For a region known for its undying love for college basketball — and college basketball's apparent undying love in return in the form of success — the day must have seemed a little shocking.
In the span of a few hours, all four North Carolina teams in the ACC had dropped their respective conference games — all by double-digit scores, no less.
Wake Forest flopped at Pittsburgh. North Carolina State was routed by Virginia. North Carolina was overcome by Syracuse. And Duke unraveled at Clemson.
Each of those scores, on their own, aren't all that crazy. All of those teams have gone through ups and downs. But all on the same day? That scenario had never before been recorded, according to FOX Sports.
So it goes in the strange world of the ACC this season.
At the start of the year, with the additions of Syracuse, Pittsburgh and Notre Dame, the ACC was discussed as most likely the strongest conference in the nation. Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski seemed to agree, telling Yahoo Sports: "We're going to be a 10-bid conference. We're going to be the best conference in the history of the game."
There is plenty of time before March, but so far it hasn't looked that way. Both CBS bracketologist Jerry Palm and Joe Lunardi from ESPN have projected six ACC teams playing in the NCAA tournament, with some of them on tenuous footing — Palm has UNC losing in the opening round.
Good thing for ACC Commissioner John Swofford that Syracuse, with its exciting trio of Tyler Ennis, C.J. Fair and Jerami Grant, did come along — the Orange are just about the only thing keeping their new league in the national spotlight.