By Jeff White (jwhite@virginia.edu)
VirginiaSports.com
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. – As he walked off the court Saturday at the Dean E. Smith Center, University of Virginia head coach Tony Bennett stopped, looked up into the stands and waved to Roy Williams, who returned the gesture.
Williams, who retired last year after a phenomenal run as the University of North Carolina’s head coach, enjoyed the afternoon much more than Bennett did. The Tar Heels, who are in their first season under Hubert Davis, led for the final 33 minutes and 39 seconds in a 74-58 victory over the Cavaliers.
The final score didn’t fully reflect the dominance of UNC (11-4 overall, 3-1 ACC), which had dropped seven straight in the series. With 2:16 to play, Armando Bacot made two free throws to push the Heels’ lead to 25 points, after which UVA (9-6, 3-2) scored the game’s final nine points.
When UNC had the basketball, Virginia’s initial defense was often solid. Time and again, though, the Heels extended their possessions. Led by Bacot, a 6-10 post player who grew up about 70 miles from Charlottesville in Richmond, Carolina turned its 11 offensive rebounds into 14 second-chance points.
“He kind of imposed his will on the offensive glass and in the post,” UVA guard Armaan Franklin said.
Bacot finished with career highs in points (29) and rebounds (21). Nine of those boards came at the offensive end. Not since Wake Forest’s Tim Duncan on Feb. 22, 1997, had a player recorded at least 20 points and 20 rebounds against Virginia.
“He certainly had his way,” Bennett said of Bacot. “If you’re out of position or you can’t get a quality body on him and just try to get him off the glass, he’s gonna make you pay, and he certainly did. Sometimes it was because we were maybe covering for a breakdown, trying to block a shot or out of position, but their frontcourt really took it to us.”
Brady Manek, a 6-foot-9 graduate transfer from Oklahoma, added 19 points for UNC. Manek hit five 3-pointers and teammate Caleb Love, a 6-foot-4 sophomore, made four. For the game, Carolina shot 44 percent from beyond the arc and 47.5 percent overall against Virginia’s Pack Line defense.
“I’ve said before, Coach Bennett is one of the best coaches in basketball: not just college, but NBA, international, whatever it is,” said Davis, a former UNC star. “And his teams, they’re great individual defenders, but they’ve also good team defenders, and it’s very difficult to get good shots against them. In order to get consistent good shots against them, you have to have spacing, balance and movement.”
The Heels had all of that Saturday. For 25 minutes, it was a tight game, “and I feel like we did a good job of staying connected,” Virginia guard Reece Beekman said.
But UNC scored 10 points in the final 4:30 of the first half and led 31-25 at the break. Carolina extended its lead to 11 early in the second half and wasn’t seriously threatened thereafter.
“You got to come into these games with an edge and [be] alert,” Bennett said, “and I didn’t think we had that. I told the guys, ‘You’ve got to keep your head up.’ But I said,
‘You’ve got to open up your ears and your mind about what just happened.’ We did not have two great days of prep. I thought we were not as alert and as sharp as we needed to be, and when you play against a quality opponent like Carolina, when you have a breakdown those teams find a way to expose it right away.”
The Hoos’ breakdowns on defense bothered Bennett more than did the long 3-pointers Love hit.
“I thought we yielded, and that was frustrating, but we’ll try to grow from it and learn from it,” Bennett said. “But you look at Bacot and Manek, that frontcourt, and they had their way.”
