11:23 PM ET
DURHAM,
N.C. --
North Carolina rebounded from a loss to its most despised rival by, well, rebounding.
Brice Johnson had 18 points and 21 rebounds, and the eighth-ranked Tar Heels dominated the glass and held on to beat No. 17
Duke 76-72 on
Saturday night and lock up the top seed in the
Atlantic Coast Conference tournament. North Carolina never trailed and rode its inside game, building a 64-29 rebounding advantage while outscoring Duke 42-20 in the paint. The Tar Heels had established a frustrating tendency to turn over late leads in the past two seasons, but they hung on against Duke to claim a reward. North Carolina's seniors got their first win at Duke as the Tar Heels worked the
Blue Devils on the boards to take the regular-season
ACC title. "We dominated the paint like we needed to. And we didn't go away from it," senior guard
Marcus Paige said. "We kept going to the paint, kept going to the paint and we were able to hold off their runs. They made a couple of runs where they made a lot of 3s, but that's what Duke does. We were able to stay composed in a hostile environment and show what this team is really made of."
Kennedy Meeks added 12 points and 14 rebounds,
Joel Berry II scored seven of his 12 in the final 5 minutes and
Paige hit four free throws in the final 10 seconds to help the Tar Heels (25-6, 14-4) earn their first win on
Duke's floor since
2012. "After all we've been through the last four years, it feels great to be able to walk off this court and say we won the ACC,"
Johnson said.
Grayson Allen scored 29 points while
Luke Kennard added 20 for the Blue Devils (22-9, 11-7), who have the
No. 5 seed in the league tournament. They gave themselves a chance to win by hitting 13
3-pointers. "That's what we do -- 3s and free throws are kind of how we have to score,'' coach
Mike Krzyzewski said. "We've got to do what we have to do, and it's won 22 games, it's made us a very good and tough team."
Allen and Kennard hit them in the final 20 seconds, with Kennard's making it 72-70 with 9.3 seconds left. Paige hit two free throws with 8.8 seconds left. After
Marshall Plumlee dunked home
Allen's missed layup with 2.8 seconds left to make it 74-72, Paige iced it with two more foul shots with 1.5 seconds. "On the second trip to the line, I knew it was over," Paige said. "And it started to sink in that after all we've been through, we finally got over the hump and became an elite team and made a run that elite teams do. Man, it felt good."
Justin Jackson added 13 points and Paige finished with 11 for the Tar Heels, who earned just their second victory at
Cameron Indoor Stadium since the
Tyler Hansbrough-Danny Green-led group went 4-for-4 here from 2006-09, and their first since 2012. Duke escaped the
Smith Center last month with a 74-73 win after the Tar Heels -- who never could put the Blue Devils away in that one, and paid dearly for it -- had a shot blocked on the game's final possession to end it.
For a while, it looked like North Carolina would decide
Round 2 much earlier, twice pushing its lead into double figures in the opening half while completely owning the paint -- holding a plus-20 rebounding margin at halftime and outscoring Duke 26-8 in the paint. But the Tar Heels missed their first 11 shots of the second half against the
2-3 zone the Blue Devils ran to mitigate that interior disadvantage. That gave Duke a chance to come back.
HE SAID IT Johnson, when told that he had 21 rebounds -- or, eight fewer than the entire Blue Devils team: "Oh, so I almost outrebounded them.
Cool." INJURY REPORT Duke announced before the game that senior forward
Amile Jefferson would miss the rest of the season with a broken right foot on the advice of team doctors.
The school says it will seek a medical hardship waiver that would allow
Jefferson to return next year. Jefferson averaged 11.4 points and
10.3 rebounds in the nine games he played before suffering
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- published: 06 Mar 2016
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