North Carolina
How to Stream the North Carolina vs. Syracuse Game Live – January 13
The No. 7 North Carolina Tar Heels (12-3, 4-0 ACC) hope to extend a six-game home winning run when hosting the Syracuse Orange (11-4, 2-2 ACC) on Saturday, January 13, 2024 at 12:00 PM ET.
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North Carolina vs. Syracuse Game Info
- When: Saturday, January 13, 2024 at 12:00 PM ET
- Where: Dean Smith Center in Chapel Hill, North Carolina
- TV: ESPN
- Live Stream: Watch this game on Fubo
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North Carolina Stats Insights
- This season, the Tar Heels have a 45.2% shooting percentage from the field, which is 3% higher than the 42.2% of shots the Orange’s opponents have hit.
- In games North Carolina shoots better than 42.2% from the field, it is 8-3 overall.
- The Orange are the 129th-ranked rebounding team in the country, while the Tar Heels sit at 38th.
- The Tar Heels average 11.8 more points per game (82.5) than the Orange allow (70.7).
- North Carolina is 9-3 when scoring more than 70.7 points.
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Syracuse Stats Insights
- The Orange’s 45% shooting percentage from the field this season is 5.3 percentage points higher than the Tar Heels have allowed to their opponents (39.7%).
- Syracuse is 9-2 when it shoots better than 39.7% from the field.
- The Tar Heels are the rebounding team in the country, the Orange rank 235th.
- The Orange’s 76.9 points per game are 7.2 more points than the 69.7 the Tar Heels allow.
- Syracuse is 11-2 when allowing fewer than 82.5 points.
North Carolina Home & Away Comparison (2022-23)
- North Carolina scored 78.3 points per game at home last year. When playing on the road, it averaged 70.2 points per contest.
- Defensively the Tar Heels played better at home last year, allowing 67.7 points per game, compared to 71.1 when playing on the road.
- In home games, North Carolina averaged 1.1 more three-pointers per game (7.5) than on the road (6.4). It also had a better three-point percentage at home (32%) compared to on the road (29.3%).
Syracuse Home & Away Comparison (2022-23)
- At home, Syracuse scored 76.5 points per game last season. Away, it scored 70.7.
- In 2022-23, the Orange gave up 4.5 fewer points per game at home (71) than on the road (75.5).
- Syracuse sunk fewer 3-pointers at home (6.1 per game) than on the road (6.2) last season. It also had a lower 3-point percentage at home (35.4%) than on the road (36.6%).
Rep your team with officially licensed college basketball gear! Head to Fanatics to find jerseys, shirts, and much more.
North Carolina Upcoming Schedule
| Date | Opponent | Score | Arena |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1/2/2024 | @ Pittsburgh | W 70-57 | Petersen Events Center |
| 1/6/2024 | @ Clemson | W 65-55 | Littlejohn Coliseum |
| 1/10/2024 | @ NC State | W 67-54 | PNC Arena |
| 1/13/2024 | Syracuse | – | Dean Smith Center |
| 1/17/2024 | Louisville | – | Dean Smith Center |
| 1/20/2024 | @ Boston College | – | Silvio O. Conte Forum |
Syracuse Upcoming Schedule
| Date | Opponent | Score | Arena |
|---|---|---|---|
| 12/30/2023 | Pittsburgh | W 81-73 | JMA Wireless Dome |
| 1/2/2024 | @ Duke | L 86-66 | Cameron Indoor Stadium |
| 1/10/2024 | Boston College | W 69-59 | JMA Wireless Dome |
| 1/13/2024 | @ North Carolina | – | Dean Smith Center |
| 1/16/2024 | @ Pittsburgh | – | Petersen Events Center |
| 1/20/2024 | Miami (FL) | – | JMA Wireless Dome |
© 2023 Data Skrive. All rights reserved.
North Carolina
Michael Jordan North Carolina “Sports Illustrated” cover sells for record $229k
A copy of Michael Jordan’s 1983 “Sports Illustrated” cover debut sold for $229,360 on Saturday night at Goldin, obliterating the previous record for a graded magazine.
Before Saturday, the previous record was the $126,000 paid for Jordan’s 1984 SI debut in a Bulls uniform entitled “A Star Is Born.”
“Sports Illustrated” magazines are very common and people kept them, but collectors narrowed the category by making rarer newsstand copies most collectible, and graded condition of those copies to narrow the most desirable down further.
Then, in July, came PSA to challenge CGC in the grading space.
The record UNC Jordan, with teammate Sam Perkins on the cover, was the only PSA 9.6. The question is, with PSA’s grading just beginning, are there others our there?
It’s possible, but that Jordan issue presents a challenge because it has a gatefold that makes it more challenging to press out defects.
The big price will likely create a group of opportunists who will now take raw subscription copies of this issue and get them graded for potential arbitrage.
But it won’t be that easy. A CGC 8.0 newsstand edition sold for $4,636 in October.
Whether the big price also creates more grading and selling of rare magazines remains to be seen, but PSA’s entrance into the space has definitely turned heads.
PSA has graded more than 50 of this particular issue, the second most commonly graded after the “Star is Born” issue.
Darren Rovell is the founder of cllct and one of the country’s leading reporters on the collectibles market. He previously worked for ESPN, CNBC and The Action Network.
North Carolina
End of 2025-26 NC ski season: Resorts announce closing dates
Warmer temperatures are bringing North Carolina’s ski season to a close, with several mountain resorts announcing closing dates. Beech Mountain will close after its annual Pond Skim on March 14, while Appalachian Ski Mountain plans to stay open through March 15 for its Meltdown Games.
Web Editor : Mark Bergin
Reporter : Eric Miller
Posted
North Carolina
Stein announces $40 million in recovery, mitigation grants for Western North Carolina
MARION, N.C. (WTVD) — Gov. Josh Stein on Friday announced more than $24 million in mitigation grants and another $16 million for volunteer rebuilding organizations during a Western North Carolina Recovery meeting in Marion.
The funding supports longterm recovery from Hurricane Helene and is intended to help communities better withstand future natural disasters.
State officials said the mitigation grants will help local governments upgrade wastewater and water infrastructure, strengthen transportation systems, relocate facilities out of flood-prone areas, expand flood warning networks and develop shovel ready recovery projects. Nonprofit groups aiding families with home repairs and reconstruction will receive the volunteer-based grants.
“Western North Carolina is coming back strong from Hurricane Helene,” Stein said, adding that recovery requires cooperation among government, private and nonprofit partners.
North Carolina Emergency Management Director Will Ray said the grants reflect a “wholeofcommunity effort” to reduce risk and help towns rebuild stronger.
Over two dozen communities and organizations – including Conover, Hendersonville, Clyde, Marion, Black Mountain, Banner Elk and multiple county agencies – will receive funding for projects ranging from flood gauge installations to dam restoration and wastewater improvements.
WATCH | Hurricane Helene: One Year Later: WNC leans into its resilience, faith and hope
Hurricane Helene: One Year Later (1 of 26)
Copyright © 2026 WTVD-TV. All Rights Reserved.
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