2011 acc men's basketball tournament program

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A look back on the 2010-2011 season and an in depth look into the 2011 ACC Tournament.

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Page 1: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

THEACC.COM 1THTHTHTHTHTHTHTHTHT EAEAEAEAEAEAEAEAAEACCCCCCCCCCCCCCC .C.C.C.CC.CCCOMOMOMOMOMOMOM 111111

Page 2: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program
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2011 ACC BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT 1

INSIDE

26CLEMSON

38NORTH CAROLINA

30FLORIDA STATE

42VIRGINIA

34MARYLAND

46WAKE FOREST

24BOSTON COLLEGE

36MIAMI

LETTER FROM COMMISSIONER 2MEET JOHN SWOFFORD 4

STAFF OF THE ACC 5

TRADITIONS OF EXCELLENCE 6FAN FEST 13

ACC BASKETBALL BY THE NUMBERS 14

POSTGRADUATE SCHOLAR ATHLETES 17

ACC MULTIMEDIA 18

HOME COURTS OF THE ACC 22

2011 ACC BASKETBALL SEASON 49

FINAL REGULAR SEASON STANDINGS 50

ACC TOURNAMENT BRACKET 51

PLAYERS OF THE WEEK 52

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS 54

ALL-ACC TEAM 56

ACC PLAYER OF THE YEAR 58

ACC ROOKIE OF THE YEAR 61

ACC DEFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE YEAR 62

SKIP PROSSER AWARD 63

ACC COACH OF THE YEAR 64

SCHOOL RECORDS 66

TEAM BOX SCORES 68

ACC VIDEO VAULT 74

ACC HALL OF CHAMPIONS 77

ACC FOOTBALL SCHEDULES 78

NCAA TOURNAMENT TITLES 82

LEGENDS OF THE ACC 84

ALL-TIME LEGENDS 106

ACC ACADEMIC SUCCESS 111

ALL-TIME ACC CHAMPIONS 112

ACC TOURNAMENT RESULTS 114

FOLLOW THE ACC FACEBOOK facebook.com/theACCYOUTUBE youtube.com/theACCsport TWITTER @theACC; @theACCfootball; @ACCgridiron; @ACCmbb; @ACCwbb; @theACCchamps

28DUKE

40NC STATE

32GEORGIA TECH

44VIRGINIA TECH

THE 2011 ACC MEN’S BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT PROGRAM IS AN OFFICIAL PUBLICATION OF THE ATLANTIC COAST CONFERENCE. PRODUCED BY DESTINATION MEDIA PUBLISHER GARY JONES FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT THE ATLANTIC COAST CONFERENCE, 4512 WEYBRIDGE LANE, GREENSBORO, NC 27407TO PURCHASE ADDITIONAL COPIES OF THIS PROGRAM, VISIT WWW.THEACC.COM OR CALL 336-854-8787

SPECIAL THANKS TO THE ATLANTIC COAST CONFERENCE STAFF AND THE SPORTS INFORMATION DIRECTORS AT THE ACC MEMBER INSTITUTIONSCOVER DESIGN BY MARTHA WALKER

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ATLANTIC COAST CONFERENCE

OFFICE OF THE COMMISSIONER

4512 WEYBRIDGE LANE • GREENSBORO, NC 27407 • P.O. DRAWER ACC • GREENSBORO, NC 27417-6724 • (336) 854-8787 MEDIA RELATIONS & VIDEO SERVICES (336) 851-6062 • MEDIA RELATIONS FAX (336) 854-8797 • ADMINISTRATION FAX (336) 316-6097

BOSTON COLLEGE • CLEMSON UNIVERSITY • DUKE UNIVERSITY • FLORIDA STATE UNIVERSITY • GEORGIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND • UNIVERSITY OF MIAMI • UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA • NORTH CAROLINA STATE UNIVERSITY

UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA • VIRGINIA POLYTECHNIC INSTITUTE AND STATE UNIVERSITY • WAKE FOREST UNIVERSITY

2 theACC.com

DEAR ACC BASKETBALL FANS:

On behalf of the Atlantic Coast Conference, welcome to the 58th annual ACC Men’sBasketball Tournament.

Our conference and the City of Greensboro have worked hard to make this a very special and exciting time for the players, coaches and fans. We sincerely hope you enjoy this weekend’s games and the events that surround the Tournament, and that you fi nd your tripto Greensboro to be a pleasurable experience.

This year will mark the 23rd time that the Greensboro Coliseum will play host to one ofthe premiere sporting events in America. As the birth place of the ACC and its home sincethe league’s inception on May 8, 1953, it is only fi tting that no other city has played host to the Tournament more times than Greensboro.

Our 12 men’s basketball teams have enjoyed an exciting 2010-11 regular-season and 2011 may well be one of the most competitive Tournaments in ACC history.

As you watch some of the nation’s fi nest teams showcase their talents, we hope you will take in the complete tournament experience. Over the past 57 years the ACC Basketball programs have produced 59 consensus All-Americans, 31 National Players of the Year, 44 NCAA Final Four teams and 12 NCAA Titles.

Enjoy your stay in Greensboro as you witness one of the greatest traditions in collegebasketball.

Sincerely,

John D. Swoff ordJ h D S ff dAtlantic Coast Conference Commissioner

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Succeeding at the highest level.

In the Atlantic Coast Conference, success is the result of hard work, character

and commitment to doing things right. As ACC student-athletes strive for

excellence in both the classroom and athletic competition, the Conference

salutes its Official Corporate Partners: AT&T, BB&T, Food Lion, Gatorade,

Geico, Havoline, Pepsi, and Toyota. These partnerships support ACC

Championship events, provide student-athletes with scholarship assistance

and help ACC outreach programs impact local communities. Together, the

Atlantic Coast Conference and its Official Corporate Partners are succeeding

at the highest level.

A Tradition of Excellence... Then, Now and Always.

Page 6: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

NOW IN HIS 14TH YEAR AS COMMISSIONER,

John Swoff ord has made a dramatic impact on the Atlantic Coast Conference and college athletics. Swoff ord has built his career on the appropriate balance of academics, athletic achievement and integrity and is regarded as one of the top administrators in the NCAA.

Swoff ord assumed his role as the fourth full-time commis-sioner of the Atlantic Coast Conference in July of 1997. He fol-lows James H. (Jim) Weaver, the league’s fi rst Commissioner from 1954-1970, Robert (Bob) James, who served from 1971-1987 and Eugene F. (Gene) Corrigan, who held the position from 1987 to 1997.

In addition to overseeing one of the nation’s largest athletic conferences, Swoff ord has been pivotal in positioning the Atlan-tic Coast Conference for the future.

In July of 2010, Swoff ord’s leadership and negotiating skills helped the conference secure a new 12 year multi-media rights agreement with ESPN. The extensive television package begins with the 2011-12 academic year and will more than double televi-sion revenue to the 12 member institutions. In addition to reach-ing new heights fi nancially, ACC content will now be televised more, both regionally and nationally, than at any point in league history, while also best positioning the conference within the continuous, ever-changing world of technology.

Equally as historic, in 2003, on behalf of the nine league institutions and the ACC Council of Presidents, Swoff ord intro-duced Miami, Virginia Tech and Boston College as the newest members of the ACC. With the expansion, Swoff ord helped bring the conference extended and enhanced television contracts in both football and basketball. Highlights included the rights to the inaugural ACC Football Championship Game and signifi cant increases in the number of televised games as well as negoti-ating an agreement with XM Satellite Radio, to broadcast the league’s football, men’s and women’s basketball games nation-ally.

In the sport of basketball, Swoff ord was instrumental in cre-ating the ACC/Big Ten Challenge that began in men’s basketball in 1999. Then in 2007, the two conferences hosted the inaugu-ral ACC/Big Ten Women’s Basketball Challenge.

Highly respected by his peers, Swoff ord was a force in the development and growth of the Bowl Championship Series and is the only person to serve two terms as its Coordinator.

Since becoming Commissioner, Swoff ord has been respon-sible for securing increased bowl opportunities for the ACC. The past fi ve seasons, at least seven ACC teams have earned bowl bids and, in 2008, the conference set an NCAA record when 10 of its 12 teams (83%) participated in bowl play. This year, the ACC has agreements in place with nine bowls including the Orange Bowl, home to the ACC Champion since 2006.

During Swoff ord’s fi rst 13 years as Commissioner, ACC teams have won 50 national team titles and 1,337 ACC teams have participated in various NCAA championships - an average of over 100 NCAA teams per year.

A long-time advocate of the importance of academics and student-athlete welfare, Swoff ord stimulated the formation of the league’s fi rst-ever ACC Student-Athlete Advisory Com-mittee. This group of current ACC student-athletes gives the conference direct feedback on their experiences participating at the highest level of college athletics.

In 2006, the prestigious ACC Men’s Basketball Tournament was awarded out to 2015. Throughout Swoff ord’s tenure, the iconic event will have traveled to many dynamic cities within the footprint of the league including Atlanta, Ga., Washington D.C. and Tampa, Fla., in addition to the traditional stops in Greens-boro and Charlotte. The 2001 ACC Tournament in Atlanta set NCAA attendance records for single session (40,083), per ses-sion average (36,505) and total attendance (182,525).

Swoff ord placed an added emphasis on the development of women’s basketball in the ACC with the hiring of an Associate Commissioner for Women’s Basketball to oversee all aspects of the sport on both a conference and national level.

The Director of Athletics at the University of North Carolina from 1980 to 1997, Swoff ord was instrumental in building North Carolina’s athletics department into one of the country’s most respected programs. He became the school’s athletic director on May 1, 1980 and at the age of 31, he was the youngest major college Athletics Director in the nation at the time.

During his tenure, Tar Heel athletic teams claimed 123 ACC championships and 24 national collegiate titles, including two in men’s basketball and one in women’s basketball. During the 1993-94 year, the Tar Heels captured the inaugural Sears Direc-tors’ Cup, emblematic of the collegiate all-sports champion and fi nished in the Top Six of the Sears Cup standings in each year of Swoff ord’s tenure that the award was given.

Under his leadership, North Carolina enjoyed tremendous growth in its athletic facilities, including the construction of the Smith Center, a complex which includes a 21,572-seat basket-ball arena, the Koury Natatorium and the Frank H. Kenan Foot-ball Center. He initiated the idea and provided the impetus for the founding of North Carolina’s trademark licensing program.

The University chose to recognize his many accomplish-ments by establishing the John D. Swoff ord women’s athletics scholarship and naming an auditorium in the school’s football complex in his honor.

John and his wife Nora reside in Greensboro, N.C. and to-gether they have three children, Amie, Chad and Autumn, who is married to Sherman Wooden. Autumn and Sherman welcomed Maya, their fi rst child, to the family in April of 2010.

JOHN D. SWOFFORD

EDUCATIONHigh School Wilkes Central High School North Wilkesboro, NCCollege University of North Carolina, 1971 Morehead Scholarship RecipientGraduate Ohio University, 1973 M.Ed. in Athletics Administration

PLAYING EXPERIENCE1965-67 Two-time All-State QB and three-sport MVP at Wilkes Central High School 1969-71 North Carolina varsity football team quarterback and defensive back Peach Bowl, 1970 Gator Bowl, 1971 ACC Champions, 1971

ATHLETIC ADMINISTRATION EXPERIENCE1973-76 Ticket Manager/Asst. to the Director of Athletic Facilities and Finance University of Virginia1976-79 Assistant Athletics Director and Business Manager University of North Carolina1979-80 Assistant Executive Vice President of the Educational Foundation University of North Carolina1980-97 Director of Athletics University of North Carolina1997- Commissioner Atlantic Coast Conference

MEMBERSHIP ON BOARDS AND COMMITTEES• NCAA Men’s College Basketball

Offi ciating, LLC Board, 2010-present• National Sportscasters and Sportswriters

Association Honorary Board, 2009-present• College Football Offi ciating, LLC

Board of Managers, 2008-present• North Carolina Sports Hall of Fame

Advisory Board, 2008-present• Wyndham Championship Board

of Directors, 2002-present• National Letter of Intent Appeals

Committee, 2002-present• BCS Coordinator, 2000-01, 2008-09• IA Collegiate Commissioner’s Assoc.

(Chair), 2005-07• NCAA Football Board of Directors

(President), 2004-05• NCAA Executive Committee, 1995-97• NCAA Division I Championship Committee

(Chair), 1995-97• NCAA Special Committee to Study a

Division I-A Football Championship, 1994-95• President of NACDA, 1993-94• NCAA Special Events Committee, 1987-91• NCAA Communications Committee (Chair), 1987-89• NCAA Football Television Committee (Chair), 1984

HONORS AND AWARDS• North Carolina Sports Hall of Fame, 2009• Homer Rice Award, 2005 (presented by the

Division 1A Athletic Directors’ Association)• Horizon Award, 2004 (presented by the Atlanta

Sports Council, recognizing the National Sports Business Executive of the Year)

• Chick-fi l-A Bowl Hall of Fame, 2003• Fifth most infl uential person in U.S. sports

by the Sporting News, 2003• Outstanding American Award for the

Triangle Chapter of the College Football Hall of Fame, 2002

• North Carolina High School Athletic Association’s Hall of Fame, 2002

• Ohio University’s Charles R. Higgins Distinguished Alumnus Award, 1984

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JOHN D. SWOFFORDCOMMISSIONER

BRIAN A. MORRISON ASSOCIATE COMMISSIONER

MEN’S BASKETBALL COMMUNICATIONS

CHARLENE CURTISCOORDINATOR,

WOMEN’S BASKETBALL OFFICIALS

ALLISON DOUGHTYASSOCIATE DIRECTOR

FOOTBALL OPERATIONS

CECELIA DIAMICOEXECUTIVE ASSISTANT TO THE

COMMISSIONER

EMILY WATKINSRECEPTIONIST

NORA LYNN FINCH ASSOCIATE COMMISSIONER

WOMEN’S BASKETBALL OPERATIONS & SWA

LINDSEY BABCOCK ASSISTANT COMMISSIONER

COMPLIANCE AND GOVERNANCE

BRAD HECKERDIRECTOR

WOMEN’S BASKETBALL OPERATIONS

BEN TARIOASSOCIATE DIRECTOR

TECHNOLOGY AND OPERATIONS

SUSAN ANTHONY ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANTADMINISTRATION/BUSINESS

SHELDON BELLINTERN

CHAMPIONSHIPS

MICHAEL KELLY ASSOCIATE COMMISSIONER

COMMUNICATIONS & FOOTBALL OPERATIONS

DOUG RHOADSCOORDINATOR,

FOOTBALL OFFICIALS

CHRISTINA L. TRACEYDIRECTOR

INFORMATION SYSTEMS

DONALD MOOREASSISTANT DIRECTOR

CHAMPIONSHIPS

TRACEY HAITHADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANTSTUDENT-ATHLETE WELFARE/COMPLIANCE & GOVERNANCE

CHARLOTTE ZOLLERINTERN

PUBLIC RELATIONS & MARKETING

JEFF ELLIOTTASSOCIATE COMMISSIONER

FINANCE & ADMINISTRATION

AMY YAKOLAASSOCIATE COMMISSIONER

PUBLIC RELATIONS & MARKETING

SHAMAREE BROWNDIRECTOR

STUDENT-ATHLETE PROGRAMS & COMPLIANCE

LINDSEY ROSSASSOCIATE DIRECTOR

COMMUNICATIONS

HEATHER C. HIRSCHMANWEBSITE COORDINATOR

SETH BARWICKINTERN, COMPLIANCE &

STUDENT-ATHLETE PROGRAMS

KARL HICKS ASSOCIATE COMMISSIONER

MEN’S BASKETBALL OPERATIONS

KRIS W. PIERCEASSISTANT COMMISSIONER

CHAMPIONSHIPS

KATHY C. HUNTDIRECTOR

MEN’S BASKETBALL OPERATIONS

GEORGIA DAVISASSISTANT DIRECTOR

WOMEN’S BASKETBALLL & SWA

BARB DERYADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANTCOMMUNICATIONS/PUBLIC RELATIONS & MARKETING

NEIL SLEIGHTINTERN

WEBSITE

MIKE FINN ASSOCIATE COMMISSIONER

FOOTBALL COMMUNICATIONS

W. SCOTT MCBURNEYASSISTANT COMMISSIONER

ADVANCED MEDIA

LYNNE HERNDONDIRECTOR

BUSINESS OPERATIONS

STEVE “SLIM” VOLLINGERASSOCIATE DIRECTOR

ADVANCED MEDIA

JENNIE BARRETT ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT

CHAMPIONSHIPS

JOANNE CANNELLINTERN

COMMUNICATIONS

SHANE LYONSASSOCIATE COMMISSIONER

COMPLIANCE & GOVERNANCE

JOHN CLOUGHERTYCOORDINATOR

MEN’S BASKETBALL OFFICIALS

LEE BUTLERASSOCIATE DIRECTOR

CHAMPIONSHIPS

STEVE PHILLIPSASSISTANT DIRECTOR

COMMUNICATIONS

KARRIE B. TILLEYADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT

MEN’S BASKETBALL OPERATIONS

ATLANTIC COAST CONFERENCE STAFF

2011 ACC BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT 5

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6 theACC.com

TRADITIOTRADITIOTRADITIOEXCEXCEXC

CONSISTENCY. IT IS THE MARK OF TRUE EXCELLENCE IN ANY ENDEAVOR.

However, in today’s intercollegiate athletics, competition has become so balanced and so competitive that it is virtually impossible to maintain a high level of consistency.

Yet the Atlantic Coast Conference has defi ed the odds. Now in its 58th year of competition, the ACC has long enjoyed the reputation as one of the strongest and most competitive intercollegiate conferences in the na-tion. And that is not mere conjecture,

the numbers support it. Since the league’s inception in

1953, ACC schools have captured 120 national championships, includ-ing 64 in women’s competition and 56 in men’s. In addition, NCAA in-dividual titles have gone to ACC student-athletes 130 times in men’s competition and 91 times in women’s action.

If success is best measured in terms of wins and losses, then the ACC is

unrivaled in NCAA annals. With Duke’s victory over Butler in last year’s NCAA title game, ACC teams have won fi ve of the last 10 NCAA National Championships and 12 overall, including eight over the last 20 years.

No conference has compiled a bet-ter NCAA Tournament record than the ACC since the inaugural tourna-ment in 1939. ACC teams have post-ed an NCAA Tournament-best mark

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2011 ACC BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT 7

ONONONCELLENCECELLENCECELLENCE

of 347-175 for a sterling .665 winning percentage against the nation’s tough-est competition.

The ACC is the only conference to have each of its teams make at least one NCAA Tournament appearance over the past fi ve years.

In the 26 years of the current 64/65-team fi eld, the ACC has produced 24 Final Four teams, an average of almost one per year and six more than any other conference.

Since the NCAA Tournament was expanded to 64 teams in 1985, ACC teams have compiled a 249-126 (.665) NCAA record, including 66 “Sweet 16” appearances and 24 Final Four berths - all NCAA Tournament bests.

Since 1985, 67 of the 133 ACC teams receiving NCAA berths have won at least two NCAA Tournament games.

North Carolina’s Tar Heels lead all ACC schools with fi ve NCAA bas-ketball championships to their credit. Duke is next with four national titles, followed by NC State with two and Maryland one. The Tar Heels claimed NCAA titles in 1957, 1982, 1993, 2005 and 2009, while the Blue Dev-ils won their fourth title in 2010, fol-lowing earlier championships in 2001, 1992 and 1991. The Wolfpack walked away with the coveted crown in 1974 and 1983 while the Terps claimed the 2002 national title.

The ACC has 10 or more NCAA

Tournament wins 13 times overall, and the league has not posted a losing re-cord in NCAA Tournament play since 1987. The conference’s 23-year non-losing streak in NCAA Tournament play is tops among all conferences.

Since 1981, the ACC has produced 38 consensus All-Americans - 15 more than any other conference and has ac-counted for 25 percent of the nation’s consensus All-Americans (38-of-155).

Seven of the last 14 and nine of the last 18 consensus

National Players of the Year have been from the ACC. Since 1975, the ACC has had 16 consensus National Players of the Year - 12 more than any other conference. In addition, nine of

THEN, NOW AND ALWAYS

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the ACC’s 16 National Players of the Year were unanimous selections.

A year ago the ACC had 52 play-ers on NBA rosters. In addition, over the past fi ve years 45 ACC players have made their NBA debuts, includ-ing an all-time high 15 in 2006.

In this past June’s 2010 NBA draft, the ACC had fi ve fi rst round selec-tions and nine players drafted over-all. The ACC has had fi ve-or-more fi rst round selections in three of the past four years and has had at least one fi rst-round pick in 22 consecu-tive NBA drafts. Since 1986, the ACC has had 93 fi rst round selections - 13 more than any other conference.

Last year, for the second time in four years, 10 ACC teams fi nished the season with 20 or more wins. The ACC is the only conference in Divi-sion I history to have 10 teams win 20 or more games in a single season. For the fi fth-straight year, the ACC surpassed the 2.2 million mark in attendance as the 12 schools totaled

2,217,642 over 201 regular season games and six ACC Tournament ses-sions.

THE CHAMPIONSHIPS

The conference conducts champi-onship competition in 25 sports - 12 for men and 13 for women.

The fi rst ACC championship was held in swimming on February 25, 1954. The conference did not conduct championships in cross country, wres-tling or tennis during the fi rst year.

The 12 sports for men include foot-ball, cross country, soccer, basketball, swimming, indoor and outdoor track, wrestling, baseball, tennis, golf and lacrosse. Fencing, which was started in 1971, was discontinued in 1981.

Championships for women are currently conducted in cross coun-try, volleyball, fi eld hockey, soccer, basketball, swimming, indoor and outdoor track, tennis, golf, lacrosse, softball and rowing.

YEAR IN REVIEW

ACC schools captured an all-time high eight national titles during the 2009-10 academic year. Overall, the ACC has totaled 50 national team titles over the last 13 years. The Con-ference has won two or more NCAA titles in 28 of the past 30 years.

2009-10 ACC NATIONAL CHAMPIONS

FIELD HOCKEY NORTH CAROLINA

WOMEN’S SOCCER NORTH CAROLINA

MEN’S SOCCER VIRGINIA

MEN’S BASKETBALL DUKE

MEN’S ICE HOCKEY BOSTON COLLEGE

MEN’S LACROSSE DUKE

WOMEN’S ROWING VIRGINIA

WOMEN’S LACROSSE MARYLAND

A HISTORY

The Atlantic Coast Conference was founded on May 8, 1953, at the Sedge-fi eld Inn near Greensboro, N.C., with seven charter members - Clemson, Duke, Maryland, North Carolina, North Caro-lina State, South Carolina and Wake For-

THE ACCIAC is a special com-mitment of the 12 university presidents and the conference offi ce to enhance academic excellence. Funded by a por-tion of the revenues from the Dr Pepper Football Championship Game, the ACCIAC eff ort is to advance the quality of educa-tion for all undergraduate stu-dents by sharing academic and administrative resources and by hosting conferences that bring together experts from all our campuses.

Strategies for collabora-

tion include conferences of students from all 12 universi-ties, scholarship awards for international study, academic grants to competitively judged creative projects, faculty devel-opment seminars led by experts from other ACC campuses, and exchanges of best practices among leaders with similar job responsibilities. In 2010-11 a new program will sponsor ACC student-athletes working through the teaching of sports to motivate promising young people in developing countries

to advance their own education.The ACC’s commitment of

athletic funds to the direct en-hancement of the undergradu-ate education experience is distinctive among all athletic conferences and an appropri-ate refl ection of the central-ity of academics. Among all athletic conferences, only the Ivy League can claim a higher percentage of its members among the Top 35 universities in the country. Excelling both academically and athletically is both a goal and a reality.

ACC INTER-INSTITUTIONAL

ACADEMIC COLLABORATIVE

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2011 ACC BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT 9

est - drawing up the conference by-laws. The withdrawal of seven schools from the Southern Conference came early on the morning of May 8, 1953, during the South-ern Conference’s annual spring meeting. On June 14, 1953, the seven members met in Raleigh, N.C., where a set of bylaws was adopted and the name became offi cially the Atlantic Coast Conference. Suggestions from fans for the name of the new conference appeared in the re-gion’s newspapers prior to the meeting in Raleigh. Some of the names suggested were: Dixie, Mid South, Mid Atlantic, East Coast, Seaboard, Colonial, Tobacco, Blue-Gray, Piedmont, Southern Seven and the Shoreline. Duke’s Eddie Cameron recommended that the name of the conference be the Atlantic Coast Conference, and the mo-tion was passed unanimously. The meeting concluded with each member institution assessed $200.00 to pay for conference ex-penses. On December 4, 1953, conference offi -cials met again at Sedgefi eld and offi cially admitted the University of Virginia as the league’s eighth member. The fi rst, and only, withdrawal of a school from the ACC came on June 30, 1971, when the Univer-sity of South Carolina tendered its resigna-tion. The ACC operated with seven mem-bers until April 3, 1978, when the Georgia Institute of Technology was admitted. The Atlanta school had withdrawn from the Southeastern Conference in January of 1964. The ACC expanded to nine members on July 1, 1991, with the addition of Florida State University. The conference expanded to 11 members on July 1, 2004, with the addition of the Uni-versity of Miami and Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University. On October 17, 2003, Boston College accepted an invi-tation to become the league’s 12th member starting July 1, 2005.

THE SCHOOLS

BOSTON COLLEGE was founded in 1863 by the Society of Jesus to serve the sons of Boston’s Irish immigrants and was the fi rst institu-

BERNARD JAMES SCORES WITH SERVICE

His garnet-and-gold uniform keeps Bernard James awash in cheers during Florida State home games.

But it’s the camoufl age uniform he hung up three years ago that keeps him in good standing when the Seminoles go on the road.

James, who served six years in the US Air Force before pursuing a college basketball career, sounds almost surprised when describing the kind treatment he has received on campuses around the ACC.

“I think they must know my story,” James said. “It seems like I get heckled the least out of anybody. There’s plenty of ammo, especially with me being older. There’s a lot of grandpa jokes to go around. And they really don’t heckle me very much. I think that might be a product of my background.”

James is indeed older. After his years in the Air Force and two more at Talla-hassee (Fla.) Community College, the 6-10 power forward now is a 26-year-old junior. And while he admits he still has plenty to learn about the game – he didn’t even play in high school and was only noticed by college recruiters after he ex-celled with an armed forces all-star team – James is blossoming into a star for the Seminoles.

He is their top scoring option in the paint, a solid rebounder and among the ACC’s leaders in blocked shots. He also is, of course, a media darling. During his fi rst season in the league, James has been profi led by countless newspapers, magazines, websites and television stations. And he said it never gets old.

“I feel like I’m bringing some honor and recognition to the Air Force,” said James, who served stints in Iraq and Qatar. “I’m proud of the fact that I served, and I’m proud of the other men and women that are still in the armed services. I really enjoy the fact that people and the media are so interested in my military history.” Given his success at the ACC level, James now has his sights set on a professional basketball career. But if that doesn’t pan out, he will fi nish his degree and consider returning to the Air Force as an offi cer. — By Ira Schoff el

CORES WITH SERVICE

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tion of higher education to be founded in the city of Boston. Originally located on Harrison Avenue in the South End of Boston, the College outgrew its urban setting toward the end of its fi rst 50 years. A new location was selected in Chestnut Hill and ground for the new campus was broken on June 19, 1909. During the 1940s, new purchases doubled the size of the main campus. In 1974, Bos-ton College acquired Newton College of the Sacred Heart, 1.5 miles away. With 15 buildings on 40 acres, it is now the site of the Law School and residence halls. In 2004, BC purchased 43 acres of land from the archdiocese of Boston; this now forms the Brighton campus.

CLEMSON UNIVERSITY is nestled in the foot-hills of the Blue Ridge Mountains near the Georgia border, and the tiger paws painted on the roads make the return to I-85 easier. The school is built around Fort Hill, the plantation home of John C. Calhoun, Vice President to Andrew Jackson. His son-in-law, Tom Clemson, left the land to be used as an agricultural school, and in 1893 Clemson opened its doors as a land-grant school, thanks to the efforts of Ben Tillman.

DUKE UNIVERSITY was founded in 1924 by tobacco magnate James B. Duke as a me-morial to his father, Washington Duke. Originally the school was called Trinity College, a Methodist institution, started in 1859. In 1892, Trinity moved to west Durham where the east campus with its Georgian architecture now stands. Near-by are Sarah P. Duke gardens, and further west the Gothic spires of Duke chapel overlook the west campus.

FLORIDA STATE UNIVERSITY is one of 11 uni-versities of the State University System of Florida. It was established as the Seminary West of the Suwannee by an act of the Florida Legislature in 1851, and fi rst offered instruction at the post-secondary level in 1857. Its Tallahassee campus has been the site of an institu-tion of higher education longer than any other site in the state. In 1905, the Buck-man Act reorganized higher education in the state and designated the Tallahassee school as the Florida Female College. In 1909, it was renamed Florida State Col-lege for Women. In 1947, the school returned to a co-educational status, and the name was changed to Florida State University.

Next to I-85 in downtown Atlanta stands the GEORGIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOL-

OGY, founded in 1885. Its fi rst students came to pursue a degree in mechanical engineering, the only one offered at the time. Tech’s strength is not only the red clay of Georgia, but a restored gold and white 1930 model A Ford Cabriolet, the offi cial mascot. The old Ford was fi rst used in 1961, but a Ramblin’ Wreck had been around for over three decades. The Ramblin’ Wreck fi ght song appeared al-most as soon as the school opened, and it is not only American boys that grow up singing its rollicking tune, for Rich-ard Nixon and Nikita Krushchev sang it when they met in Moscow in 1959.

THE UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND opened in 1856 as an agricultural school nine miles north of Washington, D.C., on land belonging to Charles Calvert, a de-scendant of Lord Baltimore, the state’s founding father. The school colors are the same as the state fl ag: black and gold for George Calvert (Lord Baltimore) and red and white for his mother, Alice Crossland. Maryland has been called the school that Curley Byrd built, for he was its quarterback, then football coach, ath-

The 1991 ACC Tournament, played at the three-year-old Charlotte Coliseum, was all about change.

This would be the ACC’s last event as an eight-team league and the fi nal three-day ACC Tournament. When Florida State joined the fold in 1992, the action spread over four days, a format that endures today.

Quarterfi nal action saw only one surprise as No. 6 Virginia beat No. 3 Wake Forest 70-66 behind guard John Crotty.

On Saturday, in the fi rst semifi nal, the top-seeded Blue Devils dispatched fourth-seeded NC State and “Fire

and Ice” — assist man Chris Corchiani and Rodney Monroe, the ACC’s Player of the Year and top scorer (27.0). “I love my basketball team,” coach Mike Krzyzewski said of a Duke unit featuring Grant Hill, Bobby Hurley, and Christian Laettner. “They like to play and they like to play hard as a group.”

In the second semifi nal, second-seeded North Carolina and Tournament MVP Rick Fox bounced the Cavaliers before upsetting Duke 96-74. The win marked the Tar Heels’ fi fth in six ACC Tournament fi nals against their archrival.

“I was really impressed

with this Duke team,” UNC coach Dean Smith said after earning the 11th of his 13 ACC Championships. “I honestly thought it was the best Duke team in modern days. That’s what makes it so satisfying.”

Smith’s judgment was ratifi ed three weeks later as the Devils won their fi rst NCAA Title.

It was the 1991 National Championship that started a remarkable run by the ACC: paced by Duke’s four national championships, league members won eight NCAA Titles over the ensuing 20 years. — Barry Jacobs

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DUKE’S 1991NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP TEAM

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2011 ACC BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT 11

letic director, assistant to the president, vice-president, and fi nally its president. Byrd also designed the football stadium and the campus layout, and suggested the nickname Terrapin, a local turtle known for its bite, when students wanted to re-place the nickname Old Liners with a new one for the school.

THE UNIVERSITY OF MIAMI was chartered in 1925 by a group of citizens who felt an institution of higher learning was need-ed for the development of their young and growing community. Since the fi rst class of 560 students enrolled in the fall of 1926, the University has expanded to more than 15,000 undergraduate and graduate students from every state and more than 114 nations from around the world. The school’s colors, representative of the Florida orange tree, were selected in 1926. Orange symbolizes the fruit of the tree, green represents the leaves and white, the blossoms.

THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA, located in Chapel Hill, has been called “the per-fect college town,” making its tree-lined streets and balmy atmosphere what a col-lege should look and feel like. Its incep-tion in 1795 makes it one of the oldest schools in the nation, and its nickname of Tar Heels stems from the tar pitch and turpentine that were the state’s principal industry. The nickname is as old as the school, for it was born during the Revo-lutionary War when tar was dumped into the streams to impede the advance of British forces.

NORTH CAROLINA STATE UNIVERSITY is located in the state capital of Raleigh. It opened in 1889 as a land-grant agricultural and me-chanical school and was known as A&M or Aggies or Farmers for over a quarter-century. The school’s colors of pink and blue were gone by 1895, brown and white were tried for a year, but the students fi nally chose red and white to represent the school. An unhappy fan in 1922 said State football players behaved like a pack of wolves, and the term that was coined in derision became a badge of honor.

THE UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA was founded in 1819 by Thomas Jefferson and is one of three things on his tombstone for which he wanted to be remembered. James Madison and James Monroe were on the board of governors in the early years. The Rotunda, a half-scale version of the Pantheon which faces the Lawn, is the fo-cal point of the grounds as the campus is called. Jefferson wanted his school to educate leaders in practical affairs and public service, not just to train teachers.

VIRGINIA TECH was established in 1872 as an all-male military school dedicated to the original land-grant mission of teaching agriculture and engineering. The Uni-versity has grown from a small college of 132 students into the largest institution of higher education in the state during its 132-year history. Located in South-west Virginia on a plateau between the Blue Ridge and Alleghany Mountains, the campus consists of 334 buildings and 20 miles of sidewalks over 2,600 acres. The offi cial school colors - Chicago maroon and burnt orange - were selected in 1896 because they made a “unique combina-tion” not worn elsewhere at the time.

WAKE FOREST UNIVERSITY was started on Calvin Jones’ plantation amid the stately pine forest of Wake County in 1834. The Baptist seminary is still there, but the school was moved to Winston-Salem in 1956 on a site donated by Charles H. and Mary Reynolds Babcock. President Har-ry S. Truman attended the ground-break-ing ceremonies that brought a pictur-esque campus of Georgian architecture and painted roofs. Wake’s colors have been black and gold since 1895, thanks to a badge designed by student John Heck who died before he graduated.

Fred BarakatApril 8, 1939-June 21, 2010

The Atlantic Coast Conference lost a member of its family this past June in retired Associate Commissioner Fred Barakat.

Fred was a 1961 graduate of As-sumption College and spent 11 years as head coach at Fairfi eld and com-piled a 160-128 record while leading the Stags to three NITs.

In 1981, Fred joined the ACC as the coordinator of basketball offi cials and throughout the years held nu-merous duties, including manager of the men’s basketball tournament. After being involved with 26 ACC Tournaments, he retired in 2007 as associate commissioner of men’s basketball operations.

“The ACC lost a tremendous friend in Fred Barakat,” said ACC Commis-sioner John Swoff ord. “Fred served college athletics well throughout his career and was a signifi cant and im-pactful infl uence especially within the basketball community. His zest for life and his contributions were evident not only in the ACC, but across the country. He’s been greatly missed as both a personal friend and respected colleague.”

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ACC FanFest, presented by the Offi cial Corporate Partners of the ACC, is located in and around the

30,000-square-foot Pavilion adjacent to the main entrance of the Greensboro Coliseum. FanFest is

FREE to ACC fans and will include Corporate Partner interactive displays, a special activities basketball court, games and amusements, live entertainment, Offi cial Tournament merchandise, daily giveaways, special appearances, food, beverages and more!!

ACC FANFEST SCHEDULETHURSDAY, MARCH 10, 2011

SESSION I - 10:00 AM - 12:00 PMSESSION II - 5:00 PM - 7:00 PM

FRIDAY, MARCH 11, 2011

SESSION III - 10:00 AM - 12:00 PMSESSION IV - 5:00 PM - 7:00 PM

SATURDAY, MARCH 12, 2011

SEMIFINALS - 10:00 AM - 1:00 PM

SUNDAY, MARCH 13, 2011

CHAMPIONSHIP - 11:00 AM - 1:00 PM

2011 ACC MEN’S BASKETBALLLEGENDS BRUNCHMARCH 12, 2011Sheraton Greensboro Hotel at Four Seasons10:00 AM

TO PURCHASE YOUR TICKET, PLEASE CALL 1-800-745-3000

2011 ACC BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT 13

Page 16: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

14 theACC.com

MICHAEL JORDANNORTH CAROLINA

TREVOR BOOKERCLEMSON

DAVID THOMPSONNC STATE

JOHN SALLEYGEORGIA TECH

CHRIS PAULWAKE FOREST

ACADEMICALL-AMERICANS

NCAA CHAMPIONSHIP

TITLES

MEN’S BASKETBALL

NCAA TITLES IN THE LAST 10 YEARS

NATIONAL COLLEGIATE BASKETBALL HALL OF FAME INDUCTEES

NBA DRAFT SELECTIONS

Page 17: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

2011 ACC BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT 152020202202020202020202020002020202202220202002020220222000200111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAACCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCC BBBBBBBBBBBBBBAASAAASSASASASSSASASASASSASSASSSSSAASSSKKEKEKEKEKEKEKEKEKEKEKEKKEKEKEKEKEKKKKEEEEKEETTTTTTBTBTBBTBTTBTTBBBTBTTTTTBBBTBTBTBTBTBBBT ALALALLLALALLAALALALLALLALALAALAAALAALALALALALLALALLALLLLLLLLLLLLL LLLLL TOTOTOTOOTOOTOOOTOTOTOTOTOOTOOTTOTOOTTOOOTTTOOOUUUURUUUUUURURURUURRRUUUUUUUUUUURRUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUURUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUURUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUU NANANANANAAAAAAAAAAAAAAANANAAAANANANAAAAAAAAANANAAAAAAAANNNAAAAMMMMMMEMEMEMEMEEEMEEEEEEEEEMMMMMMEMEEEEMMEEEMMEMEMEMEEEMEEEEEEEEEEEMEMEMMEEMEMMMMMEMMMMMEMMMMMMMMMEMMMMMEMMMMMEMMEMEMEEMMMMMEEEMMMEEEEEMMEEEMMEEEENTNTNTNTNTNTNTTTTNTTTNTNTTTNTNTTNTNTNTTTNTNTTNNTNNNNTNNTNTTTTNNT 151515151515555151515111515115151555155151155555

RALPH SAMPSONVIRGINIA

GRANT HILLDUKE

DELL CURRYVIRGINIA TECH

CHARLIE WARDFLORIDA STATE

JARED DUDLEYBOSTON COLLEGE

RICK BARRYMIAMI

JUAN DIXONMARYLAND

NATIONAL COACHES OF THE YEAR

CONSENSUS FIRST-TEAM ALL-AMERICANS

OLYMPICPLAYERS & COACHES

WINNINGEST CONFERENCE IN NCAA TOURNAMENT HISTORY

CONSENSUS NATIONAL PLAYERS OF THE YEAR

Page 18: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

Follow your team from almost anywhere.

1 . 8 6 6 . M O B I L I T Y – A T T . C O M – V I S I T A S T O R E

AT&T IS THE EXCLUSIVE WIRELESS PARTNER OF THE ATLANTIC COAST CONFERENCE.Get highlights, scores, and stats on the nation’s fastest mobile broadband network.

Mobile broadband and other services not available everywhere. See coverage map at stores for details. ©2011 AT&T Intellectual Property. Service provided by AT&T Mobility. All rights reserved. AT&T & the AT&T logo are trademarks of AT&T Intellectual Property. All other marks contained herein are the property of their respective owners.

Page 19: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

2011 ACC BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT 17

2011 AWARD RECIPIENTSNAME INSTITUTION SPORT

Caitlin Alexandra Bailey Boston College Cross Country/ Track & FieldJohn Monahan Maloy Boston College SwimmingCarolyn Elizabeth Swords Boston College BasketballStephanie Kara Buff o Clemson Cross Country/ Track & FieldElizabeth Ashcraft Savage Clemson Swimming & DivingMichael Vernon Wade Clemson FootballSarah Babineau Bullard Duke LacrosseDorian Alexander Cohen Duke FencingReka Zsilinszka Duke TennisGonzalo Barroilhet* Florida State Track & FieldFederica Michel Suess Florida State TennisChristian A. Hunnicutt Florida State BasketballHannah Marie Krimm Georgia Tech DivingGlenn Travis Wagner Georgia Tech SwimmingJennifer Yee Georgia Tech SoftballKathleen Mary Gallagher Maryland LacrosseGregory Allen Kelsey Maryland Cross Country/ Track & FieldAlicia Marie Morawski Maryland Field HockeyBrittney Ann Macdonald Miami SoccerDeidre DeLise Novotny Miami SwimmingBrittany Ann Viola Miami Swimming & DivingRiley Rhea Foster North Carolina Field HockeyMeredith Anne Newton North Carolina LacrosseMateo Sossah North Carolina Track & FieldLucas Blaine Carpenter NC State SoccerBrittany Marie Strachan NC State BasketballBrittany Leigh Vontz NC State GymnasticsRobert William Collins IV Virginia GolfMeghan Jeanne Lenczyk Virginia SoccerElizabeth Noell Shaw Virginia SwimmingPedro Matias Graber* Virginia Tech TennisJennifer Susanne Harvey Virginia Tech SoccerKelly Marie Phillips Virginia Tech Track & FieldIain Thomas Atkinson* Wake Forest TennisCasey McBride Luckhurst Wake Forest SoccerKristen Elizabeth White Wake Forest Volleyball

2010 WEAVER-JAMES-CORRIGAN HONORARY AWARD WINNERS

NAME INSTITUTION SPORT

Patricia Mbengani Mamona Clemson Track & FieldJasmine Loretta Thomas Duke BasketballCharles Edward Clark Florida State Track & FieldZachary Charles Brewster Georgia Tech BaseballDouglas Scotland Robison Virginia Swimming

* DENOTES THACKER AWARD WINNERS

Atlantic Coast Conference Commissioner John Swoff ord an-nounced the 36 student-athletes who have been selected for the Weaver-James-Corrigan Award, including three student-ath-letes who will receive the Thacker Award. Additionally, fi ve stu-dent-athletes who plan to enter a professional career in their chosen sport were named honorary recipients.

The WEAVER-JAMES-CORRIGAN AND JIM & PAT THACKER

SCHOLARSHIPS are awarded to selected student-athletes – three from each league institution – who intend to pursue a graduate degree following completion of their undergraduate requirements. Each recipient will receive $5,000 to contribute to their graduate education. Those honored have performed with distinction in both the classroom and his/her respective sports, while demonstrating exemplary conduct in the community.

In addition to those receiving scholarship funds, fi ve student-athletes will receive the Weaver-James-Corrigan Honorary Award. Two track & fi eld performers – Clemson’s Patricia Ma-mona and Florida State’s Charles Clark – along with Duke bas-ketball player Jasmine Thomas, Georgia Tech baseball player Zachary Brewster and Virginia swimmer Scot Robison will be recognized for their outstanding academic and athletic perfor-mance and intend to compete at the professional level.

The Weaver-James-Corrigan Award is named in honor of the late Jim Weaver and Bob James, as well as Gene Corrigan, all of whom are former ACC commissioners. The league’s fi rst com-missioner, James H. Weaver, served the conference from 1954-70 after a stint as the Director of Athletics at Wake Forest Uni-versity. His early leadership and uncompromising integrity are largely responsible for the excellent reputation enjoyed by the ACC today.

Robert C. James, a former University of Maryland football player, was named commissioner in 1971 and served in that ca-pacity for 16 years. During his tenure, the league continued to grow in stature and became recognized as a national leader in athletics and academics, winning 23 national championships and maintaining standards of excellence in the classroom.

Eugene F. Corrigan assumed his role as the third full-time commissioner of September 1, 1987, and served until August of 1997. During Corrigan’s tenure, ACC schools captured 30 NCAA championships and two national football titles.

Prior to 1994, the Weaver-James postgraduate scholarships were given as separate honors. The Jim Weaver Award, which originated in 1970, recognized exceptional achievement on the playing fi eld and in the classroom, while the Bob James Award, established in 1987, also honored outstanding student-athletes.

The Thacker Award, which originated in 2005, is awarded in honor of the late Jim and Pat Thacker of Charlotte, N.C. Jim Thacker was the primary play-by-play announcer for the ACC’s fi rst television network. Recipients of the award must demon-strate outstanding performance both in athletic competition and in the classroom and intend to further their education through postgraduate studies at an ACC institution.

ACC Postgraduate Scholar-Athletes will be honored at a luncheon at the Koury Convention Center in Greensboro on April 13 at 11:30 am.

POSTGRADUATESCHOLAR ATHLETESPOSTGRADUATESCHOLAR ATHLETESPOSTGRADUATESCHOLAR ATHLETESTHIRTY-SIX SCHOLAR-ATHLETES ARE HONORED FOR SHOWING DISTINCTION IN COMPETITION, CLASSROOM AND COMMUNITY

Page 20: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

18 theACC.com

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A HISTORIC AGREEMENT BETWEEN

ESPN AND THE ACC KEEPS THE

CONFERENCE AHEAD OF THE GAME

2011 ACC BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT 19

Page 22: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

“It’s an extensive package that reaches new heights fi nancially, provides unprecedented branding opportunities for us, and we think strongly positions our league within the ever-changing world of technology as we look ahead,” said ACC Commissioner John Swofford. “And our institutions will benefi t tremendously from a fi nancial standpoint from this new agreement.”

ESPN will provide ACC fans with new technology as well, including the network’s use of 3D technology on its new channel ESPN 3D. In the fall of 2010, fi ve ACC football games were produced in 3D, including the Dr Pepper ACC Football Championship Game.

And, thanks to the league’s dedication to providing the latest technology to promote its events, fans will have more access to on-demand digital content — around the world and around the clock. That includes the league’s popular new iPhone application, which allows fans to receive fully programmable, up-to-the-minute updates of

their favorite teams and preferred sports on mobile phones and digital handheld devices.

The app, which launched prior to the 2010 football season, includes live scoring of all ACC football and basketball games, broadcasts of selected games, news stories about league schools from The Associated Press and other news features.

The ground-breaking television deal with ESPN includes broadcasts of nearly 5,000 live events until the contract expires at the end of 2022-23 academic year. ESPN will broadcast regular-season and postseason games for all 25 of the ACC’s sponsored sports, both regionally and nationally.

Every football game controlled by the league will be televised; every basketball game between ACC opponents and most conference-controlled out-of-league contests will be broadcast. The entire ACC Men’s Basketball Tournament will be broadcast nationally, with the semifi nals and fi nals televised on ABC, ESPN or ESPN2.

The network will more than double the number of regular-season women’s basketball games it broadcasts nationally, from seven to 18. For the fi rst time in league history, every game in the women’s tournament will also be televised for the duration of the contract. All games in the league’s popular baseball and softball championships will be televised, as will league championships in lacrosse, and men’s and women’s soccer.

And, in an important enhancement for fans, the deal will eliminate all blackouts for regional and national telecasts.

“We are a very fan-centric company at a very fan-centric conference,” said ESPN spokesman John Skipper said. “We want to make sure … more people will be able to see more games than they have ever seen. Generally speaking, all of the ACC-controlled games are going to be available to a national audience.”

And, most importantly for the league’s 12 schools, the contract will double, on average, the revenue each school receives for

ESPN is going all-in with the Atlantic Coast Conference. The multi-platform programming network is not only the “worldwide leader in sports,” but it also will be the premier distributor of football, basketball and Olympic broadcasts for the conference’s 12 member institutions, thanks to more than a billion dollar, 12-year agreement signed by ESPN and the ACC in July. The agreement combines football and basketball rights for the fi rst time in league history, and provides unprecedented coverage of the league’s 22 Olympic sports.

20 theACC.com

Page 23: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

broadcasting rights throughout the course of the contract. Since it fi rst signed a syndication deal for individual sports in the mid-1980s, the ACC has split all of its television revenue equally among its members. The new deal will continue to do so.

While the new contract brings some exciting new changes to all ACC sports, some of the league’s most popular features will remain. ESPN will continue to broadcast fi ve ACC Thursday night football games. It plans to continue the popular ACC-Big 10 Challenge in men’s and women’s basketball, and the full lineup of Sunday Night Hoops, with start times ranging between 2 p.m.-6 p.m. Those games, broadcast on ESPNU, will reach 73 million households, a signifi cant increase over the expiring television deal.

Unlike some of its other deals, the ESPN contract with the ACC gives the network exclusive rights for football and basketball on ABC, ESPN, ESPN2, ESPNU and ESPN3.com, as well as the network’s specialized packages

like ESPN Mobile TV, ESPN Full Court, ESPN International and ESPN Classic. Combined, those networks reach nearly 450 million households.

“This is the fi rst time we at ESPN have done basically an all-in deal with a conference where we worked to be able to acquire all of its product,” Skipper said. “I think that speaks to how much we value the ACC.

“That was an important component to us because we value both basketball and football. We liked having them synched-up.” The ACC offi ce considered developing its own network, as the SEC and Big Ten have done, but decided in the end that it would be better to partner with ESPN’s long-term broadcasting experience, its national exposure and its internationally known brand.

While ESPN will own exclusive broadcast rights to all conference-controlled events, the league will continue its long-time relationship with Raycom Sports, which has owned sole syndication rights for football and basketball

broadcasts for more than three decades.Raycom will continue to regionally

broadcast games, including weekly football and basketball broadcasts and the ACC Men’s Basketball Tournament. It will also syndicate ACC games outside the region, taking national the excitement of conference basketball and football games that had previously been unavailable outside the region. It will also distribute the league’s digital assets through the league’s offi cial website, www.theACC.com, and manage the league’s corporate partner program.

Swofford is convinced that the deal will offer fans of the ACC’s 12 schools unprecedented access to see their teams in action, on a variety of platforms, for a dozen years to come.

“It’s critical that our conference in this kind of relationship can be nimble and adjust to the changing technology, and use it to our advantage moving forward,” Swofford said. “We are now well-positioned for that. The world may look very different over the next 12 years.”

2011 ACC BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT 21

“IT’S CRITICAL THAT OUR CONFERENCE IN THIS KIND OF RELATIONSHIP CAN BE NIMBLE AND ADJUST TO THE CHANGING TECHNOLOGY, AND USE IT TO OUR ADVANTAGE MOVING FORWARD. WE ARE NOW WELL-POSITIONED FOR THAT. THE WORLD MAY LOOK VERY DIFFERENT OVER THE NEXT 12 YEARS.”

—JOHN SWOFFORD, ACC COMMISSIONER

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H O M E C O U R T S O F T H E A T L A N T I C C O A S T C O N F E R E N C EC ET C O N F E R E N CN CL A N T I C C O A S TS TS O F T H E A T LT LH O M E C O U R TH T

SILVIO O. CONTE FORUMOPENED 1988 // CAPACITY 8,606 // CHESTNUT HILL, MAMARQUEE MOMENT On February 1, 1992, Malcolm Huckaby leads BC to an 88-86 double-overtime win over Georgetown in a sold-out arena.

CAMERON INDOOR STADIUMOPENED 1940 // CAPACITY 9,314 // DURHAM, NCMARQUEE MOMENT On Feb. 28, 1998, Duke rallies from a 17-point second half defi cit against UNC to secure Mike Krzyzewski’s 500th career coaching victory.

ALEXANDER MEMORIAL COLISEUMOPENED 1956 // CAPACITY 9,191 // ATLANTA, GAMARQUEE MOMENT The “Thrillerdome’s” entire 1983-84 season, when fi ve ACC home games are decided on last second shots.

LITTLEJOHN COLISEUMOPENED 1968 // CAPACITY 10,000 // CLEMSON, SCMARQUEE MOMENT On January 9, 1980, Clemson defeats No. 1 Duke in overtime 87-82.

DONALD L. TUCKER CENTEROPENED 1981 // CAPACITY 12,200 // TALLAHASSEE, FLMARQUEE MOMENT Florida State has defeated No. 1 Duke on Jan. 6, 2002, March 1, 2006 and Jan. 12, 2011 at home at the Donald L. Tucker Center.

COMCAST CENTEROPENED 2002 // CAPACITY 17,950 // COLLEGE PARK, MDMARQUEE MOMENT On February 17, 2003, a blizzard delay leads to a largelystudent crowd, which enjoys a snow-day win of Wake Forest.

BOSTON COLLEGE

DUKE

GEORGIA TECH

CLEMSON

FLORIDA STATE

MARYLAND

22 theACC.com

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H O M E C O U R T S O F T H E A T L A N T I C C O A S T C O N F E R E N C EH C O N F E R E N C EEN T I C C O A S T CCO F T H E A T L A NA NO M E C O U R T S OO O

BANKUNITED CENTEROPENED 2003 // CAPACITY 7,200 // CORAL GABLES, FLMARQUEE MOMENT On January 4, 2003, Miami christens its new arena with a victory in an overtime thriller against North Carolina.

RBC CENTEROPENED 1999 // CAPACITY 19,700 // RALEIGH, NCMARQUEE MOMENT On February 3, 2007, fi rst-year coach Sidney Lowe leads the Wolfpack to an epic win over 3rd-ranked North Carolina.

CASSELL COLISEUMOPENED 1962 // CAPACITY 10,052 // BLACKSBURG, VAMARQUEE MOMENTS 94-88 win over #1 UNC on Jan. 13, 2007. Celebrated 50 years and 500th game in the coliseum with a win over FSU on January 8, 2011.

DEAN E. SMITH CENTEROPENED 1986 // CAPACITY 21,750 // CHAPEL HILL, NCMARQUEE MOMENT On On March 6, 2005, the center hosts its largest crowd ever, as UNC edges Duke in the fi nal seconds.

JOHN PAUL JONES ARENAOPENED 2006 // CAPACITY 14,593 // CHARLOTTESVILLE, VAMARQUEE MOMENT On November 12, 2006, Virginia opens its new arena with a tough come-from-behind win over No. 10 Arizona.

LAWRENCE JOEL VETERANS MEMORIAL COLISEUMOPENED 1989 // CAPACITY 14,665 // WINSTON-SALEM, NCMARQUEE MOMENT On February 23, 1992, the Deacs hand the soon-to-be NCAA champion Duke a loss in a 72-68 shootout.

MIAMI

NC STATE

VIRGINIA TECH

NORTH CAROLINA

VIRGINIA

WAKE FOREST

2011 ACC BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT 23

Page 26: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

REV. WILLIAM P. LEAHYPRESIDENT

ROBERT A. TAGGART, JRFACULTY REPRESENTATIVE

GENE DEFILIPPOATHLETICS DIRECTOR

JOE TRAPANI“I’ve really appreciated what Joe has done this year. We’ve asked him at dif-ferent times to do diff erent things, and not always what you would want to do as a fi fth-year senior who is an all-ACC player. I’ve done some off ensive and defensive shifts late in games, and the thing I appreciate most about Joe is when you watch the fi lm and if he’s not the game at a critical time and his teammate makes a great play he’s the fi rst one really rooting them on, there is no sense of disappointment in his body language or his approach. He just plays so darn hard and he goes after plays and follows what we want to do. I really root for a kid like that. He’s had some incredible games and the thing he does most for us physically is the defensive rebounding part. He’s made us a team that can compete with teams in our league in the front court.”

STEVE DONAHUE

BOSTON COLLEGE

FOUNDED 1863

ENROLLMENT 14,500

HOME CHESTNUT HILL, MASS

ACC TITLES 0

Page 27: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

2011 ACC BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT 25

REGGIE

JACKSONJR. / G / 6-3 / 208

BIKO

PARISSR. / G / 6-1 / 194

GABE

MOTONFR. / G / 6-2 / 170

COREY

RAJISR. / F / 6-6 / 218

0 154

11

JOE

TRAPANISR. / F / 6-8 / 232

NICK

MOSAKOWSKISR. / G / 6-1 / 187

CHRIS

KOWALSKISR. / F / 6-6 / 240

12 14

24

PETER

REHNQUISTJR. / G/F / 6-4 / 210

DANNY

RUBINFR. / G / 6-6 / 170

DALLAS

ELMOREJR. / G / 6-5 / 210

JOSH

SOUTHERNSR. / C / 6-10 / 263

25

31

30

52

CORTNEY

DUNNSR. / F / 6-8 / 238

55

STEVE DONAHUE

HEAD COACH

JOE JONES

ASSOCIATE HEAD COACH

NAT GRAHAM

ASSISTANT COACH

AKBAR WAHEED

ASSISTANT COACH

Page 28: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

CLEMSON

DEMONTEZ STITT“In watching Demontez play and work-ing with him early what really came out was his competitiveness. He’s a very prideful young man. He’s asked to do a lot of diff erent things for us, defensively guarding the ball sometimes, other times guarding other team’s best shoot-ers. And we’ve moved him around in dif-ferent spots off ensively. Sometimes we outlet the ball to him and let him be the primary ball-handler and go make plays in transition, and at other times we move him off the ball and try to get him coming off screens, giving teams some diff erent looks. He’s enjoyed that, hav-ing a little bit of a diff erent role and not always being the primary ball-handler. He’s helped us do more than a lot of people thought we would.”

BRAD BROWNELL

JAMES F. BARKERPRESIDENT

LARRY LAFORGEFACULTY REPRESENTATIVE

TERRY DON PHILLIPSATHLETICS DIRECTOR

FOUNDED 1889

ENROLLMENT 19,111

HOME CLEMSON, SC

ACC TITLES 0

Page 29: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

2011 ACC BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT 27

ZAVIER

ANDERSONSR. / G / 5-9 / 170

DEMONTEZ

STITTSR. / G / 6-2 / 180

JONAH

BAIZESR. / F / 6-6 / 195

32 4

TANNER

SMITHJR. / G / 6-5 / 210

CATALIN

BACIUJR. / C / 7-2 / 255

5 10

ANDRE

YOUNGJR. / G / 5-9 / 175

11

CORY

STANTONFR. / G / 5-10 / 175

12

DEVIN

BOOKERSO. / F/C / 6-8 / 245

MILTON

JENNINGSSO. / F / 6-9 / 225

JERAI

GRANTSR. / F/C / 6-8 / 230

DEANDRE

HOPKINSFR. / G / 6-2 / 205

31

24

4544

BRYAN

NARCISSEJR. / F / 6-6 / 220

21

BRAD BROWNELL

HEAD COACH

RICK RAY

ASSOCIATE HEAD COACH

MIKE WINIECKI

ASSISTANT COACH

EARL GRANT

ASSISTANT COACH

Page 30: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

DUKEFOUNDED 1838

ENROLLMENT 6,340

HOME DURHAM, NC

ACC TITLES 18

RICHARD H. BRODHEADPRESIDENT

MARTHA PUTALLAZFACULTY REPRESENTATIVE

KEVIN WHITEATHLETICS DIRECTOR

NOLAN SMITH“A lot of times in our program we’ve had a player, like a Luol Deng or Jason Williams or Christian Laettner come in and they are just really good right from the start; I mean really good, and they get better. Nolan has taken the route that he was good, but he wasn’t a starter all the time and he came off the bench. In the last two years has risen to the level of an elite player, a national player of the year candidate. That’s not done very much. If you look at his stats over his fi rst two years and compared it to his last two years there is such a big diff erence. He’s just been a hard worker and a great kid, and he’s really taken his game to a high level.”

MIKE KRZYZEWSKI

Page 31: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

KYRIE

IRVINGFR / G / 6-2 / 180

TYLER

THORNTONFR / G / 6-1 / 185

NOLAN

SMITHSR / G / 6-2 / 185

MASON

PLUMLEESO / F / 6-10 / 240

1 32 5

KYLE

SINGLERSR / F / 6-8 / 230

JOSH

HAIRSTONFR / F / 6-7 / 210

12 15

ANDRE

DAWKINSSO / G / 6-4 / 205

20

MILES

PLUMLEEJR / F / 6-10 / 245

21

TODD

ZAFIROVSKISO / F / 6-9 / 235

DAVID

MAYERFR / GUARD / 6-4 / 195

RYAN

KELLYSO / F / 6-11 / 235

CASEY

PETERSSR / G / 6-4 / 200

525134

53

SETH

CURRYSO / G / 6-2 / 180

30

MIKE KRZYZEWSKI

HEAD COACH

STEVE WOJCIECHOWSKI

ASSOCIATE HEAD COACH

CHRIS COLLINS

ASSOCIATE HEAD COACH

NATE JAMES

ASSISTANT COACH

2011 ACC BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT 29

Page 32: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

FOUNDED 1851

ENROLLMENT 40,255

HOME TALLAHASSEE, FL

ACC TITLES 0

CHRIS SINGLETON“Chris loves defending, he loves doing the dirty work; things a lot of guys don’t enjoy doing. He loves switching out on point guards, running people down and blocking shots, getting steals and defl ections. He thrives on those things and it’s exciting to him. He’s an extremely unselfi sh player. He doesn’t have to have a high volume of shots for him to be successful. People are always trying to compare him to other players because of his potential and ability. But one of the reasons our team plays so unselfi sh is that Chris is our best player and he’s very capable of (scoring) but he’s got such an un-selfi sh spirit that it fi lters through our team. He has made tremendous strides in his game.”

LEONARD HAMILTONDR. ERIC BARRON

PRESIDENTPAM PERREWÉ

FACULTY REPRESENTATIVERANDY SPETMAN

ATHLETICS DIRECTOR

FLORIDA STATE

Page 33: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

2011 ACC BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT 31

PIERRE

JORDANSO. / G / 6-0 / 165

A.J.

YAWNSR. / G / 6-0 / 170

XAVIER

GIBSONJR. / F/C / 6-11 / 240

LUKE

LOUCKSJR. / G / 6-5 / 196

0 21 3

DEIVIDAS

DULKYSJR. / G / 6-5 / 196

OKARO

WHITEFR. / F / 6-9 / 180

BERNARD

JAMESJR. / F / 6-10 / 240

TERRANCE

SHANNONSO. / F / 6-8 / 223

4 105 15

MICHAEL

SNAERSO. / G / 6-5 / 200

RAFAEL

PORTUONDOSO. / G / 5-11 / 160

ANDREW

RUTLEDGESR. / F / 6-6 / 200

JON

KREFTJR. / C / 7-0 / 250

DERWIN

KITCHENSR. / G / 6-4 / 198

JOEY

MOREAUSO. / G / 6-2 / 165

IAN

MILLERFR. / G / 6-3 / 180

2120 24

50

22

3330

CHRIS

SINGLETONJR. / F / 6-9 / 227

31

LEONARD HAMILTON

HEAD COACH

STAN JONES

ASSOCIATE HEAD COACH

ANDY ENFIELD

ASSISTANT COACH

COREY WILLIAMS

ASSISTANT COACH

Page 34: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

GEORGIA TECHFOUNDED 1885

ENROLLMENT 19,393

HOME ATLANTA, GA

ACC TITLES 3

IMAN SHUMPERT“Iman leads us in every category so he’s been extremely important to us. We rely very, very heavily on him. He’s a big-time defender but he has re-bounded the ball better than I expect-ed. I defi nitely knew he would get bet-ter as his career progressed because a guy who works so hard at it.

PAUL HEWITTG.P. “BUD” PETERSON

PRESIDENTSUE ANN BIDSTRUP ALLENFACULTY REPRESENTATIVE

DAN RADAKOVICHATHLETICS DIRECTOR

FOUNDED 1885

ENROLLMENT 19,393

HOME ATLANTA, GA

ACC TITLES 3

Page 35: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

2011 ACC BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT 33

MFON

UDOFIASO. / G / 6-2 / 193

MAURICE “MOE”

MILLERSR. / G / 6-2 / 188

IMAN

SHUMPERTJR. / G / 6-5 / 212

NICK

FOREMANJR. / G / 6-3 / 210

0 31 4

DANIEL

MILLERFR. / C / 6-11 / 258

BRIAN

OLIVERSO. / F / 6-6 / 226

LANCE

STORRSSR. / G / 6-5 / 225

KYLE

SPELLERFR. / G / 6-2 / 185

5 1110 12

MCPHERSON

MOOREFR. / G / 6-3 / 200

BRANDON

REEDSO. / G / 6-3 / 180

NATE

HICKSFR. / C / 6-10 / 218

JASON

MORRISFR. / G / 6-5 / 210

GLEN

RICE, JR.SO. / G / 6-5 / 206

KAMMEON

HOLSEYFR. / F / 6-8 / 226

13 23

42

14

41

24

DEREK

CRAIGSO. / G / 6-4 / 205

33

PAUL HEWITT

HEAD COACH

DARRYL LABARRIE

ASSISTANT COACH

ROBERT MCCULLUM

ASSISTANT COACH

PETER ZAHARIS

ASSISTANT COACH

Page 36: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

MARYLANDFOUNDED 1856

ENROLLMENT 36,014

HOME COLLEGE PARK, MD

ACC TITLES 3

JORDAN WILLIAMS“We had to go to Jordan so much early in the year because of the players we lost and he really came through for us. He worked really hard once the season was over last year, he got in better shape and lost about 20 pounds; and he’s a better athlete this year than he was last year. He’s gotten some confi -dence in his game. Last year, with some of the good players we had, he was just kind of a tag-along player, they would throw him the ball once in a while and he didn’t have to do a whole lot to be important for us on the court. This year he’s had to do more and he’s accepted that challenge.”

GARY WILLIAMS

WALLACE D. LOHPRESIDENT

CHARLES WELLFORDFACULTY REPRESENTATIVE

KEVIN ANDERSONATHLETICS DIRECTOR

Page 37: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

2011 ACC BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT 35

ADRIAN

BOWIESR. / G / 6-2 / 195

MYCHAL

PARKERFR. / F / 6-5 / 195

BEREND

WEIJSJR. / C / 6-10 / 200

TERRELL

STOGLINFR. / G / 6-1 / 185

1 1110 12

HAUKUR

PALSSONFR. / F / 6-6 / 190

ERSIN

LEVENTJR. / F / 6-7 / 190

SEAN

MOSLEYJR. / G / 6-4 / 210

JORDAN

WILLIAMSSO. / C / 6-10 / 260

13 1514 20

PE’SHON

HOWARDFR. / G / 6-3 / 195

DINO

GREGORYSR. / F / 6-7 / 230

CLIFF

TUCKERSR. / G/F / 6-6 / 200

JAMES

PADGETTSO. / F / 6-8 / 215

21 3324 35

ASHTON

PANKEYFR. / F / 6-9 / 220

42

GARY WILLIAMS

HEAD COACH

KEITH BOOTH

ASSISTANT COACH

ROBERT EHSAN

ASSISTANT COACH

BINO RANSON

ASSISTANT COACH

Page 38: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

MIAMI

ADRIAN THOMAS“Adrian has just been such a special young man, overcoming two season-ending injuries. Everybody looks up to Adrian because he has also been a great citizen in the community. He’s made some great strides in his game. He has become a totally diff erent play-er than he was when we recruited him, and that’s all about his perseverance and working hard. He was the leading 3-point shooter in the ACC last year and nobody would have ever thought that was possible. I’m very proud of him and what he’s accomplished here at the University of Miami.”

FRANK HAITH

DONNA E. SHALALAPRESIDENT

CLYDE B. MCCOYFACULTY REPRESENTATIVE

KIRBY HOCUTTATHLETICS DIRECTOR

FOUNDED 1925

ENROLLMENT 15,520

HOME MIAMI, FL

ACC TITLES 0

Page 39: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

2011 ACC BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT 37

DURAND

SCOTTSO. / G / 6-3 / 200

TREY

MCKINNEY JONESJR. / G / 6-5 / 214

MALCOLM

GRANTJR. / G / 6-1 / 180

RAPHAEL

AKPEJIORIFR. / F / 6-8 / 229

1 43 10

RYAN

QUIGTARJR. / G / 5-11 / 172

RION

BROWNFR. / G / 6-5 / 188

JUSTIN

HELLERFR. / G / 6-2 / 180

KENNY

KADJI SO. / F/C / 6-11 / 255

11 1512 21

ADRIAN

THOMASGR. / F / 6-7 / 226

JULIAN

GAMBLEJR. / F/C / 6-9 / 258

GARRIUS

ADAMSSO. / G / 6-6 / 196

REGGIE

JOHNSONSO. / C / 6-10 / 303

DEQUAN

JONESJR. / G/F / 6-7 / 219

30

45

25

42

31

ERIK

SWOOPEFR. / F / 6-6 / 230

32

FRANK HAITH

HEAD COACH

JORGE FERNANDEZ

ASSOCIATE HEAD COACH

JAKE MORTON

ASSISTANT COACH

MICHAEL SCHWARTZ

ASSISTANT COACH

Page 40: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

NORTH CAROLINA

HOLDEN THORPCHANCELLOR

LISSA BROOMEFACULTY REPRESENTATIVE

DICK BADDOURATHLETICS DIRECTOR

TYLER ZELLER“Tyler has been a constant for us, that security blanket. You feel like he’s go-ing to play well just about every game. He has also been a leader on and off the court. Every team needs a guy who you know you’re going to get such a good eff ort from every night, and you’re going to get intelligent play from every night. I know he worked extreme-ly hard in the off season on his stretch-ing and fl exibility, and his body. He’s a very dedicated young man when it comes to doing the right things. We have dreams of big things for Tyler, but we have tried to stay away from the expectations. His solid play has been extremely important to our team.”

ROY WILLIAMS

FOUNDED 1789

ENROLLMENT 26,878

HOME CHAPEL HILL, NC

ACC TITLES 17

Page 41: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

2011 ACC BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT 39

DEXTER

STRICKLANDSO. / G / 6-3 / 180

KENDALL

MARSHALLFR. / G / 6-3 / 186

DANIEL

BOLICKSR. / G / 5-10 / 175

LESLIE

MCDONALDSO. / G / 6-4 / 215

1 532

DAVID

DUPONTJR. / F / 6-5 / 195

JUSTIN

WATTSJR. / G / 6-4 / 210

STEWART

COOPERJR. / F / 6-5 / 205

VAN

HATCHELLSR. / F / 6-4 / 185

JUSTIN

KNOXGR. / F / 6-9 / 240

22 241513

25

JOHN

HENSONSO. / F / 6-10 / 210

PATRICK

CROUCHJR. / G / 5-11 / 175

D.J.

JOHNSTONSR. / F / 6-4 / 195

3130 32

REGGIE

BULLOCKFR. / G / 6-5 1/2 / 190

35

TYLER

ZELLERJR. / F / 7-0 / 250

44

HARRISON

BARNESFR. / F / 6-8 / 210

40

ROY WILLIAMS

HEAD COACH

STEVE ROBINSON

ASSISTANT COACH

JEROD HAASE

ASSISTANT COACH

C.B. MCGRATH

ASSISTANT COACH

Page 42: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

NC STATE

RANDY WOODSONCHANCELLOR

SAM PARDUEFACULTY REPRESENTATIVE

DEBORAH A. YOWATHLETICS DIRECTOR

FOUNDED 1887

ENROLLMENT 32,029

HOME RALEIGH, NC

ACC TITLES 10

TRACY SMITH“Tracy has grown basically every year from his freshman year, when he didn’t play a lot, to when he got his opportuni-ty. We saw how much of a factor he could be for our ball club and for our university. He has continued to get bet-ter every year. He has grown into being our guy. He had a setback this year with his knee injury, but he has had a very good career here and really worked his way up to where he is today.”

SIDNEY LOWE

Page 43: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

2011 ACC BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT 41

DESHAWN

PAINTERSO. / C / 6-9 / 227

LORENZO

BROWNFR. / G / 6-5 / 186

RICHARD

HOWELLSO. / F / 6-8 / 261

ENRICO

KUFUORSR. / G / 6-1 / 192

0 21

4

C.J.

LESLIEFR. / F / 6-8 / 206

JAVIER

GONZALEZSR. / G / 6-0 / 176

5 10

RYAN

HARROWFR. / G / 6-1 / 156

12

JORDAN

VANDENBERGSO. / C / 7-1 / 248

14

TRACY

SMITHSR. / F / 6-8 / 255

C.J.

WILLIAMSJR. / G / 6-5 / 218

KENDALL

SMITHJR. / F / 6-8 / 237

2321 25

SCOTT

WOODSO. / F / 6-6 / 177

15

SIDNEY LOWE

HEAD COACH

MONTE TOWE

ASSOCIATE HEAD COACH

LARRY HARRIS

ASSISTANT HEAD COACH

PETE STRICKLAND

ASSISTANT COACH

Page 44: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

VIRGINIA

TERESA A. SULLIVANPRESIDENT

CAROLYN M. CALLAHANFACULTY REPRESENTATIVE

CRAIG K. LITTLEPAGEATHLETICS DIRECTOR

MUSTAPHA FARRAKHAN“He has matured and improved so much, and a lot of that has to do with the experience of just playing time. In his junior year he got more time than he had previously but it was still spo-radic and inconsistent. This year, he has evolved and has played a lot of minutes. When Mustapha has played his best ball he has let the game come to him. He has kind of seen the areas where he can help the team. The thing that I’ve really liked is when he’s had a rough outing or we’ve had a rough out-ing as a team he has bounced back better. He is more mature emotionally, and that’s an evolution of a lot of play-ers. That has helped him get to the next play or the next game and that has helped him elevate his play. He’s dan-gerous with his shot and is very ath-letic, and he’s done the right things to help our program.

TONY BENNETT

FOUNDED 1819

ENROLLMENT 20,895

HOME CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA

ACC TITLES 1

Page 45: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

2011 ACC BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT 43

JONTEL

EVANSSO. / G / 5-11 / 190

WILL

REGANFR. / F / 6-8 / 222

MUSTAPHA

FARRAKHANSR. / G / 6-4 / 181

ASSANE

SENEJR. / C / 7-0 / 239

1 42 5

JOE

HARRISFR. / G / 6-6 / 202

SAMMY

ZEGLINSKIJR. / G / 6-1 / 185

WILL

SHERRILLSR. / F / 6-9 / 226

12 13 22

MIKE

SCOTTSR. / F / 6-8 / 242

AKIL

MITCHELLFR. / F / 6-8 / 221

KT

HARRELLFR. / G / 6-4 / 204

DOUG

BROWMANSO. / G / 5-11 / 182

THOMAS

ROGERSFR. / G / 6-6 / 200

23

2524 31 32

JAMES

JOHNSONFR. / F / 6-9 / 234

34

TONY BENNETT

HEAD COACH

RITCHIE MCKAY

ASSOCIATE HEAD COACH

RON SANCHEZ

ASSISTANT COACH

JASON WILLIFORD

ASSISTANT COACH

Page 46: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

FOUNDED 1872

ENROLLMENT 28,000

HOME BLACKSBURG, VA

ACC TITLES 0

VIRGINIA TECH

CHARLES. W. STEGERPRESIDENT

LARRY KILLOUGHFACULTY REPRESENTATIVE

JIM WEAVERATHLETICS DIRECTOR

MALCOLM DELANEY“Malcolm is like our iron man. He’s just in unbelievable condition. He’s fi ercely competitive and he would never want it another way. He has played so many minutes for us over the last three years as a perfectly conditioned athlete. He makes no excuses, and we ask a lot of him on both and off ensive and defen-sive side of the ball. He’s always an-swered the call.”

SETH GREENBERG

Page 47: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

2011 ACC BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT 45

JEFF

ALLENSR. / F / 6-7 / 230

TERRELL

BELLSR. / G/F / 6-6 / 205

0

ERICK

GREENSO. / G / 6-4 / 185

VICTOR

DAVILAJR. / F / 6-8 / 245

ANDREW

GRIFFINSR. / F / 6-6 /220

PRINCE

PARKERGR. / F / 6-6 / 260

1

14 15

22

TYRONE

GARLANDFR. / G / 6-1 / 170

MALCOLM

DELANEYSR. / G / 6-3 / 190

PAUL

DEBNAMGR. / G / 6-3 / 195

MANNY

ATKINSSO. / G/F / 6-7 / 200

21

23

32

25

JARELL

EDDIEFR. / G/F / 6-7 / 209

31

SETH GREENBERG

HEAD COACH

ADRIAN AUTRY

ASSOCIATE HEAD COACH

JAMES JOHNSON

ASSISTANT COACH

JOHN RICHARDSON

ASSISTANT COACH

11

Page 48: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

GARY CLARK“Gary has led by example, not only on the court, but by the way he conducts himself off the court. He’s an excellent student, attends every class and is on time for everything. And he has played very hard for us. He’s played more min-utes this year than his fi rst three years combined.”

JEFF BZDELIK

NATHAN O. HATCHPRESIDENT

RICHARD CARMICHAELFACULTY REPRESENTATIVE

RON WELLMANATHLETICS DIRECTOR

WAKE FORESTFOUNDED 1834

ENROLLMENT 4,569

HOME WINSTON-SALEM, NC

ACC TITLES 4

Page 49: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

2011 ACC BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT 47

J.T.

TERRELLFR. / G / 6-3 / 175

GARY

CLARKSR. / G / 6-4 / 200

TONY

CHENNAULTFR. / G / 6-2 / 195

C.J.

HARRISSO. / G / 6-3 / 185

0 21 11

ARI

STEWARTSO. / F / 6-7 / 205

NIKITA

MESCHERIAKOVJR. / F / 6-8 / 215

MELVIN

TABBFR. / F / 6-8 / 250

TRAVIS

MCKIEFR. / F / 6-7 / 205

20 2523 30

CARSON

DESROSIERSFR. / C / 7-0 / 235

BROOKS

GODWINJR. / F / 6-5 / 210

TY

WALKERJR. / C / 7-0 / 230

DENMORE

MCDERMOTTSR. / F / 6-5 / 235

SPENCER

JENNINGSSO. / G / 6-0 / 170

AARON

INGLEJR. / G / 6-0 / 175

33 4140

52

42

43

RYAN

KEENANJR. / F / 6-4 / 195

45

JEFF BZDELIK

HEAD COACH

JEFF BATTLE

ASSOCIATE HEAD COACH

RUSTY LARUE

ASSISTANT COACH

MARK POPE

ASSISTANT COACH

Page 50: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

As the Offi cial Bank of the ACC, BB&T is in the stands and in the community, cheering on our schools and sharing our knowledge with parents, students and fans. Helping clients make the best fi nancial decisions has been our goal since 1872. Because when you’re better informed, you move in a brighter direction. Know more today at BBT.com/ACC.

BB&T is a Member FDIC.

Page 51: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

2011 ACC BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT 49

Page 52: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

50 theACC.com

TEAM CONFERENCE OVERALL

1. NORTH CAROLINA 14-2 24-6

2. DUKE 13-3 27-4

3. FLORIDA STATE 11-5 21-9

4. CLEMSON 9-7 20-10

5. BOSTON COLLEGE 9-7 19-11

6. VIRGINIA TECH 9-7 19-10

7. MARYLAND 7-9 18-13

8. VIRGINIA 7-9 16-14

9. MIAMI 6-10 18-13

10. NC STATE 5-11 15-15

11. GEORGIA TECH 5-11 13-17

12. WAKE FOREST 1-15 8-23

SEASON RESULTSFINAL 2010-11 REGULAR SEASON STANDINGS

Page 53: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

2011 ACC BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT 51

#8 VIRGINIA

#1 NORTH CAROLINA

#4 CLEMSON

#2 DUKE

#5 BOSTON COLLEGE

#7 MARYLAND

#6 VIRGINIA TECH

#3 FLORIDA STATE

#9 MIAMI

8/9 WINNER

5/12 WINNER

7/10 WINNER

#12 WAKE FOREST

#10 NC STATE

#11 GEORGIA TECH

6/11 WINNER

12:00 NOON

12:00 NOON

1:00 PM

1:00 PM

3:00 PM

2:00 PM

7:00 PM

2:00 PM

7:00 PM

9:00 PM

9:00 PM

2011 ACC CHAMPION

FIRST ROUNDTHURSDAY MARCH 10

QUARTERFINALSFRIDAY MARCH 11

SEMIFINALSSATURDAY MARCH 12

FINALSSUNDAY MARCH 13

Page 54: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

52 theACC.com

PLAYERS OF THE WEEK

1

5 10

6

7

11

1712

Page 55: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

2011 ACC BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT 53

WEEK 1

JORDAN WILLIAMS, MARYLANDRookie: Kyrie Irving, Duke & C.J. Leslie, NC State

WEEK 2

CHRIS SINGLETON, FLORIDA STATERookie: Travis McKie, Wake Forest

WEEK 3

MALCOLM DELANEY, VIRGINIA TECHRookie: Kyrie Irving, Duke

WEEK 4

MIKE SCOTT, VIRGINIARookie: Kyrie Irving, Duke

WEEK 5 REGGIE JACKSON, BOSTON COLLEGERookie: Ryan Harrow, NC State

WEEK 6

JERAI GRANT, CLEMSONRookie: KT Harrell, Virginia

WEEK 7

MALCOLM GRANT, MIAMIRookie: C.J. Leslie, NC State

WEEK 8

NOLAN SMITH, DUKERookie: Travis McKie, Wake ForestWEEK 9

JEFF ALLEN, VIRGINIA TECHRookie: C.J. Leslie, NC State

WEEK 10 CHRIS SINGLETON, FLORIDA STATE & REGGIE JACKSON, BOSTON COLLEGERookie: Travis McKie, Wake Forest

WEEK 11

ERICK GREEN, VIRGINIA TECHRookie: Reggie Bullock, North Carolina

WEEK 12

IMAN SHUMPERT, GEORGIA TECHRookie: Harrison Barnes, North Carolina

WEEK 13

JEFF ALLEN, VIRGINIA TECHRookie: Harrison Barnes, North Carolina & Kendall Marshall, North Carolina

WEEK 14

NOLAN SMITH, DUKERookie: Kendall Marshall, North Carolina

WEEK 15

NOLAN SMITH, DUKE Rookie: Terrell Stoglin, Maryland

WEEK 16

JEFF ALLEN, VIRGINIA TECHRookie: Terrell Stoglin, Maryland

WEEK 17

IMAN SHUMPERT, GEORGIA TECHRookie: Kendall Marshall, North CarolinaHarrison Barnes, North Carolina

2 10

3

4

8

9

14

13

15

16

Page 56: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

54 theACC.com

SCORING## PLAYER-TEAM CL G FG 3FG FT PTS AVG/G

1. NOLAN SMITH-DU SR 31 230 51 158 669 21.6

2. MALCOLM DELANEY-VT SR 29 160 72 152 544 18.8

3. REGGIE JACKSON-BC JR 30 193 64 100 550 18.3

4. IMAN SHUMPERT-GT JR 30 173 40 139 525 17.5

5. KYLE SINGLER-DU SR 31 184 57 105 530 17.1

6. JORDAN WILLIAMS-MD SO 31 199 0 127 525 16.9

7. MALCOLM GRANT-UM JR 31 138 82 103 461 14.9

8. TYLER ZELLER-NC JR 30 159 0 119 437 14.6

9. JOE TRAPANI-BC SR 30 148 47 89 432 14.4

10. DEMONTEZ STITT-CU SR 28 126 42 101 395 14.1

11. HARRISON BARNES-NC FR 30 153 45 71 422 14.1

12. CHRIS SINGLETON-FS JR 25 116 33 81 346 13.8

13. JEFF ALLEN-VT SR 29 155 5 85 400 13.8

14. MUSTAPHA FARRAKHAN-VA SR 30 127 49 101 404 13.5

15. DURAND SCOTT-UM SO 31 135 25 115 410 13.2

16. TRAVIS MCKIE-WF FR 31 144 17 96 401 12.9

17. GLEN RICE-GT SO 30 139 40 65 383 12.8

18. COREY RAJI-BC SR 28 130 38 58 356 12.7

19. JERAI GRANT-CU SR 30 135 0 101 371 12.4

20. REGGIE JOHNSON-UM SO 31 140 0 93 373 12.0

REBOUNDING## PLAYER-TEAM CL G OFF DEF TOT AVG/G

1. JORDAN WILLIAMS-MD SO 31 112 247 359 11.6

2. JEFF ALLEN-VT SR 29 81 210 291 10.0

3. REGGIE JOHNSON-UM SO 31 112 189 301 9.7

4. JOHN HENSON-NC SO 30 91 199 290 9.7

5. MASON PLUMLEE-DU SO 31 77 193 270 8.7

6. TRAVIS MCKIE-WF FR 31 77 158 235 7.6

7. JOE TRAPANI-BC SR 30 59 158 217 7.2

8. TYLER ZELLER-NC JR 30 84 130 214 7.1

9. CHRIS SINGLETON-FS JR 25 54 124 178 7.1

10. CJ LESLIE-ST FR 29 81 124 205 7.1

11. JERAI GRANT-CU SR 30 79 124 203 6.8

12. KYLE SINGLER-DU SR 31 80 126 206 6.6

13. COREY RAJI-BC SR 28 73 113 186 6.6

14. RICHARD HOWELL-ST SO 29 79 108 187 6.4

15. IMAN SHUMPERT-GT JR 30 53 130 183 6.1

16. DINO GREGORY-MD SR 31 65 116 181 5.8

17. TERRELL BELL-VT SR 29 48 118 166 5.7

18. BERNARD JAMES-FS JR 30 64 104 168 5.6

HARRISON BARNES-NC FR 30 57 111 168 5.6

GLEN RICE-GT SO 30 56 112 168 5.6

FIELD GOAL PCT (MIN. 5.0 MADE PER GAME)

## PLAYER-TEAM CL G FG FGA PCT

1. TYLER ZELLER-NC JR 30 159 294 .541

2. JORDAN WILLIAMS-MD SO 31 199 368 .541

3. JEFF ALLEN-VT SR 29 155 309 .502

4. REGGIE JACKSON-BC JR 30 193 388 .497

5. NOLAN SMITH-DU SR 31 230 489 .470

6. KYLE SINGLER-DU SR 31 184 437 .421

7. MALCOLM DELANEY-VT SR 29 160 381 .420

8. IMAN SHUMPERT-GT JR 30 173 422 .410

9. HARRISON BARNES-NC FR 30 153 377 .406

ASSISTS## PLAYER-TEAM CL G ASSISTS AVG/G

1. KENDALL MARSHALL-NC FR 30 168 5.60

2. NOLAN SMITH-DU SR 31 160 5.16

3. REGGIE JACKSON-BC JR 30 135 4.50

4. MALCOLM DELANEY-VT SR 29 119 4.10

5. LORENZO BROWN-ST FR 30 115 3.83

6. ADRIAN BOWIE-MD SR 31 112 3.61

7. DERWIN KITCHEN-FS SR 30 108 3.60

8. JONTEL EVANS-VA SO 30 107 3.57

9. IMAN SHUMPERT-GT JR 30 106 3.53

10. BIKO PARIS-BC SR 29 102 3.52

STEALS## PLAYER-TEAM CL G STEALS AVG/G

1. IMAN SHUMPERT-GT JR 30 81 2.70

2. CHRIS SINGLETON-FS JR 25 53 2.12

3. DERWIN KITCHEN-FS SR 30 53 1.77

4. ERICK GREEN-VT SO 27 47 1.74

5. MALCOLM DELANEY-VT SR 29 47 1.62

6. GLEN RICE-GT SO 30 45 1.50

7. MAURICE MILLER-GT SR 30 43 1.43

8. SETH CURRY-DU SO 31 43 1.39

9. SAMMY ZEGLINSKI-VA JR 23 31 1.35

10. ANDRE YOUNG-CU JR 30 40 1.33

LORENZO BROWN-ST FR 30 40 1.33

JONTEL EVANS-VA SO 30 40 1.33

3-POINT FG PCT (MIN. 2.0 MADE PER GAME)

## PLAYER-TEAM CL G 3FG FGA PCT

1. MALCOLM GRANT-UM JR 31 82 188 .436

2. SCOTT WOOD-ST SO 30 72 166 .434

3. REGGIE JACKSON-BC JR 30 64 150 .427

4. JOE HARRIS-VA FR 30 64 154 .416

5. MALCOLM DELANEY-VT SR 29 72 176 .409

6. BIKO PARIS-BC SR 29 60 150 .400

7. ADRIAN THOMAS-UM SR 31 81 203 .399

8. ANDRE YOUNG-CU JR 30 68 176 .386

FT

158

152

100

139

105

127

103

119

89

101

71

81

85 400 13.8

404 13.5

410 13.2

401 12.9

383 12.8

356 12.7

371 12.4

373 12.0

TOT AVG/G

359 11.6

291 10.0

301 9.7

290 9.7

270 8.7

235 7.6

217 7.2

214 7.1

178 7.1

PTS AVG/G

669 21.6

544 18.8

550 18.3

525 17.5

530 17.1

525 16.9

461 14.9

437 14.6

432 14.4

395 14.1

422 14.1

346 13.8

400 13 8

124 2

124 2

126 2

113 18

1008 18 8

130 181833

116 181181

118 166166

104104 168

111 1688

1112 168

7.

8.

9.

10.

3-PO##

1.

2.

3.

4.

5.

6.

7.

8.

205 7.1

203 6.8

206 6.6

86 6.6

87 6.46

3 63 6.1.

11 5.5.8

66 55.7

5.6

5.6

5.6

Page 57: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

2011 ACC BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT 55

MINUTES PLAYED## PLAYER-TEAM CL G MINUTES AVG/G

1. MALCOLM DELANEY-VT SR 29 1109 38.24

2. KYLE SINGLER-DU SR 31 1074 34.65

3. NOLAN SMITH-DU SR 31 1054 34.00

4. REGGIE JACKSON-BC JR 30 1015 33.83

5. DEMONTEZ STITT-CU SR 28 947 33.82

6. DURAND SCOTT-UM SO 31 1022 32.97

7. JEFF ALLEN-VT SR 29 947 32.66

8. C.J. HARRIS-WF SO 31 1003 32.35

9. ANDRE YOUNG-CU JR 30 969 32.30

10. MALCOLM GRANT-UM JR 31 1001 32.29

FREE THROW PCT (MIN. 2.5 MADE PER GAME)

## PLAYER-TEAM CL G FTM FTA PCT

1. MALCOLM GRANT-UM JR 31 103 118 .873

2. MALCOLM DELANEY-VT SR 29 152 177 .859

3. DURAND SCOTT-UM SO 31 115 137 .839

4. NOLAN SMITH-DU SR 31 158 193 .819

5. REGGIE JACKSON-BC JR 30 100 123 .813

6. C.J. HARRIS-WF SO 31 139 171 .813

7. KYLE SINGLER-DU SR 31 105 130 .808

8. IMAN SHUMPERT-GT JR 30 139 173 .803

9. MUSTAPHA FARRAKHAN-VA SR 30 101 130 .777

10. TRAVIS MCKIE-WF FR 31 96 129 .744

ASSIST/TURNOVER RATIO (MIN. 2.0 ASSISTS/GAME)

## PLAYER-TEAM CL G ASST AVG TURN AVG RATIO

1. ERICK GREEN-VT SO 27 71 2.6 27 1.0 2.63

2. KENDALL MARSHALL-NC FR 30 168 5.6 67 2.2 2.51

3. ANDRE YOUNG-CU JR 30 90 3.0 38 1.3 2.37

4. SAMMY ZEGLINSKI-VA JR 23 54 2.3 25 1.1 2.16

5. REGGIE JACKSON-BC JR 30 135 4.5 64 2.1 2.11

6. SETH CURRY-DU SO 31 64 2.1 31 1.0 2.06

7. ADRIAN BOWIE-MD SR 31 112 3.6 55 1.8 2.04

8. PE’SHON HOWARD-MD FR 31 103 3.3 51 1.6 2.02

9. RYAN HARROW-ST FR 28 95 3.4 48 1.7 1.98

10. JONTEL EVANS-VA SO 30 107 3.6 56 1.9 1.91

3-POINT FG MADE## PLAYER-TEAM CL G 3FG AVG/G

1. MALCOLM GRANT-UM JR 31 82 2.65

2. ADRIAN THOMAS-UM SR 31 81 2.61

3. MALCOLM DELANEY-VT SR 29 72 2.48

4. SCOTT WOOD-ST SO 30 72 2.40

5. ANDRE YOUNG-CU JR 30 68 2.27

6. REGGIE JACKSON-BC JR 30 64 2.13

JOE HARRIS-VA FR 30 64 2.13

8. BIKO PARIS-BC SR 29 60 2.07

9. SAMMY ZEGLINSKI-VA JR 23 43 1.87

10. KYLE SINGLER-DU SR 31 57 1.84

BLOCKED SHOTS## PLAYER-TEAM CL G BLOCKS AVG/G

1. JOHN HENSON-NC SO 30 94 3.13

2. TY WALKER-WF JR 31 78 2.52

3. JERAI GRANT-CU SR 30 72 2.40

4. BERNARD JAMES-FS JR 30 70 2.33

5. DANIEL MILLER-GT FR 30 66 2.20

6. MASON PLUMLEE-DU SO 31 53 1.71

7. CARSON DESROSIERS-WF FR 30 51 1.70

8. CHRIS SINGLETON-FS JR 25 40 1.60

9. RYAN KELLY-DU SO 31 48 1.55

10. DINO GREGORY-MD SR 31 43 1.39

OFFENSIVE REBOUNDS## PLAYER-TEAM CL G NO. AVG/G

1. JORDAN WILLIAMS-MD SO 31 112 3.61

REGGIE JOHNSON-UM SO 31 112 3.61

3. JOHN HENSON-NC SO 30 91 3.03

4. TYLER ZELLER-NC JR 30 84 2.80

5. JEFF ALLEN-VT SR 29 81 2.79

CJ LESLIE-ST FR 29 81 2.79

7. RICHARD HOWELL-ST SO 29 79 2.72

8. JERAI GRANT-CU SR 30 79 2.63

9. COREY RAJI-BC SR 28 73 2.61

10. KYLE SINGLER-DU SR 31 80 2.58

DEFENSIVE REBOUNDS## PLAYER-TEAM CL G NO. AVG/G

1. JORDAN WILLIAMS-MD SO 31 247 7.97

2. JEFF ALLEN-VT SR 29 210 7.24

3. JOHN HENSON-NC SO 30 199 6.63

4. MASON PLUMLEE-DU SO 31 193 6.23

5. REGGIE JOHNSON-UM SO 31 189 6.10

6. JOE TRAPANI-BC SR 30 158 5.27

7. TRAVIS MCKIE-WF FR 31 158 5.10

8. CHRIS SINGLETON-FS JR 25 124 4.96

9. IMAN SHUMPERT-GT JR 30 130 4.33

TYLER ZELLER-NC JR 30 130 4.33

2 0 1 0 - 1 1 AT L A N T I C C O A S T C O N F E R E N C E

INDIVIDUAL BASKETBALL STATISTICS

3. ANDRE Y

4. SAMMY

5. REGGIE

6. SETH CU

7. ADRIAN

8. PE’SHON

9. RYAN HA

10. JONTEL

AVG/G

2.65

2.61

2.48

2 0 1 0 - 1 1 AT L A N

Page 58: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

56 theACC.com

A L L A C C T E A M S

FIRST TEAMPTS NAME SCHOOL CL

225 Nolan Smith + Duke Sr.210 Jordan Williams Maryland So.202 Malcolm Delaney Virginia Tech Sr.199 Kyle Singler Duke Sr. 190 Reggie Jackson Boston College Jr

SECOND TEAMPTS NAME SCHOOL CL

161 Tyler Zeller North Carolina Jr. 148 John Henson North Carolina So. 145 Harrison Barnes North Carolina Fr. 132 Iman Shumpert Georgia Tech Jr. 131 Jeff Allen Virginia Tech Sr.

THIRD TEAMPTS NAME SCHOOL CL

126 Chris Singleton Florida State Jr.81 Demontez Stitt Clemson Sr.63 Joe Trapani Boston College Sr.62 Malcolm Grant Miami Jr.45 Kendall Marshall North Carolina Fr.

ALL-FRESHMEN TEAMPTS NAME SCHOOL

75 Harrison Barnes + North Carolina 74 Travis McKie Wake Forest 71 Kendall Marshall North Carolina62 Terrell Stoglin Maryland 46 C.J. Leslie NC State

ALL-DEFENSIVE TEAMPTS NAME SCHOOL

74 John Henson + North Carolina 63 Chris Singleton Florida State 59 Iman Shumpert Georgia Tech 26 Nolan Smith Duke 19 Jerai Grant Clemson

+ unanimous selection

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CL

Sr.So.Sr.Sr. Jr

CL

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HOOL

rth Carolina ke Forest rth Carolinaryland yState

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rth Carolina rida State orgia Tech gkemson

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Jr.Sr.

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So. Fr. Jr. Sr.

CL

Jr

Page 59: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

2011 ACC BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT 57

Page 60: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

58 theACC.com

NOLANSMITHD U K E

PREV

IOUS

WIN

NERS

P L A Y E R O F T H E Y E A R

1954 Dickie Hemric Wake Forest1955 Dickie Hemric Wake Forest1956 Ronnie Shavlik NC State1957 Len Rosenbluth North Carolina1958 Pete Brennan North Carolina1959 Lou Pucillo NC State1960 Lee Shaff er North Carolina1961 Len Chappell Wake Forest1962 Len Chappell Wake Forest1963 Art Heyman Duke1964 Jeff Mullins Duke1965 Billy Cunningham North Carolina1966 Steve Vacendak Duke1967 Larry Miller North Carolina1968 Larry Miller North Carolina 1969 John Roche South Carolina1970 John Roche South Carolina1971 Charlie Davis Wake Forest1972 Barry Parkhill Virginia1973 David Thompson NC State

1974 David Thompson NC State 1975 David Thompson NC State1976 Mitch Kupchak North Carolina1977 Rod Griffi n Wake Forest1978 Phil Ford North Carolina1979 Mike Gminski Duke1980 Albert King Maryland1981 Ralph Sampson Virginia1982 Ralph Sampson Virginia 1983 Ralph Sampson Virginia1984 Michael Jordan North Carolina1985 Len Bias Maryland1986 Len Bias Maryland1987 Horace Grant Clemson1988 Danny Ferry Duke1989 Danny Ferry Duke1990 Dennis Scott Georgia Tech1991 Rodney Monroe NC State1992 Christian Laettner Duke1993 Rodney Rogers Wake Forest

1994 Grant Hill Duke1995 Joe Smith Maryland1996 Tim Duncan Wake Forest1997 Tim Duncan Wake Forest1998 Antawn Jamison North Carolina1999 Elton Brand Duke2000 Chris Carrawell Duke2001 Shane Battier Duke Joseph Forte North Carolina2002 Juan Dixon Maryland2003 Josh Howard Wake Forest2004 Julius Hodge NC State 2005 J.J. Redick Duke2006 J.J. Redick Duke2007 Jared Dudley Boston College2008 Tyler Hansbrough North Carolina2009 Ty Lawson North Carolina2010 Greivis Vasquez Maryland

AWA R D W I N N E R S

Page 61: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

2011 ACC BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT 59

Page 62: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

©

©

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Page 63: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

2011 ACC BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT 61

HARRISONBARNESN O R T H C A R O L I N A

PREV

IOUS

WIN

NERS

A C C R O O K I E O F T H E Y E A R

1976 Jim Spanarkel Duke1977 Mike Gminski Duke Hawkeye Whitney NC State1978 Gene Banks Duke1979 Buck Williams Maryland1980 Ralph Sampson Virginia1981 Sam Perkins North Carolina1982 Michael Jordan North Carolina1983 Mark Price Georgia Tech1984 Bruce Dalrymple Georgia Tech1985 Duane Ferrell Georgia Tech1986 Tom Hammonds Georgia Tech

1987 J.R. Reid North Carolina1988 Dennis Scott Georgia Tech1989 Bryant Stith Virginia 1990 Kenny Anderson Georgia Tech1991 Rodney Monroe NC State1992 Bob Sura Florida State1993 Rodney Rogers Wake Forest1994 Joe Smith Maryland1995 Greg Buckner Clemson1996 Stephon Marbury Georgia Tech1997 Ed Cota North Carolina1998 Robert O’Kelley Wake Forest

1999 Chris Williams Virginia2000 Joseph Forte North Carolina2001 Chris Duhon Duke2002 Ed Nelson Georgia Tech2003 Chris Bosh Georgia Tech2004 Chris Paul Wake Forest2005 J.J. Redick Duke2006 Tyler Hansbrough North Carolina2007 Brandon Wright North Carolina2008 Kyle Singler Duke2009 Ty Lawson North Carolina2010 Derrick Favors Georgia Tech

AWA R D W I N N E R S

Page 64: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

62 theACC.com

JOHNHENSONN O R T H C A R O L I N A

P R E V I O U S W I N N E R S

D E F E N S I V E P L A Y E R O F T H E Y E A R

2005 Shelden Williams Duke2006 Shelden Williams Duke2007 Jamon Gordon Virginia Tech

2008 DeMarcus Nelson Duke2009 Toney Douglas Florida State2010 Chris Singleton Florida State

AWA R D W I N N E R S

Page 65: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

2011 ACC BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT 63

TYLERZELLERN O R T H C A R O L I N A

S K I P P R O S S E R S C H O L A R -A T H L E T E O F T H E Y E A R

Wake Forest head basketball coach George Edward “Skip” Prosser passed away on July 26, 2007. Prosser compiled a 291-146 career record in 14 seasons as a head coach, including a 126-68 mark in his six years with the Demon Deacons. The 2003 ACC Coach of the Year, Prosser won 20 plus games and led Wake Forest to the NCAA Tournament in each of his fi rst four seasons in Winston-Salem and brought the school its fi rst outright ACC regular season title in 2003. Every Wake Forest senior he coached graduated and the Deacons placed nine players on the annual All-ACC Academic Basketball Team during his tenure.In order to be nominated for the award, a student-athlete must be an upperclassman with a grade-point average of 3.0 or better – both in his career and in the previous two semesters. Sixty percent of the award is based on academic achievement and 40 percent on athletic accomplishments.

P R E V I O U S W I N N E R S 2008 Cliff Hammonds Clemson2009 Jack McClinton Miami2010 Jerome Meyinsse Virginia

AWA R D W I N N E R S

Page 66: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

64 theACC.com

ROYWILLIAMSN O R T H C A R O L I N A

PREV

IOUS

WIN

NERS

C O A C H O F T H E Y E A R

1954 Everett Case NC State1955 Everett Case NC State1956 Murray Greason Wake Forest1957 Frank McGuire North Carolina1958 Everett Case NC State1959 Harold Bradley Duke1960 Bones McKinney Wake Forest1961 Bones McKinney Wake Forest1962 Bob Stevens South Carolina1963 Vic Bubas Duke1964 Vic Bubas Duke1965 Press Maravich NC State1966 Vic Bubas Duke1967 Dean Smith North Carolina1968 Dean Smith North Carolina1969 Frank McGuire South Carolina1970 Norm Sloan NC State1971 Dean Smith North Carolina1972 Bill Gibson Virginia1973 Norm Sloan NC State

1974 Norm Sloan NC State1975 Lefty Driesell Maryland1976 Dean Smith North Carolina1977 Dean Smith North Carolina1978 Bill Foster Duke1979 Dean Smith North Carolina1980 Lefty Driesell Maryland1981 Terry Holland Virginia1982 Terry Holland Virginia1983 Bobby Cremins Georgia Tech1984 Mike Krzyzewski Duke1985 Bobby Cremins Georgia Tech1986 Mike Krzyzewski Duke1987 Cliff Ellis Clemson1988 Dean Smith North Carolina1989 Jim Valvano NC State1990 Cliff Ellis Clemson1991 Dave Odom Wake Forest1992 Pat Kennedy Florida State1993 Dean Smith North Carolina

1994 Dave Odom Wake Forest1995 Dave Odom Wake Forest1996 Bobby Cremins Georgia Tech1997 Mike Krzyzewski Duke1998 Bill Guthridge North Carolina1999 Mike Krzyzewski Duke2000 Mike Krzyzewski Duke2001 Paul Hewitt Georgia Tech2002 Gary Williams Maryland2003 Skip Prosser Wake Forest2004 Herb Sendek NC State2005 Seth Greenberg Virginia Tech2006 Roy Williams North Carolina2007 Dave Leitao Virginia2008 Seth Greenberg Virginia Tech2009 Leonard Hamilton Florida State2010 Gary Williams Maryland

AWA R D W I N N E R S

Page 67: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

2011 ACC BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT 652202020202020202020202020202020202002022 111111111111111111111111111111111111 AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAACCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCC BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBASASASASASASASASASASASASASSSASASASASSASASSASKEKEKEKEKEKEKEKEKEKEKEKEKEKEKEKEKEKEEEKEKEKEKETBTBTBTBTBTBTBTBTBTBTBTBTBTBTTBTBTBTBTBTBTTBTBTBBBALALALALALALALALALALALALALALALLAALALALALALALALALLALLALLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLL TOTTOTOTOTOTOTOTOTOTOTOTOTOTOTOTTOTOTTTOTOTOTOOTOOURURURURURURURUURUURURURURURURURUURUUURURURRUUU NANANANANANANANANANANANANANANANANANNAAAAMEMEMEMEMEMEMEMEMEMEMEMEMEMEMEMEMEEMEM NTNTNTNTNTNTNTNTNNTNTNTNTNTNTNTNTNTNT 656565656565656565656565656565656566

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Page 68: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

66 theACC.com

DATE OPPONENT W-L SCORE

111-12-10 ST. FRANCIS (NY) 79-49 W

11-16-10 YALE 67-75 L

11-22-10 HOLY CROSS 69-54 W

11-25-10 VS TEXAS A&M 67-65 W

11-26-10 VS WISCONSIN 55-65 L

11-28-10 VS CALIFORNIA 68-46 W

12-1-10 INDIANA 88-76 W

12-04-10 VS MASSACHUSETTS 76-71 W

12-8-10 PROVIDENCE 88-86 W

12-12-10 AT MARYLAND 79-75 W

12-19-10 BRYANT 93-77 W

12-22-10 BUCKNELL 84-80 W

12-29-10 AT RHODE ISLAND 65-67 L

1-1-11 AT SOUTH CAROLINA 85-70 W

1-05-11 HARVARD 69-78 L

1-8-11 GEORGIA TECH 86-75 W

1-11-11 NC STATE 75-66 W

1-15-11 AT MIAMI 71-72 L

1-19-11 VIRGINIA 70-67 W

1-22-11 AT FLORIDA STATE 51-67 L

1-27-11 AT DUKE 68-84 L

2-1-11 NORTH CAROLINA 74-106 L

2-5-11 VIRGINIA TECH 58-56 W

2-8-11 AT CLEMSON 69-77 L

2-12-11 MARYLAND 76-72 W

2-19-11 AT NORTH CAROLINA 46-48 L

2-23-11 MIAMI 64-73 L

2-26-11 AT VIRGINIA 63-44 W

3-1-11 AT VIRGINIA TECH 76-61 W

3-06-11 WAKE FOREST 84-68 W

DATE OPPONENT W/L SCORE

11/12/10 NORTH FLORIDA 75-55 W

11/14/10 AT UNCG 97-73 W

11/15/10 GARDNER-WEBB 78-53 W

11/18/10 AT FLA. INTERNATIONAL 89-66 W

11/23/10 MERCER 79-55 W

11/28/10 FLORIDA 51-55 L

11/30/10 OHIO STATE 44-58 L

12/05/10 HARTFORD 60-38 W

12/12/10 CLEMSON 75-69 W

12/15/10 STETSON 97-63 W

12/18/10 AT LOYOLA MARYMOUNT 74-63 W

12/22/10 AT HAWAI’L 70-62 W

12/23/10 VS BUTLER 64-67 L

12/25/10 VS BAYLOR 68-61 W

01/03/11 AT AUBURN 60-65 L

01/08/11 AT VIRGINIA TECH 59-71 L

01/12/11 DUKE 66-61 W

01/15/11 NC STATE 84-71 W

1/19/11 AT MIAMI 55-53 W

01/22/11 BOSTON COLLEGE 67-51 W

1/29/11 AT CLEMSON 44-62 L

02/01/11 WAKE FOREST 85-61 W

02/06/11 AT NORTH CAROLINA 69-89 L

2/10/11 AT GEORGIA TECH 72-63 W

02/12/11 VIRGINIA 63-56 W

02/19/11 AT WAKE FOREST 84-66 W

02/23/11 AT MARYLAND 62-78 L

02/26/11 MIAMI 65-59 W

03/02/11 NORTH CAROLINA 70-72 L

03/06/11 AT NC STATE 72-62 W

DATE OPPONENT W-L SCORE

11/12/10 WESTERN CAROLINA 87-64 W

11/15/10 WOFFORD 78-70 W

11/19/10 VS LONG BEACH STATE 69-55 W

11/21/10 VS OLD DOMINION 60-61 L

11/22/10 VS SETON HALL 64-58 WOT

11/26/10 SOUTH CAROLINA STATE 69-54 W

11/30/10 MICHIGAN 61-69 L

12/5/10 AT SOUTH CAROLINA 60-64 L

12/12/10 AT FLORIDA STATE 69-75 L

12/17/10 SAVANNAH STATE 61-40 W

12/19/10 UNC GREENSBORO 71-61 W

12/22/10 AT COLLEGE CHARLESTON 66-59 W

12/27/10 DELAWARE STATE 76-41 W

12/29/10 EAST CAROLINA 71-59 W

1/2/11 THE CITADEL 69-54 W

1/8/11 MIAMI 79-72 W

1/12/11 GEORGIA TECH 87-62 W

01/18/11 AT NORTH CAROLINA 65-75 L

01/22/11 AT MARYLAND 77-79 L

1/25/11 NC STATE 60-50 W

1/29/11 FLORIDA STATE 62-44 W

02/02/11 AT VIRGINIA 47-49 L

2/5/11 AT GEORGIA TECH 65-56 W

2/8/11 BOSTON COLLEGE 77-69 W

2/12/11 NORTH CAROLINA 62-64 L

02/17/11 AT NC STATE 61-69 L

2/20/11 AT MIAMI 63-59 W

2/26/11 WAKE FOREST 63-49 W

03/02/11 AT DUKE 59-70 L

3/5/11 VIRGINIA TECH 69-60 W

DATE OPPONENT W/L SCORE

11/12/10 CHARLESTON SOUTHERN 52-39 W

11/15/10 AT KENNESAW STATE 63-80 L

11/17/10 ALBANY 78-51 W

11/19/10 NIAGARA 77-51 W

11/26/10 VS TEXAS-EL PASO 71-61 W

11/27/10 VS SYRACUSE 76-80 L

11/30/10 AT NORTHWESTERN 71-91 L

12/7/10 GEORGIA 72-73 L

12/11/10 SAVANNAH STATE 69-59 W

12/18/10 VS RICHMOND 67-54 W

12/22/10 AT SIENA 57-62 L

12/31/10 MERCER 87-78 W

1/2/11 CHARLOTTE 83-86 LO2

1-8-11 AT BOSTON COLLEGE 75-86 L

1/12/11 AT CLEMSON 62-87 L

1/16/11 NORTH CAROLINA 78-58 W

1/19/11 WAKE FOREST 74-39 W

01/22/11 AT VIRGINIA 64-72 L

1/25/11 VIRGINIA TECH 72-57 W

1/30/11 MARYLAND 63-74 L

2/3/11 AT MIAMI 57-59 L

2/5/11 CLEMSON 56-65 L

2/10/11 FLORIDA STATE 63-72 L

02/13/11 AT VIRGINIA TECH 77-102 L

2/16/11 CHATTANOOGA 62-53 W

02/20/11 AT DUKE 57-79 L

1/23/11 VIRGINIA 56-62 L

02/26/11 AT NC STATE 74-79 L

03/03/11 AT WAKE FOREST 80-54 W

3/6/11 MIAMI 66-57 W

DATE OPPONENT W-L SCORE

11-14-10 PRINCETON 97-60 W

01-16-10 MIAMI OF OHIO 79-45 W

11-19-10 COLGATE 110-58 W

11/22/10 VS MARQUETTE 82-77 W

11/23/10 VS KANSAS STATE 82-68 W

11-27-10 VS OREGON 98-71 W

12-1-10 MICHIGAN STATE 84-79 W

12/04/10 VS BUTLER 82-70 W

12/8/10 BRADLEY 83-48 W

12-11-10 SAINT LOUIS 84-47 W

12-20-10 ELON 98-72 W

12/29/10 AT UNC GREENSBORO 108-62 W

01-02-11 MIAMI 74-63 W

01-05-11 ALABAMA-BIRMINGHAM 85-64 W

01-09-11 MARYLAND 71-64 W

01/12/11 AT FLORIDA STATE 61-66 L

01-15-11 VIRGINIA 76-60 W

1/19/11 AT NC STATE 92-78 W

01/22/11 AT WAKE FOREST 83-59 W

01-27-11 BOSTON COLLEGE 84-68 W

1/30/11 AT ST. JOHN’S 78-93 L

02/02/11 AT MARYLAND 80-62 W

02-05-11 NC STATE 76-52 W

02-09-11 NORTH CAROLINA 79-73 W

2/13/11 AT MIAMI 81-71 W

02/16/11 AT VIRGINIA 56-41 W

02/20/11 GEORGIA TECH 79-57 W

02/23/11 TEMPLE 78-61 W

02/26/11 AT VIRGINIA TECH 60-64 L

03-02-11 CLEMSON 70-59 W

03/05/11 AT NORTH CAROLINA 67-81 L

DATE OPPONENT W/L SCORE

11/08/10 SEATTLE 105-76 W

11/10/10 COLLEGE CHARLESTON 75-74 W

11/14/10 MAINE 89-59 W

11/18/10 VS PITTSBURGH 70-79 L

11/19/10 VS ILLINOIS 76-80 L

11/23/10 DELAWARE STATE 72-54 W

11/26/10 ELON 76-57 W

12/1/10 AT PENN STATE 62-39 W

12/5/10 VS TEMPLE 61-64 L

12/08/10 UNCG 99-56 W

12/12/10 BOSTON COLLEGE 75-79 L

12/22/10 NJIT 89-50 W

12/29/10 NORTH FLORIDA 85-62 W

01/04/11 COLGATE 95-40 W

01-09-11 AT DUKE 64-71 L

01/12/11 AT WAKE FOREST 74-55 W

01/15/11 AT VILLANOVA 66-74 L

01/20/11 VIRGINIA TECH 57-74 L

01/22/11 CLEMSON 79-77 W

01/27/11 AT VIRGINIA 66-42 W

1/30/11 AT GEORGIA TECH 74-63 W

02/02/11 DUKE 62-80 L

02/05/11 WAKE FOREST 91-70 W

02/09/11 LONGWOOD 106-52 W

2-12-11 AT BOSTON COLLEGE 72-76 L

02/15/11 AT VIRGINIA TECH 83-91 L

02/20/11 NC STATE 87-80 W

02/23/11 FLORIDA STATE 78-62 W

02/27/11 AT NORTH CAROLINA 76-87 L

3/2/11 AT MIAMI 66-80 L

03/05/11 VIRGINIA 60-74 L

BOSTON COLLEGE19-11 OVERALL, 9-7 ACC

2010-11 REGULAR SEASON RECORDS

FLORIDA STATE21-9 OVERALL, 11-5 ACC

CLEMSON20-10 OVERALL, 9-7 ACC

GEORGIA TECH13-17 OVERALL, 5-11 ACC

DUKE27-4 OVERALL, 13-3 ACC

MARYLAND18-13 OVERALL, 7-9 ACC

Page 69: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

2011 ACC BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT 67

DATE OPPONENT W/L SCORE

11/12/10 JACKSONVILLE 89-77 W

11/15/10 AT MEMPHIS 68-72 L

11/19/10 NC CENTRAL 88-65 W

11/21/10 AT RUTGERS 45-61 L

11/24/10 MCNEESE STATE 79-59 W

11/27/10 AT FLORIDA GULF COAST 87-75 W

11/30/10 MISSISSIPPI 86-73 W

12/4/10 WEST VIRGINIA 79-76 W

12/12/10 STETSON 68-54 W

12/18/10 VS CENTRAL FLORIDA 78-84 L

12/21/10 VS ORAL ROBERTS 69-56 W

12/22/10 VS RICE 73-67 W

12/23/10 VS AKRON 69-61 W

12/30/10 PEPPERDINE 94-59 W

01-02-11 AT DUKE 63-74 L

1/8/11 AT CLEMSON 72-79 L

1/15/11 BOSTON COLLEGE 72-71 W

1/19/11 FLORIDA STATE 53-55 L

1/23/11 AT NC STATE 70-72 L

1/26/11 NORTH CAROLINA 71-74 L

01/30/11 AT VIRGINIA TECH 68-72 L

2/3/11 GEORGIA TECH 59-57 W

2/5/11 VIRGINIA 70-68 WOT

02/09/11 AT WAKE FOREST 74-73 W

2/13/11 DUKE 71-81 L

2/15/11 AT UNC GREENSBORO 78-58 W

2/20/11 CLEMSON 59-63 L

2-23-11 AT BOSTON COLLEGE 73-64 W

02/26/11 AT FLORIDA STATE 59-65 L

3/2/11 MARYLAND 80-66 W

3/6/11 AT GEORGIA TECH 57-66 L

DATE OPPONENT W/L SCORE

11/15/10 USC UPSTATE 74-54 W

11/12/10 WILLIAM & MARY 76-52 W

11/18/10 AT STANFORD 60-81 L

11-22-10 VS WASHINGTON 63-106 L

11-23-10 VS OKLAHOMA 74-56 W

11-24-10 VS WICHITA STATE 58-70 L

11/29/10 AT MINNESOTA 87-79 W

12/05/10 AT VIRGINIA TECH 57-54 W

12/07/10 RADFORD 54-44 W

12/17/10 OREGON 63-48 W

12/20/10 NORFOLK STATE 50-49 W

12/22/10 SEATTLE 53-59 L

12/30/10 IOWA STATE 47-60 L

01/02/11 LSU 64-50 W

01/04/11 HOWARD 84-63 W

01/08/11 NORTH CAROLINA 56-62 L

01-15-11 AT DUKE 60-76 L

1-19-11 AT BOSTON COLLEGE 67-70 L

01/22/11 GEORGIA TECH 72-64 W

01/27/11 MARYLAND 42-66 L

01/29/11 AT WAKE FOREST 71-76 L

02/02/11 CLEMSON 49-47 W

2/5/11 AT MIAMI 68-70 LOT

02/12/11 AT FLORIDA STATE 56-63 L

02/16/11 DUKE 41-56 L

02/19/11 VIRGINIA TECH 61-54 W

1/23/11 AT GEORGIA TECH 62-56 W

02/26/11 BOSTON COLLEGE 44-63 L

03/01/11 NC STATE 69-58 W

03/05/11 AT MARYLAND 74-60 W

DATE OPPONENT W/L SCORE

111/12/10 LIPSCOMB 80-66 W

11/18/10 VS HOFSTRA 107-63 W

11/19/10 VS MINNESOTA 67-72 L

11/21/10 VS VANDERBILT 65-72 L

11/23/10 UNC ASHEVILLE 80-69 W

11/28/10 COLLEGE CHARLESTON 74-69 W

11/30/10 AT ILLINOIS 67-79 L

12/04/10 KENTUCKY 75-73 W

12-8-10 AT EVANSVILLE 76-49 W

12/11/10 LONG BEACH STATE 96-91 W

12/18/10 VS TEXAS 76-78 L

12/21/10 WILLIAM & MARY 85-60 W

12/28/10 VS RUTGERS 78-55 W

01/02/11 ST. FRANCIS 103-54 W

01/08/11 AT VIRGINIA 62-56 W

01/13/11 VIRGINIA TECH 64-61 W

1/16/11 AT GEORGIA TECH 58-78 L

01/18/11 CLEMSON 75-65 W

1/26/11 AT MIAMI 74-71 W

01/29/11 NC STATE 84-64 W

2-1-11 AT BOSTON COLLEGE 106-74 W

02/06/11 FLORIDA STATE 89-69 W

02-09-11 AT DUKE 73-79 L

2/12/11 AT CLEMSON 64-62 W

02/15/11 WAKE FOREST 78-64 W

02/19/11 BOSTON COLLEGE 48-46 W

02/23/11 AT NC STATE 75-63 W

02/27/11 MARYLAND 87-76 W

03/02/11 AT FLORIDA STATE 72-70 W

03/05/11 DUKE 81-67 W

DATE OPPONENT W/L SCORE

11/12/10 CAMPBELL 70-60 W

11/16/10 AT KANSAS STATE 57-73 L

11/21/10 AT UNCG 92-70 W

11/25/10 VS CAL STATE NORTHRIDGE 72-56 W

11/26/10 VS OKLAHOMA STATE 56-51 W

11/28/10 VS UNLV 59-71 L

12/01/10 PURDUE 55-58 LOT

12/05/10 VIRGINIA 54-57 L

12/12/10 PENN STATE 79-69 W

12/18/10 VS MISSISSIPPI STATE 88-57 W

12/23/10 VS ST. BONAVENTURE 76-68 WOT

12/30/10 USC UPSTATE 64-53 W

01/02/11 MT. SAINT MARY’S 99-34 W

01/08/11 FLORIDA STATE 71-59 W

01/13/11 AT NORTH CAROLINA 61-64 L

01/15/11 WAKE FOREST 94-65 W

01/20/11 AT MARYLAND 74-57 W

01/22/11 LONGWOOD 70-52 W

1/25/11 AT GEORGIA TECH 57-72 L

01/30/11 MIAMI 72-68 W

02/02/11 AT NC STATE 77-69 W

2-5-11 AT BOSTON COLLEGE 56-58 L

02/13/11 GEORGIA TECH 102-77 W

02/15/11 MARYLAND 91-83 W

02/19/11 AT VIRGINIA 54-61 L

02/22/11 AT WAKE FOREST 76-62 W

02/26/11 DUKE 64-60 W

03/01/11 BOSTON COLLEGE 61-76 L

3/5/11 AT CLEMSON 60-69 L

DATE OPPONENT W/L SCORE

11/12/10 TENNESSEE TECH 82-69 W

11/18/10 VS EAST CAROLINA 85-65 W

11/19/10 VS GEORGE MASON 78-65 W

11/21/10 VS GEORGETOWN 67-82 L

11/27/10 FAIRLEIGH DICKINSON 77-67 W

12/01/10 AT WISCONSIN 48-87 L

12/4/10 AT SYRACUSE 59-65 L

12/11/10 USC UPSTATE 79-60 W

12/16/10 YOUNGSTOWN STATE 67-50 W

12/19/10 ARIZONA 62-72 L

12/22/10 DELAWARE STATE 72-70 W

12/28/10 ALABAMA A&M 82-51 W

1/1/11 SAN DIEGO 76-54 W

01/05/11 AT ELON 87-72 W

1/8/11 WAKE FOREST 90-69 W

1-11-11 AT BOSTON COLLEGE 66-75 L

01/15/11 AT FLORIDA STATE 71-84 L

1/19/11 DUKE 78-92 L

1/23/11 MIAMI 72-70 W

1/25/11 AT CLEMSON 50-60 L

01/29/11 AT NORTH CAROLINA 64-84 L

02/02/11 VIRGINIA TECH 69-77 L

02-05-11 AT DUKE 52-76 L

02/13/11 AT WAKE FOREST 80-55 W

02/17/11 CLEMSON 69-61 W

02/20/11 AT MARYLAND 80-87 L

02/23/11 NORTH CAROLINA 63-75 L

02/26/11 GEORGIA TECH 79-74 W

03/01/11 AT VIRGINIA 58-69 L

03/06/11 FLORIDA STATE 62-72 L

DATE OPPONENT W/L SCORE

11/12/10 STETSON 79-89 L

11/15/10 HAMPTON 63-56 W

11/16/10 VCU 69-90 L

11/20/10 AT ELON 89-70 W

11/22/10 WINTHROP 74-83 L

11/23/10 MARIST 81-59 W

11/30/10 IOWA 76-73 W

12/04/10 HOLY CROSS 75-64 W

12/12/10 VS UNC WILMINGTON 69-81 L

12/15/10 UNC GREENSBORO 69-67 W

12/18/10 AT XAVIER 75-83 L

12/21/10 PRESBYTERIAN 64-66 L

12/29/10 AT RICHMOND 74-90 L

01/02/11 GONZAGA 63-73 L

01/05/11 HIGH POINT 79-63 W

1/8/11 AT NC STATE 69-90 L

01/12/11 MARYLAND 55-74 L

01/15/11 AT VIRGINIA TECH 65-94 L

1/19/11 AT GEORGIA TECH 39-74 L

01/22/11 DUKE 59-83 L

01/29/11 VIRGINIA 76-71 W

02/01/11 AT FLORIDA STATE 61-85 L

02/05/11 AT MARYLAND 70-91 L

02/09/11 MIAMI 73-74 L

02/13/11 NC STATE 55-80 L

02/15/11 AT NORTH CAROLINA 64-78 L

02/19/11 FLORIDA STATE 66-84 L

02/22/11 VIRGINIA TECH 62-76 L

2/26/11 AT CLEMSON 49-63 L

03/03/11 GEORGIA TECH 54-80 L

03/06/11 AT BOSTON COLLEGE 68-84 L

2010-11 REGULAR SEASON RECORDS

MIAMI18-13 OVERALL, 6-10 ACC

VIRGINIA16-14 OVERALL, 7-9 ACC

NORTH CAROLINA24-6 OVERALL, 14-2 ACC

VIRGINIA TECH19-10 OVERALL, 9-7 ACC

NC STATE15-15 OVERALL, 5-11 ACC

WAKE FOREST8-23 OVERALL, 1-15 ACC

Page 70: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

## PLAYER GP GS TOT AVG FG FGA PCT 3FG FGA PCT FT FTA PCT OFF DEF TOT AVG PF FO A TO BLK STL PTS AVG

00 REGGIE JACKSON 30 28 1015 33.8 193 388 .497 64 150 .427 100 123 .813 31 97 128 4.3 50 0 135 64 17 34 550 18.312 JOE TRAPANI 30 30 898 29.9 148 358 .413 47 129 .364 89 131 .679 59 158 217 7.2 78 1 52 58 25 19 432 14.411 COREY RAJI 28 7 787 28.1 130 258 .504 38 105 .362 58 82 .707 73 113 186 6.6 55 0 48 27 4 16 356 12.705 BIKO PARIS 29 29 905 31.2 96 230 .417 60 150 .400 34 43 .791 11 55 66 2.3 44 0 102 54 3 25 286 9.952 JOSH SOUTHERN 29 19 559 19.3 70 124 .565 0 0 .000 48 67 .716 36 76 112 3.9 63 0 44 35 11 6 188 6.531 DANNY RUBIN 27 23 486 18.0 40 94 .426 33 76 .434 6 10 .600 10 36 46 1.7 32 0 16 17 6 9 119 4.430 DALLAS ELMORE 30 2 460 15.3 24 64 .375 11 34 .324 18 23 .783 11 29 40 1.3 31 0 20 25 6 15 77 2.604 GABE MOTON 30 1 427 14.2 27 69 .391 11 44 .250 9 14 .643 11 26 37 1.2 55 2 25 23 0 16 74 2.520 JOHN CAHILL 23 3 229 10.0 13 26 .500 10 19 .526 9 12 .750 5 19 24 1.0 13 0 6 7 0 4 45 2.055 CORTNEY DUNN 19 8 164 8.6 11 18 .611 0 0 .000 6 14 .429 9 15 24 1.3 20 0 8 8 6 2 28 1.525 PETER REHNQUIST 7 0 15 2.1 2 3 .667 0 0 .000 0 0 .000 1 2 3 0.4 2 0 1 1 0 0 4 0.614 NICK MOSAKOWSKI 7 0 18 2.6 1 6 .167 0 4 .000 0 0 .000 0 1 1 0.1 1 0 0 2 0 1 2 0.324 CHRIS KOWALSKI 11 0 37 3.4 1 7 .143 0 4 .000 0 2 .000 1 3 4 0.4 4 0 0 1 1 3 2 0.2 TEAM 28 49 77 2.6 0 3 0 TOTAL 30 756 1645 .460 274 715 .383 377 521 .724 286 679 965 32.2 448 3 457 325 79 150 2163 72.1 OPPONENTS 30 770 1729 .445 206 596 .346 324 455 .712 341 651 992 33.1 493 8 390 317 98 145 2070 69.0

## PLAYER GP GS TOT AVG FG FGA PCT 3FG FGA PCT FT FTA PCT OFF DEF TOT AVG PF FO A TO BLK STL PTS AVG

02 DEMONTEZ STITT 28 26 947 33.8 126 292 .432 42 111 .378 101 137 .737 34 89 123 4.4 68 0 93 57 12 37 395 14.145 JERAI GRANT 30 27 806 26.9 135 233 .579 0 0 .000 101 143 .706 79 124 203 6.8 64 2 23 45 72 32 371 12.411 ANDRE YOUNG 30 29 969 32.3 111 278 .399 68 176 .386 34 50 .680 24 57 81 2.7 50 0 90 38 1 40 324 10.824 MILTON JENNINGS 30 4 599 20.0 86 215 .400 18 68 .265 49 66 .742 54 105 159 5.3 69 2 12 58 14 19 239 8.031 DEVIN BOOKER 30 29 721 24.0 89 198 .449 14 42 .333 47 63 .746 48 111 159 5.3 88 2 18 48 12 19 239 8.005 TANNER SMITH 28 26 799 28.5 68 168 .405 26 81 .321 54 73 .740 16 83 99 3.5 65 1 78 51 7 33 216 7.721 BRYAN NARCISSE 30 4 401 13.4 35 69 .507 9 24 .375 17 32 .531 17 30 47 1.6 38 1 10 22 15 16 96 3.201 NOEL JOHNSON 7 1 92 13.1 6 22 .273 3 14 .214 5 8 .625 3 8 11 1.6 11 0 2 6 1 2 20 2.912 CORY STANTON 29 0 330 11.4 26 80 .325 7 37 .189 14 21 .667 6 15 21 0.7 47 0 21 21 2 20 73 2.503 ZAVIER ANDERSON 27 4 258 9.6 12 27 .444 1 2 .500 7 17 .412 7 24 31 1.1 35 0 35 34 7 19 32 1.210 CATALIN BACIU 20 0 70 3.5 9 16 .563 0 0 .000 4 12 .333 9 16 25 1.3 12 0 0 4 3 0 22 1.122 HOPKINS, DEANDRE 7 0 10 1.4 0 2 .000 0 0 .000 0 0 .000 1 0 1 0.1 2 0 1 2 1 1 0 0.004 JONAH BAIZE 9 0 23 2.6 0 2 .000 0 0 .000 0 0 .000 0 3 3 0.3 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0.0 TEAM 45 35 80 2.7 0 12 0 TOTAL 30 703 1602 .439 188 555 .339 433 622 .696 343 700 1043 34.8 549 8 383 401 147 238 2027 67.6 OPPONENTS 30 632 1586 .398 162 506 .320 385 545 .706 337 654 991 33.0 576 14 327 459 95 204 1811 60.4

## PLAYER GP GS TOT AVG FG FGA PCT 3FG FGA PCT FT FTA PCT OFF DEF TOT AVG PF FO A TO BLK STL PTS AVG

02 NOLAN SMITH 31 31 1054 34.0 230 489 .470 51 141 .362 158 193 .819 41 108 149 4.8 58 0 160 98 3 41 669 21.601 KYRIE IRVING 8 8 231 28.9 41 77 .532 14 31 .452 43 48 .896 6 24 30 3.8 15 0 41 22 5 12 139 17.412 KYLE SINGLER 31 31 1074 34.6 184 437 .421 57 170 .335 105 130 .808 80 126 206 6.6 77 1 49 57 11 31 530 17.130 SETH CURRY 31 13 777 25.1 87 208 .418 56 128 .438 60 76 .789 13 42 55 1.8 49 2 64 31 4 43 290 9.420 ANDRE DAWKINS 31 7 666 21.5 83 171 .485 53 123 .431 28 37 .757 7 52 59 1.9 47 0 21 25 3 21 247 8.005 MASON PLUMLEE 31 26 784 25.3 92 161 .571 0 2 .000 35 80 .438 77 193 270 8.7 81 5 44 57 53 30 219 7.134 RYAN KELLY 31 27 622 20.1 75 149 .503 20 62 .323 29 35 .829 35 87 122 3.9 65 0 28 26 48 17 199 6.421 MILES PLUMLEE 31 9 513 16.5 55 110 .500 0 0 .000 26 45 .578 55 87 142 4.6 76 2 12 30 13 20 136 4.403 TYLER THORNTON 29 3 309 10.7 12 27 .444 4 15 .267 24 29 .828 2 19 21 0.7 47 2 31 22 1 16 52 1.815 JOSH HAIRSTON 22 0 147 6.7 12 35 .343 0 0 .000 12 22 .545 16 15 31 1.4 26 0 3 8 1 4 36 1.652 TODD ZAFIROVSKI 4 0 9 2.3 0 1 .000 0 0 .000 0 0 .000 0 0 0 0.0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.053 CASEY PETERS 8 0 14 1.8 0 0 .000 0 0 .000 0 0 .000 0 3 3 0.4 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0.0 TEAM 48 53 101 3.3 1 1 0 TOTAL 31 871 1865 .467 255 672 .379 520 695 .748 380 809 1189 38.4 543 12 453 377 142 236 2517 81.2 OPPONENTS 31 748 1864 .401 148 461 .321 349 543 .643 396 702 1098 35.4 626 15 378 469 91 190 1993 64.3

MINUTES

MINUTES

MINUTES

TOTAL

TOTAL

TOTAL

3-PTS

3-PTS

3-PTS

F-THROWS

F-THROWS

F-THROWS

REBOUNDS

REBOUNDS

REBOUNDS

SCORING

SCORING

SCORING

2010-11 REGULAR SEASON BOX SCORES

68 theACC.com

Page 71: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

## PLAYER GP GS TOT AVG FG FGA PCT 3FG FGA PCT FT FTA PCT OFF DEF TOT AVG PF FO A TO BLK STL PTS AVG

20 JORDAN WILLIAMS 31 31 999 32.2 199 368 .541 0 0 .000 127 216 .588 112 247 359 11.6 77 1 16 49 40 23 525 16.912 TERRELL STOGLIN 31 13 654 21.1 126 267 .472 33 90 .367 76 91 .835 6 34 40 1.3 54 1 101 67 3 24 361 11.624 CLIFF TUCKER 31 16 740 23.9 109 254 .429 39 110 .355 38 56 .679 24 82 106 3.4 48 0 67 49 10 27 295 9.501 ADRIAN BOWIE 31 27 784 25.3 94 203 .463 25 75 .333 67 88 .761 25 68 93 3.0 60 0 112 55 7 34 280 9.033 DINO GREGORY 31 31 921 29.7 114 225 .507 1 2 .500 50 65 .769 65 116 181 5.8 71 2 26 35 43 24 279 9.014 SEAN MOSLEY 31 28 771 24.9 93 220 .423 12 48 .250 57 75 .760 40 81 121 3.9 80 3 70 62 8 38 255 8.221 PE’SHON HOWARD 31 8 579 18.7 55 135 .407 22 62 .355 28 42 .667 8 46 54 1.7 40 0 103 51 3 25 160 5.235 JAMES PADGETT 29 0 253 8.7 35 74 .473 0 0 .000 24 49 .490 29 23 52 1.8 22 0 0 13 7 4 94 3.213 HAUKUR PALSSON 30 1 280 9.3 27 60 .450 10 24 .417 15 20 .750 23 39 62 2.1 33 0 21 19 1 10 79 2.610 BEREND WEIJS 22 0 119 5.4 20 34 .588 0 0 .000 2 6 .333 12 14 26 1.2 20 0 4 8 19 1 42 1.911 MYCHAL PARKER 13 0 80 6.2 7 20 .350 0 0 .000 3 10 .300 10 7 17 1.3 5 0 6 4 1 1 17 1.315 ERSIN LEVENT 8 0 17 2.1 1 4 .250 1 4 .250 0 0 .000 1 4 5 0.6 1 0 1 2 0 1 3 0.442 ASHTON PANKEY 1 0 3 3.0 0 0 .000 0 0 .000 0 0 .000 0 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 TEAM 49 43 92 3.0 0 6 0 TOTAL. 31 880 1864 .472 143 415 .345 487 718 .678 404 804 1208 39.0 511 7 527 420 142 212 2390 77.1 OPPONENTS 31 747 1851 .404 205 617 .332 378 546 .692 367 706 1073 34.6 601 13 405 475 115 184 2077 67.0

## PLAYER GP GS TOT AVG FG FGA PCT 3FG FGA PCT FT FTA PCT OFF DEF TOT AVG PF FO A TO BLK STL PTS AVG

01 IMAN SHUMPERT 30 30 956 31.9 173 422 .410 40 146 .274 139 173 .803 53 130 183 6.1 84 2 106 71 6 81 525 17.541 GLEN RICE 30 23 859 28.6 139 336 .414 40 134 .299 65 102 .637 56 112 168 5.6 73 1 79 69 12 45 383 12.811 BRIAN OLIVER 21 12 598 28.5 85 231 .368 36 122 .295 22 26 .846 32 63 95 4.5 53 1 32 30 6 14 228 10.900 MFON UDOFIA 30 11 649 21.6 72 190 .379 19 63 .302 45 79 .570 33 33 66 2.2 74 2 38 43 0 32 208 6.903 MAURICE MILLER 30 22 607 20.2 57 138 .413 16 50 .320 54 62 .871 9 56 65 2.2 63 2 73 46 1 43 184 6.114 JASON MORRIS 30 4 539 18.0 65 156 .417 22 53 .415 29 37 .784 23 41 64 2.1 64 0 11 41 8 20 181 6.005 DANIEL MILLER 30 30 768 25.6 59 119 .496 0 0 .000 17 46 .370 47 101 148 4.9 74 0 19 37 66 30 135 4.524 KAMMEON HOLSEY 29 12 423 14.6 43 89 .483 0 0 .000 15 31 .484 42 36 78 2.7 56 0 9 33 6 13 101 3.510 LANCE STORRS 23 6 324 14.1 21 77 .273 13 46 .283 6 6 1.000 9 32 41 1.8 37 0 25 19 1 7 61 2.742 NATE HICKS 24 0 225 9.4 17 30 .567 0 0 .000 5 15 .333 25 25 50 2.1 25 0 4 8 17 2 39 1.633 DEREK CRAIG 4 0 8 2.0 1 3 .333 0 2 .000 0 0 .000 0 0 0 0.0 1 0 0 1 0 1 2 0.504 NICK FOREMAN 21 0 84 4.0 2 8 .250 1 4 .250 5 6 .833 9 5 14 0.7 13 0 6 3 2 1 10 0.513 MCPHERSON MOORE 5 0 7 1.4 1 2 .500 0 0 .000 0 0 .000 2 1 3 0.6 1 0 1 0 0 1 2 0.412 KYLE SPELLER 2 0 3 1.5 0 1 .000 0 0 .000 0 0 .000 0 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0 TEAM 46 52 98 3.3 2 11 0 TOTAL 30 735 1802 .408 187 620 .302 402 583 .690 386 687 1073 35.8 620 9 403 412 125 290 2059 68.6 OPPONENTS 30 679 1545 .439 192 502 .382 470 703 .669 283 755 1038 34.6 553 7 386 501 81 192 2020 67.3

## PLAYER GP GS TOT AVG FG FGA PCT 3FG FGA PCT FT FTA PCT OFF DEF TOT AVG PF FO A TO BLK STL PTS AVG

31 CHRIS SINGLETON 25 25 756 30.2 116 262 .443 33 88 .375 81 120 .675 54 124 178 7.1 80 1 32 59 40 53 346 13.822 DERWIN KITCHEN 30 30 905 30.2 110 214 .514 23 64 .359 61 81 .753 41 123 164 5.5 40 0 108 61 3 53 304 10.121 MICHAEL SNAER 30 29 847 28.2 91 232 .392 35 101 .347 41 50 .820 15 69 84 2.8 65 2 65 74 6 28 258 8.605 BERNARD JAMES 30 18 620 20.7 97 151 .642 0 0 .000 56 109 .514 64 104 168 5.6 48 1 4 38 70 28 250 8.304 DEIVIDAS DULKYS 29 20 728 25.1 80 216 .370 51 149 .342 13 25 .520 24 63 87 3.0 52 3 37 40 12 38 224 7.710 OKARO WHITE 30 9 487 16.2 64 145 .441 9 32 .281 59 73 .808 43 52 95 3.2 66 3 15 40 12 22 196 6.530 IAN MILLER 19 0 269 14.2 36 100 .360 20 55 .364 13 14 .929 8 20 28 1.5 21 0 16 26 0 9 105 5.501 XAVIER GIBSON 21 13 322 15.3 43 102 .422 1 12 .083 24 35 .686 28 51 79 3.8 33 2 10 29 18 3 111 5.315 TERRANCE SHANNON 23 5 307 13.3 42 104 .404 0 0 .000 34 61 .557 29 37 66 2.9 47 0 8 27 5 10 118 5.150 JON KREFT 21 0 209 10.0 26 51 .510 0 0 .000 22 42 .524 16 37 53 2.5 48 1 6 24 7 4 74 3.503 LUKE LOUCKS 30 1 441 14.7 26 75 .347 15 49 .306 27 37 .730 5 47 52 1.7 62 1 67 50 0 18 94 3.124 ANDREW RUTLEDGE 3 0 5 1.7 1 4 .250 0 1 .000 0 0 .000 1 1 2 0.7 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 0.700 PIERRE JORDAN 15 0 80 5.3 3 23 .130 1 10 .100 2 2 1.000 4 6 10 0.7 8 0 5 7 0 3 9 0.620 RAFAEL PORTUONDO 5 0 7 1.4 1 6 .167 0 4 .000 1 2 .500 1 1 2 0.4 3 0 0 0 0 0 3 0.633 JOEY MOREAU 5 0 6 1.2 0 1 .000 0 0 .000 2 2 1.000 0 1 1 0.2 2 0 0 1 0 1 2 0.402 AJ YAWN 7 0 11 1.6 0 6 .000 0 1 .000 2 4 .500 1 1 2 0.3 1 0 1 0 0 1 2 0.3 TEAM 40 57 97 3.2 0 4 0 TOTAL 30 736 1692 .435 188 566 .332 438 657 .667 374 794 1168 38.9 577 14 374 480 173 271 2098 69.9 OPPONENTS 30 620 1698 .365 199 658 .302 439 617 .712 358 677 1035 34.5 597 13 329 471 102 222 1878 62.6

MINUTES

MINUTES

MINUTES

TOTAL

TOTAL

TOTAL

3-PTS

3-PTS

3-PTS

F-THROWS

F-THROWS

F-THROWS

REBOUNDS

REBOUNDS

REBOUNDS

SCORING

SCORING

SCORING

2010-11 REGULAR SEASON BOX SCORES

2011 ACC BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT 69

Page 72: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

70 theACC.com

2010-11 REGULAR SEASON BOX SCORES

## PLAYER GP GS TOT AVG FG FGA PCT 3FG FGA PCT FT FTA PCT OFF DEF TOT AVG PF FO A TO BLK STL PTS AVG

03 MALCOLM GRANT 31 31 1001 32.3 138 325 .425 82 188 .436 103 118 .873 10 45 55 1.8 43 0 97 78 1 26 461 14.901 DURAND SCOTT 31 31 1022 33.0 135 307 .440 25 60 .417 115 137 .839 36 95 131 4.2 80 4 100 89 4 38 410 13.242 REGGIE JOHNSON 31 29 800 25.8 140 243 .576 0 0 .000 93 137 .679 112 189 301 9.7 100 4 28 56 40 20 373 12.030 ADRIAN THOMAS 31 6 838 27.0 92 231 .398 81 203 .399 24 35 .686 32 88 120 3.9 75 5 27 33 5 13 289 9.325 GARRIUS ADAMS 31 23 891 28.7 79 196 .403 32 100 .320 46 70 .657 32 83 115 3.7 60 0 60 56 4 33 236 7.631 DEQUAN JONES 23 10 317 13.8 45 104 .433 1 11 .091 16 25 .640 19 36 55 2.4 23 0 14 31 8 9 107 4.715 RION BROWN 31 0 478 15.4 40 115 .348 27 76 .355 21 30 .700 9 48 57 1.8 43 0 18 30 3 9 128 4.145 JULIAN GAMBLE 31 13 464 15.0 47 83 .566 0 0 .000 14 37 .378 34 65 99 3.2 80 3 15 28 25 12 108 3.522 DONOVAN KIRK 13 3 124 9.5 13 32 .406 0 2 .000 9 10 .900 7 14 21 1.6 18 0 0 14 4 2 35 2.710 RAPHAEL AKPEJIORI 19 0 96 5.1 5 10 .500 0 0 .000 21 32 .656 13 17 30 1.6 16 0 0 5 12 2 31 1.632 ERIK SWOOPE 25 9 186 7.4 11 25 .440 0 0 .000 18 28 .643 12 17 29 1.2 24 1 5 7 2 13 40 1.611 RYAN QUIGTAR 5 0 8 1.6 1 1 1.000 1 1 1.000 0 0 .000 0 0 0 0.0 0 0 2 1 0 0 3 0.6 TEAM 53 59 112 3.6 0 10 0 TOTAL 31 746 1672 .446 249 641 .388 480 659 .728 369 756 1125 36.3 562 17 366 438 108 177 2221 71.6 OPPONENTS 31 710 1711 .415 208 597 .348 469 669 .701 340 656 996 32.1 580 13 391 368 101 226 2097 67.6

## PLAYER GP GS TOT AVG FG FGA PCT 3FG FGA PCT FT FTA PCT OFF DEF TOT AVG PF FO A TO BLK STL PTS AVG

44 TYLER ZELLER 30 29 817 27.2 159 294 .541 0 0 .000 119 160 .744 84 130 214 7.1 82 0 13 40 34 22 437 14.640 HARRISON BARNES 30 29 840 28.0 153 377 .406 45 140 .321 71 96 .740 57 111 168 5.6 57 0 42 57 13 20 422 14.131 JOHN HENSON 30 29 766 25.5 144 280 .514 1 4 .250 50 111 .450 91 199 290 9.7 50 0 27 60 94 16 339 11.301 DEXTER STRICKLAND 30 29 783 26.1 79 175 .451 8 31 .258 68 101 .673 28 67 95 3.2 58 1 65 41 0 36 234 7.802 LESLIE MCDONALD 29 0 428 14.8 74 180 .411 44 110 .400 24 33 .727 22 34 56 1.9 46 0 15 22 1 15 216 7.435 REGGIE BULLOCK 27 0 392 14.5 62 169 .367 29 98 .296 13 23 .565 22 54 76 2.8 25 0 16 13 3 18 166 6.105 KENDALL MARSHALL 30 13 666 22.2 60 129 .465 13 34 .382 45 64 .703 3 51 54 1.8 35 0 168 67 1 31 178 5.925 JUSTIN KNOX 30 1 456 15.2 58 106 .547 0 0 .000 39 59 .661 36 70 106 3.5 61 1 12 36 11 6 155 5.211 LARRY DREW II 21 17 479 22.8 33 86 .384 6 29 .207 21 31 .677 4 45 49 2.3 41 2 82 38 0 23 93 4.424 JUSTIN WATTS 27 0 279 10.3 19 53 .358 6 20 .300 15 28 .536 19 39 58 2.1 26 0 18 12 4 2 59 2.230 PATRICK CROUCH 10 0 17 1.7 4 7 .571 1 2 .500 0 0 .000 0 1 1 0.1 5 0 0 3 0 0 9 0.903 DANIEL BOLICK 11 1 16 1.5 1 4 .250 0 1 .000 4 4 1.000 0 4 4 0.4 1 0 2 1 0 0 6 0.532 D.J. JOHNSTON 10 1 17 1.7 2 6 .333 0 0 .000 0 0 .000 2 6 8 0.8 0 0 1 1 1 0 4 0.413 VAN HATCHELL 8 1 13 1.6 0 4 .000 0 3 .000 1 2 .500 1 1 2 0.3 1 0 1 1 0 0 1 0.122 DAVID DUPONT 10 0 16 1.6 0 3 .000 0 2 .000 0 0 .000 2 3 5 0.5 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0.015 STEWART COOPER 10 0 14 1.4 0 2 .000 0 0 .000 0 0 .000 1 2 3 0.3 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0.0 TEAM 48 44 92 3.1 0 2 0 TOTAL 30 848 1875 .452 153 474 .323 470 712 .660 420 861 1281 42.7 490 4 464 395 162 189 2319 77.3 OPPONENTS 30 750 1879 .399 205 648 .316 310 472 .657 360 726 1086 36.2 607 19 375 428 92 216 2015 67.2

## PLAYER GP GS TOT AVG FG FGA PCT 3FG FGA PCT FT FTA PCT OFF DEF TOT AVG PF FO A TO BLK STL PTS AVG

23 TRACY SMITH 20 19 552 27.6 108 217 .498 0 0 .000 65 93 .699 43 69 112 5.6 47 2 17 34 12 9 281 14.105 CJ LESLIE 29 22 720 24.8 121 275 .440 7 28 .250 77 141 .546 81 124 205 7.1 59 1 24 52 39 18 326 11.215 SCOTT WOOD 30 30 943 31.4 95 216 .440 72 166 .434 34 37 .919 11 68 79 2.6 66 0 43 26 16 25 296 9.902 LORENZO BROWN 30 25 865 28.8 102 241 .423 17 56 .304 60 83 .723 23 88 111 3.7 65 1 115 71 11 40 281 9.412 RYAN HARROW 28 9 644 23.0 91 235 .387 11 53 .208 66 75 .880 13 39 52 1.9 38 0 95 48 4 21 259 9.301 RICHARD HOWELL 29 8 526 18.1 83 160 .519 2 4 .500 46 71 .648 79 108 187 6.4 60 1 25 30 14 24 214 7.410 JAVIER GONZALEZ 30 21 582 19.4 51 143 .357 22 72 .306 36 44 .818 9 40 49 1.6 46 0 69 39 0 25 160 5.321 CJ WILLIAMS 30 4 522 17.4 59 127 .465 6 26 .231 15 22 .682 25 44 69 2.3 39 1 34 25 7 13 139 4.600 DESHAWN PAINTER 26 11 393 15.1 42 90 .467 0 0 .000 36 57 .632 29 61 90 3.5 59 1 6 22 17 3 120 4.614 JORDAN VANDENBERG 22 0 213 9.7 15 22 .682 0 0 .000 6 11 .545 15 22 37 1.7 35 1 5 10 17 2 36 1.625 KENDALL SMITH 10 0 15 1.5 4 8 .500 0 0 .000 2 2 1.000 1 3 4 0.4 2 0 0 1 0 0 10 1.004 ENRICO KUFUOR 8 1 11 1.4 1 3 .333 0 1 .000 0 0 .000 0 2 2 0.3 0 0 0 3 0 1 2 0.322 BEN AMOS 2 0 2 1.0 0 0 .000 0 0 .000 0 0 .000 0 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.020 JAY LEWIS 8 0 12 1.5 0 1 .000 0 0 .000 0 0 .000 0 1 1 0.1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0.0 TEAM 52 55 107 3.6 0 6 0 TOTAL 30 772 1738 .444 137 406 .337 443 636 .697 381 724 1105 36.8 516 8 433 368 137 181 2124 70.8 OPPONENTS 30 763 1804 .423 159 498 .319 424 578 .734 400 689 1089 36.3 517 8 349 343 133 188 2109 70.3

MINUTES

MINUTES

MINUTES

TOTAL

TOTAL

TOTAL

3-PTS

3-PTS

3-PTS

F-THROWS

F-THROWS

F-THROWS

REBOUNDS

REBOUNDS

REBOUNDS

SCORING

SCORING

SCORING

Page 73: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

## PLAYER GP GS TOT AVG FG FGA PCT 3FG FGA PCT FT FTA PCT OFF DEF TOT AVG PF FO A TO BLK STL PTS AVG

23 MALCOLM DELANEY 29 29 1109 38.2 160 381 .420 72 176 .409 152 177 .859 23 78 101 3.5 76 1 119 92 3 47 544 18.8

00 JEFF ALLEN 29 29 947 32.7 155 309 .502 5 30 .167 85 128 .664 81 210 291 10.0 97 5 52 86 24 36 400 13.8

11 ERICK GREEN 27 21 804 29.8 109 259 .421 22 83 .265 67 87 .770 17 49 66 2.4 66 1 71 27 9 47 307 11.4

05 DORENZO HUDSON 9 8 289 32.1 35 82 .427 4 18 .222 20 28 .714 10 18 28 3.1 14 0 13 24 0 8 94 10.4

14 VICTOR DAVILA 29 29 926 31.9 89 152 .586 0 1 .000 44 96 .458 50 104 154 5.3 73 2 26 42 35 6 222 7.7

01 TERRELL BELL 29 29 928 32.0 73 150 .487 26 63 .413 36 55 .655 48 118 166 5.7 76 2 56 42 28 24 208 7.2

25 MANNY ATKINS 28 0 313 11.2 40 93 .430 14 44 .318 21 22 .955 17 29 46 1.6 36 0 6 14 1 13 115 4.1

31 JARELL EDDIE 27 0 295 10.9 25 68 .368 7 32 .219 22 32 .688 18 41 59 2.2 32 1 13 17 9 4 79 2.9

21 TYRONE GARLAND 26 0 165 6.3 24 61 .393 10 28 .357 10 15 .667 1 6 7 0.3 22 0 12 16 0 4 68 2.6

32 PAUL DEBNAM 8 0 26 3.3 6 12 .500 1 4 .250 0 4 .000 3 5 8 1.0 3 0 3 1 1 1 13 1.6

24 BEN BOGGS 4 0 11 2.8 1 2 .500 1 2 .500 2 2 1.000 0 1 1 0.3 3 0 0 1 0 0 5 1.3

02 ANDREW GRIFFIN 3 0 11 3.7 1 4 .250 0 0 .000 0 0 .000 0 2 2 0.7 2 0 0 0 1 0 2 0.7

22 PRINCE PARKER 4 0 5 1.3 1 1 1.000 0 0 .000 0 0 .000 0 1 1 0.3 2 0 0 0 0 0 2 0.5

04 CADARIAN RAINES 4 0 21 5.3 1 4 .250 0 0 .000 0 0 .000 1 1 2 0.5 7 0 0 0 1 0 2 0.5 TEAM 41 39 80 2.8 2 3 0 TOTAL 29 720 1578 .456 162 481 .337 459 646 .711 310 702 1012 34.9 511 13 371 365 112 190 2061 71.1 OPPONENTS 29 653 1582 .413 181 560 .323 342 523 .654 310 635 945 32.6 577 13 354 416 98 137 1829 63.1

## PLAYER GP GS TOT AVG FG FGA PCT 3FG FGA PCT FT FTA PCT OFF DEF TOT AVG PF FO A TO BLK STL PTS AVG

23 MIKE SCOTT 10 9 337 33.7 53 110 .482 1 1 1.000 52 59 .881 38 64 102 10.2 16 0 16 24 7 3 159 15.9

02 MUSTAPHA FARRAKHAN 30 26 920 30.7 127 301 .422 49 133 .368 101 130 .777 10 73 83 2.8 47 1 55 66 9 19 404 13.5

12 JOE HARRIS 30 24 873 29.1 105 250 .420 64 154 .416 44 58 .759 33 95 128 4.3 66 2 36 48 11 23 318 10.6

24 KT HARRELL 30 15 668 22.3 87 207 .420 24 57 .421 42 66 .636 20 43 63 2.1 47 0 25 26 2 8 240 8.0

13 SAMMY ZEGLINSKI 23 10 581 25.3 58 166 .349 43 111 .387 16 25 .640 10 62 72 3.1 40 1 54 25 3 31 175 7.6

01 JONTEL EVANS 30 27 821 27.4 67 174 .385 5 14 .357 30 50 .600 13 57 70 2.3 69 0 107 56 2 40 169 5.6

05 ASSANE SENE 30 26 671 22.4 56 105 .533 0 0 .000 36 66 .545 58 104 162 5.4 87 1 3 35 38 10 148 4.9

22 WILL SHERRILL 22 12 409 18.6 38 86 .442 20 47 .426 1 1 1.000 18 47 65 3.0 35 0 13 12 4 11 97 4.4

15 BILLY BARON 17 0 189 11.1 15 48 .313 12 38 .316 9 13 .692 0 12 12 0.7 11 0 13 8 0 6 51 3.0

25 AKIL MITCHELL 28 1 416 14.9 27 76 .355 1 7 .143 15 27 .556 21 57 78 2.8 50 1 23 16 6 18 70 2.5

04 WILL REGAN 20 0 132 6.6 11 26 .423 1 4 .250 2 5 .400 8 10 18 0.9 9 0 0 6 6 2 25 1.3

32 THOMAS ROGERS 6 0 8 1.3 0 2 .000 0 2 .000 0 0 .000 0 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0

TM TEAM 35 46 81 2.7 0 5 0

TOTAL 30 644 1551 .415 220 568 .387 348 500 .696 264 670 934 31.1 477 6 345 327 88 171 1856 61.9

OPPONENTSW 30 680 1548 .439 198 544 .364 308 445 .692 268 732 1000 33.3 481 11 320 366 117 150 1866 62.2

2011 ACC BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT 71

##

23

00

11

05

14

01

25

31

##

23

02

12

24

13

01

05

22

2010-11 REGULAR SEASON BOX SCORES

## PLAYER GP GS TOT AVG FG FGA PCT 3FG FGA PCT FT FTA PCT OFF DEF TOT AVG PF FO A TO BLK STL PTS AVG

30 TRAVIS MCKIE 31 31 960 31.0 144 294 .490 17 55 .309 96 129 .744 77 158 235 7.6 67 1 30 63 31 28 401 12.9

00 J.T. TERRELL 31 17 737 23.8 109 293 .372 48 136 .353 75 98 .765 19 44 63 2.0 76 3 49 70 1 20 341 11.0

02 GARY CLARK 31 25 821 26.5 115 224 .513 49 89 .551 55 66 .833 13 57 70 2.3 71 0 49 54 6 28 334 10.8

11 C.J. HARRIS 31 31 1003 32.4 83 212 .392 19 55 .345 139 171 .813 9 99 108 3.5 82 0 109 99 0 29 324 10.5

20 ARI STEWART 30 16 744 24.8 93 239 .389 29 106 .274 39 47 .830 24 107 131 4.4 64 2 34 70 3 12 254 8.5

01 TONY CHENNAULT 14 0 243 17.4 25 82 .305 2 13 .154 13 23 .565 6 28 34 2.4 36 0 26 36 0 5 65 4.6

25 NIKITA MESCHERIAKOV 22 5 301 13.7 31 67 .463 7 17 .412 22 31 .710 16 23 39 1.8 58 1 12 33 1 12 91 4.1

33 CARSON DESROSIERS 30 21 577 19.2 47 120 .392 5 18 .278 24 34 .706 26 71 97 3.2 56 0 22 25 51 7 123 4.1

40 TY WALKER 31 9 572 18.5 48 106 .453 0 0 .000 19 32 .594 35 76 111 3.6 36 1 14 20 78 18 115 3.7

23 MELVIN TABB 14 0 124 8.9 8 23 .348 1 3 .333 5 13 .385 6 22 28 2.0 16 0 1 9 1 2 22 1.6

45 RYAN KEENAN 12 0 30 2.5 2 7 .286 2 5 .400 0 0 .000 2 1 3 0.3 3 0 3 2 0 0 6 0.5

52 DENMORE MCDERMOTT 6 0 11 1.8 1 2 .500 0 0 .000 0 2 .000 0 3 3 0.5 1 0 1 0 0 0 2 0.3

41 BROOKS GODWIN 13 0 32 2.5 1 3 .333 0 0 .000 1 4 .250 0 4 4 0.3 2 0 0 1 0 0 3 0.2

43 AARON INGLE 16 0 45 2.8 1 2 .500 0 0 .000 1 2 .500 1 0 1 0.1 5 0 1 1 0 1 3 0.2 TEAM 40 46 86 2.8 0 4 0 TOTAL 31 708 1674 .423 179 497 .360 489 652 .750 274 739 1013 32.7 573 8 351 487 172 162 2084 67.2 OPPONENTS 31 873 1924 .454 213 577 .369 429 621 .691 403 769 1172 37.8 572 5 489 382 94 260 2388 77.0

MINUTES

MINUTES

MINUTES

TOTAL

TOTAL

TOTAL

3-PTS

3-PTS

3-PTS

F-THROWS

F-THROWS

F-THROWS

REBOUNDS

REBOUNDS

REBOUNDS

SCORING

SCORING

SCORING

Page 74: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

72 theACC.com

ASSISTS MOST POINTS

114 Wake Forest vs. Georgia Tech (112) 2OT 2007 FR112 Georgia Tech vs. Wake Forest (114) 2OT 2007 FR109 Maryland vs. NC State (108) 3OT 1978 QF109 Virginia vs. Duke (66) 1983 QF

MOST FIELD GOALS MADE

47 (att. 77) Maryland vs. NC State OT 1974 F45 (att. 80) NC State vs. Virginia 1965 QF45 (att. 86) Wake Forest vs. North Carolina OT 1975 QF 45 (att. 102) NC State vs. Maryland 3OT 1978 QF 44 (att. 88) Duke vs. Wake Forest 1966 QF44 (att. 80) NC State vs. Maryland OT 1974 F

HIGHEST FIELD GOAL PERCENTAGE

.717 (33-46) Duke vs. North Carolina 1980 SF

.700 (14-20) Clemson vs. South Carolina 1970 QF

.667 (22-33) Virginia vs. North Carolina 1982 F

MOST 3-POINT FIELD GOALS MADE (EXPERIMENTAL SHOT IN 1983, PERMANENT SINCE 1987)

17 (att. 29) Duke vs. Clemson 2000 FR16 (att. 27) Wake Forest vs. Duke 1995 QF16 (att. 23) Wake Forest vs. Georgia Tech 2OT 2007 FR15 (att. 34) Wake Forest vs. North Carolina OT 1995 F

HIGHEST 3-POINT FIELD GOAL PERCENTAGE

1.000 (5-5) Virginia vs. Georgia Tech 1983 SF.722 (13-18) NC State vs. Virginia 2002 QF.696 (16-23) Wake Forest vs. Georgia Tech 2OT 2007 FR

MOST FREE THROWS MADE

40 (att. 52) Maryland vs. North Carolina 1958 F37 (att. 42) NC State vs. Duke 1956 SF37 (att. 47) Wake Forest vs. NC State 1960 SF37 (att. 47) North Carolina vs. Clemson 2005 QF35 (att. 44) North Carolina vs. Virginia 1956 QF35 (att. 47) Virginia vs. Clemson 1989 QF

HIGHEST FREE THROW PERCENTAGE (MINIMUM 10 ATTEMPTS)

1.000 (22-22) NC State vs. Maryland 1965 SF1.000 (14-14) NC State vs. North Carolina 1987 F1.000 (12-12) North Carolina vs. Georgia Tech 1985 F1.000 (11-11) Wake Forest vs. Maryland 2001 QF1.000 (11-11) Florida State vs. Wake Forest 2003 QF.958 (23-24) North Carolina vs. NC State 2007 F.957 (22-23) Maryland vs. Wake Forest OT 1954 SF .957 (22-23) North Carolina vs. Maryland 1989 SF

MOST REBOUNDS

73 Duke vs. South Carolina 1955 QF (83-67)68 Wake Forest vs. Virginia 1962 QF (81-58)67 NC State vs. Clemson 1955 QF (101-76)67 Duke vs. South Carolina 1961 SF (92-75)

MOST BLOCKED SHOTS (SINCE BEGAN REPORTING IN 1976)

13 Georgia Tech vs. Virginia 1992 QF (68-56)12 Duke vs. Virginia 1999 FR (104-67)11 Clemson vs. Maryland 1992 FR (75-81)11 Duke vs. Clemson 1994 QF (77-64)11 Duke vs. Virginia 2004 QF (84-74)

MOST ASSISTS

26 North Carolina vs. Clemson 2001 QF (99-81)25 Maryland vs. Florida State 2000 QF (82-61)24 Wake Forest vs. North Carolina 1955 QF (95-82)24 Clemson vs. Maryland 1980 SF (85-91)24 Wake Forest vs. Duke 1982 QF (88-53)24 Clemson vs. North Carolina 1984 QF (66-78)24 North Carolina vs. Duke 1992 F (74-94)24 North Carolina vs. Maryland 1993 QF (102-66)24 Duke vs. NC State 2002 F (91-61)

MOST STEALS

17 Wake Forest vs. Virginia 1984 QF (63-51)16 Virginia vs. Georgia Tech 1981 QF (76-47)16 Florida State vs. NC State 1992 QF (93-80)16 Maryland vs. North Carolina 2003 QF (72-84)16 Maryland vs. Georgia Tech 2010 QF (64-69)

SINGLE GAME - ONE TEAM

ACC TOURNAMENT RECORDS

Page 75: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

2011 ACC BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT 73

MOST POINTS - ANY GAME

45 Lennie Rosenbluth, North Carolina vs. Clemson 1957 QF 42 Buzz Wilkinson, Virginia vs. Duke 1954 QF41 Grady Wallace, South Carolina vs. Duke 1957 QF41 Charles Scott, North Carolina vs. Virginia 1970 QF

MOST FIELD GOALS MADE

19 (att. 31) Lennie Rosenbluth, North Carolina vs. Clemson 1957 QF18 (att. 25) Tommy Burleson, NC State vs. Maryland OT 1974 F 17 (att. 23) Charles Scott, North Carolina vs. Duke 1969 F17 (att. 25) Albert King, Maryland vs. Clemson 1980 SF

MOST 3-POINT FIELD GOALS MADE

9 (att. 17) Randolph Childress, Wake Forest vs. No. Carolina OT 1995 F 8• (att. 11) Mark Price, Georgia Tech vs. Virginia 1983 SF8 (att. 12) Randolph Childress, Wake Forest vs. Duke 1995 QF7 (att. 13) Will Solomon, Clemson vs. North Carolina 2001 QF7 (att. 12) J.J. Redick, Duke vs. NC State 2005 SF7 (att. 11) J.J. Redick, Duke vs. Boston College 2006 F7 (att. 18) Lewis Clinch, Georgia Tech vs. Florida State 2009 QF • Experimental shot in eff ect.

MOST FREE THROWS MADE

17 (att. 21) Charles Scott, North Carolina vs. Virginia 1970 QF16 (att. 22) Buzz Wilkinson, Virginia vs. Duke 1954 QF15 (att. 18) Dickie Hemric, Wake Forest vs. North Carolina 1955 QF15 (att. 17) Grady Wallace, South Carolina vs. Duke 1957 QF15 (att. 18) Phil Ford, North Carolina vs. Clemson OT 1975 SF

MOST REBOUNDS - ANY GAME

23 John Richter, NC State vs. South Carolina OT 1959 QF (75-72) 22 Tim Duncan, Wake Forest vs. Georgia Tech 1996 F (75-74)21 Ronnie Shavlik, NC State vs. Duke 1955 F (87-77)21 Lee Shaff er, North Carolina vs. Clemson 1959 QF (93-69)21 Kenny Carr, NC State vs. Maryland 1977 QF (82-72)

MOST BLOCKED SHOTS (SINCE REPORTING BEGAN IN 1976)

10 Cherokee Parks, Duke vs. Clemson 1994 QF8 Sharone Wright, Clemson vs. Maryland 1992 FR7 Matt Geiger, Georgia Tech vs. Virginia 1992 QF

MOST ASSISTS

15 Ishmael Smith, Wake Forest vs. Georgia Tech 2OT 2007 FR13 Larry Brown, North Carolina vs. South Carolina 1963 QF13 Bobby Hurley, Duke vs. Maryland 1992 SF13 Drew Barry, Georgia Tech vs. Clemson 1993 SF12 John Johnson, Virginia vs. North Carolina 2OT 1987 SF

MOST STEALS (SINCE BEGAN REPORTING IN 1976)

9 Justin Gainey, NC State vs. Virginia 2000 QF7 Dudley Bradley, North Carolina vs. Duke 1979 F7 Othell Wilson, Virginia vs. Wake Forest 1984 SF7 Walt Williams, Maryland vs. North Carolina 1989 SF7 Christian Laettner, Duke vs. North Caroilna 1992 F7 Jarrett Jack, Georgia Tech vs. NC State 2003 QF7 Jamon Gordon, Virginia Tech vs. Wake Forest 2007 QF6 Eight players

INDIVIDUAL - SINGLE GAME

ACC TOURNAMENT RECORDS

Page 76: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

74 theACC.com

W hat cool fan-friendly, multi-media application will the Atlantic Coast Conference think of next? It doesn’t get much better than logging on to theACC.com and clicking on the ACC Vault, which uncovers 100 classic

basketball games, key moments and player highlights dating back to 1983, including every ACC Tournament Championship Game from that year to the present.

It’s as easy as searching for your favorite team, year or player for these ACC time-less moments. There are even searches for great dunks, great shots, great fi nishes and much, much more. And you’re able to share your favorites on Facebook, Twitter and blogs.

The fi rst game of the basketball vault features two of the ACC’s biggest stars in ac-tion as Ralph Sampson takes on Michael Jordan. If you missed it more than 28 years ago, the end of the Feb.10, 1983, game features Jordan stealing the ball from Rick Carlisle and fl ying through the air for a game-winning dunk as No. 1 North Carolina defeated No. 2 Virginia 64-63 in Carmichael Auditorium.

The ACC and Raycom Sports, a key TV partner of the league for decades and a leading independent sports sales & marketing, syndication and production fi rm, part-nered on the idea and launched the ACC Vault in mid-December 2010.

So far, the fan response has been terrifi c.“This is another exciting initiative for the ACC and we’re pleased to give fans a

new way to experience our rich ACC Basketball history,” said ACC Commissioner John Swoff ord. “The ACC Vault … presents our tradition of excellence in an innovative way that will be a resource for fans, media, bloggers and our member institutions.” — By David Droschak

OPEN THE VAULT

Page 77: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

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Page 78: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program
Page 79: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

336.373.7400

www.acchallofchampions.net

A Tradition of Excellence . . . Then, Now and Always

March 3-6, 2011 & March 9-13, 2011 10:00 am – 7:00 pm

VISIT THE ACC HALL OF CHAMPIONS

Special Tournament Hours:

OPENING MARCH 2011, THE ACC HALL OF CHAMPIONS will celebrate past, present and future conference success through the design and use of interactive displays, unique institutional exhibits and multi-purpose program space that showcases the league’s 58 years. The Hall will feature a combination of content that honors the academic and athletic accomplishments and highlights the ACC’s continuing promise of “A Tradition of Excellence …Then, Now and Always”.

Located in the western portion of the Greensboro Coliseum Complex’s Special Events Center, the entrance to the ACC Hall of Champions will feature a four-foot, 360-degree, state-of-the-art video globe that will amaze and delight guests with a unique, multi-media display of conference highlights. Other features of the Hall’s fi rst phase (8,100 square feet) will include a historical timeline of the ACC’s founding in Greensboro, NC in 1953 through today; individual member school exhibits, life-size ACC school mascot exhibits, a “you call the play” interactive broadcasting booth and space to display memorabilia, trophies and historical event photos.

The ACC Hall of Champions further cements the City of Greensboro lifelong relationship with the ACC and is a dynamic platform to showcase the incredible players, coaches and fans that have been a part of the league for over 58 years.

THE ACC HALL OF CHAMPIONS

2011 ACC BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT 77

Page 80: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

BOSTON COLLEGE

Sept. 3 NORTHWESTERN

Sept. 10 at UCF

Sept. 17 DUKE

Sept. 24 MASSACHUSETTS

Oct. 1 WAKE FOREST

Oct. 8 at Clemson

Oct. 15 OPEN

Oct. 22 at Virginia Tech

Oct. 29 at Maryland

Nov. 3 FLORIDA STATE (Thurs.)

Nov. 12 NC STATE

Nov. 19 at Notre Dame

Nov. 26 at Miami

CLEMSON

Sept. 3 TROY

Sept. 10 WOFFORD

Sept. 17 AUBURN

Sept. 24 FLORIDA STATE

Oct. 1 at Virginia Tech

Oct. 8 BOSTON COLLEGE

Oct. 15 at Maryland

Oct. 22 NORTH CAROLINA

Oct. 29 at Georgia Tech

Nov. 5 OPEN

Nov. 12 WAKE FOREST

Nov. 19 at NC State

Nov. 26 at South Carolina

DUKE

Sept. 3 RICHMOND

Sept. 10 STANFORD

Sept. 17 at Boston College

Sept. 24 TULANE

Oct. 1 at FIU

Oct. 8 OPEN

Oct. 15 FLORIDA STATE

Oct. 22 WAKE FOREST

Oct. 29 VIRGINIA TECH

Nov. 5 at Miami

Nov. 12 at Virginia

Nov. 19 GEORGIA TECH

Nov. 26 at North Carolina

FLORIDA STATE

Sept. 3 LOUISIANA-MONROE

Sept. 10 CHARLESTON SO.

Sept. 17 OKLAHOMA

Sept. 24 at Clemson

Oct. 1 OPEN

Oct. 8 at Wake Forest

Oct. 15 at Duke

Oct. 22 MARYLAND

Oct. 29 NC STATE

Nov. 3 at BC (Thurs.)

Nov. 12 MIAMI

Nov. 19 VIRGINIA

Nov. 26 at Florida

GEORGIA TECH

Sept. 1 W. CAROLINA (Thurs.)

Sept. 10 at Middle Tennessee

Sept. 17 KANSAS

Sept. 24 NORTH CAROLINA

Oct. 1 at NC State

Oct. 8 MARYLAND

Oct. 15 at Virginia

Oct. 22 at Miami

Oct. 29 CLEMSON

Nov. 5 OPEN

Nov. 10 VIRGINIA TECH (Thurs.)

Nov. 19 at Duke

Nov. 26 GEORGIA

MARYLAND

Sept. 5 MIAMI (Mon.)

Sept. 10 OPEN

Sept. 17 WEST VIRGINIA

Sept. 24 TEMPLE

Oct. 1 TOWSON

Oct. 8 at Georgia Tech

Oct. 15 CLEMSON

Oct. 22 at Florida State

Oct. 29 BOSTON COLLEGE

Nov. 5 VIRGINIA

Nov. 12 vs. Notre Dame

Nov. 19 at Wake Forest

Nov. 26 at NC State

2011 ACC FOOTB

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’08

’07

78 theACC.com ’06

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MIAMI

Sept. 5 at Maryland (Mon.)

Sept. 10 OPEN

Sept. 17 OHIO STATE

Sept. 24 KANSAS STATE

Oct. 1 BETHUNE-COOKMAN

Oct. 8 at Virginia Tech

Oct. 15 at North Carolina

Oct. 22 GEORGIA TECH

Oct. 27 VIRGINIA (Thurs.)

Nov. 5 DUKE

Nov. 12 at Florida State

Nov. 19 at South Florida

Nov. 26 BOSTON COLLEGE

NORTH CAROLINA

Sept. 3 JAMES MADISON

Sept. 10 RUTGERS

Sept. 17 VIRGINIA

Sept. 24 at Georgia Tech

Oct. 1 at East Carolina

Oct. 8 LOUISVILLE

Oct. 15 MIAMI

Oct. 22 at Clemson

Oct. 29 WAKE FOREST

Nov. 5 at NC State

Nov. 12 OPEN

Nov. 17 at Virginia Tech (Thurs.)

Nov. 26 DUKE

NC STATE

Sept. 3 LIBERTY

Sept. 10 at Wake Forest

Sept. 17 SOUTH ALABAMA

Sept. 22 at Cincinnati (Thurs.)

Oct. 1 GEORGIA TECH

Oct. 8 CENTRAL MICHIGAN

Oct. 15 OPEN

Oct. 22 at Virginia

Oct. 29 at Florida State

Nov. 5 NORTH CAROLINA

Nov. 12 at Boston College

Nov. 19 CLEMSON

Nov. 26 MARYLAND

VIRGINIA

Sept. 3 WILLIAM & MARY

Sept. 10 at Indiana

Sept. 17 at North Carolina

Sept. 24 SO. MISSISSIPPI

Oct. 1 IDAHO

Oct. 8 OPEN

Oct. 15 GEORGIA TECH

Oct. 22 NC STATE

Oct. 27 at Miami (Thurs.)

Nov. 5 at Maryland

Nov. 12 DUKE

Nov. 19 at Florida State

Nov. 26 VIRGINIA TECH

VIRGINIA TECH

Sept. 3 APPALACHIAN STATE

Sept. 10 at East Carolina

Sept. 17 ARKANSAS STATE

Sept. 24 at Marshall

Oct. 1 CLEMSON

Oct. 8 MIAMI

Oct. 15 at Wake Forest

Oct. 22 BOSTON COLLEGE

Oct. 29 at Duke

Nov. 5 OPEN

Nov. 10 at Georgia Tech (Thurs.)

Nov. 17 UNC (Thurs.)

Nov. 26 at Virginia

WAKE FOREST

Sept. 3 at Syracuse

Sept. 10 NC STATE

Sept. 17 GARDNER-WEBB

Sept. 24 OPEN

Oct. 1 at Boston College

Oct. 8 FLORIDA STATE

Oct. 15 VIRGINIA TECH

Oct. 22 at Duke

Oct. 29 at North Carolina

Nov. 5 NOTRE DAME

Nov. 12 at Clemson

Nov. 19 MARYLAND

Nov. 26 VANDERBILT

BALL SCHEDULE

2011 DR PEPPER ACC FOOTBALL CHAMPIONSHIP

DECEMBER 3, 2011CHARLOTTE, NC

Follow @theACCfootball on Twitter

2011 ACC BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT 79

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82 theACC.com

The Atlantic Coast Conference has had its share of memorable postseason basketball moments,

from McGuire’s Miracle to Valvano’s Cardiac Pack.

Whether it was upsetting Wilt the Stilt in triple overtime more than a half century ago to cap North Carolina’s 32-0 season or Jim Valvano looking for someone to hug following an improbable dunk by Lorenzo Charles, the ACC has always scripted a winning recipe when the NCAA Tournament rolled around.

With sensational NCAA tournament success already etched in ACC lore, the league managed to turn it up a notch with unprecedented winning formulas over the last decade, capturing fi ve national championships in a 10-year span.

Defending national champion Duke won crowns in 2010 and ‘01, while North Carolina captured championships in 2005 and ’09, and Maryland in ’02. Five other times during the decade ACC teams managed to make it to the championship fi eld weekend, giving the league at least one team in the Final Four 19 of the last 23 seasons.

The decade ended with Mike Krzyzewski appearing in an 11th Final Four and his Blue Devils entering the 2010-11 season top-ranked in the polls.

“Any program that’s had continued high-level success — especially in our conference — a target is on you,” Krzyzewski said. “I think we have it and North Carolina has it in our league, and there are other ACC programs who have that.

“Youngsters who come into Duke’s program have to know, and I think it’s exciting for them to know, that every game they play will be an exciting one. There usually aren’t going to be any empty seats when you’re playing. As a result of being watched a lot, there are going to be people who really want you to win and really want you to lose. That happens when any program at any level of sport that has continued success and high visibility.”

Duke’s 2010 national title over Butler in Indianapolis gave the ACC as many national titles (5) in the last decade as all the other college conferences combined.

The victory also improved Krzyzweski’s NCAA Tournament win total to 77 (the best all-time) and

the ACC’s overall winning percentage to a national-best 66.6 percent since 1985.

Krzyzewski’s fourth national title placed him in some elite coaching company, but as he passes 800 all-time wins with yet another top team, his drive remains as strong as ever to win at the highest level – for his school and the ACC.

“It’s all about doing the thing you’re doing right now,” Krzyzewski said. “I mean, if we were in another walk of life, if I was in law and was able to win a number of cases in the past, I would want to win the next one. If I was a doctor, performed some really good operations, I would want to perform another one.”

Some of the ACC’s stats when it comes to basketball success over the years are staggering. For example, the league is the only conference to have each of its teams make the NCAAs over the past fi ve years and has a non-losing tournament record for 23 straight years and counting. In addition, since 1985, ACC teams have appeared in 24 Final Fours, 36 Regional Finals and the Sweet Sixteen 66 times.

“The thing about playing in the ACC that prepares you for the NCAA

Tournament is the level of competition night-in and night-out,” said Florida State coach Leonard Hamilton. “In this league, you are going against the best players and best teams in the country. The ACC teaches you that you can’t take a night off in league play. That puts your players in the mindset to value each possession in each game.”

Success in the ACC Men’s Basketball Tournament, which will be played March 10-13, 2011, in Greensboro, has often times resulted in a positive NCAA run, considering the ACC champion has make it to the Final four nine times since 1990.

“Greensboro has hosted the ACC Men’s Tournament on 22 occasions, the most of any venue,” said Matt Brown, director of the Greensboro Coliseum. “We couldn’t be prouder of that record. We like to equate the Men’s Tournament to Greensboro’s ‘Superbowl.’ When the ACC Men’s Tournament is in Greensboro it just takes over the entire town. You can’t walk around without seeing people in ACC school gear and talking basketball.” — David DroschakBO

UN

CIN

G R

IGH

T AL

ON

GAC

C HOO

PS CO

NTIN

UES T

O SE

T THE

STAN

DARD

1957NORTH CAROLINA

1991DUKE

2002MARYLAND

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1982NORTH CAROLINA

1993NORTH CAROLINA

2009NORTH CAROLINA

1974NC STATE

1992DUKE

2005NORTH CAROLINA

1983NC STATE

2001DUKE

2010DUKE

12 NATIONAL TITLES / 5 NATIONAL TITLES IN THE LAST 10 YEARS

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2011 ACC BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT 85

2011 LEGENDS OF THE ATLANTIC COAST CONFERENCE

Two former head coaches who combined for four NCAA Final Four appearances, the 1966 ACC Player of the Year, one of the centerpieces of NC State’s historic 1983 National Championship team, and a member of the ACC’s 50th Anniversary team headline the 2011 ACC Basketball Tournament Legends Class.

In all, this year’s Legends contingent includes seven former NBA Draft selections—including three fi rst-round picks—two All-Americas, three All-ACC selections, four players or coaches who appeared in a total

of 19 NCAA Final Fours and seven former players who accounted for a total of 58 years of professional basketball experience.

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86 theACC.com

A diminutive fi gure physically in a Big East Confer-ence that featured some big-time scorers and top-ranked teams in the early to mid-1980s, Michael Adams more than held his own as Boston College’s point guard against such stars as Patrick Ewing,

Walter Berry, Chris Mullin, Ed Pinckney and Pearl Washington.“Every night was a dogfi ght … or a real fi ght,” the 5-foot-10,

162-pound Adams said of the Big East. “You had to come ready to play or you weren’t going to have a chance to win on the road, let alone on your own court. We had so many wars, it was really tough and it made you a tougher player.”

Adams led the Eagles to three 20-win seasons during his ca-reer, including a tie for the Big East regular-season crown in 1983. At the time, few knew Adams would begin his ACC connection in the Big East, playing for Maryland coach Gary Williams while in Chestnut Hill.

“Gary was competitive and I was just as competitive as a player so we had the same mind-set,” Adams said. “He was always intense for those intense games, and that’s the way I modeled my game. I think Gary brings out the best in all of his players.”

Adams fi nished his college career with some numbers that truly displayed his versatility – 1,650 points, 475 assists, 320 re-

bounds and 275 steals. And he led the Eagles to three NCAA Tour-naments, including an Elite Eight appearance in 1982.

“I played the game with reckless abandon,” Adams said when asked to describe his style in college. “I was always on the off en-sive, always in attack mode. That’s the kind of scoring point guard I was. I tried to attack the defense before they set up to get where I need to go on the fl oor.”

“Growing up I was the shortest guy out there all the time, and I was always playing with my older brothers and older players, so to compete in my mind I had to be the toughest or the quickest … and mentally tough,” Adams said. “It made me a better player.”

Although Adams didn’t play his college ball in the 3-point era, he became a prolifi c long-range shooter during his NBA career, at one point holding the record with a 3-pointer in 79 consecutive games. Adams averaged 26.5 points a game with the Washington Bullets in 1990-91 and was named to the NBA All-Star team in 1992, fi nishing his NBA career with 9,621 points and 4,209 assists.

“I never dreamed I would make it to the NBA,” Adams said. “But once I got there I realized I had to be a very, very good shoot-er in order to stay in that league. And once I became a good shooter, it just opened things up for me to drive to the basket.”

Q: WHAT WAS YOUR GREATEST

ATHLETIC MOMENT IN COLLEGE?

A: “Beating No. 1 DePaul in the 1982 NCAA Tournament. I guess they didn’t know who I was coming off the bench and I ended up scoring 21 points.”Q: WHAT WAS YOUR FAVORITE

ROAD VENUE AND WHY?

A: Madison Square Garden. “I loved the vibe in New York and the fans were very knowledgeable about the game.”Q: WHAT OPPOSING PLAYER DID YOU

RESPECT THE MOST DURING YOUR

COLLEGE PLAYING DAYS AND WHY?

A: Dwayne “Pearl” Washington. “I loved his great ball-handling skills, the way he would try to attack you right or left. I had to make sure I was on my toes so he wouldn’t embarrass me.”Q: WHERE DO YOU LIVE NOW AND

WHAT ARE YOU DOING?

A: Washington, D.C. area. Real estate and personal appearances with Washington Wizards.

L E G E N D S O F T H E AT L A N T I C C O A S T C O N F E R E N C E

MICHAEL ADAMS

Page 89: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

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Page 90: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

A self-proclaimed late bloomer out of high school in the state of Kentucky, Greg Buckner wasted little time making an impact in one of college basketball’s most demanding leagues. The 6-foot-4 wing guard led Clem-son in scoring and rebounding in 1995 and was named

ACC Rookie of the Year. Buckner remains the only player from the Tigers to win that award.

“Being successful so early in the ACC had a lot to do with my high school coach and coach (Rick) Barnes, both just continued and continued to stay on me,” Buckner said. “They saw what talent I had way before I understood what I had.”

Buckner turned down off ers to walk on at Louisville and Ken-tucky and signed with Providence, but headed to Clemson when Rick Barnes switched schools, helping to begin a successful four-year stretch in which Clemson made the NCAA Tournament three straight seasons.

The 1997 Clemson team went 23-10 and fi nished with the second-highest Associated Press ranking (14th) in school his-tory. Buckner was named to the All-ACC second team that sea-son as well as ’98.

“In college I was a scorer and I did whatever it took to win,” Buckner said. “Coach Barnes wanted me to shoot more and more

as time went on. I was a guy who teams would try to key in on, fi gur-ing if they stopped me they had a good chance of beating Clem-son.” Buckner was on the fl oor more times than not for the Tigers, his 3,954 minutes the fourth most in school history. The guard av-eraged 14.4 points in his career, shot 50.4 percent, grabbed 592 rebounds and dished out 252 assists. His 1,754 points rank fourth all-time in Clemson history.

One of Buckner’s biggest baskets (a dunk as time expired) came in the 1996 ACC Tournament when the Tigers staged a furi-ous rally to upset a ranked North Carolina team 75-73 that includ-ed Vince Carter, Antawn Jamison and Shammond Williams.

“They call that “THE Dunk” in Clemson,” Buckner said. “We trailed the whole game and everybody in the arena except us thought we were out of it in the fi rst half.”

Buckner was selected in the second round of the 1998 NBA Draft and played 570 career games for fi ve diff erent professional teams over a decade, averaging 5.0 points.

“In the pros, I became a defender, I became a stopper,” he said. “I knew when I came into the NBA they were looking for guys to play defense on the wing, just because some guys were scoring 30 or 40 points a night. I revamped my game and it kept me in the league for 10 years.”

Q: WHAT WAS YOUR GREATEST

ATHLETIC MOMENT IN COLLEGE?

A: “My sophomore year, realizing we had made the NCAA Tournament for the fi rst time.”Q: WHAT WAS YOUR FAVORITE

ROAD VENUE AND WHY?

A: Cole Field House. “It was always pretty rowdy,” Buckner said.Q: WHAT OPPOSING PLAYER DID YOU

RESPECT THE MOST DURING YOUR

COLLEGE PLAYING DAYS AND WHY?

A: Matt Harpring. “He was my arch rival since we both came in to college at the same time,” Buckner said. “What he did, what I did, I’m pretty sure we tried to out-perform each other. He came out every day, every night and played his butt off .”Q: WHERE DO YOU LIVE NOW AND

WHAT ARE YOU DOING?

A: Dallas. Finishing his degree with Clemson on-line classes and then looking to get an MBA in project management. “I’m a professional student now,” Buckner laughed.

L E G E N D S O F T H E AT L A N T I C C O A S T C O N F E R E N C E

GREG BUCKNER

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2011 ACC BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT 89

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Page 92: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

Winning was Steve Vacendak’s calling card at Duke, not necessarily gaudy stats. A fi ery point guard during the heyday of the Vic Bubas era of the mid 1960s, Vacendak helped lead the Blue

Devils to three straight 20-win seasons and two Final Four appearances during his career.

Vacendak’s job was to pass fi rst and shoot second with such high-scoring teammates as Jeff Mullins, Jack Marin, Mike Lewis and Bob Verga on Duke’s roster. Still, Vacendak’s talents and accomplishments didn’t go unnoticed as he was named second team All-ACC in 1965 and ’66.

“My role was to kind of pull everything together and make sure everyone else got the ball,” said Vacendak, who was recruited out of Pennsylvania by Bubas to come to Durham. “I enjoyed playing defense and I enjoyed playing hard – and playing as hard the fi rst minute as I did at the end of the game.”

Although Vacendak averaged just 11.3 points in his career and didn’t reach Duke’s 1,000-point club, he could score when needed. He hit for 17 points in the 1966 Final Four semifi nals against Kentucky, and averaged 16.2

points for a Blue Devil team that averaged 92.4 points in 1964-65.

“That was a lot of fun,” Vacendak said. “And we averaged that many points without the 3-pointer – that’s a lot of points. We had a lot of guns and coach gave us a free hand to shoot. It was almost a fast break even after made baskets.”

Vacendak still recalls the intense ACC games staged during the early years of the league.

“Sure, now there is more media attention, but there were still kids who lived and died by their radios at 8:30 at night in North Carolina, living their dream just as intensely,” he said. “The ACC was THE entertainment in this area; it was THE sport for most folks. People really supported their schools.”

Although there were no scoring titles or All-American awards for Vacendak, he was named the 1966 ACC Player of the Year and cherishes a 72-14 overall record at Duke just as much.

“This is kind of special for me when you think of being included with all the great Duke players, and then with all the ACC players, it’s something that really is very meaningful to me.”

Q: WHAT WAS YOUR GREATEST ATHLETIC

MOMENT IN COLLEGE?

A: “I got to meet a lot of wonderful people from all across the country while playing basketball at Duke, and a lot of wonderful people in North Carolina. I got to know the state of North Carolina and the culture.”Q: WHAT WAS YOUR FAVORITE ROAD VENUE AND WHY?

A: Reynolds Coliseum. “It was the largest arena in the South at the time and the State fans were always in the game. They were ready to cheer the Pack, and it made for a wonderful, competitive environment. It was loud, it was large and they were on top of you.”Q: WHAT OPPOSING PLAYER DID YOU RESPECT THE MOST

DURING YOUR COLLEGE PLAYING DAYS AND WHY?

A: Dave Bing and Gail Goodrich. “I’ve got a tie for this one. They were very good players, but they always played smart and within themselves. They didn’t make a lot of mistakes.”Q: WHERE DO YOU LIVE NOW AND WHAT ARE YOU DOING?

A: Raleigh. Executive director of North Carolina Beautiful, a non-profi t organization dedicated to preserving the natural beauty of North Carolina.

L E G E N D S O F T H E AT L A N T I C C O A S T C O N F E R E N C E

STEVE VACENDAK

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Hugh Durham accomplished plenty during his time at Florida State. The crowning achievement — leading the Seminoles to the 1972 Final Four — remains vivid in his mind not just for the run to the title game but also for whom Florida State faced along the way.

“We played three games in a row against Adolph Rupp, Dean Smith and John Wooden,” Durham said. “We played Kentucky in the regional fi nal, against UNC and Dean Smith in the semifi nals and in the fi nal game against coach Wooden. I don’t think anybody has played those three back-to-back-to-backs, and the only way that would take place is if you played in the tournament. There ain’t no way anyone’s going to schedule those three games in a row.”

Durham played them and a whole lot more over a career that spanned 37 years. He won 633 games during stints at Florida State (1966-1978), Georgia (1978-1995) and Jacksonville (1997-2005). He also took Georgia to the Final Four in 1983.

He remains 16th on Florida State’s career scoring list, but the Final Four run as Florida State’s coach stands out as a legendary accomplishment.

“It’s probably a lot more special now than it was then,” Durham said. “You refl ect back and see just how diffi cult it was to get to the Final Four. That kind of validated where we had come from.”

Q: WHAT WAS YOUR GREATEST COACHING

MOMENT IN COLLEGE?

A: “It would have to be in 1972 when we beat Kentucky to get to the Final Four. The reason I say that is because I’m from Kentucky and I grew up being a Wildcat fan. When I was a kid, they were winning national championships, so that had a big impact. That put us in the Final Four, and that was Adolph Rupp’s last game.”Q: WHAT WAS YOUR FAVORITE ROAD VENUE

AND WHY?

A: “We had a lot of success at Georgia Tech. We won 11 out of the last 14 we played against Georgia Tech, and six of those were in Atlanta. That wasn’t a bad place. It’s kind of hard to say I enjoyed coaching at Chapel Hill, because we never won a game there.”Q: WHAT OPPOSING COACH DID YOU RESPECT

THE MOST AND WHY?

A: “I had a lot of respect for Dean Smith. He and I are friends. He played us when I was at Florida State and we were independent and a lot of quality schools were shying away from playing an independent that was competitive. I always admired the job Joe Hall did at Kentucky. Joe Hall did something that was really diffi cult, and that is following a legend. And Rick Pitino; I don’t think we ever played anybody that was more prepared than his teams were.”Q: WHERE DO YOU LIVE NOW AND WHAT ARE

YOU DOING?

A: Durham retired in 2005. “We live in Jacksonville, Fla., and we’re also up there in North Carolina about fi ve months out of the year. I told somebody I don’t do much of anything and I don’t do that until 12. That’s really not true because my wife and I work out at 5:15 in the morning.”

L E G E N D S O F T H E AT L A N T I C C O A S T C O N F E R E N C E

HUGH DURHAM

2011 ACC BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT 91

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One of the fi nest hours of John Salley’s college career was winning the ACC Tournament in 1985. The Yellow Jackets collected their fi rst ACC Championship, and did so a

short drive from campus. After the defeat of North Carolina in the title game, Georgia Tech received a welcome Salley still recalls vividly.

“Since it was in Atlanta, we were in the vans and we’re going back to campus — and it’s like 3 miles from the Omni — and all the kids were out screaming and cheering when we got to the dorm,” the center said.

It was part of the payoff of lifting the Yellow Jackets from obscurity in their early years in the ACC. Salley, who was twice a second-team All-ACC pick, was one of the major pieces in Georgia Tech’s rebuilding project.

The 1985 team was the fi rst from Georgia Tech in a quarter-century to earn an NCAA Tournament invitation, and Salley was part of the all-regional team after the Yellow Jackets

reached the Elite Eight. A year later, he helped Georgia Tech reach the ACC fi nal and the NCAA regional semifi nals.

Salley, nicknamed “Spider” for his long arms and legs, started all 125 games he played in his career and fi nished with 1,587 points (15th in school history), 798 rebounds (eighth), 243 blocks (second) and a .587 fi eld goal (third). Later, Salley played on four NBA champions.

To younger fans, Salley is well-known for his many television products — a refl ection of an upbeat attitude that helped him in basketball and beyond.

“I’m never too big, and no job is too small,” Salley said.

Q: WHAT WAS YOUR GREATEST ATHLETIC MOMENT IN COLLEGE?

A: “Graduating from Georgia Tech and having my number retired as soon as I walked off the stage. Bobby Cremins was a man of his word.”Q: WHAT WAS YOUR FAVORITE ROAD VENUE AND WHY?

A: “I loved playing at Duke. Johnny Dawkins was a great representative and a great player for Coach K. We got up there and I remember winning inside that place only once in four years. I remember how intense the fans were and the things they would say and how they would read up on you.”Q: WHAT OPPOSING PLAYER DID YOU RESPECT THE MOST AND WHY?

A: Lenny Bias. “He and Johnny Dawkins and I got to know each other at the Five-Star basketball camp. We talked about going to Maryland … but then we decided it might be better that we become respected in our own places.”Q: WHERE DO YOU LIVE NOW AND WHAT ARE YOU DOING?

A: Salley lives in Los Angeles, where he produced TV shows and music and is now doing an interview show for ReelzChannel. “But a consistent passion is health. I eat a raw vegan diet and I do organics. I’ve got the same body that I had back in 1989. I just try to help people live healthy.”

L E G E N D S O F T H E AT L A N T I C C O A S T C O N F E R E N C E

JOHN SALLEY

92 theACC.com

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Lefty Driesell once famously boasted he would turn Maryland into the UCLA of the East. His plan to do so quickly revolved around building a daunting and talented frontcourt.

One of the centerpieces of Driesell’s fi rst Elite Eight team was Len Elmore, an imposing 6-foot-9 center who would scatter his name throughout Maryland’s record book.

Elmore remains Maryland’s career rebounding leader and is the only Terp to ever snag 1,000 boards (1,053). He was also Maryland’s team MVP in 1973, when the Terrapins made their fi rst NCAA appearance since 1958 and came within a game of the Final Four.

“It was meaningful to be in the NCAA Tournament, recognizing the diffi culty that existed in reaching it, knowing this was a one-bid league, and the automatic bid came from winning the tournament,” Elmore said.

A year later, Elmore averaged 14.6 points

and a staggering 14.7 rebounds as a senior, the latter fi gure has only been matched in the ACC only by Tim Duncan since 1974. The magical season abruptly ended with a 103-100 overtime loss in the ACC Tournament fi nal against NC State, a game many believe to be the best in ACC history.

“Playing in the ACC Tournament fi nal against NC State was tantamount to playing for a national championship,” Elmore said. “We were pretty certain we could win it. Unfortunately, we were defeated.”

Still, Elmore enjoyed a remarkable career. He was a second-team all-conference pick in 1972 and ’73, then a fi rst-team pick in his fi nal season. His No. 41 hung from Cole Field House and now housed in the Comcast Center, and he played 10 seasons in the ABA and NBA. Later, he became the fi rst former pro basketball player to graduate from Harvard Law School.

Q: WHAT WAS YOUR GREATEST ATHLETIC MOMENT IN COLLEGE?

A: “We had a lot of triumphs and some disappointments. I guess being named to fi rst team all-ACC and second team All-America.”Q: WHAT WAS YOUR FAVORITE ROAD VENUE AND WHY?

A: “I’d say Carmichael Auditorium, because it was North Carolina and because of their history and tradition. It certainly wasn’t Cameron Indoor Stadium. We had too much trouble there. Even though we lost there only once in three years, that was still a tough place to play.”Q: WHAT OPPOSING PLAYER DID YOU RESPECT THE MOST AND WHY?

A: “David Thompson, because you had to marvel at his skills when there were few if any players like him. Also, the rest of the NC State team. We battled them, and after those kinds of competitions, you always come out respecting your opponent. I’d also say Bill Walton, who in many respects was one of the outstanding players of our time. And Barry Parkhill from Virginia, who was just a total class act … and we remain friends.”Q: WHERE DO YOU LIVE NOW AND WHAT ARE YOU DOING?

A: New York City. “I work for ESPN and I’m the CEO of iHoops, which is the youth basketball initiative of the NCAA and the NBA. And I’m still an attorney, although I’m not practicing.”

L E G E N D S O F T H E AT L A N T I C C O A S T C O N F E R E N C E

LEN ELMORE

2011 ACC BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT 93

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94 theACC.com

Former Miami star Eric Brown wasn’t familiar with the ACC Legends pro-gram until he was named as the Hurricanes’ representative for 2011. Now he can’t stop talking about an honor that added to his status as a Miami Hall of Famer. “I felt that was the end of all the blessings that would be bestowed on me for playing the game of basketball,” Brown

said. “This thing here, I’ve used it quite often in my everyday life. People will men-tion “Be careful, you’re talking to a legend.’ I use it to my advantage. It’s one of the greatest honors I’ve ever attained.”

Brown, though, meant a lot to the Hurricanes when the school revived its bas-ketball program in the mid 1980s.

He scored 2,270 points — second in school history — and averaged 24.7 points as a senior while playing on Miami’s fi rst four teams after a 15-year hiatus. He is one of two Hurricanes to lead the team in scoring for four seasons, and he remains fi rst on the program’s all-time charts in free throws made and second in minutes played.

Beyond the numbers, Brown was crucial in re-establishing Miami as a legiti-mate basketball program. Three seasons after his college career ended in 1989, Miami joined the Big East Conference. By 1998, the Hurricanes reached the NCAA Tournament. And in 2004-05, Miami debuted in the ACC.

“I’m in awe of where we brought it from,” Brown said. “ I was proud of the fact I could pave the way and bring back a program while just forging ahead with a pio-neer spirit.”

Q: WHAT WAS YOUR GREATEST

ATHLETIC MOMENT IN COLLEGE?

A: “Scoring 39 points at Virginia Common-wealth’s gymnasium. It was diffi cult to play on the road.”Q: WHAT WAS YOUR FAVORITE

ROAD VENUE AND WHY?

A: Duke. “That was pretty intimidating, seeing the fans and how they dressed up and acted. They were sitting on top of you, almost inches behind your bench. You can feel them. I didn’t sit on the bench much, but when we had our timeouts and talked and listened to our coach, we couldn’t hear what he said. Not that it made a diff erence because we got blown out. That stadium, it’s amazing.”Q: WHAT OPPOSING PLAYER DID YOU

RESPECT THE MOST AND WHY?

A: “After the fact, it was Danny Ferry. He had 58 points against us down here at the Miami Arena. He threw up some shots where I said

‘Man, you’ve got to be kidding me.’ It was just one of those things. He was in a zone. I never thought of him being that great before then, but he had a great night. I had a lot of respect for him after that.”Q: WHERE DO YOU LIVE NOW AND

WHAT ARE YOU DOING?

A: Brown is a Miami-Dade police detective, and is the founder of the Brownsville Basketball Academy, a program aimed at kids in Homestead, Fla. “I’m doing something preventive rather than taking them to jail after the fact. It feels good to give back. I’m able to impart the experiences and knowledge I have.”

L E G E N D S O F T H E AT L A N T I C C O A S T C O N F E R E N C E

ERIC BROWN

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2011 ACC BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT 95

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First as Dean Smith’s loyal assistant for three decades at North Carolina, and then as his successful replacement, Bill Guthridge carved out a unique piece of basketball history for the Tar Heels. In Guthridge’s 33 seasons on

the North Carolina bench, the Tar Heels won two national championships, played in 12 Final Fours (including 1998 and 2000 when he was the head coach) and captured 13 ACC Tournament Titles. Guthridge holds the record par-ticipation in NCAA Final Fours as a player, assistant coach and head coach with 14 appearances.

In the 1970s, Guthridge accepted the head coaching position at Penn State, but backed out after 24 hours, to remain at North Carolina for good.

“I decided then that I loved North Carolina and I loved the people that I dealt with and the players we had and it was just an ideal situation,” he said.

Guthridge worked mainly with North Carolina’s big men during his coaching career, developing such star players as Sam Perkins, James Worthy, Brad Daugherty, J.R. Reid, Rasheed Wallace and Eric Montross.

“I really enjoyed working with the big men,” Guthridge

said. “Fifteen minutes before practice every day I would work with them. I wanted our big guys to have a favorite move, a counter move, a little jump shot, work on free throws and on getting good position inside.”

Guthridge’s three seasons as head coach produced records of 34-4, 24-10 and 22-14, including an 8-3 mark in NCAA Tournament play. He retired with an 80-22 re-cord, tying Everett Case for the most wins after three seasons.

“Very few coaches retire,” Guthridge said. “I thought I would coach longer than I did but when I got back from the Final Four in 2000 I was home two nights over the next six weeks and I was 63 years old. It wore me out. It was just a tough profession at this level. I tried to give myself a month to see if I could recover and I couldn’t. You’ve got to go 100 percent or not at all.”

The humble Guthridge joked about becoming an ACC Legend.

“North Carolina has a lot of legends but I’m not one of them,” he said. “It’s nice of them to recognize me. I haven’t been to the ACC Tournament since I’ve retired so it will be nice getting back to Greensboro.”

Q: WHAT WAS YOUR GREATEST COACHING

MOMENT IN COLLEGE?

A: “My highlight would be the people who I was associated with, from Dean Smith on down, and all the great players we had through the years. A person couldn’t ask for anything more no matter what your profession was to have good people around you most of the time.”Q: WHAT WAS YOUR FAVORITE ROAD

VENUE AND WHY?

A: Madison Square Garden.” That was a thrill because you hear about that venue all the time. And going into any opposing ACC gym and winning was always great.”Q: WHAT OPPOSING PLAYER DID YOU

RESPECT THE MOST AND WHY?

A: David Thompson or Tim Duncan. “They come to mind right away … and Duncan is still going strong.”Q: WHERE DO YOU LIVE NOW AND

WHAT ARE YOU DOING?

A: Chapel Hill. “Retired and golfi ng whenever I can. I still have an offi ce at the Smith Center and come in when I’m in town to take care of a few things.”

L E G E N D S O F T H E AT L A N T I C C O A S T C O N F E R E N C E

BILL GUTHRIDGE

Page 99: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

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Page 100: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

98 theACC.com

The questions never grow old for Thurl Bailey as the NCAA Tournament rolls around every March, curi-ous fans still wondering almost three decades later how North Carolina State became college basket-ball’s fi rst “Cinderella Team” to win the national

championship.“It will always be one of those memories that will never dis-

sipate in my mind or my life,” said Bailey, the 6-foot-11 power forward on the Cardiac Pack team of 1983. “It will always be passed on to my kids, how special that moment was in the his-tory of college basketball and NC State. I’m not sure there is a week or sometimes a day that goes by that I’m not reminded how special that was.”

NC State won its fi nal nine games that season – including fi ve by three points or less – before squaring off against heavi-ly-favored Houston in the national title game. Bailey, who led NC State with 15 points that day, remembers being part of the fran-tic fi nal seconds as he was passed the ball in the corner as the clock ticked down, the Wolfpack trailing by one and desperately searching for a good look at the hoop.

“Sidney Lowe to this day was so mad because he wanted me to shoot that ball,” Bailey said. “There was about 7-8 seconds

left when I caught it and I consciously knew I hadn’t scored a point in the second half. I knew who the hot hand was and it was Dereck Whittenburg, so I even bypassed Sidney on the pass and threw it to Derrick. One of their players even got a hand on it. We might not be talking about this now had he stolen that ball. Of course, Dereck called his shot ‘a pass’ but he shot it and we all know the end of the story.”

A Lorenzo Charles dunk gave Bailey and the Pack the vic-tory, but Bailey’s career in Raleigh was so much more than one big game. He led NC State in scoring and rebounding three straight seasons, was named fi rst-team all-ACC in 1983 after engaging in epic battles with the likes of Ralph Sampson and Sam Perkins, and his 207 career blocked shots remain a school record.

“In college, blocking shots was my favorite part of the game,” Bailey said. “It’s something when you can reject some-body’s shot in front of 10,000-20,000 people. Blocking shots is all about timing and desire.”

Bailey, nicknamed Big T, was the seventh overall pick of the Utah Jazz in the 1983 NBA Draft, playing a dozen seasons in the league, making the 1984 All-Rookie First Team and scoring 11,834 career points.

Q: WHAT WAS YOUR GREATEST ATHLETIC

MOMENT IN COLLEGE?

A: “It was the life education I got playing sports; those were the best four years of my life.”Q: WHAT WAS YOUR FAVORITE ROAD

VENUE AND WHY?

A: Cole Field House.”I was from the Maryland area, so I always loved going home and playing well in front of that crowd.”Q: WHAT OPPOSING PLAYER DID YOU

RESPECT THE MOST DURING YOUR

COLLEGE PLAYING DAYS AND WHY?

A: Ralph Sampson. “He was just way ahead of his time and was just a great competitor.”Q: WHERE DO YOU LIVE NOW AND WHAT

ARE YOU DOING?

A: Bailey lives in Salt Lake City where he is a color analyst for the Utah Jazz. He is also an accomplished musician and is currently producing his fi fth CD.

L E G E N D S O F T H E AT L A N T I C C O A S T C O N F E R E N C E

THURL BAILEY

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Chris Williams arrived at Virginia at a tough point in the program’s history. The Cavaliers had just made a coach-ing change and found themselves short on players. Fortunately for

coach Pete Gillen, he had Williams to help lift Vir-ginia back to the NCAA Tournament.

Williams was the ACC Rookie of the Year in 1999, but perhaps more importantly he was a cru-cial element in the Cavaliers’ rapid rise a decade ago. He led Virginia in scoring with 15.5 points per game as a sophomore in 2000, and a year later helped the Cavaliers rise as high as No. 6 in the country as they earned an NCAA berth for the fi rst time since 1997.

“It was very meaningful,” Williams said. “We had our share of struggles in the beginning, but Coach Gillen did a tremendous job of working with what he had and getting us back to the tournament. We were probably a better tournament team the year before, but we lost some games toward the end, and didn’t get selected for the tourney.”

The 6-foot-7 Williams departed Charlottesville as one of the program’s top all-around players, and his name remains scattered across the Cavaliers’ career lists.

He is eighth in Virginia history in career scoring (1,812 points), seventh in rebounds (786), seventh in fi eld goals made (650), tied for third in steals (189) and seventh in blocks (97). He is the only Cavalier in the top 10 of all fi ve of those categories. Only three other players — Junior Burrough, Ralph Sampson and Bryant Stith — ranked in the top 10 of four of those categories. Put together, it made Wil-liams a worthy selection as Virginia’s latest ACC Legends representative.

“It’s such an honor to be recognized for the things I was able to accomplish in my time there,” Williams said. “I really appreciated the op-portunity given to me to play on such a high level of basketball and to compete in the best conference ever in college basketball history. I am truly hon-ored.”

Q: WHAT WAS YOUR GREATEST ATHLETIC

MOMENT IN COLLEGE?

A: “It had to be winning the ACC Rookie of the Year award. There were plenty of guys just as worthy as I was, so winning that was really special.”Q: WHAT WAS YOUR FAVORITE ROAD VENUE AND WHY?

A: Reynolds Coliseum. “They would have the heat on super high during the game and the fans were always rowdy and into the game.”Q: WHAT OPPOSING PLAYER DID YOU RESPECT THE MOST DURING

YOUR COLLEGE PLAYING DAYS AND WHY?

A: “I respected every player on every team. Playing in the ACC, there are always one or more great players on the opposing side. I won’t name any names, but those Duke and Maryland teams of the late 1990s were tough.”Q: WHERE DO YOU LIVE NOW AND WHAT ARE YOU DOING?

A: “My hometown of Birmingham, Ala. I am still playing profes-sional basketball in Iran. I have traveled all over, met so many people, and have forged relationships with diff erent people that I would never have dreamed to be possible. “

L E G E N D S O F T H E AT L A N T I C C O A S T C O N F E R E N C E

CHRIS WILLIAMS

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2011 ACC BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT 101

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102 theACC.com

Some of the 2011 ACC Legends will travel quite a distance to make it to the ACC Tournament. Former Virginia Tech star Wayne Robinson will simply have to make a short

drive in his hometown to arrive at the Greensboro Coliseum.

“It’s defi nitely a thrill,” Robinson said. “Basketball has been behind me for a while. I don’t watch a lot of basketball — I’m probably a bigger college football fan than college basketball. But this is defi nitely a tremendous honor, and I’m very humbled by it.”

It will also serve as a reminder of how impressive Robinson was during an era in which basketball, and not football, was king in Blacksburg, Va.

Robinson led the Hokies in rebounding from 1978-80, ranking eighth in school history with 852 boards. He’s also seventh in blocked shots (119) and eighth in fi eld goal percentage (.517).

He was also part of Virginia Tech’s last

conference championship team. The Hokies won the 1979 title in the old Metro Conference, then won their fi rst game in the NCAA Tournament before falling to a Larry Bird-led Indiana State team. It capped a 22-9 season that, at the time, matched the Virginia Tech record for wins in a season.

“That was great,” Robinson said. “Anytime you win, it’s always good. We were extremely close and certainly when you’re able to bond off the court and on the court it makes for a special team and a special experience.”

Robinson was also part of the Virginia Tech team that reached the second round of the 1980 NCAA Tournament.

Robinson was a second-round pick in the 1980 NBA Draft. He played one season with the Detroit Pistons and seven more overseas after his college career.

Q: WHAT WAS YOUR GREATEST ATHLETIC MOMENT IN COLLEGE?

A: Winning the Metro Conference in 1979. “That was our fi rst year in the league and at that time it was Florida State, Cincinnati, Louisville, Tulane, Saint Louis, Memphis State. It was a lot of great opponents for us, and we were able to show we were a force to be reckoned with.”Q: WHAT WAS YOUR FAVORITE ROAD VENUE AND WHY?

A: “Freedom Hall [in Louisville] was a tough place to play. I certainly enjoyed the atmosphere. We played in Cincinnati’s old arena and that was certainly a diffi cult place and we also had a lot of success in the old Roanoke Civic Center.”Q: WHAT OPPOSING PLAYER DID YOU RESPECT THE MOST AND WHY?

A: “One-on-one, Pat Cummings in his junior and senior years was a very formidable big man that Cincinnati had. He was their star. Playing Larry Bird, even though it was one time, he was a force to be reckoned with.”Q: WHERE DO YOU LIVE NOW AND WHAT ARE YOU DOING?

A: Greensboro. “I am a talent and recruiting manager for Nucor Corp., one of the largest manufacturers of steel in the United States. That’s my bread and butter. I’ve also been in ministry for 20 years – and for the last seven as the pastor at the New Millennium Christian Center.”

L E G E N D S O F T H E AT L A N T I C C O A S T C O N F E R E N C E

WAYNE ROBINSON

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Robert O’Kelley had one of the toughest gigs in college basketball in the late 1990s as the next star recruit at Wake Forest. “It was tough because it was after the Tim Duncan era, and I was playing a lot of minutes as a

freshman and sophomore,” O’Kelley said. “Tim was such a great player and any program that loses a player like that is going to take a hit. ”

O’Kelley was a big-time scorer coming out of high school in Memphis, Tenn., and beat out such players as Shane Battier, Elton Brand and Dion Glover for 1998 ACC Rookie of the Year honors, averaging 16.6 points a game.

He fi nished third in the ACC in scoring the following season (17.5 points per game) and was one of the league’s top 3-point shooters throughout his four years in Winston-Salem, logging more than 4,000 minutes – third most in school history.

“I guess I was just blessed to play as much as I did and for coach (Dave) Odom to have so much confi dence in me,” O’Kelley said. “It was a challenge to play in the best basketball league in the country. I just tried to have confi dence and play as hard as I could.”

O’Kelley’s scoring average dipped some in his fi nal two

seasons as he made the adjustment to more of a point guard role, but still fi nished his career with 1,885 points and 288 3-pointers, leading the Demon Deacons in long-range shots each of his four seasons.

“With my height I had to make that transition to being a real point guard as far as being a leader and getting other guys involved and not just being a scorer,” O’Kelley said. “That transition was a challenge to me.”

Although Wake Forest appeared in just one NCAA Tournament game during O’Kelley’s career, the guard shined in NIT play, scoring 36 points against Xavier in 1999 and then winning the MVP award as the Demon Deacons captured the NIT Championship in 2000, scoring 19 points in the fi nals against Notre Dame.

“I remember one thing that coach Odom used to always say: “There are always two teams standing at the end of the season with championships and one of those is the NIT Champion,”’ O’Kelley said. “Winning that championship made us feel that we were good enough to be in the NCAA Tournament that season. And we got to play in Madison Square Garden, the Mecca of basketball. That was just a great experience.”

L E G E N D S O F T H E AT L A N T I C C O A S T C O N F E R E N C E

ROBERT O’KELLEY

Q: WHAT WAS YOUR GREATEST ATHLETIC

MOMENT IN COLLEGE?

A: Winning the ACC Rookie of the Year. “There was such a group of talented players that year and to win that award was my most exciting moment.”Q: WHAT WAS YOUR FAVORITE ROAD VENUE AND WHY?

A: Smith Center. “Just the tradition, you see all the jerseys up there and Dean Smith was there my fi rst year. Being from Memphis I really didn’t know what that whole UNC tradition was about, but I sure learned fast and always got pumped to play there.”Q: WHAT OPPOSING PLAYER DID YOU RESPECT THE

MOST DURING YOUR COLLEGE PLAYING DAYS AND WHY?

A: Terrell McIntyre. “He was feisty and being matched up with him was a challenge. He was really quick, was fast and he could shoot. I enjoyed competing against him.”Q: WHERE DO YOU LIVE NOW AND WHAT ARE

YOU DOING?

A: Memphis, Tenn. “A sports ministry director at a Presbyterian church. I pretty much direct the sports and fi tness throughout the church year round. I’m still around sports.”

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2011 ACC BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT 105

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106 theACC.com

Dana Barros 2006

Jay Murphy 2007

Bill Curley 2008

Danya Abrams 2009

Terry Driscoll 2010

Michael Adams 2011

Bobby Conrad 1999, 2005

Mike Eppley 2000

Larry Nance 2001

Jim Brennan 2002

Vince Hamilton 2004

Chris Whitney 2006

Murray Jarman 2007

Elden Campbell 2008

Randy Mahaff ey 2009

Dale Davis 2010

Greg Buckner 2011

Steve Wojciechowski 1999

Tate Armstrong 2000

Bobby Hurley 2001

Jeff Mullins 2002

Coach Vic Bubas 2004

Danny Ferry 2005

Mark Alarie 2006

Christian Laettner 2007

Mike Gminski 2008

Jim Spanarkel 2009

Jack Marin 2010

Steve Vacendak 2011

Brad Johnson 2001, 2004

Mitchell Wiggins 2002

Brad Johnson 2004

Dave Cowens 2005

George McCloud 2006

Bob Sura 2007

Charlie Ward 2008

Ron King 2009

Otto Petty 2010

Coach Hugh Durham 2011

Craig Neal 1999

Duane Ferrell 2000

Roger Kaiser 2001

Rick Yunkus 2002

Tom Hammonds 2004

Dennis Scott 2005

Drew Barry 2006

James Forrest 2007

Kenny Anderson 2008

Brian Oliver 2009

Bruce Dalrymple 2010

John Salley 2011

Tom McMillen 2000

Albert King 2001

Coach Gene Shue 2002

Adrian Branch 2004

Walt Williams 2005

Buck Williams 2006

Bill Jones 2007

Coach Lefty Driesell 2008

Al Bunge 2009

Keith Booth 2010

Len Elmore 2011

Dana Barros 20 Tom McMillen 2000Craig Neal 1999999Brad Johnson 2001, 2004004Steve Wojciechowski 199999Bobby Conrad 1999, 2005006 005

A L L-T I M E L E G E N D S O F T H E A T L A N T I C C O A S T C O N F E R E N C E

Page 109: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

2011 ACC BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT 107

Rick Barry 2005

Dick Hickox 2006

Don Curnett 2007

Tim James 2008

Bill Foster 2009

Will Allen 2010

Eric Brown 2011

Bobby Jones 1999

Mitch Kupchak 2000

Walter Davis 2001

Phil Ford 2002

Lennie Rosenbluth 2004

Bobby Lewis 2005

Bill Cunningham 2006

Tommy Kearns 2007

Coach Dean Smith 2008

Charles Scott 2009

Sam Perkins 2010

Coach Bill Guthridge 2011

David Thompson 1999

Tommy Burleson 2000

Coach Norman Sloan 2001

Lou Pucillo 2002

Chris Corchiani 2004

Kenny Carr 2005

Bob Speight 2006

Tom Gugliotta 2007

Lorenzo Charles 2008

Monte Towe 2009

Rodney Monroe 2010

Thurl Bailey 2011

Ralph Sampson 1999, 2002

Barry Parkhill 2000

Jeff Lamp 2001

Bryant Stith 2004

Wally Walker 2005

Curtis Staples 2006

Buzzy Wilkinson 2007

John Crotty 2008

Richard Morgan 2009

Harold Deane 2010

Chris Williams 2011

Allan Bristow 2005

Dell Curry 2006

Bimbo Coles 2007

Glen Combs 2008

John Wetzel 2009

Chris Smith 2010

Wayne Robinson 2011

Charlie Davis 1999

Anthony Teachey 2000

Dickie Hemric 2001

Tyrone “Muggsy” Bogues 2002

Jack Murdock 2004

Skip Brown 2005

Rusty LaRue 2006

Rodney Rogers 2007

Len Chappell 2008

Frank Johnson 2009

Dave Wiedeman 2010

Robert O’Kelley 2011

harlie Davis 1999an Bristow 2005 Chalph Sampson 1999, 2002 Allvid Thompson 1999 RaBobby Jones 1999 Da

A L L-T I M E L E G E N D S O F T H E A T L A N T I C C O A S T C O N F E R E N C E

Page 110: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

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UNITED, WE CAN CHANGE OUR COMMUNITIES BECAUSE WE ALL WIN WHEN WE LIVE UNITED.

BETSY KIMGeorgia TechSport: Track & FieldMajor: Public Policy

ALEX FERNANDEZFlorida State Sport: SwimmingMajor: Psychology

The ACC salutes United Way,and encourages everyone to get involved in their local communities. Lend a hand to one and infl uence the condition of all. Learn more at theACC.com/unitedway

Page 113: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

The Atlantic Coast Conference is always well-repre-sented in the NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament, both in terms of quantity and quality. Not only does the conference traditionally send several teams to the “Big Dance,” but the ACC has produced the last two – and fi ve of the past 10 – national champions.

If a tournament was created with the objective of measuring which universities possess the best mixture of athletics and academics, however, the ACC might be even more dominant.

According to U.S. News & World Report’s 2011 rank-ings, the ACC was the only conference with seven schools ranked among the nation’s 50 “Best Colleges.” In fact, if there was a tournament fi eld of 68 – using only the U.S. News criteria – 10 of the conference’s 12 schools would likely make it in. And the other two would not be far behind.

Of course, academic excellence is not reserved to the hardwood when it comes to the ACC.

The conference has been recognized repeatedly for leading the nation in graduation rates among football pro-grams, and it also has ranked fi rst nationally in football

APR (Academic Progress Rate) for four straight years.The APR measures the success of every program at ev-

ery school in the areas of student-athlete retention, prog-ress toward earning degrees, and graduation, and the ACC continues to set the bar in those areas.

According to the most recent statistics, all 12 of the league’s football programs fared better than the NCAA-required score of 925, and seven schools ranked among the top 34 nationally. Duke again led the conference and ranked fi fth nationally with a mark of 983, and Miami was not far behind at 978 (sixth nationally).

Boston College, Clemson, Georgia Tech, Wake Forest and North Carolina also fi nished in the top 34 and helped the ACC post the highest composite APR in the country.

The conference produced equally impressive numbers when the NCAA released Graduation Success Rate (GSR) statistics in October. Ten of the conference’s programs ranked higher than the national GSR average of 79, and the ACC also had more football and men’s basketball pro-grams score above the national average than any other BCS automatic-qualifying conference.

Three of the conference’s programs scored cumulative scores of above 90, which also out-paced the nation’s other BCS automatic-qualifying conferences.

And ACC student-athletes also racked up numerous individual accolades this past year.

Six of the conference’s brightest athletes were honored this year with NCAA Elite 88 awards, which are granted each year to students, “who perform at the highest lev-els, both academically and athletically,” according to the NCAA’s website.

Elite 88 winners this year were North Carolina’s Bill Dworsky (men’s soccer); UNC’s Kristi Eveland (women’s soccer); Virginia’s Lauren Elstein (fi eld hockey); Clem-son’s Allison Colberg (rowing); Duke’s Matt Anderson (men’s lacrosse); and North Carolina’s Meredith Newton (women’s lacrosse).

The students were honored for carrying the highest cu-mulative grade-point averages into NCAA fi nals sites for each of their respective sports.

A TRADITION OF

ACADEMIC EXCELLENCEA TRADITION OF

ACADEMIC EXCELLENCEA TRADITION OF

ACADEMIC EXCELLENCEA TRADITION OF

ACADEMIC EXCELLENCEBY IRA SCHOFFEL

EXAMPLES OF ACADEMIC

LEADERSHIP: (clockwise from top) the Florida State’s Myron Rolle was awarded the prestigious Rhodes Scholarship; Ishmael Smith graduated from Wake Forest in May 2010 2009 ACC Player of the Year C.J. Spiller graduated from Clemson in December 2009; Maryland’s Katie O’Donnell won the 2010 Honda Sports Award in fi eld hockey, designating her as the nation’s top collegiate female athlete in that sport.

2011 ACC BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT 111

Page 114: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

YEAR CHAMPION RUNNER-UP SCORE MOST VALUABLE PLAYER COACH OF YEAR LOCATION

1954 NC State Wake Forest 82-80 (OT) Dickie Hemric (WF) Everett Case (NCS) Raleigh

1955 NC State Duke 87-77 Ronnie Shavlik (NCS) Everett Case (NCS) Raleigh

1956 NC State Wake Forest 76-64 Vic Molodet (NCS) Murray Greason (WF) Raleigh

1957 North Carolina South Carolina 95-75 Len Rosenbluth (NC) Frank McGuire (NC) Raleigh

1958 Maryland North Carolina 86-74 Nick Davis (MD) Everett Case (NCS) Raleigh

1959 NC State North Carolina 80-56 Lou Pucillo (NCS) Harold Bradley (DU) Raleigh

1960 Duke Wake Forest 63-59 Doug Kistler (DU) Bones McKinney (WF) Raleigh

1961 Wake Forest Duke 96-81 Len Chappell (WF) Bones McKinney (WF) Raleigh

1962 Wake Forest Clemson 77-66 Len Chappell (WF) Bob Stevens (USC) Raleigh

1963 Duke Wake Forest 68-57 Art Heyman (DU) Vic Bubas (DU) Raleigh

1964 Duke Wake Forest 80-59 Jeff Mullins (DU) Vic Bubas (DU) Raleigh

1965 NC State Duke 91-85 Larry Worsley (NCS) Press Maravich (NCS) Raleigh

1966 Duke NC State 71-66 Steve Vacendak (DU) Vic Bubas (DU) Raleigh

1967 North Carolina Duke 82-73 Larry Miller (NC) Dean Smith (NC) Greensboro

1968 North Carolina NC State 87-50 Larry Miller (NC) Dean Smith (NC) Charlotte

1969 North Carolina Duke 85-74 Charlie Scott (NC) Frank McGuire (SC) Charlotte

1970 NC State South Carolina 42-39 (2OT) Vann Williford (NCS) Norm Sloan (NCS) Charlotte

1971 South Carolina North Carolina 52-51 Lee Dedmon (NC) / John Roche (SC) Dean Smith (NC) Greensboro

1972 North Carolina Maryland 73-64 Robert McAdoo (NC) Bill Gibson (VA) Greensboro

1973 NC State Maryland 76-74 Tommy Burleson (NCS) Norm Sloan (NCS) Greensboro

1974 NC State Maryland 103-100 (OT) Tommy Burleson (NCS) Norm Sloan (NCS) Greensboro

1975 North Carolina NC State 70-66 Phil Ford (NC) Lefty Driesell (MD) Greensboro

1976 Virginia North Carolina 67-62 Wally Walker (VA) Dean Smith (NC) Landover

1977 North Carolina Virginia 75-69 John Kuester (NC) Dean Smith (NC) Greensboro

1978 Duke Wake Forest 85-77 Jim Spanarkel (DU) Bill Foster (DU) Greensboro

1979 North Carolina Duke 71-63 Dudley Bradley (NC) Dean Smith (NC) Greensboro

1980 Duke Maryland 73-72 Albert King (MD) Lefty Driesell (MD) Greensboro

1981 North Carolina Maryland 61-60 Sam Perkins (NC) Terry Holland (VA) Landover

1982 North Carolina Virginia 47-45 James Worthy (NC) Terry Holland (VA) Greensboro

THE CHAMPIONSHIPS

1 9 5 4 T O 2 0 0 91 9 5 4 T O 2 0 0 91 9 5 4 T O 2 0 1 0

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ILLUSTRATION BY SEAN MCCABE

YEAR CHAMPION RUNNER-UP SCORE MOST VALUABLE PLAYER COACH OF YEAR LOCATION

1983 NC State Virginia 81-78 Sidney Lowe (NCS) Bobby Cremins (GT) Atlanta

1984 Maryland Duke 74-62 Len Bias (MD) Mike Krzyzewski (DU) Greensboro

1985 Georgia Tech North Carolina 57-54 Mark Price (GT) Bobby Cremins (GT) Atlanta

1986 Duke Georgia Tech 68-67 Johnny Dawkins (DU) Mike Krzyzewski (DU) Greensboro

1987 NC State North Carolina 68-67 Vinny Del Negro (NCS) Cliff Ellis (CU) Landover

1988 Duke North Carolina 65-61 Danny Ferry (DU) Dean Smith (NC) Greensboro

1989 North Carolina Duke 77-74 J.R. Reid (NC) Jim Valvano (NCS) Atlanta

1990 Georgia Tech Virginia 70-61 Brian Oliver (GT) Cliff Ellis (CU) Charlotte

1991 North Carolina Duke 96-74 Rick Fox (NC) Dave Odom (WF) Charlotte

1992 Duke North Carolina 94-74 Christian Laettner (DU) Pat Kennedy (FSU) Charlotte

1993 Georgia Tech North Carolina 77-75 James Forrest (GT) Dean Smith (NC) Charlotte

1994 North Carolina Virginia 73-66 Jerry Stackhouse (NC) Dave Odom (WF) Charlotte

1995 Wake Forest North Carolina 82-80 (OT) Randolph Childress (WF) Dave Odom (WF) Greensboro

1996 Wake Forest Georgia Tech 75-74 Tim Duncan (WF) Bobby Cremins (GT) Greensboro

1997 North Carolina NC State 64-54 Shammond Williams (NC) Mike Krzyzewski (DU) Greensboro

1998 North Carolina Duke 83-68 Antawn Jamison (NC) Bill Guthridge (NC) Greensboro

1999 Duke North Carolina 96-73 Elton Brand (DU) Mike Krzyzewski(DU) Charlotte

2000 Duke Maryland 81-68 Jason Williams (DU) Mike Krzyzewski (DU) Charlotte

2001 Duke North Carolina 79-53 Shane Battier (DU) Paul Hewitt (GT) Atlanta

2002 Duke NC State 91-61 Carlos Boozer (DU) Gary Williams (MD) Charlotte

2003 Duke NC State 84-77 Daniel Ewing (DU) Skip Prosser (WF) Greensboro

2004 Maryland Duke 95-87 (OT) John Gilchrist (MD) Herb Sendek (NCS) Greensboro

2005 Duke Georgia Tech 69-64 J.J. Redick (DU) Seth Greenberg (VT) Washington

2006 Duke Boston College 78-76 J.J. Redick (DU) Roy Williams (NC) Greensboro

2007 North Carolina NC State 89-80 Brandan Wright (NC) Dave Leitao (VA) Tampa Bay

2008 North Carolina Clemson 86-81 Tyler Hansbrough (NC) Seth Greenberg (VT) Charlotte

2009 Duke Florida State 79-69 Jon Scheyer (DU) Leonard Hamilton (FSU) Atlanta

2010 Duke Georgia Tech 65-61 Kyle Singler (DU) Gary Williams (MD) Greensboro

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1954RALEIGH, NC (MARCH 4-5-6)

QUARTERFINALS #3 Wake Forest d. #6 South Carolina 58-57 (OT); #2 Maryland d. #7 Clemson 75-59; #1 Duke d. #8 Virginia 96-68; #4 NC State d. #5 North Carolina 52-51.

SEMIFINALS NC State d. Duke 79-75; Wake Forest d. Maryland 64-56 (OT).

FINALS NC State d. Wake Forest 82-80 (OT).

ALL-TOURNAMENT First Team: Dickie Hemric, WF; Gene Shue, Md.; Mel Thompson, NCS; Ronnie Shavlik, NCS; Skippy Winstead, UNC. Second Team: Buzz Wilkinson, UVa; Bernie Janicki, Duke; Rudy D’Emilio, Duke; Herb Ap-pelbaum, NCS; Lefty Davis, WF.

TOURNAMENT MVP - Dickie Hemric, Wake Forest (23.4 points, 14.7 rebounds)

1955RALEIGH, NC (MARCH 3-4-5)

QUARTERFINALS #6 Virginia d. #3 Maryland 68-67 (OT); #2 Duke d. #7 South Carolina 83-67; #1 NC State d. #8 Clemson 101-76; #4 Wake Forest d. #5 North Carolina 95-82.

SEMIFINALS NC State d. Wake Forest 85-70; Duke d. Virginia 90-77 (OT).

FINALS NC State d. Duke 87-77.

ALL-TOURNAMENT First Team: First Team ; Buzz Wilkinson, UVa; Ronnie Shavlik, NCS; Ronnie Mayer, Duke; Dickie Hemric, WF; Lowell Davis, WF. Second Team: Bill Miller, UVa; Bill Yar-borough, Clem.; Vic Molodet, NCS; Joe Belmont, Duke; Phil DiNardo, NCS.

TOURNAMENT MVP -Ronnie Shavlik, NC State (23.3 points, 18.0 rebounds)

1956RALEIGH, NC (MARCH 1-2-3)

QUARTERFINALS #3 Wake Forest d. #6 South Carolina 79-64; #2 North Carolina d. #7 Virginia 81-77; #1 NC State d. #8 Clemson 88-84; #4 Duke d. #5 Maryland 94-69.

SEMIFINALS NC State d. Duke 91-79; Wake Forest d. North Carolina 77-56.

FINALS NC State d. Wake Forest 76-64.

ALL-TOURNAMENT First Team: Vic Molodet, NCS; Lennie Rosenbluth, UNC; Jack Murdock, WF; Jack Wil-liams, WF; John Maglio, NCS. Second Team: Ronnie Shavlik, NCS; Ronnie Mayer, Duke; Bob Kessler, Md.; Bill Miller, UVa; Bob McCarty, UVa.

TOURNAMENT MVP - Vic Modolet, NC State (26.3 points, 14.7 rebounds)

1957RALEIGH, NC (MARCH 7-8-9)

QUARTERFINALS #6 South Carolina d. #3 Duke 84-81; #2 Maryland d. #7 Virginia 71-68; #1 North Carolina d. #8 Clemson 81-61; #4 Wake Forest d. #5 NC State 66-57.

SEMIFINALS North Carolina d. Wake Forest 61-59; South Carolina d. Maryland 74-64.

FINALS North Carolina d. South Carolina 95-75.ALL-TOURNAMENT First Team: Lennie Rosenbluth, UNC; Grady Wallace, USC; Jack Williams, WF; Pete Bren-nan, UNC; Jack Murdock, WF. Second Team:Tommy Kearns, UNC; John Nacincik, Md.; Ray Pericola, USC; Joe Quigg, UNC; Bob Cunningham, UNC.

TOURNAMENT MVP -Len Rosenbluth, N. Carolina (35.3 points; 11.0 rebounds)

1958RALEIGH, NC (MARCH 6-7-8)

QUARTERFINALS #3 North Carolina d. #6 Clemson 62-51; #2 NC State d. #7 South Carolina66-61; #1 Duke d. #8 Wake Forest 51-44; #4 Maryland d. #5 Virginia 70-66.

SEMIFINALS Maryland d. Duke 71-65 (OT); North Carolina d. NC State 64-58.

FINALS Maryland d. North Carolina 86-74.

ALL-TOURNAMENT First Team: Pete Brennan, UNC; Nick Davis, Md.; Lou Pucillo, NCS; Charles McNeil, Md.; Tommy Kearns, UNC. Second Team: Bucky Allen, Duke; Bob Vernon, Duke; Ray Stanley, UNC; Al Bunge, Md.; Bobby Joe Harris, Duke.

TOURNAMENT MVP - Nick Davis, Maryland (19.7 points, 2.3 assists)

THE ACCTOURNAMENT1954 - 2010YEAR BY YEAR RESULTS

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1959RALEIGH, NC (MARCH 5-6-7)

QUARTERFINALS #3 Duke d. #6 Wake Forest 78-71; #2 North Carolina d. #7 Clemson 93-69; #1 NC State d. #8 So. Carolina 75-72 (OT) #5 Virginia d. #4 Maryland 66-65.

SEMIFINALS NC State d. Virginia 66-63; North Carolina d. Duke 74-71.

FINALS NC State d. North Carolina 80-56.

ALL-TOURNAMENT First Team: Lou Pucillo, NCS; John Richter, NCS; Lee Shaff er, UNC; Paul Adkins, UVa; George Stepanovich, NCS. Second Team: Bob MacGillivray, NCS; Doug Moe, UNC; York Larese, UNC; Howard Hurt, Duke; Carroll Youngkin, Duke.

TOURNAMENT MVP -Lou Pucillo, NC State (13.7 points, 3.0 rebounds)

1960RALEIGH, NC (MARCH 3-4-5)

QUARTERFINALS #6 NC State d. #3 Maryland 74-58; #2 Wake Forest d. #7 Clemson 74-59; #1 North Carolina d. Virginia 84-63; #4 Duke d. #5 South Carolina 82-69.

SEMIFINALS Duke d. North Carolina 71-69; Wake Forest 71 d. NC State 66.

FINALS Duke d. Wake Forest 63-59.

ALL-TOURNAMENT First Team: Len Chappell, WF; Doug Kistler, Duke; Howard Hurt, Duke; Lee Shaff er, UNC; York Larese, UNC. Second Team: Car-roll Youngkin, Duke; David Budd, WF; John Frye, Duke; Bob DiStefano, NCS; Paul Adkins, UVa.

TOURNAMENT MVP - Doug Kistler, Duke (17.3 points, 9.0 rebounds)

1961RALEIGH, NC (MARCH 2-3-4)

QUARTERFINALS #1 Wake Forest, bye; #4 Maryland d. #5 Clemson 91-75; #6 South Carolina d. #3 NC State 80-78; #2 Duke d. #7 Virginia 89-54.

SEMIFINALS Wake Forest d. Maryland 98-76; Duke d. South Carolina 92-75.

FINALS Wake Forest d. Duke 96-81.

ALL-TOURNAMENT First Team: Len Chappell, WF; Art Heyman, Duke; Billy Packer, WF; John Frye, Duke; Art Whisnant, USC. Second Team: Bill Stasiulatis, Md.; Scotti Ward, USC; Dave Wiedeman, WF; Carroll Youngkin, Duke; Choppy Patterson, Clem.

TOURNAMENT MVP - Len Chappell, Wake Forest (33.5 points, 15.0 rebounds)

1962RALEIGH, NC (MARCH 1-2-3)

QUARTERFINALS #6 Clemson d. #3 NC State 67-46; #2 Duke d. #7 Maryland 71-58; #1 Wake Forest d. #8 Virginia 81-58; #5 South Carolina d. #4 North Carolina 57-55.

SEMIFINALS Wake Forest d. South Carolina 88-75; Clemson d. Duke 77-72.

FINALS Wake Forest d. Clemson 77-66.

ALL-TOURNAMENT First Team: Len Chappell, WF; Jim Brennan, Clem.; Art Heyman, Duke; Jeff Mullins, Duke; Billy Packer, WF. Second Team: Dave Wiedeman, WF; Jerry Greenspan, Md.; Bob Robinson, USC; Ronnie Collins, USC; Art Whisnant, USC.

TOURNAMENT MVP - Len a, Wake Forest (29.0 points, 9.3 rebounds)

1963RALEIGH, NC (FEB 28; MARCH 1-2)

QUARTERFINALS #3 North Carolina d. #6 South Carolina 93-76; #2 Wake Forest d. #7 Maryland 80-41; #1 Duke d. #8 Virginia 89-70; #5 NC State d. #4 Clemson 79-78.

SEMIFINALS Duke d. NC State 82-65; Wake Forest d. North Carolina 56-55.

FINALS Duke d. Wake Forest 68-57.

ALL-TOURNAMENT First Team: Art Heyman, Duke; Jeff Mullins, Duke; Dave Wiedeman, WF; Billy Cunningham, UNC; Ken Rohloff , NCS. Second Team: Jay Buckley, Duke; Larry Brown, UNC; Bob Woolalard, WF; Frank Christie, WF; Buzzy Harrison, Duke.

TOURNAMENT MVP - Art Heyman, Duke (21.3 points, 12.7 rebounds, 5.3 assists)

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1966RALEIGH, NC (MARCH 3-4-5)

QUARTERFINALS #6 South Carolina d. #3 Clemson 60-52; #2 NC State d. #7 Virginia 86-77; #1 Duke d. #8 Wake Forest 103-73; #4 North Carolina d. #5 Maryland 77-70.

SEMIFINALS Duke d. North Carolina 21-20; NC State d. South Carolina 75-62.

FINALS Duke d. NC State 71-66.

ALL-TOURNAMENT First Team: Eddie Biedenbach, NCS; Steve Vacendak, Duke; Tommy Mattocks, NCS; Bob Verga, Duke; Mike Lewis, Duke. Second Team: Skip Harlicka, USC; Larry Miller, UNC; Jack Marin, Duke; Bob Riedy, Duke; Bob Lewis,

EVERETT CASE AWARD Steve Vacendak, Duke (10.0 points, 2.0 rebounds)

1968CHARLOTTE, NC (MARCH 7-8-9)

QUARTERFINALS #3 NC State d. #6 Maryland 63-54; #2 Duke d. #7 Clemson 43-40; #1 North Carolina d. #8 Wake Forest 83-70; #4 South Carolina d. #5 Virginia 101-78.

SEMIFINALS North Carolina d. South Carolina 82-79 (OT); NC State d. Duke 12-10.

FINALS North Carolina d. NC State 87-50.

ALL-TOURNAMENT First Team: Larry Miller, UNC; Gary Gregor, USC; Dick Grubar, UNC; Jack Thompson, USC; Skip Harlicka, USC. Second Team: Charles Scott, UNC; Rusty Clark, UNC; Eddie Biedenbach, NCS; Vann Williford, NCS; Mike Lewis, Duke.

EVERETT CASE AWARD Larry Miller, North Carolina (25.3 points,; 8.3 rebounds)

1967GREENSBORO, NC (MARCH 9-10-11)

QUARTERFINALS #3 South Carolina d. #6 Maryland 57-54; #2 Duke #7 Virginia 99-78; #1 North Carolina d. #8 NC State 56-53; #5 Wake Forest d. #4 Clemson 63-61 (2ot).

SEMIFINALS North Carolina d. Wake Forest 89-79; Duke d. South Carolina 69-66.

FINALS North Carolina d. Duke 82-73.

ALL-TOURNAMENT First Team: Larry Miller, UNC; Bob Verga, Duke; Al Salvadori, USC; Bob Lewis, UNC; Paul Long, WF. Second Team: Mike Lewis, Duke; Rusty Clark, UNC; Jack Thompson, USC; Jerry Montgomery, WF; Randy Mahaff ey, Clem.; Dick Grubar, UNC.

TOURNAMENT MVP - Larry Miller, North Carolina (25.7 points, 8.3 rebounds)

1969CHARLOTTE, NC(MARCH 6-7-8)

QUARTERFINALS #3 Duke d. #6 Virginia 99-86; #2 South Carolina d. #7 Maryland 92-71; #1 North Carolina d. #8 Clemson 94-70; #5 Wake Forest d. #4 NC State 81-73.

SEMIFINALS North Carolina d. Wake Forest 80-72; Duke d. South Carolina 68-59.

FINALS North Carolina d. Duke 85-74.

ALL-TOURNAMENT First Team: Charles Scott, UNC; Charlie Davis, WF; Dick DeVenzio, Duke; Steve Vanderberg, Duke; John Roche, USC. Second Team: Jerry Montgomery, WF; Bill Bunting, UNC; Dave Golden, Duke; Dick Grubar, UNC; Vann Williford, NCS.

EVERETT CASE AWARD Charlie Scott, North Carolina (24.7 points; 5.7 rebounds)

1964RALEIGH, NC (MARCH 5-6-7)

QUARTERFINALS #3 Clemson d. #6 Maryland 81-67; #2 Wake Forest d. #7 Virginia 79-60; #1 Duke d. #8 NC State 75-44; #5 North Carolina d. #4 South Carolina 80-63.

SEMIFINALS Duke d. North Carolina 65-49; Wake Forest d. Clemson 86-64.

FINALS Duke d. Wake Forest 80-59.

ALL-TOURNAMENT First Team: Jeff Mullins, Duke; Jay Buckley, Duke; Bil-ly Cunningham, UNC; Frank Christie, WF; Bob Leonard, WF. Second Team: Hack Tison, Duke; Butch Hassell, WF; Ronny Watts, WF; Denny Ferguson, Duke; Nick Milasnovich, Clem.

TOURNAMENT MVP - Jeff Mullins, Duke (19.3 points, 6.7 rebounds)

1970CHARLOTTE, NC (MARCH 5-6-7)

QUARTERFINALS #1 South Carolina d. #8 Clemson 34-33; #7 Virginia d. #2 North Carolina 95-93; #3 NC State d. #6 Maryland 67-57; #5 Wake Forest d. #4 Duke 81-73.

SEMIFINALS South Carolina d. Wake Forest 79-63. NC State d. Virginia 67-66.

FINALS NC State d. South Carolina 42-39 (2 ot).

ALL-TOURNAMENT First Team: Vann Williford, NCS; Charlie Davis, WF; Tom Owens, USC; Chip Case, UVa; Tom Riker, USC. Second Team: Charles Scott, UNC; John Roche, USC; Bill Gerry, UVa; Ed Leftwich, NCS; Joe Dunning, NCS.EVERETT CASE AWARD Vann Williford, NC State (24.3 points; 9.3 rebounds)

1965RALEIGH, NC (MARCH 4-5-6)

QUARTERFINALS #3 Maryland d. #6 Clemson 61-50; #2 NC State d. #7 Virginia 106-69; #1 Duke d. #8 South Carolina 62-60; #5 Wake Forest d. #4 North Carolina 92-76.

SEMIFINALS Duke d. Wake Forest 101-81; NC State 76 d. Maryland 76-67.

FINALS NC State d. Duke 91-85.

ALL-TOURNAMENT First Team: Bob Leonard, WF; Larry Worsley, NCS; Bob Verga, Duke; Steve Vacendak, Duke; Larry Larkins, NCS. Second Team: Tommy Mattocks, NCS; Gary Ward, Md.; Ronny Watts, WF; Jay McMillen, Md.; Jack Marin, Duke.

EVERETT CASE AWARD Larry Worsley, NC State (19.0 points, 5.0 rebounds)

1971GREENSBORO, NC (MARCH 11-12-13)

QUARTERFINALS #1 North Carolina d. #8 Clemson 76-41; #2 South Carolina d. #7 Maryland 71-63; #6 NC State d. #3 Duke 68-61; #5 Virginia d. #4 Wake Forest 85-84.

SEMIFINALS North Carolina d. Virginia 78-68; South Carolina d. NC State 69-56.

FINALS South Carolina d. North Carolina 52-51.

ALL-TOURNAMENT First Team: Barry Parkhill, UVa; Tom Owens, USC; John Roche, USC; Lee Dedmon, UNC; Paul Coder, NCS. Second Team: Al Heartley, NCS; George Karl, UNC; Bill Chamberlain, UNC; Tom Riker, USC; Charlie Davis, WF.

EVERETT CASE AWARD John Roche, South Carolina & Lee Dedmon, North Carolina

YEAR BY YEAR RESULTS / 1 9 5 4 -2 0 1 0

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1973GREENSBORO, NC (MARCH 8-9-10)

QUARTERFINALS #1 NC State, bye; #7 Wake Forest d. #2 North Carolina 54-52 (OT); #3 Maryland d. #6 Clemson 77-61; #5 Virginia d. #4 Duke 59-55.

SEMIFINALS NC State d. Virginia 63-51; Maryland d. Wake Forest 73-65.

FINALS NC State d. Maryland 76-74.

ALL-TOURNAMENT First Team: Tommy Burleson, NCS; David Thompson, NCS; Tom McMillen, Md.; John Lucas, Md.; Eddie Payne, WF. Second Team: Bobby Jones, UNC; Jim O’Brien, Md.; Gus Gerard, UVa; Barry Parkhill, UVa; Tony Byers, WF.

EVERETT CASE AWARD Tom Burleson, NC State (14.0 points, 12.5 rebounds)

1972GREENSBORO, NC (MARCH 7-8-9)

QUARTERFINALS #1 North Carolina, bye; #2 Maryland 54 d. #7 Clemson 54-52; #3 Virginia d. #6 Wake Forest 74-65; #4 Duke d. #5 NC State 73-60.

SEMIFINALS North Carolina d. Duke 63-48; Maryland d. Virginia 62-57.

FINALS North Carolina d. Maryland 73-64.

ALL-TOURNAMENT First Team: Barry Parkhill, UVa; Dennis Wuycik, UNC; Robert McAdoo, UNC; George Karl, UNC; Tom McMillen, Md. Second Team: Jim O’Brien, Md.; Scott Mc-Candlish, UVa; Gary Melchionni, Duke; Len Elmore, Md.; Steve Previs, UNC.

EVERETT CASE AWARD Bob McAdoo, North Carolina (15.0 points; 7.5 rebounds)

1974GREENSBORO, NC (MARCH 7-8-9)

QUARTERFINALS #1 NC State, bye; #2 Maryland d. #7 Duke 85-66; #3 North Carolina d. #6 Wake Forest 76-62; #4 Virginia d. #5 Clemson 68-63.

SEMIFINALS NC State d. Virginia 87-66; Maryland d. North Carolina 105-85.

FINALS NC State d. Maryland 103-100 (OT).

ALL-TOURNAMENT First Team:David Thompson, NCS; Tommy Burleson, NCS; Tom McMillen, Md.; John Lucas, Md.; Maurice Howard, Md. Second Team: Len Elmore, Md.; Owen Brown, Md.; Gus Gerard, UVa; Monte Towe, NCS; Billy Langloh, UVa.

EVERETT CASE AWARD Tom Burleson, NC State (26.5 points, 12.0 rebounds)

1975GREENSBORO, NC (MARCH 6-7-8)

QUARTERFINALS #1 Maryland, bye; #2 North Carolina d. #7 Wake Forest 101-100 (OT); #3 Clemson d. #6 Duke 78-76; #4 NC State d. #5 Virginia 91-85.

SEMIFINALS NC State d. Maryland 87-85; North Carolina d. Clemson 76-71 (OT).

FINALS North Carolina d. NC State 70-66.

ALL-TOURNAMENT First Team: David Thompson, NCS; Mitch Kupchak, UNC; Kenny Carr, NCS; Phil Ford, UNC; Skip Wise, Clem. Second Team: John Lucas, Md.; Wally Walker, UVa; Walter Davis, UNC; Skip Brown, WF; Monte Towe, NCS.

EVERETT CASE AWARD Phil Ford, North Carolina (26.0 points, 3.3 assists)

1976LANDOVER, MD (MARCH 4-5-6)

QUARTERFINALS #1 North Carolina, bye; #2 Maryland d. #7 Duke 80-78 (OT); #6 Virginia d. #3 NC State 75-63; #4 Clemson d. #5 Wake Forest 76-63.

SEMIFINALS North Carolina d. Clemson 82-74; Virginia d. Maryland 73-65.

FINALS Virginia d. North Carolina 67-62.

ALL-TOURNAMENT First Team: Wally Walker, UVa; Billy Langloh, UVa; Marc Iavaroni, UVa; Mitch Kupchak, UNC; Tate Armstrong, Duke; Phil Ford, UNC. Second Team: Maurice Howard, Md.; Steve Sheppard, Md.; Bobby Stokes, UVa; Stan Rome, Clem.; Walter Davis, UNC.

EVERETT CASE AWARD Wally Walker, Virginia (24.3 points, 7.0 rebounds)

1978GREENSBORO, NC (MARCH 1-2, 4)

QUARTERFINALS #1 North Carolina, bye; #2 Duke d. #7 Clemson 83-72; #6 Maryland d. #3 NC State 109-108 (3ot); #5 Wake Forest d. #4 72-61.

SEMIFINALS Duke d. Maryland 81-69; Wake Forest d. North Carolina 82-77.

FINALS Duke d. Wake Forest 85-77.

ALL-TOURNAMENT First Team: Mike Gminski, Duke; Leroy McDonald, WF; Rod Griffi n, WF; Jim Spanarkel, Duke; Gene Banks, Duke. Second Team: Phil Ford, UNC; Frank Johnson, WF; Kenny Dennard, Duke; Lawrence Boston, Md.; Larry Gibson, Md.

EVERETT CASE AWARD Jim Spanarkel, Duke (17.7 points, 4.3 rebounds)

1977GREENSBORO, NC (MARCH 3-4-5)

QUARTERFINALS #1 North Carolina, bye; #7 Virginia d. #2 Wake Forest 59-57; #3 Clemson d. #6 Duke 82-74; #5 NC State d. #4 Maryland 82-72.

SEMIFINALS North Carolina d. NC State 70-56; Virginia d. Clemson 72-60.

FINALS North Carolina d. Virginia 75-69.

ALL-TOURNAMENT First Team: Phil Ford, UNC; Mike O’Koren, UNC; Bobby Stokes, UVa; Marc Iavaroni, UVa; John Kuester, UNC; Kenny Carr, NCS. Second Team: Steve Castellan, UVa; Billy Langloh, UVa; Walter Davis, UNC; Jim Spanarkel, Duke; Mike Gminski, Duke.

EVERETT CASE AWARD John Kuester, North Carolina (13.5 points, 4.0 assists)

1979GREENSBORO, NC (MARCH 1-2-3)

QUARTERFINALS #1 North Carolina, bye; #2 Duke d. #7 Wake Forest 58-56; #6 NC State d. #3 Virginia 82-78; #4 Maryland d. #5 Clemson 75-67.

SEMIFINALS North Carolina d. Mary-land 102-79; Duke d. NC State 62-59.

FINALS North Carolina d. Duke 71-63.

ALL-TOURNAMENT First Team: Jim Spanarkel, Duke; Mike O’Koren, UNC; Dudley Bradley, UNC; Mike Gminski, Duke; Dave Colescott, UNC. Second Team: Charles Whitney, NCS; Al Wood, UNC; Larry Gibson, Md.; Jeff Lamp, UVa; Clyde Austin, NCS.

EVERETT CASE AWARD Dudley Bradley, North Carolina (12.5 points, 4.0 rebounds)

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1986GREENSBORO, NC (MARCH 7-8-9)

QUARTERFINALS #1 Duke d. #8 Wake Forest 68-60; #5 Virginia d. #4 NC State 64-62; #2 Georgia Tech d. #7 Clemson 79-61; #6 Maryland d. #3 North Carolina 85-75.

SEMIFINALS Duke d. Virginia 75-70; Georgia Tech d. Maryland 64-62.

FINALS Duke d. Georgia Tech 68-67.

ALL-TOURNAMENT First Team: Johnny Dawkins, Duke; Duane Ferrell, GT; Len Bias, Md.; Mark Alarie, Duke; David Henderson, Duke. Second Team: John Salley, GT; Mark Price, GT; Tom Ham-monds, GT; Tom Sheehey, UVa; Olden Polynice, UVa.

EVERETT CASE AWARD Johnny Dawkins, Duke (20.0 points, 4.7 rebounds, 4.3 assists)

1981LANDOVER, MD. (MARCH 5-6-7)

QUARTERFINALS #3 Wake Forest d. #6 Clemson 80-71; #1 Virginia d. #8 Georgia Tech 76-47; #2 North Carolina d. #7 NC State 69-54; #4 Maryland d. #5 Duke 56-53.

SEMIFINALS Maryland d. Virginia 85-62; North Carolina d. Wake Forest 58-57.

FINALS North Carolina d. Maryland 61-60.

ALL-TOURNAMENT First Team:Sam Perkins, UNC; Frank Johnson, WF; Albert King, Md.; James Worthy, UNC; Buck Williams, Md. Second Team: Ernest Graham, Md.; Jeff Lamp, UVa; Al Wood, UNC; Larry Nance, Clem.; Jimmy Black, UNC.

EVERETT CASE AWARD Sam Perkins, North Carolina (17.7 points; 8.3 rebounds)

1983ATLANTA, GA (MARCH 11-12-13)

QUARTERFINALS #1 North Carolina d. #8 Clemson 105-79; #4 NC State d. #5 Wake Forest 71-70; #2 Virginia d. #7 Duke 109-66; #6 Georgia Tech d. #3 Maryland 64-58 (OT).

SEMIFINALS NC State d. North Caro-lina 91-84 (OT); Virginia d. Georgia Tech 96-67.

FINALS NC State d. Virginia 81-78.

ALL-TOURNAMENT First Team: Thurl Bailey, NCS; Ralph Sampson, UVa; Sidney Lowe, NCS; Othell Wilson, UVa; Dereck Whittenburg, NCS. Second Team: Mark Price, GT; Michael Jordan, UNC; Matt Doherty, UNC; Lorenzo Charles, NCS; Sam Perkins, UNC.

EVERETT CASE AWARD Sidney Lowe, NC State (18.3 points; 4.3 assists)

1987LANDOVER, MD (MARCH 6-7-8)

QUARTERFINALS #1 North Carolina d. #8 Maryland 82-63; #4 Virginia d. #5 Georgia Tech 55-54; #7 Wake Forest d. #2 Clemson 69-62; #6 NC State d. #3 Duke 71-64 (OT).

SEMIFINALS North Carolina d. Vir-ginia 84-82 (2ot); NC State d. Wake Forest 77-73 (2ot)

FINALS NC State d. North Carolina 68-67.

ALL-TOURNAMENT First Team: Tyrone Bogues, WF; Vinny Del Negro, NCS; Andrew Kennedy, UVa; Jeff Lebo, UNC; Joe Wolf, UNC. Second Team: Bennie Bolton, NCS; Chucky Brown, NCS; J.R. Reid, UNC; Charles Shackl-eford, NCS; Kenny Smith, UNC.

EVERETT CASE AWARD Vinny Del Negro, NC State (14.0 points, 7.7 rebounds)

1982GREENSBORO, NC (MARCH 5-6-7)

QUARTERFINALS #1 North Carolina d. #8 Georgia Tech 55-39; #4 NC State d. #5 Maryland 40-28; #2 Virginia d. #7 Clemson 56-54; #3 Wake Forest d. #6 Duke 88-53.

SEMIFINALS North Carolina d. NC State 58-46; Virginia d. Wake Forest 51-49 (OT).

FINALS North Carolina d. Virginia 47-45.

ALL-TOURNAMENT First Team:James Worthy, UNC; Ralph Sampson, UVa; Michael Jordan, UNC; Sam Perkins, UNC; Mike Helms, WF. Second Team: Vince Hamilton, Clem.; Ricky Stokes, UVa; Jim Johnstone, WF; Dereck Whittenburg, NCS; Matt Doherty, UNC.

EVERETT CASE AWARD James Worthy, North Carolina (13.3 points; 8.7 rebounds)

1984GREENSBORO, NC (MARCH 9-10-11)

QUARTERFINALS #1 North Carolina d. #8 Clemson 78-66; #4 Duke d. #5 Georgia Tech 67-63 (OT); #2 Maryland d. #7 NC State 69-63; #3 Wake Forest d. #6 Virginia 63-51.

SEMIFINALS Duke d. North Carolina 77-75; Maryland d. Wake Forest 66-64.

FINALS Maryland d. Duke 74-62.

ALL-TOURNAMENT First Team: Len Bias, Md.; Mark Alarie, Duke; Johnny Dawkins, Duke; Matt Doherty, UNC; Ben Coleman, Md. Second Team: Adrian Branch, Md.; Michael Jordan, UNC; Murray Jarman, Clem.; Anthony Teachey, WF; Mark Price, GT.

EVERETT CASE AWARD Len Bias, Maryland (18.7 points, 6.0 rebounds)

1980GREENSBORO, NC (FEB 28-29, MARCH 1)

QUARTERFINALS #2 North Carolina d. #7 Wake Forest 75-62; #1 Maryland d. #8 Georgia Tech 51-49 (OT); #6 Duke d. #3 NC State 68-62; #4 Clemson d. #5 Virginia 57-49.

SEMIFINALS Maryland d. Clemson 91-85; Duke d. North Carolina 75-61.

FINALS Duke d. Maryland 73-72.

ALL-TOURNAMENT First Team: Albert King, Md.; Gene Banks, Duke; Mike Gminski, Duke; Al Wood, UNC; Greg Manning, Md. Second Team: Vince Taylor, Duke; Billy Williams, Clem.; Brook Steppe, GT; Buck Williams, Md.; Ernest Graham, Md.

EVERETT CASE AWARD Albert King, Maryland (27.0 points; 6.3 rebounds)

1985ATLANTA, GA (MARCH 8-9-10)

QUARTERFINALS #1 Georgia Tech d. #8 Virginia 55-48; #4 Duke d. #5 Maryland 86-73; #2 North Carolina d. #7 Wake Forest 72-61 (OT); #3 NC State d. #6 Clemson 70-63.

SEMIFINALS Georgia Tech d. Duke 75-64; North Carolina d. NC State 57-51.

FINALS Georgia Tech d. North Carolina 57-54.

ALL-TOURNAMENT First Team:Mark Price, GT; Brad Daugherty, UNC; Bruce Dalrymple, GT; Kenny Smith, UNC; Johnny Dawkins, Duke. Second Team: John Salley, GT; Anthony “Spud” Webb, NCS; Jay Bilas, Duke; Delaney Rudd, WF; Yvon Joseph, GT.

EVERETT CASE AWARD Mark Price, Georgia Tech (16.7 points, 5.3 assists)

YEAR BY YEAR RESULTS / 1 9 5 4 -2 0 1 0

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2011 ACC BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT 119

1988GREENSBORO, NC (MARCH 11-12-13)

QUARTERFINALS #1 North Carolina d. #8 Wake Forest 83-62; #5 Maryland d. #4 Georgia Tech 84-67; #2 NC State d. #7 Clemson 79-77; #3 Duke d. #6 Virginia 60-48.

SEMIFINALS North Carolina d. Mary-land 74-64; Duke d. NC State 73-71.

FINALS Duke d. North Carolina 65-61.

ALL-TOURNAMENT First Team: Danny Ferry, Duke; J.R. Reid, UNC; Robert Brickey, Duke; Scott Williams, UNC; Charles Shackleford, NCS. Second Team: Jeff Lebo, UNC; Quinn Snyder, Duke; Keith Gatlin, Md.; Vinny Del Negro, NCS; Rodney Monroe, NCS.

EVERETT CASE AWARD Danny Ferry, Duke (18.0 points, 8.0 rebounds)

1989ATLANTA, GA (MARCH 10-11-12)

QUARTERFINALS #8 Maryland d. #1 NC State 71-49; #4 North Carolina d. #5 Georgia Tech 77-62; #2 Duke d. #7 Wake Forest 88-64; #3 Virginia d. #6 Clemson 90-73.

SEMIFINALS North Carolina d. Mary-land 88-58; Duke d. Virginia 69-58.

FINALS North Carolina d. Duke 77-74.

ALL-TOURNAMENT First Team:Danny Ferry, Duke; J.R. Reid, UNC; Jeff Lebo, UNC; Tony Massenburg, Md.; Phil Henderson, Duke. Second Team: Rick Fox, UNC; Steve Bucknall, UNC; Christian Laettner, Duke; Chris King, WF; Bryant Stith, UVa.

EVERETT CASE AWARD J.R. Reid, North Carolina (16.0 points, 8.0 rebounds)

1990CHARLOTTE, NC(MARCH 9-10-11)

QUARTERFINALS #1 Clemson d. #8 Wake Forest 79-70; #5 Virginia d. #4 North Carolina 92-85 (OT); #2 Duke d. #7 Maryland 104-84; #3 Georgia Tech d. #6 NC State 76-67.

SEMIFINALS Virginia d. Clemson 69-66; Georgia Tech d. Duke 83-72.

FINALS Georgia Tech d. Virginia 70-61.

ALL-TOURNAMENT First Team: Dennis Scott, GT; Bryant Stith, UVa; Brian Oliver, GT; Kenny Anderson, GT; Phil Henderson, Duke. Second Team: An-thony Oliver, UVa; Christian Laettner, Duke; Kenny Turner, UVa; Dale Davis, Clem.; John Crotty, UVa.

TOURNAMENT MVP - Brain Oliver, Georgia Tech (23.3 points, 5.0 rebounds)

1991CHARLOTTE, NC (MARCH 8-9-10)

QUARTERFINALS #1 Duke bye; #4 NC State d. #5 Georgia Tech 82-68; #2 North Carolina d. #7 Clemson 67-59; #6 Virginia d. #3 Wake Forest 70-66.

SEMIFINALS Duke d. NC State 93-72; North Carolina d. Virginia 76-71.

FINALS North Carolina d. Duke 96-74.

ALL-TOURNAMENT First Team: Chris-tian Laettner, Duke; Rick Fox, UNC; John Crotty, UVa; Hubert Davis, UNC; Rodney Monroe, NCS. Second Team: Pete Chilcutt, UNC; King Rice, UNC; Greg Koubek, Duke; Chris Corchiani, NCS; Grant Hill, Duke.

TOURNAMENT MVP - Rick Fox, North Carolina (17.3 points, 9.0 rebounds)

1992CHARLOTTE, NC (MARCH 12-13-14-15)

FIRST ROUND #8 Maryland d. #9 Clemson 81-75.

QUARTERFINALS #4 Georgia Tech d. #5 Virginia 68-56; #1 Duke d. #8 Maryland 94-87; #2 Florida State d. #7 NC State 93-80; #3 North Carolina d. #6 Wake Forest 80-65.

SEMIFINALS Duke d. Georgia Tech 89-76; North Carolina d. Florida State 80-76.

FINALS Duke d. North Carolina 94-74.

ALL-TOURNAMENT First Team: Chris-tian Laettner, Duke; Hubert Davis, UNC; Bobby Hurley, Duke; George Lynch, UNC; Brian Davis, Duke. Sec-ond Team: Walt Williams, Md.; Grant Hill, Duke; Rodney Rogers, WF; Charlie Ward, FSU; Malcolm Mackey, GT.

EVERETT CASE AWARD Christian Laettner, Duke (24.3 points, 10.3 rebounds)

1993CHARLOTTE, NC (MARCH 11-12-13-14)

FIRST ROUND #8 Maryland d. #9 NC State 76-55.

QUARTERFINALS #7 Clemson d. #2 Florida State 87-75; #6 Georgia Tech d. #3 Duke 69-66; #5 Virginia d. #4 Wake Forest 61-57; #1 North Carolina d. #8 Maryland 102-66.

SEMIFINALS North Carolina d. Virginia 74-56; Georgia Tech d. Clemson 69-61.

FINALS Georgia Tech d. North Carolina 77-75.

ALL-TOURNAMENT First Team: James Forrest, GT; Eric Montross, UNC; Brian Reese, UNC; Drew Barry, GT; Cory Alexander, UVa. Second Team: Chris Whitney, Clem.; Sharone Wright, Clem.; Travis Best, GT; George Lynch, UNC; Donald Williams, UNC.

EVERETT CASE AWARD James Forrest, GT (26.7 points, 8.7 rebounds)

1994CHARLOTTE, NC (MARCH 10-11-12-13)

FIRST ROUND #8 Clemson d. #9 NC State 76-63

QUARTERFINALS #4 Virginia d. #5 Maryland 69-63; #1 Duke d. #8 Clemson 77-64; #2 North Carolina d. #7 Florida State 83-69; #3 Wake Forest d. #6 Georgia Tech 74-49.

SEMIFINALS Virginia d. Duke 66-61; North Carolina d. Wake Forest 86-84.

FINALS North Carolina d. Virginia 73-66

ALL-TOURNAMENT First Team: Jerry Stackhouse, UNC; Harold Deane, UVa; Derrick Phelps, UNC; Jamal Robinson, UVa; Randolph Childress, WF. Second Team: Grant Hill, Duke; Rasheed Wallace, UNC; Trelonnie Owens, WF; Cherokee Parks, Duke; Eric Montross, UNC.

EVERETT CASE AWARD Jerry Stackhouse, North Carolina (15.7 points, 6.7 rebounds)

1995CHARLOTTE, NC (MARCH 9-10-11-12)

FIRST ROUND #9 Duke d. #8 NC State 83-70.QUARTERFINALS #4 Virginia d. #5 Georgia Tech 77-67; #1 Wake Forest d. #9 Duke 87-70; #2 North Carolina d. #7 Clemson 78-62; #3 Maryland d. #6 Florida State 71-64.

SEMIFINALS Wake Forest d. Virginia77-68; North Carolina d. Maryland 97-92 (OT).

FINALS Wake Forest d. North Carolina 82-80 (OT).

ALL-TOURNAMENT First Team: Randolph Childress, WF; Tim Duncan, WF; Jerry Stackhouse, UNC; Rasheed Wallace, UNC; Junior Burrough, UVa. Second Team: Joe Smith, Md.; Donald Williams, UNC; Exree Hipp, Md.; Dante Calabria, UNC; Jeff McInnis, UNC.

EVERETT CASE AWARD Randolph Childress, Wake Forest (35.7 points, 7.0 assists)

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120 theACC.com

1996GREENSBORO, NC (MARCH 7-8-9-10)

FIRST ROUND FIRST ROUND #9 NC State d. #8 Florida State 80-65

QUARTERFINALS #5 Maryland d. #4 Duke 82-69; #1 Georgia Tech d. #9 NC State 88-73; #2 Wake Forest d. #7 Virginia 70-60; #6 Clemson d. #3 North Carolina 75-73.

SEMIFINALS Georgia Tech d. Mary-land 84-79; Wake Forest d. Clemson 68-60.

FINALS Wake Forest d. Georgia Tech 75-74.

ALL-TOURNAMENT First Team: Tim Duncan, WF; Tony Rutland, WF; Matt Harpring, GT; Stephon Marbury, GT; Greg Buckner, Clem. Second Team: no second team chosen

EVERETT CASE AWARD Tim Duncan, Wake Forest (22.7 points, 18.7 rebounds)

2001ATLANTA, GA (MARCH 8-9-10-11)

FIRST ROUND #9 Clemson d. #8 Florida State 66-64.

QUARTERFINALS #1 N. Carolina d. #9 Clemson 99-81; #5 Georgia Tech d. #4 Virginia 74-69; #2 Duke d. #7 NC State 76-61; #3 Maryland d. #6 Wake Forest 71-53.

SEMIFINALS North Carolina d. Georgia Tech 70-63; Duke d. Maryland 84-82.

FINALS Duke d. North Carolina 79-53.

ALL-TOURNAMENT First Team: Shane Battier, Duke; Jason Williams, Duke; Joseph Forte, UNC; Mike Dunleavy, Duke; Juan Dixon, Md. Second Team: Brendan Haywood, UNC; Lonny Bax-ter, Md.; Alvin Jones, GT; Nate James, Duke; Jason Capel, UNC

EVERETT CASE AWARD Shane Battier, Duke (18.7 points; 8.3 rebounds)

1998GREENSBORO, NC (MARCH 5-6-7-8)

FIRST ROUND #8 NC State d. #7 Florida State 65-63; #1 Duke d. #9 Virginia 63-41.QUARTERFINALS #5 Clemson d. #4 Wake Forest 75-56; #2 North Carolina d. #8 NC State 73-46; #3 Maryland d. #6 Georgia Tech 83-65.

SEMIFINALS North Carolina d. Maryland 83-73 OT; Duke d. Clemson 66-64,

FINALS North Carolina d. Duke 83-68.

ALL-TOURNAMENT First Team: Shammond Williams, UNC; Antawn Jamison, UNC; Roshown McLeod, Duke; Trajan Langdon, Duke; Terrell McIntyre, Clem. Second Team: Chris Carrawell, Duke; Ademola Okulaja, UNC; Vince Carter, UNC; Ed Cota, UNC; Rodney Elliott, Md.

EVERETT CASE AWARD Antawn Jamison, North Carolina (20.7 points, 11.3 rebounds)

2003GREENSBORO, NC (MARCH 13-14-15-16)

FIRST ROUND #9 Florida State d. #8 Clemson 72-61

QUARTERFINALS #1 Wake Forest d. #9 Florida State 69-61; #4 NC State d. #5 Georgia Tech 71-65; #7 North Carolina d. #2 Maryland 84-72; #3 Duke d. #6 Virginia 83-76.

SEMIFINALS NC State d. Wake Forest 87-83; Duke d. North Carolina 75-63.

FINALS Duke d. NC State 84-77.

ALL-TOURNAMENT First Team:Daniel Ewing, Duke; Marcus Melvin, NCS; Josh Powell, NCS; Julius Hodge, NCS; Raymond Felton, UNC. Second Team: J.J. Redick, Duke; Jawad Williams, UNC; Scooter Sherrill, NCS; Josh Howard, WF; Dahntay Jones, Duke.

EVERETT CASE AWARD Daniel Ewing, Duke (20.7 points; 3.0 rebounds).

1997GREENSBORO, NC (MARCH 6-7-8-9)

FIRST ROUND #8 NC State d. #9 Georgia Tech 60-46.

QUARTERFINALS #5 Maryland d. #4 Clemson 76-61; #8 NC State d. #1 Duke 66-60; #2 Wake Forest d. Florida State 66-65; #3 North Carolina d. #6 Virginia 78-68.

SEMIFINALS NC State d. Maryland 65-58; North Carolina d. Wake Forest 86-73.

FINALS North Carolina d. NC State 64-54.

ALL-TOURNAMENT First Team: Sham-mond Williams, UNC; Justin Gainey, NCS; Antawn Jamison, UNC; C.C. Har-rison, NCS; Tim Duncan, WF. Second Team: Keith Booth, Md.; Jeremy Hyatt, NCS; Ed Cota, UNC; Serge Zwikker, UNC; Danny Strong, NCS.

EVERETT CASE AWARD Shammond Williams, North Carolina (20.0 points, 5.0 assists)

2002CHARLOTTE, NC (MARCH 7-8-9-10)

FIRST ROUND #9 Florida State d. #8 Clemson 91-84.

QUARTERFINALS #1 Maryland d. #9 Florida State 85-59; #4 NC State d. #5 Virginia 92-72; #2 Duke d. #7 North Carolina 60-48; #3 Wake For-est d. #6 Georgia Tech 92-83.

SEMIFINALS NC State d. Maryland 82-86; Duke d. Wake Forest 79-64.

FINALS Duke d. NC State 91-61.

ALL-TOURNAMENT First Team: Carlos Boozer, Duke; Jason Williams, Duke; Anthony Grundy, NCS; Mike Dunleavy, Duke; Archie Miller, NCS. Second Team: Steve Blake, Md.; Julius Hodge, NCS; Darius Songaila, WF; Chris Duhon, Duke; Marcus Melvin, NCS.

EVERETT CASE AWARD Carlos Boozer, Duke (18.0 points,; 9.3 rebounds)

1999 CHARLOTTE, NC (MARCH 4-5-6-7)

FIRST ROUND #8 Florida State d. #7 Clemson 87-85 (OT); #1 Duke d. #9 Virginia 104-67.

QUARTERFINALS #5 NC State d. #4 Wake Forest 66-52; #2 Maryland d. #8 Florida State 93-69; #3 North Carolina d. #6 Georgia Tech 78-49.

SEMIFINALS Duke d. NC State 83-68; North Carolina d. Maryland 86-79.

FINALS Duke d. North Carolina 96-73

ALL-TOURNAMENT First Team:William Avery, Duke; Max Owens, UNC; Steve Francis, Md.; Ademola Okulaja, UNC; Elton Brand, Duke. Second Team: Corey Maggette, Duke; Shane Battier, Duke; Ed Cota, UNC; Anthony Grundy, NCS; Kris Lang, UNC.

EVERETT CASE AWARD Elton Brand, Duke (19.3 points, 10.3 rebounds)

YEAR BY YEAR RESULTS / 1 9 5 4 -2 0 1 0

2000CHARLOTTE, NC (MARCH 9-10-11-12)

FIRST ROUND #7 Florida State d. #8 Georgia Tech 63-62; #1 Duke d. #9 Clemson 94-63.

QUARTERFINALS #Wake Forest d. #4 North Carolina 58-52; #2 Maryland d. #7 Florida State 82-61; #6 NC State d. #3 Virginia 76-65.

SEMIFINALS Duke d. Wake Forest 82-73; Maryland d. NC State 64-61.

FINALS Duke d. Maryland 81-68.

ALL-TOURNAMENT First Team: Jason Williams, Duke; Juan Dixon, Md.; Shane Battier, Duke; Lonny Baxter, Md.; Chris Carrawell, Duke. Second Team: Terence Morris, Md.; Carlos Boozer, Duke; Mike Dunleavy, Duke; Damien Wilkins, NCS; Nate James, Duke.

EVERETT CASE AWARD Jason Williams, Duke (17.7 points; 9.0 assists)

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2011 ACC BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT 121

2006GREENSBORO, NC (MARCH 9-10-11-12)

FIRST ROUND #8 Miami d. #9 Clemson 66-63; #12 Wake Forest d. #5 Florida State 78-66; #7 Virginia d. #10 Virginia Tech 60-56; #6 Mary-land d. #11 Georgia Tech 82-64.

QUARTERFINALS #1 Duke d. #8 Miami 80-76; #12 Wake Forest d. #4 NC State 82-71; #2 North Carolina 79 d. #7 Virginia 79-67; #3 Boston College d. #6 Maryland 80-66.

SEMIFINALS Duke d. Wake Forest 78-66; Boston College d. North Carolina 85-82.

FINALS Duke d. Boston College 78-76.

ALL-TOURNAMENT First Team: .J. Redick, Duke; Craig Smith, BC; Jared Dudley, BC; Shelden Williams, Duke; Tyler Hansbrough, UNC. Second Team: Greg Paulus, Duke; Louis Hinnant, BC; Josh McRoberts, Duke; Reyshawn Terry, UNC; Eric Williams, WF.

EVERETT CASE AWARD J.J. Redick, Duke (23.7 points; 2.0 assists)

2008CHARLOTTE, NC(MARCH 13-14-15-16)

FIRST ROUND #9 Florida State d. #8 Wake Forest 70-60; #5 Miami d. #12 NC State 63-50; #7 Georgia Tech d. #10 Virginia 94-76; #11 Boston College d. #6 Maryland 71-68.

QUARTERFINALS #1 N. Carolina d. #9 Florida State 82-70; #4 Virginia Tech d. #5 Miami 63-49; #2 Duke d. #7 Georgia Tech 82-70; #3 Clemson d. #11 Boston College 82-48.

SEMIFINALS North Carolina d. Virginia Tech 68-66; Clemson d. Duke 78-74.

FINALS North Carolina d. Clemson 86-81.

ALL-TOURNAMENT First Team: Tyler Hansbrough, UNC; Wayne Ellington, UNC; Marcus Ginyard, UNC; K.C. Rivers, Clem.; Trevor Booker, Clem. Second Team: James Mays, Clem.; Cliff Hammonds, Clem.; DeMarcus Nelson, Duke; Malcolm Delaney, VT; A.D. Vassallo, VT.

EVERETT CASE AWARD Tyler Hansbrough, North Carolina (22.8 points; 8.7 rebounds)

2007TAMPA, FLA (MARCH 8-9-10-11)

FIRST ROUND #9 Florida State d. #8 Clemson 67-66; #12 Miami d. #5 Maryland 67-62; #10 NC State d. #7 Duke 85-80 ot; #11 Wake Forest d. #6 Georgia Tech 114-112 2ot.

QUARTERFINALS #1 N. Carolina d. #9 Florida State 73-58; #4 Boston College d. #12 Miami 74-71 ot; #10 NC State d. #2 Virginia 79-71; #3 Virginia Tech d. #11 Wake Forest 71-52.

SEMIFINALS North Carolina d. Boston College 71-56; NC State d. Virginia Tech 72-64.

FINALS North Carolina d. NC State 89-80.

ALL-TOURNAMENT First Team: Bran-dan Wright, UNC; Wayne Ellington, UNC; Ty Lawson, UNC; Brandon Costner, NCS; Gavin Grant, NCS. Second Team: Courtney Fells, NCS; Ben McCauley, NCS; Engin Atsur, NCS; Al Thornton, FSU; Tyrese Rice, BC.

EVERETT CASE AWARD Brandan Wright, North Carolina (15.7 points; 3.7 rebounds)

2009ATLANTA, GA (MARCH 12-13-14-15)

FIRST ROUND #8 Virginia Tech d. #9 Miami 65-47; #12 Georgia Tech d. #5 Clemson 86-81; #7 Maryland d. #10 NC State 74-69; #6 Boston College d. #11 Virginia 76-63.

QUARTERFINALS #1 N. Carolina d. #8 Virginia Tech 79-76; #4 Florida State d. #12 Georgia Tech 64-62; #7 Maryland d. #2 Wake Forest 75-64; #3 Duke d. #6 Boston College 66-65.

SEMIFINALS Florida State d. North Carolina 73-70; Duke d. Maryland 67-61.

FINALS Duke d. Florida State 79-69.

ALL-TOURNAMENT First Team: Toney Douglas, FSU; Jon Scheyer, Duke; Kyle Singler, Duke; Tyler Hansbrough, UNC; Gerald Henderson, Duke. Second Team: Greivis Vasquez, Md.;Lewis Clinch, GT; Wayne Ellington, UNC; Solomon Alabi, FSU; Eric Hayes, Md.

EVERETT CASE AWARD Jon Scheyer, Duke (21.7 points; 4.0 rebounds)

2004GREENSBORO, NC (MARCH 11-12-13-14)

FIRST ROUND #8 Virginia d. #9 Clemson 83-79.

QUARTERFINALS #1 Duke d. #8 Virginia 84-74; #4 Georgia Tech d. #5 North Carolina 83-82; #2 NC State d. #7 Florida State 78-71; #6 Maryland d. #3 Wake Forest 87-86.

SEMIFINALS Duke d. Georgia Tech 85-71; Maryland d. NC State 85-82.

FINALS Maryland d. Duke 95-87 ot.

ALL-TOURNAMENT First Team: John Gilchrist, Md.; Shelden Williams, Duke; Chris Duhon, Duke; Jamar Smith, Md.; Daniel Ewing, Duke. Second Team: Julius Hodge, NCS; Luol Deng, Duke; Travis Garrison, Md.; B.J. Elder, GT; Chris Paul, WF.

EVERETT CASE AWARD John Gilchrist, Maryland (24.0 points, 6.3 assists)

2010GREENSBORO, NC (MARCH 11-12-13-14)

FIRST ROUND #9 Virginia d. #8 Boston College 68-62; #12 Miami d. #5 Wake Forest 83-62; #7 Georgia Tech d. #10 North Carolina 62-58; #11 NC State d. #6 Clemson 59-57.

QUARTERFINALS #1 Duke d. #9 Vir-ginia 57-46; #12 Miami d. #4 Virgivnia Tech 70-65; #7 Georgia Tech d. #2 Maryland 69-64; #11 NC State d. #3 Florida State 58-52.

SEMIFINALS #1 Duke d. #12 Miami 77-74; #7 Georgia Tech d. #11 NC State 57-54.

FINALS #1 Duke d. #7 Georgia Tech 65-61.

ALL-TOURNAMENT First Team: Kyle Singler, Duke; Nolan Smith, Duke; Jon Scheyer, Duke; Derrick Favors, GT; Durand Scott, Miami. Second Team:

Gani Lawal, GT; Iman Shumpert, GT; Reggie Johnson, Miami; Tracy Smith, NCS; Scott Wood, NCS.

EVERETT CASE AWARD Kyle Singler, Duke (21.7 points, 8.3 rebounds)

2005WASHINGTON, D.C. (MARCH 10-11-12-13)

FIRST ROUND #9 Clemson d. #8 Maryland 84-72; #7 NC State d. #10 Florida State 70-54; #11 Virginia d. #6 Miami 66-65.

QUARTERFINALS #1 North Carolina d. #9 Clemson 88-81; #5 Georgia Tech d. #4 Virginia Tech 73-54; #7 NC State d. #2 Wake Forest 81-65; #3 Duke d. #11 Virginia 76-64.

SEMIFINALS Georgia Tech d. North Carolina 78-75; Duke d. NC State 76-69.

FINALS Duke d. Georgia Tech 69-64.

ALL-TOURNAMENT First Team: J.J. Redick, Duke; Shelden Williams, Duke; Daniel Ewing, Duke; Will Bynum, GT; Raymond Felton, UNC Second Team: Jarrett Jack, GT; Elian Evtimov, NCS; Julius Hodge, NCS; Shawan Robinson, Clem.; J.R. Reynolds, UVa.

EVERETT CASE AWARD J.J. Redick, Duke (25.3 points; 4.3 rebounds)

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Page 127: 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Program

CONTRACTORS BUILDING FOR THE FUTURE OF DUKE

Boiler Masters Inc.HVAC / ENERGY CONTRACTORS

314 Village Green Dr.Greensboro, NC 27406

115 Atrium Way, Suite 123Columbia, SC 29223

Email: [email protected]

Toll Free: 1-888-272-9044

Steam Boilers, Hot-Water Boilers & Much MoreGCJ Construction

Residential and Commercial Plastering Contractor

Specializing in “EIFS”

Certified Installer by DRYVIT and STO

(Design assistance available)

Experienced: Kal-Kote, Patching, and Damage Repair

Fully Insured Free Estimates

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ALANIS PAINTING CO., INCJaime A. Alanis

Fully InsuredLicensed

919-225-2936Free Estimates

Residential / CommercialInterior / Exterior

CONTRACTORS BUILDING FOR THE FUTURE OF DUKE

DAVIDSON AND JONES CONSTRUCTION COMPANY1207 Front Street, Raleigh, NC 27609

919-719-7701

Jeff Scott Grading919-795-1075Pittsboro, NC

GOOD LUCK UNC CHAPEL HILL FROM YOUR FRIENDS IN BUSINESS

Laboratory Casework and Fume HoodsAuthorized Sales Representative

Craig Krist - Gallagher-Stone, Inc.7716 Acc Blvd., Raleigh, NC 27617

919.237-2131 fax 919.237-2415 ckristenc.rr.com

Selway Industries

CDICDICDI

Manufacturers Representative

3302 SandalwoodWaxhaw, NC 28173704-843-1522704-575-7760 Mobile704-843-9272 Faxe-mail: [email protected]

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ARCHITECTS, ENGINEERS & BUSINESS FRIENDS WORKING FOR THE FUTURE OF VIRGINIA TECH

COMFORT INN - BLACKSBURG

3705 SOUTH MAIN STREET

BLACKSBURG VA 24060 PHONE: 540.951.1500FAX: 540.951.1530

COMFORTINNBLACKSBURG.COMBY CHOICE HOTELS

RSC Equipment Rental1570 Radford RdChristiansburg, VA 24073P 540.382.9036 M 540.580.0575Toll Free 800.222.7777F [email protected]

RSCEquipment Rental

Russ DolgosGeneral Manager

ScheduleContract GS-21F-0036T

Gordon & Lisa Lyle5625 Fork Mountain RoadRocky Mount, VA 24151

Business 540-489-5279Cell 540-493-5544

Visit our website at www.LylesPetCremations.com

928 Bluefi eld Avenue • Bluefi eld, WV 24701

moc.enilnotdb@elaht 6182-723 )403(

We do commercial printingCall for your next quote

PO BOX 13425Roanoke, VA 24033T 540.342.3158

First in textile services worldwide

Selway Industries

GEO

RGE R. RUHL & SONS, INC

.

B

A K E R S S U P P L I ES

ESTABLISHED1789

7477 Race RoadP.O. Box 250

Hanover, Maryland 21076

LOCAL: 1 (410) 796-0203TOLL FREE: 1 (800) 634-8200

FAX: 1 (410) 796-0276VISIT OUR WEBSITE

www.grruhl.com

AMERICA’S OLDEST BAKERY SUPPLY HOUSE

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DCI/SHIRES, INC.General Contracting

Residential • Commercial • Industrial

www.dcishires.com

P.O. Box 1259Bluefield, WV 24701Tele: (304) 323-1996Fax: (304) 323-3037

Residential • Commercial • Industrial

CONTRACTORS BUILDING FOR THE FUTURE OF VIRGINIA TECH

Offices located in Wytheville - Bristol - Bluefield -

Beckley - Wise

Providing Superior Wireless Solutions For Over 55 Years

Communication Systems Design, Sales & Service

Retail, Industrial, Commercial & Manufacturing Systems

1-888-228-2791 www.twowayradioinc.com

Alexander FlooringCommercial & Residential

25632 Wataugua Rd.Abingdon, VA 24211

Ph: (276) 628-7632Fax: (276) 623-0311

Roger Alexander

45910 Old Ox RoadSterling, VA 20166

Ph 571-262-8001Fax: 571-262-8009

Web Site: burgerscabinets.com

Residential & Commercial

WASTE MANAGEMENT

2508 West Main Street, Salem VA 24153(800) 342-9532 (540) 387-4398 Fax

From everyday collection to environmental protection,Think Green Think Waste Management

TAYLORS ASPHALT PAVING & SEALING

Blacksburg, VA

Phone: 1-800-BLACKTOP • (540) 552-5521Office: (276) 928-0010 • Fax: (276) 928-0402VA Lic # 2705115748A WV Lic # WV035947

• Hollow Metal Door & Frames• Commercial Hardware • Residential & Commercial Garage Repair Doors• Toilet Partitions & Toilet Accessories

P.O. Box 5176 Roanoke, VA 24012Phone: 540-342-4645 Fax: 540-981-1263www.ccidoors.netE-mail: [email protected] Contractors License #2705114847A

DOOR & HARDWARE

Designer Solutions

Fullcare Janitorial Service, Inc.

P.O. Box 147Pembroke, VA 24136

(540) 921-4049

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CAN’T MAKE IT TO YOUR FAVORITE ACC CHAMPIONSHIP? Catch live championship action on theACC.com!

A TRADITION OF EXCELLENCE … THEN, NOW AND ALWAYSwww.theACC.com

THE ULTIMATE IN COLLEGE SPORTS.MEN’S CROSS COUNTRY

Florida State

WOMEN’S CROSS COUNTRYFlorida State

WOMEN’S SOCCERWake Forest

FIELD HOCKEYMaryland

MEN’S SOCCERMaryland

VOLLEYBALLDuke

FOOTBALLVirginia Tech

WOMEN’S SWIMMING AND DIVING Virginia

MEN’S SWIMMING AND DIVINGVirginia

WOMEN’S INDOOR TRACK AND FIELDClemson

MEN’S INDOOR TRACK AND FIELDVirginia Tech

WOMEN’S BASKETBALLDuke

WRESTLINGMaryland

MEN’S BASKETBALLGreensboro Coliseum Complex

March 10-13, 2011

WOMEN’S GOLFSedgefi eld Country Club

(Greensboro, NC)April 15-17, 2011

MEN’S AND WOMEN’S OUTDOOR TRACK AND FIELD

Duke UniversityApril 21-23, 2011

WOMEN’S LACROSSEWakeMed Park

(Cary, NC)April 21, 22 & 24, 2011

MEN’S AND WOMEN’S TENNISCary Tennis Park

(Cary, NC)April 21-24, 2011

MEN’S GOLFThe Old North State Club

Uwharrie Point (New London, NC)April 22-24, 2011

MEN’S LACROSSEDuke University

April 22 & 24, 2011

ROWINGLake Hartwell

(Hosted by Clemson University)April 23, 2011

SOFTBALLGeorgia Institute of Technology

May 13-15, 2011

BASEBALLDurham Bulls Athletic Park

Durham, NCMay 25-29, 2011

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INSPIRED BY THE LIFE & LIGHTNING QUICK

GAME OF BRANDON JENNINGS.

AVAILABLE 03.01.11

©20

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