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Postgame: Thoughts from Duke's 69-53 win over UNC

Tyler Thornton and the rest of the Blue Devils crashed UNC's senior day. Credit: ROBERT WILLETT

CHAPEL HILL Well, that was unexpected. Duke thoroughly dominated UNC from the opening tip until the final buzzer, and Andrew Carter details the in between in the game story here. Mason returned to his player of the year form, and—get this—Roy Williams lost for the first time on senior day. Ever. That spans 25 years as a head coach and 10 as an assistant to Dean Smith. Hard to believe, but it's true: Duke hadn't closed out the season with a win in Chapel Hill since 2001, when the Carlos Boozer-less Blue Devils ran all over the Tar Heels.

I'm writing a bigger picture take on what this means for Duke later today, and I'll link it here when it's up. In the meantime, a few quick thoughts I jotted down during the game:

Game Preview: Duke at UNC

Mason Plumlee came alive late in the game when the Tar Heels came to Durham. Credit: CHUCK LIDDY

Duke at North Carolina
When:
9 p.m.
Where: The Smith Center, Chapel Hill
TV/Radio: ESPN/WKIX-102.9 FM

Good morning, folks, and welcome to the second installment of the 2012-13 Duke-Carolina rivalry. As usual, there is plenty of pregame reading:

• In September, Mike Krzyzewski got a call saying Seth Curry might miss the whole year. Now in March, Curry isn't just surviving. He's thriving.

Andrew Carter, our UNC beat writer, with the big-picture look of how UNC and Duke have arrived just one game apart in the ACC standings.

• My take on UNC's small lineup: no one, not C.J. Leslie and not Alex Len, has taken advantage of the mismatch. Duke needs Ryan Kelly and Mason Plumlee to be the first to do so.

Luke DeCock with a closer look at the two critical freshmen, Rasheed Sulaimon and Marcus Paige

And now a full breakdown of the matchups:

Tale of the tape:

POINT GUARD: Marcus Paige vs. Quinn Cook

He's a big Tar Heel fan

Here's one Tar Heel fan that the folks at Carolina probably wish was a bit less supportive.

Meet Donald Shaun Black.

According to the Gaston Gazette, he was jailed on a drug charge thanks to an eyewitness who identified him by the very noticable tattoo on his cheek.

It reads "UNC."

 

At UNC-CH, discord over Thursday night football game

UNC Chapel Hill is will send workers home two hours early Oct. 22, hoping to ease congestion on a campus that will host its first Thursday night football game that evening.

But workers will then have to make up the time, and that isn’t sitting well with some.

 “There are a lot of hourly people here on campus that have kids, or [elderly] parents, or second jobs,” said Richard Silc, business officer with the Odum Institute for Social Science Research. “To me, they’re making the this big decision based on an ESPN payment and the consideration for the worker bee is secondary.”

The Tar Heels host Florida State Oct. 22 at 8 p.m. Employees who usually work until 5 p.m. will leave at 3 p.m. The mandate is expected to affect about 11,500 workers.

For years, UNC-CH shied away from hosting a Thursday night game because of the potential disruption to the campus. Officials agreed to host the game this year in part because it will be held during fall break.

The primetime, national television broadcast brings with it an avalanche of free publicity to the football program and the school.

State policy dictates that employees make up time they don’t work, said Brenda Malone, UNC-CH's vice chancellor for human resources. Employees can use vacation time or start work earlier, stay late or work through lunch during the other four work days that week to make up the time, Malone said in a campus memo.

In an e-mail, Malone told me this:

Because University employees are also employees of the State of North Carolina, we are required to follow state policy and practice in this situation. Under these circumstances, it is inconsistent with state policy to pay employees for time that they don’t work or take leave. Therefore, employees are being asked to either use a flexible schedule to make up the two hours that week – start work a little earlier, work a little later, or work through part of their lunch hour – or use available leave for those hours. Available leave options could include vacation or bonus leave, compensatory time or flexible furlough hours.

We chose to take this step only after full consideration of all options. Our goal is to minimize disruption to employees and allow them to safely exit campus -- thus avoiding the anticipated traffic congestion before the game. We believe that changing the time the work day ends is a prudent and responsible step to avoid this potential problem for our employees. We have provided two months’ advance notice to employees; plus, the game is scheduled during Fall Break, which will ensure that there is no negative impact on students or interference with the academic schedule.

The decision has tongues wagging on campus.

As head of UNC-CH’s Employee Forum, a campus worker advocacy group, Tommy Griffin has gotten an earful on this issue. He's sympathetic, but also sees the benefits the game can bring.

“I know a lot of employees are upset about those two hours,” he said. “But [the game] is something good for campus that will bring a lot of revenue, so I’m not too upset about it.”

UNC/White House trip funded privately

Just for the record: the trip the UNC basketball team took earlier this week to Washington D.C. to meet President Barack Obama at the White House was not funded by taxpayer dollars.

The trip cost $30,496 and was paid for by the Educational Foundation - or 'Ram's Club,' - which raises money for the athletic program, according to Steve Kirschner, UNC's sports information director.

There were about 50 people in the traveling party, including Chancellor Holden Thorp, Athletic Director Dick Baddour, 17 team members, six team managers, Coach Roy Williams and three assistant coaches, and a handful of other athletic department staffers in ticketing, strength and athletic training and sports information.

Thorp, Baddour, Williams and several others brought their spouses on the trip as well.

Tar Heels take over the world

First, here's the cartoon from Kevin Siers, the editorial cartoonist at The Charlotte Observer, marking UNC's NCAA championship. Second is the cartoon I found the funniest from the rest of the McClatchy artists last week. Look at them all at www.mcclatchydc.com/.

 

 

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