Men's Basketball

Cavaliers Muscle Past Tar Heels to Grab Spot in Semifinals

GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) - Jayden Gardner had 17 points and 10 rebounds, and No. 13 Virginia dealt a damaging blow to North Carolina's already shaky NCAA Tournament hopes, beating the Tar Heels 68-59 in the Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament quarterfinals on Thursday night.

Reece Beekman added 15 points, five assists and five steals for the second-seeded Cavaliers (24-6), who finally wrestled away control of the game with a 9-0 run in the final two minutes after the Tar Heels had cut a 10-point deficit to 57-55. Much of that production came at the foul line, where the Cavaliers made 9 of 10 as UNC finally ran out of gas.

RJ Davis scored 24 points to lead the Tar Heels (20-13), who shot just 35.8% to lose for the second time in three meetings with the Cavaliers.

Virginia big man Kadin Shedrick put the final touches on the win, swatting away Davis' driving layup at one end and then sprinting the floor to take a feed from Armaan Franklin for a two-handed dunk with 27 seconds left.

Shedrick, who did not play in the previous two games, had five blocked shots while being pressed into a larger role due to an injury to starting forward Ben Vander Plas.

Franklin finished with 14 points for Virginia, which scored on 13 of 16 possessions coming out of halftime and stretched its lead to 10 points on three occasions. The Cavaliers shot 58.3% in the second half.

UNC also continued a season-long trend of struggling to hit outside shots, making 8 of 27 3-point attempts.

BIG PICTURE
UNC: The Tar Heels entered Thursday's quarterfinal with a 1-8 record in the Quadrant 1 games that top an NCAA Tournament resume, with the lone win coming at home against the Cavaliers on Feb. 25 - and that one hovering on the line to fall into Quadrant 2 territory. This game - considered a neutral-court setting despite being roughly an hour from the Chapel Hill campus - ended up as a huge missed opportunity for a program that reached the national title game last year.

Virginia: The Cavaliers had lost at Boston College and at UNC before regrouping with wins against Clemson and Louisville to close out the schedule and clinch a share of the ACC regular-season title. Coach Tony Bennett had said the last two games were “a step in the right direction” in terms of “the right kind of tenacity," and his team showed it in repeatedly turning back second-half pushes by the Tar Heels.

INJURY HIT
Virginia took a hit before even taking the court in Greensboro, with the school announcing that Vander Plas would miss the rest of the season with a broken right hand suffered in practice Wednesday.

That led the Cavaliers to give 7-foot-1 redshirt senior Francisco Caffaro his first start of the season and more minutes for Shedrick against All-ACC big man Armando Bacot.

Bacot, hobbled by an ankle injury from Wednesday’s second-round win against Boston College, never found much space against frequent double teams and was a non-factor (four points, three rebounds).

Noting the Quarterfinals – Thursday’s Third Game
-Virginia (24-6) moves on to Friday’s 9:30 p.m. semifinal game and will face the winner of Thursday’s last quarterfinal matchup between No. 3 Clemson (22-9) and No. 6 NC State (23-9). The Cavaliers defeated Clemson 64-57 in Charlottesville on Feb. 28 and also won their lone meeting versus the Wolfpack at home by a 63-50 score on Feb. 7.

- Virginia is 45-64 all-time in the ACC Tournament and 19-24 in Greensboro. The Cavaliers are 14-8 I the ACC Tournament under current head coach Tony Bennett and 27-37 all-time in ACC Tournament quarterfinals.

- The Cavaliers are now 7-4 all-time as the tournament’s No. 2 seed.

- Virginia’s 24 wins are the most for the program since the NCAA Championship team of 2019 won 35.

- The Cavaliers have won at least one game in the ACC Tournament a program-record nine consecutive years. Friday night’s win was Virginia's 14th in the tournament in the past 10 years. The program won 14 tournament games in the previous 24 years.

 - Virginia is 2-1 versus UNC in 2022-23 after both sides won at home during the regular season.

- The Cavaliers are 9-5 away from home this season, including a 3-0 mark on neutral courts.

- UNC slipped to 106-51 in ACC Tournament play, 48-14 in the quarterfinals and 2-3 as the No. 7 seed.

- Virginia is now 2-8 all-time versus the Tar Heels and 1-6 in tournament games at the Greensboro Coliseum. The Cavaliers’ last win over UNC in Greensboro prior to Thursday night came on Feb. 11, 1955, when Virginia downed the Tar Heels 98-73 in the dedication of the new gymnasium at what is now Grimsley High School.

- The Tar Heels are now 43-21 in ACC Tournament games in Greensboro, 119-36 all-time in games played at the Coliseum and 127-40 in the city of Greensboro.

UNC is 14-5 versus Virginia in the ACC Tournament and 134-62 all-time versus the Cavaliers overall.

- UNC and Virginia met in the ACC Tournament for the second consecutive year and the fifth time in the last nine years.

- Virginia finished with six turnovers in Friday night’s contest, the Cavaliers’ 10th straight with fewer than 10.

- With his team-high 17 points and 10 rebounds, Virginia senior Jayden Gardner registered his fourth double-double of the season and his second versus UNC. Gardner has led the Cavaliers in scoring 10 times this season and reached double figures in scoring in 11 of his last 14 games.

- The Cavaliers, 7-of-12 from the foul line in the game’s first 38 minutes, went 9-for-10 in the final two minutes to secure the victory.

- The Tar Heels came up short despite a game-high 24 points from guard RJ Davis on 8-of-14 shooting from the floor, including 4-of-8 from 3-point range. UNC had been 5-0 this season when Davis connected on four or more threes.