Final Mar 13
BGSU 67 11.5 o149.0
AKR 96 -11.5 u149.0
Final Mar 13
DUQ 59 2.0 o130.0
SBON 64 -2.0 u130.0
Final Mar 13
BUT 57 12.0 o145.5
SJU 78 -12.0 u145.5
Final Mar 13
IND 59 2.0 o142.0
ORE 72 -2.0 u142.0
Final Mar 13
GT 70 23.0 o144.5
DUKE 78 -23.0 u144.5
Final Mar 13
ISU 92 -2.5 o146.0
BYU 96 2.5 u146.0
Final Mar 13
USF 68 3.0 o144.5
WICH 73 -3.0 u144.5
Final Mar 13
ARK 80 4.5 o147.0
MISS 83 -4.5 u147.0
Final OT Mar 13
OHIO 85 -2.5 o158.5
TOL 90 2.5 u158.5
Final Mar 13
DAV 75 4.0 o142.0
SLU 83 -4.0 u142.0
Final Mar 13
ALST 84 1.0 o137.5
TXSO 79 -1.0 u137.5
Final Mar 13
UNC 68 -6.0 o148.0
WAKE 59 6.0 u148.0
Final Mar 13
MARQ 89 -2.5 o145.0
XAV 87 2.5 u145.0
Final Mar 13
NW 63 8.5 o141.5
WIS 70 -8.5 u141.5
Final Mar 13
CHAR 59 10.0 o144.5
FAU 64 -10.0 u144.5
Final Mar 13
SJSU 52 16.0 o150.5
UNM 63 -16.0 u150.5
Final Mar 13
COLO 68 17.5 o127.5
HOU 77 -17.5 u127.5
Final 2OT Mar 13
TEX 94 6.0 o140.5
TXAM 89 -6.0 u140.5
Final Mar 13
EMU 75 4.5 o149.5
M-OH 81 -4.5 u149.5
Final Mar 13
FOR 81 6.5 o144.0
GW 88 -6.5 u144.0
Final Mar 13
BSU 62 -1.5 o134.5
SDSU 52 1.5 u134.5
Final Mar 13
MAN 65 2.5 o144.0
IONA 77 -2.5 u144.0
Final Mar 13
MORG 91 3.5 o161.5
HOW 90 -3.5 u161.5
Final Mar 13
IOWA 94 10.0 o164.5
ILL 106 -10.0 u164.5
Final Mar 13
WMU 66 10.5 o143.5
KENT 73 -10.5 u143.5
Final Mar 13
NMSU 77 1.0 o136.5
KENN 80 -1.0 u136.5
Final Mar 13
TLSA 75 3.0 o143.5
TEM 71 -3.0 u143.5
Final 2OT Mar 13
DEP 81 13.0 o143.5
CREI 85 -13.0 u143.5
Final Mar 13
STAN 73 10.5 o144.0
LOU 75 -10.5 u144.0
Final Mar 13
BAY 74 6.5 o142.0
TTU 76 -6.5 u142.0
Final Mar 13
LAS 70 12.5 o144.0
JOES 75 -12.5 u144.0
Final Mar 13
MSST 73 3.0 o158.5
MIZZ 85 -3.0 u158.5
Final Mar 13
NCCU 79 1.0 o153.0
DSU 77 -1.0 u153.0
Final Mar 13
MSM 62 4.5 o127.0
MRST 58 -4.5 u127.0
Final Mar 13
ALCN 60 3.0 o134.0
COOK 69 -3.0 u134.0
Final 2OT Mar 13
LT 75 2.0 o142.0
MTU 77 -2.0 u142.0
Final Mar 13
USC 71 10.5 o151.0
PUR 76 -10.5 u151.0
Final Mar 13
NEV 59 5.0 o138.0
CSU 67 -5.0 u138.0
Final Mar 13
UCSB 78 3.5 o151.5
CSN 72 -3.5 u151.5
Final Mar 13
SEA 69 -6.0 o133.5
AC 63 6.0 u133.5
Final Mar 13
KU 77 3.0 o153.0
ARIZ 88 -3.0 u153.0
Final Mar 13
SMU 54 7.0 o142.5
CLEM 57 -7.0 u142.5
Final Mar 13
UTSA 65 5.0 o147.0
ECU 70 -5.0 u147.0
Final Mar 13
VILL 56 7.0 o135.0
CONN 73 -7.0 u135.0
Final Mar 13
OKLA 84 6.5 o161.5
UK 85 -6.5 u161.5
Final Mar 13
CP 96 4.5 o164.0
UCRV 83 -4.5 u164.0
Final Mar 13
UNLV 58 8.0 o142.0
USU 70 -8.0 u142.0
Final Mar 13
TST 51 5.5 o128.0
CBU 55 -5.5 u128.0
North Carolina 5th ACC21-12
Clemson 3rd ACC26-5

North Carolina @ Clemson preview

Littlejohn Coliseum

Last Meeting ( Feb 6, 2024 ) Clemson 80, North Carolina 76

North Carolina is aware that the trajectory of its season is causing some alarm, and another matchup looms large for the Tar Heels when they visit Clemson on Monday night.

North Carolina (14-10, 7-5 Atlantic Coast Conference) has endured a bumpy stretch, but the Tar Heels are coming off Saturday's 67-66 home victory against Pitt.

"I think you should play like that every day, every possession, whether it's shootaround, practice, game," North Carolina coach Hubert Davis said. "It's not a sense of urgency. It's a sense of emergency."

Clemson (19-5, 11-2) will be just two days removed from conquering No. 2 Duke, with Saturday night's 77-71 victory ending the country's longest winning streak at 16 games.

"Our guys mustered up the spirit and energy," Tigers coach Brad Brownell said. "... A big one for us and another one coming on Monday."

Fans stormed the court postgame to celebrate the outcome against Duke. The Tigers are hoping that the enthusiasm expressed from the crowd can be replicated throughout Monday night's game.

Clemson will be going for a trifecta of sorts on its home court against college basketball's bluebloods. The Tigers have toppled Kentucky and Duke at Littlejohn Coliseum.

"This place is just special when it's like this," Brownell said. "Obviously, it has been like this several times this year now and I'm very thankful for that. I know our players are. It certainly affects the outcome of the game."

The Tigers covet these situations and are determined to rise to the occasion.

"Knowing we're built for it," said guard Chase Hunter, who had 14 points and seven rebounds against Duke. "We've been in a lot of close games, big games. Making sure we stay confident."

Two of North Carolina's ACC victories are one-point decisions. Other tight games haven't gone the Tar Heels' way.

"We feel like we've been in that position so many times, and we've been on the wrong side of it," North Carolina guard Elliot Cadeau said. "So it feels good to be on the good side of it now."

The Tar Heels felt better about their ball-handling after committing six turnovers Saturday. Now it's a chance for the Tar Heels to generate momentum.

"It's something we can use to get ourselves rolling," forward Ven-Allen Lubin said. "Especially since we have a quick turnaround for Clemson on Monday, it gets us on the right path."

North Carolina guard RJ Davis, who has led the team in scoring in 11 games this season, has 2,505 career points to rank seventh in ACC history.

Clemson showed the versatility of its lineup by shooting 63.4 percent on 2-point attempts against Duke. Viktor Lakhin had 22 points on 9-of-12 shooting.

Ian Schieffelin, who'll go into the North Carolina game seeking his 10th double-double of the season, has 28 double-digit rebounding outings in his career.

"We've got an older group of guys, who've been through a lot of games," Hunter said. "It shows out there when we play. We play with a lot of grit, a lot of toughness."

Other than defeating San Francisco and Penn State on Nov. 25 and 26, the Saturday-to-Monday turnaround will mark the shortest time between games this season for Clemson.

--Field Level Media

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