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Final Thoughts on NC State’s Loss to #3 Virginia

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  • NC State wasn’t ready for a team like that. Virginia did exactly what they wanted to do on both ends of the court and the Pack could do nothing about it. On the same note, this was the one game on the schedule that we marked for the best chance to take a loss. Just the combination of experience and the style of play didn’t bode well for the Pack.
  • Bad night defensively. State just played bad defense. They didn’t have the intensity level we’ve seen over the past 2 games and didn’t do enough to make the Virginia guards uncomfortable. State needs to keep guys in front of them because when they don’t, their help-side over commits and leaves shooters wide open. Virginia took advantage of this and knocked down shot after shot. They were 56% from the field and 57% from 3pt range. It was a bad defensive night for State, combined with a red-hot shooting night for UVA.
  • Offensively, State was flustered. They were out-physically by a bigger, stronger UVA team. Too many boneheaded plays where guys tried to go one on one, couldn’t get by their guy, had their pride hurt, and plowed in anyways, only to take an off-balance shot. This team needs to play together if they want to win and last night they didn’t. 7 assists on 23 made baskets isn’t going to cut it.
  • UVA shut down State’s weapons. Al Freeman put up his first goose egg of the season and only was able to get 5 attempts. Yurt only had 6 points, and Beverly had 4. These are the scorers NC State has relied on this season, and Virginia took them away.
  • Just didn’t shoot it well. Part of the reason the Wolfpack didn’t shoot it well is that UVA played such good defense. They didn’t let their guys get by them, meaning they didn’t need to help off, which kept State’s shooters smothered. But it’s not like they didn’t get some good looks. I can remember 3 from Beverly that were clean looks that just didn’t fall. Freeman had an open look and Yurt had 2. State shot an awful 12% from 3. If they just would have made 4 more 3s  (which would have brought them up to a more normal 37% from beyond the arc), this would have been a 68-63 game and with it that close, who knows what would have happened.
  • Big games coming for the Batts/Johnson combo. I thought when these two guys played together, you started to see the havoc Keatts wants his system to create. Johnson, however, was obviously rusty. After missing 8 games due to suspension you can understand why. But he had his moments. In his 23 minutes, he dished out 5 of the Pack’s 7 assists. That’s impressive and what State has really been missing. Batts provided it against Duke, but this team really misses a guy like Markell, who gets into the lane with ease and creates for his teammates by nature. When Johnson gets back into form, this duo is going to be fun to watch.
  • Torin Dorn continues to play well. One guy who seemed extremely hungry last night was Dorn. Sure, he made some mistakes, but overall I thought he played extremely hard and overall, pretty well. He finished with a team-high 16 points on 7-12 shooting. Over the past 3 games, Dorn is averaging 13.6 ppg, shooting 56% from the floor and has knocked down 4-6 from beyond the arc (66%).
  • I want to rant on the refs for a second. Not one time this season have a mentioned the refereeing. Not on this site, nor to any friends or to fellow State fans. I think the reffing has been good overall this year. That said, I think Virginia’s brand of basketball is very reliant on the referees letting teams play physical. Last night, the refs set the tone by not blowing the whistle when NC State made an effort to get the ball into the post. There is no way NC State should only have gone to the line 5 times last night. They were getting the ball in the post and I thought the Pack played pretty physical themselves. State murdered UVA on the offensive boards 14-5. Those offensive boards led to 14 second-chance points, but they should have led to way more. State’s bigs were getting bodied all over the place and while I respect physical basketball, the refs have to draw a line. State was called for 18 fouls and Virginia, only 10. For the entire game, only 10 calls. As good as a team can be on defense, if you play that physical, you’re going to foul more than 10 times. I thought last night was one-sided and really helped UVA impose their will.

NC State Basketball

Louisville Transfer Guard Mike James is Currently Visiting NC State

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Louisville Transfer Guard Mike James (6’5″/200) is on a visit to NC State currently, according to a source.

Indiana State Transfer Ryan Conwell was on campus last week, but he just committed to Xavier.

From what I hear, the staff preferred James over Connell anyway. A plus with James is he has 2 years of eligibility, whereas Conwell has 1.

News broke about James entering the Transfer Portal back on March 25th, and NC State was quick to reach out. Kevin Keatts and his staff recruited the former 4-star prospect out of high school heavily, but he ultimately chose the Cardinals.

Rivals ranked James as the #71 overall player in the 2021 recruiting class, and ESPN ranked him as the #7 prospect in the state of Florida.

After redshirting his first year in Louisville due to torn achilles, James has been a starter for the Cardinals the past two years. This year, he averaged 12.6 points and 5 rebounds.

For a more extensive look at James’ game, click here.

Rivals ranks James as the #77 overall player in the Transfer Portal.

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NC State Basketball

Louisville Transfer Guard Mike James is a Priority for NC State

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Louisville Transfer Guard Mike James (6’5″/200) is a priority for NC State, according to a source.

News broke about James entering the Transfer Portal back on March 25th, and NC State was quick to reach out. Kevin Keatts and his staff recruited the former 4-star prospect out of high school heavily, but he ultimately chose the Cardinals.

After redshirting his first year in Louisville due to torn achilles, James has been a starter for the Cardinals the past two years.

This past year, James averaged 12.6 points per game (3rd on the team) and 5 rebounds. He’s extremely physical and aggressive, taking 47% of his field goal attempts at the rim (making 46%). As a result, he draws a lot of fouls, ranking 10th in the ACC in Fouls Drawn, and 4th in Free Throw Rate. James made opponents pay this year when they put him on the line, making 81.8% from the charity stripe, which ranked 15th in the ACC.

James shot the ball better as a Redshirt Freshman, than he did this past season. His Effective Field Goal Percentage in 2022-23 was 55.8%, which ranked 19th in the ACC, and his True Shooting Percentage of 59.6% ranked 14th.

He does have the ability to knock down a three, making 34.8% for his career.

NC State already hosted Indiana State Transfer Guard Ryan Conwell last week, and while the Wolfpack coaches like both players, from what I’m hearing, James would be their preference.

NC State hasn’t had James in for a visit, but that could happen soon.

James has 2 years of eligibility remaining.

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NC State’s Casey Morsell is the 4th Player in NCAA History to Start 41 Games in a Season

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NC State Guard Casey Morsell started 41 games for the Wolfpack this season, becoming the 4th player in NCAA history to do so.

 

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Prior to this season, the record for most games started in a single season in NC State history was 37, with three Wolfpack players doing so: Lorenzo Brown, Richard Howell, CJ Williams.

Morsell now sits atop the list, and a fellow teammate, DJ Burns ranks second, with 40 games started this season.

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Georgetown Transfer Dontrez Styles Commits to NC State!

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Georgetown Forward Transfer Dontrez Styles (6’6″/212) has committed to NC State!

Styles was the 2nd leading scorer for Georgetown this season, averaging 12.8 points per game, while grabbing 5.8 boards. He shot 36.8% from three.

Originally, Sytles was a consensus 4-Star prospect in UNC’s 2021 recruiting class. 247Sports ranked him as the #62 overall player nationally, and the #2 player in the state of North Carolina, playing for Kinston High School.

After two seasons with the Tar Heels, Styles entered the Portal, and took an Official Visit to NC State and Georgetown, and ultimately chose the Hoyas.

ON3 ranks Styles as the #104 overall player in the Portal.

With his final year of eligibility, Styles’ made the right choice this time.

NC State now has 2 scholarships remaining after Styles’ commitment.

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