Loss at Wake shows Duke still struggling to produce in the clutch

Duke lost its last four games of 2009, and at the time, coach David Cutcliffe thought the biggest hurdle his program had to make was learning how to win games. There’s plenty that goes into  winning – talent, of course, but a key ingredient is the ability to perform when games were on the line.

Saturday’s 54-48 Blue Devil loss at Wake Forest was a blistering offensive performance, but the engaging show and gaudy numbers don’t mask the fact that this was devastating loss for Duke. Even athletics director Kevin White told the Duke radio network before the game how important this game was, and that the entire Duke sports administrative staff was “in the foxhole” with the team on this one. Duke had lost 10 straight to Wake Forest, a pretty dismal effort against a school with a similar size and academic standard.

Jim Grobe remains one of the ACC’s most remarkable coaches, but this is a Wake team Duke could have beaten. When you watch Duke, the Blue Devils have more athletes than in recent seasons – corners like Chris Rwabukamba who can turn upfield for picks and just more speed across the field. Quarterback Sean Renfree is an All-ACC caliber player and could wind up in the NFL. He has strong receivers and a head coach who knows how to punish a defense.
For example, Renfree’s 6-yard strike to Cooper Helfet in the first quarter was a beautifully designed play in which the Devils got a tight end isolated on a linebacker over the middle and scored easily.
But all Duke’s progress can’t mask some lingering problems. Just when you think Duke is looking like a smart team that doesn’t kill itself, its punter drops a snap and Wake scores an easy touchdown. Just when you think Duke is improving on defense, the Devils can’t stop Wake to save their lives and give up 54 points and 500 yards of total offense. The Deacons pounded Duke for 229 yards rushing – you just can’t win when you give up rushing yards like that.
“Defensively we simply need to tackle better to begin with,” Cutcliffe said. “Just look at the numbers, guys are throwing at us, but most of those run yards, a lot of it wasn’t tackling very well. And, when we tackled when, we shut them down. So, it goes back to correctable things.
“Will it define us? No. We have to play good, clean football. Kicking game goes from phenomenal to giving up the punt return; we’re a pretty good return team. There are a lot of things to build on. And, I always choose to be more encouraged than discouraged, and I will always be that way.”
The encouraging side starts with Renfree. If you saw the brutal hit he took while delivering one ball, you saw all you needed to know about how tough he is. Renfree has the force and touch on his throws of an elite ACC quarterback, and has quality receivers to hit.
The running game showed encouraging signs. Desmond Scott isn’t Tony Dorsett but he did scamper for 122 yards and a touchdown on 11 tries. Duke is desperate for a running threat to balance its passing game, and Scott is their best option for the moment. He won’t garner many All-ACC votes but if he can break some runs and at least make rival linebackers worry about him, he’ll give Duke a chance.
The defense simply has to improve. There’s no excuse for giving up 54 points and 500 yards. You can play pitch and catch all you want, but it’s hard to be a winner in college football trying to outscore people all the time.
But the real killer was Wake’s decisive drive late in the fourth quarter. With Duke trailing 48-41, the game hinged on whether the Devils could stop Wake and get the ball back. But the Deacons went on a punishing 13-play, 79-yard drive that erased 5:52 from the clock. The Deacons had talked in the preseason about how they had to be tougher in critical moments – this drive was a tremendous measure of their mettle.
By the time Wake scored, only 2:53 remained. But from the Duke perspective, that’s the type of drive strong teams don’t allow, and that’s exactly the point in time where Duke has to perform if it is ever to realize its football ambitions.
Duke has Alabama on Saturday and Army after that. You have to figure that’s a loss and then a win. Then comes at Maryland on Oct. 2, another winnable game – and another chance for Duke to demonstrate whether it can perform with games on the line.

Baddour: Davis is ‘the fit’ for North Carolina

North Carolina athletics director Dick Baddour offered a strong endorsement of coach Butch Davis Friday afternoon, telling the Capital Sports Report, “He’s the fit for the University of North Carolina.”
Baddour, calling from his cell phone, said he was just leaving the Kenan Football Center after a long meeting with Davis.“I had a good meeting with Butch,” he said. “We had a number of things we wanted to discuss.”
Baddour said there “is progress” on the Carolina players whose status is uncertain, but said, “We’re not at a point where we have resolution, either good or bad.”
The scandal has cost UNC associate coach John Blake his job. Blake resigned Sunday, saying it was best of the program. Baddour refused to say if Davis had ever offered to resign as well.
“If he had or hadn’t, I wouldn’t say that,” Baddour said. “I appreciate the question, but I wouldn’t answer that.”
Instead, Baddour insisted Davis is the right coach for UNC.
“I believe in what he stands for. I believe he knows how to build a program,” Baddour said. He praised Davis for knowing how to develop and motivate his staff. He also praised Davis for understanding the role of the football program in a university setting.
“I believe he’s committed to the academic values of the institution,” Baddour said.
Baddour added, “I believe the things that have gone on are as bothersome to him as the rest of us. He has the commitment and skills to get this ship right.”

Zero tackles for Irving proves frustrating for Pack LB

The most surprising statistic from N.C. State’s game with Western Carolina Saturday was the zero posted in the tackles column by Pack linebacker Nate Irving.

Irving, of course, missed all of last season because of a car accident and has been shifted to middle linebacker by new position coach Jon Tenuta. It’s easy to see why Irving may not be where he was in 2008, but to see zero tackles against Western was a surprise.

“Nate didn’t have many opportunities,” Wolfpack coach Tom O’Brien said this week. “I think he got a little frustrated out there. Everything got funneled to Terrell [Manning]. He was the linebacker they attacked. … I don’t know if that was by design or not but that’s the way things worked out.”

Manning led State with 10 tackles (two unassisted and eight assists).

Ten area high school football games to consider attending, with predictions

Here are 10 football games that are within driving distance in the Triangle area Friday night. In bold is the predicted winner. Most games are at 7:30 p.m. Check with local officials as some games start at 7.
My record last week, again, was 7-3 for a season total of 21-9.

Athens Drive at Green Hope

Cardinal Gibbons at Ravenscroft

Carrboro at East Chapel Hill

Cary at Fuquay-Varina

Durham Riverside at Garner

Lee County at Apex

Leesville Road at East Wake

Middle Creek at Holly Springs

New Hanover at SE Raleigh

Northern Durham at Millbrook, 7 p.m.

Check the scores in our Sports Roundup on the left navigation bar.

Quarterbacks the big story for Duke-Wake game

Yes, Wake Forest has beaten Duke 10 straight times and are at home but in order to beat the Devils again, they’ll have to get good production out of the quarterback position.

With four-year starter Riley Skinner gone, Ted Stachitas, a sophomore, is expected to get most of the snaps this year but he has had two surgeries on his right shoulder. Therefore, freshman lefty Tanner Price, who had been a redshirt candidate, saw action last week against Presbyterian.

“We feel like Ted Stachitas can win a bunch of football games for us,” Wake coach Jim Grobe said this week. “I think as he plays more, he’s going to be better. But his injuries have been an issue for us. You just have to have Plan B ready, basically because of his history injury wise.”

Grobe seems a little ambivalent about Stachitas. “I like a lot of the things that Ted did (in the opener). He misfired on a couple of pretty easy open throws which was disappointing. And he fumbled the football at one time, and that’s something we can’t do.”

Grobe went on to decisively say, “I think he was somewhat indecisive at times, but at times he was very decisive.”

Unless he’s playing possum, you’d have to give the quarterback matchup edge in Saturday’s game to Duke’s Sean Renfree.

“A couple of people that are from Arizona that knew about the kid when he was in high school told me when Duke first signed him that they had signed a great quarterback,” Grobe said of Renfree. “Of course he got some snaps early last year. And with Thad Lewis being as good as he is, I knew that Coach Cutcliffe wasn’t going to put that kid on the field and take reps away from Thad Lewis unless he thought he could help them win. So I knew with him being on the field last year he had to be pretty special.”

Renfree completed 80 percent of his passes against Elon last week. “It’s hard for a kid to hit 80 percent if there’s no defense on the other side if you’re just out there throwing on air. On one hand I was probably a little surprised and disappointed that he played so well last week. Watching the video was pretty special.”

While Wake Forest is favored to continue its streak against Duke, Renfree could be the difference maker.

UNC’s Davis: No progress yet on unavailable players

North Carolina is no closer to resolving its roster when it comes to the NCAA and school investigations into the football program, coach Butch Davis said Wednesday.

“There’s no movement today on any of the players we were not in position to play last weekend,” he said on the ACC teleconference.

Carolina held out 13 players in Saturday’s loss to LSU, with an obvious impact on the defense. Those losses rippled across the UNC lineup in other ways as well.

The Tar Heels started Johnny White at tailback and he promptly fumbled the ball away. UNC turned to Anthony Elzy, a converted fullback, after that and even sophomore Hunter Furr. Asked about his running back situation for the Sept. 18 Georgia Tech game, Davis said both White and Elzy had ankle injuries and he was uncertain what would happen.

Carolina also had to use inexperienced players on special teams, which led to some disastrous coverage issues in the first half against LSU.

O’Brien likes what he sees so far in young Pack running backs

Quarterback Russell Wilson was the headline in N.C. State’s victory over Western Carolina Saturday, but Wilson will need more help as State’s schedule toughens up with Saturday’s game at Central Florida.

Two issues for State are whether it can run the ball, and how its inexperienced offensive line performs. The Wolfpack rushed for 129 yards against Western, a decent number considering the fact that redshirt freshman Dean Haynes and true freshman Mustafa Greene had never carried the ball in a college game. Haynes carried 13 times for 69 yards and Greene 10 times for 35 yards.

“Our thought process was keep it simple, hold onto the football, run to the goal line,” O’Brien said. He said he wasn’t looking for his backs to do anything fancy, but to turn upfield and not make a mistake.

A major issue with young backs is pass protection. While fans often evaluate runners by how they perform with the ball, coaches are watching closely to see if they protect the quarterback. In that aspect, O’Brien said he was pleased with what he saw.

“They were perfect in where they were going and what they were doing,” O’Brien said. The technique could use some work but at least they grasped the game plan.

“They could be a little better fundamentally but as far as assignment-wise they were going the right direction the entire night,” O’Brien said.

UCF, with George O’Leary as coach, is expected to field a defense that will be much tougher than Western Carolina. The Knights beat South Dakota 38-7 and allowed only 220 yards of total offense.

State’s offensive line is inexperienced, but has talent. O’Brien raved after massive left tackle Rob Crisp, a true freshman who started because Jake Vermiglio did not dress.

“With Rob Crisp it was an exceptional performance from a freshman,” O’Brien said. “What you see is really good athletic ability. You saw great tenaciousness. He’s got a certain confident about himself.”

O’Brien said Vermiglio is practicing this week but refused to say if he will play Saturday against Central Florida. Vermiglio faced drug charges in the offseason, but they were dropped.

O’Brien said Crisp and Vermiglio will both remain at left tackle to give the Wolfpack depth at that position this season.

Fan reaction misses key point on Blake, Wichard

Some of the fan reaction to The News & Observer’s Wednesday story linking associate coach John Blake to agent Gary Wichard misses a key point. Many fans, in response, have pointed out that Wichard represents only one UNC player, Kentwan Balmer, who came up in the Butch Davis regime.

That criticism overlooks the fact that Davis came into a program bereft of talent. Balmer was San Francisco’s first-round pick in 2008 – UNC’s first first-rounder since Julius Peppers and Ryan Sims in 2002. Hakeem Nicks was a first-round pick in 2009 and Richard Quinn went in the second round. In 2010, Carolina didn’t have a player select in the top three rounds.

The 2011 NFL Draft will be different, with multiple UNC players considered first-round picks. It makes sense that agent would want to position himself to represent those Carolina players – and the NFL prospects to follow. The N&O’s story showed a pattern of communication between Blake and Wichard that follows their professional association, and the trip Marvin Austin took last summer to work out with Balmer, a trip that is likely an NCAA violation.

N&O story on Blake raises more questions at UNC

UNC associate coach John Blake announced his resignation abruptly Sunday night, and there were two points to that story that made you realize there was much more than what you saw in the official release.

The first was that he would be paid $74,500 out of his base salary of $240,000. So Blake walked away from a $169,500? That’s hard to fathom.

The second point – in The News & Observer’s story on Monday morning, it reported Raleigh attorney Wade Smith “has been working with Blake.” Smith is one of the city’s top attorneys, and someone you turn to in real trouble. But why would Blake need Smith?

On Wednesday, we found out. The N&O’s front-page splash detailed extensive communications between Blake and agent Gary Wichard. Remember, a newspaper can request such documents under the Freedom of Information act, and I’m sure what happened was the paper asked for them, Carolina realized how much Blake had been in contact with Wichard, and Blake was promptly encouraged to resign.

So to connect the dots – the newspapers seeks the documents, the school sees what they reveal, and the assistant coach gets a lawyer and resigns before the story hits.

First of all, kudos to the paper for pushing hard on the story. While The N&O, like all papers, has suffered cuts, it has rallied the resources to dominate this story.

Second, this raises real questions about how much UNC’s own investigations will reveal.

And third, Davis’ comments to the paper that he had “no idea” Blake was so connected to Wichard just ring hollow. On Tuesday in Chapel Hill, I listened as UNC tight end Zack Pianalto – once again – said he dropped the ball in the endzone Saturday, and Pianalto refused to say there was pass interference on the play. Pianalto took responsibility for what happened, an example his coach could learn from.

Finally, here’s one point to keep in mind. All this eventually rests with Chancellor Holden Thorp, who has been engaged in this process and who ultimately would have to act if he believes the actions of the football program are hurting the school. While UNC’s comeback against LSU was exhilirating, I’ve heard from many Carolina fans who say this whole affair isn’t worth the damage to the school’s image.

At a news conference when the academic issues broke, Thorp was asked directly if school lacked institutional control of the football team.

“Right now, I think that what we need to do is determine the facts,” Thorp said. “We are still in the middle of that, so it’s a little early for me to say what it is that would make me feel one way or another about that question.”

Some people read that comment as Thorp dodging the issue. I didn’t. I read it as Thorp declining to defend the school – he did not say the school had institutional control – and Thorp wisely reserving judgment to see where this process led. Now, Blake is gone, and Davis, if he is to retain the confidence of his chancellor, will have to show he is on top of the issues that have challenged the institution’s confidence in his program.



Raycom Sports will feature ACC Network brand

ACC NEWS RELEASE – Raycom Sports and the Atlantic Coast Conference today announced that beginning this season, the Raycom Sports Regional Syndicated package of Atlantic Coast Conference football and basketball telecasts will be branded as the ACC Network.

The new marketing initiative will feature ACC Network graphics and designations beginning with the first game this year, the Duke at Wake Forest telecast on Saturday, Sept. 11.

The ACC Network branding was part of the new television rights agreements between the ACC, Raycom Sports and ESPN that begins with the 2011 Football season. Raycom Sports and the Conference moved to begin the branding during the final year of the existing contract.

“Beginning to brand the ACC Network with the start of the first conference football game made great sense for our league, member schools, fans and partners,” said ACC Commissioner John Swofford. “It’s a great tribute to Raycom that we’re able to roll out this initiative a year before the new contract begins.”

“The establishment of the ACC Network brand was a natural step, given our longstanding syndication exclusivity with the Atlantic Coast Conference,” said Jimmy Rayburn, vice-president of operations for Raycom Sports. “Moving forward with our new rights agreement, we were already preparing the transition. But with the volume of media coverage already surrounding the conference’s new television rights agreement, it made perfect sense to capitalize on the public’s attention now with the ACC Network designation.”