Kendall Marshall was not great in his first game against Duke; he missed nearly three times as many shots as he made, missed just as many free throws as he made, let Nolan Smith get 34 points, and his team lost.
In other words, North Carolina's new starting point guard isn't ready for All-America honors just yet, but he's obviously talented, super heady and already a difference-maker even on nights when the box score doesn't support that opinion. If you watched the game, you saw it.
Apparently, UNC was having Larry Drew II issues, not starting point guard issues. However, the Heels may now have backup point-guard issues, and that's where Drew's departure potentially hurts, because what happens when Marshall gets into foul trouble or turns an ankle? One of those things will happen at some point, almost certainly. For UNC's sake, they just better hope it doesn't happen in a must-win situation like, say, the NCAA tournament.
So if you want to worry about the Tar Heels, worry about that, but there's no longer a need to question whether the Tar Heels have a starting point guard who is capable of leading them deep into the NCAA tournament because it's now clear they do. Marshall isn't Raymond Felton or Ty Lawson, and he's a bit of a mess defensively, but he is certainly better than the Larry Drew option.
Bottom line, Marshall gives UNC a chance to be really good, and that's an inspiring thing, because it was something Drew never did and almost certainly was never gonna do.