CHAPEL HILL, N.C. — Roy Williams had promised there would be times when his North Carolina team looked ready to make a serious run at defending the national championship.
And then there would be days like Sunday, when the Tar Heels commit "silly" turnovers, don't put opponents away and lack intensity.
It's why Williams was so irked by the time the Tar Heels had finished a tougher-than-should've-been 88-77 win over Valparaiso. He saw his team blow much of a 24-point second-half lead and look a little shaky after a promising start to the season. And with his team preparing for a tough stretch that begins with a trip to New York to play No. 16 Ohio State on Thursday in the 2K Sports Classic, Williams wasn't shy in letting his team know it has to play much better.
"We have no chance in New York if we play this kind of basketball," Williams said flatly.
It just wasn't coachspeak, either. Sure, the Tar Heels (3-0) won each game by double digits this week, but their performance against the Crusaders (0-2) didn't offer a lot to feel good about. They committed 14 turnovers despite playing against a zone defense much of the game. Their defense repeatedly gave up several baskets on backdoor cuts, with several coming against their big men who are having to defend more of the court as smaller teams spread the floor.
Valparaiso made 12 3-pointers, including a 7-for-10 performance during a second half in which the Crusaders shot 53 percent and quietly inched their way back into the game.
Perhaps most alarmingly, North Carolina didn't show a huge sense of urgency against a determined team that just wouldn't quit. Perhaps it has something to do with the number of young players who are inheriting prominent roles with the departures of Tyler Hansbrough, Ty Lawson and Wayne Ellington from last year's title team, a point illustrated by some of the players' comments afterward.
"I could feel it coming a little bit," fifth-year senior Marcus Ginyard said. "In warmups, we didn't seem like we had that pep in our step. Nobody was really talking. We just didn't have that intensity and it showed tonight."
Yet sophomore point guard Larry Drew II didn't pick up on that pregame vibe.
"Honestly, I thought everything was all good," Drew said. "But Coach kind of told us before the game, 'It seems like you lacked a little intensity out there for the shootaround,' and 'You seemed a little dead in the locker room.' I felt I was ready to go out and play, but I had a lot of mental lapses and too many turnovers."
- Cottonwood High School football coach Josh...
- Jazz, Warriors have much at stake in draft...
- BYU football: Phil Ford has change of plans;...
- 2011-12 Utah high school sports Gallery of...
- High school baseball: All-star rosters announced
- Brad Rock: UVU gets a lesson in tournament...
- Utah Jazz: No luck for Jazz as Warriors keep...
- Real Salt Lake: Real suffers stunning U.S....
- Dick Harmon: John Beck gets a new start...
19 - High school football: Cary Whittingham...
17 - Cottonwood High School football coach...
15 - Brad Rock: UVU gets a lesson in...
14 - Utah baseball: Utes fall in season...
13 - High school baseball: All-star rosters...
13 - BYU football: Phil Ford has change of...
13 - Jazz, Warriors have much at stake in...
12






DeseretNews.com encourages a civil dialogue among its readers. We welcome your thoughtful comments.
— About comments