ACC Basketball Game Stories, Jan. 20

Check here for game stories from all the ACC basketball action on Monday. Now that we’re conference play, stories will be listed in alphabetical order, by which ACC team won the game.

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NC State rallies to beat Maryland 65-56

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) – North Carolina State proved it can win without star scorer T.J. Warren.

Ralston Turner matched his career-high with 23 points, helping the Wolfpack rally to beat Maryland 65-56 on Monday despite playing without the Atlantic Coast Conference’s leading scorer.

Desmond Lee added 14 points for the Wolfpack (12-7, 2-4 ACC), who rallied from 11 down early in the second half to snap a three-game losing streak. N.C. State shot 57 percent after halftime, with Turner scoring 19 points and knocking down all five of his 3-pointers in the second half.

“Boy, our guys were determined,” coach Mark Gottfried said. “They were absolutely determined not to lay down.”

Turner was making his first start in two months with Warren sidelined due to a sprained left ankle suffered late in Saturday’s 35-point loss at Duke. Warren was averaging 22 points per game, but Turner and his Wolfpack teammates responded to the challenge against the Terrapins (11-8, 3-3).

“We all talked about before the game to just come together,” Turner said. “It didn’t really matter who did what. We just wanted to come together and play as one unit and get a win.”

It was clear how much this win meant for the Wolfpack, who had suffered two 30-point losses in a span of eight days. Gottfried – who was celebrating his 50th birthday – went down the Wolfpack bench giving his players celebratory high-fives and thumping their chests as the horn sounded on this one.

N.C. State had a big win at Notre Dame to build some confidence after a home loss to Pittsburgh in its league opener. But things had gone downhill since, starting with a 31-point home loss to Virginia followed by a 70-69 loss on a last-second basket at Wake Forest four days later.

Then came Saturday’s ugly loss to the Blue Devils, the Wolfpack’s worst loss in the series in a dozen years. That sent the Wolfpack into a three-game ACC homestand against Maryland, Georgia Tech and Florida State not far away from desperation mode.

“We needed something positive and we needed it fast,” Lee said. “Today we got it.”

Turner, an LSU transfer, made it happen with his best scoring effort in an N.C. State uniform. He started the season’s first four games but hadn’t started since, with his best scoring total being 21 points against Detroit on Dec. 14. He hadn’t scored more than 12 points in the past nine games.

He was 2-for-8 from the field and missed all five of his 3-point tries in the first half, but went 5-for-10 from behind the arc after halftime and finished with seven rebounds.

“He started making big shots for them and we couldn’t stop him,” said Charles Mitchell, who had a career-high 18 rebounds for the Terps. “He had some uncontested shots and contested shots and still made them. You knew it was going to be his night when he started making those shots.”

No one for Maryland could match Turner’s surge. Leading scorer Dez Wells finished with 10 points on 2-for-11 shooting, while Evan Smotrycz also had 10 for Maryland – which led 29-20 on Jake Layman’s 3-pointer just before halftime but shot just 31 percent for the game.

Maryland had lost two straight games by at least 20 points before last week’s home win against Notre Dame, then looked on its way to a second straight win when it took its biggest lead at 31-20 on Shaquille Cleare’s hook shot over Jordan Vandenberg 30 seconds into the second half.

But the Wolfpack answered with an 8-0 flurry, ending when Lee found a trailing Kyle Washington for big transition dunk that erased the Terps’ working margin.

Turner took over later on, hitting consecutive 3-pointers that put the Wolfpack ahead to stay at 48-46 with 8:50 left. He knocked down one over Wells with the Wolfpack protecting a one-point lead at the 4:35 mark, then hit his last one off a feed from Anthony “Cat” Barber to make it 62-55 with 2:40 to play.

Maryland was 9-0 when holding opponents to fewer than 70 points and 8-0 when leading at the half before Monday night.

“We got up 11 and we just stopped running back and quit guarding and then we gave them confidence,” Maryland coach Mark Turgeon said. “I thought they were terrific on both ends in the second half.”

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Virginia hands Tar Heels another ACC loss, 76-61

CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. (AP) – Joe Harris and Virginia led North Carolina by nine at halftime on Monday night, and went into the locker room feeling lousy about the way they had played, and fortunate to be in front.

They fixed it after the intermission, quickly building their lead to 15 points. They never allowed the Tar Heels to get back within single digits and sent them to another Atlantic Coast Conference loss, 76-61 at John Paul Jones Arena.

“We didn’t come out and play very well at all,” Harris said of the opening 20 minutes, which nonetheless ended with the Cavaliers ahead 38-29. “There were a lot of breakdowns we had defensively and we were a little sped up on offense. Even though we were winning in the first half, we didn’t feel very good about it.”

Virginia finished the half on a 12-2 run. And when the Cavaliers scored 10 of the first 14 points of the second half, building their advantage to 48-33, they had plenty of cushion to cruise to victory.

“The second half was a lot better,” Harris said.

Malcolm Brogdon and Harris scored 16 points each and Justin Anderson had 13 for the Cavaliers (14-5, 5-1), who continued their best start in ACC play since the 1994-95 team also opened 5-1. Moreover, two of the wins this season have come in three tries on the road.

“We’re feeling good right now,” senior forward Akil Mitchell said. “We’re on a roll and as long as we keep sticking to what we do, we’ve got a good team and we know we can be good.”

Kennedy Meeks scored 15 points and James Michael McAdoo had 11 for North Carolina (11-7, 1-4). The Tar Heels avoided the first 0-4 ACC start in team history by beating Boston College in their last game, but trailed almost throughout against the Cavaliers.

“The easiest way to put it is the more efficient team won the game,” Tar Heels coach Roy Williams said, lamenting his team’s inability to turn offensive rebounds into points.

North Carolina grabbed nine offensive rebounds in the first half, when it largely got the better of Virginia, but was able to convert them into just four points, missing often from in close.

“We’ve got to be more attentive to finishing the play instead of worrying about getting fouled,” Williams said.

Harris made a trio of 3-pointers in the first 3:14, and even though his next field goal came with just 2:28 remaining, the fast start opened things up for everyone else.

“Joe takes all the attention and makes it easier for everybody, makes it easier for our offense to flow,” said Brogdon, who also had six rebounds and three steals.

London Perrantes added eight points and nine assists for Virginia, and Akil Mitchell had 11 rebounds.

The Cavaliers shot 50 percent from the field until the final minute, when coach Tony Bennett made wholesale lineup changes

Virginia also turned 11 Tar Heels turnovers into 17 points and shot 49 percent (26-54).

The Cavaliers led 38-29 at halftime and started the second half on a 10-4 run, extending their burst spanning the halves to 22-6. Mike Tobey, who did not score in a foul-plagued first half, had six of the points after the break.

The Tar Heels closed to within 12 several times, and then got within 60-49 on McAdoo’s tip-in with 9:05 to play. But Brogdon beat the shot clock with a jumper from 15 feet, McAdoo missed a pair of free throws and Mitchell’s driving basket pushed the lead back to 15, and it was more than enough.

The first half was close throughout until Virginia closed it with a 12-2 run to open a 38-29 lead.

Brogdon made a three-point play with 1:57 left and the freshman Perrantes, who had a career-best eight assists by halftime, swished a 3-pointer from the left corner with 27 seconds remaining.