College Basketball

North Carolina throttles Michigan State to advance into Sweet 16

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Hubert Davis was disgusted by what he saw.

His No. 1-seeded North Carolina Tar Heels, one of the deepest, most athletic and talented teams in the country with size, was being manhandled by Michigan State in the early part of their NCAA Tournament second-round game Saturday night at the Spectrum Center.

The Spartans, a No. 9 seed and a four-point underdog, took early leads of 12-5 and 17-7 and 25-14, and with 8:09 remaining in the first half, they were leading 28-17 and having their way with the top seed in the bracket, outshooting, outrebounding and out-hustling the Tar Heels.

RJ Davis, who scored a team-high 20 points, drives past Tre Holloman during North Carolina’s 85-69 win over Michigan State in the Round of 32 of the NCAA Tournament. Jim Dedmon-USA TODAY Sports

“They punched first,’’ Davis, the North Carolina coach said. “Their physicality, their will, their want-to in the first 10 minutes of the game overwhelmed us. They were just better than us.’’

That’s when Davis delivered this message to his players during a timeout: “We can’t even talk about any basketball until we join the fight.’’

His North Carolina players took the message to heart and obliged, overcoming Michigan State, 85-69, to advance to its 36th Sweet 16, this one next week in Los Angeles as one of four teams that’ll play in the West Region.

The Tar Heels (29-7) will play Tennessee, who beat Texas 62-58, in the Sweet 16.

And they’ll do it in large part because the large heart of RJ Davis, their 6-foot senior guard out of White Plains via Archbishop Stepinac High.

Davis led the Tar Heels with 20 points and is the engine that makes them go.

“We ask a lot out of him,’’ Davis the coach said of Davis his player. “We ask him to handle the basketball, distribute, score, defend, rebound, lead our team. There’s a lot on his plate, and he never whines, he never complains.

“What a great example to the younger players, to see someone at the highest level and see what goes into it. We’re going to ride his back the remainder of the season. I wouldn’t want to ride anybody’s back other than RJ.’’

Armando Bacot, who scored 18 points, looks to make a move on Carson Cooper during North Carolina’s win. Bob Donnan-USA TODAY Sports

Hubert Davis played the guard position at the highest level, both at North Carolina and in the NBA, and he has an acute appreciation for what he sees in Davis.

Patrick Massaroni, Davis’ coach at Archbishop Stepinac, knows that appreciation Hubert Davis has for his former player, because he’s felt that same appreciation.

“Even going into his senior year, he was still doubted by so many people,’’ Massaroni told The Post over the phone from back home in New York on Saturday. “For a guy at 6-foot and overlooked to do what he’s doing night in and night out on the biggest stage is truly remarkable. And through all of this, he’s continued to be humble.’’

As Michigan State got off to a dream start, not only Hubert Davis was a big part of settling the Tar Heels down, RJ Davis was a big part of that, too.

Tom Izzo argues a call during Michigan State’s loss. AP

North Carolina turned that 28-17 deficit into a 40-31 halftime lead, thanks to a furious 23-3 run to close out the half in the final 8:09.

“I feel bad,’’ Michigan State coach Tom Izzo said after falling to North Carolina in the NCAA Tournament for the fifth time without a victory. “We played so well for the first 12 minutes and then I don’t know … the ball just stuck … we didn’t move it as well. Give them credit. We played a good team.’’

The Spartans were led by graduate-student guard Tyson Walker, a Long Island native who played his high school ball at Christ the King in Queens and had his share of battles with RJ Davis at the previous level.

Walker scored a game-high 24 points in his final college game.

RJ Davis celebrates during North Carolina’s victory. Getty Images

“I’ve been in college for a little while, so it’s going to be weird,’’ Walker said afterward. “No more practice. No more games. For the underclassmen, it will be something to learn, just how the game goes. You can’t have big mistakes. The game is fragile.’’

Joe Arbitello, Walker’s coach at Christ the King, was on the phone with The Post before the game talking about how badly he wanted to see Walker get to the Sweet 16 “and get what he deserves, because he’s worked so hard at it.’’

“He wasn’t heavily recruited, nobody would take a shot on him coming out of high school,’’ Arbitello said. “When you looked at him, he was little, he didn’t pass the eye test, I guess is what these college coaches call it. Now he has a shot to be a pro.’’

Arbitello was on the phone with Massaroni earlier in the day talking about “how unbelievable it was to have this game between’’ Walker and Davis.

“We were talking about how surreal it is that they’re going to play in the Round of 32 against each other,’’ Massaroni said. “Two kids from New York.’’

The shame is that only one moves on to the Sweet 16 and the other is left to ponder the unknown of his future.