Wolfpack Dispatches Virginia in the ACC Tournament Second Round, 75-56

In a thoroughly dominating performance in the Second Round of the ACC Tournament, the Wolfpack defeated Virginia, 75-56.

Scott Wood was on fire in the second half, seemingly throwing in three point shots as if they were balls tossed at the side of a barn. The vaunted UVA defense could do little to stop the senior, who finished the game with 23 points, 4 rebounds, and 2 steals. But that line doesn’t tell the whole story: Wood, often unappreciated for his defensive effort frustrated Virginia star Joe Harris for most of the night. Wood’s defensive effort was largely responsible for Harris being unable to set the tone and that put the Cavs out of synch for the game…and when the Wolfpack got back the ball, often it was Wood who was swishing the ball through the net or making a key pass to extend the Pack’s lead.

Despite a few “CJ” moments, Calvin Leslie had a hard-working game. His 17 points and 11 rebounds with three blocks were key, as was his effort throughout. Leslie was double-teamed for much of the day and had a tough day around the basket, but the mercurial junior made the most of a 5-17 shooting performance by never giving up on loose balls and coolly sinking 5 of his 7 free throws. His seventeen seemed to quietly accumulate, and on the surface it may have seemed like he had a bad game — but that impression would be wrong.

The boxscore cannot show the intangibles that make often make the difference between victory and defeat, and there, Leslie had perhaps his best game of the year. With 16:31 left, and the game still long in doubt, Leslie followed Scott Wood’s three a few moments before with an old-fashioned three-point play of his own, by driving past Evan Nolte for a score, the sinking the free throw that followed – a play that put the Pack up 44-25 and the game out of reach for Virginia. They never got closer than eleven after that, as the Wolfpack collectively had an answer for every Virginia parry the rest of the way.

Freshman TJ Warren was also solid, giving the Pack eighteen points in a game that saw starter Richard Howell largely frustrated throughout. Warren did have one junior moment when he was called for a technical by tossing the ball at the feet of a Virginia player after he was called for a foul. The Hoos sank one of the two free throws and then followed with a three, but that was only a whisper in a wind of the Wolfpack roars today in Greensboro.

Up tomorrow the Pack faces the only team to beat them at home this year, the Miami Hurricanes.

Discuss, and we will add more in a bit.

12-13 Basketball ACC & Other NC State NCS Basketball

76 Responses to Wolfpack Dispatches Virginia in the ACC Tournament Second Round, 75-56

  1. greg74 03/16/2013 at 11:03 AM #

    An email I’m sending to the editor of the sports page of the Charleston (SC) Post and Courier:
    ———-
    Mr. Dewitt:

    I am writing to complain, specifically, about the Sports Section’s coverage of the ACC Men’s basketball tournament and, more generally, the lack of coverage of the teams from NC State University. While many alumni from Duke and University of NC choose to make their homes in the Low Country, there are also many alumni of NC State who do the same. The coverage in Saturday’s sports section typifies what I see as a conspicuous bias in terms of coverage against the NC State Wolfpack’s sports teams. Page 1 of the sports section covers Duke’s loss to Maryland, and devotes about a third of the page to that game. The remainder of the coverage of the tournament’s second round is on page 3 and covers about 1/6th of the page. Of that small section, almost 2/3 is given to the UNC Tarheels, including a photo. Then comes the section about Miami’s win over Boston College. Five sentences about teams from Florida and Massachusetts. And finally, the section about the Wolfpack’s victory over Virginia.

    Two sentences. Shameful in my opinion.

    NC State holds a prestigious place in the history of the ACC. Two national championships in men’s basketball along with other high rankings in football and in other non-traditional non-money sports over the years. We NC State alumni who live in Charleston and the surrounding areas deserve as much coverage of our beloved Wolfpack teams as that given to the Blue Devils and Tarheels.

    Please try to afford us the same respect as that received by the “blue” teams in North Carolina. We deserve it.

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