCSU scoreless for an 8-minute stretch in the second half. They did it lots of ways, too, whether it was Henson’s blocks or even Thompson creating steals at mid-court.
    • Good shots. UNC has been crushing the field-goal percentage category, including from three. Last night they shot 50.9% from the floor, 42.6% from downtown. Now if they’d only work on that 59.1% from the line.

    Superlatives

    • Blockmeister – Well, the only guy who got any blocks, John Henson. But especially for his two in one defensive possession.
    • Move that made you go “OHHHHH!” - Deon Thompson for that sick drive into jam. I will try to find some video of this, or make my own. I got DVR!
    • Not superstitious, just a little stitious – Roy Williams. Roy might think that talking about his ties makes us dadgum idiots, but did you see him wearing any stripes last night? All I’m saying is that our analysis shows us to be 0-3 in the ACC when he does. Just saying.
     
  • shwineka 4:22 pm on January 25, 2010 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , Basketball, , , , ,   

    UNC vs. N.C. State 

    NCSU looked pretty good against Duke last week. Can they do the same to the Heels?

     
  • shwineka 12:23 pm on January 22, 2010 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: 2008 Final Four, , , Basketball, , , , , , , , , ,   

    Analysis of Roy’s Ties 

    So we all know Roy is plotting a way to revive this team, and we know he will figure something out. Let’s not forget last year’s team started 0-2 in the ACC. We’ll leave the strategy to him, but we’re going to give him that little extra “umph” and tell him what to wear around his neck to achieve victory.

    After analyzing (Tie_Tracker_09_10) Roy’s neckware thus far in the season, here are the cold hard facts:

    Tie Patterns

    1. When Roy wears a striped tie, UNC is 2-3 and the net margin of final score is 23 points less than opponents.
    2. When Roy wears a paisley tie, UNC is 3-1 and the net of final score has UNC outscoring opponents by 58.
    3. When wearing something else (dots or lines), Carolina is 2-0 and outscored opponents by a combined 35.

    Ties By Color

    1. When wearing a Carolina blue and white tie, UNC is 3-2 , margin +17.
    2. Single color: 1-0 by 14 pts (Virginia Tech)
    3. Ties with gold in them: 2-0 by +58 pts
    4. Ties with navy or dark blue in them: 3-1, margin +58
    5. FedEx Kinko’s Colors: 0-1, margin -19

    Sling

    1. In the solid black sling, UNC is 2-1 with a net margin of +12 points.
    2. In the blue-covered sling, UNC is 4-2 with a net margin of +91 points

    Pocket Square

    1. When Roy wears a pocket square, UNC is 6-4, margin +61
    2. No pocket square: 6-2, margin +105

    Micellaneous

    1. Against the six power conferences, UNC is 2-4 when Roy wears a tie, and 2-2 when he was in the sling.
    2. In the ACC, UNC is 0-3 when Roy wears a striped tie!
    3. Outside the Power 6, UNC’s only loss came when Roy wore that stylish sweater vest and the NC logo white longsleeve — a pity.
    4. When Roy wears a “famous” tie — thus far the ‘09 Championship tie and the ‘08 Final Four tie — UNC is 0-2, margin -21 pts.
    5. When Roy wore that Carolina blue plaid shirt, the team was 2-0, with one of those wins being against Michigan State.
    6. When Roy wears a shirt with some kind of UNC logo on it, Carolina is 2-1 with points margin +50.

    Conclusion

    Well, no more stripes and no more “famous” ties for Ol’ Roy. And as you readers voted, please, please, please get rid of that FedEx Kinko’s tie.

    Yes, in order to give Carolina the best chance to win, it appears Roy is going to have to seriously compromise his legendary fashion sense. The best combination appears to be wearing a solid gold tie with some kind of line or dot pattern, no pocket square and a blue plaid shirt.

    Sorry, Roy, but the numbers don’t lie.

     
    • lulu 12:58 pm on January 24, 2010 Permalink

      Document, document, document. Unbelievable statistics. I seriously hope Coach Williams is linked to the truth. Surely, in reviewing the tapes and the results of the tie-tracker, coach williams will have all he needs to put together the best strategy ever for THIS team. It is not last years championship team, but there is talent. The right combination of clothing, coaching and team desire may pull us up by the Jordan shoestrings. Maybe they need stripes, dots, or……

  • shwineka 12:08 pm on January 20, 2010 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , Basketball, Benn Wineka, , , , , , , , , grant hill, Hokies, , , , , , , , , , throwback, , UVa, , ,   

    ACC Power Rankings – Uni-edition – Jan. 20, 2010 

    We polled all the Rafters bloggers to see who is looking good in the ACC this week. If you check this poll throughout the season, you’ll notice a certain consistency at the No. 1 position. It’s not our job to tout other teams who might have had a better week than Carolina, it’s our job to tell you why, week after week, UNC is the best team in the conference. If you know a reason why the Heels are No. 1, send it to us at editors@raftersblog.com.

    Our little disclaimer above takes a very literal turn this week, as yet again, the Heels are No. 1!

    You might have been worried that we wouldn’t be able to justify it this time. Wrong. Have a little faith. You can still talk junk to Clemson, even after that 19-point drubbing. They wear purple and orange. Child, please. Here’s a web album of all the inferior unis that attempt to challenge Carolina in the conference.

    1. North Carolina (1-2) – No one can touch the blue set on the road. This is easily the best uniform in the ACC, if not the country. The argyle up the side adds class, and somehow allows UNC to wear a color that could easily be used wrong with style. The white ones ain’t bad either, and then there’s the sick retros — all Jordan brand by the way. We could go on.

    2. Florida State (2-2) – At first glance, you might thing FSU is rockin’ a boring, maroon set with white and gold stripes down the side. But look again, that’s a feather going the length of the jersey and onto the shorts. Nice touch.

    3. Virginia (3-0) - UVa gets a little bump because of their record, but their unis ain’t hurtin. Pretty good meld of classic and contemporary design. For the amount of crap some teams put on uniforms now, this isn’t half bad.

    4. Virginia Tech (1-2) - We love the “Hokies” on the front, even if it is just a castrated turkey, but really hate the not-as-nice-as-Texas’ orange.

    5. Georgia Tech (3-2) - GT is here at No. 5 because they, too, are wearing throwbacks this year. Problem is, they don’t look that much different than their current jerseys. Not to mention these aren’t throwbacks to a championship team, they’re throwbacks to an Elite 8 team.

    6. Wake Forest (2-2) – Lumped in here with Ga. Tech because, well, they wear the same colors, and they’re colors that remind us of an old lady in church.

    7. Boston College (2-3) - BC climbs out of the basement of the rankings this week, not because they have sweet jerseys or a good record, but because there’s nothing to like or dislike about those unis.

    8. N.C. State (1-3) - Now we get to the bottom feeders of the league. State lands at No. 8 because even their own fans dislike their court wear. As Rafters blogger Benn Wineka put it, they’re  ”too bland to even be ‘classic.’”

    9. Miami (1-4) - The ‘Canes have been losing and looking bad while doing it. They rock the epitome of useless stripes down the side of their uniforms. They should take note from their fellow Floridians FSU and accent those jerseys with something less cliche.

    10. Clemson (3-2) - There’s so much potential to use a sweet paw print logo on Clemson’s sets, but instead they decide to waste it by wearing purple and orange. Let it sink in……………..purple…………..and orange.

    11. Maryland (2-1) - Maryland is another with squandered potential. The yellow/black checker from the Maryland state flag could be so cool. It’s almost used well on the home whites, but Benn reminded us that their yellows are unforgivable.

    12. Duke (3-1) - We’ve been waiting to put the Durhamites down here for a while, and this week’s theme provided the perfect opportunity. You remember when Duke had some pretty classic-looking jerseys and the rivalry match-ups with UNC just reeked of tradition?

    Per usual, the Dukies decide to ruin everything. In homage to their “famed” Gothic architecture, they are wearing what looks like a circuit board on their backs this year. And for a while now, they’ve switched the white out of their away blues (like Grant Hill is wearing above) to black, and “accented” that with black shoes. Black shoes, guys, really? Guess they’ve come to embrace their role, which is of course,  pure evil.

     
  • shwineka 11:41 am on January 14, 2010 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , Basketball, , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,   

    UNC Falls to…….Clemson? 

    I’m bummed today, sad even. Something that rarely happens is really bringing me down.

    In falling to Clemson Wednesday, UNC added an “L”  to a, well, I guess you can call it a “rivalry.” But for the most part, it isn’t one. After last night, the series stands at 122 wins for UNC, 20 for Clemson. Carolina has, and will always hold the trump card over its brothers to the south.

    So why does this loss hurt so much?

    Is it the fact that even though both teams held similar national rankings, Clemson students stormed the court? Andy Katz feels it was justifed. Though I might (actually certainly do) disagree.

    Is it because the Roy Williams era has more or less consisted of Williams spoiling us with Final Fours and National Championships, and we just can’t take this average team?

    Are we just suffering Tyler Hansbrough withdrawal?

    In my opinion it’s a combination. Starting with the withdrawal part.

    For the previous four years, Heels fans watched arguably the hardest-working  player to ever wear the baby blue. Hustle has been the standard. Players fed off that, and tried to match intensity with their floor leader. (Who certainly led by example, not charisma.)

    This year that’s absent.

    Roy’s teams need that general to run the floor and get after loose balls and just exemplify the Carolina philosophy. The whole system is about “getting it” and frankly it appears this team just doesn’t “get it” yet.

    Roy looked drained throughout the Clemson game. He used an old Dean Smith tactic, putting in the “blue team” and pulling the five on the floor to sit them down and tell them why they were sucking, for lack of a better word. Even the mid-half line change didn’t rouse the Heels.

    Commentator Jay Bilas even said something to the effect of, “Roy Williams is getting older with every turnover.” Last night UNC coughed it up 26 times.

    So back to last night’s game’s lingering sting.  When you have players that buy into the Carolina system, you will typically not lose by 20. If everyone’s playing tough that doesn’t happen. Sure you might lose a game, but it’s not going to be the lopsided affair we witnessed last night.

    To top that off, it wasn’t to an eventual national championship team, like the previous biggest loss for Roy at Carolina, Kansas. It was to Clemson.

    Clemson, folks. Clemson.

    The team that has NEVER won in Chapel hill, and the team that hasn’t beaten Carolina since I was in high school in 2004. The other losses this year have all had their reasons to be justified. Three of them were to top teams and the other, although a stretch, could be called a trap game. But now the eternal optimist in me is fighting really hard with the pessimist. It could possibly be a long season.

    So go ahead and be sad today. It’s OK. Carolina lost to Clemson. And if you’re sad every time that happens, you’ll live a mostly happy existence.

    (photo by Robert Willet of the N & O)

     
  • shwineka 5:30 pm on January 11, 2010 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , Basketball, , , , , Kenan Stadium, , , , , , , , , ,   

    UNC Beats Va. Tech 78-64 

    Last night was a fantastic one for Tar Heels fans everywhere. Conference play began, Marcus Ginyard returned, Roy Williams was his sharply dressed self again – sans sling – and, oh yeah, the Heels pulled out a W.

    From the onset of the game it appeared it would be more of the same we’ve come to expect from this young team. Some poor decisions and ummmm, we’ll call it “inefficient layup production,” had Carolina trailing by four at the half.

    Then the impostors who we’ve been developing a certain familiarity with left and the real, full-potential UNC team came back out for the second half. The 3’s fell quickly and were ultimately the difference in the game. Five 3-pointers in the second half and a 14-point win, you do the math.

    Maybe it was their obnoxious football fans who showed up at Kenan the first year Va. Tech joined the ACC, but for some reason I really dislike that team, and especially losing to them. Nice job, boys.

    Last night was a good, character-building win. UNC built a lead, and kept it for the first time against a power-conference foe.

    Takeaways


    • WILL GRAVES! - Thirteen points on 5-10 shooting including trey, treys would have been enough, but Graves decided to add six boards and two blocks just for good measure. If UNC can get that kind of production from Graves it would cause opponents to have to guard the perimeter more honestly and not crash down on our bigs, opening up the offense a bit. Last night can only be a good sign.
    • John Henson - Henson is starting to understand his role a bit better. He had as many blocks last night as points (2) and notched one of every other statistical category (Rebs, Asts, Stls — and TOs). He only played 10 minutes, so to me that shows he’s getting after the ball and making better decisions based on what situation he’s in. Now if only he could add 20 pounds, that’d be great. Love ya, John, but sometimes I worry you might break.
    • Holding the lead - As I said above, Carolina built a lead in the second half — like they have in many games — but this time they held on to it. Tech never got back in the game after going down 15, and the win was never in doubt after that point.

    Superlatives

    • Not as “Fierce” as Roy Award - To Seth Greenberg for his failed attempt at lookin’ sharp.

    • Mr. Consistency - Mr. “Easy” Ed Davis had another double double (20 pts, 11 rebs) and chipped in four blocks, including a couple of monster pins to the backboard. Now if he’d only cut down on those four TOs…..
    • Perpetually Most-Improved Player - Dexter Strickland might not be a consistent, go-to scorer yet, but his decision making is constantly getting better. Dex had one TO in 21 minutes last night.

    (Photos by Robert Willet of the N & O)

     
  • shwineka 12:04 pm on January 6, 2010 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , Arizona, Auburn, Basketball, , , Cleveland State, , , , , Georgia, , , Harvard, , Maine, , Marquette, , , , , , Northern Iowa, , , Power Rankings, , , , Seton Hall, South Florida, St. Joseph's, Stanford, , , , , , , , , , , , Wisconsin,   

    ACC Power Rankings – Jan. 6, 2010 

    We polled all the Rafters bloggers to see who is looking good in the ACC this week. If you check this poll throughout the season, you’ll notice a certain consistency at the No. 1 position. It’s not our job to tout other teams who might have had a better week than Carolina, it’s our job to tell you why, week after week, UNC is the best team in the conference.

    In the inaugural edition of the ACC Power Rankings,  we have a couple of teams with a sizable advantage, being that they’ve already played a conference game. Or is that disadvantage? Feel free to discuss.

    1. North Carolina (0-0) – The Heels might have dropped a game to College of Charleston, but their other losses are to the best of the best in the NCAA, with all three being to teams in the Top 5. The CoC loss also came without two starters (Marcus Ginyard and Will Graves), on the road, in overtime and after the Cougars had to hit a 3-pointer with two seconds left just to get to OT. Not too bad for a rebuilding year.

    2. Florida State (1-0) – Already beat a conference foe, and to top it off, it was a ranked conference foe (Ga. Tech).

    3. Duke (1-0) – You could say the same thing about the Dukies as you can about FSU, but as we’ve said before, a victory over Clemson is overrated. Plus they lost their only true road game of the season at Wisconsin, which we all know is the sole reason the ACC lost the Big 10/ACC challenge for the first time EVER. Way to go, Duke.

    4. Wake Forest (1-0) – A pretty decisive win over N.C. State by this young team is a good sign.

    5. Georgia Tech (0-1) – Gritted out their loss to a good FSU team. They are another really young squad who will only get better over the course of the season. We’re overlooking the rivalry loss to Georgia. 

    6. Clemson (0-1) – Only this high because they’ve played an ACC game already. Still not sold on Clemson without their outside shooters from last year. As despicable as Terrence Oglesby was, he was still a pretty good, yet awkward shot. Trevor Booker is good, but he can’t carry them.

    7. Virginia (0-0) – Nice wins over Cleveland State and UAB coupled with three losses by a combined nine points says this team is going to be frustrating for its fans. Those three losses (Penn State, Auburn and Stanford) are all to teams who are more or less evenly matched with Virginia. They also have a more lopsided loss to South Florida.  UVA might slide from this spot, but right now we’re going to give them a nod as a team whose “almost clicking.”

    8. Virginia Tech (0-0) – Wins over Penn State and Seton Hall look OK, but are they good enough for a NCAA berth? Not so sure. 

    9. Miami (0-1) – Losing to Boston College was miserable, but it was a one-point game on the road in conference. They can come back.

    10. North Carolina State (0-1) – The Wolfpack has had some tough losses already this season, including a heartbreaker Sunday night against Florida and a two-point loss to Arizona. They do have a win over Marquette, but the losses to the dismal SEC and Pac – 10 tells us that things might not be looking up in Raleigh just yet.

    11. Maryland (0-0) - That was a nice game against William & Mary, eh? I’m just elated the bar I was in would only play your pathetic excuse for a game while the Heels were destroying Albany. Have to admit though, seeing Greivis Vasquez go down is almost as much fun as imitating Jon Scheyer, which I did during many times during that night of drinking. UMD has also lost all the games they needed to win to make a statement pre-conference with their best win coming against a down-year Indiana squad.

    12. Boston College (1-0) – Why rank a team who has actually won a conference game this low? Five reasons: St. Joseph’s, Northern Iowa, Harvard (AGAIN!), Rhode Island and Maine. And as one Rafters blogger put it, “they are just the maroon-headed step child of the ACC.”


     
  • shwineka 3:51 pm on January 5, 2010 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: Basketball, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,   

    Postgame: UNC – College of Charleston 

    (photo by N&O’s Robert Willet)

    I could sit here and rant about hustle and turnovers and defense. I could complain that UNC didn’t have two of its starters — and upperclassman starters at that. I could even blame it on Roy, saying he should have had them better prepared for the game.

    But that would be silly because he basically did that for me.

    Maybe it’s because it’s already the next day and I’ve had time to calm down, but I think this loss will help the Heels down the road. My advice to the Heels:

    Kill, baby, kill!

    How did I arrive at this conclusion?

    First an aside: Larry Drew’s comments after the game:

    “Yeah, we talked. We always talk. There’s something with this team – we’ve got to stop talking at a point, and start playing. We’ve got to start walking the talk. … I feel like I’ve heard everything — from the players, from the coaches. It’s getting to a point where we’ve just got to start doing what we say we’re going to do.”

    Coach Williams said this team was about as low as it could get right now. Do you agree with that?

    “Wouldn’t you? Yeah. I don’t think right now… We’ve just got to play better.”

    Is there something different going on during these road games?

    “We’ve just got to play better. That’s all it comes down to. I mean, I missed a ton of shots out there. We’ve just got to make shots and make stops. [We’ve] got to manage the game better – that’s on me.”

    It sounds to me like the team is feeling what the Tar Heel faithful have been feeling throughout these last few games. And frankly it’s just what LD said — they’ve got to play better.

    More than that, the team needs to mature into a full-blown killing machine.

    Young teams always have this problem. They manage to build a lead, then watch it slip away as they try to hold on until time expires. What Easy Ed, LD, Deon, Dex, Big Z, Will, JWatts, T. Wear, D. Wear, Marcus, Henson and Leslie McDonald need to do is go for the freaking throat. Don’t let up intensity just because you’ve got a lead. Hell, even the Dukies are beating people by 40.

    Rutgers closed it down to four near the end. In the team’s best wins this season (Ohio State and Michigan State) UNC has squandered double digit leads, even being up 17 in the second half to MSU before they brought it to single digits. We’re not going to talk about that OSU game, though Larry Drew that’s when I started to love you.

    So back to this loss being a good thing. All of those wins-that-could-have-easily-turned-to-losses have had us Heels fans on edge over the past several weeks. Before College of Charleston, it was easy to chalk up the “L”s to playing Top 5 talent. Now there’s no excuses. UNC needs to amp up for the conference schedule, and this loss might just be the kick in the ass they need. The potential that many saw at the beginning of the season is still there.

    They’ve just simply got to play meaner.

     
  • shwineka 10:33 am on December 16, 2009 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , Basketball, Biscuit Briefs, , Bojangles, , , , , DB Camps, , , Dewey Burke, , EYE Program, , , Gerald Henderson, , , , , Sam Wineka, Sheldon Williams, Sky High Basketball, , , , ,   

    Want some gravy with that?:The Rafters' Interview with Dewey "Biscuits" Burke 

    Rafters blogger Sam Wineka recently caught up with former Heels guard Dewey Burke, a.k.a. “Biscuits.” For those of you that might not know (and who are you?) Bojangles offers patrons of Carolina games two sausage biscuits for $1.00 in instances when UNC scores 100 points in the Dean Smith Center. Mr. Burke had a knack for pushing the Heels over the century mark and chatted with The Rafters about it.

    Rafters: Tell us a little about what you’re up to. Are you in Philly? How are DBCamps and Sky High Basketball coming along?

    DB: I am currently living just outside of Philly, where I grew up. I am building two different business that I have started. One is a basketball training company. Think personal trainer – but 100 percent basketball-specific. I do everything on the court. In the summer time I run camps for ages 7-18, and then in the Fall and Spring, I do individual and small group private instruction. Working on fundamentals, skills on both sides of the ball, shooting form, etc. Basically I evaluate the needs of the young players, and create a plan for improvement. So far things are going well and the business is growing nicely.

    The summer camps have really been fun to do because I’ve been able to have my teammates come up and speak for the kids. North Carolina Basketball carries such prestige around the country, so when you can bring in a Tyler Hansbrough, Wayne Ellington, Marcus Ginyard or Bobby Frasor – the kids really enjoy it and are mesmerized by what these guys can do. (http://www.DBcamps.com & http://www.skyhighbasketball.com)

    My second company is a small education firm. We specialize in after-school tutoring for students from low-income families. Our services are completely free to our students and their families – all of our funding comes from the state government. Through and educational grant my company has been approved to provide this supplemental education to students in desperate need of extra academic help. It is named the EYE Program, and EYE stands for Empowering Youth through Education. You can find out more here: http://www.EYEpartners.org.

    Rafters: I was in the Dean Dome the first time you pushed Carolina over 100 and secured your nickname, “Biscuits,” by hitting a trey near the end of regulation. I have to say that in my four years at Carolina, it was definitely in the Top 5 loudest moments I heard the Smith Center. What was that moment like?

    DB: There were a lot of special memories in the Smith Center, and that was a great one. Playing for Carolina is such a special gift, and the fans are the biggest part of that. The love we receive day in and day out is truly a blessing. It’s very, very unique to be a part of something that literally millions of people are so passionate about. I’ve always had a tremendous relationship with the Carolina fans, and I have so much love for the people of Chapel Hill. Even now, two years out, every time I drive up Franklin Street I get goose bumps. Chapel Hill will always be home for me. I have a lot of special feelings in my heart for that place. I think, too, that some fans see some of themselves in me. I’m not 6’8’’ and I wasn’t recruited out of high school to any big time schools. I just decided that playing for Carolina was what I was meant to do – nothing and no one was going to stand in the way of that.

    Rafters: While we’re talking about great moments, what was your favorite as a Carolina player?

    DB: My favorite moment was beating Duke in Cameron Indoor the first time (in 2006). The class of 2009 went on to do it 4 times in a row, but the first time was an incredible experience. JJ Redick and Sheldon’s last home game, senior night for them, they were # 1 – we had freshmen, etc etc. We just played so tough that night, and David Noel was the greatest leader you could ask for. The day before at practice, there was a sense and a feeling in the air that we were going to go over there and win. Coach talked about how there were very, very few people outside out locker room that believed we could win that game…but that was ok because we knew. And we were not just saying that. We came in so confident that night, we weren’t intimidate or worried at all. We knew they couldn’t handle us that night. It was an amazing experience.

    Rafters: In the infamous Duke game when Gerald Henderson broke Tyler Hansbrough’s nose, you were one of the guys holding Tyler back. I have to ask, did you kind of (maybe deep down) just want to let him go?

    DB: No. And that’s the truth. My immediate thought when he got up was “he’s going to kill someone.” All I was thinking was keeping him away from anyone else, because I didn’t want him to get suspended. It was the last game of the regular season. All we had worked for all year was about to be upon us (NCAA Tourney), and there was no way we were going into it without our best player. Truly, all I was thinking was keeping him calm. If you watch the clips, you can see me telling him “try to breathe, stay cool.” He was very upset. He took more beatings than anyone in college basketball since Shaq, and he never reacted. He would always say, I won’t care about it unless someone makes my face bleed – then it’s too far. Well, Gerald and Duke took it too far – but we took the high road. We won that game, the ACC a few times, and a National Title. That’s what matters.

    Rafters: Follow up: are you in fact, the only person capable of stopping Psycho T?

    DB: Well we both know that no one can stop him on the court… Off it, he’s a really a gentle giant. He’s quiet and reserved, and until you get to know him and get into his inner circle – he won’t say a whole lot. The real Tyler Hansbrough is a regular friend like anyone else. He laughs, jokes and enjoys life. He’s no different. He’s an intensely loyal friend and great example of what a Tar Heel player is supposed to be about. On the court he’s the most focused and driven person I’ve ever seen. Off the court, he’s just a regular guy and a great friend.

    Rafters: What do you think about this year’s team? I think all Carolina fans expect their team to go really far.  Are your expectations higher or lower than a Final Four?

    DB: This year’s team is going to very fun to watch grow. We have so much talent. We have everything you could want: speed, size, length, athleticism. Maybe all we are missing is a knock-down shooter, but Will Graves can fill that role if he wants to. We will be in every game because we are further along defensively than most teams are at this time. Marcus is the main reason for that. He’s so good on defense, people just don’t even begin to understand. Defense is so much more than not letting your man score. It’s about communication, and positioning, and timing and toughness and grit. Marcus is the best we’ve had in a long time.

    My feeling is, people better beat us now. Come March, when Coach Williams has 90-100 practices with this team, look out. They’ll get the offensive end figured out and continue to get better defensively. We will learn to run better and better and get easier baskets. We are so young that all we can do is improve. We can be a force by March, and barring injuries – we will be.

    ————————————————————————————————————————

    You can listen to more of Dewey’s take on UNC basketball on his podcast, Biscuit Briefs.

     
c
compose new post
j
next post/next comment
k
previous post/previous comment
r
reply
e
edit
o
show/hide comments
t
go to top
l
go to login
h
show/hide help
esc
cancel
7 visitors online now
7 guests, 0 members
Max visitors today: 9 at 04:44 am GMT+5
This month: 10 at 09-01-2010 06:03 pm GMT+5
This year: 120 at 02-24-2010 09:35 am GMT+5
All time: 120 at 02-24-2010 09:35 am GMT+5