The NCAA tournament has already tipped off, and North Carolina begins its quest for a sixth NCAA title tonight at 7:15 against Long Island. While UNC has won nine of its previous 10 games, a few of those games have shown chinks in the Tar Heel armor. If UNC wants to make a deep run into the NCAA tournament, the Tar Heels must work on:
Beating a zone defense
At no point during this year has North Carolina been able to figure out how to beat a zone defense. This has long been known by Tar Heel opponents. Most teams usually throw a traditional 2-3 at UNC because the Tar Heels have a tough time breaking through to the interior. In February, UNC embarrassed Boston College 106-74 in Chestnut Hill. The Eagles ran a zone defense against the Tar Heels in the rematch and held UNC to a season-low 48 points.
UNC has combated the zone defense with increased 3-point efficiency. Harrison Barnes is shooting 46.8 percent from behind the arc in the past five games while Leslie McDonald is 52.9 percent in that same span.
Freeing Kendall Marshall when he brings the ball down the floor
Roy Williams knows its tough for his offense to get into a flow when it has to start 45 feet from the basket, but that’s what opponents have forced Kendall Marshall and the Tar Heels to do. Clemson’s Demontez Stitt applied soft pressure when Marshall brought the ball up the court, but Duke’s Nolan Smith crouched down even lower with his hand extended to always present the threat of a potential swipe.
Marshall is an old-school point guard who always handles the ball with his head up looking for not only where he’s going to pass, but where that next pass may end up. When Stitt, Smith or any other guard forces Marshall to focus less on UNC’s offensive set and more on just getting the ball past the timeline, the Tar Heels struggle to get their offense going the way it should.
Shaky starts
In three ACC tournament games, North Carolina started sluggishly. And in the final game against Duke, it finally caught up with the Tar Heels. No UNC player will say he got tired of having to come back because three games in three days is the nature of tournament basketball. North Carolina’s opponents in the ACC tournament averaged a .530 shooting percentage from the field in the first half. UNC, on the other hand, averaged .332 from the field in the first 20 minutes.