Miami (Fla.) coach Jim Larranaga knows no one expected this.
Before the season started, college basketball reporters and analysts fell all over themselves to predict how the three Triangle squads -- Duke, North Carolina and North Carolina State -- would arrange themselves at the top of the Atlantic Coast Conference.
Well, the surprise was on everyone else: Instead, it's Miami -- picked mostly to finish fourth or fifth in the league -- that leads the pack after a 9-0 conference start that featured victories over North Carolina and N.C. State. Oh, and over No. 4 Duke by 27 points.
The 63-year-old Larranaga, in his second year at Miami, has been here before. In 2006, he masterminded George Mason's Cinderella run to the Final Four. Now that he is heading another surprise team, he is authoring another strange bit of history, making the Hurricanes the first squad other than Duke or UNC to go 8-0 in the ACC since Virginia did it in 1981. One of the assistants on that Ralph Sampson-led Cavaliers team? Jim Larranaga.
With plenty of experience handling pressure, Larranaga is intent on keeping his team -- which has the No. 1 strength of schedule in the country and is the only major-conference program undefeated in league play -- concentrating on a cliché: one game at a time.
"Our focus level has to be at an all-time high," center Reggie Johnson told the Miami Herald. "Every team looks at us as a trap game, because we're undefeated. Coach L makes sure we take one game at a time. We will not look ahead. He won't let us."
The Hurricanes have proven capable of handling the new attention -- they are ranked No. 8, tying their highest AP ranking ever, even though no current player has been to the NCAA tournament -- while avoiding slips. A prime example: The way the Hurricanes have performed in the games after the big games, such as Tuesday's Boston College victory after a big win at N.C. State.
It helps that Larranaga's players, who were far off the college hoops radar after losing their second game of the year to Florida Gulf Coast, don't have their heads in the clouds. With all five starters returning from last season -- four of them seniors now -- it's a savvy and experienced group. The Hurricanes have two 22-year-olds, one 23-year-old and one 24-year old in the starting lineup, plus a pretty talented sophomore in Shane Larkin, the son of Hall of Fame shortstop Barry Larkin.