No. 1 UCLA tops No. 6 UNC soccer

UCLA's Leo Stolz.
UCLA’s Leo Stolz.
No. 6 North Carolina came up short in a 1-0 setback to top-ranked UCLA Sunday night in the final game of the Carolina Nike Classic from Fetzer Field.

The first half was played fairly even between the two clubs. Each team had five shots and both keepers made two saves in the opening 45 minutes.

The difference was UCLA’s All-America midfielder Leo Stolz found the back of the net in the 31st minute to give the visitors a 1-0 lead at intermission.

A long ball played to the top of the 18-yard box brought UNC keeper Brendan Moore well of his line. The ricocheted ball found the foot of Stolz and with the goal area fully exposed, the reigning Pac-12 Player of the Year slotted a shot off the left post and into the net.

That proved to be the game winner as Carolina was unable to shake a very compact and composed Bruin back line.

Carolina held a 10-7 shot advantage with midfielder Omar Holness owning half of the Tar Heel attempts.

Moore made three saves on the night, while UCLA keeper Earl Edwards made a pair of stops.

Carolina will play next Friday at Old Dominion and Sunday at Virginia Commonwealth. Both matches kick at 7 p.m.

Boone throws four TDs as Duke dominates Elon

Anthony Boone.
Anthony Boone.
Duke redshirt senior quarterback Anthony Boone completed 22-of-33 passes for 247 yards and four touchdowns to lead the Blue Devils to a season-opening 52-13 victory over Elon in front of 31,213 fans at Wallace Wade Stadium.

The 52 points are the fourth most scored by the Blue Devils under head coach David Cutcliffe and the most scored by Duke in a season opener since 1954. Duke compiled 567 yards of offense with a balanced 292 through the air and 275 on the ground.

Jamison Crowder led the receiving corps with seven catches for 93 yards, including two for touchdowns, to push his career catches total to 205. He is the third receiver in Duke history to amass 200-plus career catches, joining Donovan Varner and Conner Vernon. Max McCaffrey had a career receiving day with five catches for 65 yards.

The running game was led by Josh Snead and Shaquille Powell with 74 and 54 yards, respectively.

Devon Edwards paced the defense with seven tackles, including four solo stops. Bryon Fields had six tackles and Carlos Wray made three stops and recorded his first career sack.

Duke, after forcing Elon into a three-and-out on its opening possession, marched 61 yards over 11 plays to get on the scoreboard for the first time in 2014 with a four-yard touchdown pass from Boone to Issac Blakeney. Shaquille Powell carried the ball for 34 yards and Blakeney hauled in 22 yards receiving, including the one-handed grab in the back left corner of the end zone, to highlights Duke’s opening drive of 2014.

Elon answered with a 61-yard drive that finished with a 36-yard field goal from John Gallagher to pull within a score. Duke punted for the first time of the afternoon on its next possession to go into the first break with a 7-3 lead.

Coming into the game two catches shy of the 200-catch benchmark, Crowder made his second grab of the evening count. On the first play from scrimmage, Boone found Crowder streaking down the right sideline for a 46-yard strike to put the Blue Devils in front 14-3 early in the second quarter.

The Blue Devils continued to roll offensively with Powell finding the end zone for the first time of the season with a two-yard rush up the middle, and Blakeney pulling in a 19-yard toss from Boone to send Duke into halftime with a 28-6 lead.

Duke racked up 205 yards of offense in the second quarter with Boone passing for 129 and Josh Snead amassing 52 yards on the ground. Boone finished the first half 13-of-19 with 170 yards and three touchdowns.

Defensively, the Blue Devils held the Phoenix to just 10 first downs, 165 yards of offense and two field goals in the first 30 minutes.

Boone and the Duke offense continued to fire on all cylinders in the third quarter. After scoring on the opening drive of the period – a 13-yard pass to Crowder – Duke added a 49-yard Ross Martin field goal for a 38-6 advantage.

Duke redshirt sophomore quarterback Thomas Sirk came off the bench to add a pair of rushing touchdowns for the Blue Devils. Sirk finished 5-of-7 for 40 yards.

Elon, trailing 45-6 in the fourth quarter, tacked on its lone touchdown in the fourth quarter, despite being held to just 132 yards of offense for much of the second half.

Duke hits the road next to take on Troy next Saturday, September 6th at 7 p.m.

– News release

UNC uses third-quarter onslaught to whip Liberty 56-29

Jeff Schoettmer.
Jeff Schoettmer.
North Carolina broke open a close home opener with four third-quarter touchdowns to defeat Liberty 56-29 Saturday night.

The heavily favored Tar Heels led just 21-15 at the half and after a fumble return by Liberty, the Heels trailed 22-21 in the third period.

But Carolina struck quickly and often during a stretch where Liberty turned the ball over three times in five plays. Within about four minutes, the Heels scored four times to take a commanding 49-22 lead.

“The defense started creating all those turnovers,” UNC coach Larry Fedora said. “We’ve spent a lot of time focusing on that… I think we created more turnovers tonight than we did all of last year. I’m proud of that.”

UNC safety Dominiquie Green recovered three fumbles while linebacker Jeff Schoettmer intercepted a pass and ran it in for a score during that third-quarter onslaught.

“I read the quarterback’s eyes and he threw it right to me,” Schoettmer said. “We had just scored on offense and we wanted to get the ball back.”

Starting QB Marquis Williams found Mack Hollins who ran it in from 33 yards out to give Carolina a 28-22 lead before Schoettmer’s interception.

Seven different Tar Heels scored with Williams running in for two scores. Backup QB Mitch Trubiskey played significant time as well and tossed his first collegiate touchdown to tight end Jack Tabb.

The No. 23 Tar Heels played eight true freshmen and four redshirt freshmen on offense and defense during the game. The inexperience showed as Carolina turned the ball over four times and made several unnecessary penalties (18 for 120 yards). Plus, the Tar Heels, while taking advantage of six Liberty turnovers, turned the ball over four times themselves.

“We had too many interceptions (three) and wasted opportunities,” said Fedora, who added however that he was impressed that his team came out in the third quarter with a lot of energy.

The Tar Heels finished with 443 yards on offense and converted all six times they got in the red zone.

Final Stats

Wolfpack comes back late for first win since last September

statehelmetJacoby Brissett found Matt Dayes for a 35-yard strike down the right sideline with 1:37 left, as the Pack completed its comeback in the fourth quarter to start the 2014 season with a 24-23 win over Georgia Southern. The Pack’s two TD drives in the fourth quarter covered 99 yards and then 75 yards to send the 54,273 Wolfpack faithful home happy.

WOLFPACK DRIVE OF THE GAME
NC State’s 9 play, 75 yard TD drive in the fourth quarter to put the Pack up 24-23 with 1:37 left.

Down by six, NC State took possession of the ball at the 25-yard line. The Pack marched down the field in just 1:58 to score the go-ahead TD, a 35-yard Brissett to Dayes TD pass. Brissett’s third TD pass of the game gave the Pack its first lead of the game, 24-23, with 1:37 left to play.

On the drive, Brissett went 8-of-9 for 75 yards, with all the plays on the drive a pass.

WOLFPACK DRIVE OF THE GAME – PART II
NC State’s 12 play, 99 yard TD drive in the fourth quarter to cut the Eagles lead to 20-17 with 6:55 left.

After the Pack defense forced a Georgia Southern fumble on the Pack’s 1-yard line, NC State went 99 yards in 12 plays in 4:08 to bring the Pack closer at 20-17 with 6:55 left in the game. Bra’Lon Cherry capped the drive with his second TD reception of the game, 11 yards from Jacoby Brissett.

On the drive, Brissett went 6-of-7 for 56 yards, with the last six plays of the drive all Brissett completions.

PLAYER OF THE GAME
Jacoby Brissett: 28-of-40 for 291 yards and 3 TDs.

Making his first start in a Wolfpack uniform, and playing in his first game in 651 days, Brissett led the Wolfpack comeback thanks to his play in the fourth quarter. On the Pack’s two TD drives in the quarter, Brissett was 14-of-16 for 131 yards, leading the Pack on scoring drives of 99 and 75 yards.

NOTABLES
• #Wolfpups: A total of 10 true freshmen made their NC State debuts in today’s game: Shawn Boone, Bradley Chubb, Cole Cook, B.J. Hill, Bo Hines (starter at WR), Stephen Louis, Airius Moore, Germaine Pratt, Jaylen Samuels, Kentavius Street.

• #FirstTimeAction: Other NC State players who made their Wolfpack debuts today: Jacoby Brissett (starter at QB), NaQuan Brown, Jerod Fernandez (starter at LB), Kenton Gibbs, Josh Jones (starter at S), Bryce Kennedy, Malcolm Means, Ernie Robinson, Josh Sessoms, Charlie Twitty, Lucas Wilson.

UP NEXT
NC State returns to home action next weekend, hosting Old Dominion on Saturday, September 6 at 6 p.m.

– News release

UNC opens soccer season with 3-1 win over No. 7 Cal

Goals from senior forwards Tyler Engel, Andy Craven and Rob Lovejoy gave No. 6 North Carolina a 3-1 victory over No. 7 California in the 2014 season opener for both clubs Friday night from Fetzer Field.

Carolina (1-0) controlled play at the onset of the game and that ultimately paid dividends when Engel finished from 15 yards in the 19th minute off a feed from Craven.

Minutes later Cal was on the cusp of an equalizer but senior All-America defender Boyd Okwuonu cleared away a ball on the goal line that was going to tie the match in the 21st minute.

Tar Heel defender Jonathan Campbell nearly made it 2-0 with a header off a corner kick, but the Bears defense stood tall to keep the ball from crossing the line.

Just three minutes later, Craven beats the Cal keeper for that two-goal advantage in the 33rd minute. Lovejoy earned the assist as he placed a nice through ball to the foot of Craven.

Cal (0-1) cut its defect in half with a goal from reserve Christian Thierjung in the 36th minute. That was the final tally of the opening half with Carolina taking a 2-1 lead into intermission.

UNC All-ACC keeper Brendan Moore made three brilliant saves in the first 18 minutes of the second half to keep his club on top. He pushed aside a header in the 46th minute, stopped a point-blank shot from Connor Hallisey in the 53th minute and later did the same to Stefano Bonomo in the 63rd minute.

The Tar Heels regained its composure over the final 20 minutes. Lovejoy iced the match with a blue-collar goal in the 83th minute to cap the scoring, 3-1, in favor of Carolina.

Moore was forced to come up with eight saves on the evening, while Cal’s Kevin Peach had four saves over 90 minutes.

Carolina held a 17-13 shot advantage over the Golden Bears, while Cal had seven corners to the Tar Heels five.

UNC hosts No. 1 UCLA on Sunday at 7 p.m. The Bruins earned a 3-1 victory over Wake Forest this evening.

Box score
– News release

Fan guide to UNC’s home opener vs. Liberty

unclibertyNorth Carolina opens its 124th college football season on Saturday, Aug. 30, when the Tar Heels host Liberty of the Big South Conference at 6 p.m. It’s the season opener for a pair of teams looking to build off the momentum of strong finishes from a year ago. Carolina won six of its last seven in 2013, including a 39-17 win over Cincinnati in the Belk Bowl, while the Flames reeled off five straight victories to end the year.

Saturday’s game is the first meeting between Carolina and Liberty on the gridiron. The two institutions squared off in the first round of the NCAA men’s basketball tournament in 1994 with the No. 1 Tar Heels prevailing, 71-51.

Carolina is 1-1 in season openers under head coach Larry Fedora. In 2012, the Tar Heels knocked off Elon, 63-0, in Fedora’s debut as UNC’s coach. Last year, Carolina fell at No. 6 South Carolina on a Thursday night in Columbia, 27-10. A win over Liberty would be Fedora’s 50th as a head coach.

Carolina has won five of its last seven season openers. All five came against FCS competition.

Liberty is coached by Turner Gill, who is in his third season with the Flames. Gill previously was the head coach at Buffalo and Kansas.

AT A GLANCE
Records: North Carolina 0-0, Liberty 0-0
Rankings: Carolina is ranked No. 23 in both the AP poll and the USA Today Coaches’ Poll. Liberty is receiving votes in the Sports Network FCS Top 25.
TV: ESPN3 (click to watch). Ryan Rose (play-by-play), Forrest Conoly (analyst) and Angela Mallen (sideline) have the call.
Radio: Tar Heel Sports Network (click to listen), a division of Learfield Communications. Jones Angell (play-by-play), Ethan Albright (analyst) and Lee Pace (sideline) have the call.
Twitter: @TarHeelFootball, @CoachFedora | @LibertyFootball, @LibertyTGill

QUICK HITS
• Carolina is ranked No. 23 in both The Associated Press and USA Today Coaches Top 25 Polls. It is the first time the Tar Heels have been ranked since 2010. That year, Carolina began the season No. 18 in the AP poll, but lost to No. 21 LSU in the season opener in Atlanta.
• Carolina had just six scholarship seniors on its 2014 training camp roster and just one senior starter on offense – tight end Jack Tabb.
• Carolina’s offensive line has just 43 starts to its credit led by junior offensive guard Landon Turner with 17. Jon Heck started all 13 games last year at right tackle and Caleb Peterson started 12 at left guard. Offensive tackle Kiaro Holts started one game in 2012 vs. Idaho.
• Carolina looks to continue its outstanding special teams play from a year ago. In 2013, the Tar Heels ranked first in the country in punt returns, 10th in net punting and 19th in kickoff returns.

UNC, Duke expected to challenge FSU in ACC volleyball

accvolleyballFlorida State, which has won two of the last three and three of the last five Atlantic Coast Conference volleyball league titles, was tabbed as the preseason favorite in a vote by the league’s 15 head coaches.

The Seminoles accumulated a total of 187 out of a possible 196 points. First-place votes were awarded 14 points, second place received 13 points, etc. Coaches were not allowed to include their own team in their predicted order of finish.

Florida State narrowly surpassed second place Duke (181 points) and third place North Carolina (180), while Miami (151) and Louisville (123) rounded out the top five. Virginia’s 113 points placed it ahead of NC State (106), Syracuse (105), Pittsburgh (103) and Virginia Tech (93). Notre Dame (85), Clemson (53), Georgia Tech (40), Wake Forest (39) and Boston College (16) completed the poll.

A total of 11 teams are represented on the 2014 Preseason All-ACC Team. Duke and Florida State lead all conference schools with three selections apiece, followed by Louisville, Miami, North Carolina and Virginia with two selections each. NC State, Notre Dame, Syracuse, Pittsburgh and Virginia Tech all have one selection.

Twelve of the 19 selections were voted to the 2013 All-ACC Team. The squad features AVCA Third Team All-American and 2013 ACC Player of the Year Sklar, along with six others that were named Honorable Mention All-America by the American Volleyball Coaches Association.

Florida State returns four starters from last year’s team that earned a 26-7 overall record and a 17-3 mark in league play. The Seminoles were defeated by national runner-up Wisconsin in the third round of the NCAA Division I Women’s Volleyball Championship.

The 2014 season gets underway on Friday, August 29, with 14 of the conference’s teams in action. The 2014 ACC volleyball champion will be determined by the final regular season standings, with that team receiving an automatic bid to the 2014 NCAA Division I Volleyball Championship.

2014 ACC Volleyball Predicted Order of Finish

No. Team (First Place) Points 2013 Record (Conference)

1 Florida State (7) 187 26-7 (17-3)

2 Duke (4) 181 28-5 (18-2)

3 North Carolina (4) 180 27-5 (16-4)

4 Miami 151 19-12 (12-8)

5 Louisville 123 23-8 (18-0)

6 Virginia 113 18-14 (11-9)

7 NC State 106 20-12 (11-9)

8 Syracuse 105 16-16 (11-9)

9 Pittsburgh 103 19-14 (11-9)

10 Virginia Tech 93 22-12 (10-10)

11 Notre Dame 85 13-18 (7-13)

12 Clemson 53 15-16 (9-11)

13 Georgia Tech 40 12-20 (6-14)

14 Wake Forest 39 16-16 (5-15)

15 Boston College 16 9-23 (1-19)

2014 Preseason All-ACC Team

Name Class Position School

Emily Sklar Junior Outside Hitter Duke

Jeme Obeime Senior Outside Hitter Duke

Maggie Deichmeister Senior Setter Duke

Nicole Walch Junior Outside Hitter Florida State

Katie Mosher Senior Libero Florida State

Sarah Burrington Sophomore Middle Blocker Florida State

Katie George Junior Setter Louisville

Janelle Jenkins Sophomore Outside Hitter Louisville

Savanah Leaf Senior Outside Hitter Miami

Emani Sims Senior Middle Blocker Miami

Paige Neuenfeldt Junior Middle Blocker North Carolina

Chaniel Nelson Senior Opposite Hitter North Carolina

Jeni Houser Senior Middle Blocker Notre Dame

Dariyan Hopper Senior Outside Hitter NC State

Jessica Wynn Senior Outside Hitter Pittsburgh

Silvi Uattara Junior Outside Hitter Syracuse

Lauren Fuller Junior Setter Virginia

Jasmine Burton Sophomore Outside Hitter Virginia

Kathryn Caine Senior Middle Blocker Virginia Tech

NC State’s Dave Doeren’s news conference prior to Saturday’s opener

doeren3“It’s good to be back at game week and I’m excited for an opportunity to compete against a team that we have a lot of respect for,” NC State football coach Dave Doeren said. “Georgia Southern obviously last season they had a very good football staff that left to go to Army and they have a new staff brought in from Sam Houston State.

“I know Willie (Fritz) extremely well from when he was at Central Missouri and I was at Kansas. He’s a very good football coach, and obviously a team that had an upset victory on the road at Florida, so we know that going on the road for them is not going to be something that startles their football team.

“Our team I know is excited just to get back out there and play a game and we need to play a game. We practice and practice and practice, and there is no substitute for game day. So were really excited to get out there and watch our guys. They’ve put in a lot of work and we want to see where they’re at. Game one is the best way to judge where you’re at with your football team. We’ve got a lot of young players; everybody knows that. Jacoby (Brissett) has been taking a lot of reps and doing all the things he can do to get better and now its time to see him on game day with his teammates, and we’re excited about it.

“It’s Wolfpack Club Day and we’re honoring the Wolfpack Club and all that they do for us and all the members. What Bobby and his staff do for our facilities and for our scholarships we appreciate that. Mario Williams is coming back and we’re excited about honoring his number as well and have him be a part of the event.

“Talking about Georgia Southern, they have a spread option offense that last year was a triple option under center offense. They would break and get back and then get in some but this year our reports are they’re going to be in the piston. Their guy running their spread option, the quarterback (Kevin) Ellison, number four, is a really good runner. He tough, he’s not a guy that goes down easy. He averages 80 yards a game and has had several big runs and games. A strong-armed guy who didn’t ask to throw a lot but you can see he does have arm strength in his throws. They also have a young man that they’re talking about rotating, (Favian) Upshaw. They said he’s the fastest member of their football team. So we know there’s good skill at the quarterback position, and we’ll probably see anywhere from 20 to 40 quarterback runs based on what happens in the option game.

“The offensive line they have five seniors upfront. Anytime you’re playing a veteran offensive line even though they’re playing a little bit different than they did a year ago schematically, those are guys that have played together and have good chemistry. Their left tackle and their center are probably the best two on film; we watched those guys and they’re tough, they play hard. Their wide receivers that’s going to be probably the biggest position well have to gauge on game day just because they really didn’t ask him to much but block last year and they’re good at that. You can see the speed that they have with the slot backs and how they’re moving out the receiver, how much they’re going to throw and what kind of routes. Obviously we’ve been looking at a lot of Sam Houston film and see the concepts they like to run, but how much of that are they going to do? We’ll probably see a lot of movement type passes and move legs and sprint outs and the play actions that come off their run game and the option. Defensively their middle linebacker, number 40 (Edwin Jackson), is a really good player and makes a lot of plays for them. Number 36 (Matt Breida), a guy that didn’t play last year because of an injury but was a really good player his sophomore year at linebacker, so there’s two good linebackers in their lineup. Their cornerbacks are back; they’re guys that can run on film.

“Anytime you’re in a first game regardless of whether it’s a new staff or a returning staff, you know as a coach there’s a lot of things they studied like us in the offseason about their talents and their recruiting coming in. You know there’s going to be some things you just can’t show them. The first game a lot depends on what your kids know about your system and how they can adapt on the fly to things that you can’t show them. It’s a big focus just on us; the ball security that even though you scrimmage a couple of times it’s not the same with all those guys flying in there, the mental focus of having the fans in the stadium, the pre snap focus on both sides of the football, not jumping off sides and lining up correctly, getting your feet in the grass, ready to play and the finish of plays. On both sides breaking tackles when we’re on offense, running through contact and not getting tripped up, finishing blocks defensively, not tagging guys off like you do in practice you’re wrapping them up and finishing and getting the second and third and fourth guy to the pile to rip the ball out.

“I think you’ll see two teams that both are going to have a chip on their shoulder. I think our team does for sure, and I know just having coached at schools like Georgia Southern. I know what their players are going to be like and both of us in my opinion are going to play that way. For us, it’s been a while since we’ve finished a game and felt good about the end result. That’s what all the work you do is about is the end result. We’re excited for that opportunity to get back and play at home in front of a great crowd against a good football team. The best way to get a taste out of your mouth is to go out there and play. To see the fans to prepare to be in game week again it’s a great week.”

On how depth chart shaped out, any surprises:
Not necessarily, there’s ones and twos, there’s a lot of guys that rotate. I think the depth chart is pretty fluid with a young team and there’s going to be guys that are going to be playing in their first game. Jerod Fernandez, Josh Jones, Tony Adams, Bo Hines and all these guys that have practiced a lot for us are playing in their first game. So we expect to rotate some guys and see where we’re at. There wasn’t any huge surprise; I think probably the most improved player was Stephen Louis, a receiver. He was trying to figure his way out in the spring, and he really had a good fall camp. Walk-on receiver NaQuan Brown has had a really good fall camp for us as well. Those are two guys that just joined our team last spring.

On comparison of preparing for season opener last year versus this year’s opener:
La. Tech lost a lot of seniors the year before so it was really hard to see their personnel on tape. You can turn on Georgia Southern’s film and see a lot of their players and see what they do even though their schemes are a little different on offense. I think that in all opening games there’s a lot of ghost chasing saying, “What if they do this? Well maybe they’ll do that,” but at the end of the day your systems have to have rules built in place to handle whatever they do. So that’s what we really run, and the week before the week we run ours just make sure you show the guys enough things so that they’re ready. At Sam Houston they never run their center or run him at the wishbone offense, but because they do at Georgia Southern maybe they will. They ran more off front at Sam Houston than they did at Georgia Southern but they retained their defensive coordinator. Things like that you just don’t know how much the head coach is going to come in and say well this is how we did it at their school so I want you do it. You have to cover all of your bases in week one regardless of who you’re playing. Even when you have a team that returns a lot of the same people. Like I said in the offseason they all went to clinics, they all did their self-scout, they all studied film, they recruited new players that are different that can do certain things than maybe the year before players could, so you’re going to have to adjust.

On comfort of going in to year two compared to last year:
A lot more comfortable, just because I know what our players are like for the most part except for the true freshman. I’ve seen a lot of these guys on game day and I have a better feel for what they can and can’t do and what all of our coaches do, and it’s just the little things that you do in the offseason to better yourself. I talked about our offseason program, but in year one you’re throwing your guys into a lifting program that you’ve done at other places but you don’t necessarily know their weaknesses they need to work on and whereas in year two the entire thing was built on things we’ve got to do better. We made tremendous strides and made a great healthy training camp because of that. Our strength staff did a great job evaluating the weaknesses of our room, our coaches talked a lot with them about things guys have to do in order to be better and you just can’t do that in year one. So when you get back out there and run your systems you can see improvements because of those things.

On quarterbacks in games, willingness to play McLendon:
A little bit depends on what the game is like, and I think he’ll (Brissett) be great. For the redshirt Jalan I don’t know if that’s real or not, he gets better every time he plays. Garrett is a guy who can go in and run our offense, has a good arm and knows the system. It’s just a matter of what happens; are you talking about finishing a game with a guy or having to play the rest of the season with a guy. And I think that’s where you have to decide what’s best for Jalan. If its finishing a game, there’s no question Garrett can do those things for us. If I want him in for a series, he can do that. If I’m talking about were going to play eight games with those two guys, then were going to have to pull the redshirt and see who is the best guy.

On coming out of preseason camp, feeling better about defense versus offense:

I wouldn’t pick a side, I just feel better about our depth. I think that’s the biggest thing I feel better about is our competition in positions. When you have people behind people that can take their jobs you get better effort in practice from guys. Guys can’t have a bad day; they’re going to be on the next part of the depth chart if they do. If you come in and do your job you earn playing time, and both sides of the ball were like that. There are maybe a couple of positions when we didn’t have that, and they were really our specialists. Other than our kicker, snapper and punter I felt like every position on the team had someone fighting to get on the field.

On other quarterbacks in league:
I don’t really care what the rest of the league has right now. I’m worried about our team and that’s it. We all have our own things that we have to worry about and I’m really not concerned about who is going to play quarterback at Louisville or Boston College right now. That’s for later in the year to worry about. Our focus is on us and will be. Like I’ve told our team, in week one in particular a lot more teams beat themselves and that’s what we cant do. We’ve got to be really good at quarterback and making decisions and putting the ball in the right place. And not just at quarterback across the board you see a lot of first week mistakes and that’s one thing we want to try not to do. We want to go out there and beat Georgia Southern not beat ourselves in the game, and that’s where our focus is.

On Brissett and length of time out from playing:
I’m worried about all kids that way, but I’m not going to dampen his excitement. I want him to be excited and I want him to have fun. There’s nothing wrong with butterflies; everyone has them when you go out there. You just have to make sure they go away quick and that he makes the same decisions he’s been coached to make in practice when he goes out there to play. He’s ultra competitive; his only nervousness would only be because of how excited he is to play. I’m happy for him to be that way.

Game Notes: Duke opens football season at home vs. Elon

dukefootballDuke kicks off its 102nd season of football by hosting Elon on Saturday, August 30 at 6 p.m. The game will mark the eighth on the gridiron between Duke and Elon, with the Blue Devils holding a 6-0-1 all-time series lead.

The Blue Devils posted a 10-4 overall record in 2013, captured the ACC’s Coastal Division championship and appeared in the Dr Pepper ACC Championship Game.

The game will be broadcast live by ESPN3 with Roy Philpott (play-by-play) & Stan Lewter (analyst) calling the action.

• Duke received a bid to the 46th annual Chick-fil-A Bowl in Atlanta, Ga., where the Blue Devils suffered a 52-48 loss to Texas A&M on December 31, 2013
• The series with Elon began in 1920 with a 13-6 Duke victory … The schools battled to a 0-0 deadlock one season later … The most recent meeting — the first between the two schools since 1926 — came in 2010 and resulted in a 41-27 victory for Duke in Durham … The two schools are separated by 40 miles
• Duke owns an all-time record of 475-494-31 in 101 seasons
• Ameritas Group serves as the official game sponsor of this week’s contest … In addition, Duke will celebrate Duke Employee Appreciation Day at Wallace Wade Stadium
• Duke will welcome back to campus members of the 1989 football team to celebrate the 25th anniversary of its ACC Championship … The squad will be honored on the field following the first quarter of play … Led by ACC Player of the Year Clarkston Hines and ACC Coach of the Year Steve Spurrier, Duke compiled a 6-1 league record to tie for the top spot in the standings with Virginia … The Blue Devils finished with an 8-4 overall ledger
• Duke head coach David Cutcliffe enters his seventh season at the helm of the Blue Devil gridiron program … Named the ACC Coach of the Year in both 2012 and 2013, Cutcliffe is 31-44 at Duke and 75-73 overall as a head coach
• Duke is among others receiving votes in both the Associated Press and USA Today/Coaches national polls entering the season
• Duke’s five team captains for the 2014 season — as voted on by their teammates — are QB Anthony Boone, LB Kelby Brown, S Jeremy Cash, WR Jamison Crowder & OG Laken Tomlinson … Boone will serve as a captain for the second consecutive season
• A season ago, Duke enjoyed the friendly confines of Wallace Wade Stadium, where the Blue Devils matched the school single-season record for home victories with five … The school standard of five home wins in a single campaign is shared by the teams of 1930, 1932, 1933, 1943, 1974, 1989, 1994, 2012 & 2013
• Duke is 3-1 all-time in games played in August with wins over East Carolina (2002), James Madison (2008) and N.C. Central (2013) and a loss to Virginia (2003)

Blue Devils by the Numbers
• 10-2 — Duke’s overall record in¬cluding a perfect 7-0 ledger in ACC regular season action with Anthony Boone as the starting QB
• 10 — School-record victories for the Blue Devils last season, bettering the standard of nine set by the 1933, 1936, 1938 & 1941 teams
• 121 — Tackles for S Jeremy Cash in 2013 en route to earning second team All-America honors from USA Today
• 4,216 — Career all-purpose yards for WR Jamison Crowder, who sits 1,537 yards shy of the school record of 5,753 set by RB Chris Douglas (2000-03)
• 28 — School-record consecutive games with 2+ receptions for WR Jamison Crowder … Crowder shares the school record with both Clarkston Hines and Conner Vernon
• 4 — Non-offensive TDs produced in 2013 by S/CB DeVon Edwards, who logged two TDs on interception returns and another pair on kickoff returns
• 30.21 — Kickoff return average for DeVon Edwards last season, a mark which ranked second in the ACC and third nationally
• 68-4-14 — Combined tackles, interceptions and PBUs in 2013 for the CB duo of Breon Borders (26-4- 8) and Bryon Fields (42-0-6) … Both saw extensive action last season as true freshmen and are expected to start in the secondary in 2014
• 25 — Career games with 5+ tackles for LB David Helton
• 7.52 — Duke record career points per game average for K Ross Martin … Through two seasons as a Blue Devil, Martin has amassed 203 points
• 43.65 — Career punting average for P Will Monday, marking the top average among active punters in the ACC … Monday also ranks ninth on the league’s career punting average chart
• 5.45 — Career yards per rushing attempt for RB Josh Snead, marking the fourth-highest total in Duke history trailing only Red Smith (6.05), Ace Parker (5.87) and Elmore Hackney (5.86) … Snead enters the 2014 sea¬son as one of just 11 RBs nationally with 250+ rushing attempts and 5.40+ yards per carry average
• 39 — Consecutive starts for OG Laken Tomlinson along the Blue Devil offensive line
• 60-10 — Career record for David Cutcliffe when leading after three quarters … At Duke, Cutcliffe is 26-3 when ahead entering the final period

Detroit Lions to host ACC team in new bowl game?

bowl-game-centerpiece-v3The Detroit Lions announced today a multiyear agreement with Ford Motor Company’s Quick Lane Tire & Auto Center designating Quick Lane as title sponsor for the annual bowl game held at Ford Field in Detroit. This year’s game is scheduled for Dec. 26, 2014 at 4:30 p.m.

The Quick Lane Bowl, which will air on ESPN, will feature teams from the Big Ten and ACC conferences. At the end of the college football season, officials from both conferences will meet with bowl officials to determine the best possible matchup and choose their team representatives.

Tickets for the game will be available for purchase at 10 am, Thursday, Aug. 28 at quicklanebowl.com, the Ford Field box office (open Monday through Friday, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.) or by calling 877-212-8898.

The Detroit Lions are only the second NFL team (after the Houston Texans) to host and operate a college football bowl game. The team’s entertainment division, DLI Entertainment, has promoted multiple large-scale shows and events at Ford Field, including seven consecutive sold-out Kenny Chesney concerts, Taylor Swift, the 2003 Basketbowl, 2008 NCAA Men’s Basketball Regionals, 2009 NCAA Men’s Basketball Final Four and the 2010 NCAA Men’s Ice Hockey Frozen Four.

“With a national platform to showcase the city of Detroit as well as Southeast Michigan football tradition, it was important for us to partner with an organization like Quick Lane who has a strong local and national presence,” said Detroit Lions President Tom Lewand. “We look forward to collaborating to institute a great bowl game tradition at Ford Field for years to come.”

“We are delighted to have the opportunity to support this valuable football tradition,” said Frederiek Toney, vice president, Ford Motor Company and president, Ford Customer Service. “With over 700 Quick Lanes available in communities across the U.S., we’re hoping to continue to raise awareness among consumers for the fast service, value and convenience our Quick Lanes deliver.”