College: ACC Report
By Avi Creditor, InsideHoops.com / Jan. 27, 2005
Through games of January 25, 2005.
For starters, Virginia Tech and Miami are currently
running fourth and fifth, respectively, in the ACC. Don’t
think this is a down year for the two schools in football—
the newcomers are playing fantastic basketball. The Hokies
have gotten out to their hot start behind the play of senior
Carlos Dixon. He had a last second dunk to push the Hokies
past Clemson, 59-57, for Virginia Tech’s first ever ACC
victory. In their last game at Georgia Tech, he scored 21
points and hit a jumper with 36.8 seconds remaining to put
the Hokies up 70-69, and the team held on to win by that
margin. Dixon averages 14.8 points on the season to lead the
team.
Sandwiched in between those wins was a great home
performance against North Carolina State. Sophomore Coleman
Collins hit a shot with 12.9 seconds remaining to put the
team up 72-71, and sophomore Jamon Gordon blocked Julius
Hodge’s game-winning attempt to seal the victory. Collins
and Zabian Dowdell each scored 20 points to lead the team in
the win. The Hokies haven’t been getting the job done in
dominating fashion, but the young, inexperienced players on
this team definitely have not been getting rattled in the
final minutes and seconds of games like some might suspect
they would. The schedule does not get any easier for the
Hokies, as battles at Duke and against Wake Forest loom in
the upcoming weeks, but kudos to head coach Seth Greenberg
and his squad for their incredible start in their inaugural
ACC season.
Miami’s fast start has been fueled by the play of
Guillermo Diaz. The energetic sophomore guard has averaged
25.5 points in ACC play, and has been the spark that makes
his Hurricanes go. He hit a shot with eight seconds
remaining against Florida State to give the Canes a one-
point edge and scored 19 points in all to propel them to
their third consecutive conference victory, 64-63. He has
been the lone standout in the last two games, both losses,
as the Hurricanes have run into national powers Duke and
North Carolina. He scored 25 in the 92-83 home loss to Duke,
a game in which Miami sold out its home arena, not a common
occurrence for a school known for its football. Anthony King
added 10 points and 10 rebounds in the loss. Diaz went on to
score 30 in a road loss to the Tar Heels, but he was the
only scorer in double figures, and the Canes lost 87-67.
Nevertheless, Miami has been a huge surprise along with the
Hokies, and Diaz is a star in the making. Something to keep
an eye on is the play of Robert Hite. He emerged at the
beginning of the season as the conference’s leading scorer,
but he scored six points apiece in the games against Duke
and North Carolina. If he can regain his early-season form,
Miami will continue to surprise in the ACC.
Let me be the first to apologize to Wake Forest and Taron
Downey for completely jinxing the senior guard and his free-
throw shooting ability before Wake’s game at Florida State.
After Downey made a ridiculous three-pointer as he was
fouled in the waning seconds of a great Wake comeback to tie
the game, he had the chance to end the game by making a free
throw, something he does 85 percent of the time. On top of
all of this, his Wake Forest team had just set an NCAA
record by making 50 free throws in a row. A throat-slashing
gesture and in-and-out toilet bowl shot from Downey, and an
overtime later, and Wake, fresh off their incredible
performance at home against white-hot North Carolina,
suffered a demoralizing 91-83 loss at the hands of the ever-
inconsistent Seminoles. Wake spent most of the game coming
back from a 19-point first-half deficit, and almost pulled
off the win before Downey’s mishap. Perhaps Downey got what
he deserved, as he—very out of character—made the throat-
slashing gesture while mouthing “It’s over” to the hostile
Seminole crowd before clanking his game-winning attempt.
Chris Paul had 29 points and Downey had 21 in the loss.
This loss was a minor setback for the Demon Deacons, who
have established themselves as the team to beat in the ACC.
Wake toyed with Maryland, beating the Terps 81-66 behind the
torrid shooting of Justin Gray, who went 6-9 from three-
point range and scored 25 points in all. The much-
anticipated match-up against North Carolina turned into a
one-sided battle, as the Deacs cruised by the Tar Heels, 95-
82. Paul scored 26 points, dished out eight assists, grabbed
six rebounds, and notched five steals, winning his personal
battle with Carolina point guard Raymond Felton. Four other
Wake players scored in double figures, including Downey who
added 18 points. Wake bounced back from the Florida State
loss with a great road win at Cincinnati in a non-conference
tilt. Eric Williams put forth his best game of the year
scoring 29 points, and Paul maintained his top-level play
with a 21 point, seven assist, six-rebound performance. It
looks like the road to the top of the ACC will go through
Winston-Salem.
Georgia Tech is in some major trouble. With B.J. Elder being
sidelined because of a gimpy hamstring, the defending
national finalists have stumbled through the beginning of
conference play, starting out 2-3. The team hit a new low
with their home loss to Virginia Tech. The team had multiple
chances to win at the end. Isma’il Muhammad missed two free
throws with the team down by one with 5.5 seconds left in
the game, and Mario West and Ra’Sean Dickey missed putbacks
off the last missed free throw to seal the loss. This all
comes after consecutive losses to North Carolina, 91-69, and
to North Carolina State, 76-68. The Yellow Jackets, who were
ranked nationally as high as third, are on a three game
losing streak, and find themselves in sixth place in the ACC
and in a whirlpool heading down the drain.
The problem is that nobody has picked up the scoring void
left behind by Elder. Will Bynum did his best by throwing
down 28 against the Hokies, but Jarrett Jack’s play has
stagnated, Luke Schenscher has yet to pick up from where he
left off last year, and experienced players Anthony McHenry
and Theodis Tarver have not produced much at all, combining
for a mere 6.7 points a game. Until Elder comes back, the
Ramblin’ Wreck will continue to be a wreck, and they will
struggle through the tough conference schedule. Their next
two games are at home against Wake Forest and on the road
against Maryland.
North Carolina scored consecutive blowout victories over
Maryland and Georgia Tech, proving that beating them at the
Dean Dome, let alone at all, will be no easy task for the
remainder of the year. The 109-75 blowout of the Terps was
fueled by seven players scoring in double figures. Rashad
McCants led the way with 19 points. Jawad Williams added 13
points and seven rebounds, and Raymond Felton added 12
points and six assists. The Tar Heels broke open the contest
in the last three minutes of the first half, and then they
just out hustled the Terps and used a furious fast break to
make the Terps look like a junior varsity team.
The Tar Heels used another balanced attack to defeat Georgia
Tech, 91-69. Five players scored in double figures this
time, led by Williams’ 18 points. Sean May threw down a 12-
point 13-rebound performance, and freshman Marvin Williams
scored 14 points in the win. The Tar Heels can win playing
so many different ways. They have perhaps the best inside-
outside combination in the conference, if not in the nation,
with Sean May and then the quintet of the two Williamses,
McCants, Felton, and Jackie Manuel. The team runs the fast
break to perfection. Felton is an incredible playmaker and
McCants can score from anywhere on the floor.
All that being said, the Tar Heels ran into a wall on their
one-way street to cutting down the nets in the form of the
Wake Forest Demon Deacons. All of a sudden the ghosts of the
Carolina teams of the past two years came back to haunt the
Tar Heels. McCants reverted back to his immature ways,
staring down referees and taking bad shots. Felton was
outplayed by his point guard counterpart Chris Paul. For
every run Carolina had, Wake had an answer. Unfortunately
this is the only time the two powers are scheduled to meet
all season, but if Carolina has its way, the two will be
locking horns again at the MCI Center in the ACC tournament.
Carolina bounced back with wins over Clemson and Miami, and
looks to roll through the upcoming ACC battles they have
with Virginia and North Carolina State.
The good news for Florida State is that Von Wafer has
finally emerged as the scoring threat that most thought he
would be this year. The bad news is the Seminoles have lost
three of their last four conference games, and they sit in
ninth place in the conference with a 2-4 record.
Wafer’s finest game in his young career came in FSU’s great
home upset over Wake Forest. He scored a ridiculous 25
points in the first half, helping the Noles to build up a 14-
point halftime lead. He shot 10-18 from the field for the
game, including 7-12 from three-point land. Al Thornton
poured in 26 points and grabbed 10 rebounds to put forth his
finest effort in a Florida State jersey, as well. The third
Seminole hero of the night was guard Todd Galloway, who
scored nine straight points in overtime, and 21 in all, to
cap off the upset victory.
Prior to the great upset, Florida State suffered two
heartbreaking losses, a two-point home loss at the hands of
the Clemson Tigers, and a one-point loss at Miami. The
bright spot in the Miami loss was the 25 points scored by
Wafer, but the Noles would easily trade in a great personal
performance for another W. Making matters worse, Duke came
into Tallahassee just four days after the Wake win, and
torched the Seminoles, 88-56. The Blue Devils jumped out to
an 18-8 lead, and the hosts never had a shot at getting back
in the game after that as they allowed Duke to shoot 55.4
percent from the field. Wafer’s past two weeks of play has
boosted his points per game average up to 13.5, but he must
build on his play and carry his team if Florida State wants
to get out of the bottom tier of the conference.
Somehow, Coach K always finds a way to get it done. With
this year’s squad being one of his lesser-talented teams
he’s had in his tenure at Duke, his Blue Devils remain one
of the last three undefeated teams in the country, winning
their first 15 games of the season. Not only is Coach K
getting everything he can out of stars Shelden Williams,
J.J. Redick, and Daniel Ewing, but with injuries taking its
toll on Duke’s already depleted depth, seldom used Lee
Melchionni has stepped into a starting role and has not just
filled holes, but contributed important points and minutes.
In Duke’s 86-74 win at North Carolina State, Melchionni
scored 16 points on 6-9 shooting. In Duke’s 92-83 win at
Miami, he scored 14 points and grabbed five rebounds. In his
six starts he’s averaging just over nine points a game and
has been a pleasant surprise for the Blue Devils.
Of course Melchionni hasn’t taken the team on his back, as
that responsibility has been relegated to the trio of Redick
(21.7 PPG), Ewing (16.6 PPG), and Williams (15.6 PPG, 11.3
RPG). Williams was this past week’s ACC Player of the Week,
for his 30-point, seven rebound performance in the win over
Miami and his 11-point, 13 rebound performance in Duke’s
blowout 88-56 win over Florida State. In the FSU game J.J.
Redick was beyond on fire, scoring 31 points shooting 8-11
from behind the three-point line. Duke has games against
Maryland and Virginia Tech before tipping off in Winston-
Salem against Wake Forest on Feb. 2. Duke should roll
through those two teams, but should be wary of looking ahead
to the Demon Deacons.
All of the optimism that greeted the Maryland Terrapins at
midnight madness has turned into sheer concern, as the Terps
have done anything but improve on last year’s improbable
success with a young team. For starters, John Gilchrist has
struggled to find his identity, as head coach Gary Williams
wants him to be more of a team leader and floor general
rather than a scorer. Compounding this issue is the lack of
a low post presence, as Travis Garrison and Ekene Ibekwe
have struggled playing down low, and more playing time is
being relocated to reserve Will Bowers. Making matters
worse, D.J. Strawberry, the team’s best on-ball defender,
tore his ACL in practice and will have to miss the rest of
the season. Maryland fans have found the positives from
this, in that Mike Jones will likely see more playing time.
Jones showed flashes of his potential, scoring 21 points
while tearing apart the Temple zone defense from beyond the
arc. If he can play like that on a consistent basis, he will
provide an outside scoring punch that Maryland has yearned
for ever since Drew Nicholas and Juan Dixon left the
program. Nik Caner-Medley scored a career-high 35 points in
the win to lead the Terps. Caner-Medley now leads the team
in scoring at 16.9 points per game.
This win was much needed as the Terps were coming off two
very lopsided back-to-back losses on the road against North
Carolina and Wake Forest. Carolina ripped away and dignity
and pride Maryland had, torching the Terps by 34, 104-75.
Just three days later in Winston-Salem, the Terps lost by 15
to Wake Forest, 81-66. In the two losses Maryland shot a
combined 3-36 from three-point range. Yikes. In any event,
the Terps built on their performance against Temple with an
82-68 home win over Virginia only to lose at home to North
Carolina State, 85-69. Down by 26 at halftime, the Terps
used full-court pressure the entire second half to whittle
the lead down to 10 before falling apart. The Terps have yet
another chance to notch a quality win over a top ranked
opponent as they go head-to-head with rival Duke at Cameron
Indoor Stadium on Jan. 26. What better way to salvage the
shaky start to the season then to give the Dukies their
first loss?
North Carolina State finds themselves in a precarious
position. They are eighth in the ACC with a 2-3 conference
record, have lost five of their last seven games, and
Cameron Bennerman, the team’s second leading scorer at 10.3
points per game, is “out for an indefinite period of time”
in the words of coach Herb Sendek. The Wolfpack did notch
two big wins in the past week, though, at home against
Georgia Tech, and on the road against Maryland.
Against Georgia Tech in the 76-68 victory, Ilian Evtimov led
five players in double figures with 17 points. The team held
the Yellow Jackets to 13.3 percent shooting from three-point
range. Bennerman added 16 points and Julius Hodge notched a
double-double (14 points, 10 rebounds) even though he only
shot 1-7 from the field. In the win over Maryland the team
hit 10 three-pointers in the first half. Hodge went for 20
points and 11 boards, Engin Atsur scored 17 points, and
Evtimov added 16 points and nine rebounds. The Wolfpack
built a 26-point halftime lead, and then saw the lead
dwindle down to 10, something that brought back memories of
last year’s ACC tournament collapse to the NCST faithful.
The Wolfpack prevailed this time, though, 85-69, and have
two more winnable games against Florida State and Clemson
before a battle with in state rival North Carolina.
Virginia might have peaked in the first month of the season.
Since starting out 5-0 in November, the Cavaliers have gone
6-6. Two of those wins came down to the very end against
inferior competition; a 79-77 overtime victory at home over
Loyola Marymount, and a 80-79 double overtime victory at
home over Western Kentucky. In terms of conference play,
Virginia opened up losing their first five ACC games before
beating Clemson, 81-79, behind 22 points from Devin Smith,
and 16 points from Elton Brown. The backcourt duo of Sean
Singletary and J.R. Reynolds combined for 26 points, nine
rebounds, and eight assists to key the victory. In the five
ACC contests prior to the Clemson win, Virginia was not
competitive, and barely had a chance to win against Wake
Forest, Georgia Tech, Miami, Duke, and Maryland. If head
coach Pete Gillen is in fact on the hot seat, the schedule
does not favor his return to Charlottesville. The Cavs head
to Blacksburg to take on in-state foe, and suddenly sound,
Virginia Tech, they host North Carolina, and play at a tough
non-conference opponent, Providence, all within the span of
the upcoming week.
The silver lining in Clemson’s 1-5 conference start is the
continuing stellar play by their freshmen. Cheyenne Moore
won ACC Rookie of the Week honors for his play against North
Carolina and Virginia. He averaged 14.5 points and 3.5
rebounds in the two games, and he along with freshman Cliff
Hammonds have combined to win the award three times this
season. Hammonds scored 12 points to lead the Tigers in
their lone conference victory to date, a 56-54 win over
Florida State. Sharrod Ford added 11 points and Shawan
Robinson pitched in 10 in the win.
The bottom line, though, for Clemson is that they could
easily be 0-6, and it looks as if it will be an uphill
battle for the remainder of the season for the Tigers and
head coach Oliver Purnell. The Tigers do luck out though, in
that they do not have to play Duke or Wake Forest again, as
with the additions of Miami and Virginia Tech, each team
does not play every team in the conference twice.
STANDINGS (Overall, Conference)
Duke 15-0 5-0
North Carolina 16-2 5-1
Wake Forest 16-2 4-1
Virginia Tech 10-6 3-2
Miami 12-5 3-3
Georgia Tech 11-5 2-3
Maryland 11-5 2-3
North Carolina State 12-6 2-3
Florida State 10-9 2-4
Virginia 10-6 1-5
Clemson 10-8 1-5
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