basketball

YouTube Gold: The Infamous 1979 Duke-UNC Game, Analyzed

โ€ขYahoo Sports

A bizarre but classic win over UNC

UNITED STATES - MARCH 13: Coll, Basketball: NCAA playoffs, Duke's Mike Gminski in action vs Kentucky at Rupp Arena, Lexington, KY 3/13/1980 (Photo by Manny Millan/Sports Illustrated via Getty Images) (SetNumber: X24296 TK1) In 1979, Duke had a rocky season, but still had the Duke Power Company โ€“ a frontcourt of Mike Gminski, Gene Banks, and Kenny Dennard โ€“ and also had Jim Spanarkel and Bob Bender, and Vince Taylor off the bench. Duke was hammered by Clemson in the game before that, 70-49, and Dean Smith was wary of an angry bunch of Blue Devils. So, after Duke went up 2-0, Smith put his UNC team into a deep freeze , and refused to let anyone shoot for most of the first half.

Smith had done it to Duke in the 1960s, losing 21-20, and NC State famously upset the Blue Devils in the 1968 ACC Tournament, 12-10. The narrator is pretty perceptive and informed in general, but what he doesnโ€™t understand is the level of tension this game โ€“ or really, any slowdown game โ€“ generated. You canโ€™t play this way with the shot clock of course, but it was a legitimate strategy for decades.

The strategy broke down late as Duke pulled ahead, and UNC took just two shots, both airballs. The first one, by the late Rich โ€œChickโ€ Yonakor, inspired the Cameron Crazies to chant โ€œAirball! โ€ for the first time.

In the end, Duke won 47-40, and what was particularly interesting is that afterwards, Smith said he thought UNC could match Duke for a half, but not for the whole game. So while his strategy was controversial, in the end, he was uncannily accurate. The narrator gets a lot of props for his combination of research and bemusement.