ONLINE SPORTSBOOK, SPORTS BETTING, CASINO GAMES, FOOTBALL BETTING, BLACKJACK GAMBLING

Online Sportsbook Online Blackjack

SPORTSBOOK LOGIN

Join  My Sportsbook
Forget your Password?

Secure Offshore Sports Betting

SPORTSBOOK LINES

Sportsbook Lines ESPN
College and NFL Football Sportsbook Lines Football
College and NBA Basketball Sportsbook Lines Basketball
MLB Baseball Sportsbook Lines Baseball
NHL Hockey Sportsbook Lines Hockey
Soccer Sportsbook Lines Soccer
Tennis Sportsbook Lines Tennis
NASCAR Sportsbook Lines Auto Racing
Golf Sportsbook Lines Golf
Horse Racing Betting Lines Horse Racing
Boxing Betting Lines Boxing
Online Sportsbook Lines Cross Sport Parlay
Sportsbook Odds Mixed Prop Parlay
ONLINE SPORTSBOOK - Betting football, baseball, basketball, hockey and more

SPORTSBOOK NEWS

College and NFL Football Sports News Football
College Football Sports News College Football
College and NBA Basketball Betting News Basketball
College and MLB Baseball Betting News Baseball
Pro NHL Hockey Betting News Hockey
Pro Boxing Betting News Boxing
NASCAR, INDY, Formula 1 Betting News Auto Racing
PGA Betting News Golf
Harness and Thoroughbred Horse Racing News Horse Racing
English Premier, MLS, Intenational Soccer News Soccer Group 1
Intenational Soccer News Soccer Group 2
Intenational Soccer News Soccer Group 3
Pro Tennis Betting News Tennis
This Day in Sports This Day in Sports
Olympics Betting News Olympics
College Coaching Moves College Coaching
Sportsbook

 College Basketball Sports Betting News

 

Tar Heels hold recent edge on rival Blue Devils


All RSS Feeds
MySportsbook.com - Online Sportsbook, Casino & Racebook

CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP) -For years, everything Duke and North Carolina achieved - the conference championships, Final Four trips and national titles - has been connected in a back-and-forth game of one-upmanship.

These days the Tar Heels have the upper hand.

Since shortly after Roy Williams returned to his alma mater, the Tar Heels have outperformed Mike Krzyzewski's Blue Devils in the long-running race between college basketball's fiercest rivals. North Carolina has two NCAA championships in the five seasons since Duke last reached the Final Four. The Tar Heels have also dominated the recent series, including four straight wins at the Blue Devils' Cameron Indoor Stadium.

Of course both sides say they focus on themselves, but they can't ignore what's going on a short drive down the U.S. 15-501 highway linking Chapel Hill and Durham, either. As North Carolina fifth-year senior Marcus Ginyard put it, ``There's no question we want to be better than them.''

``I think both programs have been very good for the other one,'' Williams said. ``We do what we want to do because we think it's best, and Mike does for his program what they want to do because he thinks it's best. But also, I do believe there is something where their success makes us want it a little more and our success perhaps makes them want it a little more.''

Right now, the Blue Devils are the ones left wanting.

North Carolina has won 86 percent of its games in the past five seasons, with two Atlantic Coast Conference titles, three Final Fours, and NCAA titles in 2005 and 2009. The Tar Heels have failed to reach the NCAA's round of eight just once and are coming off a dominating NCAA run that ended with a romp over Michigan State in Detroit.

Things are rolling so well that North Carolina is ranked sixth despite losing four-year star Tyler Hansbrough, Ty Lawson, Wayne Ellington and Danny Green.

The ninth-ranked Blue Devils remain among the nation's elite, yet haven't had the same success as the Tar Heels - or past Duke teams under Krzyzewski, for that matter. They've won 80 percent of their games in that same span, but they haven't advanced past the NCAA round of 16 and have twice been eliminated in the tournament's opening weekend.

Last year, Duke won its third ACC championship in five seasons, but lost in the regional semifinals to Villanova by 23 points, its most lopsided NCAA exit since the 103-73 loss to UNLV in the 1990 final.

While most programs pray for the Blue Devils' recent success, it just doesn't feel quite, well, Duke-like. Krzyzewski has three NCAA titles in 29 seasons there, though the last of his 10 Final Fours came in 2004 - coincidentally Williams' first season in Chapel Hill.

Not to mention North Carolina has won six of the past seven meetings.

``As far as our motivation, we don't need North Carolina or Maryland or anybody else to motivate us,'' Krzyzewski said. ``We're motivated by trying to win a championship.

``Last year, Carolina had great team ego and great team talent. (When) you get that, that's tough, that's the ultimate. And we've had that here, so I understand how they feel. But it doesn't last forever. And that's why they play each season. They start it over and they don't bring any records along with it.''

Krzyzewski has been on the other side, too.

His program pushed ahead of Dean Smith's Tar Heels in the late 1980s with six Final Fours in seven seasons - including NCAA titles in 1991 and 1992 - and three ACC crowns while the Tar Heels had two ACC titles and one Final Four trip.

It's the ebb and flow of the rivalry, said Jay Bilas, an ESPN analyst and a player on Krzyzewski's first Final Four squad in 1986. And neither program can afford to get caught up in comparisons.

``The thing in the Duke-Carolina rivalry is it's inescapable,'' Bilas said. ``Whatever team wins, their fans get to crow and celebrate and have a good time, but the players have to get up and go to practice. They've got another game after that.

``Neither school has a banner hanging in their gym saying what their record is against the other. They don't hang banners for that stuff.''

Recruiting explains some of the current gap. Williams has nabbed several players like one-and-done talents Marvin Williams and Brandan Wright, and eventual NBA first-round draft picks Lawson and Ellington, who stayed in school longer than many anticipated. Then there's Hansbrough, who graduated as the ACC's all-time leading scorer and North Carolina's top rebounder.

The Blue Devils have also ranked highly with recruits like NBA lottery pick Gerald Henderson and junior Kyle Singler, the preseason ACC player of the year. But they've missed on key names like Kentucky's John Wall and Patrick Patterson, and Georgetown's Greg Monroe that could have provided a boost, while the NBA departures of Luol Deng after one season and preps-to-pros guard Shaun Livingston didn't help, either.

``They've had good players in their classes,'' Dave Telep, national recruiting director for Scout.com, said of Duke. ``This is not nearly as much of a conversation if the guys eight miles down the road didn't do some amazing things with their classes.

``Duke has hit a couple of solo home runs and North Carolina hit a couple of grand slams. Over the course of time, the runs add up.''

As for the players there now, they enter this season as co-favorites in the ACC. And what happens this year is what's most important to Duke's Jon Scheyer.

``I can only control what I've done since I've been here and obviously they've been more successful,'' the senior said. ``But like I said before, you want to beat them. That's the main thing: to beat them the next year.''

---

AP Sports Writer Joedy McCreary in Durham contributed to this report.Copyright © 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. The information contained in the AP News report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press.

November 06, 2009 at 15:34 PM ET
<-- At Seattle U it's dad taking orders from son
Battle leads PSU to 82-51 win over Slippery Rock -->

Archives: | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 |
College Basketball Preview - Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference
College Basketball Preview - Southwestern Athletic Conference
College Basketball Preview - Ohio Valley Conference


About Sportsbook | Sportsbook | Cashier | Join Sportsbook | Online Casino | Sportsbook Lines | Sportsbook Promotions | Sportsbook Rules | Sportsbook & Casino Help Sports News | Privacy | Security | Social Responsibility | Site Map

© 1997-2009 My Sportsbook Sportsbook - Casino - Racebook - Poker
Online Sportsbook - Internet Sportsbook - MLB Baseball Betting - NFL Football betting - NCAA Football Betting - Online Casino

My Sportsbook is a fully licensed online sportsbook providing sports betting, casino games, horse betting and online poker games. Large sports betting lines selection, fast service and payouts. Review live sports betting odds on all major sports including NFL Football Betting, MLB Baseball betting and NBA Basketball betting and March Madness betting.
Toll Free Phone #: 1-866-BetOnIt (1-866-238-6648)
  Non Toll Free Phone #: 011-506-2282-3822
  Support Email : support@mysportsbook.com