No. 12 Virginia Tech beats No. 23 NC State 47-24

2:11

NC State held to historically bad 24 points

No. 23 NC State shoots 16.7 percent from the field against Virginia Tech, scoring the fewest points by a ranked team in the shot clock era.


RALEIGH, N.C. -- Miss after miss, they kept coming for No. 23 North Carolina State on Saturday.

Bricked jumpers off the front rim.

Drives that rolled around the cylinder and dropped away.

Shots that didn't hit anything at all.

They never stopped, either, not until the Wolfpack had managed a stunningly low point total that stood as the worst for any Atlantic Coast Conference school in the shot-clock era. N.C. State lost 47-24 to No. 12 Virginia Tech, a throwback output to the long-ago days when teams would hold the ball and turn games into stand-around slowdowns.

Only this came from one of the ACC's best offenses with a shot clock constantly rolling.

"It was crazy," Wolfpack coach Kevin Keatts said. "It was almost like there was something on the rim."

When it was over, N.C. State had put up the lowest point total by a ranked team in more than three decades of the shot-clock era, according to ESPN Stats & Info. It also flirted with the all-time low total -- 20 points by St. Louis against George Washington in 2008 -- since the shot clock began in the 1985-86 season, ESPN Stats & Info said.

The ACC said it surpassed the previous low mark for a league team set by Georgia Tech in a 57-28 loss to Virginia in January 2015. And N.C. State's 16.7-percent shooting (9 of 54) also now stands as the lowest percentage in the history of a league founded in 1953.

"You never want to be a part of a loss like that," graduate transfer Wyatt Walker said. "You never want to be on that side of it."

It was hard to explain, too. N.C. State (16-6, 4-5) was coming off a 66-65 overtime home loss to No. 3 Virginia, rallying from 14 down in the second half to force overtime. And with its fast pace and pressure defense, the Wolfpack entered this game ranked third in the ACC in scoring (84.4 points), third in shooting percentage (.484) and fourth in 3-point percentage (.378).

But things started poorly and only got worse.

Perhaps there was a sign that things were off when the school tried to honor the presence of program great David Thompson at PNC Arena by showing his image on the scoreboard in the first half- but instead zeroed in on 1980s player Ernie Myers (who started motioning to the camera that it was a mistake).

The Wolfpack made just 2 of 28 3-pointers. It was N.C. State's lowest total since it beat Duke 12-10 in the 1968 ACC Tournament -- back then, underdog teams often used stalls, hoping to keep close.

Sophomore guard Braxton Beverly typified the Wolfpack's afternoon. A week to the day after hitting a buzzer-beating, 3-pointer to beat Clemson on this court, he shot 0 for 12, missing nine times from behind the arc.

N.C. State made 1 of 17 shots to start this one and missed first 11 3-pointers, and trailed just 20-14 at halftime with the Hokies (18-3, 7-2) playing a slower pace with point guard Justin Robinson sidelined by an injury.

"At halftime I told them to relax and let's laugh a little bit, because I said, it's 20-14," Keatts said.

Yet as Keatts preached that things-can't-get-worse approach, they somehow did. After making 6 of 31 field goals in the first half (.194), N.C. State made just 3 of 23 (.130) after halftime.

"I don't think even in high school I've seen anything like it," Virginia Tech's Ty Outlaw said. "This is a different level, of course. I just thought it was an ugly game. We weren't exactly firing on all cylinders on offense, either."

Indeed.

Virginia Tech shot just 36 percent and made 7 of 21 from behind the arc. But the Hokies didn't need much production against the cold-cold-cold-shooting Wolfpack.

"I was thinking the whole time: `OK, we're not shooting it well but our defense is staying there and we're going to start making shots eventually," Walker said, "and it never happened for us tonight. It's just, it's sad."

BIG PICTURE

Virginia Tech: The Hokies' already-limited numbers were further depleted by Robinson's absence. The senior came in averaging 14.4 points but left early from Wednesday's win at Miami with an injury, then showed up in Raleigh sporting a protective boot on his left foot. But Kerry Blackshear led the way with 13 points and 13 rebounds in a balanced effort with only seven players.

"We can tell that we miss some of his poise and everything," Blackshear said of Robinson. "But I think each and every person stepped up. It wasn't a single person who picks up what he does. It takes all of us and it's going to take all of us."

N.C. State: Keatts' team never gave itself a chance with its complete inability to accomplish the most basic element in the game -- putting the ball in the basket.

"We didn't have it today, for whatever reason," Keatts said. "When you look at these numbers, they're mindboggling, the percentage our guys shot."

UP NEXT

Virginia Tech: The Hokies host No. 15 Louisville on Tuesday night.

N.C. State: A demanding three-game stretch ends Tuesday at No. 9 North Carolina.

---

More AP college basketball: https://apnews.com/Collegebasketball and http://www.twitter.com/AP-Top25

---

Follow Aaron Beard on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/aaronbeardap