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Tar Heels Up Next For Irish In ACC Second Round

No. 11 Notre Dame (11-14, 7-11) vs. No. 6 North Carolina (16-9, 10-6)

📍     Greensboro Coliseum, Greensboro, NC

📅     Wednesday, March 10, 2021

🕕     9:00 p.m. ET

📺     ACC Network with Dan Schulman and Jay Bilas

📻     Notre Dame Radio Network with Jack Nolan

🗒. Notre Dame Game Notes vs. UNC (ACC Second Round)

BY THE NUMBERS: IRISH IN GREENSBORO

5

Notre Dame is 5-1 all-time – and on a five-game win streak – in the Greensboro Coliseum during ACC Tournament play. Tuesday night’s buzzer-beating win avenged a loss to Wake Forest in the 2014 ACC tournament.

Since that game, the Irish are 5-0 in the building during tournament play – victories over Miami, Duke and North Carolina to claim the 2015 tourney title and last season’s round two win over Boston College before the rest of the tournament was cancelled.

5.2

Rebounds-per-game average for junior guard Dane Goodwin this season, an increase from 3.6 in 2019-20. Goodwin has been among Notre Dame’s most steady players this season, scoring in double figures 15 times and shooting .862 from the free throw line.

5.9

Points-per-game improvement this season for junior forward Nate Laszewski (from 7.4 in 2019-20 to 13.83 in 2020-21).

7.0

Rebounds-per-game average over the last five games for junior guard Cormac Ryan, including a career-high nine against NC State on March 3.

8

Notre Dame has seen eight scheduled games affected by COVID-19 safety guidelines enacted by the opposing team this season. Two games (at Pittsburgh Jan. 30, Syracuse, Feb. 20) were rescheduled while Notre Dame’s postponed home games with Georgia Tech (Jan. 6) and Clemson (Feb. 17) were eventually not provided a make up date and have been cancelled.

10

Entering post season play, junior guard Prentiss Hubb was 10th in the country in total assists (145) and 14th in assists per game (6.0).

12

Notre Dame has won its first game of conference tournament action in 12 of the last 13 seasons, with a 2014 ACC first-round setback to Wake Forest the lone blemish in that run. In the 20 years of conference tournament play under Glenn and Stacey Murphy Head Men’s Basketball Coach Mike Brey, Notre Dame has failed to win its first game (that did not include a first-round bye) just four times. 

35

Notre Dame and North Carolina will be meeting for the 35th time overall and third time in the ACC tournament Wednesday night. The Irish defeated the Tar Heels in the 2015 ACC Championship game, then fell to UNC the next season in the semifinals.

25

Points scored by junior forward Nate Laszewski in the first meeting between Notre Dame and North Carolina this season on Jan. 2. Laszewski was seven of 11 from three-point range in the game with nine rebounds.

20

Games played by junior guard Trey Wertz this season – who was expected to sit out the year after transferring from Santa Clara during the offseason. Wertz, along with all other first-time transfers, were granted a blanket waiver to compete this season on Dec. 16, 2020, to help teams stay active through the myriad of safety challenges from COVID-19. Wertz is shooting a career-best .438 from three-point range this season, including Tuesday night’s game-winning three-point shot at the buzzer to eliminate Wake Forest.

120

Assists in ACC play this season for Prentiss Hubb which is tied for the eight-most in a single ACC season since 1996-97. Hubb was one of just five major conference players to eclipse 100 assists in league play in 2020-21.

1021

Career points for Prentiss Hubb who became the 65th Notre Dame player to reach the 1,000-point plateau in program history. He is the 24th player of the Mike Brey era to score 1,000 points and the sixth to do so in three years or less. Since 2000-01 (first year of the Brey era), Notre Dame is second among all Division I teams with 1,000-point scorers (Villanova is first with 26).

IRISH HAVE SHORT BUT STRONG HISTORY IN THE ACC TOURNAMENT

Notre Dame is finishing its eighth season as a member of the ACC and has already compiled a distinguished resume at the league tournament. The Irish are 11-5 all-time in the championship competition, including the 2015 title (defeating both Duke and North Carolina in Greensboro, North Carolina) while also advancing to the 2017 championship game against Duke. Only Duke (13), Virginia (11) and North Carolina (12) have more wins in ACC tournament play since Notre Dame joined the league in 2013-14.

NOTRE DAME ACC TOURNAMENT HISTORY

Date

City

Site

Opponent

ND Seed

Opp Seed

W/L

ND

Opp

2014

3/12/2014

Greensboro, NC

Greensboro Coliseum

Wake Forest

13

12

L

69

81

2015

3/12/2015

Greensboro, NC

Greensboro Coliseum

Miami

3

6

W

70

63

3/13/2015

Greensboro, NC

Greensboro Coliseum

Duke

3

2

W

74

64

3/14/2015

Greensboro, NC

Greensboro Coliseum

North Carolina

3

5

W

90

82

2016

3/10/2016

Washington, DC

Verizon Center

Duke

4

5

W OT

84

79

3/11/2016

Washington, DC

Verizon Center

North Carolina

4

1

L

47

78

2017

3/9/17

Brooklyn, NY

Barclays Center

Virginia

3

6

W

71

58

3/10/17

Brooklyn, NY

Barclays Center

Florida State

3

2

W

77

73

3/11/17

Brooklyn, NY

Barclays Center

Duke

3

5

L

66

75

2018

3/6/18

Brooklyn, NY

Barclays Center

Pittsburgh

10

15

W

67

64

3/7/18

Brooklyn, NY

Barclays Center

Virginia Tech

10

7

W

71

65

3/8/18

Brooklyn, NY

Barclays Center

Duke

10

2

L

70

88

2019

3/12/19

Charlotte, NC

Spectrum Center

Georgia Tech

15

10

W

78

71

3/13/19

Charlotte, NC

Spectrum Center

Louisville

15

7

L

53

75

2020

3/11/20

Greensboro, NC

Greensboro Coliseum

Boston College

7

10

W

80

58

2021

3/9/21

Greensboro, NC

Greensboro Coliseum

Wake Forest

11

14

W

80

77

CHALLENGES OF A COVID-19 SCHEDULE

College basketball teams across the country have been challenged to face schedule uncertainty all season as safety protocols have forced the cancellation or postponement of games. The Irish have had eight games this season affected one way or another by a COVID-19 safety issue from the opposing team. That has led to an unbalanced schedule in some respects:

  • Notre Dame’s final two home games last week against NC State (March 3) and Florida State (March 6) were the first time the Irish hosted back-to-back ACC home games all season. It also was the first time the Irish have seen back-to-back home games since the Bellarmine (Dec. 23) and Virginia (Dec. 30) combination.
  • Notre Dame was the final school in the ACC to host back-to-back home games and joins Louisville and North Carolina as the only ACC teams to host just one back-to-back league game series in 2020-21.
  • The Irish just completed a three-game road swing in league play (at Syracuse, Louisville and Boston College) and join Wake Forest as the only other ACC team to face multiple three-game road trips in league play. The Irish played earlier this season at North Carolina, Virginia and Virginia Tech consecutively.
  • Notre Dame has faced three multiple game ACC road trips this season, joining Duke, Miami, Syracuse and Wake Forest as the only ACC teams facing such a challenge in 2020-21.

HUBB FINISHES SECOND ON NOTRE DAME ACC SINGLE-SEASON ASSIST MARK

With 120 assists in ACC play this season, Prentiss Hubb finished second behind Jerian Grant’s Notre Dame record of 125 assists in league play from the 2015 season.

Since the 1996-97 season, an ACC player has reached 100 assists in conference play 40 times.

NOTRE DAME SINGLE SEASON ACC ONLY ASSISTS

Player

Season

Games

Assists

1.

Jerian Grant

2014-15

18

125

2.

PRENTISS HUBB

2020-21

18

120

3.

Prentiss Hubb

2019-20

20

97

4.

Matt Farrell

2016-17

18

94

5.

Eric Atkins

2013-14

18

91

DURHAM CAREER FIELD GOAL PERCENTAGE HIGH ON IRISH CAREER CHARTS

Graduate forward Juwan Durham boasts a .585 career field goal percentage at Notre Dame, a mark that would rank him third among Irish players with 200 or more FGM since 1996-97:

Player

Seasons

GP

FGM

FG%

1.

Martinas Geben

2014-18

108

216

.608

2.

Jack Cooley

2009-13

123

394

.601

3.

JUWAN DURHAM

2018-21

84

271

.585

4.

Harold Swanagan

1998-2002

127

301

.569

5.

Zach Auguste

2012-16

128

507

.567

6.

Bonzie Colson

2014-18

125

609

.528

PROGRAM DEVELOPMENT HIGHLIGHTED BY 1,000 POINT SCORERS

Notre Dame has produced 65 1,000 point scorers throughout the history of the program with 24 of those players reaching that statistical milestone during the Mike Brey era (2000-01 – current). Of the 85 players who have suited up for Notre Dame under Mike Brey, 36 of them were recruited by the staff and exhausted their eligibility with the Irish – 20 of those players have scored more than 1,000 points in a career.

Since 2000-01, Notre Dame leads all ACC teams in 1,000 point scorers (24) and is second in the country over that time frame to Villanova.

School

All-Time 1,000 Point Scorers

1,000 Point Scorers since 2000-01

North Carolina

77

20

Louisville

69

18

Duke

67

20

NOTRE DAME

65

24

Villanova

64

26

Syracuse

62

19

Kansas

61

19

HUBB REACHES 1,000 POINTS QUICKLY

In the victory over No. 11/11 Florida State on March 6, 20201, Prentiss Hubb became just the sixth Irish player to reach that plateau in his third season playing for Mike Brey.

Player

Third Season

Games

Points

1.

Luke Harangody

2008-09

99

1823

2.

Chris Thomas

2003-04

99

1783

3.

Bonzie Colson

2016-17

104

1218

4.

Jerian Grant

2013-14

81

1111

5.

Tim Abromaitis

2010-11

81

1109

6.

PRENTISS HUBB

2020-21

89

1021

A DECADE OF ‘NO FOUL’ CONTINUES

One of the mantras of Notre Dame basketball under Mike Brey has been to keep the amount of opponent foul shots down. Defend without fouling is a way of life for Irish basketball and the statistics bear out that trend.

In the last 11 years, Notre Dame has failed to finish among the top 10 in least amount of personal fouls committed just twice. They have also led the country in least amount of personal fouls three times.

The NCAA has been tracking the least amount of fouls committed in a season since 1993. Notre Dame is the only team since 1993 to lead the country in least amount of fouls more than twice (four times) and could be on pace to make it six times this season.

NOTRE DAME FOULS PER GAME NATIONAL/CONFERENCE FINAL RANKING

Year

Fouls Per Game

NCAA Raking

Conference Ranking

2009-10

15.1

10

2

2010-11

15.2

11

1

2011-12

13.8

1

1

2012-13

14.1

8

1

2013-14

16.2

15

5

2014-15

15.1

6

1

2015-16

15.1

1

1

2016-17

14.9

4

1

2017-18

13.1

1

1

2018-19

13.8

1

1

2019-20

12.4

1

1

2020-21

12.8

2

2

IRISH RECEIVE COMMITMENTS FROM TWO AREA PROSPECTS

Rising high school seniors J.R. Konieczny (Ko-nez-nee) and Blake Wesley, both from South Bend, Indiana, have signed National Letters of Intent to play basketball at the University of Notre Dame.

Rated among the top 150 high school players in the 2020-21 class, Konieczy (Kah-nez-nee) is a four-star recruit according to ESPN.com and earned third-team all-state honors as a junior in 2019-20. He averaged over 24 points a game last season, including a 42-point outburst in the 2020 sectional semifinal – a performance that earned him the Indiana Basketball Coaches Association Player of the Week honors.

A consensus four-star recruit, Wesley is ranked 96th nationally by Rivals and 113th by 247Sports. An honorable mention all-state selection as a junior in 2019-20, Wesley led all local area players with a 26.0 points-per-game average last season.

2019-20 IVY LEAGUE PLAYER OF THE YEAR PAUL ATKINSON JR. TO JOIN IRISH IN 2021-22

The University of Notre Dame men’s basketball program has announced the addition of Paul Atkinson Jr. as a graduate transfer from Yale who will join the Fighting Irish roster for the 2021-22 season. The 2019-20 Ivy League Player of the Year, Atkinson Jr. was unable to play his senior season at Yale due to the Ivy League’s shut down throughout the COVID-19 pandemic.

“I am excited to join the Notre Dame family and get to play alongside a group of really talented guys as well as being able to learn under a great coaching staff that will help me further my game,” Atkinson Jr. said.

Owning a career field goal percentage of .661 and 16 20-point scoring performances, Atkinson Jr. will step into a front court in transition next season due to the departure of fifth-year seniors Juwan Durham and Nikola Djogo at the end of the 2020-21 campaign. In a February 3, 2021, ranking from ESPN+, Atkinson Jr. was selected as the fourth-ranked transfer prospect in college basketball.

“Paul brings a great combination of academic and athletic ability to our basketball program and he will work toward an accelerated graduate degree next year,” Glenn and Stacey Murphy Head Men’s Basketball Coach Mike Brey said.

“The timing with his arrival and our roster turnover for next season works out and we are excited to add his skill set and experience to our team.”

JACK NOLAN, VOICE OF IRISH ATHLETICS, ANNOUNCES HIS RETIREMENT

Jack Nolan, a fixture of Notre Dame athletics broadcasts for 39 years, has announced his retirement at the conclusion of the 2020-21 men’s basketball season.

“I have been truly blessed to have been associated with the Notre Dame Athletics Department for 39 seasons,” Nolan said.

“I will be forever grateful to all the athletes, coaches, colleagues and fans who have been so wonderful to me over the years. However, the time has come for my wife Rhonda (Brown) and I to live a more normal life.

“We want to get off the road and off the nights, weekends and holidays work schedule we have both navigated for so long. We hope to indulge our passion for travel, our desire to be warm during Michiana winters and be able to spend much more time with family and friends.”

A jack of all trades, Nolan has been a staple around Notre Dame football and men’s basketball games for close to 40 years. He’s taken home many awards as both a news and sports anchor, served as master of ceremonies for innumerable Irish special events and established himself as one of the most recognizable faces of Notre Dame athletics.

“Jack Nolan has been with us since I started at Notre Dame and it is hard to think about our broadcasts without him,” Glenn and Stacey Murphy Head Men’s Basketball Coach Mike Brey said. “His professionalism has made my job easier and his broadcast calls are as much a part of our basketball legacy as ‘The Burn’ or the three-point shot. I will miss having him around the program, but if anyone deserves the ability to enjoy a long and happy retirement it is Jack and Rhonda.”

Nolan joined the South Bend community in 1982 after spending a year at upstart cable news network CNN after graduation from Missouri in 1981. The opportunity to call play-by-play of Notre Dame football games was the catalyst for him to take the job at WNDU, the local NBC affiliate.

At the time of his arrival at WNDU, the station was owned by the University and broadcast Irish football games that were not selected to be on national television. Nolan had an immediate award-winning impact on the football broadcast crew, taking home Associated Press play-by-play awards in 1983, 1987 and 1989.

Nolan also anchored the WNDU sports desk throughout the 1980s and ‘90s, while adding in weekend news anchor duties in 1993. He met his future wife, Rhonda Brown, while working together and the couple co-anchored WNDU’s NewsCenter 16 Sunday Morning from 1996 through 2002.

His long run with Notre Dame men’s basketball began in 1982 on both radio and television, eventually becoming the regular radio analyst with Jack Lorri and then assuming the play-by-play duties for Irish hoops after Lorri’s retirement in 2006.

Also in 2006, Nolan left WNDU to become a full-time employee on campus as part of Notre Dame Sports Properties, who handled the radio broadcasting rights for Irish athletics and helped lead Notre Dame through its first steps of online video productions. Nolan soon became synonymous with Irish athletics both over the air and online, hosting the Brian Kelly and Mike Brey television and radio shows, checking in from Irish football practices and calling numerous Notre Dame olympic sport events.

Nolan’s radio talents were not just limited to play-by-play or analyst duties. From 1982 through 1999 he co-hosted WNDU’s popular SportsTalk show with the late Jeff Jeffers and was the host of the Official Notre Dame Football Post Game Show for over 25 seasons.

In addition to Lorri and Jeffers as notable long-time colleagues of Nolan, Reggie Brooks and the late Mirko Jurkovic spent several seasons both on radio and und.com as part of his broadcast crew. It was also with Nolan on Notre Dame men’s basketball radio crew that ESPN’s LaPhonso Ellis and Jordan Cornette began their broadcast careers.

“The time Jack, Mirko and I spent on the air together was a great professional memory for me,” said Brooks, a former Notre Dame All-American and current Assistant Athletics Director at the University.  “Jack was a great guy to work with and we will all miss him being around campus.”

Nolan’s tireless work with Notre Dame Sports Properties and Fighting Irish Media was honored in November 2015 when he won the Outstanding Crafts Achievement Emmy for On-Camera Talent-Sports awarded by the Chicago Midwest Chapter of the National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences.

A native of Winchester, Massachusetts, Nolan was awarded an Honorary Monogram by the University in 2013.