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North Carolina-Notre Dame Preview

SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP) - Beating second-ranked North Carolina on Saturday night doesn't look quite as formidable as it once might have for Notre Dame, not after defeating the Tar Heels twice last year.

The first victory in Chapel Hill in early January 2015 helped launch the Fighting Irish to one of their best seasons, coming a shot away from making it to the Final Four. The second victory came in the Atlantic Coast Conference tournament title game, as the Irish used a 26-3 run late to win 90-82 and earn their first title in any league.

''I don't think there's any intimidation factor in this program anymore,'' coach Mike Brey said. ''To have won two in a row in the state of North Carolina is a little bit mind-blowing. If you make it three in a row, I don't know, maybe the Earth will rotate the wrong way on its axis if we do that.''

The Irish had been 4-18 all-time against the Tar Heels before the two victories last season. The teams enter Saturday's game in South Bend trying to avoid back-to-back losses for the first time this season.

Notre Dame hasn't lost consecutive games since dropping three straight to finish 2013-14. That's a stretch of 60 games, rebounding 11 times following losses to win.

Brey said he believes the key has been forgetting bad performances.

''They understand how you move on from things, address some things that you've got to do better,'' he said.

The Irish (15-7, 6-4) have lost two of three, a pair of road defeats in which they weren't competitive. With upcoming games at third-place Clemson and against No. 19 Louisville, Notre Dame is in the midst of one of its toughest stretches.

''This second half of league play is tough for us. We're going against a lot of great teams. It's not going to be as easy as the first half of league play,'' forward Zach Auguste said.

The Irish struggled defensively in a 79-70 loss to No. 17 Miami on Wednesday that wasn't as close as the score, with Notre Dame trailing by 20 with eight minutes left. Brey said the Irish need to stop getting beat off the dribble.

North Carolina coach Roy Williams said his team didn't match Louisville's intensity or its effort on the boards Monday, with the Tar Heels (19-3, 8-1) getting outrebounded for just the fourth time all season in a 71-65 loss.

''Well, we got our tails beat the last game,'' he said. ''If you don't step up right now, there's something wrong with you. So I fully expect that we'll even play at a higher level of intensity than we did on Monday night against Louisville just because we got it handed to ourselves last game.''

The Tar Heels' biggest concern has been an extended shooting slump. After hitting at least 45 percent in their first 17 games to rank among the nation's most accurate teams, they've failed to crack 40 percent in three of their last four games - shooting a season-worst 34.5 percent against the Cardinals.

Preseason ACC co-player of the year Marcus Paige continues to struggle, making 12 of 57 shots (21 percent) - including 5 of 36 from 3-point range (14 percent) - in six games since scoring 30 in a win over Florida State.

Williams wasn't sure on the status of junior guard Nate Britt, who checked out of Monday's loss midway through the second half and didn't return due to a back injury.