No. 8 UNC remains unbeaten in ACC. Three takeaways from Heels’ win over No. 16 Clemson

No. 8 UNC (11-3, 3-0 ACC) defeated No. 16 Clemson (11-3, 1-2 ACC), 65-55, on the road Saturday afternoon, remaining atop the ACC.

The teams’ defenses dominated and the offenses had a hard time staying in their systems, but the Heels pulled it off. Senior RJ Davis and graduate student Armando Bacot led the team with 14 points each. Bacot added 16 rebounds.

Carolina leads the all-time series, 136-23, and has won three straight against the Tigers.

Here are three takeaways from the game.

Unexpected contributors

UNC’s start looked wildly different Saturday than it did earlier in the week. The Tar Heels started 5-of-9 from the field and made four straight shots, a far cry from the 10 misses to start the Pitt contest. The offense cooled down significantly, thanks in part to Clemson’s defense, but its contributions came from unlikely players.

Graduate student Cormac Ryan buoyed the Tar Heels’ offense in the first half, scoring 10 points and going 2-for-4 from the perimeter. He added two rebounds and assisted on three other buckets.

Bacot praised Ryan earlier this week for his ability to create scoring opportunities and the pressure it takes off of him.

“It’s just been amazing, because it’s not like in past years where teams try to take me away, and we kind of just fall flat and don’t have offense,” Bacot said.

The transfer left the game with less than three minutes to play in the first half after appearing to tweak his previously-injured ankle on a defensive play against Clemson’s Joseph Girard, but he returned to the game about a minute later.

Every Tar Heel who earned minutes contributed at least two points, and Seth Trimble and grad student Paxson Wojcik added clutch 3s in the second half to keep Carolina on top.

The Heels finished with 14 bench points.

Defense stops Clemson’s Hall, Girard

Even though the Carolina offense recorded a lower offensive output than usual, its defense held the Tigers far below its scoring average.

UNC specifically stopped PJ Hall and Joseph Girard III, Clemson’s top two scorers. Hall, who fouled out with 1:26 left in the game, recorded just 10 points and five rebounds. He came into the game averaging 20.2 points and 6.5 rebounds per game.

Bacot knew Hall would be a key factor in the game, citing his playmaking ability.

“I think in his four years he’s always kind of fell under the radar,” Bacot said. “I think everything he’s been doing this year, people are finally starting to notice how good he really is.”

Girard, who averages 15 points per game, also finished with five points on 1 of 10 shooting.

In another game where the shots aren’t falling — UNC hit 31.7% in the second half — effective defense picks up those wins.

Harrison Ingram has second off game

Junior Harrison Ingram struggled on offense for another game, but he didn’t make up for it on defense with 15 rebounds like he did at Pitt. Instead, Ingram looked off on both ends.

The Stanford transfer finished with nine points and hit a couple of 3s, but the Clemson bigs out-worked him inside and forced him to take several bad shots. That hurt the Heels, who had a hard time shaking the Tigers.

The two teams traded points for virtually the entire game, recording seven ties and 11 lead changes.

Ingram told the media Tuesday he sustained a wrist injury against Kentucky and is “playing catch up.” Based on his performance Saturday, it appears Ingram remains impacted by the fall he took against the Wildcats.