North Carolina
Syracuse’s late rally turns North Carolina blowout into a run-of-the-mill loss
Syracuse, N.Y. ― North Carolina was blowing out Syracuse.
For the first 30 minutes of Monday night’s game at the Smith Center in Chapel Hill, N.C., the North Carolina Tar Heels tore through the Syracuse Orange, making 3-pointers, ramming home dunks and simply dominating in all phases of the game.
The Tar Heels built a 72-40 lead. North Carolina coach Hubert Davis had taken future NBA lottery pick Caleb Wilson out of the game for the night.
Then came an unexpected and confounding comeback. Syracuse went on a 35-to-10 run, cutting North Carolina’s lead down to six points.
Syracuse’s rally came up short as the Tar Heels held on for an 87-77 win over the Orange.
Syracuse Orange Basketball 2025-26: Syracuse @ North Carolina
While Syracuse showed some grit with its late-game effort, North Carolina had too much firepower for the Orange.
UNC’s frontcourt duo of freshman Caleb Wilson (22 points and nine rebounds) and 7-foot center Henri Veesaar (17 points and 11 boards) were nearly unstoppable. Together they combined to shoot 13-for-25 from the field. Wilson drew numerous fouls and went 10-for-13 at the free throw line.
The loss dropped Syracuse’s record to 13-10 on the season and 4-6 in the ACC.
Syracuse remained winless against the Tar Heels at the Smith Center, losing all eight of its trips to Chapel Hill since joining the ACC.
North Carolina, which came into the game ranked 14th in the country, improved to 18-4 overall and 6-3 in the conference. North Carolina is undefeated at home this season with a Saturday date with arch-rival Duke looming.
Donnie Freeman returned to Syracuse’s starting lineup after coming off the bench in Saturday’s win over Notre Dame. Freeman led the Orange with 23 points and eight rebounds.
But no other Syracuse player was able to do much offensively until the furious comeback effort in the final 10 minutes. The Orange made 11 out of 12 shots during the rally.
In that time, Naithan George finished with 15 points, JJ Starling added 13 and Nate Kingz hit a pair of 3-pointers in the final two minutes.
Prior to the run, Syracuse players other than Freeman were a combined 10-for-36 from the field.
Syracuse, which had a season-high 21 assists in the win over Notre Dame on Saturday, assisted on just seven of its 29 made field goals against the Tar Heels.
A valiant effort from a Syracuse team or a case of North Carolina taking its Heel off the gas? Either way, the Orange has now lost five of its last six games.
And next up is a trip to No. 18 Virginia on Saturday.
North Carolina’s lead went up and down in the first half, before the more dramatic crests and plummets in the second half.
North Carolina opened up a 46-32 halftime lead thanks to a late 12-0 run.
Syracuse had trailed by 13 points midway through the half but pulled to within five points at 34-29 with 3 minutes left.
Freeman provided most of the offense with 18 first-half points. The Tar Heels would hold him in check for most of the second half.
But after all that work from the Orange to narrow the gap, North Carolina erupted for 12 straight points for a 46-29 lead.
Freeman saved things, in a small way, as he banked in a 3-pointer at the buzzer to get the Orange to within 46-32.
North Carolina clogged up Syracuse’s offense. Syracuse was reduced to a lot of one-on-one moves and contested shots. After doling out 21 assists in Saturday’s win over Notre Dame, the Orange had two assists in the first half.
Freeman went 6-for-9 from the field in the half, but the rest of the Orange made only five out of 14 field goal attempts.
North Carolina
‘It was dire’: NC State professor returns from Qatar after being trapped during Iran war
An North Carolina State University professor is back home Monday night after he was trapped in the Middle East as war with Iran broke out.
Rich Spontak was stuck in Qatar while traveling from Bangkok to Spain and was forced to stay in the country for about a week. Several travelers were trapped for days in the Middle East after Iran’s
Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and several defense leaders were
killed in joint strikes by the United States and Israel.
Spontak, like many travelers, found himself stranded in the Middle East after the initial attacks, which quickly entangled more surrounding countries, including Kuwait and Saudi Arabia, where seven U.S. service members were killed in retaliatory attacks from Iran.
Spontak said there were times he thought he wouldn’t make it out.
“I would just keep looking out and looking for the missiles,” Spontak said. “Some people that I met along the way were hit by shrapnel from the missles. It was dire.”
Airspace over Iran, Iraq, Bahrain, Kuwait and Syria remained closed, according to flight-tracking service Flightradar24. Azerbaijan also shut the southern sector of its airspace on Thursday after accusing Iran of a drone attack that injured four civilians and damaged an airport building.
Lilia Austin, a Chapel Hill woman who was part of a group of 100 women who went to Israel for a trip the day before Khamenei was killed, also returned home on Sunday after she left Israel through Egypt.
North Carolina
Gov. Stein proposes $1.4B ‘critical needs’ budget for North Carolina
RALEIGH, N.C. (WLOS) — With North Carolina still without a new state budget, Gov. Josh Stein is urging state lawmakers to approve a $1.4 billion “Critical Needs Budget.” Stein says this budget will address the state’s most urgent priorities while the General Assembly works on a full spending plan.
“North Carolina has gone nearly two and a half years without passing a new state budget – the only state in the country to finish 2025 without one[…]This budget invests in critical public safety, education and health care services for the people of North Carolina that cannot wait,” Gov. Stein said in a press release Monday.
A major part of Stein’s proposal is $319 million to fully fund Medicaid, which provides health coverage to over three million North Carolinians. This program also supports rural hospitals, nursing homes and statewide health care providers, per the release.
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The “Critical Needs Budget” would target public safety staffing and pay. According to the governor’s office, North Carolina currently ranks 49th in starting salaries for state troopers and correctional officers, and low pay has contributed to staffing shortages and vacancy rates. This budget would bring pay raises to correctional officers, law enforcement officers, probation and parole officers and more.
Stein’s proposed budget calls for raising starting and average teacher pay, as well as increasing pay for senior teachers and other education staff. The governor’s office said the state remains in the bottom 10 nationally in average teacher pay.
The budget proposal also includes pay increases for state employees and a cost-of-living adjustment for retired state employees, citing rising inflation costs and increasing health care premiums. Stein’s plan also includes targeted funding to maintain essential services, such as support for child care access and affordability.
North Carolina
The North Carolina Arboretum’s “Spring Into the Arb” returns for year two
ASHEVILLE, N.C. (WLOS) — The North Carolina Arboretum has announced a new season of “Spring Into the Arb!”
The “Spring Into the Arb!” is in its second year, with its series of plant shows and sales, science and nature activities, music, and art, allowing people to reemerge and reconnect with nature.
The season begins with Nature Play Day on Saturday, March 14, continuing through April, May, and June with new activities every weekend.
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According to a news release, throughout the season, guests can enjoy the following:
- Asheville Orchid Festival, annual Ikebana and Rose shows
- Purchase plants at the Spring Plant Sale and Market
- Get back to their native roots with Native Azalea Day, Mountain Science Expo, and Nature Play Day
The series culminates with Bonsai in the Blue Ridge in June, according to the release.
The release says guests and members are invited to drop in on the newly-opened Arbor Eatery in the Arboretum’s Education Center, which is open from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. daily. Hours extend to 5 p.m. beginning April 1.
Spring Into the Arb events and programs are included with the regular Arboretum parking fee of $25 per vehicle. Arboretum Society Members get in free.
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According to the release, additional admission is required for the Asheville Orchid Festival and Bonsai in the Blue Ridge.
A full list of the Spring Into the Arb 2026 events includes:
- Nature Play Day: March 14
- Asheville Orchid Festival: March 28 to 29
- Music in the Mountains Day: April 4
- Arbor Day Celebration: April 11
- Native Azalea Day: April 18
- Mountain Science Expo: April 25
- World Bonsai Day: May 9
- Change of Seasons: Spring into Ikebana: May 16 to 17
- The Asheville-Blue Ridge Rose Society Exhibition: May 22 to 24
- The Arb in Focus: 40 Views for 40 Years: Opening May 23
- Spring Plant Sale and Market: May 29 to 30
- Bonsai in the Blue Ridge: June 4 to 7
For more information, visit here.
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