CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP) With North Carolina trailing at halftime, Rashad McCants pulled Sean May aside and told him to take over.
The junior more than obliged his sidelined teammate.
May scored a career-high 32 points and had 12 rebounds Thursday night to help No. 2 North Carolina beat Florida State 91-76, giving the Tar Heels at least a share of the Atlantic Coast Conference regular-season title.
Freshman Marvin Williams added 17 points for the Tar Heels (25-3, 13-2 ACC), who have won 11 of 12 games to earn their first league title in four years.
North Carolina can clinch the top seed in next week's ACC tournament - which would mark its first outright league crown since the NCAA championship season in 1993 - with a home win against No. 6 Duke on Sunday.
It was another sign of the program's recovery from its struggles of the past few years, during which the Tar Heels went 8-20 in 2002 and saw coach Matt Doherty step down in an ugly, public split the following year.
After the game, the Tar Heels stayed on the court long enough for an announcement that the team had clinched a share of the ACC title.
"I wanted the team to stay out there and enjoy that feeling a little bit," coach Roy Williams said. "They have gone through so much junk - 8-20 is tough enough, and getting accused of getting a coach fired ... I really feel good for those guys."
May was the biggest reason why North Carolina moved a step closer to sole possession of the ACC crown - and stayed unbeaten despite playing without McCants, the team's leading scorer who has missed three straight games because of an intestinal disorder.
The 6-foot-9 junior went 13-for-15 from the floor and finished with his seventh straight double-double, becoming the first Tar Heel to do so since Mitch Kupchak in the 1975-76 season. The 32-point performance was the best by a Tar Heel since Joseph Forte scored 36 against the Seminoles in February 2001.
And May reached the 1,000-point mark for his career with nine points in the first half, making him the 57th player in school history to reach the plateau.
"He's the best - by far - big man in the country, my opinion," said Raymond Felton, who had 15 points and 10 assists.
North Carolina had all kinds of trouble early with the pesky Seminoles (11-18, 3-12), who seemingly couldn't miss in the first half and led 54-52 with about 13 minutes to play. But the Tar Heels played better defensively in the second half, going ahead to stay on a 3-pointer from Melvin Scott and gradually building a double-digit margin.
