WASHINGTON, D.C. — Armando Bacot scored 14 points and grabbed 10 of his team’s 48 rebounds to Florida State’s 22, and fourth-ranked North Carolina rolled into the Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament semifinals with a 92-67 victory Thursday.


What You Need To Know

  • North Carolina overpowered Florida State 92-67 in the ACC Tournament quarterfinals

  • RJ Davis scored 18 points and Armando Bacot had 14 points and 10 rebounds for the Tar  Heels

  • The Seminoles' Jamir Watkins, who scored 34 points Wednesday, was held to 12 points Thursday

  • Primo Spears led Florida State scorers with 17 points

  • North Carolina will play either Wake Forest or Pitt on Friday night

Bacot got the double-double with a rebound on his final play before being pulled midway through the second half, and unanimous ACC player of the year RJ Davis scored a game-high 18 points.

“Their effort, energy, attention to detail defensively was good,” North Carolina coach Hubert Davis said. “And for us to dominate the boards on both ends, I thought that was a huge key for us in allowing them to be successful out there.”

Winning their sixth in a row, the Tar Heels flexed their muscles on the boards, at one point grabbing four offensive rebounds on the same possession late in the first half — a sequence Bacot described as "a ton of fun." By halftime, the Seminoles had just six.

“Rebounding is not about size and athleticism, it’s about heart and will and positioning,” said Harrison Ingram, who also had 10 rebounds. “We’ve been working on it every single day.”

A combination of rebounding domination and some timely shooting — as Florida State went ice cold from the floor — helped UNC (26-6, 18-3 ACC) pull away. Four Tar Heels scored in double figures.

Shooting for a No. 1-seeding in the NCAA Tournament, the ACC’s regular-season champions face Wake Forest or Pitt on Friday night with a spot in the final on the line.

No. 11 Duke could be there for a rematch from last week and a third meeting between the Tobacco Road rivals in the past two months. UNC has not reached an ACC Tournament final since 2018 and hasn’t won it since 2016, when the event was also in Washington.

“It’s something none of us have experienced other than the coaches,’ said Bacot, who’s in his fifth season in Chapel Hill. ”We feel like it’s right there for the taking, so that’s why we’ve been playing so hard.”

FSU didn’t pose much of a challenge to UNC. The Tar Heels also got 14 points from Cormac Ryan, who went 3 of 4 from 3-point range fresh off his leading performance against Duke at Cameron Indoor Stadium.

Primo Spears led ninth-seeded Florida State (17-16, 10-11) with 17 points. Spears did so in his old home arena after playing last season at Georgetown.

Three Seminoles finished in double-figure scoring. Jamir Watkins, who scored 34 points Wednesday against Virginia Tech, had 12 points, five assists and four rebounds Thursday, and Jalen Warley added 10 points.

“We got beat by a team that played better than us,” longtime coach Leonard Hamilton said. “They were much more aggressive, much more physical.”

Big picture

Florida State: Missing the NCAA Tournament for a third consecutive season could bring some questions about how the program is trending under Hamilton. The struggles came after the Seminoles reached the Sweet 16 twice and made one trip to the Elite Eight sandwiched around a successful 2019-20 season that would have brought a high seeding before the tournament was canceled because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

North Carolina: The selection committee is watching, and there’s no rust on a team that looks every bit like a national championship contender. The Tar Heels were sharp in their first game since Saturday, and even if they may need another top team to falter in its conference tournament, is on track to get a No. 1-seeding if they keep playing like this the rest of the week.

Up next

UNC: Is again expected to be a heavy favorite against Pitt or Wake Forest, with much more Carolina blue expected in the stands as the weekend goes on.

FSU: An NIT bid is a possibility for the Seminoles.