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Turnovers Dash UNC Hopes in 31-30 Meineke Bowl Loss to WVa

Hakeem Nicks did all he could for North Carolina (8-5, 4-4 ACC). 

He took three of T.J. Yates’ passes for touchdowns and totaled 217 yards in a performance that will likely increase the likelihood that Nicks departs for the greener pastures of the NFL.  He may, in fact, corral quite a bit of green as a potential 2nd-round WR pick.

A fourth-quarter fumble by Shaun Draughn on the Mountaineers’ 29-yard line and an interception carelessly tossed by Yates in the final possession were the final nails in the coffin, but the Tar Heels also failed to stop West Virginia’s passing game and 3rd-down offense.

West Virginia quarterback Pat White was an incredibly efficient 27 of 33 for 334 yards.  He also ran for 56 yards on 21 attempts, though UNC was much more effective at stopping his legs than they were his arm.  The Mountaineers continuously converted short third downs (12 of 19 overall), and yet the Heels still had more than enough opportunities to win the game.

Draughn’s fumble can mostly be excused.  He was wrapped up and almost down, with his legs bent awkwardly under him.  He held tight to the ball, but it was ripped away before any elbow, buttock, knee, arm, etc. could find the turf first.

Yates’ interception, on the other hand, was totally inexcusable.  He stared down his receiver, threw into heavy coverage, and was easily picked off.

This is the way the regular season went.  When North Carolina secured the football, they won, compiling a +8 turnover margin in their eight wins.  In the four games they lost, the Tar Heels had a far less impressive -4 turnover margin.

This team, and their leader Yates, will be presumably more mature and obviously more experienced when they take the field next fall.  Hopefully, there will be a lower incidence of unacceptable mistakes like Yates’ 4th-quarter interception. 

Though they will lose senior playmaker Brandon Tate and possibly Nicks (to the NFL), there are plenty of reasons for UNC to be hopeful for 2009, including another strong recruiting class on the way.

Butch Davis might want to duct tape a football to every single offensive player’s hands in the offseason.  The lesson is simple.  Give the ball to the other team and you are going to lose.

Excitement Builds for UNC – WVA Bowl Game

It’s been a while.

North Carolina (8-4, 4-4 ACC) has not won a bowl game since a 2001 victory over the Auburn Tigers in the Peach Bowl, and the last trip to the Meineke Car Care Bowl didn’t go so well.  In 2004, the Tar Heels were handled rather easily by Boston College, 37-24.

In 2008, fans in Chapel Hill have been cheering for the football team with an enthusiasm usually reserved for Roy Williams’ boys over in the Dean Dome. 

The end of the season was an obvious disappointment (key losses to Maryland on the road and N.C. State at home), but a bowl win will help put a lot of the late-season memories away for good.  It will also help reestablish UNC as a legitimate ACC contender in the years to come.

Although perennial powers Virginia Tech, Miami (FL), and Florida State are all expected to significantly improve in 2009, it appears that the Tar Heels are on pace to keep up with them.  They are young and, by all accounts, have a solid recruiting class coming in for next year.

Right now, however, the focus is on Charlotte and the West Virginia Mountaineers (8-4, 5-2 Big East).  Heels fans will be ready to talk about 2009 on Sunday, preferably with a bowl win in the rearview mirror.

West Virginia is also 0-1 in the Meineke Bowl, losing the inaugural matchup in 2002 to Virginia, 48-22.  The Mountaineers’ season is something of a mirror image of UNC’s, as they spent much of the year at or near the top of the Big East before collapsing at the end and handing the title to the Cincinnati Bearcats. 

Fans of both schools were hoping for an Orange Bowl matchup in Miami, but the late-season swoons have left this as a must-win for 2nd-year North Carolina coach Butch Davis and 1st-year West Virginia coach, Bill Stewart.

If North Carolina is able to pick up a win on Saturday, it will continue the momentum that Davis has built, greatly help recruiting (especially in-state and in nearby South Carolina, Tennessee and Georgia), and make it at least a little more likely that the school can potentially evolve into a consistent threat to win the ACC.

Davis resisted the advances of several universities (most notably Tennessee) who came calling after disappointing seasons of their own.  He has Tar Heel fans hoping that he is truly devoted to staying in Chapel Hill long enough to build and sustain a successful football program, so that UNC can one day shed the mantle of being solely a “basketball school.”

There is a unique opportunity with Tommy Bowden “resigning” from Clemson, Phillip Fulmer being fired from Tennessee, and several other major programs having down years in the south and southeast.  One Clemson recruit has already signed on with Davis since the Bowden resignation.

UNC needs to seize this opportunity and take the next small step on the long road back from the bottom tier of the ACC.

Prediction:  North Carolina 31, West Virginia 27

Bonus Prediction:  Butch Davis stays in North Carolina at least through the 2012 season, if not for the rest of his career.