USA TODAY International Edition

Freshman duo help Tar Heels make a run

Duke phenoms get a lot of press, but Coby White and Nassir Little are stepping up for UNC.

- In Sports

Duke isn’t the only team with fabulous freshmen.

The country has been transfixed by Zion Williamson and R.J. Barrett, and understand­ably so. They’re incredible, exciting players, and they might just carry Duke to the national title.

Unless North Carolina’s Coby White and Nassir Little beat them to it.

The Tar Heels made the Sweet 16 for the 36th time Sunday, and White and Little played big roles in getting them there. White broke out of his shooting slump from the first game in the NCAA tournament to score 17 against Washington, and his early flurry of threes helped North Carolina sidestep the Huskies’ suffocating zone.

Little seemed to come up with baskets anytime the Tar Heels needed them, giving North Carolina a lift as it rallied against Iona on Friday and then keeping Washington at bay Sunday. There was one stretch in the second half when Little had 13 points and the entire Huskies team had … nine.

“He’s being aggressive. If Nas is aggressive, that takes us to another level,” senior guard Kenny Williams said. “For him to outscore the whole team for a stretch is big, and that was all a product of him being aggressive. There’s no X’s and O’s to it. When Nas is aggressive, he gets good results.”

Little and White were hardly unknown quantities coming into the NCAA tournament. White broke the

North Carolina state high school scoring record — no small thing, considerin­g some of the players who’ve grown up there — and earned ACC Freshman of the Week honors five times, tied with Williamson for most in the season.

Little was MVP of the McDonald’s All-American Game and was fourth in scoring for the Tar Heels despite coming off the bench.

But both were overshadow­ed by Williamson’s otherworld­liness, to say nothing of his shoe drama. Little also was slowed after spraining his ankle against Virginia on Feb. 11. Though he did not miss a game, coach Roy Williams could see the effect the injury had on his game.

“He was really coming along really, really well. And then he got his ankle hurt, and then he got hit in the face — in the eye, excuse me. And those kind of things set him back quite a bit,” Roy Williams said. “But the last two games he’s been something else for us.”

Little’s speed and athleticis­m make him almost impossible to defend. You think you have him contained out on the wing and, next thing you know, he’s by the basket. He can shoot the three or drive to the basket, and he can usually be counted on for a handful of rebounds.

Little’s energy is infectious, too, lifting the rest of the Tar Heels when he shifts into that extra gear.

White was uncharacte­ristically off against Iona. He couldn’t get anything to fall and never looked as if he was comfortabl­e with the flow of the game. But he was locked in from the opening tip Sunday, and there was one 70-second stretch early in the game when he and Little showed just what a force they can be.

North Carolina led by just two when Little scored on a short jumper in the paint. White then made two threes in quick succession to stretch the Tar Heels’ lead to double digits. When the Huskies pared the lead back to six, White answered with another 3-pointer.

White would finish with 17 points and was 4-for-7 from 3-point range.

“We just tell each other to keep shooting because you know you’ll knock them down,” Kenny Williams said. “(White) didn’t have the best game shooting-wise (against Iona). I told him, ‘Today they’ll go in.’ And you guys saw that.”

Duke’s freshmen are terrific; no one’s questionin­g that. But North Carolina’s are pretty good, too.

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 ?? KEVIN JAIRAJ/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? North Carolina guard Coby White, who averages 16.1 points, scored 27 total in the Tar Heels’ first two NCAA games.
KEVIN JAIRAJ/USA TODAY SPORTS North Carolina guard Coby White, who averages 16.1 points, scored 27 total in the Tar Heels’ first two NCAA games.
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 ?? RICK OSENTOSKI/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? North Carolina forward Nassir Little, dunking Sunday against Washington, has 39 points in two NCAA games.
RICK OSENTOSKI/USA TODAY SPORTS North Carolina forward Nassir Little, dunking Sunday against Washington, has 39 points in two NCAA games.

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