Showing posts with label Coastal Division. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Coastal Division. Show all posts

Saturday, November 3, 2018

UNC Comeback Bid Falls Short, Tar Heels Eliminated From Bowl Contention

3:32 PM
CHAPEL HILL – The North Carolina Tar Heels were 1-6 going into Saturday's Homecoming game against Coastal division rival Georgia Tech. Rallying from eighteen points down in the third quarter to tie the game in the final quarter, turnovers and an inability to slow down the vaunted Yellow Jacket triple option offense ultimately proved too much for the Tar Heels as they fell 38-28 on a chilly afternoon at Kenan Stadium.

UNC Fell to Georgia Tech, 38-28, on Saturday

Things looked bright for the Tar Heels when the UNC defense took the field for the first time. Getting into the backfield, Malik Carney was able to strip the Georgia Tech ball carrier, pick up the ball and race twenty yards to the end zone, giving the Tar Heels an early 7-0 lead.

That good feeling wouldn't last long, though, as the Yellow Jacket offense went to work on the next drive, going seventy-five yards in five plays resulting in an eleven-yard Nathan Cottrell scoring run. This was the first of four rushing touchdowns on the day for Georgia Tech, who rumbled for 461 yards on the ground in the game.

Georgia Tech added two more scores in the second quarter, including a rare eighty-six-yard touchdown pass, to take a commanding 21-7 lead. Only a twenty-three-yard Freeman Jones field goal kept the Tar Heels offense from a scoreless first half.

The Yellow Jackets opened up the second half much like they played the first half. Starting on their own 25, the visitors marched seventy-five yards down the field in twelve plays and it looked bleak for the Tar Heels as Clinton Lynch dove towards the pylon, securing an eighteen-point lead.

North Carolina did not give up, though, and finally ground their groove offensively. Pinned deep after the kickoff, UNC moved quickly down the field and freshman Jace Ruder threw his first career touchdown pass to former Hough standout Carl Tucker to make it 28-17. The Tar Heel defense created the next opportunity for UNC, recovering a fumble and leading to another Jones field goal.

When the final quarter began, the visitors' lead had been cut to eight and they were facing a tough fourth down at midfield. Coach Paul Johnson rolled the dice and went for it, but the UNC defense stiffened up and stopped the Yellow Jackets for a loss. Five plays later, Antonio Williams hit pay dirt and after Anthony Ratliff-Williams reeled in the two-point conversion, it was knotted at 28.

When it looked like UNC was going to be able to take their first lead of the game, Georgia Tech's Tariq Carpenter picked off a pass near midfield, taking away the momentum the Tar Heels had built throughout their comeback. Nine plays and forty-one yards later, backup Yellow Jacket quarterback Tobias Oliver scored on a one-yard keeper. Another interception on the subsequent possession led to a short field goal which ultimately sealed the deal.


Next Week
UNC (1-7, 1-5) travels to Duke in an annual renewal of a longstanding Tobacco Road rivalry while Georgia Tech (5-4, 3-3) hosts Miami at Bobby Dodd Stadium.


Tuesday, November 3, 2015

Duke Seeking Rebound in Coastal Division Rivalry Clash

6:41 PM
Duke (6-2, 3-1 ACC) kicks off the final month of the regular season by travelling to face rival No. 21 North Carolina (7-1, 4-0 ACC) on Saturday, November 7. Kickoff at Kenan Memorial Stadium is set for 12 noon. ESPN2 will broadcast the game with Bob Wischusen (play-by-play), Brock Huard (analyst) & Shannon Spake (sideline).

The battle for the Victory Bell began in 1948 with North Carolina earning possession with a 20-0 win. Head cheerleaders from Duke (Loring Jones) and North Carolina (Norman Spear) decided on the idea, with Jones designing the model and Spear obtaining a bell from an old railroad train. Red Lewis, Duke’s business manager, agreed to find money in the budget to pay for the bell.

Saturday’s game will mark the 102nd on the gridiron between the two schools, with North Carolina holding a 59-38-4 series advantage. The series began in 1888 with a 16-0 Duke win. The Tar Heels won last year’s contest, 45-20, in Durham. Duke’s last win in Chapel Hill came in the form of a 27-25 decision in 2013.

The Blue Devils have won six straight and 12 of their last 13 road games dating back to the start of the 2013 season. Among ACC teams, Duke has the top ledger in that time span followed by Florida State (10-1), Clemson (9-4), Virginia Tech (9-5), Pittsburgh (8- 6), Georgia Tech (7-7), Boston College (6-6), North Carolina (6-7), N.C. State (6-7), Miami (6-8), Syracuse (4-9), Wake Forest (3-13) & Virginia (0-12).

Over their last 18 ACC regular season games, the Blue Devils are 14-4. Only Florida State (17-1) and Clemson (15-3) have better ledgers.

Dating back to the 2013 season, the Blue Devils are 23-5 in their last 28 regular season games. The only schools with equal or more wins during that stretch are Florida State (27), Ohio State (27), Baylor (26), Michigan State (26), Alabama (25), Clemson (23) and Wisconsin (23).

Duke has won two straight road games as an unranked team against a ranked opponent with wins over No. 16 Virginia Tech (2013) and No. 22 Georgia Tech (2014).

Duke is 27-135-6 all-time against nationally-ranked foes (AP poll). The Blue Devils’ last win against a ranked opponent came on September 26, 2015, with a 34-20 win at home over No. 20 Georgia Tech.

Duke’s Thomas Sirk is one of five QBs among the Power 5 schools to lead his team in both rushing and passing yardage this season, joining Lamar Jackson of Louisville, Dak Prescott of Mississippi State, Seth Collins of Oregon State and Jerrod Heard of Texas. The last Duke player to lead the Blue Devils in both rushing and passing yards was QB Mike Dunn in 1976.

Duke S Jeremy Cash reached the 300-tackle plateau for his career last week against Miami. In 35 career games with the Blue Devils, Cash has registered 302 stops, becoming the 16th player in school history to achieve the standard.

Tar Heels Looking for Repeat in Victory Bell Rivalry

6:34 PM
Ranked No. 21 in both the Associated Press and Coaches Top 25 polls, ACC Coastal Division leader North Carolina faces Duke on Saturday, Nov. 7, at noon. It is homecoming for the Tar Heels, who are 5-0 at Kenan Stadium this season. The winner of the game will be awarded the Victory Bell.

Carolina has won seven in a row and is 7-1 overall and 4-0 in league play for the first time since 1997. Duke is 6-2 with the only losses coming to Northwestern and last week to Miami.

Carolina snapped a two-game losing streak to Duke last season with a 45-20 victory in Durham on Thursday night. The Tar Heels have won 22 of the last 25 meetings.

In its most recent action last Thursday night, Carolina jumped out to a 20-3 halftime lead behind the efficient play of Marquise Williams and the powerful running of Elijah Hood. Williams connected with Ryan Switzer on a 71-yard pass play and Hood grinded out 98 yards rushing against a stout Pitt defense. Place-kicker Nick Weiler had his best game with four field goals and registered 14 points on the evening.

QUICK HITS
  • Marquise Williams is just the fifth quarterback in ACC history with 2,000 career rushing yards. Williams ranks 13th in UNC history with 2,038 yards.
  • Williams has been responsible for 78 career touchdowns, which is one shy of the school record of 79 held by Darian Durant (2001-04) and ranks 10th in ACC history. Williams has rushed for 27 scores (UNC record for QB), passed for 48 and has three receiving TDs.
  • Carolina is the only school in the country that has not allowed a conventional punt return this season. A blocked punt at Pitt is the only statistical punt return allowed by the Tar Heels.
  • Carolina has allowed just 61 points in the second half in eight games – 7.6 points per game. (South Carolina – 7 points; North Carolina A&T – 14; Illinois – 7; Delaware – 7; Georgia Tech – 10; Wake Forest – 0; Virginia – 0; Pittsburgh – 16)
  • Senior wide receiver Quinshad Davis is the all-time leader at UNC in receptions (183) and touchdowns (22). He currently ranks fourth at UNC in career receiving yards and is 120 shy of moving into second place.
  • Ten current Tar Heels have made 20-or-more career starts. Quinshad Davis leads the way with 41, followed by OG Landon Turner (36), OT Jon Heck (32), LB Jeff Schoettmer (32) and OG Caleb Peterson (31).
  • North Carolina is 10 for 10 in non-quarterback passes under Larry Fedora. WR Quinshad Davis has completed all four pass attempts of his career for touchdowns. He is 4 of 4 for 121 yards and four touchdowns for a passer rating of 684.1. WR Ryan Switzer has completed all three of his attempts for two touchdowns.
  • Carolina ranks third in the country in passing yards allowed, 13th in pass efficiency defense and 16th in scoring defense. UNC is allowing just 152.9 passing yards per game and 17.0 points per game.
  • Carolina is 21st in the nation in scoring offense and is one of just 10 teams in the country averaging more than 200 yards per game rushing (210.3) and 250 passing (259.8).
  • Carolina has punted just 22 times this year. Only Georgia Southern (21), Navy (20) and Baylor (17) have fewer punts.
  • Preseason first-team All-America guard Landon Turner will make his 37th career start Saturday against Duke. Turner has graded out at 90 percent or higher in six of eight games this season.


Wednesday, October 28, 2015

Duke Hosts Miami in ACC Coastal Division Action

7:56 PM
No. 22 Duke (6-1, 3-0 ACC) returns home following two straight road trips to host Coastal Division foe Miami (4-3, 1-2 ACC) on Saturday, October 31 at 7 p.m. at Brooks Field at Wallace Wade Stadium ... ESPNU will broadcast the game with Allen Bestwick (play-byplay) & Dan Hawkins (analyst).

This week’s game will mark the 13th meeting between Duke and Miami, with the Hurricanes holding a 10-2 series advantage ... The series began in 1976 with a 20-7 Blue Devil win ... In 2013, Duke posted a 48-30 victory in Durham to snap a nine-game skid against the Hurricanes.

Duke holds an all-time record of 91- 37-5 as a nationally-ranked squad ... The Blue Devils are 7-6 all-time when playing on Halloween ... Duke will celebrate Family Weekend and Iron Dukes Day against Miami ... Time Warner Cable is the official game sponsor of Saturday’s Duke-Miami contest.

Duke has limited its opponent to 25 or fewer points in 22 of its last 26 regular season games.

Over their last 17 ACC regular season games, the Blue Devils are 14-3 ... Only Florida State (16-1) and Clemson (14-3) have equal or better ledgers.

Blue Devils by the Numbers

5 — Career kickoff returns for TDs for S DeVon Edwards including a 95- yard scoring effort at Tulane and 100- yard dash against Georgia Tech ... The only active player nationally with more KORs for TDs is Autrey Golden of UTEP (6) ... In addition, Edwards’ 28.89 career kickoff return average ranks second nationally among active players trailing only Rashaad Penny of San Diego State (29.33)

5-0 — Duke’s record when S DeVon Edwards returns a kickoff for a TD ... The five victories have come against N.C. State (2013), North Carolina (2013), Pittsburgh (2014), Tulane (2015) & Georgia Tech (2015)

37.38 — Kickoff return average this year for S DeVon Edwards, a mark that would rank second nationally if the minimum qualification of 1.2 returns per game was met ... Edwards has just eight returns in seven games

14.0 — ACC-leading total of tackles for loss for S Jeremy Cash ... Cash’s per game average of 2.00 TFL ranks second nationally behind Carl Nassib of Penn State (2.19) ... Cash is the only DB among the nation’s top 75 in TFL per game

34-8 — Duke’s record under David Cutcliffe when leading at halftime 378 — Career points for K Ross Martin ... Martin currently sits in fourth place on the ACC’s career scoring chart, 15 points away from moving into a tie for third place with former Maryland standout Nick Novack

10-14 — Rushing TDs & passing TDs for QB Thomas Sirk in his career ... The only other Duke QBs to register double figures in both columns are Anthony Boone (16-38), Mike Dunn (22-11) & Leo Hart (13-23)

0.57 — Sacks per game allowed by the Duke offensive line, an average that leads the ACC

6 — Blue Devils with multiple rushing TDs this season, marking the highest total in the ACC ... Among the Power 5 schools, only Michigan and Ole Miss match Duke’s total ... QB Parker Boehme and RB Shaquille Powell lead the way with three rushing TDs apiece followed by RB Zach Boden, RB Jela Duncan, QB Thomas Sirk and RB Shaun Wilson with two each

4 — Career TD runs of 45+ yards for RB Shaun Wilson


3 — Seasons with 3+ TD receptions for WR Max McCaffrey, who is one of 11 players in Duke history to accomplish the feat ... In 47 career games at Duke, the Castle Rock, Colo., native has 90 catches for 1,058 yards and nine TDs