North Carolina
The FanDuel North Carolina promo code grants $250 in NC and $200 in other states for any game Sunday
Sports betting has commenced in North Carolina, offering Tar Heel State users an opportunity to win big using the FanDuel North Carolina promo code.
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Nuggets vs. Mavericks Pick
With Luka Doncic anticipated to be back in action tomorrow. He’s averages nearly a 30-point triple-double this season.
Doncic and Kyrie Irving form an impressive pairing, providing the Mavericks with considerable potential in the upcoming NBA playoffs. Facing the defending champions at home on Sunday, I’m confident that Dallas will deliver a strong performance, posing a significant challenge to Denver.
Although the Nuggets boast solid rim protection (ranking 6th in opponent rim FG%), their perimeter defense isn’t as sturdy. The Mavericks excel both inside the paint and beyond the arc, making them difficult to defend for any opponent, especially Denver, which struggles to create turnovers (ranked 22nd in steals).
These factors will enable the home team to cover the spread on Sunday.
Pick: Dallas +3.5
What is the FanDuel promo code?
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FanDuel Sportsbook Promo Code
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North Carolina
Kansas vs. North Carolina: How to watch college basketball free today
LAWRENCE, Kansas – College basketball blue bloods collide as the top-ranked Kansas Jayhawks host the No. 9 North Carolina Tarheels today – Friday, Nov. 8 – at historic Allen Fieldhouse in Lawrence, Kansas. The matchup is available to watch on multiple streaming services.
This top-10 matchup will broadcast live on ESPN2 with tipoff scheduled for 7 p.m. Eastern. (6 p.m. Central). Fans who have parted ways with their cable provider can catch the game at no cost by taking advantage of streaming alternatives like DirecTV Stream, which offers a free trial. FuboTV is also offering a free trial and $20 off your first month.
Sling TV has promotional offers for new customers.
Revamped and ready to move past an uncharacteristic 11-loss season, the Jayhawks (1-0) cruised past Howard in their season opener and are one of the most talented teams in the country, guided senior paint pariah Hunter Dickinson, senior forward KJ Adams Jr. and freshman big Flory Bidunga.
Dickinson nabbed 16 points and six rebounds while Adams had seven points, four rebounds and three assists. Bidunga went a perfect 6-for-6 with 13 points and eight rebounds off the bench.
Dickinson’s presence presents problems across the court. The methodical style chips away at defenses, but also opens up swing opportunities for some streaky shooting.
South Dakota State grad transfer Zeke Mayo had a game-high 19 points off the bench.
Kansas’ biggest concern could be its ability to stay healthy. The lineup is already thin after losing Elmarko Jackson for the season. Sophomore guard Jamari McDowell is redshirting while senior Shakeel Moore missed opening night.
The Jayhawks and Tarheels have not played since the 2022 National Championship. Kansas won that meeting, 72-69. The Jayhawks have won the last four meetings. The two programs have combined for 37 Final Fours and 10 national titles.
Watch Kansas vs. North Carolina for free on DirecTV Stream
Despite a scare against Elon in their season opener, the Tarheels (1-0) have high expectations with All-Amercian candidate RJ Davis leading the charge. He can burn the opposition with a silky-smooth jumper and carves through defenses with blazing speed.
Davis rescued the Tarheels with 24 points, seven rebounds, seven assists and two steals. He will likely see perimeter specialist Dajuan Harris Jr. as his assignment.
The Phoenix fiasco was a small sample size, but still concerning. North Carolina trailed 71-69 with less than seven minutes left before turning on the afterburners to a 14-point victory.
The Tarheels shot 40% from the field in the uphill climb. While they outscored Elon 34-22 in the paint, there were some glaring mishaps that could spell doom against a potent interior Jayhawk lineup. They also only claimed a 44-40 advantage on the glass against a much smaller team.
Those numbers are troubling against the likes of Dickinson, Adams and Bidunga. North Carolina will need to be much more physical, so they are not swallowed up inside.
If initial play is any indication, senior forward Jae’Lyn Withers will have his hands full. He tallied 10 points and 10 rebounds with one assist on opening night.
North Carolina has a collection of guards to offset their weakness inside, including sensational sophomore Elliot Cadeau, who tallied 17 points, eight assists and four rebounds while shooting 57.1% from the field.
Seth Trimble, Cade Tyson, along with freshmen Ian Jackson and Drake Powell are also capable of putting up points.
Both teams excel in transition, which makes for a back-and-forth affair in what is UNC’s first game in Kansas since 1960.
Watch Kansas vs. North Carolina for free on FuboTV
Who is announcing Kansas vs. North Carolina?
Dan Shulman (play-by-play) and Jay Bilas (analyst) will be on the call.
What are the latest odds for Kansas vs. North Carolina?
Moneyline: KU: (-345), NC: (+275)
Spread: KU: -7.5, NC: +7.5
Over/Under: 160
Odds from DraftKings
Here’s more information on how to watch Kansas-North Carolina on TV or streaming services:
What: College basketball: Kansas vs. North Carolina
When: Friday, Nov. 8, 2024
Time: 7 p.m. Eastern (6 p.m. Central)
Where: Allen Fieldhouse | Lawrence, Kansas
Channel: ESPN2
Best streaming options: FuboTV (free trial and $20 off first month), DirecTV Stream (free trial) and Sling TV (half off first month)
Cable Channel Finder: AT&T U-Verse, Comcast Xfinity, Spectrum/Charter, Optimum/Altice, Cox, DIRECTV, Dish, Verizon Fios
North Carolina
A local reporter’s experience covering Western North Carolina in the wake of Helene
See Helene’s aftermath over Swannanoa in North Carolina
Drone video from Oct. 3 shows Helene’s floodwaters receding and crews beginning the cleanup process after the storm brought devastation to Swannanoa and surrounding parts in North Carolina
Reuters
It’s hard to put into words what it’s like to pull up to where a family’s home once stood and see mounds and mounds of cracked, beige dirt.
To notice that a wooden, split-rail fence managed to withstand more than 20 feet of swift-moving floodwaters, yet not realize until later that the fence bordered the home’s driveway. To walk next door to a tiling warehouse, where men in white coveralls and muddy black boots are removing storm debris, and ask if there was a house next to their place of business.
And, when one answers in the affirmative, to have him walk you and your photographer to the spot where a family once laughed and cried and prayed together – all while knowing the tragic outcome of their story.
My job is to put these kinds of experiences into words. More than a week later, I’m still struggling to.
I tried to begin this piece – a brief description of my reporting in Asheville, North Carolina, as part of the USA TODAY Network’s Hurricane Helene coverage – in a light-hearted way.
I thought about starting with how we in the Asheville Citizen-Times newsroom had to use gallon buckets to force-flush the toilets because there was no running water. About how bags of cat litter sat in the halls in case reporters needed to take them home to create a makeshift bathroom.
I thought about describing the lovely man I encountered as I traipsed around a homeless encampment, who was all too willing to show me where a tree fell on his tent and legs when Helene swept through Western North Carolina. His rebuilt camp is the tidiest I’ve ever seen – and my beat has taken me through quite a few.
But today, on an unseasonably warm Tuesday in late October, I wrote and rewrote the beginning of this piece. Because this afternoon – and the afternoon before it – my heart is heavy.
It’s heavy for the Dryes and Wiselys, two families who lost almost everyone to the floods, and the other Asheville survivors I spoke to. For the families who are still waiting to hear about loved ones.
For the homeless residents who told me they fear some of their acquaintances who perished in the storm will never be claimed by family because of their transient status. And for the Western North Carolina community as a whole, which is mourning the loss of homes and pets and landmarks and an art colony that disappeared entirely in mere hours.
As students, journalism hopefuls are taught to keep an arm’s length from stories and sources. Reporters must remain objective, professors stress, which means maintaining a certain level of detachment. If you care too much, your feelings might find their way into a piece and influence your ability to tell the story fairly.
But what this (well-intentioned) lesson leaves out is humanity.
How can one travel to natural disaster-ravaged areas, interview families who lost parents and siblings and children and grandparents, and not be impacted?
How can a reporter spend hours at a barricade situation involving an 11-month-old girl and not feel emotional when they’re told a chaplain has been called to the hospital where the baby was rushed following a gunshot wound to her head?
And how can journalists be expected to cover school shootings – as the Texas-based photographer I worked alongside in Asheville did in Uvalde in 2022 – and remain emotionless?
I don’t believe reporters can. And I also believe this is something those in the field have long known.
At the first newspaper I worked at, I had an editor who was decades into his career. He knew I was fresh out of college and hadn’t chosen the breaking news/public safety beat (which I’m so thankful I was assigned to because it’s now my specialty.) He knew that I’d write a lot of hard stories in my career.
So, one day, he offered me a piece of advice: The moment this stuff – the really tragic, heavy stories, he meant – stops getting to you, get out of the profession. Or, at the very least, take a long enough break to where you can feel the humanity of this again.
Eight or so years later, I remember those words like he spoke them yesterday. So, on days when my heart is heavy, I think it’s OK to feel this way.
Because what’s happening in Western North Carolina is heavy – and it will be for that community and those journalists for a while.
Isabel is an investigative reporter covering breaking news and public safety, with an eye toward some of Delaware’s most vulnerable: children, those struggling with addiction, and those with mental illness. She can be reached at ihughes@delawareonline.com or via X at @izzihughes_
North Carolina
Fairfield residents turn RV's into homes for North Carolina Helene victims
FAIRFIELD, Va. (WDBJ) – It’s been over a month since Hurricane Helene and communities in North Carolina are still working to recover.
But here in our hometowns, people are still stepping up to lend a hand, and those in Fairfield are lending a home.
A group in Fairfield is packing campers full of everything a family might need to become the new home for those who lost everything in Hurricane Helene.
Home has always been where you have a roof over your head and a bed to sleep in. But in Lake Lure, N.C., that no longer exists for many residents.
Bonnie Wilmer has seen it herself.
“I believe Lake Lure alone had 60 families that’s in tents,” said Wilmer. “They don’t have anything right now except sleeping bag in the ground.”
So she and a few friends are creating homes and sending them down to those people.
“[My friend] said she was going to purchase campers and some of them would need to be cleaned, I said bring them to my house, my friends will come help,” said Wilmer.
For the past week, people have been donating campers to Wilmer. Someone came all the way from Ohio to drop one off.
She and her crew clean them up and pack them with the basic necessities that have also been donated and other items to make it feel like a home.
“They have a new grill here, charcoal grill, new toaster, new dishes, new brooms, mops, new sheets for their bed, new bed pillows, and all the toiletries and anything that they would need [and] stocked it with some food,” said Wilmer, walking through the camper.
So far, three campers have been sent down to Lake Lure.
“They’re very, very grateful,” said Wilmer, recalling the reaction of the North Carolina residents. “I know they said one little girl was so excited to have a home. And these people are in tents, and it’s getting a little too cold for that.”
And two more families will have homes delivered Friday.
“We’ll just keep on going, as long as we continue to get money to pay for them,” said Wilmer.
Wilmer said she and her group are always accepting donations. They are collecting everything from food to hygiene products, mattresses and clothing. Monetary donations will go toward buying more campers to fill.
The best way to help out is through Wilmer’s Facebook. You can find her page here.
Copyright 2024 WDBJ. All rights reserved.
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