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North Carolina rolls past Georgia Tech behind Caleb Williams

Shelby Swanson, The News & Observer on

Published in Basketball

ATLANTA — It took over 12 minutes Saturday for Caleb Wilson to score his first points in his Atlanta homecoming trip at Georgia Tech’s McCamish Pavilion, but he still made sure to put on a show.

In No. 16 North Carolina’s 91-75 win over Georgia Tech, Wilson opened up his performance with a 3-pointer and, by the end of the first half, started going full-on NBA Slam Dunk Contest. There was the one-handed finish on the lob from Kyan Evans with two minutes until halftime, followed roughly a minute later by another thunderous slam — this time with two hands — in transition.

Wilson was scoreless for North Carolina’s first 28 points. After that? He had 14 of the Tar Heels’ last 24 heading into halftime.

And he wasn’t done. He added eight more points in the second half to finish with a team-high 22. Wilson broke two freshman records in the process: most consecutive double-figure scoring games to begin a career (21) and 20-point games (15).

The Tar Heels’ frontcourt twin terrors were back in peak form on Saturday afternoon. Henri Veesaar (20 points) led the team in rebounds with 12, while Wilson led in scoring. That marks the 19th time in 21 games that Veesaar or Wilson has led the team in those categories.

An 18-6 North Carolina (17-4, 5-2 ACC) run midway through the first half put the Tar Heels up by double digits. From that point on, UNC remained firmly in control. Despite several pushes from Georgia Tech, the Yellow Jackets got within only 12 points of the Tar Heels in the second half.

Here are some takeaways from the game:

Veesaar rebounds from dismal performance at UVA

Veesaar entered Saturday a week removed from his least productive outing of the season: seven points, one rebound and four fouls in 29 minutes of playing time.

“They did a really good job against him and he really couldn’t get into a rhythm on both ends of the floor,” UNC coach Hubert Davis said at his Friday press conference. “And so we talked about, from a defensive standpoint, being more ready defensively for guys posting up and going at him.”

From the onset of the Georgia Tech clash, which saw Veesaar nearly wrestle a Yellow Jacket to the floor on a jump ball, it was clear the seven-footer had shaken off that performance. By the time he hit a quick 3-pointer from the top of the key, Veesaar was up to 11 points, six rebounds and two blocks in just nine minutes of action.

Veesaar continued to add more blocks to his statline with a volleyball-like spike of Georgia Tech’s Kam Craft (15 points) with three and a half minutes remaining in the first half. His four blocks were one away from his career-high of five, which he recorded against N.C. Central earlier this season.

After falling into foul trouble against the talented Virginia frontcourt last week, Veesaar put on a drop coverage clinic Saturday — providing a response and the exact type of impact Davis sought out in the transfer portal this past offseason.

“What I saw when we got Henri in the transfer portal was somebody that could check a number of different boxes on both ends… just an overall versatile player that has tremendous size,” Davis said Friday, later adding, “Going to places at Virginia, at Georgia Tech, he’s been in those places before and knows how to prepare, practice and respond to that.”

More balance on the boards

 

Georgia Tech tends to clean the glass well, averaging the second-best defensive rebounding effort in ACC play at 36.4 per game. The Yellow Jackets, despite an unimpressive start to ACC play, provided a solid litmus test for the Tar Heels after a less-than-ideal rebounding performance against the Cavaliers.

North Carolina pretty much matched Georgia Tech on the boards, 39-38. Nothing eye-popping, certainly, but it marked an improvement from the Tar Heels’ last outing.

At Virginia last week, Wilson and Veesaar combined for a total of five rebounds — season lows as individuals and a pair. On the flip side, North Carolina’s backcourt combined for a season-high 19 rebounds, led by Jonathan Powell’s team-best seven rebounds and five from Seth Trimble.

Ahead of this contest, Davis placed an emphasis on his team’s rebounding — particularly on the defensive end.

“Last two games, teams have gotten 34 offensive rebounds against us,” Davis said at a press conference on Friday. “We’ve been able to [handle] that in getting wins, because they haven’t been able to convert on it. We’ve taken care of the basketball and we’ve shot the ball really well, and that’s not sustainable. So limiting teams to one shot every possession and being able to finish that possession with a box-out rebound is going to be huge on Saturday.”

North Carolina held Georgia Tech to 12 second-chance points on nine offensive rebounds.

Small defensive lapses offer room for improvement

Less than a minute after Wilson raced out for his third dunk of the afternoon midway through the second half, Davis called a 30-second timeout. The freshman’s slam had put the Tar Heels up by 20, but immediately after, North Carolina gave up two wide-open triples.

Georgia Tech cashed both. They cut the deficit to just 16, thanks to a Wilson pull-up jumper between the two treys. But the ease with which the Yellow Jackets scored likely didn’t sit well with Davis.

Georgia Tech, at that point, had hit six of nine attempts from deep (66.7%). Craft had three of those triples at a 50% clip.

The Yellow Jackets only hit one 3-pointer for the rest of the game following that timeout.

That said, Georgia Tech nearly matched North Carolina’s offense in a sleepy second half, scoring 38 to the Tar Heels’ 39.

Against more potent offenses to come in ACC play, UNC can’t afford to take its foot off the gas late.

Baye Ndongo led the Yellow Jackets (11-11, 2-7) with 27 points.


©2026 The News & Observer. Visit at newsobserver.com. Distributed at Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

 

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