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| Sunday, January 30 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
The ACC thought its growing pains were over. Last year's inexperience was supposed to evolve into steady play in 1999-2000.
For the most part, that's been the case. But not where you'd expect. North Carolina and Wake Forest talked of challenging Duke for the conference title but both have failed to mature as predicted. However, the improved play from N.C. State and Virginia has come not entirely without the help of some key freshmen. And then there's Duke, which has proven to be more resilient than anyone anticipated. Duke and Virginia have the two bumper freshman crops this season, filling roster holes left by early-entry, transfers and just a lack of quality players. The Devils plugged in four McDonald's All-Americans and haven't missed a beat while the Cavaliers, who were down to six scholarship players last season, are fighting for a place in the ACC's upper echelon. Jason Williams is challenging Arizona's Jason Gardner for national freshman of the year honors, and a look at his numbers tells you why. He fills the box score every night, coming within one rebound of recording a triple-double in an 84-83 overtime win over DePaul in which he played all 45 minutes. Along with veterans Chris Carrawell, Nate James and Shane Battier, Williams has a slew of freshmen at his disposal. Carlos Boozer is dominating inside after recovering from a foot injury early in the season, and Mike Dunleavy is considered a sixth starter for the Devils. The fourth famous frosh, Casey Sanders, just needs to add bulk before this Duke quartet can become an absolute wrecking ball. Long on perimeter players but short inside, the Cavaliers found their bruiser in 6-foot-7, 245-pound Travis Watson. His presence inside has pulled defenses in, opening the perimeter for Chris Williams and Donald Hand. Roger Mason and Majestic Mapp, two equally heralded recruits, haven't had to play as much as Watson but are still progressing nicely. While North Carolina's season is failing to meet expectations, the play of freshman Joseph Forte is exceeding Bill Guthridge's wildest dreams. Forte leads the Heels in scoring at 16.2 and chips in 5.5 rebounds and 1.7 steals per game. He could stand some improvement on defense, but in this transition time for Carolina, the door is open for him to assume a major leadership position. Judging by how he's tried to take over on offense during tough times, he's already on his way. Statistics through Thursday, Jan. 27.
| ALSO SEE The Weekly Word on college basketball Freshman Watch East: Young Devils make their mark Statistical breakdown of top 20 freshmen Poll results for top 10 freshmen by conference Top 10 freshmen in the Big Ten Top 10 freshmen in the Big 12 Top 10 freshmen in the SEC Top 10 freshmen in Conference USA Top 10 freshmen in the Pac-10 Top 10 freshmen in the Mountain West and WAC Top 10 freshmen in the Atlantic 10 Top 10 freshmen in the Big East Top 10 freshmen in the rest of the country AUDIO/VIDEO Carlos Boozer takes the ball to the rack in OT. avi: 980 k RealVideo: 56.6 | ISDN | T1 |