Roy Williams had no problem disposing of Texas when he coached at Kansas, as proven by his 6-1 record against the Longhorns.
But at his alma mater, Williams has struggled, going 0-3 against Rick Barnes and Texas as the North Carolina head coach. But that all came to a close Wednesday night.
In an 82-63 final, the No. 5 Tar Heels defeated the only team Williams had not beaten after facing more than once while at UNC.
Of course, the Longhorns lacked the intimidating post presence and experience they had possessed in the three previous meetings with Williams’ Tar Heels. The Rick Barnes-led group had depended on solid, experienced play in the paint in the past, but severely lacked that on Wednesday.
“Our problems started on the offensive end because we aren’t disciplined, and that’s my fault,” Barnes said. “Not to take anything away from North Carolina, but we never gave ourselves a chance from the beginning.”
UNC (11-2) exploited that weakness early, recording 18 points in the paint in the first half alone, compared to a paltry six for the visitors.
The lack of a steadfast big man allowed UNC to spread the ball around the halfcourt, disorienting the young Longhorns (9-3) and allowing seven Tar Heels to score in the game’s opening eight minutes. UNC would finish with 22 offensive rebounds compared to Texas’ 17 defensive rebounds.
Texas pulled the game to 24-16 early, but any momentum the Longhorns had gathered was stymied by P.J. Hairston — and the best dunk in the Smith Center this season.
On a fast break with six minutes left in the half, Kendall Marshall swung a pass to Hairston near midcourt, who exploded down the sideline toward the open paint. Texas guard Julien Lewis slid over and attempt to draw a charge under the circle as Hairston began liftoff from the low block that would end with a fully extended, one-handed jam.