Daily Press (Sunday)

Love’s shooting barrage lifts UNC in battle of bluebloods

- By Eddie Pells

PHILADELPH­IA — Turns out, the best explanatio­n for the shooting spree Caleb Love put on for North Carolina was also the simplest.

It’s gotta be the shoes. Reinvigora­ted by a change of sneakers at halftime, Love went crazy for the Tar Heels on Friday night. He made the game-tying and go-ahead 3-pointers 37 seconds apart to lift Carolina to a 73-66 victory over UCLA in a matchup of power programs.

Love scored 27 of his career-high 30 points in the second half, part of a barrage that included NBA-range 3s and no-look layups. His go-ahead 3 came with 1:03 left. He also hit a pair of free throws with 7.8 seconds remaining that put away the fourthseed­ed Bruins for good.

The idea to change shoes came from the team’s director of operations, Eric Hoots, after Love shot 1 for 8 in the first half. He shot 10 for 16 in the second.

“I’m going to give him a raise,” coach Hubert Davis said of his right-hand man.

North Carolina is one win away from its 21st Final Four, which would improve on the record it already holds. Its next game is today against Saint Peter’s in a first-of-its-kind 8-vs.-15 matchup in the Elite Eight. The 15th-seeded Peacocks topped Purdue 67-64 earlier Friday.

Every bit as tantalizin­g, the Tar Heels and their archrival Duke, which played Arkansas on Saturday night, are each one win away from a matchup at the Final Four in New Orleans next weekend. The teams have never played each other in the NCAA Tournament.

As great as the Saint Peter’s run has been, and as great as both games in Philly were on Friday night, nobody stood out more over the five hours of hoops at the Wells Fargo Center — the same place Carolina punched its ticket for the 2016 Final Four — than Love.

The sophomore managed only five points in last week’s win over Baylor, but had one point more than that during the decisive 37 seconds. His go-ahead 3 marked the last of 14 lead changes in a game that was tied eight times.

“One hot player can send you home,” UCLA guard Jules Barnard said.

Last year, that hot player was Jalen Suggs, the Gonzaga guard who banked in a shot from near halfcourt to end UCLA’s season in a national semifinal. This time, it was Love, who scored one fewer point than what Bernard (16) and Tyger Campbell (15) put up combined.

This was a nip-and-tuck affair all the way. Neither team led by more than eight. In their secondroun­d win over Baylor, the Tar Heels built a 25-point advantage, only to squander it, then pull things together and pull out the game in overtime.

That game got dicey once Brady Manek got tossed out for throwing an inadverten­t elbow. Manek played all but two minutes Friday and finished with 13 points.

Armando Bacot had 14 points and 15 rebounds for North Carolina, the most crucial of which came when the Richmond native

tipped in a miss by R.J. Davis with 15 seconds left to build Carolina’s lead to five points — the biggest it had been to that point.

But this game, especially the second half, belonged to Love, who started heating up as soon as he came out of the locker room with a fresh pair of Jordans. He scored seven of North Carolina’s first 12 points of the half, then, with the game tied at 44, scored 10 in a row for the Tar Heels.

Those included a pair of twisting, practicall­y no-look layups and an NBA-range 3-pointer. He followed that with a heat-check 3-point try under pressure. It missed, but that didn’t stop him.

Trailing 64-61 with 2 minutes left, the Tar Heels fed to Love, who missed again — this time on a pull-up 3 that would have tied the score. Bacot hustled to get the rebound just before it went out

of bounds, and Carolina fed Love once more. That one went in at the 1:40 mark. The Tar Heels didn’t trail again.

“I never lose my confidence level,” Love said. “Coach (Hubert) Davis and all my teammates always tell me that. I feel like that’s the best part of my game, not to lose my confidence.”

Injury update

UCLA’s Jaime Jaquez Jr. played all but two minutes despite the ankle sprain he incurred last week against Saint Mary’s. He had 10 points and five rebounds, but shot 1 for 11 in the second half.

Record-tying

This was North Carolina’s 129th victory in the tournament, equaling Kentucky for the all-time lead.

 ?? MATT ROURKE/AP ?? North Carolina guard Caleb Love goes up for a shot against UCLA guard Jules Bernard during Friday night’s East Region semifinal in Philadelph­ia. Love scored 27 of his career-high 30 points in the second half.
MATT ROURKE/AP North Carolina guard Caleb Love goes up for a shot against UCLA guard Jules Bernard during Friday night’s East Region semifinal in Philadelph­ia. Love scored 27 of his career-high 30 points in the second half.

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