Close Menu

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Are You Getting What You Voted For? DL Hughley Weighs In

    Sybil Wilkes Breaks Down What We Need to Know: January 23, 2026

    Richard Smallwood’s Celebration of Life

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • Are You Getting What You Voted For? DL Hughley Weighs In
    • Sybil Wilkes Breaks Down What We Need to Know: January 23, 2026
    • Richard Smallwood’s Celebration of Life
    • JD Vance Defaults To Denial And Victim-Blaming When Confronted About ICE Racial Profiling
    • Minnesota Stages Economic Blackout To Protest ICE 
    • Ryan Coogler has always understood his assignment
    • Warren Moon’s heart is with the Seattle Seahawks in the NFC Championship Game
    • Martin Luther King Jr. has a legacy in America. A sneaker shows we’ve lost the plot.
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    BLK ALERTSBLK ALERTS
    • Home
      • About BLK ALERTS
        • Ethics and Corrections
        • Verification and Fact Checking
      • Anchors & Reporters
      • Archives
    • Community
      • Missing Persons
    • News
      • Submit a Tip
      • Black Media RSS
    • Politics
    • Opinion
      • Alex Haynes
      • Tiffanie Lanelle
      • The Unmuted Report
    • Sports
    • Entertainment
    • Subscribe!
    BLK ALERTSBLK ALERTS
    You are at:Home»Black Media Network»The Grio»Horne’s return to NC State has played a critical role in the Wolfpack’s unexpected Final Four run
    The Grio

    Horne’s return to NC State has played a critical role in the Wolfpack’s unexpected Final Four run

    thegrio.comBy thegrio.comApril 6, 2024No Comments7 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest Telegram LinkedIn Tumblr Email Reddit
    Horne’s return to NC State has played a critical role in the Wolfpack’s unexpected Final Four run
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest WhatsApp Email

    “Everybody has their own path,” Horne says

    GLENDALE, Ariz. (AP) — DJ Horne has taken a long road to the Final Four.

    The 6-foot-2, 180-pound guard has been the undersized, unoffered recruit out of North Carolina State’s base of Raleigh. He’s been the strong mid-major performer for two years at Illinois State, followed by the reliable scorer at power-conference program Arizona State.

    And now, he’s the twice-over homecoming star: playing a lone season with the Wolfpack to net the most improbable of Final Four runs that has brought him back to the state of Arizona, less than an hour from his previous college stop with the Sun Devils.

    “Everybody has their own path,” Horne said Friday.

    “Coming back after the whole journey and everything like that, I would say that coming home (to N.C. State) there’s been a lot of love and people showing me respect for my grind and my journey to get back to where I am now.”

    NC State guard DJ Horne, left, and guard Dennis Parker Jr. exit their locker room after a media availability ahead of a Final Four college basketball game in the NCAA Tournament, Thursday, April 4, 2024, in Glendale, Ariz. NC State plays Purdue on Saturday. (AP Photo/Brynn Anderson )

    Horne has been a perfect fit for the Wolfpack entering Saturday’s game against Purdue in the national semifinals, N.C. State’s first time on this stage since the “Cardiac Pack” title run of 1983 under the late Jim Valvano. He’s been the explosive perimeter scorer as part of a 1-2 punch with burly March Madness star DJ Burns Jr. in the paint.

    And his ties to Raleigh have positioned him to appreciate this moment as well as anybody could with N.C. State owning a spotlight it normally has to fight to share with nearby Atlantic Coast Conference rivals Duke and North Carolina.

    “Getting him back to Raleigh,” Wolfpack coach Kevin Keatts said, “I thought that was very important.”

    The player that’s getting this shot now is very different from the one who left North Carolina as a three-star recruit to play for the Redbirds of the Missouri Valley Conference. He took a second-year jump in production there to average 15.1 points in 2020-21 while shooting 44.6% from the field and 42.4% from 3-point range, making him an attractive player just in time for NCAA legislation clearing the way for players to transfer without having to sit out at a new school.

    That ultimately led Horne to Arizona State.

    “When we brought him in from Illinois State, we saw how productive he had been,” said Sun Devils coach Bobby Hurley, a former Duke player. “I thought his game would translate, moving up a level from the mid-majors. And he didn’t disappoint. DJ was a guy we never promised anything to when he came into our program, and he fought for it.”

    Horne averaged 12.5 points while starting 62 games over two seasons for the Sun Devils, including their return to March Madness after missing two straight NCAA fields. Horne also came up big in Arizona State’s lone tournament game, crossing over defender Rondel Walker to create some space and then burying a straightaway 3-pointer to tie the game with 15.6 seconds left and finishing with a team-high 17 points in a narrow loss to TCU.

    “DJ’s a fighter, he believes in himself,” Hurley said. “Like a lot of small guards, he plays with a chip on a shoulder. When he gets going and starts making a couple shots, man, you better look out because he’s a dangerous guy. I think his confidence grows, his belief grows.”

    N.C. State’s DJ Horne reacts after a made basket during the first half of the Wolfpack’s 80-67 win in the first round of the NCAA Tournament on Thursday, March 21, 2024, at PPG Paints Arena in Pittsburgh, Pa. (Kaitlin McKeown/The News & Observer via AP)

    Across the country around that time, Keatts was looking for backcourt help as he retooled the roster after the loss of high-scoring duo Jarkel Joiner and Terquavion Smith. Horne’s development was perfectly timed. He became the top addition for the Wolfpack, who had reached the NCAAs last season.

    “Coming in, (Keatts) basically gave me the keys, man,” Horne said.

    “He told me up front: ‘We’re going to need you to do this, we’re going to need you to lead, we’re going to need you to be the guy.’ Me knowing my game, knowing what I wanted out of this year, I couldn’t pass up that opportunity.”

    Joel Justus, a Wolfpack assistant coach who works with the guards, said Horne arrived with confident polish, strengthened through building successful seasons at the mid-major and then the power-conference levels to appear in 159 college games.

    “It’s a totally different day in college basketball because you are coaching experienced guys,” Justus said. “You are coaching guys that have been in situations. So it’s much more of a collaborative experience for both player and coach. … When we got him here, it was a little bit of, ‘Hey, this is your first year of professional basketball, you’ve got to treat that that way.’”

    Horne has risen to that challenge, averaging a team-high 16.8 points with multiple big showings during N.C. State’s nine-game surge that led to an ACC Tournament title (the first since 1987) and this improbable Final Four trip. The highlight was his 29 points in the ACC title game to take down eventual No. 1 NCAA regional seed North Carolina, then coming through with 39 points and six 3-pointers in the wins against Marquette and Duke — the second of this March surge against the Blue Devils — that advanced the 11th-seeded Wolfpack out of the South bracket.

    It’s a run that has harkened back to the Wolfpack’s miracle run of 41 years earlier, earning 2024 a place in Wolfpack lore alongside 1983 and the 1974 squad that won the national championship — a run that included beating UCLA in the Final Four to end John Wooden’s run of seven straight championships.

    Horne admitted he had allowed himself to dream a bit as he left Arizona State last year about the possibility of returning to the state to play in the Final Four. That’s exactly what he was doing Friday as the Wolfpack took the court for its open practice, breaking into big smiles and bobbing his head along with music from the Wolfpack band during the festive event.

    Like with everything else, Horne gets to savor that wrinkle, too.

    “I was already planning on coming back out here to visit my guys and everything,” Horne said. “But expenses-paid trip and the Final Four, it doesn’t get any better than that. Just to see that it came full circle and it’s right here in front of my face now, I’m ready to take advantage of it.”

    Never miss a beat: Get our daily stories straight to your inbox with theGrio’s newsletter.

    Recommended Stories

    • Horne’s return to NC State has played a critical role in the Wolfpack’s unexpected Final Four run
    • South African footballer and Olympian Luke Fleurs killed in hijacking
    • Black student association holds sit-in at Washington University in St. Louis, alleges school fosters racism
    • Sean Paul helped bring dancehall to the masses. With a new tour, he’s ready to do it all over again
    • Christian Combs accused in lawsuit of sexually assaulting woman on yacht
    • Watch: Self Care Tips | Life Hacks
    • USC’s Bronny James declares for NBA draft and enters transfer portal after 1 season
    • University of Texas professors demand reversal of job cuts from shuttered DEI initiative

    The post Horne’s return to NC State has played a critical role in the Wolfpack’s unexpected Final Four run appeared first on TheGrio.

    AP College Basketball featured newswirelink Sports
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp Telegram Email
    Previous ArticleSouth African footballer and Olympian Luke Fleurs killed in hijacking
    Next Article Detroit Pistons legend Chauncey Billups made the Hall of Fame playing ‘the right way’
    thegrio.com

    Related Posts

    Djimon Hounsou’s ex-girlfriend released from jail after being arrested for assaulting him

    January 23, 2026

    A Georgia lawmaker has introduced a bill to make lemon pepper the official state wing flavor

    January 23, 2026

    ‘Real Housewives of Salt Lake City’ star Mary Cosby reveals where she stands after her son’s arrest: ‘I have to step back so that he can learn’

    January 23, 2026
    Top Posts

    GloRilla Serves Body In A Glimmery Gucci Set And We Approve

    December 3, 202417K Views

    Breaking Down The Stereotype: Black People And Smoke Detectors

    July 12, 2024

    The Chancellor’s Mansion: A Renovation Story of Family, Home, History, and Mystery

    July 7, 2025

    Fact Check: Are Black Women Still The ‘Most Educated’ Group In America?

    May 23, 2025
    Don't Miss
    Black America Web January 23, 2026By Black America Web

    Are You Getting What You Voted For? DL Hughley Weighs In

    Source: Reach Media / Radio One DL Hughley delivered a scathing critique of the Trump…

    Sybil Wilkes Breaks Down What We Need to Know: January 23, 2026

    Richard Smallwood’s Celebration of Life

    JD Vance Defaults To Denial And Victim-Blaming When Confronted About ICE Racial Profiling

    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • Vimeo

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest BLKALERTS and a summary of our daily news.

    About Us
    About Us

    BLKALERTS reports breaking news, live coverage and community reporting for Black America. Our reporters are identified with BA identifiers. BLKALERTS publishes / aggregates additional news content from Black News providers.

    We're accepting new partnerships right now.

    Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube WhatsApp
    © 2026 BLKALERTS. Powered by UNMUTEDCO.
    • Home
    • Privacy Policy
    • Ethics and Corrections
    • Advertise

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

    Ad Blocker Enabled!
    Ad Blocker Enabled!
    Our website is made possible by displaying online advertisements to our visitors. Please support us by disabling your Ad Blocker.