Heels trying to turn back time against Pack
BY AL FEATHERSTON : The Herald-Sun
afeatherston@heraldsun.com
Feb 29, 2004 : 12:13 am ET
RALEIGH -- It's a good time to be an N.C. State fan.
In fact, this is a golden age if beating North Carolina in the major sports is important to the Wolfpack faithful. Never before in history has N.C. State enjoyed such dominance over its bitter rival as in the early years of the 21st Century.
The Pack has won three of the last four matchups on the football field and four of the last five basketball showdowns with the Tar Heels. The only other time in ACC history that N.C. State enjoyed such superiority in both sports was from 1990-92, when Dick Sheridan's football team won three straight against UNC and Jim Valvano's last Wolfpack basketball team and Les Robinson's first two Pack clubs won four out of six in the series.
N.C. State has enjoyed other good runs in football and in basketball against the Heels, but never at the same time.
And in at least one sense, this streak is better than the one in the early 1990s. While N.C. State enjoyed head-to-head basketball success against UNC in those days, the Tar Heel program was clearly better -- finishing ahead of the Pack in the ACC in all three of those seasons.
That's not the case now. No. 14 N.C. State (18-6, 10-3 ACC) is already assured of finishing ahead of No. 12 North Carolina (16-8, 6-7 ACC) for the third straight season-- the first time in ACC history that the Wolfpack basketball team has finished the regular season ahead of the Tar Heels during such a span.
Of course, it's also possible that UNC is on the verge of turning the tide against the Pack. The Tar Heels broke N.C. State's four-game winning streak in the series last month in Chapel Hill, pulling out a 68-66 victory in the Smith Center.
With another victory tonight in the RBC Center, North Carolina can officially end the Pack's golden age.
A Tar Heels victory would also severely damage N.C. State's pursuit of first-place Duke for the ACC regular season title and perhaps leave the Pack vulnerable to a late run by Wake Forest for second place.
But rivalry, not conference standings, is the main issue.
"I wasn't really aware of the N.C. State and Chapel Hill rivalry until my freshman year," N.C. State's Ilian Evtimov said. "People kept making a big deal about it -- everybody kept saying, 'Just make sure you beat Carolina.'
"We played at Chapel Hill and that was a big-time win -- we won by 20. I wasn't really aware of what a big win it was until I came back. Riding on the bus and all these Carolina fans were just so mad. When we got back here to Reynolds Coliseum, we had about 1,000 people waiting for us. I just realized, that's more than I thought."
Sean May, who grew up in Indiana, learned about the intensity of the rivalry last year -- even though he had to watch from the sidelines after suffering a foot injury.
"Just the atmosphere and the flow of the game," the sophomore center said. "It was exciting to see as a fan, just watching. It's not as big as Carolina and Duke, but it's right up there with some of the best rivalries in college basketball."
UNC coach Roy Williams got in the spirit of the rivalry by disguising a jab at the Wolfpack as a compliment for N.C. State coach Herb Sendek.
"I'm not trying to make N.C. State people mad," he said. "But when I first got here, I heard this. Their football team finished fourth and got a parade. Their basketball team finished fourth and got 'Fire Herb.' That doesn't make sense to me. I think Herb's done a great job."
Williams, who learned about the rivalry as a student and assistant coach at UNC, understands that the games with N.C. State mean more to the Tar Heel fans than to the current players.
"A lot of it means nothing to the kids," he said. "But everybody that's got blue hair and wrinkles remembers the games in 1950. It's important to them. I don't think our kids or State's kids look at it as much as someone that sat in Carmichael Auditorium or Reynolds Coliseum and watched those games for 25 years.
"My father-in-law graduated from N.C. State. He has a lot more of those feelings than Rashad McCants does. I'm not belittling what we think about N.C. State at all. I just think kids don't look back that far."
Sendek voiced similar sentiments.
"We certainly are aware of the legendary rivalry that exists," he said. "[But] it's not possible to prepare any more than we do otherwise. It's not like we're all of a sudden do something different because each game to us is a big game and we know that. We recognize that it's a lot of fun for the fans and the game has a lot of interest, regardless of what sport the schools are participating in. There's a lot of fanfare and a lot of pageantry that goes with it, but I think the teams basically go about preparing and they're going to play hard and give it their best shot."
N.C. State will have one huge advantage in this matchup -- the home court. North Carolina has struggled on the road, winning just one of six ACC road games. On the other hand, the Pack is 13-0 in the RBC Center.
Sendek said the five-year-old arena is becoming the same kind of homecourt advantage that the Pack used to enjoy in Reynolds Coliseum.
"Right now, we're in the process of assembling a scrapbook, a photo album from the RBC, the same way we did for years at Reynolds," the Wolfpack coach said. "One of the things that made Reynolds so dear to us was we had all these wonderful photo albums and scrapbooks full of memories that we could point to. When you move over to a new building, you have to buy a new scrapbook.
"It's not just the buildings per se that make them special, it's all the collection of memories that we have to go along with them. Now that we're in our fifth year at RBC, we're in the beginning pages of building new memories."
NOTES -- N.C. State could be tied for first in the ACC by the end of the night if the Pack beats UNC, while Florida State knocks off front-running Duke in Tallahassee. ... The Pack is looking for its first perfect home season since the 1974 team went 11-0 in Reynolds. n UNC still leads the series with N.C. State 129-74, including a 53-46 edge in Raleigh. ... This will be the first time N.C. State and UNC have met while both were ranked since Feb. 9, 1989, when the No. 17 Pack knocked off the No. 6 Tar Heels in Raleigh.