UNC’s four unanswered second-half touchdowns rip ECU

North Carolina scored four touchdowns in the second half after falling behind 17-14 to defeat East Carolina 42-17.

The Tar Heels struggled in the first half with missed opportunities and penalties. Twice quarterback T.J. Yates overthrew open receivers who had beaten the ECU secondary for what would have been touchdowns. A roughing the kicker call on UNC’s Bruce Carter negated excellent field position in ECU territory and restarted a Pirate drive that ended in a touchdown to make it 14-7 ECU.

But the Tar Heels managed to tie the score at 14-14 late in the first half when UNC’s Da’Norris Searcy intercepted a pass and went in from 47 yards out. Searcy, who had been scrutinized under the recent investigations, was cleared to play for the first time earlier in the week.

In the second half, the Tar Heels started to wear down the smaller Pirates, especially with rushing yardage. Carolina held the ball for 22 of the 30 second-half minutes and scored on three straight possessions after UNC’s Casey Barth missed a 37-yard field goal. The Heels went from being behind 17-14 to going up 35-17.

Shaun Draughn scored his third touchdown of the game on a 13-yard cutback run in the last minute to put the finishing touches on the 42-17 victory.

Draughn ended the game with 137 yards rushing while Johnny White bettered him with 140 yards. It’s the first time in six years that two Carolina runningbacks have rushed for more than 100 yards in a game.

East Carolina got up early – on its second drive – as Dominique Davis threw a 13-yard touchdown pass to Lance Lewis to culminate a long drive where Davis went eight-for-eight.

UNC came right back to tie the score on its next drive when Yates hit Jheranie Boyd with a 25-yard scoring strike on third-and-10.

ECU went up 14-7 on a trick play where receiver Dwayne Harris threw a 40-yard TD to fellow receiver Joe Womack.

Searcy’s interception tied it at the half before State took a 17-14 lead in the third quarter. Carolina took the lead for the first time at 21-17 when Yates found Dwight Jones running a crossing pattern for 13 yards and a touchdown. The big play in the drive was a 32-yard pass play from Yates to Zach Pianalto.

Three rushing touchdowns later by Draughn, the game was over.

“If you can run the ball,” UNC coach Butch Davis said, “it keeps the other team’s offense off the field and tires the other team out.”

Davis also said it was key that the Tar Heels did not turn the ball over and picked off three passes. In addition to Searcy’s key interception, UNC’s Kevin Reddick and Gene Robinson intercepted tipped passes.

ECU coach Ruffin McNeill, aka Weebles, agreed that the turnovers were costly. But he said that other mistakes also hurt the Pirates. “Penalties hurt us – that’s an understatement – and it put us in some tough situations,” he said. The Pirates were penalized 13 times for more than 100 yards whereas the Heels were penalized 10 times for 80 yards.

As Carolina was steamrolling in the second half, the adversity built but McNeill said he needs to teach the team to just play the next play. He said the team is “young and talented and they’re going to make some mistakes.”

East Carolina finished with a respectable 347 total yards but that’s 100 fewer than the Pirates have averaged plus they only managed 64 on the ground. Carolina racked up 444 total yards with 263 on the ground and 181 through the air.

UNC improves to 2-2 while ECU falls to 2-2.

Random Thoughts: East Carolina was every bit as good as UNC until the Pirates wore down. Coach McNeill has done an excellent job of getting his offense to buy into his passing, quick-playing offense. The defense is simply too small and inexperienced to help the offense much at this point though. McNeill has the Pirates playing better than I thought they would at this point in the season. While they are 0-2 against ACC teams, they are 2-0 in their own conference and will be a force.

Durham Bulls play-by-play announcer Neil Solondz did a commendable job as the ESPN3 announcer for the game. He has a good voice and seems to know the two teams fairly well. He did have the “huh?” moment of the game however when he said that an ECU runner had “a negative gain of two yards.” That would be a two-yard loss to you and me.

His sidekick, commentator Jay Taylor, wasn’t nearly as good. He had too many “duh” moments to mention but the one I liked the most is when he said the ECU defender wouldn’t have been called for interference if he had turned around and not touched the receiver. Ah, duh.

It was nice that Time Warner Cable broadcast the ESPN3 game to its viewers in the state. Otherwise, the game would have only been available through online streaming video. Unfortunately, technical difficulties cut the first few minutes of the game.

Game Photo Gallery

Tar Heel women’s soccer blanks State 3-0

North Carolina’s speed, depth and quick ball movement wore down N.C. State in the second half and the Tar Heels went on to a 3-0 victory in Raleigh tonight.

Carolina held a 1-0 lead at the intermission against the gritty Wolfpack squad after a Kealia Ohai goal from a sharp side angle. The Heels had numerous opportunities to score before that one finally went in.

In the second half, it was apparent that the Tar Heels were getting stronger and the Wolfpack was getting weaker.

Carolina took a 2-0 advantage with 26:33 left when Courtney Jones blasted one to the back of the net from well beyond the box.

About eight minutes later, Carolina went up 3-0 as Rachel Wood headed in a corner kick.

The No. 3 ranked Tar Heels outshot the Pack 19-6 including a 10-2 advantage in the second half. UNC’s goalies had four saves while State’s Kim Kerm made eight saves against the aggressive Heels.

Carolina moves to 10-1-1 and 2-1 in the ACC while State falls to 7-5 and 1-2 in the ACC.

The rivalry showed when a bank of State fans in bleachers near the goal harrassed Jones, who had been physical in attacking the net. Two student fans were escorted out. Moments later Jones answered the taunts with that long, powerful goal. When Wood scored to make it 3-0, she looked toward that group of State fans and mockingly cupped her ear toward them.

Hurricanes win in OT in final home warm-up in front of 16,000

Behind two goals from new alternate captain Brandon Sutter, the Carolina Hurricanes topped the Atlanta Thrashers 2-1 in overtime in front of 16,000 at the RBC Center.

It’s the last time the Hurricanes will play in Raleigh until late October as the team opens the regular season in Helsinki, Finland against the Wild.

Sutter said he was impressed with the crowd which provided regular-season excitement to the game. Fans were allowed in free to the 1:30 p.m. game.

The Hurricanes are younger, smaller and faster than last year’s team. Coach Paul Maurice said he is happy with his players but is still looking for chemistry.

The defense held the Thrashers in check until the last minute of the game when they tied it up. Just a minute into overtime, on a fast-break rush, Carolina’s Erik Cole found Sutter on the opposite side of the goal for the game winner.

Cam Ward had 30 saves, including a couple of spectacular ones, for the Hurricanes, who now head out to St. Petersburg, Russia for their final preseason game Monday.

Before the game, outside the RBC Center, young fans got to play roller hockey, jump on inflatibles and shoot pucks.

Duke needs a win at Maryland to salvage season

With losses at Wake Forest and at home against a poor Army team, and the way the defense is playing, it will be tough for Duke to win another game this season. Maryland, this week’s foe, is an opponent we picked at the first of the year that we thought Duke could beat.

It would have been a slight upset but now it would be a big upset as Duke QB Sean Renfree has not excelled. In fact, he’s already thrown seven interceptions for the 1-3 Blue Devils.

Plus, the matchup seems right for Maryland. “We have to limit the big play,” Duke coach David Cutcliffe said. “It’s killed us. We’ve played good five to six snaps and then we give up a monster. And Maryland specializes in the monster.”

The Washington Post says this is one of the easiest games to pick all season. “Maryland in a runaway,” they say. In a Post online poll, 90 percent chose the Terrapins to win.

With Miami, Virginia Tech and Navy on the horizon, Duke better put up a strong effort in this game to attempt to salvage the season. I have a feeling that Duke will play its best game of the year. We’ll see if that’s enough. Otherwise, unless the Devils can beat Virginia, it looks as if this could turn into a 1-11 season.

Consider attending one of these 10 area football games tonight

It’s going to be wet and muddy but it appears games will go forward tonight. Here are 10 football games that are within driving distance in the Triangle area. In bold is the predicted winner. Most games are at 7:30 p.m. You might want to check with local officials as some games start at 7.
My record last week was 9-1 for a season total of 45-15.

Apex at Fuquay-Varina

Durham Jordan at Northern Durham

Durham Riverside at E. Chapel Hill

Garner at Knightdale

Green Hope at Cary

Holly Springs at Panther Creek

Harnett Central at Clayton

Harrells Christian at Wake Christian

Person at Southern Durham

South Granville at Orange

A couple of area games were played Thursday night. Leesville Road defeated Broughton 36-28. Wake Forest Rolesville defeated Enloe 42-0. Check the scores in our Sports Roundup on the left navigation bar.

Austin Rivers cancels visit to Carolina, signs with Duke

In another blow to UNC athletics, No. 1 rated high school basketball star Austin Rivers not only canceled a planned official to UNC for this weekend but has committed to Duke.

“He picked Duke because of [Mike Krzyzewski] and his staff,” his high school coach David Bailey said today. “There is a ton of tradition at Duke, and it was the best place for him from a basketball and academic standpoint.”

I guess Carolina and Roy Williams are chopped liver and not even deserving of a visit. Take that Tar Heels.

Rivers’ father, Boston Celtics coach Doc Rivers, said that Austin’s commitment to Duke has not been finalized but is likely.

New revelations make UNC’s Davis sound like he’s defending his job

North Carolina football coach Butch Davis is increasingly sounding like a coach defending his job, and he very well may be.
On Wednesday, UNC athletics director Dick Baddour again defended Davis when he spoke to the Raleigh Sports Club, telling the audience of several hundred Davis had his support.

But yet another revelation came out Thursday, with Yahoo! Sports detailing the financial ties between former UNC assistant John Blake and California agent Gary Wichard. Davis was on Taylor Zarzour’s “Sports Drive” show later Thursday, and Zarzour, to his credit, pushed the coach on the issue of whether he should have known about Blake’s ties to Wichard and whether he should have known players like Marvin Austin were visiting agents.
“In the past we haven’t monitored where they’ve gone,” Davis said. “Kids have said ‘I’m hanging around here, or I’m going with a particular player to his house,’ so no one monitors,” Davis told Sports Drive. “But we have already implemented as measures to try to improve some of the things so that we do know.”
By Thursday afternoon, News & Observer columnist Caulton Tudor had seen enough. Posting to the paper’s website, Tudor wrote, “Butch Davis should resign as North Carolina’s football coach.”

All that led to a wild scene in Chapel Hill Thursday when Davis addressed the media, surrounded by reporters and photographers. Davis said he would not resign and again said he couldn’t know all that his coaches and players were doing. He told reporters he plans “to be the head football coach here currently, and in the future,” according to The News & Observer.

All this couldn’t come at a worse time for UNC, which is building an “academic excellence” center in a Kenan Stadium endzone and trying to raise funds from alumni. The endless process involving the student honor council, the Secretary of State’s office and the NCAA has only eroded fan patience with the program.
About the only good news for UNC was that safety Da’Norris Searcy was cleared to play Thursday and will compete for the first time Saturday at home against East Carolina.
Other than that, the news for Carolina is grim – and Davis’ status increasingly tenuous.

UNC braces for a heated in-state rivalry game with ECU

UNC football coach Butch Davis, like many Carolina fans, doesn’t seem too keen about having this Saturday’s opponent East Carolina on the schedule.

“When I took the job, they were on the schedule for multiple years in the future,” Davis said at the weekly ACC press conference. “It’s a heated, big rivalry, like all in-state rivalries are. We’ve gone there once and they’ve come here one time since I’ve been here. I know they’re still on the schedule in future years. We’re going to continue to play them when it is scheduled.”

Some Carolina fans say that there is nothing to gain by playing East Carolina. But there are bragging rights.

Davis said the players and fans know each other well. “A lot of these kids played against each other in high school, they know each other. Some of them played on the same teams with each other,” Davis said. “Anytime the fans are in such close proximity in the state of North Carolina, where there’s so many schools, it obviously adds added excitement and hype.”

Davis praised ECU as “extraordinarily explosive” and said that the players have quickly bought into the new coaches’ schemes and philosophy.

Davis pointed to the team speed and Dwayne Harris in particular. “East Carolina has an awful lot of speed on their football team. Probably none of it is more evident than Dwayne Harris. Dwayne, not knowing him as a young man, but just watching him over his career, he’s one of the real gifted athletes that we’ll play against in the last couple years.

“He can score on punt returns, kickoff returns. He’s an excellent receiver. He does a lot of stuff for their football team. He’s definitely somebody that’s playing extremely well.”

Saturday afternoon’s game in Chapel Hill will be broadcast online on ESPN3.com and locally on Time Warner Digital Cable.

Baddour sees light at the end of the tunnel

University Of North Carolina Athletic Director Dick Baddour addressed a capacity crowd and several media representatives at the Raleigh Sports Club (RSC) today. In his comments, Baddour stated he could “see the light at the end of the tunnel” and did not anticipate the NCAA investigation into the Tar Heel football program dragging out another “three to six months.”

Baddour stated that he never imagined it would drag out this long but it is the NCAA, which is in charge of the investigation and ultimately, determines the timeline and results of the investigation. The NCAA investigation includes looking into academic fraud and athlete-agent relationships.

Baddour indicated that the university had fallen short on academic compliance as it relates to the athletic department. He noted that the success of how the university handles the investigation will not be completely “understood for quite sometime.”

Baddour praised Chancellor Holden Thorp and head football Coach Butch Davis on how they have handled the NCAA investigation.

The two most common questions Baddour stated he gets are why the “secrecy” surrounding the investigations and why it is taking so long. He noted that the NCAA in the beginning has requested that university officials working with the NCAA be careful in what they share with those that do not need to know. He also referred to student privacy as a reason for being careful in what is released by the university.

“We are committed to do this the right way, to restore integrity,” Baddour said.

The Raleigh Sports Club can be found on the web at www.raleighsportsclub.org. Meetings are held at Highland United Methodist Church. The church is located on the corner of Ridge Rd. and Lake Boone Trail at 1901 Ridge Rd. Meetings are held on most Wednesdays from Noon until 1 p.m.; however, the southern buffet line opens at 11:30 a.m.

Duke head football coach David Cutcliffe is the next speaker at the Raleigh Sports Club on Wednesday, Oct. 6, followed by N.C. State basketball coach Sidney Lowe on Oct. 13.
– by Greg Pierce, correspondent

Beamer says N.C. State is fast and confident

At the weekly ACC football press conference, Virginia Tech coach Frank Beamer says that N.C. State’s players not only are fast but they play fast.

“They’re just fast,” he said. “They’re fast on defense; they’re fast on offense. (QB) Russell Wilson makes them go and they’re really an exceptional football team that’s playing with a lot of confidence and playing fast, and we’re going to have to have a great week to prepare for them.”

On defense, Beamer mentioned State’s senior linebacker Nate Irving. “He’s a great football player, and he’s like the rest of that crowd over there they’re flying around and playing good defense and getting after folks,” he said. “Not only is he a good player, I would bet he’s a great leader for them.”

Virginia Tech is 2-2 overall and 1-0 in the Coastal division of the conference after beating Boston College last weekend. Surprising N.C. State is 4-0 and 1-0 in the Atlantic division of the conference after beating Georgia Tech.