University of North Carolina Athletics

Photo by: ANTHONY SORBELLINI
Men's Basketball Heads To Clemson For Monday Night Matchup
February 9, 2025 | Men's Basketball
• Carolina begins a two-game road trip on Monday at 7 p.m. at Clemson on ESPN.
• It will be the third of four away games in a five-game stretch that will culminate Saturday at Syracuse.
• The Tar Heels are 14-10 overall, 7-5 in the ACC.
• The Tigers defeated second-ranked Duke, 77-71, on Saturday, which was the Blue Devils' first loss in league play. Clemson is 11-2 in the ACC.
• Carolina is 3-5 on the road, including three straight losses at Wake Forest, Pitt and Duke.
• Clemson is 12-2 at home, including overtime losses to Memphis and Georgia Tech (triple overtime). The Tigers have played four overtime games this season.
• This is the first of two Saturday-Monday turnarounds for the Tar Heels (also February 22 vs. Virginia and February 24 at Florida State).
• Carolina defeated Pitt, 67-66, on Saturday in the Smith Center. RJ Davis gave the Tar Heels the lead with a jumper with 51 seconds to play and UNC held on when Ishmael Leggett's 14-footer rimmed out at the buzzer.
• It was Carolina's second one-point win of the season (Notre Dame) and its fourth one-point game in ACC play this season (losses to Stanford and Wake Forest). Per Rob Daniels, Carolina is the first team to have four games decided by a point in its first dozen ACC games since Georgia Tech in 1983-84 (and NC State in 1971-72 is the only other ACC team to do that).
• Davis led Carolina with 18 points. He was 6 for 12 from the floor, 3 for 5 from three, and had three assists and zero turnovers. Davis has led UNC in scoring in each of the last six games and is 36 for 77 from the floor (46.8%) and 16 of 34 from three (47.1%) in those games.
• The Tar Heels beat the Panthers despite getting a combined two field goals from Elliot Cadeau, Ian Jackson and Jalen Washington (both by Cadeau, which came late in the game and tied the score at both 58 and 60).
• Ven-Allen Lubin scored nine straight points to give Carolina a 12-3 lead and finished 8 for 12 from the floor and scored a season-high 17 points.
• Seth Trimble (15 points) pulled down a game-high seven rebounds (including two he put back for second-chance buckets) and hit two three-pointers. It was the first time he made multiple threes since November 26.
• Drake Powell hit a pair of late threes – which tied the game at 51 and gave Carolina a 56-55 lead – the first time he hit multiple threes since January 7.
• A significant key to the win was the improvement in taking care of the ball. Two games ago in the loss at Pitt, Carolina committed 14 turnovers the Panthers converted into 22 points (there was an 18-point margin in points off turnovers). On Saturday, the Tar Heels committed six turnovers (only two in the second half) that led to six Pitt points. Carolina was a plus-seven in points off turnovers.
• Carolina is 10-4 this season when it scores more points off turnovers and 4-6 when the opponents score more points off turnovers.
• Pitt led 60-58 with 5:00 to play. That marked the 12th time in 24 games this season the margin was within five points with 5:00 to play. UNC has led by five or fewer points three times (beat Georgia Tech and lost to Kansas and Stanford) and trailed by five or fewer points eight times (beat Dayton, UCLA, Notre Dame, Boston College and Pitt and lost at Louisville, at Wake Forest and at Pitt). The score was tied once (in the loss to Florida).
• In all games, Carolina is second in the ACC in scoring at 80.6 points per game, trailing only SMU in scoring average. However, in ACC play the Tar Heels are seventh in the conference in scoring offense (73.1 ppg). Carolina is also ninth in points allowed (71.9 ppg) in league play.
• The 67-66 win over Pitt fourth time in 12 ACC games both teams scored in the 60s (68-65 win over Georgia Tech, 63-61 win at NC State and 67-66 loss at Wake Forest). Take out the 102-96 overtime win over Boston College and the Tar Heels are averaging 70.5 points and allowing only 69.7 points per game in ACC play.
• In 12 ACC games, the Tar Heel defense has held the opponents to just 41.5% shooting from the floor, which is fourth best in the league behind Wake Forest, SMU and Duke.
• Carolina attempted more free throws in nine of the first 13 games this season. In the last 11 games, the opponents have shot more free throws seven times (UNC is 3-4 in those games). The Tar Heels have shot more free throws in four of the last 11 games – wins over SMU, Cal and Boston College and a loss to Stanford).
• Seth Trimble, a 6-3 guard, leads the Tar Heels in rebounding at 5.4 per game. He is on pace to become the shortest player to lead the Tar Heels in rebounding average since at least 1950. Bud Maddie (1952-53) and Larry Miller (1965-66) were both listed at 6-4.
• Trimble has three point/rebound double-doubles this season (27 points and 10 rebounds vs. Dayton, 18 and 12 vs. Boston College and 10 and 12 at Pitt).
CAROLINA-CLEMSON
• Carolina is 136-24 all-time against the Tigers, including 42-18 at Clemson and 31-15 in Littlejohn Coliseum.
• The teams have split the last six games.
• Last season was the first time the teams ever won on each other's home court in the same season. Carolina beat the Tigers, 65-55, at Clemson on January 6 and a month later the Tigers returned the favor with an 80-76 win in Chapel Hill.
• In the win at Clemson, RJ Davis and Armando Bacot shared team scoring honors with 14 points apiece. The Tigers made just 1 of 18 three-pointers and their 55 points were a season low. The teams combined for zero fastbreak points.
• At UNC, Clemson went on an early 13-0 run, led by as many as 16 in the first half and made 11 three-pointers, 10 more than it made in Carolina's win a month earlier. Bacot had 24 points and 13 rebounds and Davis scored 22 points with five assists. He was 5 for 12 from three. It was Carolina's only home loss last season.
CLOSE CALLS
• Including the 67-66 win over Pitt on Saturday, the Tar Heels have played 10 one-possession games (decided by one, two or three points) this season. Those are the most played by the Tar Heels in a season in the three-point era, which began in 1986-87. The 2010-11 team played nine one-possession games and won eight.
• The Tar Heels' six one-possession wins this season are the second most in the three-point era. UNC won eight in 2010-11, six this season and five in 1998-99 (5-3), 2002-03 (5-2) and 2016-17 (5-1).
• The losses to Stanford and Wake Forest were just the fourth time ever Carolina lost by a point in back-to-back games. The other instances include the 1929-30 season (Loyola Chicago and Duke), 1940-41 (Fordham and St. Joseph's) and 1967-68 (South Carolina and Duke).
SCHEDULE
• Carolina's strength of schedule is No. 11 in the country overall (seventh in non-conference games).
• Carolina's opponents collectively have the eighth-best offensive efficiency and 19th-best defensive efficiency in the nation.
• The Tar Heels have played three of the top five, four of the top 10 and five of the top 11 teams in the February 3 Associated Press poll.
• Carolina has already played No. 1 Auburn, No. 2 Duke, No. 3 Alabama, No. 6 Florida, No. 9 Michigan State, No. 14 Kentucky and No. 16 Kansas.
• Carolina is No. 41 overall in KenPom and 45th in the NET.
SCORING EFFICIENCY
• The Tar Heels are 40th in the country in scoring at 80.6 points per game and 295th in scoring defense (76.3).
• Factoring in pace of play and the number of possessions, Carolina is 44th in the country in offensive efficiency and 52nd in defensive efficiency.
• The Tar Heels are 9-1 this season when holding opponents below 105 points per 100 possessions. Wake Forest (92.0 ppp) is the only team to beat UNC despite scoring fewer than 105 points per 100 possessions.
• Carolina is shooting 55.4% from two-point range, its highest two-point percentage since the 1997-98 ACC champion and NCAA East Regional champion Tar Heels shot 56.5% from two-point range.
• The Tar Heels are shooting 32.7% from three, the fourth-lowest percentage in UNC history.
• Carolina is 12-4 this season when it makes 30% or better from three-point range and 2-6 (wins over Georgia Tech and Notre Dame) when it makes less than 30% of its three-point attempts.
• The Tar Heels made 27 of 93 (29%) from three-point range in their last four losses. Saturday in the win over Pitt, Carolina hit 46.7% from three (7 of 15). The 15 attempts were its fewest since the Cal game on January 15 (attempted 14 in a 26-point win over the Bears).
WINS AND LOSSES
• In Carolina's 14 wins the Tar Heels are shooting 9.6% higher from the floor than their opponents (49.5 to 39.9%). In the losses, the opponents are out-shooting the Tar Heels 46.7 to 43.7%.
• The opponents average 83.7 points in UNC's losses and just 70.9 in the Tar Heels' wins.
• Carolina is plus 5.1 rebounds per game in its wins and minus 2.1 per game on the boards in the losses. The opponents have out-rebounded the Tar Heels in six of the 10 losses.
• Carolina is shooting 35.7% from three in its wins and 28.6% in the losses.
• RJ Davis averages 17.6 points in Carolina's victories and 17.1 in the losses.
• Carolina is 7-3 when it makes the same number or more three-pointers and is 7-7 when the opponents make more 3FGs.
• The Tar Heels are 9-4 when they attempt 20 or more free throws and 5-6 when attempting fewer than 20.
• UNC is 8-2 when it makes more free throws (losses to Kansas and Stanford) and 6-8 when making an equal amount or fewer free throws.
TAR HEELS AND THE ACC
• Carolina is a charter member of the Atlantic Coast Conference.
• This is the 72nd season of ACC men's basketball.
• UNC has won the regular-season championship 33 times, including the 2023-24 season, when the Tar Heels went 17-3 to win the title outright for the 22nd time. Duke is second with 20 regular-season titles.
• The Tar Heels are 765-318 all-time in ACC regular-season play. The 765 wins are the most by any team.
• RJ Davis was the 2024 ACC Player of the Year and Hubert Davis was the Coach of the Year.
• Davis is the first Player of the Year to return the following season since UNC's Tyler Hansbrough won the award in 2008 and came back for his senior season in 2009, when he led the Tar Heels to an NCAA title.
MORE MILESTONES FOR RJ
• RJ Davis, Duke's Cooper Flagg and Pitt's Jaland Lowe are the only players in the top 10 in the ACC in both scoring and assists.
• Davis leads Carolina and is ninth in the ACC in scoring at 17.4 points per game and is ninth in the league in assists at 3.8 per game.
• Davis has played in 162 games over five seasons. He is second in games by a Tar Heel behind Armando Bacot's ACC-record 169. Davis and Bacot played five seasons due to Covid-19.
• The White Plains, N.Y., native is averaging a career-high 3.8 assists this season. His previous season bests were 3.6 per game in 2021-22 and 3.5 last season.
• Davis scored 21 points at Wake Forest and 22 in the OT win over Boston College, when he scored seven points in the extra period. He has 42 career 20-point games. The Tar Heels are 32-10 when he scores at least 20 and 13-5 when he drops 25 or more.
• Davis is Carolina's all-time leader and is ninth in ACC history with 325 three-pointers. Randolph Childress (Wake Forest) is eighth with 329.
• Davis is averaging 14.2 field goal attempts per game this season. Last year, he averaged 16.4. He is attempting 6.7 threes per game (7.7 per game last season).
• Davis is the second-leading scorer in Carolina history with 2,505 points. He passed Armando Bacot, who also played in five seasons, for second place in the win at Notre Dame on January 4.
• Davis is seventh in ACC scoring. Virginia's Bryant Stith is sixth (2,516).
• He has the highest free throw percentage ever by a Tar Heel (86.0%).
• Davis' 29-point outing vs. Florida on December 17 made him the highest scoring guard in Carolina history, eclipsing the mark held by Phil Ford.
• Davis' career scoring average is 15.5, the eighth-highest by a Tar Heel guard.
• Last year, Davis became the 19th Tar Heel to earn consensus first-team All-America honors. Those 19 players have won consensus first-team All-America honors a total of 28 times.
• Davis joined Lennie Rosenbluth in 1957, Phil Ford in 1978, Michael Jordan in 1983 and 1984, Kenny Smith in 1987, Jerry Stackhouse in 1995, Antawn Jamison in 1998, Joseph Forte in 2001 and Tyler Hansbrough in 2008 and 2009 as the only Tar Heels to make first-team All-America on each of the teams the NCAA recognizes to determine consensus first-team All-America.
NOVEMBER SIGNEES
• Carolina signed Isaiah Denis of Concord, N.C., and Derek Dixon of Vienna, Va.
• Denis is a 6-5 guard at Davidson Day High School in Davidson, N.C. His parents are Nancy Denis and Frantz Denis, and he plays AAU for CP3.
• Dixon, the son of John and Kari Dixon, is a 6-3 guard at Gonzaga College High School in Washington, D.C. He also plays AAU for Team Takeover.
• It will be the third of four away games in a five-game stretch that will culminate Saturday at Syracuse.
• The Tar Heels are 14-10 overall, 7-5 in the ACC.
• The Tigers defeated second-ranked Duke, 77-71, on Saturday, which was the Blue Devils' first loss in league play. Clemson is 11-2 in the ACC.
• Carolina is 3-5 on the road, including three straight losses at Wake Forest, Pitt and Duke.
• Clemson is 12-2 at home, including overtime losses to Memphis and Georgia Tech (triple overtime). The Tigers have played four overtime games this season.
• This is the first of two Saturday-Monday turnarounds for the Tar Heels (also February 22 vs. Virginia and February 24 at Florida State).
• Carolina defeated Pitt, 67-66, on Saturday in the Smith Center. RJ Davis gave the Tar Heels the lead with a jumper with 51 seconds to play and UNC held on when Ishmael Leggett's 14-footer rimmed out at the buzzer.
• It was Carolina's second one-point win of the season (Notre Dame) and its fourth one-point game in ACC play this season (losses to Stanford and Wake Forest). Per Rob Daniels, Carolina is the first team to have four games decided by a point in its first dozen ACC games since Georgia Tech in 1983-84 (and NC State in 1971-72 is the only other ACC team to do that).
• Davis led Carolina with 18 points. He was 6 for 12 from the floor, 3 for 5 from three, and had three assists and zero turnovers. Davis has led UNC in scoring in each of the last six games and is 36 for 77 from the floor (46.8%) and 16 of 34 from three (47.1%) in those games.
• The Tar Heels beat the Panthers despite getting a combined two field goals from Elliot Cadeau, Ian Jackson and Jalen Washington (both by Cadeau, which came late in the game and tied the score at both 58 and 60).
• Ven-Allen Lubin scored nine straight points to give Carolina a 12-3 lead and finished 8 for 12 from the floor and scored a season-high 17 points.
• Seth Trimble (15 points) pulled down a game-high seven rebounds (including two he put back for second-chance buckets) and hit two three-pointers. It was the first time he made multiple threes since November 26.
• Drake Powell hit a pair of late threes – which tied the game at 51 and gave Carolina a 56-55 lead – the first time he hit multiple threes since January 7.
• A significant key to the win was the improvement in taking care of the ball. Two games ago in the loss at Pitt, Carolina committed 14 turnovers the Panthers converted into 22 points (there was an 18-point margin in points off turnovers). On Saturday, the Tar Heels committed six turnovers (only two in the second half) that led to six Pitt points. Carolina was a plus-seven in points off turnovers.
• Carolina is 10-4 this season when it scores more points off turnovers and 4-6 when the opponents score more points off turnovers.
• Pitt led 60-58 with 5:00 to play. That marked the 12th time in 24 games this season the margin was within five points with 5:00 to play. UNC has led by five or fewer points three times (beat Georgia Tech and lost to Kansas and Stanford) and trailed by five or fewer points eight times (beat Dayton, UCLA, Notre Dame, Boston College and Pitt and lost at Louisville, at Wake Forest and at Pitt). The score was tied once (in the loss to Florida).
• In all games, Carolina is second in the ACC in scoring at 80.6 points per game, trailing only SMU in scoring average. However, in ACC play the Tar Heels are seventh in the conference in scoring offense (73.1 ppg). Carolina is also ninth in points allowed (71.9 ppg) in league play.
• The 67-66 win over Pitt fourth time in 12 ACC games both teams scored in the 60s (68-65 win over Georgia Tech, 63-61 win at NC State and 67-66 loss at Wake Forest). Take out the 102-96 overtime win over Boston College and the Tar Heels are averaging 70.5 points and allowing only 69.7 points per game in ACC play.
• In 12 ACC games, the Tar Heel defense has held the opponents to just 41.5% shooting from the floor, which is fourth best in the league behind Wake Forest, SMU and Duke.
• Carolina attempted more free throws in nine of the first 13 games this season. In the last 11 games, the opponents have shot more free throws seven times (UNC is 3-4 in those games). The Tar Heels have shot more free throws in four of the last 11 games – wins over SMU, Cal and Boston College and a loss to Stanford).
• Seth Trimble, a 6-3 guard, leads the Tar Heels in rebounding at 5.4 per game. He is on pace to become the shortest player to lead the Tar Heels in rebounding average since at least 1950. Bud Maddie (1952-53) and Larry Miller (1965-66) were both listed at 6-4.
• Trimble has three point/rebound double-doubles this season (27 points and 10 rebounds vs. Dayton, 18 and 12 vs. Boston College and 10 and 12 at Pitt).
CAROLINA-CLEMSON
• Carolina is 136-24 all-time against the Tigers, including 42-18 at Clemson and 31-15 in Littlejohn Coliseum.
• The teams have split the last six games.
• Last season was the first time the teams ever won on each other's home court in the same season. Carolina beat the Tigers, 65-55, at Clemson on January 6 and a month later the Tigers returned the favor with an 80-76 win in Chapel Hill.
• In the win at Clemson, RJ Davis and Armando Bacot shared team scoring honors with 14 points apiece. The Tigers made just 1 of 18 three-pointers and their 55 points were a season low. The teams combined for zero fastbreak points.
• At UNC, Clemson went on an early 13-0 run, led by as many as 16 in the first half and made 11 three-pointers, 10 more than it made in Carolina's win a month earlier. Bacot had 24 points and 13 rebounds and Davis scored 22 points with five assists. He was 5 for 12 from three. It was Carolina's only home loss last season.
CLOSE CALLS
• Including the 67-66 win over Pitt on Saturday, the Tar Heels have played 10 one-possession games (decided by one, two or three points) this season. Those are the most played by the Tar Heels in a season in the three-point era, which began in 1986-87. The 2010-11 team played nine one-possession games and won eight.
• The Tar Heels' six one-possession wins this season are the second most in the three-point era. UNC won eight in 2010-11, six this season and five in 1998-99 (5-3), 2002-03 (5-2) and 2016-17 (5-1).
• The losses to Stanford and Wake Forest were just the fourth time ever Carolina lost by a point in back-to-back games. The other instances include the 1929-30 season (Loyola Chicago and Duke), 1940-41 (Fordham and St. Joseph's) and 1967-68 (South Carolina and Duke).
SCHEDULE
• Carolina's strength of schedule is No. 11 in the country overall (seventh in non-conference games).
• Carolina's opponents collectively have the eighth-best offensive efficiency and 19th-best defensive efficiency in the nation.
• The Tar Heels have played three of the top five, four of the top 10 and five of the top 11 teams in the February 3 Associated Press poll.
• Carolina has already played No. 1 Auburn, No. 2 Duke, No. 3 Alabama, No. 6 Florida, No. 9 Michigan State, No. 14 Kentucky and No. 16 Kansas.
• Carolina is No. 41 overall in KenPom and 45th in the NET.
SCORING EFFICIENCY
• The Tar Heels are 40th in the country in scoring at 80.6 points per game and 295th in scoring defense (76.3).
• Factoring in pace of play and the number of possessions, Carolina is 44th in the country in offensive efficiency and 52nd in defensive efficiency.
• The Tar Heels are 9-1 this season when holding opponents below 105 points per 100 possessions. Wake Forest (92.0 ppp) is the only team to beat UNC despite scoring fewer than 105 points per 100 possessions.
• Carolina is shooting 55.4% from two-point range, its highest two-point percentage since the 1997-98 ACC champion and NCAA East Regional champion Tar Heels shot 56.5% from two-point range.
• The Tar Heels are shooting 32.7% from three, the fourth-lowest percentage in UNC history.
• Carolina is 12-4 this season when it makes 30% or better from three-point range and 2-6 (wins over Georgia Tech and Notre Dame) when it makes less than 30% of its three-point attempts.
• The Tar Heels made 27 of 93 (29%) from three-point range in their last four losses. Saturday in the win over Pitt, Carolina hit 46.7% from three (7 of 15). The 15 attempts were its fewest since the Cal game on January 15 (attempted 14 in a 26-point win over the Bears).
WINS AND LOSSES
• In Carolina's 14 wins the Tar Heels are shooting 9.6% higher from the floor than their opponents (49.5 to 39.9%). In the losses, the opponents are out-shooting the Tar Heels 46.7 to 43.7%.
• The opponents average 83.7 points in UNC's losses and just 70.9 in the Tar Heels' wins.
• Carolina is plus 5.1 rebounds per game in its wins and minus 2.1 per game on the boards in the losses. The opponents have out-rebounded the Tar Heels in six of the 10 losses.
• Carolina is shooting 35.7% from three in its wins and 28.6% in the losses.
• RJ Davis averages 17.6 points in Carolina's victories and 17.1 in the losses.
• Carolina is 7-3 when it makes the same number or more three-pointers and is 7-7 when the opponents make more 3FGs.
• The Tar Heels are 9-4 when they attempt 20 or more free throws and 5-6 when attempting fewer than 20.
• UNC is 8-2 when it makes more free throws (losses to Kansas and Stanford) and 6-8 when making an equal amount or fewer free throws.
TAR HEELS AND THE ACC
• Carolina is a charter member of the Atlantic Coast Conference.
• This is the 72nd season of ACC men's basketball.
• UNC has won the regular-season championship 33 times, including the 2023-24 season, when the Tar Heels went 17-3 to win the title outright for the 22nd time. Duke is second with 20 regular-season titles.
• The Tar Heels are 765-318 all-time in ACC regular-season play. The 765 wins are the most by any team.
• RJ Davis was the 2024 ACC Player of the Year and Hubert Davis was the Coach of the Year.
• Davis is the first Player of the Year to return the following season since UNC's Tyler Hansbrough won the award in 2008 and came back for his senior season in 2009, when he led the Tar Heels to an NCAA title.
MORE MILESTONES FOR RJ
• RJ Davis, Duke's Cooper Flagg and Pitt's Jaland Lowe are the only players in the top 10 in the ACC in both scoring and assists.
• Davis leads Carolina and is ninth in the ACC in scoring at 17.4 points per game and is ninth in the league in assists at 3.8 per game.
• Davis has played in 162 games over five seasons. He is second in games by a Tar Heel behind Armando Bacot's ACC-record 169. Davis and Bacot played five seasons due to Covid-19.
• The White Plains, N.Y., native is averaging a career-high 3.8 assists this season. His previous season bests were 3.6 per game in 2021-22 and 3.5 last season.
• Davis scored 21 points at Wake Forest and 22 in the OT win over Boston College, when he scored seven points in the extra period. He has 42 career 20-point games. The Tar Heels are 32-10 when he scores at least 20 and 13-5 when he drops 25 or more.
• Davis is Carolina's all-time leader and is ninth in ACC history with 325 three-pointers. Randolph Childress (Wake Forest) is eighth with 329.
• Davis is averaging 14.2 field goal attempts per game this season. Last year, he averaged 16.4. He is attempting 6.7 threes per game (7.7 per game last season).
• Davis is the second-leading scorer in Carolina history with 2,505 points. He passed Armando Bacot, who also played in five seasons, for second place in the win at Notre Dame on January 4.
• Davis is seventh in ACC scoring. Virginia's Bryant Stith is sixth (2,516).
• He has the highest free throw percentage ever by a Tar Heel (86.0%).
• Davis' 29-point outing vs. Florida on December 17 made him the highest scoring guard in Carolina history, eclipsing the mark held by Phil Ford.
• Davis' career scoring average is 15.5, the eighth-highest by a Tar Heel guard.
• Last year, Davis became the 19th Tar Heel to earn consensus first-team All-America honors. Those 19 players have won consensus first-team All-America honors a total of 28 times.
• Davis joined Lennie Rosenbluth in 1957, Phil Ford in 1978, Michael Jordan in 1983 and 1984, Kenny Smith in 1987, Jerry Stackhouse in 1995, Antawn Jamison in 1998, Joseph Forte in 2001 and Tyler Hansbrough in 2008 and 2009 as the only Tar Heels to make first-team All-America on each of the teams the NCAA recognizes to determine consensus first-team All-America.
NOVEMBER SIGNEES
• Carolina signed Isaiah Denis of Concord, N.C., and Derek Dixon of Vienna, Va.
• Denis is a 6-5 guard at Davidson Day High School in Davidson, N.C. His parents are Nancy Denis and Frantz Denis, and he plays AAU for CP3.
• Dixon, the son of John and Kari Dixon, is a 6-3 guard at Gonzaga College High School in Washington, D.C. He also plays AAU for Team Takeover.
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