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Return of players propelled North Carolina

CHRIS DUFRESNE / ON COLLEGE BASKETBALL

Instead of turning pro, key members of the team chose to go back, setting the stage for the Tar Heels to make a run at the national title.

April 08, 2009|CHRIS DUFRESNE

DETROIT — North Carolina didn't win the national title Monday.

It won the national title last June, in Tar Heels Coach Roy Williams' office.


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You sometimes forget the fragile nature of these championship runs.

Three stars from last year's Final Four team -- Ty Lawson, Wayne Ellington and Danny Green -- all had petitioned for the NBA with the option of pulling their names out before draft day.

The players decided to come back, but Williams needed to know why. He told them not to return if all they wanted was to up their NBA ante.

"Our team was going to be the primary focus," Williams said in the preseason edition of the Blue Ribbon Yearbook. "It was not going to be about running an offense for each one of them or any one of them to help them to improve their draft status."

North Carolina didn't win the national title Monday.

It won when Tyler Hansbrough, last season's unanimous player of the year, decided to return for his senior season after having a long talk with his grandfather. Hansbrough liked school and, what the heck, he might be able to get out with his degree and a national title.

The decision of four young men, with guidance from their counselors, allowed North Carolina to return its top six scorers and position itself for something special.

Coming back, when you can make millions in the NBA, is risky business.

A stress fracture suffered to his shin forced Hansbrough to sit out three of his team's first four games this season.

Williams, the coach, faced a different kind of stress.

"How would you like to be coaching a guy who came back to school when he could have gone, and he has a stress-reaction condition?" Williams said after the Tar Heels' 89-72 win over Michigan State in the NCAA title game Monday night. "And one day, if I make a mistake, he could break his leg. Every agent in America would start smiling because they would say, 'See, you shouldn't go back.' "

Williams fretted over Hansbrough for weeks, then dealt with a late-season injury to Lawson's big toe.

Williams brilliantly, as it turned out, sat Lawson out of the Atlantic Coast Conference tournament and Carolina's first-round NCAA win against Radford.

Lawson returned to lead a six-game run to glory.

"You add those two together, the expectations, those kinds of adversity, they're really pretty serious to me," Williams said of dealing with the Hansbrough and Lawson injuries.

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