
On February 8, 2012, the Dean E. Smith Center in Chapel Hill was packed to the rafters for one of college basketball’s fiercest rivalries: No. 10 Duke against No. 5 North Carolina.
Duke entered the game at 19-4 overall (6-2 in the ACC), led by head coach Mike Krzyzewski and a talented but young roster featuring freshman Austin Rivers, Seth Curry, and big man Mason Plumlee. North Carolina, coached by Roy Williams, was riding high at 20-3 (7-1 ACC) with a dominant frontcourt of Tyler Zeller, John Henson, and Harrison Barnes, plus playmaker Kendall Marshall.
The Tar Heels had won 31 straight games at home – a school record – and looked poised to extend that streak. UNC controlled much of the night, building a double-digit lead in the second half and appearing on the verge of putting the game away.
Trailing 82-72 with just over two minutes remaining, the Blue Devils ignited a furious rally:
The Dean Dome crowd was stunned to say the least as the momentum swung wildly towards the visitors.
"Obviously this is my favorite win I've ever had in my entire life," Rivers said. "And it's because we were down the whole game. The whole game, we were down. They just kept it on us - 10-point lead, 10-point lead. And then there was 3 minutes left and probably everybody thought we were going to lose, and we just kept fighting. To get a W, it's amazing."
With 13.9 seconds left and UNC up 84-83 after another Zeller free throw miss, Duke inbounded to Rivers. The freshman guard – son of NBA coach Doc Rivers, who was in the stands watching – calmly brought the ball upcourt against Reggie Bullock.
Rivers created just enough space, stepped back, and launched a high-arching 3-pointer over the outstretched hand of the 7-foot Zeller. The ball hung in the air… and swished through as the time expired.
As the time was winding down to 2.5 seconds, you could see Curry in the corner telling Rivers to go, which we know the rest of the story.
Final Score: Duke 85, North Carolina 84.
The Blue Devils had snapped UNC’s 31-game home winning streak in the most dramatic fashion possible. The Smith Center fell into stunned silence. Rivers sprinted down the court, arms outstretched, as his teammates chased him down and mobbed him in celebration.
Rivers finished with a season-high (and Duke freshman record against UNC) 29 points on 9-of-16 shooting, including 6-of-10 from 3-point range. That last shot etched his name into rivalry lore.
Barnes led UNC with 25 points, while Zeller added 23 points and 11 rebounds. Despite shooting 59% in the second half, the Tar Heels went just 8-of-15 from the free-throw line after halftime – misses that proved costly.
Austin Rivers’ buzzer-beater remains one of the signature moments in Duke-UNC history – a pure, high-pressure shot that turned a likely loss into an unforgettable win. It boosted Duke's confidence in a strong ACC season and gave Coach K another iconic Tobacco Road victory.
More than a decade later, the clip still circulates – Rivers stepping back, Zeller contesting, the ball dropping through the crowd going quiet. One shot. One moment. Pure Tobacco Road magic.
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