Claremore Daily Progress

Sports

November 1, 2012

No. 11 Tar Heels putting the pieces together

CHAPEL HILL, N.C. — North Carolina coach Roy Williams knew what last year's team could accomplish before the season. The Hall of Fame coach has more questions than answers this time.

"Last year we were picked first (in the Atlantic Coast Conference) and I thought that was fine because I thought we could be the best team,'' Williams said. "I don't have any idea what the ceiling could be for this team. And I don't think we'll know until we get into conference play.''

The 11th-ranked Tar Heels (32-6) must replace NBA first-round draft picks Harrison Barnes, John Henson, Kendall Marshall and Tyler Zeller from a preseason No. 1 that went on to win the ACC regular-season title and reach an NCAA regional final.

Left behind is a forward who struggled most of his rookie season before coming on late in the year, a veteran guard, two players returning from serious knee injuries and several youngsters stepping into significant roles. That means UNC, picked to finish third in the league, will have less room for error.

"We won games last year when we didn't play great,'' Williams said. "This year, we've got to play closer to our potential or we're not going to be successful.''

It has been a bumpy offseason for the Tar Heels. After the NBA defections, they lost longtime assistant Jerod Haase, who became head coach at UAB.

Then, a month before practice started, the 62-year-old Williams had surgery to remove a tumor from his right kidney. Tests eventually determined it was a benign growth - as was a similar one on his left kidney - but Williams has had to go easy during the first several weeks of practice as he recovered.

Now they're preparing to find out if sophomore James Michael McAdoo is ready to pick up where he left off late last season.

McAdoo, a 6-foot-9 forward, often looked lost through his freshman season as a reserve. But he averaged about 11 points and five rebounds in the ACC and NCAA tournaments when pressed into more minutes due to Henson's wrist injury.

The former McDonald's All-American is a preseason all-ACC pick entering the year. He's the closest thing the Tar Heels have to a proven frontcourt presence.

"I know there were certain things I just had to realize I had to do, and that's focus in each and every day in practice,'' McAdoo said. "Practice makes perfect but perfect practices help even more. I think that's something I had to work on. It's not something that just all of a sudden clicked. It's something I really started to work on at practice in late January or early February, but it didn't show up until late March.''

Junior guard Reggie Bullock also returns to provide outside shooting and long-armed perimeter defense, while he's joined by two guards - Leslie McDonald and Dexter Strickland - returning from torn knee ligaments.

McDonald, the team's best outside shooter in 2011, redshirted last season after he was hurt during a summer-league game. While McDonald has had more than a year to recover, Strickland was injured in January and is still working his way back to full strength.

If both players return to form - Strickland was the team's No. 2 ballhandler and best perimeter defender - the Tar Heels will have three veterans in the backcourt along with the return of sophomore guard P.J. Hairston.

"With Kendall, Harrison, John and Z leaving, that's the majority of the points,'' Hairston said. "It's up to us, the upperclassmen and the freshmen that just came in to step up. If we step up and do everything we're supposed to do, it can be a good season and we can do anything we want to do.''

Replacing Marshall at the point, however, will be the toughest challenge, one that will likely fall to freshman Marcus Paige. The 6-foot, 157-pound lefty is a McDonald's All-American, and Williams has said he expects Paige would have the first shot at the starting job.

Freshman forward Joel James (6-10, 260) could provide some needed bulk up front alongside McAdoo, while the Tar Heels also brought in 6-9 forward Brice Johnson and 6-5 wing J.P. Tokoto.

The pieces are there for another strong season. And after his recent health scare, Williams is going to enjoy putting the puzzle together.

"I really want to enjoy the journey a heck of a lot more myself,'' Williams said. "I preach that every year to my kids and particularly the fans as well. My wife tells me I always do the worst job of it, but I'm really going to try and do a much better job of that myself.''



 

Text Only
Sports
  • DSC_9471web.jpg Howe, Whatley shine at OU Showcase

    Claremore High School seniors Bryce Howe and Matt Whatley caught the eyes of several NCAA Division I and JUCO scouts Friday in Norman.
    Howe and Whatley, as well as Claremore’s Cole Weiesnbach and Cameron Smith, competed with the Bearcats — a competitive baseball team coached by Jenks’ Jeff Owens — at the University of Oklahoma Showcase.

    June 15, 2013 2 Photos

  • DSC_0119web.jpg ‘Staying close to home’

    Home is where the heart is.
    Claremore graduate Isaac Hollihan loves playing baseball and takes his academics pretty serious.
    For the next four years, Hollihan will continue his baseball career a short distance from his Claremore residence at Rogers State University.

    June 13, 2013 2 Photos

  • TRACK: Tyson Gay healthy heading into nationals

    For a little bit, Tyson Gay's first step tearing down the track made him wince and his next made him wonder: Would he ever be the same sprinter again?
    The runner who captured three gold medals at the 2007 world championships. The runner who broke the American 100-meter record in 2009.

    June 18, 2013

  • Texas Longhorns men's track coach retires

    Texas men's track coach Bubba Thornton is retiring after 18 years and 12 conference championships.
    According to a statement from the school on Monday, Thornton and athletic director DeLoss Dodds mutually agreed to terminate the coach's contract effective Aug. 31. The Longhorns won this year's Big 12 indoor and outdoor championships and finished sixth at the NCAA outdoor championships.

    June 18, 2013

  • Daytona frontstretch getting $400M facelift

    Daytona International Speedway is getting another facelift, this one considerably bigger than the last.
    Three years after a complete repaving project, the famed track is overhauling the frontstretch to enhance the "fan experience.''

    June 18, 2013

  • STANLEY CUP NOTEBOOK: Rough ice affects play in Game 3

    Teams try to avoid risky plays in the postseason that they might try in the regular season. And when the ice surface isn't smooth, even greater care is necessary.
    Boston took that approach with less-than-ideal ice conditions during its 2-0 win over the Chicago Blackhawks that gave the Bruins a 2-1 lead in the Stanley Cup finals on Monday night.

    June 18, 2013

  • STANLEY CUP: Rask shuts down Blackhawks, Bruins take 2-1 lead

    The puck bounced off the post and rolled across the crease, away from the goal line. The red light flashed briefly, but replays would confirm that Tuukka Rask's shutout streak was intact.
    For the last 122 minutes, 26 seconds of the Stanley Cup finals, the Bruins goalie has prevented Chicago from scoring.

    June 18, 2013

  • New $15M scoreboards planned for Jazz arena

    Owners of EnergySolutions Arena are upgrading the home turf of the Utah Jazz with a new $15 million scoreboard system.

    June 18, 2013

  • NBA FINALS: Heat have no room for error versus Spurs in Game 6

    They lost three times in three months in one of the most overpowering stretches the NBA has ever seen.
    Now the Miami Heat have lost three times in five games.
    So superb during the regular season, LeBron James, Dwyane Wade and the Heat have to be something even more for the rest of the NBA Finals.

    June 18, 2013

  • NBA FINALS: Spurs' coach puts 'Pop' into news conferences

    During his team's Game 3 rout of the Heat, Gregg Popovich was shown on TV talking to his players while they were in the process of burying Miami with a stirring offensive display.

    June 18, 2013