
Cameron Johnson hit five three-pointers in Tuesday's win at Wofford.
Photo by: Willis Glassgow
Tar Heels To Visit Elon Friday
November 8, 2018 | Men's Basketball
GAME TWO NOTEBOOK
• Carolina opened the 2018-19 season on 11/6 with a 78-67 win at Wofford. Luke Maye (24), Garrison Brooks (20) and Cameron Johnson (17) combined to score 61 of the Tar Heels' 78 points. A full recap is below.
• This is the 109th season of Carolina Basketball. The Tar Heels have won 2,233 games, third most in NCAA history. Carolina has won an average of 20.7 games per season. UNC is the only school in the top 10 in all-time NCAA wins that has averaged at least 20 wins per season.
• The Elon game is the second straight road game to begin the season, the first time UNC has opened with consecutive road games since 1986-87, when the Tar Heels played at Hawai'i and Hawai'i-Loa.
• The regular-season home opener is Monday, 11/12 vs. Stanford.
CAROLINA VS. ELON SERIES NOTES
• This will be the first regular-season game at Elon's new on-campus arena, the Schar Center.
• Carolina is 18-4 against Elon, although the teams have played only once since 1950. UNC beat Elon, 100-62, on 12/29/2011. ACC Player of the Year Tyler Zeller had 19 points and 13 rebounds, Harrison Barnes scored 18, John Henson had 16 points and 11 boards and Kendall Marshall had a game-high eight assists. All four players were first-round NBA Draft picks in June 2012
• This will be the first time UNC plays at Elon since 12/2/1950 (at Alumni Gym).
• Carolina is 4-3 at Elon (3-3 at West Dormitorium and 1-0 at Alumni Gym).
RECAPPING THE WOFFORD GAME
• Carolina opened the 2018-19 season on 11/6 with a 78-67 win at Wofford. Luke Maye (24), Garrison Brooks (20) and Cameron Johnson (17) combined to score 61 of the Tar Heels' 78 points. A full recap is below.
• This is the 109th season of Carolina Basketball. The Tar Heels have won 2,233 games, third most in NCAA history. Carolina has won an average of 20.7 games per season. UNC is the only school in the top 10 in all-time NCAA wins that has averaged at least 20 wins per season.
• The Elon game is the second straight road game to begin the season, the first time UNC has opened with consecutive road games since 1986-87, when the Tar Heels played at Hawai'i and Hawai'i-Loa.
• The regular-season home opener is Monday, 11/12 vs. Stanford.
CAROLINA VS. ELON SERIES NOTES
• This will be the first regular-season game at Elon's new on-campus arena, the Schar Center.
• Carolina is 18-4 against Elon, although the teams have played only once since 1950. UNC beat Elon, 100-62, on 12/29/2011. ACC Player of the Year Tyler Zeller had 19 points and 13 rebounds, Harrison Barnes scored 18, John Henson had 16 points and 11 boards and Kendall Marshall had a game-high eight assists. All four players were first-round NBA Draft picks in June 2012
• This will be the first time UNC plays at Elon since 12/2/1950 (at Alumni Gym).
• Carolina is 4-3 at Elon (3-3 at West Dormitorium and 1-0 at Alumni Gym).
RECAPPING THE WOFFORD GAME
• Luke Maye led all scorers with 24 points, Garrison Brooks scored 13 of his career-high 20 in the opening half and Cameron Johnson added five three-pointers in UNC's 78-67 win at Wofford.
• The win improved UNC to 97-12 in season-opening games, including 15-1 under Roy Williams.
• It was Maye's 14th career 20-point game.
• Maye has scored 50 points in Carolina's last two season openers (26 vs. UNI in 2017-18).
• Brooks made a career-high nine field goals (previous was five). It was the sixth time he scored in double figures. His previous high was 14 against Northern Iowa in the 2017-18 opener.
• Johnson played in his 100th collegIate game. He was 5 for 7 from three-point range. It was the seventh time he made at least five threes in a game (third time as a Tar Heel.)
• Johnson scored 17 points and led UNC in rebounds (8) and offensive rebounds (5).
• Johnson broke a 46-all tie with a three, and added two more threes in a 14-5 UNC run that gave the Tar Heels a 60-51 lead.Â
• Kenny Williams did not score, but led UNC with five assists and played outstansing defense against Southern Conference preseason Player of the Year Fletcher Magee (helping to hold Magee to 7-23 shooting from the floor, 3-16 from three-point range).
• Freshmen Coby White and Nassir Little combined for 15 points and five assists.
• White became the 35th Tar Heel to start his first game as a freshman (the 15th under Roy Williams).
OPENING ON THE ROAD
• The win at Wofford was the seventh time Carolina has opened a season with a road game since the ACC's first season in 1953-54. UNC is now 6-1 in those road openers.
2018-19 at Wofford, W
2016-17 at Tulane, W
2007-08 at Davidson, W
1986-87 at Hawai'i, W
1980-81 at Alaska-Anchorage, W
1978-79 at Northwestern, W
1965-66 at Clemson, L
THE 2018-19 TAR HEELS
• Carolina returns 11 players from a year ago and adds six newcomers (including a transfer, Ryan McAdoo, who will red-shirt).
• The 11 returnees include four who combined to make 109 starts last season (Luke Maye 37, Kenny Williams 36, Cameron Johnson 20 and Garrison Brooks 16).
• Williams has made 59 career starts, including 22 as a sophomore in UNC's national championship season in 2016-17.Â
• Johnson has 55 collegiate starts – 34 at Pittsburgh, where he played for three seasons and earned his undergraduate degree in communications. He is a second-year graduate student in sports administration.
• Maye has 39 career starts. He started one game as a sophomore, at Duke, in 2016-17.
• Carolina returns 1,950 of 3,018 points from a year ago (64.6 percent), 1,047 of 1,570 rebounds (66.7 percent) and 334 of 674 assists (49.6 percent).
• Maye (16.9 ppg), Johnson (12.4) and Williams (11.4) were the second-, third- and fourth-leading scorers last year.
• Maye led the team and was second in the ACC in rebounding at 10.1 per game. He was also seventh in the league in scoring and field goal percentage.
• Maye is one of three returning players who ranked among the top 10 in ACC scoring last season with Tyus Battle of Syracuse (third) and Ky Bowman of Boston College (sixth).
AP POLL
• Carolina is No. 8 in the Associated Press preseason poll.Â
• This is the 13th time in 16 seasons under Roy Williams UNC is in the preseason Top 10.
• Carolina is ranked in an AP poll for the 896th time, second-most in college basketball history.
• UNC is ranked in the top 10 for the 670th time, most in ACC history and second-most all-time behind Kentucky's 685.
 • This is the 56th time in 71 seasons of the poll the Tar Heels have been ranked in the top 10 in at least one week of the poll.
• UNC finished the year in the AP poll top 10 10 times in Williams' first 15 seasons.
• Carolina has finished in the top 10 of the AP poll 37 times, including 26 of the last 38 years.
• Carolina is seventh in the coaches poll.
PRESEASON PICKS
• Carolina was picked to finish third in the conference at ACC Media Day (on Oct. 24) behind Duke and Virginia.
• Other preseason ACC rankings include: No. 2 by Athlon and Lindy's and No. 3 by Blue Ribbon Yearbook and Street & Smith's.
• National predictions include: No, 6 by Lindy's, No. 7 by Athlon and Street & Smith's and No. 12 by Blue Ribbon.
• Senior forward Luke Maye (Huntersville, N.C.) was selected the ACC Preseason Player of the Year at ACC Media Day. He is the first Tar Heel to be named preseason player of the year since Marcus Paige in 2014-15 and 2015-16.
• Maye was named Sports Illustrated's No. 1 candidate for National Player of the Year, the top player in the country by Lindy's and a player of the year candidate for the NABC award. He was ranked the fourth-best player in the country by NBC, the ninth-best player by Athlon and a preseason first-team All-America by the AP, ESPN.com, Sporting News, Blue Ribbon, Lindy's and Street & Smith's.
• Freshman forward Nassir Little (Orange Park, Fla.) was named third-team All-America by Athlon, fourth-team All-America by NBC Sports, first-team All-ACC by Athlon and second-team All-ACC by Lindy's.Â
• NBC Sports ranked Little the No. 3 wing in the country; Athlon named Little the No. 3 impact freshman and No. 11 overall player in the country.
• Maye is a candidate for the Basketball Hall of Fame's Karl Malone Award (power forward) and Little for the Julius Erving Award (small forward).
• Maye and Little are pre-season candidates to watch for the John R. Wooden Award (Los Angeles Athletic Club) and the Citizen Naismith Trophy (Atlanta Tipoff Club) to the National Player of the Year.Â
• Carolina's front court was ranked No. 4 in the nation by Lindy's.
MILESTONE WATCH
• Cameron Johnson has scored 923 points at Pittsburgh (583) and UNC (340). He needs 77 points to reach 1,000.
• Luke Maye has scored 881 career points and needs 119 for 1,000. Maye needs 30 three-pointers to become the 28th Tar Heel to make at least 100 and needs 128 rebounds to become the 28th Tar Heel with 700 or more.
• Kenny Williams has scored 607 points and needs 393 for 1,000.
• Seventy-six (76) Tar Heels have scored 1,000 or more career points. That's more than any other school in college basketball history. Louisville is second with 68 and Duke is third with 67.
• Carolina is 198-16 alltime in the Smith Center against non-ACC opponents. UNC needs two wins to reach 200.
• Carolina has played in 49 NCAA Tournaments. Should UNC advance to the 2019 NCAA Tournament, Carolina would become the second school with Kentucky to play in at least 50 NCAA Tournaments.
RECAPPING THE MOUNT OLIVE EXHIBITION
• Garrison Brooks led North Carolina with 16 points and 16 rebounds in a 107-64 exhibition game win over Mount Olive on 11/2.
• UNC led 14-13 seven minutes into the game, then went on a 13-0 run to stretch the lead to 27-13 and ended the half on another 27-12 run to build a 54-29 advantage at the half.
• Kenny Williams (15), Cameron Johnson (11), Nassir Little (11) and Coby White (10) also scored in double figures for Carolina.Â
• Freshman Coby White started at point guard for Carolina and had a game-high six assists.
• Carolina shot 58.3 percent from the floor in the second half and 51.2 (42 of 80) for the game. The Trojans shot just 28.4 percent for the contest (25 of 88), including 8 of 37 (.216) from three-point range.Â
• UNC out-rebounded Mount Olive, 69-36, but both teams scored 25 second-chance points. The Tar Heels had 26 assists on 41 field goals, but committed 22 turnovers.
RECAPPING THE VILLANOVA SCRIMMAGE
• UNC and Villanova – winners of the last three NCAA men's basketball championships – played a controlled scrimmage Oct. 20 at Finneran Pavilion on the Wildcats' campus.
• Cameron Johnson led five Tar Heels in double figures with 19 points. In addition to Johnson's 19, Coby White (17), Luke Maye (16), Little (13) and Garrison Brooks (11) also scored in double figures over the 50 minutes for the Tar Heels.
• Villanova out-scored the Tar Heels, 41-36, in the first 20 minutes and 48-43 in the second 20-minute segment. UNC freshman Nassir Little made a free throw with no time on the clock to tie an additional 10-minute segment, 25-25.
• Villanova senior Phil Booth made nine three-pointers and led all scorers with 41 points over two 20-minute and one 10-minute periods.
• Eric Paschall scored 18 of his 24 points from three-point range and freshman Saddiq Bey made five threes en route to 23 points for the Wildcats.
• Following the second 20-minute segment, the teams scrimmaged for 10 minutes in which both teams played exclusively zone defenses (UNC won, 14-13). UNC's reserves also won a 5-minute segment, 14-5.Â
HURRICANE RELIEF
• Carolina Basketball and head coach Roy Williams donated $23,400 to provide relief from Hurricane Florence at Late Night with Roy!
• Carolina donated $11,700 ($100 for each of 117 made baskets over a four-minute, 15-second shooting drill) from the proceeds from the team's sale of autographed basketballs.Â
• Williams and his wife, Wanda, matched that with a $11,700 gift of their own.Â
• Fifty percent of the combined proceeds will go to the University's Disaster Relief Fund (https://ccps.unc.edu/news-events/disaster-relief/unc-disaster-relief-funds/) and 50 percent went to the Hurricane Florence Student Emergency Fund.
ROY WILLIAMS COURT
• On 8/23/18, Carolina officially dedicated the Tar Heels' home floor as Roy Williams Court at the Dean E. Smith Center.
• The dedication was part of a two-day Carolina Basketball reunion of more than 300 players, coaches, managers and staff.
NO. 1 SCHEDULE IN THE COUNTRY
• Carolina's 2018-19 schedule is rated the No. 1 most difficult schedule in the country by NCAA.com.
• Carolina is scheduled to play 10 teams that are ranked in the preseason Top 25 by the Associated Press, including No. 2 Kentucky (in Chicago), No. 3 Gonzaga (home), No. 4 Duke (home and away), No. 5 Virginia (home) and possibly No. 10 Michigan State (in Las Vegas).
• Other opponents in the Top 25 include No. 15 Virginia Tech (home), No. 16 Syracuse (home), No. 17 Florida State (home), No. 19 Michigan (away), No, 21 UCLA (possible opponent in Las Vegas) and No. 22 Clemson (away).
• Carolina and Florida are the only two schools in the country that play six non-conference games against teams that played in the 2018 NCAA Tournament (Texas, Michigan State or UCLA, Michigan, Gonzaga, Kentucky and Davidson).
• UNC also plays eight ACC teams that played in the 2018 NCAA Tournament for a total of 14 opponents (at least 17 games) against last year's NCAA field.
THREE NON-ACC ROAD GAMES
• Carolina will play non-conference road games at Wofford, Elon and Michigan.
• UNC is one of 14 schools in the ACC, Big East, Big Ten, Big 12, SEC and Pac 12 that play three or more road games (Stanford is the only one to play four, including Nov. 12 in Chapel Hill).
• UNC and Georgia Tech are the only ACC schools to play three non-conference road games.
• Including this season, Carolina will have played 42 non-conference, regular season road games in Roy Williams' 16 years as Carolina's head coach. That equals the third most in the ACC behind Georgia Tech (45) and Wake Forest (44). Virginia Tech is tied with UNC with 42.
FOUR IN DECEMBER
• Carolina plays just four times in December – home games against UNCW (12/5), Gonzaga (12/15) and Davidson (12/29) and the CBS Sports Classic game vs. Kentucky in Chicago (12/22).
• This is the first time since 1961-62 the Tar Heels have played this few games in December. That season was Dean Smith's first as UNC's head coach; the Tar Heels played only three times in December 1961.
FAMILY TIES
• Carolina has three players on its roster whose father or brother played basketball for the Tar Heels and a fourth whose dad played quarterback for the UNC football team.
• Senior forward Luke Maye's dad, Mark, played quarterback in 1984, 1986 and 1987. He finished his career second in UNC history in completions (263) passing yards (3,459) and tossed 20 touchdowns. He set a single-season total offense school record in 1987 with 1,914 yards. Mark was also a two-time Academic All-ACC honoree (Luke is a three-time recipient already) and wore No. 14.
• Sophomore point guard K.J. Smith is eligible to play this season after sitting out in 2017-18 as a transfer from the University of Pacific, where he played in 24 games in 2016-17. His dad, Kenny, was the National Player of the Year (Basketball Times) in 1987, set UNC career records for assists (768) and steals (195) and played 10 seasons in the NBA. He won championships in 1994 and 1995 with Houston and is now an Emmy Award-winning analyst with Turner Sports. K.J. Smith is wearing No. 30, which was his dad's number.
• Sophomore forward Walker Miller wears No. 22, the number his brother, Wes, wore while playing for the Tar Heels from 2004-07. Currently the head coach at UNCG, where he led the Spartans to the Southern Conference title and an NCAA berth in 2018. Wes was a member of the 2005 NCAA champions, started at shooting guard in 2006 and was a key contributor on the 2007 ACC champion Tar Heels.
• Sophomore Ryan McAdoo is in his first season with the Tar Heels but is red-shirting as a transfer after playing at Florida Gulf Coast a year ago. He is wearing No. 35, which his father wore in his one season at Carolina. Bob McAdoo is a member of the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame. McAdoo averaged 19.5 points and 10.1 rebounds, was the 1972 ACC Tournament MVP and led UNC to the Final Four. He was the NBA's MVP in 1975, a five-time all-star, won NBA titles with the Lakers in 1982 and 1985 and led the league in scoring in 1974 (30.6 ppg), in 1975 (34.5) and 1976 (31.1).
NEW VIDEO BOARDS
• New at the Smith Center this season are four video boards, one in each corner of the upper deck. Each of the boards measure 1,875 square feet, which is greater than the combined size of the previous four boards (432 sq. ft. each).
• The boards include 8.9 million LEDs, provide more than 7,500 sq. ft. of display space and have a resolution of 1080p.
HALL OF FAMERS SCOTT, PERKINS
• Charlie Scott was inducted in the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in September. Scott became the 10th Tar Heel enshrined in the Naismith Hall of Fame in Springfield, Mass.
• Scott joins Tar Heels Ben Carnevale (inducted in 1970), Frank McGuire (1977), Dean Smith (1983), Billy Cunningham (1986), Bob McAdoo (2000), Larry Brown (2002), James Worthy (2003), Roy Williams (2007) and Michael Jordan (2009).
• Sam Perkins will be inducted in the NABC College Basketball Hall of Fame on Nov. 18 in Kansas City.
• Perkins will become the 11th Tar Heel in the College Hall of Fame with Brown, Carnevale, Cunningham, Phil Ford, McAdoo, McGuire, Scott, Smith, Williams and Worthy.
VITALE'S MOUNT RUSHMORE
• ESPN's Dick Vitale is commemorating his 40th year in broadcasting with a book titled "Dick Vitale's Mount Rushmores of College Basketball."
• Vitale's Mount Rushmore includes Dean Smith, Roy Williams, Bob Knight and Mike Krzyzewski.
• Co-authored with Hall of Fame writer Dick Weiss, the book will be available in November at DickVitaleOnline.com with all the proceeds going to reaching a goal of $4 million to benefit the V Foundation for Cancer Research.
NEXT UP: GAME THREE VS. STANFORD
• Carolina returns to action on Monday, Nov. 12 in the home opener at the Smith Center vs. Stanford (7 p.m., ESPN2).
• UNC is 11-0 against the Cardinal, including a 96-72 win at Maples Pavilion last season.
• Stanford's head coach is Jerod Haase, who played for Roy Williams at Kansas and was an assistant coach/staff member at Carolina from 2003-12.
• The win improved UNC to 97-12 in season-opening games, including 15-1 under Roy Williams.
• It was Maye's 14th career 20-point game.
• Maye has scored 50 points in Carolina's last two season openers (26 vs. UNI in 2017-18).
• Brooks made a career-high nine field goals (previous was five). It was the sixth time he scored in double figures. His previous high was 14 against Northern Iowa in the 2017-18 opener.
• Johnson played in his 100th collegIate game. He was 5 for 7 from three-point range. It was the seventh time he made at least five threes in a game (third time as a Tar Heel.)
• Johnson scored 17 points and led UNC in rebounds (8) and offensive rebounds (5).
• Johnson broke a 46-all tie with a three, and added two more threes in a 14-5 UNC run that gave the Tar Heels a 60-51 lead.Â
• Kenny Williams did not score, but led UNC with five assists and played outstansing defense against Southern Conference preseason Player of the Year Fletcher Magee (helping to hold Magee to 7-23 shooting from the floor, 3-16 from three-point range).
• Freshmen Coby White and Nassir Little combined for 15 points and five assists.
• White became the 35th Tar Heel to start his first game as a freshman (the 15th under Roy Williams).
OPENING ON THE ROAD
• The win at Wofford was the seventh time Carolina has opened a season with a road game since the ACC's first season in 1953-54. UNC is now 6-1 in those road openers.
2018-19 at Wofford, W
2016-17 at Tulane, W
2007-08 at Davidson, W
1986-87 at Hawai'i, W
1980-81 at Alaska-Anchorage, W
1978-79 at Northwestern, W
1965-66 at Clemson, L
THE 2018-19 TAR HEELS
• Carolina returns 11 players from a year ago and adds six newcomers (including a transfer, Ryan McAdoo, who will red-shirt).
• The 11 returnees include four who combined to make 109 starts last season (Luke Maye 37, Kenny Williams 36, Cameron Johnson 20 and Garrison Brooks 16).
• Williams has made 59 career starts, including 22 as a sophomore in UNC's national championship season in 2016-17.Â
• Johnson has 55 collegiate starts – 34 at Pittsburgh, where he played for three seasons and earned his undergraduate degree in communications. He is a second-year graduate student in sports administration.
• Maye has 39 career starts. He started one game as a sophomore, at Duke, in 2016-17.
• Carolina returns 1,950 of 3,018 points from a year ago (64.6 percent), 1,047 of 1,570 rebounds (66.7 percent) and 334 of 674 assists (49.6 percent).
• Maye (16.9 ppg), Johnson (12.4) and Williams (11.4) were the second-, third- and fourth-leading scorers last year.
• Maye led the team and was second in the ACC in rebounding at 10.1 per game. He was also seventh in the league in scoring and field goal percentage.
• Maye is one of three returning players who ranked among the top 10 in ACC scoring last season with Tyus Battle of Syracuse (third) and Ky Bowman of Boston College (sixth).
AP POLL
• Carolina is No. 8 in the Associated Press preseason poll.Â
• This is the 13th time in 16 seasons under Roy Williams UNC is in the preseason Top 10.
• Carolina is ranked in an AP poll for the 896th time, second-most in college basketball history.
• UNC is ranked in the top 10 for the 670th time, most in ACC history and second-most all-time behind Kentucky's 685.
 • This is the 56th time in 71 seasons of the poll the Tar Heels have been ranked in the top 10 in at least one week of the poll.
• UNC finished the year in the AP poll top 10 10 times in Williams' first 15 seasons.
• Carolina has finished in the top 10 of the AP poll 37 times, including 26 of the last 38 years.
• Carolina is seventh in the coaches poll.
PRESEASON PICKS
• Carolina was picked to finish third in the conference at ACC Media Day (on Oct. 24) behind Duke and Virginia.
• Other preseason ACC rankings include: No. 2 by Athlon and Lindy's and No. 3 by Blue Ribbon Yearbook and Street & Smith's.
• National predictions include: No, 6 by Lindy's, No. 7 by Athlon and Street & Smith's and No. 12 by Blue Ribbon.
• Senior forward Luke Maye (Huntersville, N.C.) was selected the ACC Preseason Player of the Year at ACC Media Day. He is the first Tar Heel to be named preseason player of the year since Marcus Paige in 2014-15 and 2015-16.
• Maye was named Sports Illustrated's No. 1 candidate for National Player of the Year, the top player in the country by Lindy's and a player of the year candidate for the NABC award. He was ranked the fourth-best player in the country by NBC, the ninth-best player by Athlon and a preseason first-team All-America by the AP, ESPN.com, Sporting News, Blue Ribbon, Lindy's and Street & Smith's.
• Freshman forward Nassir Little (Orange Park, Fla.) was named third-team All-America by Athlon, fourth-team All-America by NBC Sports, first-team All-ACC by Athlon and second-team All-ACC by Lindy's.Â
• NBC Sports ranked Little the No. 3 wing in the country; Athlon named Little the No. 3 impact freshman and No. 11 overall player in the country.
• Maye is a candidate for the Basketball Hall of Fame's Karl Malone Award (power forward) and Little for the Julius Erving Award (small forward).
• Maye and Little are pre-season candidates to watch for the John R. Wooden Award (Los Angeles Athletic Club) and the Citizen Naismith Trophy (Atlanta Tipoff Club) to the National Player of the Year.Â
• Carolina's front court was ranked No. 4 in the nation by Lindy's.
MILESTONE WATCH
• Cameron Johnson has scored 923 points at Pittsburgh (583) and UNC (340). He needs 77 points to reach 1,000.
• Luke Maye has scored 881 career points and needs 119 for 1,000. Maye needs 30 three-pointers to become the 28th Tar Heel to make at least 100 and needs 128 rebounds to become the 28th Tar Heel with 700 or more.
• Kenny Williams has scored 607 points and needs 393 for 1,000.
• Seventy-six (76) Tar Heels have scored 1,000 or more career points. That's more than any other school in college basketball history. Louisville is second with 68 and Duke is third with 67.
• Carolina is 198-16 alltime in the Smith Center against non-ACC opponents. UNC needs two wins to reach 200.
• Carolina has played in 49 NCAA Tournaments. Should UNC advance to the 2019 NCAA Tournament, Carolina would become the second school with Kentucky to play in at least 50 NCAA Tournaments.
RECAPPING THE MOUNT OLIVE EXHIBITION
• Garrison Brooks led North Carolina with 16 points and 16 rebounds in a 107-64 exhibition game win over Mount Olive on 11/2.
• UNC led 14-13 seven minutes into the game, then went on a 13-0 run to stretch the lead to 27-13 and ended the half on another 27-12 run to build a 54-29 advantage at the half.
• Kenny Williams (15), Cameron Johnson (11), Nassir Little (11) and Coby White (10) also scored in double figures for Carolina.Â
• Freshman Coby White started at point guard for Carolina and had a game-high six assists.
• Carolina shot 58.3 percent from the floor in the second half and 51.2 (42 of 80) for the game. The Trojans shot just 28.4 percent for the contest (25 of 88), including 8 of 37 (.216) from three-point range.Â
• UNC out-rebounded Mount Olive, 69-36, but both teams scored 25 second-chance points. The Tar Heels had 26 assists on 41 field goals, but committed 22 turnovers.
RECAPPING THE VILLANOVA SCRIMMAGE
• UNC and Villanova – winners of the last three NCAA men's basketball championships – played a controlled scrimmage Oct. 20 at Finneran Pavilion on the Wildcats' campus.
• Cameron Johnson led five Tar Heels in double figures with 19 points. In addition to Johnson's 19, Coby White (17), Luke Maye (16), Little (13) and Garrison Brooks (11) also scored in double figures over the 50 minutes for the Tar Heels.
• Villanova out-scored the Tar Heels, 41-36, in the first 20 minutes and 48-43 in the second 20-minute segment. UNC freshman Nassir Little made a free throw with no time on the clock to tie an additional 10-minute segment, 25-25.
• Villanova senior Phil Booth made nine three-pointers and led all scorers with 41 points over two 20-minute and one 10-minute periods.
• Eric Paschall scored 18 of his 24 points from three-point range and freshman Saddiq Bey made five threes en route to 23 points for the Wildcats.
• Following the second 20-minute segment, the teams scrimmaged for 10 minutes in which both teams played exclusively zone defenses (UNC won, 14-13). UNC's reserves also won a 5-minute segment, 14-5.Â
HURRICANE RELIEF
• Carolina Basketball and head coach Roy Williams donated $23,400 to provide relief from Hurricane Florence at Late Night with Roy!
• Carolina donated $11,700 ($100 for each of 117 made baskets over a four-minute, 15-second shooting drill) from the proceeds from the team's sale of autographed basketballs.Â
• Williams and his wife, Wanda, matched that with a $11,700 gift of their own.Â
• Fifty percent of the combined proceeds will go to the University's Disaster Relief Fund (https://ccps.unc.edu/news-events/disaster-relief/unc-disaster-relief-funds/) and 50 percent went to the Hurricane Florence Student Emergency Fund.
ROY WILLIAMS COURT
• On 8/23/18, Carolina officially dedicated the Tar Heels' home floor as Roy Williams Court at the Dean E. Smith Center.
• The dedication was part of a two-day Carolina Basketball reunion of more than 300 players, coaches, managers and staff.
NO. 1 SCHEDULE IN THE COUNTRY
• Carolina's 2018-19 schedule is rated the No. 1 most difficult schedule in the country by NCAA.com.
• Carolina is scheduled to play 10 teams that are ranked in the preseason Top 25 by the Associated Press, including No. 2 Kentucky (in Chicago), No. 3 Gonzaga (home), No. 4 Duke (home and away), No. 5 Virginia (home) and possibly No. 10 Michigan State (in Las Vegas).
• Other opponents in the Top 25 include No. 15 Virginia Tech (home), No. 16 Syracuse (home), No. 17 Florida State (home), No. 19 Michigan (away), No, 21 UCLA (possible opponent in Las Vegas) and No. 22 Clemson (away).
• Carolina and Florida are the only two schools in the country that play six non-conference games against teams that played in the 2018 NCAA Tournament (Texas, Michigan State or UCLA, Michigan, Gonzaga, Kentucky and Davidson).
• UNC also plays eight ACC teams that played in the 2018 NCAA Tournament for a total of 14 opponents (at least 17 games) against last year's NCAA field.
THREE NON-ACC ROAD GAMES
• Carolina will play non-conference road games at Wofford, Elon and Michigan.
• UNC is one of 14 schools in the ACC, Big East, Big Ten, Big 12, SEC and Pac 12 that play three or more road games (Stanford is the only one to play four, including Nov. 12 in Chapel Hill).
• UNC and Georgia Tech are the only ACC schools to play three non-conference road games.
• Including this season, Carolina will have played 42 non-conference, regular season road games in Roy Williams' 16 years as Carolina's head coach. That equals the third most in the ACC behind Georgia Tech (45) and Wake Forest (44). Virginia Tech is tied with UNC with 42.
FOUR IN DECEMBER
• Carolina plays just four times in December – home games against UNCW (12/5), Gonzaga (12/15) and Davidson (12/29) and the CBS Sports Classic game vs. Kentucky in Chicago (12/22).
• This is the first time since 1961-62 the Tar Heels have played this few games in December. That season was Dean Smith's first as UNC's head coach; the Tar Heels played only three times in December 1961.
FAMILY TIES
• Carolina has three players on its roster whose father or brother played basketball for the Tar Heels and a fourth whose dad played quarterback for the UNC football team.
• Senior forward Luke Maye's dad, Mark, played quarterback in 1984, 1986 and 1987. He finished his career second in UNC history in completions (263) passing yards (3,459) and tossed 20 touchdowns. He set a single-season total offense school record in 1987 with 1,914 yards. Mark was also a two-time Academic All-ACC honoree (Luke is a three-time recipient already) and wore No. 14.
• Sophomore point guard K.J. Smith is eligible to play this season after sitting out in 2017-18 as a transfer from the University of Pacific, where he played in 24 games in 2016-17. His dad, Kenny, was the National Player of the Year (Basketball Times) in 1987, set UNC career records for assists (768) and steals (195) and played 10 seasons in the NBA. He won championships in 1994 and 1995 with Houston and is now an Emmy Award-winning analyst with Turner Sports. K.J. Smith is wearing No. 30, which was his dad's number.
• Sophomore forward Walker Miller wears No. 22, the number his brother, Wes, wore while playing for the Tar Heels from 2004-07. Currently the head coach at UNCG, where he led the Spartans to the Southern Conference title and an NCAA berth in 2018. Wes was a member of the 2005 NCAA champions, started at shooting guard in 2006 and was a key contributor on the 2007 ACC champion Tar Heels.
• Sophomore Ryan McAdoo is in his first season with the Tar Heels but is red-shirting as a transfer after playing at Florida Gulf Coast a year ago. He is wearing No. 35, which his father wore in his one season at Carolina. Bob McAdoo is a member of the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame. McAdoo averaged 19.5 points and 10.1 rebounds, was the 1972 ACC Tournament MVP and led UNC to the Final Four. He was the NBA's MVP in 1975, a five-time all-star, won NBA titles with the Lakers in 1982 and 1985 and led the league in scoring in 1974 (30.6 ppg), in 1975 (34.5) and 1976 (31.1).
NEW VIDEO BOARDS
• New at the Smith Center this season are four video boards, one in each corner of the upper deck. Each of the boards measure 1,875 square feet, which is greater than the combined size of the previous four boards (432 sq. ft. each).
• The boards include 8.9 million LEDs, provide more than 7,500 sq. ft. of display space and have a resolution of 1080p.
HALL OF FAMERS SCOTT, PERKINS
• Charlie Scott was inducted in the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in September. Scott became the 10th Tar Heel enshrined in the Naismith Hall of Fame in Springfield, Mass.
• Scott joins Tar Heels Ben Carnevale (inducted in 1970), Frank McGuire (1977), Dean Smith (1983), Billy Cunningham (1986), Bob McAdoo (2000), Larry Brown (2002), James Worthy (2003), Roy Williams (2007) and Michael Jordan (2009).
• Sam Perkins will be inducted in the NABC College Basketball Hall of Fame on Nov. 18 in Kansas City.
• Perkins will become the 11th Tar Heel in the College Hall of Fame with Brown, Carnevale, Cunningham, Phil Ford, McAdoo, McGuire, Scott, Smith, Williams and Worthy.
VITALE'S MOUNT RUSHMORE
• ESPN's Dick Vitale is commemorating his 40th year in broadcasting with a book titled "Dick Vitale's Mount Rushmores of College Basketball."
• Vitale's Mount Rushmore includes Dean Smith, Roy Williams, Bob Knight and Mike Krzyzewski.
• Co-authored with Hall of Fame writer Dick Weiss, the book will be available in November at DickVitaleOnline.com with all the proceeds going to reaching a goal of $4 million to benefit the V Foundation for Cancer Research.
NEXT UP: GAME THREE VS. STANFORD
• Carolina returns to action on Monday, Nov. 12 in the home opener at the Smith Center vs. Stanford (7 p.m., ESPN2).
• UNC is 11-0 against the Cardinal, including a 96-72 win at Maples Pavilion last season.
• Stanford's head coach is Jerod Haase, who played for Roy Williams at Kansas and was an assistant coach/staff member at Carolina from 2003-12.
Players Mentioned
UNC Men's Soccer: Tar Heels Fight for 1-1 Draw vs SMU
Sunday, September 21
UNC Field Hockey: Offense Sends Heels Past Cal, 5-1
Saturday, September 20
Tar Heels in the Community pres. by NC Electric Co-ops - WLAX Hospital Visit - Sept. 19, 2025
Friday, September 19
Carolina Insider - Football at UCF Preview (Full Segment) - September 19, 2025
Friday, September 19