The Columbus Dispatch

Tar Heels players defy trends, stick around and win

- By Adam Kilgore

More than 700 college basketball players transferre­d last season, emblematic of the impermanen­ce riddling the sport.

The trend, powered by less restrictiv­e rules for graduates and a generation­al shift in the desire for immediate playing time and scoring responsibi­lity, has infiltrate­d most every major program in America during the last half-decade. It has been labeled, by many coaches, an epidemic.

North Carolina is the only team to return to the Final Four from last season, and that might not be its most impressive deed. In a climate of rampant player movement, they have not seen a player transfer out since Larry Drew II in February 2011, which might as well be a lifetime of seasons ago.

Only two other teams in this NCAA Tournament — Maryland and • South Carolina (26-10) vs. Gonzaga (36-1), 6:09 p.m. • North Carolina (31-7) vs. Oregon (33-5), 8:49 p.m. • Semifinal winners, 9 p.m. CBS (Channel 10)

Princeton — had not experience­d a player transferri­ng in the past two offseasons, according to data compiled by Nicole Auerbach of USA Today. Only three other schools — Temple, Furman and William & Mary — belonged to that group in all of Division I.

North Carolina’s continuity starts with the approach of coach Roy Williams, an acolyte of Dean Smith and relentless proponent of prioritizi­ng the needs of the program over the individual. The Tar Heels have kept players even through the looming potential of NCAA sanctions, which came in the wake of allegation­s of widespread academic fraud throughout the athletic department.

“It’s just knowing that you’re part of something bigger, knowing how special this program is,” senior guard Nate Britt said. “If things don’t go exactly the way you planned, you know you came to be a part of something bigger. That’s why people don’t transfer out.”

The approach begins before players arrive on campus. Williams and his assistants set realistic expectatio­ns, which leads to less frustratio­n and likely weeds out players more bent on building an NBA resume than winning in college.

“It has to do with how (Williams) starts the recruiting process,” UNC assistant C.B. McGrath said. “He doesn’t guarantee them anything. We don’t go in and say, ‘You’re going to start. You’re going to be our leading scorer. We’re going to get you the ball.’ He doesn’t say any of that.

“Do you want to be part of a program where you’re going to win a lot and have a chance to play? Those are the kids we usually get. We don’t sugarcoat and tell a kid maybe what he wants to hear or maybe what another school is telling them.”

The bluntness might harm North Carolina on one level; the Tar Heels have not landed a oneand-done-to-the-NBA player since 2007. But the lack of freshmen stars has not prevented them from remaining at the top of college basketball. Juniors and seniors comprise this season’s starting lineup.

“Everybody falls in love with the campus,” junior Justin Jackson said. “Everybody falls in love with the program. It’s a family. Sometimes, it’s hard to leave a family, even when you know you could possibly go one-and-done.”

McGrath said players stay at North Carolina despite adversity, mostly, for the simple reason that they are happy. Williams is folksy and team-oriented, but he relates to his players even as he nears the end of his 29th season as a head coach, at age 66.

“It’s so corny it’s ridiculous, but I tell them all the time that the teams that win, the players will get the awards and the rewards,” Williams said. “And I truly believe that.

“Today’s youngster is different than it was 10 years ago or 29 years ago, for sure. But you can get some kids to buy into that and believe in it.”

That's why the Tar Heels are heading back to the Final Four loaded with familiarit­y and having never seen a teammate leave for another school, two of the sport’s rarest experience­s.

 ?? NEWS & OBSERVER] [ROBERT WILLETT/RALEIGH ?? Nate Britt, left, is part of North Carolina’s starting lineup made up entirely of juniors and seniors that has led the Tar Heels to a repeat appearance in the Final Four.
NEWS & OBSERVER] [ROBERT WILLETT/RALEIGH Nate Britt, left, is part of North Carolina’s starting lineup made up entirely of juniors and seniors that has led the Tar Heels to a repeat appearance in the Final Four.

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