What they’re saying about Carolina’s one-point loss at Wake

North Carolina had a 27-21 lead with seven minutes to go but the new no-huddle hurry-up offense took virtually no time off the clock as the team hurried to the line, runners ran out of bounds and passes fell incomplete. As a result, Wake Forest drove the length of the field and scored with about two minutes left to give Wake a 28-27 win.

The game was delayed for 75 minutes due to lightning during a storm that rolled in about 30 minutes before kickoff. The game was slowed down by several injuries and a bevy of incomplete passes. A game that was supposed to start at 3 p.m. ended past 7:30 p.m.

The Tar Heels played without star running back Giovani Bernard, who was sidelined with an injured knee. Twice in the second half, the Tar Heels got the ball deep in Wake territory only to settle for field goals.

“We score a touchdown, then we’re all sitting here and I have a smile on my face. But that’s the way the game’s played. That’s why you have to go do it. Just because you get the ball down there, doesn’t mean it’s going to go in. You have to make it go in.”
– Larry Fedora, UNC head football coach

“(Tanner) Price scored the game-winning touchdown on a quarterback sneak with 2:09 left, and ended up running for a career-high two touchdowns and throwing for a career-high 327 yards, finding many holes in a North Carolina secondary that showed some signs of weakness. (Michael) Campanaro was his No. 1 target, and for good reason. He showed why he is one of the best receivers in the ACC, with 13 catches for 164 yards — both are career highs.”
– Andrea Adelson, ESPN.com

“This is as good as it gets. I’m just really proud of the way our guys hung in there. They had a lot of opportunities to hang their heads, especially with some of the injuries we had tonight, and they just didn’t do it. They just kept working and finding a way to win.”
– Jim Grobe, Wake Forest head coach

“Too many mistakes tonight on our part. Too many penalties. You get down in the score zone and you have to kick field goals instead of touchdowns, and you turn the ball over on your own end and it’s hard to win.”
– Larry Fedora, UNC head football coach

“I can’t really describe it. It’s an unreal feeling and it’s so great to get a win like that against a rival team at home — especially after a game like we had last week when people were kind of questioning our team. It was a great win.”
– Tanner Price, Wake Forest quarterback

“The exhilaration of a 62-point win is followed by the disappointment of a heartbreaking one-point loss. Carolina is no longer undefeated in the Larry Fedora era, and the message hit home that there is still work to do. With a trip to Louisville next weekend, the road only gets tougher.”
– Turner Walston, GoHeels.com

What they’re saying about State’s 10-7 win over Connecticut

NC State was underwhelming but still managed to come away with a 10-7 victory at Connecticut. It was the fewest points in a road win since 1968 when the Pack beat Wake Forest 10-6. But any win has to feel good after the loss to Tennessee a week ago.

“On a day when the Huskies defense played flat-out fantastic, holding North Carolina State to just 258 total yards and sacking quarterback Mike Glennon six times, the offense played … well, offensively, managing just 239 yards and one late touchdown in a 10-7 loss to the Wolfpack before 34,202 Saturday at Rentschler Field.”
– Chris Elsberry, Connecticut Post

“North Carolina State’s David Amerson was looking for a little redemption after being burned deep a couple of times in a season-opening loss to Tennessee. The All-America cornerback responded with an interception and knocked down a fourth-down pass on Connecticut’s final drive Saturday as the Wolfpack (1-1) held on for a 10-7 win over the Huskies (1-1).”
– Pat Eaton-Robb, Associated Press

“Both teams floundered offensively, but Connecticut was worse. But the Huskies did manage a three-play, 63-yard drive for their score late to make a game of it. UConn got the ball back with a chance to tie or take the lead, but the offense failed to move down the field.”
– Evan Hilbert, CBSSports.com

“Frustrating … frustrating afternoon, to put it mildly. N.C. State’s a good, solid team. You can’t turn it over four times against a team like that and expect to win. It’s a credit to our defense that it was a three-point game in the end. Too many miscues.”
– Connecticut head coach Paul Pasqualoni

“With South Alabama, The Citadel and Miami (yes, Miami) just ahead, N.C. State’s football team should reach mid-season at 4-1 and solidly in position to grab a bowl bid. But unless something can be done to improve the frail offensive unit that surfaced Saturday in a 10-7 escape at Connecticut, the Wolfpack simply will not have enough scoring pop to win more than six or seven games. Of particular concern only two games into the schedule is the offensive line, an ongoing program problem.”
– Caulton Tudor, Raleigh News & Observer

High school football predictions

Tonight’s high school football games feature several rivalries but they might not all be close. For instance, Cardinal Gibbons should blow out Ravenscroft, Wakefield should handle East Wake and Cary should clobber Apex. Close games should include Athens Drive at Green Hope, Garner at Middle Creek and Wake Forest-Rolesville at Southeast Raleigh. Weather should be clear and 70s. Below are tonight’s games involving Triangle-area teams with predicted winners in bold. Last week my record was 13-1. Most games start at 7:30 p.m. You might want to check with local officials as some games start at 7.

Apex @ Cary
Athens Drive @ Green Hope
Cardinal Gibbons @ Ravenscroft
Carrboro @ East Chapel Hill
Dudley @ Hillside
East Wake @ Wakefield
Garner @ Middle Creek
Holly Springs @ Panther Creek
Northern Durham @ Millbrook
Northwood @ Chapel Hill
S. Brunswick @ Southern Durham
Terry Sanford @ Broughton
WF-Rolesville @ Southeast Raleigh

Experts say it will take more than Griffin for Redskins to win

Comments from the experts as the Redskins begin the 2012 NFL season.

Chris Berman, ESPN — RG3 provides hope and excitement.

Clifton Brown, Sporting News — Robert Griffin III makes team more fun to watch, but don’t expect win total to soar dramatically.

Cris Collinsworth, NBC Sports — Young running backs Evan Royster and Roy Helu need to take some pressure off RG3.

Rich Gannon, CBS Sports/SiriusXM NFL Radio — Not convinced they’re all that much better running ball, and that’s problem with rookie QB.

Bob Glauber, Newsday — RG3 has taken DC by storm, and games haven’t started. Don’t expect miracles, but defense should keep team competitive. Relatively mistake-free play from QB will make rebuilding process less painful.

Ira Kaufman, Tampa Tribune — Reunited with Raheem Morris, talented safety Tanard Jackson did it again — third drug-related suspension.

Pat Kirwan, SiriusXM NFL Radio/CBSSports.com — RG3 has developed nicely since start of camp. Seeing field better and starting to trust pocket and his eyes. Defense can get after people. Lot to ask for team to become 9-win outfit with rookie QB in NFC East.

John Lynch, Fox Sports — Shanahan rebuilding since he arrived. Did he find final piece with RG3? I believe so, but patience is a virtue. Preseason showed depth is vastly improved.

Alex Marvez, Foxsports.com — Underrated defense must carry Redskins as rookie quarterback Robert Griffin III begins first NFL season.

Rick Gosselin, Dallas Morning News — Robert Griffin III will become first rookie to start at quarterback for Redskins since Patrick Ramsey in 2002.

Clark Judge, CBSSports.com — Yes, ‘Skins have RG3, but they also have fourth-best team in NFC East.

Dan Pompei, Chicago Tribune — RGIII looks like he’s ready to make plays, but he might not have enough help around him.

Experts seem high on Newton and Panthers chance to improve

Comments from the experts as the Carolina Panthers begin the 2012 NFL season.

Chris Berman, ESPN — Year 2 of Cam Newton like looking forward to Christmas.

Clifton Brown, Sporting News — No matter how Cam Newton plays, I don’t see enough improvement on defense for team to overtake Saints or Falcons in NFC South.

Clark Judge, BSSports.com — Yeah, Cam Newton is sensational. But can he win? Guess we’re about to find out.

Ira Kaufman, Tampa Tribune — Defense will be significantly improved, easing burden on Cam Newton.

Pat Kirwan, SiriusXM NFL Radio/CBSSports.com — Cam Newton will not suffer sophomore slump and his receiving weapons look improved. Can defensive line and pass rush live up to their end of bargain? If so, team could move up.

John Lynch, Fox Sports — Cam Newton even better in Year 2 and defense that struggled mightily gets help from Jon Beason, Thomas Davis and rookie LB Luke Kuechly. Consistent pass rush must emerge.

Cris Collinsworth, NBC Sports — Lots of weapons on offense, but do they have enough defense?

Rick Gosselin, Dallas Morning News — Pencil in MLB Luke Kuechly as one of early favorites for NFL Defensive Rookie of the Year.

Alex Marvez, Foxsports.com — Forget about Tim Tebow. Cam Newton is prototype run/pass quarterback — and he should be even better after banner rookie campaign.

Dan Pompei, Chicago Tribune — Panthers offense starting to look like it can be very scary for opposing defenses.

Rich Gannon, CBS Sports/SiriusXM NFL Radio — Still concerned about D and WR position opposite Steve Smith.

Bob Glauber, Newsday — Division crowded with contenders, and that might include Panthers. Can’t say enough about Cam Newton’s leadership and ability. A surprise team in ‘12? Could be.

Fedora says the new Carolina way is to focus, execute the same way each game

UNC coach Larry Fedora says he was pleased with the focus his Tar Heels displayed throughout the 62-0 win over Elon. He expects the same effort this week at Wake Forest, and every week for that matter.

“As the game got a little bit out of hand in the second half, I was pleased with the way the guys went back out,” Fedora said during his weekly media teleconference. “They weren’t sloppy. They went out and executed as we had asked them to.”

Fedora said that the Heels need to focus the same against old rival Wake Forest. “I think we treat each and every game the same,” he said. “We expect to practice a certain way each and every week. Doesn’t matter who we play, where we play, what time we play, what the conditions are, we try to get our guys to play one way all the time. That’s the new Carolina way.”

Q. Obviously a lot of things went well
last week. Was there anything you looked at
and said, We really have to fix or correct this?

COACH FEDORA: There’s no doubt
about it. There’s so many different places in the
game we got to get better. We have to get better
with our tempo on offense. We still turned the ball
over twice. We had three penalties as a team.
Defensively, I mean, we still gave up a few
third-and-longs that we would not liked to have
given up. We had a penalty on special teams. Our
kickoff return team was not very good at all. Our
coverage team was not very good on our kickoff
coverage. So we got a lot to work on.

Q. Could you touch on a little bit about
preparing for a guy like Michael Campanaro,
receiver for Wake Forest, some of the things he
brings to the table that make him challenging
to defend?

COACH FEDORA: Well, I think the tough
thing about Michael is he’s a great athlete. You
can tell he’s very natural catching the ball. He
plucks everything with his hands. That’s not
something he’s concerned with. If they get the ball
close to him, he’s going to make the catch. He
catches the ball in contact, in a crowd. He can
make you miss. He can obviously take it the
distance.
It’s definitely a headache for you
defensively knowing that when he’s got you out in
open spaces, you have to make that tackle. The
key is make sure you get him on the ground. Don’t
worry about the knock-out, just get him on the
ground. He definitely gives you a challenge.

Q. This week both you and your
players have specifically mentioned winning
the state championship. How important is it,
especially with this particular team, to have
goals like that to keep them focused on what
they can accomplish?

COACH FEDORA: I think it’s extremely
important. I think the first step en route to success
is setting a goal. I think that’s the first thing you
have to do is set a goal. We have done that. We
set a couple of goals that we feel like we can
accomplish this year, and one of those is to be
state champs.
This is a part of that goal. So it’s very
important to our team.

Q. Jim Grobe said he was kind of
surprised with the execution you had last week.
So much is new. Did it surprise you at all or
did you expect that right out of the gate?

COACH FEDORA: That’s hard to say. I’m
always expecting it. Whether I get it or not, that’s
the question.
But I think our staff just did a tremendous
job preparing those kids, and the kids were very
focused on the task at hand. I think you’ll find out
in college coaching as you look around the
country, that’s the biggest challenge that any
coach has, is to get his guys to play at a high level
week in and week out.
Now that one is gone, put to bed. No one
really cares about what we did last week. It’s all
about what we do this week. So our focus is now
totally on Wake Forest.

Q. Larry, you and Jim Grobe both had
some time spent under Coach DeBerry at Air
Force. Do you see some of the same traits in
Jim’s team?

COACH FEDORA: I tell you what, not only
is Fisher DeBerry a great football coach, but he’s a
great man, a great husband, a great father. He
does things the right way. You don’t ever have to
question anything about the way Fisher does
things, they’re going to be done right.
One of the things I think about Coach
DeBerry that I learned is he’s one of the most
positive people that I’ve ever been around in any
situation. I think it rubbed off on me, I can assure
you. I’m sure it has on Jim also.
I think his teams play like that also.

Q. With such a short road trip to
Winston-Salem, do you have to deviate at all
from your normal pregame routines?

COACH FEDORA: No. As a matter of
fact we try to make all our away games the same
as home games. Our Fridays, the way we have
them arranged are pretty much the same week in,
week out, whether it’s a plane flight or a bus trip.
It’s all built in.
It’s basically the same what we would be
doing a Friday at home, just minus the travel.

Q. Will you stay in Chapel Hill Friday
night?

COACH FEDORA: No, we’re not staying
in Chapel Hill. We don’t stay in Chapel Hill for a
home game either.

Q. Because you opened up with an
FCS team, how much of a good gauge was that
or was that not for the first week?

COACH FEDORA: I guess that’s still to be
seen, whether it’s a good gauge or not. I’m just
happy that we got to play another team. Didn’t
really matter to me who we played, all those things.
It was about us. It was about how were we going
to go out and execute, how were we going to
handle any adversity in the game. Were we going
to have multiple penalties, turn the football over,
make mistakes that are uncharacteristic.
You know what, we didn’t in most of those
situations. So I was pleased with our guys’ focus.

Q. Wake’s offensive line is really
young, struggling with injuries up front. With
y’all’s success Saturday, do you feel that’s an
area you could really take advantage of and be
successful with Saturday? If so, why?

COACH FEDORA: Well, I haven’t looked
at that and said, Hey, their offensive line is a
weakness. I haven’t done that by any means.
I think they may be younger than some of
the other guys on the team, but you have Bolling
who is in his fourth year. You have (Antonio) Ford
in his third year. You have (Garrick) Williams in his
fifth-year. You have (Frank) Sousa in his fourth
year. You have (Colin) Summers in his third year.
I don’t really consider that young. It maybe is on
Jim’s team because everybody has been
redshirted.
Now experience-wise, they may not have
had a lot of experience, but they’ve been
developed in his program. I don’t really look at that
as a weakness.

Q. You mentioned the tempo of the
offense, wanting to get that a little bit better
this week. Any specific thing you can pinpoint
that will help you go faster?

COACH FEDORA: Sure. I mean, our
quarterback needs to be more conscious of where
he is on the field, what’s going on, so that he can
manage that better. Our offensive linemen need to
do a better job of communicating quicker. Our
receivers need to get lined up faster. We get those
things done, we can move a little bit quicker.

Duke goes west remembering the whipping Stanford put on them last year

Stanford came east to whip Duke 44-14 last season. Duke coach David Cutcliffe, who recruits heavily in California, says he likes going to play on the West Coast but again this season it will be a challenge to play familiar-foe Stanford.

“They were extremely impressive (last year) and are now (this year) on tape,” Cutcliffe said during his weekly media teleconference. “Very, very talented, well-coached football team that just does so many things right. They’re good in the kicking game. They’re good on offense. Extremely physical offense with a lot of big-play capability there, and a defense that’s just relentless.”

He said he thinks his Blue Devils are well prepared.

Q. Coach, can you talk a little bit about
what you’ve done to keep your team focused
after beating FIU?

COACH CUTCLIFFE: I think all you have
to do is turn on the tape of last year’s Stanford
game. I don’t think it was hard to regather. We
have a lot of people that played a lot of football
here, so they understand that Sunday you watch
the previous game, you put it behind you, you’re
moving forward from that point on.
I think we’ve done a solid job of doing that.
The first week you have to practice like that,
obviously after camp, then an opener. I think
we’ve done a solid job of doing that.

Q. Did you use any of that game to test
off potential plays you might use against
Stanford?

COACH CUTCLIFFE: We run our offense,
we run our defense, you game plan. But you have
a defensive and offensive playbook. All of it comes
from within that. So we’ll try to do what we do
best.

Q. Coach, I wanted to ask you about
the travel. Coach (Tom) O’Brien was talking
about the difficulty when you have to cross
three time zones. Is that a problem and what
do you do to alleviate it?

COACH CUTCLIFFE: I’ve done it a lot. I
think it can be a problem if you let it be one. I think
the worst thing – me personally – is to go out and
try to stay two days, get on their time zone, et
cetera, et cetera. Your body really doesn’t have
that amount of time to change.
We’re going to make sure we hydrate.
We’re going to get on the plane Friday, fly out
midday, get there in the afternoon their time.
Going to stretch as soon as we get there. We’ll
have worked out that morning, but we’ll get the
kinks out. Take a while, get to the motel, eat, do
our normal routine, meet, get their snacks, put
them to bed.
The only difference we’re going to do is let
them sleep in on Saturday morning, and by
‘sleeping in’ means sleeping in on eastern time.
18- to 23-year-olds have no trouble, no trouble
sleeping in on a Saturday morning. Once we get
up out there, we will be just in a normal 7:00, 7:30
kickoff mode, and nothing will be different than if
we were here.

Q. Unlike a lot of schools around here,
you have recruited California fairly heavily.
Can you talk about that. Is playing a game out
there, showing the flag, important at all?

COACH CUTCLIFFE: Yeah, sure. We’re
going to see Cooper Helfet, one of our more recent
California products, that just finished by going to
San Francisco. That’s where he is from. All of our
L.A. parents are driving up. We have Corbin
McCarthy, Deion Williams, and Blair Hilliday from
Los Angeles, Brandon Connette. We’re
represented well out there and we’re going to
continue to recruit well out there.
I like playing in California. I like the
opportunity for people to see what Duke football is
all about.

Q. Stanford score-wise appeared to
struggle in their first game. Won by three
points. Obviously there’s a transition from the
Andrew Luck era into the next one. Can you
tell a whole lot of difference? Are they making
many adjustments on offense or are they just
running pretty much the same system with a
different guy?

COACH CUTCLIFFE: They were a little
simpler just because you’re going to be. You went
from the first player taken in the draft to a young
man that had really relatively no experience.
That’s not easy for anyone. He’s got a game under
his belt. He’ll be much better this week. Not that
he was bad.
Also, I knew this, because Mike McIntyre
(head coach at San Jose State and former Duke
defensive coordinator) and I talked all summer,
they played a good San Jose team. San Jose is
going to have a really good season this year, in my
opinion. In watching the tape, you saw two good
football teams. Mike’s defense is experienced and
physical. Matched up to them pretty well. Kept
them from making big plays. If an offense doesn’t
get a lot of explosives, it’s hard to get a lot of
yards. I thoughts that’s what San Jose did best.
On the other side, their defense at
Stanford didn’t disappoint at all. They held San
Jose to 17 points and not very many yards. They
were very impressive on defense and very
impressive in the kicking game.
They’ve had a change there. Their special
teams coach left and they have a new special
teams coach. I thought they played extremely well
in that area.
Don’t get confused by scores. This is a
really good Stanford football team. This is a
No. 18 team minimally in the country, so we have
our hands full.

Q. Did your team exceed your
expectations in that opener?

COACH CUTCLIFFE: No. I thought all
along we had a good football team. A lot of guys
that have played a lot of football here. We have
more depth, some talented young people.
The problem we knew going in, we had a
lot of people out of the game. We had 12
scholarship-position players out of the game. It
frightens you. We had 21 people play their first
college football, 10 true freshmen and 11 redshirt
freshmen.
I think the thing I was pleased about, I
don’t know that I was surprised, was that those
guys played well. We’ll need them to continue to
do that. If we can do that and build our depth, we
have a chance to have a solid football team.

Q. I know you expected a lot from a
fifth-year senior guy. Can you evaluate Sean’s
(Renfree) first game. Did he live up to your
expectations?

COACH CUTCLIFFE: Yeah, obviously he
threw the interception, backed up where he babied
a ball, missed a couple throws he really didn’t need
to.
It was interesting. I would want to see his
response. I went up and said, Hey, it’s been a
shaky start. Don’t let it set you back. Let’s get this
thing cranked up, which he did. I think he played
better than he’s played from that point on. His
statistics were incredible. Not only that, he was
accurate with the ball. He had two balls dropped
after that, and it could have been a better night for
him than 21 of 30. He could have been 23 of 30.
If he would have had a better start, he would have
had 350 yards passing. The one he missed to
Jamison deep in the end zone, he could have had
an incredible night. He just barely missed that
deep post. I think he is well on his way to having a
special year. I am excited to see him continue to
compete and keep playing at the level he’s playing.

Q. My impression was he probably
threw deep better than I’ve seen him throw
before. Do you agree with that?

COACH CUTCLIFFE: Yeah, without a
doubt. That’s not an accident. That’s something
they’ve worked on all summer. We’ve asked him
to do. They’re further along than where we’ve
been.
I think this team made a huge commitment
in the summer on their own, which was really
pleasing to me, and is a tribute to Sean Renfree,
our upperclassmen that are hungry.
It’s never guaranteed. We play a tough
schedule. Everybody is good. Everybody can
beat us. We’re going to throw our hat in the ring
and see what happens. If you want to have a
special year, you have to make a commitment to it.

Pack ready to get back on the field in Connecticut, O’Brien says

After losing to Tennessee in the first game, NC State coach Tom O’Brien says his team is ready to get back on the field against Connecticut.

“It’s a very senior team on defense. They are starting seven seniors, and four or five of them are redshirt seniors,” he said during the weekly media teleconference. “Got a lot of experience on that side of the ball. I think last week they only gave up 53 yards offense, and didn’t allow UMass to cross the 50-yard line. So they playing great defense right now.”

The Connecticut offense has less experience but they are experienced on the line.

Q. Coming off last week, what are the
areas of improvement you’re focusing on
heading into week two here?

COACH O’BRIEN: When you look back,
there are five big plays on defense that counted for
half the yardage, and long passes, long runs.
Those are things that we have to get corrected.
We turned the ball over five times on offense. One
fumble and four interceptions. So those are things
that we spent a lot of time trying to correct.
You can’t take ten plays out of the game,
but those ten plays dictated the final. So we have
to make corrections in those areas and give
ourselves a chance to win here on Saturday.

Q. How much of that loss concerned
you or do you look at it and say I think
Tennessee’s going to be a lot better than
everyone expected this year perhaps?

COACH O’BRIEN: No, every loss
concerns me. You have to be concerned right now
that we had a chance to do something and we
didn’t make it work. I do think that Tennessee,
they feel they’re a heck of a lot better team,
certainly, with that quarterback in there and their
skill level and the change in defense than they
were a year ago. But that’s still no excuse for the
way we played.

Q. Coach, how has the attitude been on
the team since the Tennessee game?

COACH O’BRIEN: I think they’ve been
fine. They were a little bit down on Sundays. We
got them back together and looked at the tape and
made corrections. But they’ve been focused the
last two mornings. We already practiced this
morning. They’ve been focused a little better today
than they were yesterday and they’ll have to be a
lot better tomorrow.

Q. With the start that David Amerson
had last week, is there any concern on your
end about his confidence level or whether it
will make him less effective as the season
goes?

COACH O’BRIEN: That’s a good
question. Hopefully he’s going to answer that here
in the next couple weeks. I think one of the great
things about it is if you are a great player,
especially as a quarterback or if you are as a
corner, you’re going to get beat. But you have to
have amnesia and forget about it and come back
and play from that point on. So it’s a good lesson
for him to learn, and we’ll see how he reacts this
week on Saturday.

Q. I know some coaches prefer to go
on the road because they feel there are less
distractions and people prefer to be at home.
What is your feeling on that? Does the length
of the road trip matter at all? Connecticut’s a
longer flight and a longer trip than a lot of ACC
trips for you guys.

COACH O’BRIEN: No, I’d certainly rather
play at home. We have a great home-field
advantage, we have a great crowd and our fans
are tremendous. I think we have a distinct
advantage playing at home.
Maybe there are more distractions one
way or another. But certainly once the ball is
kicked off, I think home-field advantage is an
absolute, especially as far as we’re concerned
here at state.

Q. Does a longer trip like Connecticut
present any other challenges or problems for
you or does it not really matter?

COACH O’BRIEN: No, I think you know
looking at the trip that Duke has to take, I did that
at Boston College and had to go to Stanford. That
makes a difference when you cross time zones.
The furthest flight — and that was one of
the advantages being at North Carolina and
Boston, we always took three hours or more flights.
When you take a flight and go three time zones, I
think that really affects you playing and certainly
affects you coming back. I’m thinking Boston, after
we played Stanford at 7:30 their time, we got back
9:00 o’clock Sunday morning or something.

Q. Going back to Amerson, especially
the two big plays, was it a matter of him simply
getting beat or was there not help that was
supposed to be there? Was it a secondary
problem as opposed to an Amerson problem?

COACH O’BRIEN: Well, I don’t know if it
was an Amerson problem or the fact that
Tennessee’s pretty dang good. Their skill level is
high. Their play, they’re certainly a different team
with that quarterback in there than they were at the
end of last year. When he was in there, I think
they were averaging 40 points a game the first
couple of games of the year last year. They
averaged ten a game when he was out of there.
So I think he makes a big difference. I think it may
have been more of a skill problem and them
executing than us not executing.

Q. Looked like Quintin Payton really
came through for you in that game. One of
your inexperienced receivers stepping it up.
Did he surprise you had anyway what he did in
that game? Do you think that’s something he
can carry through the season?

COACH O’BRIEN: Well, he had a good
preseason camp. I think that’s one of the things
that Michael (Glennon) is not afraid to throw the
ball, and he does a good job and he did a good job
especially on the first one that he threw to Quintin
of aiding the rush, which he hadn’t done a year
ago. They had left him running wide open down
the boundary. The best catch he made was
Michael threw it backside shoulder on a takeoff
down the boundary, and Quintin went up and used
his height which we’re used to seeing when we
had Jarvis Williams here. So he has to give us
that. I think not only will he now because it’s a
great confidence boost for him, but certainly for
Mike that he knows that he’s got somebody that
will go up and get the football like that.

Q. I’d like to ask you about Mike the
quarterback. The four interceptions are kind of
uncharacteristic for him. What kind looking at
film — was he making bad decisions or was it
the pressure on him that forced those? Can
you give us an explanation?

COACH O’BRIEN: The last one was at
the end of the game, so that’s a throw out. We’ll
take that one out of there. The first one they made
a great play. They baited him into it, and it’s
something he has to learn from and go to
something we can’t do. The second one, I think,
was a bad decision. He didn’t see the whole
coverage and didn’t recognize what was going on.
Then the third one was a great play. He may have
underthrown the corner a little bit. You don’t
underthrow a corner. You don’t underthrow a post.
So we can do better at that.
But I think two of them you have to give
the kids at Tennessee credit too. They made
pretty good plays on the ball.

Q. Are there particular things about
UConn that concern you that seeing on film, if
you had a chance to watch much to this point?

COACH O’BRIEN: Well, as I said before,
they only give out 50-something yards and shut out
a team. Didn’t let them across the 50-yard line on
defense. They have Paul Pasqualoni, who has
been a defensive guy for a long time, coordinated
in the NFL with the Dallas Cowboys and the
Dolphins before he came back. I’ve known him
since my days at Syracuse and Boston College.
Don Brown’s coordinating there. Their defense is
very well coached. (They) do not make a mistake.
They have one kid, (number) 48, the
defensive end was a hundred-meter champ when
he was coming out of high school in Connecticut.
He gets a lot of pressure on the quarterbacks.
They’ve got senior quarterbacks that play well.
Then when you play a team and they’re having the
success they had. They had a new quarterback in
there that kind of protected him, the junior college
kids that more conventional. Then they bring in
(number) 11, the wildcat who is a whole new style
of offense when he’s in the game. So they make
you prepare a lot offense.
Those are the things that are a major
concern. To be able to make you move the
football, make first downs and hopefully cross the
50-yard line against that defense.

Panthers, Redskins just average; will finish around .500

With the regular season starting this week, a review of the NFL power ratings for 2012 shows that the Carolina Panthers are just ahead of the Washington Redskins. Eight of the top ratings average the Panthers as the 19th best team in the league while the Redskins average out as the 23rd best team.

The two teams play each other in Week 9 in a game that might determine which finishes higher in the power ratings. Neither team is expected to contend for any titles but the Panthers are a trendy pick to improve. That will depend on Cam Newton’s health and whether a year of film allows defenses to catch up with Newton.

The Redskins, with new rookie QB Robert Griffin III, will probably end the season at 7-9 or 8-8 while the Panthers, who have a slightly tougher schedule, will probably be no better. The matchup between the two will probably determine which team ends at .500 on the season. If the Panthers can get an upset on the road, maybe against the Falcons or the Saints, they could improve to 9-7 and be in the discussion for a wild card berth.

Wake coach Bzdelik to speak at Raleigh Sports Club

Wake Forest basketball coach Jeff Bzdelik will speak Wednesday at the Raleigh Sports Club luncheon. He will discuss the state of the Deacons’ basketball program and Atlantic Coast Conference title hopes.

The RSC will also honor Broughton basketball player James Hemphill as the Student Athlete of the Week.

The meetings emphasize friendship, fellowship, weekly door prizes, pick sheets, and great food. This is the 49th year of The Raleigh Sports Club.

The Raleigh Sports Club weekly Wednesday luncheon meetings are from 11:30 -1 p.m. at Highland United Methodist Church at 1901 Ridge Road in Raleigh. The Forks Cafeteria caters a Southern Buffet with lines opening at 11:30 a.m. There were 265 attendees last week who heard NCSU football coach Tom O’Brien speak.

Member attendance fee is $15 while guests are $25. For more details go to www.raleighsportsclub.org.