Category Archives: N.C. State

Duke not interested in Purvis but NC State is

Raleigh’s Rodney Purvis decommitted from a basketball scholarship to Louisville in May and has issued a list of schools still in the running.

Purvis, a 6-foot-4 guard from Upper Room Christian Academy, said he is looking at Connecticut, Memphis, Missouri, N.C. Central, N.C. State, Ohio State, Virginia Commonwealth and Virginia.

“Instead of rushing into another decision,” Purvis said. “I get to sit down and talk with the coaches more. Gain relationship with every coach on the staff. Just get a good feel for the campuses … and see what fits my style of play the best.”

He has scheduled an in-home visit with N.C. State on Saturday, Sept. 10. Duke’s Mike Krzyzewski, on the other hand, called Purvis recently to tell them that the Blue Devils weren’t interested.

Coach K called Rodney and said with the number of guards they had he didn’t think it would be fair to him to bring him in,” said his mother Shanda McNair, who played basketball at N.C. Central. “We respect it. We understand it. Our quest for the right fit continues.”

O’Brien, Lebo to speak at Raleigh Sports Club

The first five speakers for the new year of the Raleigh Sports Club have been set. The first meeting will be Wednesday, Aug. 31 with buffet lines open at 11:30am. Head Coach Tom O’Brien of North Carolina State football is the speaker.

For information on visiting or joining, please go to www.raleighsportsclub.org. Below are the profiles for the upcoming speakers

Aug. 31
Coach Tom O’Brien
Beginning his 5th season as Head Football Coach for State. The Wolfpack is coming off a 9-4 season and a 25th national ranking. State returns 11 starters on both sides of the ball and per O’Brien, “If you are fundamentally sound, believe in what you are doing and have faith in the person next to you, you are going to have a chance to win every time.”

Sept. 7
Coach Jeff Lebo
Head Men’s Basketball Coach for ECU, and former outstanding student-athlete at UNC Chapel Hill. Last year’s team finished its first season under Lebo with an 18-16 record, its first winning campaign in 14 years. Lebo also guided the Pirates to their first post-season appearance since 1993.

Sept. 14
Coach Kellie Harper
State Head Basketball Coach for the Lady Wolfpack, and former Southern Conference Coach of Year. Heading into her 3rd year as the head mentor for the Wolfpack women, her program has established an identity that is ready to take this season head on.

Sept. 21
Wes Chesson
One of the all-time great football players in Duke football history, lettering from 1968-70, and has been their football radio analyst for years and is a close observer of ACC Football. Hear him tell us about arguably the most famous play in ACC history!

Sept. 28
Rick Steinbacher
UNC Associate Athletic Director for Sports Marketing, and former Tar Heel Football Captain. Rick is also a color analyst for the Tar Heel Sports Network.

What the hell is going on with Carolina, Duke, State?

What the hell is going on with Carolina, Duke, State?

North Carolina has been dealing with an NCAA investigation regarding players having papers done for them, an assistant coach dealing with an NFL agent and various other apparent infractions for a year now.

Now UNC Chancellor Holden Thorp has apparently illegally by NCAA standards spoken about a football recruit, former Coach Butch Davis’ son. Davis has been fired and AD Dick Baddour has announced he is leaving. Boosters are up in arms about Thorp’s handling of it all, mostly Davis’ firing.

Meanwhile, N.C. State has been dealing with an uncomfortable and ugly situation with former quarterback Russell Wilson, who was not allowed back on the team after opting to play professional baseball for a while.

Then Wolfpack AD Debbie Yow, former Maryland AD, talked trash about Terrapin coach Gary Williams at a press conference announcing Mark Gottfried as head basketball coach. Now Gottfried is among those who took part in a Ponzi scheme linked to Jim Donnan, who played at State and coached at Georgia. For his part, Gottfried lost $25,000 he invested with Donnan and he has declined to comment about it although he has not been charged for any wrongdoing.

The Wolfpack’s top basketball recruit Torian Graham, a top 25 prospect, has de-committed from State and will likely enroll elsewhere. The Pack’s starting guard Ryan Harrow has transferred to Kentucky.
Several current Carolina football players, including the No. 2 tailback Hunter Furr, have decided to transfer from a program that could have severe sanctions as a result of the NCAA investigation.

Even Duke’s Mike Krzyzewski is being investigated for apparently offering Alex Poythress, a forward from Tennessee, a scholarship while he was at a tournament in Florida recently. NCAA rules say that coaches cannot contact recruits before they are through playing in tournaments.

An online survey on USA Today shows that 71 percent of voters believe Coach K should not be given any slack despite apparently running a clean program for years.

All this negativity will pass.

Coach K may get a slap on the wrist for a very minor wrong. After all, Poythress’ team had been ousted from the tournament so the tourney was over for him even though the tournament itself wasn’t over.

Wolfpack basketball will get players who want to play for State and Carolina football will get players who want to play for the Heels.

Gottfried, while he better learn to avoid “no comment” when talking to ACC basketball media, will avoid any serious ramifications from the Ponzi scheme.

N.C. State football will adjust to a less athletic quarterback and should be fine. Most thought Wilson wasn’t coming back for this season anyway so the Pack had moved on without him.

That leaves the Carolina mess. It appears this one will linger for a while. Carolina had – until recently – handled the situation well, cooperating with NCAA officials and voluntarily holding out players last season. Firing Butch Davis at this point wasn’t helpful and only angered boosters who had funded stadium improvements under the impression given by Thorp that Davis would be back as coach.

I have no insight as to what the NCAA sanctions will be but it won’t be good even though the players who caused problems and the assistant coach who caused problems and the rouge tutor who caused problems are all gone. This was not a situation where University officials knew and turned a blind eye nor is it a situation where the institution itself was cheating or where boosters were paying players. Still, I don’t think the NCAA will be overly lenient.

I imagine the Heels will lose at least one bowl opportunity and will lose scholarships but who knows? Still, eventually, in a year or two, things should be back to normal although the program will inevitably – with a new coach – take a bit of a dip.

Hopefully this sort of news will be gone in a year or so and we won’t have to ask “What the hell is going on with Carolina, Duke and State?”

Former State guard Harrow transfers to Kentucky

Former NC State point guard Ryan Harrow announced via Twitter Wednesday night that he is transferring to Kentucky. He reportedly chose the Wildcats over Louisville. Harrow, who average nine points a game, decided to transfer after Coach Sidney Lowe left State. Per NCAA rules, Harrow must sit out the 2011-12 season and will be eligible to play for Kentucky as a sophomore in 2012-13.

NC State upsets Florida State in day one of ACC tourney

N.C. State’s Cory Mazzoni struck out nine and teammate Matt Bergquist blasted a two-run homer to lead the Wolfpack past Florida State 7-0 Wednesday night in the Atlantic Coast Conference tournament in Durham.

The No. 7 seeded Pack, now 34-23, lost to the Seminoles in last year’s ACC championship game. Florida State, now 41-15, won the Atlantic Division championship and came into the tourney as the No. 2 seed.

The Pack plays third-seeded Georgia Tech Thursday at 7 p.m.

In other action Wednesday, Clemson whipped the Yellow Jackets 9-0 while No. 1 seed Virginia humiliated No. 8 seed Wake Forest 13-1. No. 4 North Carolina plays No. 5 Miami at 11 a.m. Thursday.

Pack opens ACC tourney play today; UNC starts Thursday

No. 7 seed N.C. State takes on No. 2 seed Florida State at 7 p.m. tonight while No. 4 UNC opens plays its ACC baseball tournament against No. 5 Miami at 11 a.m. Thursday at Durham Bulls Athletic Park.

Only eight teams make the tournament. No. 8 seed Wake Forest is also in the tournament. For a full tourney schedule, please click here.

To purchase single game or full-tournament passes to the 2011 ACC Baseball Championship, call the Durham Bulls ticket office at 919-956-BULL or order on-line through the team’s website at www.durhambulls.com.

UNC’s Moran named ACC freshman of the year; State’s Maynard makes first team

North Carolina freshman third baseman Colin Moran was named the 2011 Atlantic Coast Conference Freshman of the Year for his first campaign as a Tar Heel as voted on by the league coaches. Moran was also named to the All-ACC First Team, while the UNC trio of Tommy Coyle, Levi Michael and Patrick Johnson were named to the second team.

Pratt Maynard, a junior catcher, was the only player from NC State to make the first team. Maynard had a consistent 2011 campaign, batting .335 with 19 doubles, one triple, five home runs and 40 RBIs.

Moran becomes the fifth Tar Heel to be named the ACC Freshman of the Year and first since Dustin Ackley in 2007. Moran currently leads the ACC with 67 RBI during the regular season, 10 more than his next closest competitor. The Rye, N.Y., native leads the Tar Heels with a .355 average on the year and owns a team-best .464 on base percentage.

In addition to the Freshman of the Year award, Moran was also named First Team All-ACC becoming the first freshman to be named to the squad since Virginia’s Danny Hultzen in 2009.

Also earning All-ACC honors were infielders Tommy Coyle and Levi Michael as Carolina is the only team in the conference with three infielders on the two teams.

Coyle finished the regular season with an even 50 runs scored to lead the team, while hitting .307 to rank third on the team. The Chalfont, Pa., native also leads the Tar Heels in stolen bases as he has swiped 16 bases in 18 attempts.

Michael came in to the season as a preseason All-America candidate and went on to hit .311 during the regular season scoring 47 runs, while driving in 46 more. The Welcome, N.C., native also became just the third player in school history to record 40 runs, 40 RBI and 40 walks in back-to-back seasons.

Coming into the season the Tar Heels were in search of a Friday night starter with several options available but senior Patrick Johnson quickly gained hold of the spot starting the season on a six-game unbeaten streak. Johnson would finish the regular season with a dominating four-hit shutout of No. 1 Virginia en route to All-ACC Second Team honors.

Johnson is currently on a four-game unbeaten streak and posted a 7-1 mark in conference play with a team-low 3.18 ERA.

Carolina opens the 2011 ACC Baseball Championship on Thursday at 11 a.m. when it faces Miami.

Player of the Year: Brad Miller, Clemson
Pitcher of the Year: Danny Hultzen, Virginia
Freshman of the Year: Colin Moran, UNC
Coach of the Year: Brian O’Connor, Virginia

13th Annual Big Ten/ACC Challenge matchups announced

The 13th annual Big Ten/ACC Challenge Presented by DICK’S Sporting Goods on Nov. 29-30 will be highlighted by Duke at Ohio State and Wisconsin at North Carolina — four traditional power programs expected to be highly ranked entering the 2011-12 season – and an expanded format with new Big Ten member Nebraska. ESPN, ESPN2, ESPNU and ESPN3.com will combine to broadcast all 12 games of the two-day event, one more than in the previous 12 Challenges.

The 2011 Challenge involves six teams ranked an early preseason top 25 by ESPN.com senior college basketball writer Andy Katz, including three in the top five: No. 1 North Carolina, No. 3 Ohio State, No. 5 Duke, No. 11 Wisconsin, No. 21 Florida State and No. 23 Michigan.

This year’s event – top college basketball programs playing for conference supremacy and the Commissioner’s Cup — will include 11 teams that played in the 2011 NCAA Tournament: Clemson, Duke, Florida State and North Carolina from the ACC, and Illinois, Michigan, Michigan State, Ohio State, Penn State, Purdue and Wisconsin from the Big Ten.

The ACC has won 10 of the first 12 Challenges with league teams winning 72 of the 119 games played. A year ago, the Big Ten won its second consecutive Challenge by a 6-to-5 margin. Home teams won six of the 11 games in 2010 and five of the contests were decided by eight points or less, including two by three or fewer points.

In the event of a 6-6 tie in the Challenge, the Commissioner’s Cup will remain with the conference that won the Challenge the previous year.

• Following a First with a Rematch: Georgia Tech and Northwestern will follow the first meeting between the programs (Northwestern 91-71) with a second consecutive Challenge showdown.
• Pursuing Perfection: Boston College will look to continue its undefeated streak in the Challenge when the program hosts Penn State. The Eagles have won their previous five games.
• Going for 12: Duke, which lost its only Challenge game in 2009, will look for its event-record 12th win. Duke also won its previous Challenge game against Ohio State, 91-76 in 2002.
• Commissioner’s Cup: The Big Ten won the Commissioner’s Cup for the second consecutive year; the ACC won the previous 10 Challenges.
• First Challenge Matchups: nine of the telecasts will feature first-time Challenge matchups: No. 11 Wisconsin at No. 1 North Carolina, No. 21 Florida State at Michigan State, No. 23 Michigan at Virginia, Miami at Purdue, Clemson at Iowa, Indiana at NC State, Penn State at Boston College, Virginia Tech at Minnesota and Wake Forest at Nebraska.
• Four’s a Charm?: Illinois and Maryland will meet for the fourth time in the Challenge with the Terrapins winning the previous three matchups (69-61 in 2007; 72-66 in 2006; 76-63 in 2001).

2011 Big Ten/ACC Challenge schedule – times and networks are to be determined
(Rankings refer to preseason top 25 by ESPN.com senior college basketball writer Andy Katz)

Tuesday, November 29
Miami at Purdue
Northwestern at Georgia Tech
Illinois at Maryland
No. 23 Michigan at Virginia
Clemson at Iowa
No. 5 Duke at No. 3 Ohio State

Wednesday, November 30
Indiana at NC State
Penn State at Boston College
No. 21 Florida State at Michigan State
Virginia Tech at Minnesota
Wake Forest at Nebraska
No. 11 Wisconsin at No. 1 North Carolina

State’s Leslie caught up in our politically correct society

N.C. State’s C.J. Leslie has been forced to apologize for a comment he tweeted where he said he’d rather not have a gay person in the locker room.

Really? It seems pretty tame. While many may feel differently, he was just saying how he feels. This is political correctness run amok. No one would have said a word if a female basketball player said she didn’t want a heterosexual male in the locker room.

Leslie didn’t say he hates gay people or anything particularly derogatory about gay people. He’d simply rather not share a locker room with someone of a different sexual orientation.

As soon as the tweet came out, radical groups and sensitive N.C. State officials came down on Leslie, who released this statement: “Wanna apologize for hurting or offending any 1 with my tweets yesterday…Was watching espn about it and didn’t think before I tweeted. Meant no disrespect to any 1.”

I believe him but left-leaning sportswriters aren’t giving him any breaks. For instance, Tim Hall, who covers ACC basketball and football for 99.9 The Fan and 620 The Buzz, wrote “Let’s be real, the apology was only a formality. Did he suddenly change his personal view on how he would feel with a gay athlete in his locker room in a 24 hour span? The apology probably isn’t for having the opinion, just for tweeting it.”

So, evidently in our policitically correct society, we are supposed to apologize for our opinions. Leslie’s opinion is Leslie’s opinion and many Americans believe it is a legitimate concern. He should have a right to it without being PC-ed to death.

NC State’s Choi named ACC’s top freshman golfer

NC State’s Albin Choi was named unanimously the 2011 Atlantic Coast Conference Men’s Golf Freshman of the Year when the All-ACC team was announced on Monday by the conference office.

Choi and teammate and fellow Canadian Mitchell Sutton were voted on the 12-man All-ACC team for the first time, as selected by the league’s head coaches.

Additionally, Choi was a finalist for player of the year after leading the conference with a 71.03 scoring average. The Toronto native scored two victories in his first season with the Wolfpack. He also recorded a runner-up finish and had seven top-10 placements, and wound up out of the top 20 in just one of 11 tournaments.

Sutton, from London, Ontario, was about as good as Choi was this season in his sophomore campaign. He notched a 71.97 scoring average, good for the 11th lowest in the ACC. He won the Hootie at Bulls Bay Intercollegiate in the spring for his first collegiate win. He has three top 10’s and six top 20’s to his credit this year.

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