
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. — Top-ranked North Carolina’s latest lopsided victory didn’t matter much in the locker room. Not after the Tar Heels lost a key contributor for the rest of the season.
Tyler Hansbrough scored 26 points and Wayne Ellington added a career-high 23 to help North Carolina beat Nevada 106-70 on Thursday night, but the Tar Heels lost junior guard Bobby Frasor to a knee injury in the second half.
Frasor tore his left anterior cruciate ligament when his leg gave way while he was trying to make a steal near the sideline with 9:47 to play. He immediately clutched his knee when he went down before limping to the locker room. He did not return and will require surgery.
The injury robs the Tar Heels (12-0) of a versatile veteran who can play either guard position and provides defense and leadership off the bench.
“He can handle this,” an emotional coach Roy Williams said. “It’s not going to be easy. It’s not easy for any of us right now. I told the team it should put things in perspective that every day you don’t take things for granted.”
The injury overshadowed another solid performance from the Tar Heels, who ran off 19 straight points spanning halftime and cracked the 100-point mark for the fifth time this season. North Carolina is off to its best start since winning 17 straight to open the 1997-98 season.
Ty Lawson had 16 points and turned in a terrific all-around floor game — which included career-highs of 10 assists and five steals — while the Tar Heels shot 54 percent for the game, including 9-of-18 on 3-pointers.
North Carolina had a 45-33 rebounding advantage against the Wolf Pack (7-5), leading to 22 second-chance points.
Armon Johnson scored a career-high 23 points for Nevada.



