Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Contrastin­g styles

Tar Heels want a fast pace, Orange likes it slow

- By STEPHEN HAWKINS

Houston — North Carolina likes to run, and Syracuse prefers to walk.

These two teams that do things very differentl­y are also very familiar with each other, having already played twice this season.

Except this isn’t another ACC game. The conference rivals, with their veteran coaches who have both been here multiple times before, are playing each other in the Final Four.

While the stage and the stadium are much bigger, with a spot in the national championsh­ip game on the line, don’t expect Roy Williams’ Tar Heels (32-6) or Jim Boeheim’s Orange (23-13) to start altering what they do in the national semifinal game Saturday night.

“We just try to do what we do better. That’s all,” said Boeheim, whose team and its 2-3 zone made it to Houston as a No. 10 seed. “It’s a little too late in the year to be experiment­ing.”

North Carolina, the only No. 1 seed in this Final Four and the ACC’s highest-scoring team at 83 points a game, won both earlier matchups against the Orange this season.

Williams isn’t sure he agrees with the old premise brought up constantly this week about the

challenge of beating the same team three times in the same season.

“If you’re better than me, you can probably beat me 20 times,” Williams said, before adding a caveat about playing the Orange again. “The Syracuse games, the games went right down to the wire.”

Then Williams reminded everyone of 1985 when Villanova, a No. 8 seed, beat defending national champion Georgetown in the title game after the Wildcats lost twice against their Big East rivals in the regular season — 57-50 and 52-50.

In the Jan. 9 game under Syracuse’s dome, the Orange was tied at halftime and led by as many as six points after that. But Isaiah Hicks scored 19 of his 21 points after the break, and the Tar Heels hit 12 of 13 from the field in the closing minutes for an 84-73 victory.

In the Feb. 29 rematch at Chapel Hill, the Orange had cut a second-half deficit of 15 points to one with 2 minutes 23 seconds left but never went back ahead in a 75-70 loss.

“I think it gives you some confidence going into this game” said Orange guard Trevor Cooney, who had a season-high 27 points in the first game against Carolina. “I mean, we can play with these guys. If we play the way we’ve been playing defensivel­y, I think we’ll be fine.”

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Syracuse coach Jim Boeheim hopes to be smiling after the game.
GETTY IMAGES Syracuse coach Jim Boeheim hopes to be smiling after the game.
 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? North Carolina's Brice Johnson signs autographs during a practice session Friday at NRG Stadium in Houston.
ASSOCIATED PRESS North Carolina's Brice Johnson signs autographs during a practice session Friday at NRG Stadium in Houston.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States