About this blog

Duke Now is your place for Blue Devil hoops and football. Beat writer Laura Keeley has up-to-the-minute news and analysis. Columnist Luke DeCock also contributes. Follow us on Twitter at @laurakeeley or @accnow.

Choose a blog

A closer look: Mason Plumlee vs. UNC

Bookmark and Share

James Michael McAdoo was able to limit Mason Plumlee offensively. Credit: CHUCK LIDDY

There’s no sugarcoating it: Mason Plumlee played awful—a-w-f-u-l—in the first half of Duke's 73-68 win over UNC. To his credit, though, he was much more efficient down the stretch in the second as he stopped turning the ball over and made four key free throws in the final 2:30 of the game. By the end of the game, he had recorded a double-double, with 18 points (tied for the team-high) and 11 rebounds. But let’s take a closer look:

***James Michael McAdoo held Plumlee in check. He forced him to travel as Plumlee was posting him up and he played tight enough so that lay-ins and hook jump shots weren’t automatic. One of two times Plumlee did take McAdoo and finish a lay-up in the first half, McAdoo responded on the other end by blowing by Plumlee and finishing with a dunk. Plumlee’s other finish at McAdoo’s expense—a dunk—came after he flopped to the ground, giving Plumlee a free path to the basket.

McAdoo had to leave the floor for about three minutes when he was whistled for his second foul with 7:21 left in the first half. Jackson Simmons, a 6-foot-7 forward who has steadily earned for playing time for the Tar Heels, was then assigned to Plumlee. But Duke’s big man struggled to take advantage of the mismatch, and actually lost his footing on one attempt to post Simmons up, turning the ball over.

On Duke’s next offensive possession, Plumlee tried to take P.J. Hairston (all 6-foot-5 of him), and was whistled for an offensive foul.

Later in the first half, Simmons was back on Plumlee, and, instead of making a strong move to the basket, he settled for a short jumper, which missed (perhaps his two fouls had something to do with his hesitancy).

Plumlee’s third and final basket of the half came on a wide-open dunk, as Simmons had been sucked in to help on the driving Sulaimon, who kicked it to Plumlee. He finished the first half 3-of-8 from the field and 2-of-4 from the line for eight points. He also pulled down five rebounds and blocked a shot, but recorded four turnovers and was whistled for two fouls. It was, without a doubt, his worst half of the year.

Duke, as a whole, had struggled on offensive, recording 11 turnovers against 12 field goals.

"We had to get the ball moving," Plumlee said. "We aren’t a one-on-one team, so we have to work together and get guys open, set screens, and execute."

The second half didn’t open well for Plumlee, as he was whistled with for his third foul less than a minute after play resumed, as McAdoo corralled an offensive rebound. From there, Plumlee backed off on defense, and UNC took advantage.

The next time down on the defensive end of the floor, McAdoo blew by Plumlee for an open lay-up. He did miss the shot, but Plumlee swung open like a door, backing away as McAdoo closed in. Plumlee didn’t crash the defensive boards on UNC’s next offensive possession, as Reggie Bullock grabbed an offensive rebound and tipped it in to give UNC a 36-31 lead.

But the play that sent Plumlee to the bench was when McAdoo drove the baseline, right by Plumlee (again) and finished with a behind-the-back, two handed slam (much like Maryland’s Alex Len, and Plumlee himself, have done previously in Cameron). Before he left the floor, he took a long jump shot from beyond the left elbow, that missed. At that point, he was 3-of-9 from the floor.

“I thought he was playing like he had three fouls,” Duke head coach Mike Krzyzewski said. “I thought McAdoo was just going at him, so McAdoo was either going to score or Mason was going to foul him.”

Plumlee sat for the next four minutes, and, in the interim, Duke cut the deficit from 38-31 to 43-42.

When he came back, his defense was still tentative. He opted not to help as Dexter Strickland drove free to the basket, making it a one-possession game at 50-47. But on the other end, Plumlee backed down McAdoo (who flopped again) and finished with a lay-up two put Duke back up by 5.

Neither team would score for the next four minutes until Plumlee sank a jump hook shot over McAdoo to give Duke a 54-47 lead with 7:37 remaining in the game. Less than a minute later, Plumlee picked up his fourth foul, as he attempted to battle Reggie Bullock for a rebound the Tar Heels guard had already corralled.

Plumlee’s fourth foul could have doomed Duke—it would be unrealistic to expect Josh Hairston or Amile Jefferson to contain McAdoo for the final 6:40. Other than a brief exit ahead of the final media timeout, Plumlee stayed on the floor.

“We just made some dumb fouls and got ourselves into a lot of foul trouble,” Krzyzewski said. “We are really tired because we don’t have as many guys. I like my guys, but in a game like that you worry about foul trouble and fatigue. And we were able to have the discipline to stay in the game with foul trouble, and had enough toughness to get through the fatigue.”

Inexplicably, the Tar Heels didn’t constantly challenge him with drives to the basket, as they settled for jump shots instead. After picking up his fourth foul, he grabbed three defensive rebounds, hit another jump hook over McAdoo and—most critically—made all four of his free throw attempts.

“He kind of put us on his back at the end of the game – he hit some free throws, hit some big jump hooks,” Quinn Cook said. “When we all step up, we’re a great team.”

For all the latest Duke news, like Duke NOW on Facebook and follow me on Twitter.

Cars View All
Find a Car
Go
Jobs View All
Find a Job
Go
Homes View All
Find a Home
Go

Want to post a comment?

In order to join the conversation, you must be a member of newsobserver.com. Click here to register or to log in.

About the blogger

Laura Keeley is the Duke beat writer for the News & Observer. Follow her on Twitter @laurakeeley
Advertisements