Cameron Classic! Duke Edges Carolina 71-70
DURHAM, N.C. (AP) -- Rashad McCants drove for a layup in the final minute and brought North Carolina within a point. The basket was significant for another reason -- it was the only fast break points of the game for either team. "We were fortunate that we were able to get back and not commit too many turnovers where they had runs," Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski said. "We committed turnovers, but they didn't have runs where they had the numerical advantage." By keeping the game almost entirely in the halfcourt, the Blue Devils and their vaunted defense simply were too much for North Carolina. J.J. Redick scored 18 points, freshman DeMarcus Nelson added 16 and Duke forced 23 turnovers to hold off the second-ranked Tar Heels 71-70 Wednesday night.
North Carolina squandered a chance to win in the final seconds, never getting a shot off after inbounding with 18 seconds left. David Noel dribbled the ball out of bounds just as the buzzer sounded and the Cameron Crazies raced onto the court, celebrating the Blue Devils' 15th victory in the past 18 games in this Tobacco Road rivalry. "It seemed like a long time, and I was just hoping that that clock went down before they got a shot off," Nelson said. "We played some great defense, and we made them try to do something that they weren't ready for." Ewing finished with 15 points and helped the Blue Devils (18-2, 8-2) move into a first-place tie with North Carolina in the Atlantic Coast Conference. Wake Forest trails both by one-half game. Duke (No. 8 ESPN/USA Today; No. 7 AP) finished 21-of-22 from the free throw line and made 10 3-pointers. All but one of the Blue Devils' baskets in the second half were 3s -- only a layup by Nelson with about 10 minutes left came from inside the arc.
Instead of running with the Tar Heels, Duke held the ball on many possessions, milking time and letting Redick, Nelson or Daniel Ewing drive in the waning seconds of the shot clock. The strategy worked perfectly. "They slowed us down when they got the job done on offense," North Carolina coach Roy Williams said. "I mean, they spread the floor and controlled the tempo that way. And in their pressure defense, there's no question that bothered us, too." Sean May had 23 points and 18 rebounds for the Tar Heels (19-3, 8-2), who couldn't overcome their shoddy ball control. Point guard Raymond Felton had eight turnovers and May added five, and the top assist team in Division I finished with only 10, 11 below its average. They were held to their lowest point total since also scoring 70 in a victory at Indiana in December.
"They're good, they're solid," May said. "They don't run many traps or scrambles, they're just solid man-to-man pressure. They play better D at home just because of the fans the atmosphere they bring. They're almost as solid as you can get." Felton scored 13 points and freshman Marvin Williams had 12 for North Carolina. But Nelson was the better first-year player in this one. He had a career-high four steals and came up big offensively when it counted, swishing two 3-pointers in a span of about 90 seconds in the second half to help Duke take a 49-42 lead. "It was obvious that DeMarcus just played at a level, or even a couple of levels, higher than he's played," Krzyzewski said. "We really needed that. To win a game like this, at times you need something that's different from what you normally do. DeMarcus did that."


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