Mikel Brown Jr. had 10 3-pointers and scored an ACC freshman single-game record 45 points as No. 24 Louisville routed NC State 118-77 on Monday night.

Published 3 months ago on Feb 11th 2026, 5:00 pm
By Web Desk

LOUISVILLE, Ky. -- Clearly aware he had a hot hand, Mikel Brown Jr. wanted to see what scoring heights he could reach before cooling off.
The heralded Louisville guard topped the ACC's most recent freshman phenom and matched a Hall of Famer and Cardinals legend.
Brown hit a career-best 10 3-pointers and scored 45 points to break Cooper Flagg's ACC single-game scoring mark of 42 set last season to help No. 24 Louisville rout NC State 118-77 on Monday night. His total also tied Wes Unseld's Louisville scoring mark set against Georgetown College on Dec. 1, 1967.
"I did not know," Brown said when asked about the Unseld record on a night when he shot 14 of 23 from the field and 10 of 16 from long distance. He also made all seven free throws, grabbed nine rebounds, had three steals and two assists.
"To be honest, I was just so locked in with just staying with it and just not having it drop off," Brown said. "Just maintaining my aggressiveness and my will to create for myself and for others as well. I think the gravity that was being pulled toward me kind of opened up everybody else, and we had walk-in layups and was getting open shots.
"I definitely wasn't thinking about the record until they [teammates] just came to me, and I'm like, 'I'm going to go get it.'"
Fittingly, Brown's ACC freshman record-tying 3 came dead center from just past the halfcourt logo, sending 14,389 white-clad fans into a frenzy. Had Brown not juggled the ball while going up for a dunk earlier in the second half, he might've broken the Louisville record.
Not that being mentioned alongside a Louisville Hall of Famer -- or prospective NBA Rookie of the Year favorite in Flagg -- was a bad thing.
"That means a lot, just because he's a legend," Brown said of matching Unseld. "I couldn't do this without my teammates. They encourage me every single day to be myself and to stay aggressive and just be free."
Almost overlooked among Brown's white-hot shooting was teammate Ryan Conwell, who added 31 points on 10-of-14 shooting. Then again, the energy Brown created was going to rub off.
"His gravity on the floor, he makes it easy for me," Conwell said of Brown.
Brown started the season strong, highlighted by a 29-point performance against rival Kentucky on Nov. 11. He then suffered a lower back injury that sidelined him for eight games from mid-December until early January.
He returned to score in double digits in three of five games, including 20 points twice. The accuracy and rhythm seemed off, but Brown insisted in an interview with The Associated Press that it was just a matter of time before things fell into place.
One game, it turned out.
The Orlando, Florida, native had 21 points at halftime, and early in the second half, Brown surpassed LaBradford Smith's Louisville single-game freshman mark of 32 points set twice, most recently Feb. 15, 1988.
Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.
The heralded Louisville guard topped the ACC's most recent freshman phenom and matched a Hall of Famer and Cardinals legend.
Brown hit a career-best 10 3-pointers and scored 45 points to break Cooper Flagg's ACC single-game scoring mark of 42 set last season to help No. 24 Louisville rout NC State 118-77 on Monday night. His total also tied Wes Unseld's Louisville scoring mark set against Georgetown College on Dec. 1, 1967.
"I did not know," Brown said when asked about the Unseld record on a night when he shot 14 of 23 from the field and 10 of 16 from long distance. He also made all seven free throws, grabbed nine rebounds, had three steals and two assists.
"To be honest, I was just so locked in with just staying with it and just not having it drop off," Brown said. "Just maintaining my aggressiveness and my will to create for myself and for others as well. I think the gravity that was being pulled toward me kind of opened up everybody else, and we had walk-in layups and was getting open shots.
"I definitely wasn't thinking about the record until they [teammates] just came to me, and I'm like, 'I'm going to go get it.'"
Fittingly, Brown's ACC freshman record-tying 3 came dead center from just past the halfcourt logo, sending 14,389 white-clad fans into a frenzy. Had Brown not juggled the ball while going up for a dunk earlier in the second half, he might've broken the Louisville record.
Not that being mentioned alongside a Louisville Hall of Famer -- or prospective NBA Rookie of the Year favorite in Flagg -- was a bad thing.
"That means a lot, just because he's a legend," Brown said of matching Unseld. "I couldn't do this without my teammates. They encourage me every single day to be myself and to stay aggressive and just be free."
Almost overlooked among Brown's white-hot shooting was teammate Ryan Conwell, who added 31 points on 10-of-14 shooting. Then again, the energy Brown created was going to rub off.
"His gravity on the floor, he makes it easy for me," Conwell said of Brown.
Brown started the season strong, highlighted by a 29-point performance against rival Kentucky on Nov. 11. He then suffered a lower back injury that sidelined him for eight games from mid-December until early January.
He returned to score in double digits in three of five games, including 20 points twice. The accuracy and rhythm seemed off, but Brown insisted in an interview with The Associated Press that it was just a matter of time before things fell into place.
One game, it turned out.
The Orlando, Florida, native had 21 points at halftime, and early in the second half, Brown surpassed LaBradford Smith's Louisville single-game freshman mark of 32 points set twice, most recently Feb. 15, 1988.
Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.

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