The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

ACC Tournament deep and wide open

- By Ralph D. Russo

NEW YORK » In an era of bloated conference­s, the first day of most league tournament­s is reserved for bottom- of-the- standings teams that are hoping for a longshot championsh­ip run to an automatic NCAA Tournament bid, but are usually just playing out the string or angling for the NIT.

At the Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament this week, however, the most interestin­g team in the field might just be the 10th seed.

Notre Dame comes to Brooklyn with an 18-10 record (8-10 ACC), but a team that looked as if it could compete with anybody in the country in 16 games (12-4) when preseason AllAmerica­n Bonzie Colson was healthy enough to play.

What are the Fighting Irish’s prospects for an atlarge bid to the NCAAs?

“It’s an interestin­g question,” Notre Dame coach Mike Brey said Saturday after the Fighting Irish lost at No. 1 Virginia by five. “We are probably one of the harder ones to analyze. Now, we have to do some work in Brooklyn to put ourselves on the docket. But we’re in there. They have to look at us.”

The Cavaliers, the unanimous No. 1 team in the latest Top 25 poll, are also the top seed in the ACC tournament after running away with the conference by four games and coming a couple of points short of a perfect league record.

Coach Tony Bennett’s team enters the tournament looking to win it for the second time in five seasons and with an NCAA No. 1 seed all but locked up.

Maybe the most intriguing thing about Virginia this week will be the status of guard Kyle Guy, who left the Notre Dame game with an injury and returned to the sideline wearing a knee brace.

“I really don’t knowwhat, but they’ll do some tests and hopefully it’s OK,” Bennett said Saturday.

Virginia, second-seeded Duke, third-seeded Miami and fourth-seeded Clemson don’t play in Brooklyn until Thursday, having earned a double bye. Duke is also a contender for a No. 1 seed in the NCAAs. The Blue Devils remained at No. 5 in the poll.

Tuesday’s opening day triple bill features Notre Dame facing No. 14 seed Wake Forest in the nightcap and No. 11 Syracuse, another team on the NCAA bubble, against winless Pittsburgh.

Colson broke his foot in late December and missed 15 games. Without him, the Irish went 6-9 with a sevengame losing streak. During that time, point guard Matt Farrell also missed games with an ankle injury.

Notre Dame sits at No. 65 in the RPI and has a 2-8 record against Quadrant 1 teams, with wins against Wichita State in the Maui Invitation­al and at Syracuse.

Colson had 24 points and 15 rebounds against Virginia.

“Our numbers are good, and one thing I’m very happy that the committee saw today is Bonzie Colson is obviously back,” Brey said. “He is back andwith him we have a chance, but we need to get going in Brooklyn. I hope we can give thema few more wins so that we are really debated in that room.”

Things to knowabout the ACC Tournament, which is in the second of a two-year stay in New York before returning to North Carolina next year.

TAR HEELS’ NEXT SHOT: North Carolina (229) went from the possibilit­y of claiming the No. 2 seed by winning at Duke — and earning a double-round bye into the quarterfin­als — to sliding into the No. 6 seed and opening play Wednesday against either Syracuse or Wake Forest.

The Tar Heels, who are ranked No. 12 in the poll, won the tournament in 2016, but fell to rival Duke in last year’s semifinals, though that team went on to win the program’s sixth NCAA championsh­ip. “Brooklyn’s another chance for us to get rolling going into the tournament,” senior Theo Pinson said after Saturday night’s loss at Duke’s Cameron Indoor Stadium.

PACK ON A ROLL: North Carolina State (21-10) had been picked to finish 12th in the league under firstyear coach Kevin Keatts, but the Wolfpack stunned everyone. There was a win against then-No. 2 Arizona in the Battle 4 Atlantis tournament in the Bahamas, along with a win against Duke in January.

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