UNC women's basketball fall prey to Virginia Tech in upset
Allisha Gray’s calm-and-collectedness and Diamond DeShields’ fearlessness.
Use the fields below to perform an advanced search of The Daily Tar Heel's archives. This will return articles, images, and multimedia relevant to your query. You can also try a Basic search
148 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
Allisha Gray’s calm-and-collectedness and Diamond DeShields’ fearlessness.
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — As the red numbers fiercely ticked down on the game clock at the end of the first half, Kennedy Meeks caught the ball inside, gathered himself and finished strong with his left hand.
At about 6 p.m. Wednesday night, North Carolina students received an email with notice that the men’s basketball team’s game against Duke would be postponed.
Latifah Coleman laid the ball in the basket.
Fresh names and faces graced the big screen at Kenan Stadium for the first time on Wednesday.
The public announcer at the Dean E. Smith Center couldn’t catch his breath.
ATLANTA — Perhaps it was too early for James Michael McAdoo to get on his team’s case.
Seven pounds. Three ounces. Nineteen inches.
North Carolina women’s basketball coach Sylvia Hatchell is in remission after announcing her leukemia diagnosis Oct. 14, a team spokesman said Wednesday.
On his weekly radio show Monday night, North Carolina basketball coach Roy Williams lamented that if there’s one thing currently lacking amongst his players, it’s intensity.
WINSTON-SALEM — When North Carolina stepped foot in the painted area below each basket at Joel Coliseum Sunday night, the chances were there.
At Friday’s press conference, Roy Williams tapped into his arsenal of sayings, reciting one he admitted usually brings about a deal of laughs from his players.
In his last four games, James Michael McAdoo had gotten away from what he’s grown accustomed to doing in nearly three years as a member of the North Carolina men’s basketball team — scoring the basketball.
Boyd Okwuono doesn’t hesitate to say what he expects for the North Carolina men’s soccer team’s defense each and every time the group takes the field.
As the sun began to set Tuesday, marking the eventual end of its training session, the North Carolina men’s soccer team remained on the cold, dry practice field.
The North Carolina men’s soccer team has thrived this season off of early goals.
The night before the biggest game of his life, Theo Pinson wanted to avoid distractions.
The No. 19 North Carolina men’s soccer team’s defensive unit prides itself on being a close-knit group, relying upon communication whenever an offense threatens its goal.
Twelve years ago, a young Chipper Root took his place on the sideline every game at Fetzer Field as a ball boy for the North Carolina men’s soccer team during its 2001 national championship-winning season.
In just his first season as a member of the North Carolina men’s soccer team, junior transfer from Southern Methodist Tyler Engel has shown he can not only score, but win games — relying on his dominant left foot when his team is in need of a goal.