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Enters his sophomore season looking to improve on an outstanding freshman campaign • Is a preseason candidate for the Wooden Award and the Naismith Award, which are given to the National Player of the Year • Preseason first-team All-America, as named by Dick Vitale/ESPN • Joins Troy Murphy (Notre Dame), Terrence Morris (Maryland), Jamaal Tinsley (Iowa State) and Shane Battier (Duke) on the first team • Set a number of UNC freshman scoring records and was selected the Most Outstanding Player of the NCAA South Regional • Scored 28 points in the regional championship against Tulsa to lead the Tar Heels to the Final Four • Showed remarkable poise and savvy as a young player, leading his team in scoring the entire season • The 2000 Atlantic Coast Conference Rookie of the Year • Joined Georgia Tech guard Kenny Anderson (1990) as the only players to win ACC Rookie of the Year and NCAA regional MVP honors in the same season • Displayed a knack for hitting key shots in late-game situations • Has a smooth, long-range jumper and the athleticism to drive to the basket • Improved each game as a ballhandler and defender, although he must continue to work in those areas • Started for the U.S. Men’s Select Team in an exhibition game played on Sept. 2, 2000, against the U.S. Olympic Team.
FRESHMAN SEASON (1999-2000) Was third on the team in rebounds at 5.5 per game • Had six or more boards in 16 games with a season-high 11 at Virginia • Also had nine boards (five offensive) against Maryland on Jan. 27. Ranked second on the team in assists with 94 and had a season-high six against top-ranked Cincinnati. Connected on at least one three-point field goal in 30 of the 36 games with a high of six at home vs. Wake Forest on Feb. 12. Connected on a big three-point field goal late in the game at Miami after the Hurricanes had cut UNC’s 16-point lead down to six • Led the Tar Heels with 15 points on 7 of 12 shooting against Clemson in the ACC opener • Scored 18 points against NC State (Jan. 8) on 6 of 9 shooting from the floor • Hit a pair of 3FGs, was 4 for 4 from the FT line and added 4 rebounds, 3 assists and 2 steals • Had 13 points, five assists and four steals against UCLA • His steal, dunk and three-pointer brought UNC back from an 11-point second-half deficit to within 62-60 • Scored 27 points on 11 of 16 shooting at Virginia • Recorded his first career double-double against the Cavaliers (27 points, 11 rebounds, five assists and two steals) • The 27 points were the most by a UNC freshman since Antawn Jamison had 31 at Maryland in 1995-96 • Hit a key three-pointer to start the second half in the win over Maryland (UNC was down by seven at the break) • Had 11 second-half points in the 70-53 win at Georgia Tech • Hit a three-pointer with 0:05 left in regulation to force overtime on Feb. 3 versus No. 3 Duke • Had 20 points, six rebounds, four assists and three steals in his first game versus Duke. Had 16 points in the win at NC State on Feb. 9, with 12 of those points in the second half • Led all scorers with 24 points against Wake Forest on Feb. 12 • Missed his first two three-point attempts, then hit six in a row• Named the ACC’s Rookie of the Week for the second time on Feb. 14 after the wins over NC State and Wake Forest. Named the ACC’s Rookie of the Week for the second time in three weeks on Feb. 28 • He started the week by scoring 14 points and grabbing four rebounds in UNC’s 70-67 win at Florida State on Feb. 23 • He also tallied four assists, including one on Jason Capel’s go-ahead three-point play with under a minute to play • Then he scored 26 points on 11-of-16 shooting (and had two blocks and two steals) at Maryland on Feb. 26, in a game played just minutes from his hometown of Greenbelt, Md. Led Carolina with 19 points and had a career-high six steals (all in the first half) in the March 1 overtime win over Georgia Tech • His driving shot off the glass gave Carolina the lead for good with 51 seconds to play • Paced Carolina with 24 points on 11 of 20 shooting at Duke on March 4 • Also had six rebounds and five assists in his first game at Duke. Topped UNC with 17 points in the NCAA second-round upset of No. 1 seed (and No. 3 ranked) Stanford • Broke a 47-47 tie when he hit back-to-back three-pointers with 4:16 and 3:31 to play in the second half, giving Carolina a lead it would not relinquish • Those two three-pointers were part of eight straight points he scored in a span of 1:44 late in the game. Again led all scorers with 22 points in the Sweet 16 win over Tennessee • After missing his opening attempt, he made his next five field goal attempts and scored 11 of Carolina’s first 18 points • He did not attempt a field goal in the second half against the Vols until he hit a jumper with 8:38 to play that cut UT’s lead to 55-51 • His next shot was perhaps the biggest of the season for UNC as he drained a three-pointer with 4:27 to play cut UT’s lead to 64-60 • That basket began a 13-0 run by UNC. Had a season-high 28 points in the 59-55 win over Tulsa in the South Regional final • Made 10 of 17 shots from the floor, 7 of 8 free throws and shared the team lead with eight rebounds. Was named MVP of the NCAA South Regional after averaging 25.0 points and 6.5 rebounds in wins over Tennessee and Tulsa • Scored 22 points and grabbed five boards in the win over the Volunteers • Became the 12th Tar Heel, but the first UNC freshman, to earn NCAA regional MVP honors. Scored 15 points, 13 of which came in the second half, in the NCAA Final Four vs. Florida • With the Gators leading 40-38, he scored 10 consecutive Tar Heel points (four jumpers, including two 3FGs to give UNC a 48-42 lead with 15:49 to play. Scored 95 points in five NCAA Tournament games, trailing only Morris Peterson of Michigan State (105 points in six games) as the leading scorer among all players in the 2000 NCAA Tournament.
PREP Forte Personality File FORTE’S CAREER HIGHS
JOSEPH FORTE GAME-BY-GAME
FORTE’S CAREER STATISTICS
FORTE’S CAREER ACC STATISTICS
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