No. 16 North Carolina Tar Heels Defeat Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets
No. 16 North Carolina didnโt just beat Georgia Tech; they walked into Atlanta, put their feet up on the furniture, and cruised to a 91-75 victory that felt even more lopsided than the final score suggested. For Hubert Davis and his squad, this wasn’t just another notch in the ACC win column; it was a statement that the Tar Heels are finding their rhythm at the exact right moment.
Caleb Wilson Etches His Name In North Carolina History
If you haven’t bought stock in Caleb Wilson yet, you might be too late. The freshman sensation returned to his hometown of Atlanta and put on a clinic that looked more like a mixtape than a conference basketball game. Wilson finished with a team-high 22 points, 6 rebounds, and 5 assists, but the raw numbers donโt tell the whole story.
It was the way he did it. Whether it was catching an alley-oop from Kyan Evans that defied gravity or navigating through traffic with the poise of a fifth-year senior, Wilson was untouchable.
Wilsonโs performance wasnโt just flashy; it was historic. With his 15th 20-point game of the season, he surpassed the legendary Tyler Hansbrough for the most 20-point games by a freshman in program history. He also eclipsed Rashad McCants for consecutive double-figure scoring games by a freshman.
Veesaar and Trimble Provide the Heavy Lifting
While Wilson was grabbing the headlines, Henri Veesaar was quietly assembling a monster performance in the paint. The big man was a force of nature, posting a double-double with 20 points and 12 rebounds. But Veesaar wasn’t just cleaning the glass; he was a problem defensively, tallying four blocks and altering countless other shots. He even stepped out and knocked down a three from the top of the key.
Then there was Seth Trimble. If Wilson is the flash and Veesaar is the muscle, Trimble is the spark plug. He poured in 18 points, attacking the rim relentlessly and keeping the Georgia Tech defense on its heels. Between Trimbleโs slashing and Luka Bogavac adding 16 points off the bench, North Carolina had too many weapons for the Yellow Jackets to track.
North Carolina Wins the Turnover Battle By a Mile
You want to know how you lose a game at home by 16 points? You let the other team treat the basketball like a precious gem while you toss it around like a hot potato. The stat of the night wasn’t the points or the reboundsโit was the turnovers. North Carolina committed just two turnovers.
On the flip side, the Tar Heelsโ defense forced Georgia Tech into mistakes, turning those errors into points. UNC outscored Georgia Tech 18-0 in points off turnovers. When you execute your offense with surgical precision and punish your opponent for every mistake, you win games. Itโs that simple.
Hubert Davis, Drake Maye, and Embracing the Hard Stuff
Before the team even arrived in Atlanta, Head Coach Hubert Davis pulled a different kind of card from his motivational deck. He showed the team a clip of former Tar Heel Quarterback Drake Maye, now prepping for the Super Bowl with the New England Patriots.
Davis highlighted a moment where Maye acknowledged how hard the grind is, telling his offensive coordinator, “This is hard, good God.” Davis used that to drive a point home to his team: Winning is supposed to be hard. The grind of the ACC is supposed to be hard. “That hardness is something you have to walk towards and embrace,” Davis told them.
It seems the message landed. North Carolina didnโt shrink from the challenge on the road; they embraced it. They took the “hard” and made it look easy.
Looking Ahead To Syracuse
With the win, North Carolina improves to 17-4 overall and 5-3 in the ACC, riding a three-game winning streak that has the locker room buzzing. But there isn’t much time to celebrate. The Tar Heels have a quick turnaround, heading back to Chapel Hill to host Syracuse on Monday night.
