UNC 19, Duke 6
Give it up for the defense.
This was shaping up to be just like one of the many low-scoring affairs of the Butch Davis era, where UNC could manage the occasional drive but never get more than field goals from them, and the opposing team hung in there just long enough to get a late score to seal it. Admit it, you were waiting for Cutcliffe to find some hole in the defense, for there to be a momentary lapse to cost the Heels the game. It was Maryland or Virginia last year, all over again.
But the lapse never came, and the hole never revealed itself. Instead, the defense held them to 43 yards in the second half (just slightly more than the 35 UNC gave the Blue Devils in penalties) and never let the Duke offense across the fifty. And the only time Duke did sniff the end zone, on a series that began with an interception on the Heels' 37, the defense snatched the ball right back in three plays with an interception of their own. The Blue Devils never had the opportunity to get a series going until late in the fourth, by which time Carolina had already put the game away.
And they did so primarily on the back of Ryan Houston, who with Draughn out with an injury on his first play had the most carries for his career, and did the most with them, grinding out 164 yards in 37 attempts, including carries on 10 of the 12 plays of UNC's only touchdown drive to go up 10 in the fourth. T.J. Yates added 119 yard through the air, surpssing 5,000 for his career and moving to second on UNC's career passing totals. Which, by the way, says something about how late the Heels came around to the idea of the forward pass. But this was the defense's day, with Deunta Williams and Charles Brown both grabbing interceptions and most of the team contributing to UNC's eight tackles for losses and three sacks; they pushed the Blue Devils back a full length of the football field over the course of the game.
The Coastal Division is rapidly coalescing into two levels of performance, with Georgia Tech, Virginia Tech, and Miami at one tier, and Virginia and Duke on the other. UNC remains in the middle, with a poor loss to UVa and a stellar win over Virginia Tech sending mixed messages. How they manage next week's final home game, against a Hurricane team that just handed the Cavaliers their worst loss in over a year, with bowl eligibility on the line. It's an interesting week ahead.
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ACC Tiers
I think that we’ve proved the UVA loss was on the shoulders of Shoop and our boys lack of urgency. I see it as a scenario where Shoop thought he could get by with what he had until retooling the offense in the bye week. We got exposed, caught with our pants down and were unable to adjust. If you’ll notice, since that game, our production has improved, our play calling is a lot more inventive and we’ve had a lot more success running the football.
As for the league’s tiers I think that you’re spot on although I still believe Miami is the cream of the crop in terms of ability and A game vs A game with every team in the league. VT and GT are about as even as you’ll find and then we pull in right behind them. Who would have thought that the GT-Duke game would be for the keys to the coastal division?
If I’m Paul Johnson I’m lobbying for the ACC Title game to be played on a Thursday night and for the BCS bowl game to be held that next monday. The longer teams have the worse his guys look. Meeting Clemson in Tampa is going to be trouble for them, the Tigers shut them down in Atlanta already.
ItsFELDER
How I'd Rank The ACC
Here’s how I’d rank the league as a whole, right now, not caring about head to head, just based upon what I see on the field week in and week out:
Miami, Clemson, VT, GT, UNC, FSU, BC, Wake, Duke, UVA, NC State, Maryland
I know UVA, Maryland, Clemson, UNC, FSU have all beat teams that are ahead of them, but as I’ve said head to head is so difficult once the conference race is in the latter stages. UNC beats VT, loses to UVA they’re somewhere between the two extremes. Same for Clemson who beats Da U, loses to MD or VT who beats Da U and loses to UNC.
ItsFELDER
by MichaelFelder on Nov 8, 2009 5:15 PM EST up reply actions
I have more respect for Georgia Tech than you, but agree it will be interesting to see what happens when a team faces them twice. FSU is more of a DUke-level team without Ponder, and UNC and Boston College are still the big mysteries for me. They have the largest range of possible outcomes, depending on how the next couple of weeks turn out.
GT Respect
GT hasn’t done anything to warrant respect in my opinion. I think that they caught VT on an awful offensive day and play Clemson early. If that Clemson game is where it normally is placed, october, the Tigers win. Remember this fact; take away GT’s illegal fake field goal and the pooch punt that didn’t get out of bounds and the Tigers win by two scores.
Just how I see it; living on gimmickry no life at all and trickeration is a fickle mistress.
ItsFELDER
by MichaelFelder on Nov 11, 2009 9:31 AM EST via mobile up reply actions

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