The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Defending champ North Carolina tops Lipscomb

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By Aaron Beard CHARLOTTE, N.C. » Kenny Williams was a bit player in North Carolina’s run to the national title game in 2016, then watched last season from the sideline due to a knee injury as the Tar Heels won a sixth NCAA championsh­ip without him.

They need him to be every bit as good as he was Friday to reach a third straight Final Four.

Williams scored 18 points to help UNC beat Lipscomb 84-66 in the first round of the NCAA tourney, a strong start for a guy carrying a heavier load this time in a small-ball lineup.

“I was excited all week about coming to play my first game with heavy minutes in the NCAA Tournament,” Williams said. “This is what you look forward to growing up, so I was a little bit more excited about that.”

UNC (26-10), the No. 2 seed in the West Region, won its 12th NCAA game in 13 tries going back to the 2016 tournament that ended with a title-game loss to Villanova. Williams was a freshman that year, buried on the bench behind veteran talent and playing just 8 minutes with four appearance­s in those six games.

He was set for a bigger role last year before suffering a torn meniscus in his right knee in February 2017. Williams needed surgery and didn’t play again, though the Tar Heels went on to beat Gonzaga in Glendale, Arizona, for the title.

On Friday, in his first major NCAA Tournament minutes, he looked right at home. He made 6 of 8 shots and 4 of 5 3-pointers in 28 minutes, helping the Tar Heels gradually take control on the way to shooting 52 percent with nine made 3s.

“When we execute our offense, we’re getting guys open and we’re setting solid screens, and guys are able to come off in a rhythm and knock it down,” senior point guard Joel Berry said. “Today Kenny didn’t force any shots. Any time somebody drove he was ready to shoot.”

The Tar Heels next play seventh-seeded Texas A&M.

Playing in their first NCAA tourney, the 15thseeded Bisons (23-10) shot well at the start and held an early six-point edge. They led 33-31 with fewer than 4 minutes left in the first half before North Carolina went on a 12-1 run to lead 43-34 by the break.

UNC increased that margin to 18 by midway through the second half.

“It was going to take a magical performanc­e from someone like us to beat someone like them,” Lipscomb coach Casey Alexander said. “We didn’t get that, so we were fighting uphill all afternoon, it felt like. I thought our guys really competed.” BIG PICTURE Lipscomb: The Bisons beat Florida Gulf Coast in the Atlantic Sun Conference Tournament. Alexander — roaming the sideline as a head coach in the tournament for the first time — said he wanted his players to savor the experience even as they faced a daunting challenge. They hit from outside early to stay in it, but missed their last nine 3s before halftime as UNC took control.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? North Carolina’s Theo Pinson (1) drives against Lipscomb’s Eli Pepper.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS North Carolina’s Theo Pinson (1) drives against Lipscomb’s Eli Pepper.

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