Tiger Board Logo

Donor's Den General Leaderboards TNET coins™ POTD Hall of Fame Map FAQ
GIVE AN AWARD
Use your TNET coins™ to grant this post a special award!

W
50
Big Brain
90
Love it!
100
Cheers
100
Helpful
100
Made Me Smile
100
Great Idea!
150
Mind Blown
150
Caring
200
Flammable
200
Hear ye, hear ye
200
Bravo
250
Nom Nom Nom
250
Take My Coins
500
Ooo, Shiny!
700
Treasured Post!
1000

YOUR BALANCE
Has "unc-gate" cost the heels a highly ranked prospect?(c/p)
storage This topic has been archived - replies are not allowed.
Archives - Tiger Boards Archive
add New Topic
Replies: 8
| visibility 1,755

Has "unc-gate" cost the heels a highly ranked prospect?(c/p)


Apr 27, 2015, 8:01 PM

Ingram’s college decision a victory for Duke over UNC

By Luke DeCock - ldecock@newsobserver.com


Just by himself, Brandon Ingram choosing Duke isn’t that big a deal. Even though the Kinston star is the fast-rising No. 3 prospect in the country, per ESPN, he’s just one piece in a larger puzzle, maybe even unlikely to crack Duke’s starting lineup as a freshman.

Ingram’s decision is, however, the latest battle in the perennial basketball war between Duke and North Carolina, one convincingly won by the Blue Devils.

Ingram previously indicated he probably would have committed to North Carolina last fall were it not for the threat of NCAA sanctions. He was ready to follow Jerry Stackhouse and Reggie Bullock from Kinston to Chapel Hill. Instead, he became yet another recruiting coup for Duke, where Mike Krzyzewski and Jeff Capel can apparently do no wrong.

Between the national title and the imminent delivery of three first-round picks to the NBA, with Jahlil Okafor having a chance to go No. 1 overall, Duke’s image with high school kids is as burnished as it has ever been.
Related
Top basketball recruit Brandon Ingram chooses Duke

Krzyzewski’s biggest spring recruit was Capel, who passed on the Arizona State job, a flag that he’s now the heir apparent at Duke. And now, in the space of a week, the Blue Devils convinced Derryck Thornton to graduate from high school a year early to solve their point-guard problems and landed the top player in the state.

With the new recruits and changes elsewhere – Trevor Lacey’s unexpected departure at N.C. State and Justin Anderson’s decision to leave Virginia for the NBA – Duke went from rebuilding to reloading. North Carolina and Virginia may be the class of the ACC going into next season, but Duke is atop the second tier ahead of N.C. State and Notre Dame and Miami.

After watching Ingram choose their rivals down the road, the Tar Heels have even more at stake next season. North Carolina’s Final Four drought stands at six years, and Ingram’s snub is the latest recruiting defeat for Roy Williams, who lamented during the season that not only could he no longer land top recruits, he couldn’t even get them on campus, thanks to the uncertainty surrounding the NCAA’s appraisal of North Carolina’s academic scandal.

These things can change quickly – it was not all that long ago that Krzyzewski’s Olympic responsibilities were hurting Duke and he could no longer land top recruits, “not all that long ago” now spanning two national titles – but North Carolina has never been more in need of a good season on the court and on the recruiting trail.

The Tar Heels still move the needle with television programmers, but they’ve slipped with recruits. There are three alpha dogs nationally now, Duke and Kentucky and Kansas. North Carolina used to be in that group. The Tar Heels no longer are. Williams knows it. Ingram knows it, too.

While they’re still in the running for top-10 prospect Jaylen Brown, in the larger picture the Tar Heels remain in limbo. Not even the NCAA knows how it’s going to approach North Carolina’s widespread academic fraud. The NCAA has to ask and answer some vital questions about itself before it can weigh in on North Carolina.

Is what happened at North Carolina merely an internal curriculum issue that’s beyond the NCAA’s purview, as president Mark Emmert seemed to indicate during the Final Four? If so, there’s going to be a mad race among schools to set up phony departments, the NCAA having tacitly endorsed them as long as a non-athlete or two is enrolled.

Or is what happened at North Carolina central to the NCAA’s mission of making sure member schools follow the rules they set for themselves, including the integrity of academic eligibility? If so, the Tar Heels are going to take it right in the chops.

Ingram was frightened away from Chapel Hill by that possibility. As long as the NCAA continues to ruminate, North Carolina will continue to suffer and Duke will be happy to extend the gap further.

Read more here: http://www.newsobserver.com/sports/spt-columns-blogs/luke-decock/article19758228.html#storylink=cpy

2024 purple level memberbadge-donor-10yr.jpg flag link military_tech thumb_downthumb_up


Que TarheeledTiger to tell us how UNC wont be sanctioned


Apr 27, 2015, 8:06 PM

Lol. That will be a great day

2024 orange level memberbadge-donor-15yr.jpg flag link military_tech thumb_downthumb_up

Best Is The Standard


???


Apr 28, 2015, 8:29 AM

where and when have i ever said that?

flag link military_tech thumb_downthumb_up

Re: Que TarheeledTiger to tell us how UNC wont be sanctioned


Apr 28, 2015, 9:13 AM [ in reply to Que TarheeledTiger to tell us how UNC wont be sanctioned ]

"Williams lamented during the season that not only could he no longer land top recruits, he couldn’t even get them on campus, thanks to the uncertainty surrounding the NCAA’s appraisal of North Carolina’s academic scandal."

End the streak in 2016.

flag link military_tech thumb_downthumb_up

He could start for Clemson


Apr 27, 2015, 8:06 PM

;)

2024 orange level memberbadge-donor-10yr.jpg flag link military_tech thumb_downthumb_up


Re: Has "unc-gate" cost the heels a highly ranked prospect?(c/p)


Apr 27, 2015, 8:16 PM

we can only hope since gutless NCAA wont do anything

badge-donor-05yr.jpgringofhonor-74tiger.jpg flag link military_tech thumb_downthumb_up

Re: Has "unc-gate" cost the heels a highly ranked prospect?(c/p)


Apr 27, 2015, 9:51 PM

Best case scenario this lingers for a while longer. This is like a recruiting restriction before the official NCAA sanctions. There have to be serious sanctions for something this egregious. Even well connect UNCheat shouldn't be able to wiggle out of this one. Hopefully Dan Kane at the N&O will keep up his great reporting and the NCAA will have no choice but to throw the book at those arrogant SOBs.

flag link military_tech thumb_downthumb_up

Re: Has "unc-gate" cost the heels a highly ranked prospect?(c/p)


Apr 28, 2015, 5:08 AM

I dislike the program from Chapel Hill .
I don't care for them at all .



In the least .

2024 white level memberbadge-donor-05yr.jpg flag link military_tech thumb_downthumb_up

DB23


Re: Has "unc-gate" cost the heels a highly ranked prospect?(c/p)


Apr 28, 2015, 9:32 AM

No 1 and done is going anywhere near a school that might even get a 1 year ncaa ban.

flag link military_tech thumb_downthumb_up

Replies: 8
| visibility 1,755
Archives - Tiger Boards Archive
add New Topic