CHARLOTTE – Bill Belichick walked into ACC Kickoff with the same steady tone he has carried for decades. No theatrics. No slogans. No promises. Just a clear message that North Carolina is finally ahead of schedule instead of scrambling to catch up. Last year was a reset. This year is a build. “We are so far ahead of where we were last season,” Belichick said. “Our players are stronger, faster, and better fundamentally. Now we need to stack good days together.”
UNC went through a full roster overhaul in 2025. The Tar Heels played with quarterbacks who had not taken a single spring snap. They installed a new system with a new staff and a new head coach who was learning the college landscape in real time. The result was a four win season that tested everyone involved. Belichick did not hide from any of it. He said the biggest adjustment was learning the college ecosystem. Compliance. Scheduling. Recruiting windows. Building relationships across the university. It was a year of learning, and the Tar Heels paid for it on the field.
Now the foundation is in place. UNC returns a core of leaders in Melkart Abou Jaoude, Christo Kelly, and Jordan Shipp. The quarterback room is intact. The offense has merged Belichick’s NFL principles with Bobby Petrino’s college experience. The defense has continuity and a clearer identity. And the roster includes more than sixty new players, many of whom arrived in a combined freshman class after UNC skipped a traditional group in 2025.
Stability Under Center
UNC’s quarterback situation last year was chaotic. Gio Lopez was not on campus in the spring. Max Johnson was unavailable. The Tar Heels entered fall camp without a single quarterback who had run the offense in a live practice. This year will be different for the Tar Heels, though. “Our quarterbacks after spring ball are still here,” Belichick said. “They are out in player run practices. They can call the plays. They know what everyone is supposed to do.”
Jordan Shipp, the face of the program and the player teammates call Mr. Carolina, said he feels comfortable with every quarterback in the room. He praised each Tar Heels quarterback for their different strengths and said the competition has made him better. “It does not matter who is throwing the ball,” Shipp said. “The stat sheet does not say why you dropped it. It just says you dropped it. So do not drop the ball.” Shipp’s confidence is a reflection of the stability UNC did not have last season.
A Tougher Defense Emerges
Melkart Abou Jaoude arrived at Delaware as a walk-on. He worked at a bagel shop during his senior year of high school. He carries that chip with him every day, and Belichick loves it. “He has great leadership and plays with consistency,” Belichick said. Abou Jaoude is the leading returning sack producer in the ACC. He said the key to taking another step is simple: consistency and trust in his teammates.
Christo Kelly brings a different kind of leadership. He was selected to the AFCA Good Works Team for his community service and has become one of the most respected voices in the locker room. He spoke openly about adversity, faith, and the responsibility of being a veteran. “There is no magic pill for success,” Kelly said. “Everything is done through hard work. You have to earn the respect of your teammates.”Belichick echoed that message. He said UNC is building a culture of tough, smart, dependable players who understand their roles and improve every day.
Moving Past Last Season
Jordan Shipp did not hide from the frustration of last season. He said the team felt like everyone wanted to see Belichick fail. He said the noise was loud and often ridiculous, including stories that claimed Belichick missed practice when he was standing right next to the players.
Instead of dividing the team, the criticism pulled them together. “It seemed like everybody was against us,” Shipp said. “But that helped us rally with each other. I bleed blue. I was not going anywhere.” Belichick praised Shipp’s leadership and said the returning players have set the tone for the newcomers. “We have a much better base to build off of,” Belichick said. “Now we need to keep improving.”
Schedule Breakdown
UNC’s 2026 schedule is balanced but demanding. It starts with a showcase game overseas and ends with a rivalry stretch that will define the season.
- Aug. 29 vs TCU in Dublin
- Sep. 12 vs East Tennessee State
- Sep. 19 at Clemson
The opener in Ireland is a unique opportunity and a challenge. TCU is physical and experienced. East Tennessee State is a chance to settle in at home. Clemson on the road is one of the toughest environments in the ACC.
The middle of the season is a stretch that will reveal who UNC is.
- Oct. 3 vs Notre Dame
- Oct. 10 at Pitt
- Oct. 17 at Duke
- Oct. 24 vs Syracuse
- Oct. 31 vs Miami
Notre Dame in Chapel Hill is a marquee game. Pitt and Duke on the road will test UNC’s toughness. Syracuse and Miami at home are swing games that will determine whether the Tar Heels enter November with momentum.
Finish: rivalry and reality
- Nov. 7 at UConn
- Nov. 14 vs Louisville
- Nov. 21 at Virginia
- Nov. 28 vs NC State
UConn is a long trip at an awkward point in the schedule. Louisville is a contender in the conference this year. Virginia reached the ACC title game last season and will not be overlooked. NC State in Chapel Hill is the rivalry game that always carries weight.
Photos Courtesy of ACC Digital Services



