A total of 13 players from Duke, NC State and UNC have signed free agent contracts or received invitations to attend free agent camps from teams in the National Football League. There are 51 players from Atlantic Coast Conference schools that have done so.
Wolfpack guard Zack Allen was signed by the Carolina Panthers while UNC’s Casey Barth was picked up by Atlanta.
Combined with the 31 ACC players drafted by the NFL, a total of 82 players from ACC schools will head to NFL training camps this year.
When draftees (3) and free agents (10) from Pittsburgh and Syracuse are included, teams which will join the ACC this July 1, the number of players headed to the NFL grows to a total of 95 players.
ACC NFL Free Agent Signees (as of May 9)
Duke (3)
Jackson Anderson LS Houston Texans
Tony Foster DB Kansas City Chiefs
Conner Vernon WR Oakland Raiders
North Carolina (4)
Casey Barth PK Atlanta Falcons
Jheranie Boyd WR Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Erik Highsmith WR Minnesota Vikings
Kevin Reddick LB New Orleans Saints
NC State (6)
Zach Allen G Carolina Panthers
Brandan Bishop S Minnesota Vikings
R.J. Mattes OL New England Patriots
Tobais Palmer WR Jacksonville Jaguars
Cameron Wentz C Minnesota Vikings
C.J. Wilson CB Chicago Bears
Jeremy KimbroughAmong the 12 college free agents the Washington Redskins signed recently are two players with North Carolina ties.
The Redskins signed Appalachian State inside linebacker Jeremy Kimbrough, 5-9, 235-pounds, who led the conference with 143 tackles last season. In fact, he was named Southern Conference Co-Defensive Player of the Year last season. He is known as a run stopper but he also worked out as a fullback during the NFL combine.
The Skins also signed Florida offensive tackle Xavier Nixon, who is from Fayetteville and played a Jack Britt High School. The 6-6, 320-pounder made the Senior Bowl but he was not a consistent starter for the Gators although he cracked the starting lineup at times throughout his four years. In fact, he started five games at left tackle as a freshman while Tim Tebow was the starting QB. Xavier Nixon
Ron FrancisThe National Hockey League arrived in North Carolina in 1997. Ron Francis, one of hockey’s all-time greats, followed a year later, becoming a pioneer for the sport in the state.
Now, Francis, who serves as the vice president of hockey operations for the Carolina Hurricanes, is a pioneer for the sport in the North Carolina Sports Hall of Fame, as he becomes the first hockey player to be inducted.
Francis, 50, is among 10 other inductees enshrined in the Hall of Fame’s 50th annual class.
“The Carolina Hurricanes mean so much to the state of North Carolina and our sports history,” said Don Fish, the executive director of the Hall of Fame. “Ron is a part of that heritage. It was time to include a champion. Ron Francis changed the face of hockey in this state.”
“It’s a tremendous honor and not one I take lightly,” Francis said. “This is a pretty impressive sports hall of fame, and to go in their 50th year is great.”
Stated simply, the mission of the Hall of Fame, which inducted its first class in 1963, is to “celebrate excellence and extraordinary achievement in athletics.” Francis certainly fits the bill.
In a storied career spanning 23 seasons with Hartford, Pittsburgh, Carolina and Toronto, Francis scored 549 goals and tallied 1,249 assists. His 1,798 points rank fourth in NHL history behind only Wayne Gretzky, Mark Messier and Gordie Howe. Francis, a two-time Stanley Cup Champion with Pittsburgh (1991, 1992), spent 16 of his 23 seasons with the Hartford/Carolina franchise, establishing team records in games played (1,186), goals (382), assists (793) and points (1,175).
“I tell people that it seems like yesterday when it was 1998 and I signed here,” he said. “What intrigued me about the whole process was moving to a new market and the opportunity to sell our game. It’s our game that I firmly believe in, and it’s a tremendous sport. It’s been great to me in my life, and it was an opportunity for me to come back, give a little back to the game and promote it. Here we are 15 later, and I’m going into the North Carolina Sports Hall of Fame as a hockey player.”
Before Wednesday’s press conference, amidst a myriad of basketball and football greats, Francis was talking with Mildred Southern, who is heralded as the matriarch of tennis in the South. Southern said she was surprised to be inducted because she was a tennis player.
“I said, ‘Mildred, how do you think I feel? I played hockey,’” Francis joked.
In many ways, Francis could be considered the patriarch of hockey in North Carolina.
“He helped build an incredible foundation, and although he wasn’t there for the Stanley Cup, it was a Stanley Cup victory because of what he had done previously,” Fish said. “Being the first hockey player inducted is indeed an honor and well-deserved.”
Hockey was first formally recognized by the Hall of Fame in 2012, when the Hurricanes’ 2006 Stanley Cup Championship was honored as one of the Great Moments in state sports history.
And there will be more accolades to come. Likely soon to join Francis and the 299 others in the Hall of Fame will be Rod Brind’Amour and Jim Rutherford, who have already been nominated and considered as inductees.
“To be honored and have the opportunity to step in is tremendous, and I know I won’t be the last,” Francis said. “It’s great to be the first part of the team heading into the hall.”
As Francis paved the way for hockey in North Carolina, he has so paved the way for the sport in the Hall of Fame.
“We’ll see, over the course of history, a continual flow of hockey players that will be included in the North Carolina Sports Hall of Fame,” Fish said.
“I think it’s only going to get better and better,” Francis said about the future of the sport in the state. “You see it in the youth hockey numbers. You see it in the level of teams that our community is putting on the ice. They go to different national tournaments now, and they’re not getting beat by six or eight or 10 goals; they’re competing, and they’re winning. I think that bodes well for the future of our sport going forward.”
Sport in the state of North Carolina has a rich and celebrated heritage. Francis had a foundational role in hockey’s success in the state shortly following the turn of the millennium. One day, perhaps hockey will be reminisced in the Hall of Fame with the fondness of other sports.
“Today is the first step, and it’s a good step for the organization and our sport,” Francis said.
“It’s a sport that is relatively new in time but is so popular,” Fish said. “No question about it: hockey will be recognized forever in this state.”
In a video released recently, North Carolina’s NHL Hockey team, the Carolina Hurricanes showed their support for gay and lesbian athletes. The video is part of the You Can Play campaign dedicated to ensuring equality, respect and safety for all athletes, without regard to sexual orientation.
You Can Play works to guarantee that athletes are given a fair opportunity to compete, judged by other athletes and fans alike, only by what they contribute to the sport or their team’s success.The organization also seeks to challenge the culture of locker rooms and spectator areas by focusing only on an athlete’s skills, work ethic and competitive spirit.
According to the Carolina Hurricanes website, the Hurricanes’ video marks the first time a professional sports team in North Carolina has come forward with this type of message encouraging gay and lesbian inclusivity in professional athletics.
About the video, Hurricanes forward Kevin Westgarth said, “I think it’s fantastic that we’re moving forward and it lets whomever it may be feel more comfortable being themselves….You want people to feel comfortable being who they are and know it’s not going to affect what people think of them and what they’re able to do…if you’re good enough to play on my team, I want you on my team.”
Founded by Philadelphia Flyers scout Patrick Burke, You Can Play has had vocal and expansive support throughout hockey since its inception on March 9, 2012.
“To formalize it across the NHL and NHLPA is a great thing, and hopefully that is a beacon moving forward,” Westgarth said.
According to the league, the partnership between the NHL, NHLPA and You Can Play includes a broad pledge to education and training. You Can Play will conduct educational seminars at the league’s rookie symposium and will make its resources available for teams and players. The partnership also includes production and broadcast support of public service announcements.
At its core, the You Can Play project centers around respect – respect both in and out of the locker room – and the idea of judging athletes based on character and work ethic. Sport unites people of all backgrounds, races and culture together; exclusivity is not inherent, and inclusivity should be celebrated.
“It’s unfortunate it can’t just be right without saying anything,” Westgarth said. “But I think it’s very important now that we do it, and I think it’s a great step for us.”
Robert Griffin“In January of 2013, Washington Post columnist Mike Wise said only superstar quarterback Robert Griffin III could force the Redskins to change their name. Well sorry, Mike, but RGIII doesn’t seem to be on board with the cause.
“RGIII sent out a tweet today branding calls for a Redskins name change as the ‘tyranny of political correctness.'”
– Jonathan Wolfe, Opposing Views
Griffin tweeted, “In a land of freedom we are held hostage by the tyranny of political correctness.”
Evidently the series of tweets were sent out because of a DC Council proposal by council member David Grosso calling for the Redskins to change their name to the “Redtails,” the nickname of the Tuskegee Airmen.
People certainly have the right to be offended but they don’t have a right not to be offended.
The fact is that the name “Redskins” was meant to honor the former head coach, William “Lone Star” Dietz, who was an American Indian. The term “redskin” is a translation from native American languages of a term used by native Americans for themselves. The term entered popular usage via the novels of James Fenimore Cooper. In the early- to mid-nineteenth century the term was neutral, not pejorative, and indeed was often used in contexts in which whites spoke of Indians in positive terms.
I hope Griffin isn’t forced to retract his statements and, in fact, I hope he stands firm against the name change. If he does, he can end this silliness.
For the 11th time in the last 12 seasons and the ninth time under head coach Brian Kalbas, the North Carolina women’s tennis team has been awarded a home regional and a national seed for the NCAA Division I Team Championship, the NCAA announced Tuesday. The Tar Heels are the No. 2 seed in the 2013 event and will welcome Tennessee, VCU and South Carolina State to the Cone-Kenfield Tennis Center May 10 and 11. The No. 2 seed is the highest in program history, matching the 2010 squad that advanced to the national semifinals.
Carolina will face MEAC champion South Carolina State at 1 p.m. on May 10. That match will follow the first-round meeting between Atlantic 10 champion VCU and SEC at-large selection Tennessee at 10 a.m. The two first-round winners will meet Saturday, May 11, at 11 a.m. for the right to advance to Urbana, Ill., this year’s final NCAA site.
Carolina is making its 15th consecutive appearance in the national tournament and 10th in a row under Kalbas. The Tar Heels have an all-time NCAA record of 26-14 and have advanced beyond the regional round on eight occasions, including last year’s run to the round of 16.
Tickets for the event are $5 for the general public and $3 for students and seniors. Gates will open one hour prior to play on both Friday and Saturday.
Friday, May 10
9 a.m. Gates Open
10 a.m. Tennessee vs. VCU
1 p.m. South Carolina State vs. North Carolina
Saturday, May 11
10 a.m. Gates Open
11 a.m. Second Round
NC State
For the second time in three years, the NC State women’s tennis team was awarded an at-large bid to the NCAA Division I Women’s Tennis Championship, as announced Tuesday evening by the NCAA.
“I think the team’s hard work has paid off,” said head coach Hans Olsen. “For us, it’s very exciting and we will appreciate the opportunity to play more and improve as a team.”
NC State (14-9) will face Big East Champion Notre Dame (17-8) in the Ann Arbor (Mich.) Regional on Friday, May 10. With a victory, the Pack would face the winner of 10th-seeded Michigan and IPFW. The start times for the matches have not been announced.
“I think the team has learned to believe,” Olsen said. “A lot of these players were on the team last year and it’s almost like a reward for how hard they’ve worked. I think this tournament will give them another opportunity to show off that hard work.”
NC State last received a bid to the tournament in 2011, and will make its sixth overall appearance in program history.
In history, the two programs have never faced one another, but the first-round matchup between the Wolfpack and Fighting Irish will be a preview of what’s to come when Notre Dame officially joins the Atlantic Coast Conference next fall.
The two sides share common opponents this season in Duke, Georgia Tech and South Florida.
Duke
The 14th- ranked Duke women’s tennis team seek to improve upon last season’s trip the NCAA Final Four when it kicks off the NCAA Tournament Saturday, May 11 against Ole Miss in the opening round in Lubbock, Texas, as announced by the organization Tuesday. Under head coach Jamie Ashworth, the Blue Devils have reached the NCAA Final Four five times, highlighted by a trip to the 2009 NCAA Finals where they topped UCLA to claim the title.
“We are looking forward to the challenge of playing Ole Miss in the first round of this year’s NCAA tournament,” Ashworth said. “They are an extremely well coached team and we had a battle with them last year at the national team indoors. Coming out of the SEC they are used to tough matches and I know they will be ready to play. We have to have a great week of practice and prepare for what should be a really good match.
Duke has had a long history of success in the NCAA Tournament, earning bids to 24 consecutive tournaments, while totaling a 55-23 (.705) all-time record in the event. The Blue Devils’ .705 winning percentage is the fourth highest in the NCAA, and the squad has reached the NCAA Final Four eight times in program history.
The match against Ole Miss is scheduled to begin at 11 a.m. CT, with the winner advancing to face the winner of Texas Tech and College of Charleston in the second round Sunday, May 12 at 1 p.m. CT.
Overall, eight ACC teams were selected to the 64-team field – the second-most of any conference in the nation behind only the Southeastern Conference (SEC) which received nine total bids.
The Carolina Panthers have agreed to terms with 13 undrafted college free agents.
Alabama safety Robert Lester – a three-year starter and three-time national champion – is among those that have agreed to join the Panthers.
South Carolina linebacker Damario Jeffery and East Carolina guard Robert Jones are two local products that also have come to agreements with the Panthers.
The Panthers’ rookies will take part in a rookie minicamp May 10-12. These agreements with undrafted free agents will not become official until each player signs his contract upon reporting to minicamp.
UNDRAFTED ROOKIE FREE AGENTS
Pos Name Ht Wt Age College Hometown
QB Colby Cameron 6-2 210 23 Louisiana Tech Newbury Park, Calif.
TE Taylor Cook 6-7 255 23 Rice Altair, Texas
WR Trey Diller 6-1 197 23 Sam Houston State The Woodlands, Texas
DE Wes Horton 6-5 264 23 Southern California Sherman Oaks, Calif.
LB Damario Jeffery 6-3 241 22 South Carolina Columbia, S.C.
OG Robert Jones 6-3 313 23 East Carolina Tucker, Ga.
DB Robert Lester 6-1 211 24 Alabama Foley, Ala.
K Morgan Lineberry 6-1 195 22 Abilene Christian Dallas, Texas
OG Tori Mobley 6-3 290 23 Jacksonville State Columbus, Ga.
DE Craig Roh 6-4 271 22 Michigan Scottsdale, Ariz.
DT Casey Walker 6-1 336 23 Oklahoma Garland, Texas
DB Melvin White 6-1 203 22 Louisiana-Lafayette Freeport, Texas
FB Mike Zordich 6-1 236 23 Penn State Youngstown, Ohio
Last season, undrafted free agent defensive tackle Nate chandler played in 10 games. Running back Tauren Poole spent the entire year on injured reserve and wide receiver Jared Green spent the season on the practice squad.
In addition to the 13 college free agents, the Panthers signed free agent Brandon Williams – a 6-4, 250-pound tight end who played collegiately at Oregon and Joliet Junior College. With Williams in the fold, the Panthers currently have 86 players on the roster.
No. 1 North Carolina and No. 6 NC State’s series finale scheduled for 7 p.m. Sunday in Raleigh has been canceled due to inclement weather. The game will not be made up.
Game times are switched all the time in order to get games in when bad weather is on the way but ESPNU was scheduled to show the game at 7 so that probably killed any chance the two teams would or could move the game to earlier in the day.
The teams split games on Friday and Saturday so it may come down to the ACC tournament or NCAA tournament to settle things between the two ACC division leading teams.
UNC junior Kent Emanuel allowed one run in eight innings to earn his ninth win of the year Friday night as the top-ranked Tar Heels downed No. 6 NC State, 7-1.
Emanuel (9-1) pitched through the eighth inning for the fourth consecutive outing Friday night as he scattered seven hits and matched a career high with nine strikeouts.
The Tar Heels provided Emanuel plenty of run support as Colin Moran connected on his 11th home run of the year in the first inning. Brian Holberton also hit a home run for UNC, while Michael Russell paced five Tar Heels with two more hits as he connected on three singles.
NC State evened the series with a 7-3 win in front of a record crowd on Saturday night at Doak Field at Dail Park.
The Wolfpack (34-11, 15-8 ACC) drew 3,123 spectators to watch the victory, the largest crowd in Doak Field history. State ran out to a 7-0 lead by the end of the fifth, thanks to one run in the third and three in the fourth and fifth. North Carolina (41-4, 19-3) answered with a three-run homer in the seventh, but could not cut the lead any further.
For the third year in a row, the Pack boasts a win over the top-ranked team in the nation. State defeated No. 1 Florida State in 2012 and No. 1 Virginia in 2011. Wolfpack pitchers struck out Tar Heel batters a combined 11 times, the most strikeouts in a single game against UNC this season.
Carlos Rodon (5-2) accounted for 10 of those strikeouts in 6 2/3 innings of work. Rodon scattered seven hits and left with two runners on base, both scored to put two earned on his final line. In three career appearances against North Carolina, Rodon has allowed three earned in 22 1/3 innings, good for a 1.19 ERA, striking out 29 while walking eight.
North Carolina’s long wait ended Sunday afternoon at Kenan Stadium.
Packing a lethal offensive punch for the second straight tournament game and holding at least a two-goal lead throughout the final 32 minutes, the second-seeded Tar Heels turned back fourth-seeded Virginia, 16-13, in the title game of the Atlantic Coast Conference Men’s Lacrosse Championship.
A crowd of 4,001 saw the Tar Heels (12-3) claim their 12th ACC title overall and their eighth since the league began determining its champion via a tournament format in 1989. But North Carolina’s last ACC championship prior to Sunday had come in 1996.
“We’ve had five years of working hard, recruiting and trying to bring in the best people,” said Joe Breschi, the Tar Heels’ head coach since 2009. “You hear (our players) talking about being together and how tight they are. They believe in each other and they continue to battle for one another, and that’s what makes them great.”
North Carolina, which enhanced its chances of receiving the No. 1 seed in the upcoming NCAA Tournament, weathered a determined effort by the Cavaliers (7-8), who needed a victory on Sunday to earn NCAA eligibility. Matt White hammered home an ACC Championship single-game record-tying seven goals – including five in the second half – and Nick O’Reilly set the Championship single-game record for assists with seven.
But the Tar Heels, who set an ACC Championship scoring record with 34 goals in two games, remained a step ahead most of the way.
Championship MVP Marcus Holman assisted on five goals Sunday en route to becoming the program’s all-time leading scorer (207 points). Davey Emala scored a team-high four goals, and Chad Tutton added three.
Defensively, freshman goalkeeper Kieran Burke helped assure North Carolina of its ninth straight victory with 17 saves, 12 of which came in the second half.
“We really played about as well as we can play this weekend,” Breschi said. “This is a confident bunch. I heard Marcus talking (to reporters) about always being the underdog, and we kind of like that. We’ve been underdogs since I arrived, for sure. But we don’t listen to any of that.”
The first half began in a steady light rain and ended with North Carolina in front by a 10-7 score.
Holman became the Tar Heels’ all-time leading scorer when he assisted on back-to-back by goals by Emala in the closing minutes of the second period. Holman’s second connection with Emala gave him 205 career points, surpassing the previous school record of 204 set by Bruce Ledwith (1970-73).
O’Reilly handed out four assists in the first quarter alone and added a second-period goal to end the first half with five points. Emala’s hat trick and one assist paced North Carolina’s scoring in the opening period.
Two nights after North Carolina and Duke set an ACC Championship record with a combined 35 goals in the semifinal round, the Tar Heels and Cavaliers displayed similar scoring prowess in the opening minutes Sunday. The teams combined for four goals in the first 3:01 of the game, and the score was knotted 3-3 at the 8:48 mark of the first quarter before the floodgates somewhat closed.
The Tar Heels controlled 13 of 19 first-half faceoffs and ended up with an 18-14 edge for the game. North Carolina also led in ground balls, 41-37.
“I think Carolina has evolved defensively,” Virginia coach Dom Starsia said. “The kid in the cage (Burke) had kind of solidified that position for them. I thought we really had a shot at it when we closed it to two goals there late in the third quarter, early in the fourth. But Carolina was just a little slicker in the unsettled game, converted more easily, and came out on top.”
Holman was joined on the All-Tournament team by Tar Heel teammates Emala, Tutton, Burke and R.G. Keenan. White, O’Relly, Mark Cockerton and Harry Prevas represented Virginia on the squad, and Jordan Wolf and Brendan Fowler were named from Duke.
In addition to Sunday’s single-game goals record, White set an ACC Championship record for total goals scored (10) and total points (13). O’Neill’s nine assists in two games were also a tournament record.
“It’s going to be strange tomorrow to wake up and not be getting ready for practice,” said Starsia, whose team will miss out on the NCAA Tournament for the first time since 2004. “But that’s the way it is in this game. You just have to work harder to pick up the pieces. I am sure come tomorrow we’ll already have thoughts of 2014.”