Week 11 (UNC @ NCSU)

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Pack Gears Up For UNC

http://www.gopack.com/ViewArticle.dbml?SPSID=41956&SPID=3730&DB_OEM_ID=9200&ATCLID=1304821

BY TONY HAYNES



RALEIGH, N.C. ? NC State quarterback Daniel Evans would really love to knock off North Carolina this Saturday afternoon, but not necessarily because the Wolfpack has dropped three straight games to its rivals from Chapel Hill.



As the son of a former Wolfpack quarterback and punter, Evans was wearing NC State red long before he received a scholarship to play football for the Pack three years ago. And the NC State ? North Carolina rivalry was very much in his blood many years before he made his first start against the Tar Heels last year in Chapel Hill. As a result, he's still trying to settle some scores that date back to his childhood.



?I remember in elementary school we?d have ACC day and you?d wear your favorite team?s colors or sweatshirts,? Evans said. ?Most of the time it would happen during the basketball tournament, but we?d have it during the fall too. Kids get ruthless. I can remember they would tear you apart if you were going for State and State lost. I can remember being excited when State would win and I would go in and talk some smack with some kids too. When I was little I didn?t know better.?



This Saturday when the Wolfpack (4-5, 2-3) and Tar Heels (3-6, 2-3) face off for the 97th time at Carter-Finley Stadium, Evans hopes his right arm will do most of the talking. The son of former Wolfpack All-American Johnny Evans is probably glad he didn?t have to show up for ACC day at his old elementary school the last three years since Carolina has owned the bragging rights in the rivalry going back to that controversial ending in 2004 when Pack running back T.A. McLendon?s apparent game-winning touchdown was taken off the Kenan Stadium scoreboard.



While first-year NC State coach Tom O?Brien may be new to this rivalry, he?s already keenly aware of the series history and the overall impact it has on the two schools and their followers.



?I know we?ve only won three of the last 14 games,? O?Brien said. ?Since 1993, there?s only three victories. When you look at the overall record we?re down 35, so we?ve got a lot of ground to make up.?



Obviously, O?Brien and company would love to start chipping away at that substantial deficit starting with this week?s game. There?s every reason to believe that both teams will show up and play well.



Since dropping five of its first six games, NC State has caught fire, winning three in a row against pretty good competition. The biggest difference? The Wolfpack owned a plus-four in turnover margin in its victories over East Carolina, Virginia and Miami. During its 1-5 start, the Pack was minus-17.



After losing four times by seven points or less in its first seven games, North Carolina finally found a way to win a close one when it held off Maryland on Saturday, 16-13.



And what do North Carolina and NC State have in common this season? Both have beaten traditional college football powerhouse Miami. The Tar Heels jumped out to a big lead before holding on for a 33-27 victory over the Hurricanes at home back on October 6. Steve Hauschka?s 42-yard field goal in overtime lifted the Pack to a 19-16 triumph over the ?Canes this past weekend.



O?Brien was openly blunt when talking down his team during its stumbling start, implying that some of his players had an inflated opinion of themselves and their abilities. But that?s not to suggest he didn?t see some potential.



?The idea was for them to understand that it was going to take a little more hard work than they thought it would take, especially on the practice field? O?Brien said. ?They thought they could just show up and perform. That doesn?t happen against the teams in the leagues that we?re playing. You have to practice well, you have to prepare well and you have to do what you?re supposed to do. If you do that you?re going to have a chance to win football games. If you don?t you?re going to lose. I thought we could be a good football team and I said that during the ACC Kickoff. I didn?t anticipate some of the injuries that came and our reaction to them.?



A flood of injuries did take away some of NC State?s best players on both sides of the ball during the first half. Some have returned, while others haven?t. At Miami, strong safety Javon Walker sustained a knee sprain, an injury that will keep him out of action this week.



With Walker sidelined against the Hurricanes, O?Brien went back to his pre-bye week starting safety combo of Miguel Scott at free safety and DaJaun Morgan at strong safety. But because Morgan had played so well at the free safety spot after Walker was inserted into the line-up for the East Carolina game, he?ll be back there this week with inexperienced redshirt junior Robbie Leonard taking over for Walker at strong safety.



Walker?s emergence had certainly given the NC State defense a boost the last three weeks.



?That?s a tough loss for us,? said O?Brien. ?After we came out of the break we played three games and were in a pretty good rhythm. It?s a tough break for Javon, but it?s an opportunity for Robbie to step in and play. We?re confident that he?ll play well and get the job done for us.?



A strong contributor to NC State?s kick off and punt coverage teams, Leonard has gotten very few meaningful snaps on defense during his career.



This week, he makes his first start in what certainly will be a meaningful game for a lot of people, just as Daniel Evans did a year ago when he got his first real taste of what a North Carolina ? NC State game is all about.



?We lost but I still had a great time out there,? said Evans, who was 22-of-41 passing for 261 yards and three interceptions in last year?s 23-9 defeat in Chapel Hill. ?It was one of the things that you always grow up and think about, probably more so than the other games you think about. It?s the one that you circle when you first get the schedule at the beginning of the season. I can remember thinking this is as good as it gets. The entire week is a different type of week with the way guys talk giving speeches at the hotel the night before the game and the way students approach you on campus. Everything is a little bit different.?



It will indeed be a different week, just the way it was back in those days when Evans was fending off Carolina fans in elementary school.



Toys For Tots: Fans attending Saturday?s game at Carter-Finley Stadium will have a chance to contribute to the U.S. Marines Toys for Tots campaign. New toys for toddlers ages 2-4 and pre-teens ages 10-12 are needed most. Cash donations will also be accepted. Donations can be made in the Fan Zone on the front lawn of the RBC Center.



?There are millions of kids out there that the Marines help for Toys for Tots,? said O?Brien, a former Marine officer and a member of the national board for Toys for Tots. ?It would be great for the Wolfpack nation and even our fans that come to the game from Chapel Hill to contribute.?



ACC Honors Hauschka: After booting a career-high four field goals including the dramatic game winner at Miami, Hauschka was named the ACC?s Specialist of the Week on Monday. Hauschka had converted on his first 10 field goal attempts this season until finally missing in the second quarter at the Orange Bowl. Overall, he?s 14-of-15 in 2007.



Four p.m. Kick for Wake Game: NC State?s game at Wake Forest on Saturday, November 17 will begin at 4:00 p.m. Television coverage will be provided by ESPNU.
 

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http://www.newsobserver.com/734/story/763460.html

Ground game crucial in UNC-State series

A.J. Carr, Staff Writer
For running backs at N.C. State and North Carolina, the yards have been hard to come by this season. Still, keep an eye on the ball carriers Saturday at Carter-Finley Stadium.

In this rivalry, the team that runs the best usually fares the best.

In the past 15 meetings, the team with the most yardage on the ground has won 14 times. UNC broke the cycle in 2004 when it captured a 30-24 decision despite being outrushed 304-164.

"That's an interesting statistic, and revealing,'' Tar Heels coach Butch Davis said. "I think running the football is critically important in every ballgame. For us to become the football team we want to become, we've got to become a more dominant run team. That doesn't mean we're not going to try to throw for 300 yards. But running the football, I think, it's an identity -- it talks about the toughness of your team."

Statistically, Carolina has been a little tougher running than State, though not with trample-'em-in-the-turf style.

Both teams rank among the lowest in the ACC in rushing, but are in the upper half passing (State fourth, UNC fifth).

The Tar Heels average 102.8 yards on the ground, 10th in the ACC. State is 11th at 93 yards per outing.

Season-ending injuries to tight end Anthony Hill and running backs Toney Baker and Andre Brown, plus personnel shuffling in the offensive line, threw the Pack's ground attack for a big loss this year.

No. 3 tailback Jamelle Eugene stepped in and has averaged 4.0 yards per carry, but the Pack has been more reliant on the passing of junior Daniel Evans, who has thrown for 889 yards in State's three-game winning streak.

Complicating it all are crafty, wrecking defensive schemes.

State coach Tom O'Brien still insists it's possible to establish a successful running attack "as long as you have the right pieces to the puzzle."

At Carolina, freshman T.J. Yates (62.4 completion percentage) and receiver Hakeem Nicks have highlighted the Tar Heels' offense. Yet it wouldn't be surprising to see young backs Johnny White (4.5 yards pre carry) and Anthony Elzy (3.7 ypc) attack the Pack with extra aggression Saturday.

Both ran effectively in UNC's 16-13 win over Maryland, with White gaining 92 yards on 18 carries and Elzy getting 37 on eight cracks. Meanwhile, Miami, often lining up with two tight ends, rushed for 314 yards against State.

"We've gotten better as the season has gone on," said UNC running backs coach Ken Browning. "Part of it is the maturity of the [young] team. You have to be mature and physically tough to be good at running the ball."

Even then, it can be an arduous grind. Virginia Tech quarterbacks coach and former NCSU head coach Mike O'Cain says it's harder to ground out the yardage than it was a few years ago because defenses are blitzing more to stop the rush as well as the pass.

Steed Lobotzke, Wake Forest's offensive coordinator, said that talent on defensive units in the ACC also appears to be the best he has seen since arriving in the league in 2001.

Like O'Cain, Lobotzke credits defensive coaches for making it tougher and cited Georgia Tech coordinator Jon Tenuta, whose zone-blitz package has blown up lots of offensive plays.

"It's tougher than ever to run," Lobotzke said. "Our numbers [also] are down because of the lack of the option. A running quarterback can pad the [stats] and creates better opportunities for your tailback.''

Even so, Wake has run effectively throughout Jim Grobe's seven-year tenure, prudently blending deception, power and passing. The Deacons currently rank fourth in the ACC in rushing and sport the league's No. 3 ground gainer in Josh Adams (81.4 ypg).

But the conference has just one 100-yard runner, Georgia Tech's Tashard Choice (108 ypg).

NCSU offensive coordinator Dana Bible believes running the ball might have taken a different form in the past several years.

He pointed to the shotgun formation and how some teams feature the quarterback as if he were a tailback. Check Florida's Tim Tebow, a prolific passer who also has run for 598 yards.

"Defenses have always been aggressive," Bible said. "The toughest thing is the caliber of players you face week-in and week-out. Therein lies the major challenge."

This week, from a historical perspective, the big challenge for State and Carolina might be to outrush the other team.

Staff writer Robbi Pickeral contributed to this story.
 

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http://www.statefansnation.com/index.php/archives/2007/11/06/rivalry-week-an-opponents-perspective/

Earlier, this year, I asked a friend of mine to write a guest post outlining his perspective of the State/Carolina rivalry. Some background - he is an avid ACC historian and trivia king (rivals our own noah on those fronts), a ?friend of the blog,? and the only ?football first? UNC fan that I have ever met. He actually attended the thrashing in Death Valley last year - I shit you not. We eagerly await the likely return of BLS in the comments. Without further ado, here are the words of ACC Guru:

I?ve been asked to give the Carolina (or should I say ?UNC-CH?) perspective of the State-Carolina rivalry, and have struggled with the best way to organize my discussion. First, I decided to limit my analysis to the last 20-25 years, mainly because I wasn?t old enough to follow college football until the mid-80s. Once I decided on that timeframe, I quickly realized that, for most Carolina fans, and probably for even more State fans, this rivalry over the last 21 years has pretty much been defined by the man working the home sideline at Carter-Finley Stadium. So, here?s one Carolina fans? take on this great rivalry during the Sheridan, O?Cain, and Amato years.

The Sheridan Years (1986-1992)

Results: NC State 6, UNC 1

Best game:1986. State wins 35-34 in Kenan by stopping a UNC 2-point try in the closing seconds. Ironically, had the Heels kicked the PAT, and assuming the rest of that season plays out the same, UNC would have tied Clemson for the ACC title.
Best memory: 1987. An easy choice - the Heels? only win over Sheridan.
Worst memory: 1992. After back-to-back winning seasons under Mack Brown, UNC fans finally thought we had caught up to the Pack, and so this 27-20 home loss was really tough to take. (Honorable mention for the 1990 loss. That game was not televised and I was stuck listening on the radio, and was just left in stunned silence when Woody Durham described Damon Hartman?s 56-yard game winning field goal crossing over the goal post.)
My take: It was tough being a Carolina football fan during Mack?s early years, particularly with respect to this rivalry. State had really solid teams and the Heels were terrible, resulting in two awful shellackings in 1988 and 1989. Plus, Sheridan was such a good game coach that, despite Mack Brown?s upgrade of the UNC talent, the Heels could not quite break through in the early 90s, though it wouldn?t be long (see The O?Cain Years) before the Heels got back on track against the Pack.

The O?Cain Years (1993-1999)

Results: UNC 7, NC State 0

Best game: 1998. Heels win OT thriller in Charlotte, despite a great performance by one of the finest receivers in ACC history, Torry Holt. Best memory: 1993. UNC ends the 5-year losing streak by outscoring State 25-0 in the second half for a 35-14 win in Carter-Finley.
Worst memory: 1995. OK, it was still a win, but it wasn?t that much fun seeing a 5-5 UNC team need a missed pass interference call on a 2-point play to sneak into the Carquest bowl with a 30-28 escape over a bad State team.
My take: Ah, these were the glory years for the Heels. However, I get the sense that most Heel fans got a little spoiled with the success of the mid-90s, and so the 1998 and 1999 wins were probably more special than some of the others during this stretch because they helped erase some of the sting of watching a Top-5 team quickly unwind into the abyss of the post-Mack Brown era.

The Amato Years (2000-2006)

Results: UNC 4, NC State 3

Best game: 2001. The only time during the Amato years that both UNC and State would go to a bowl. The Heels defense, led by future NFL stars Julius Peppers and David Thornton, was just a little better than Philip Rivers? offense in a 17-9 UNC win.
Best memory: 2004. Realizing my audience, I won?t add any detail here.
Worst memory: 2002. UNC leads 17-7 early in the second half only to see the Pack roar back for a convincing 34-17 win. This game was early enough in the season that UNC fans believed that the Heels, at 2-3, could still have a good season. However, by the time this game entered the 4th quarter, it became very obvious that State was on its way to a banner year while the Heels were on their way to a horrible 3-9 campaign.
My take: The 2002 and 2003 seasons were very depressing ones for UNC football fans. It was bad enough that our Heels were 5-19 over that stretch, including a home loss to Duke in which a future NFL Pro-Bowl running back couldn?t even earn one carry from our brilliant coaching staff. What made it worse was State?s success over that same time, especially with the media?s seemingly incessant hype of the ?Golden Boy? Rivers. Thankfully, Philip graduated, and since then the rivalry has taken a more pleasant turn.

Looking Ahead

For the first time since 1992, State and Carolina both have quality head football coaches. Here?s hoping that the games between TOB?s Pack and Butch?s Heels will be as entertaining as some of those early 90s contests, but hopefully with different outcome. If a Middlebury kicker boots a 56-yard field goal to beat the Heels on Saturday, I may just have to give up football all together.
 
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Pool Plays this week:

Pool Plays this week:

Navy -14.5
UConn +6.5
Mizzu -18.5
UCF -20 (Best bet)

lot of big chalk plays last 2 weeks....but have been hitting 3 out of 4 last few weeks..hope that continues...will be back later with Pack play(s)
 

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http://www.gopack.com/ViewArticle.dbml?DB_OEM_ID=9200&ATCLID=1306468

NORTH CAROLINA (3-6, 2-3) at NC STATE (4-5, 2-3)



DATE: Saturday, November 18, 2006



TIME: Kickoff: 12:00 p.m. (EST) at Carter-Finley Stadium, Raleigh, NC (57,500)



RADIO: Wolfpack Sports Network. Airtime: 11:00 a.m. (EST)



TELEVISION: Raycom/Lincoln Financial Sports (ACC Network)



OPPONENT?Maryland, depleted by injuries and fighting to keep bowl hopes alive, trailed North Carolina by 13 points in the third quarter Saturday night at Kenan Stadium. The Terps reached back and found something extra, but it wasn?t quite enough, and the Tar Heels escaped with a 16-13 win.

Maryland scored 10 straight points, driving to UNC?s 41 in the game?s final minute with a chance to set up a game-tying field goal attempt. But on fourth-and-2, quarterback Chris Turner was pressured by defensive tackle Kentwan Balmer and threw high toward the sideline, ending the drive with 36 seconds remaining.

It was Maryland?s third straight loss, dropping the Terps to 4-5 overall and 1-4 in the ACC. North Carolina snapped a two-game losing streak.

The contest was anything but artistic with Carolina flagged for 11 penalties and Maryland nine. The Terps? mistakes and inability to sustain drives, especially in the first half, proved too much to overcome.

Give credit to the UNC defense, too. ?This is maybe the best defensive performance we?ve had, from a standpoint of a lot of guys on defense really contributed,? said Tar Heels coach Butch Davis.

Connor Barth kicked three field goals for Carolina. His 45-yarder gave UNC a 6-3 lead with 1:01 to play in the second quarter.

After the ensuing kickoff, Turner was intercepted by strong safety Trimane Goddard on Maryland?s first play from scrimmage. Carolina quarterback T.J. Yates took advantage, completing a 20-yard pass to Hakeem Nicks that led to a 45-yard field goal for Barth.

Yates 30-yard touchdown pass to Nicks put UNC up 16-3 in the third. Maryland responded with Keon Lattimore?s 5-yard TD run and a 29-yard field goal by Obi Egekeze to cut the deficit to 16-13 in the fourth, but could get no closer.

Yates was 16-of-26 passing for 149 yards and 2 interceptions. Turner finished with 209 yards through the air on 20-of-36 with one pick. Both teams lost a fumble.

Maryland outgained Carolina 302 to 259, but the Heels defense held the Terps to only 93 yards rushing. UNC ran for 110 yards, including a career-high 92 by freshman tailback Johnny White.

An improving defense and better rushing attack have made a difference lately for North Carolina.

Most of the improvement?especially on defense-- has come since the fifth game of the season After the first four games, the Tar Heels were allowing 375 yards a game. In the last five games, they?ve knocked that average down to 334 yards?good enough for a No. 28 national ranking.

The last three games are even better. UNC opponents are averaging only 284 yards during that stretch, including just 114 yards a game on the ground.

Carolina?s defensive line is anchored by two seniors who are second-year starters. Balmer (6-5, 295) is a pro prospect who is No.2 on the team in stops (47), including 6.5 tackles for loss. Hilee Taylor (6-3, 245), an outstanding pass rusher, is among the ACC leaders in sacks (8) and tackles for loss (12.5). He has also forced a team-high 3 fumbles.

The linebackers are led by third-year starter Durell Mapp (6-2, 225). The senior from Burlington ranks second in the ACC in tackles (9.9) and has posted four games with 10 or more stops this season. That?s not bad for a guy who started his career as a walk-on.

Freshmen anchor the other two starting linebacker positions. The most notable of that pair is Quan Sturdivant (6-2, 230). Since he was inserted into the starting lineup at Virginia Tech, Sturdivant has made big plays. He had 8 stops, including a sack against the Hokies, recovered a fumble against South Carolina and blocked a punt and picked off a pass in the Miami game.

Carolina?s defense has recorded 15 take-a-ways this season, including 9 interceptions (topping its total of seven from a year ago). Free safety Deunta Williams (6-2, 195), a redshirt freshman, leads Carolina with 3 picks.

Except for Goddard (5-11, 195, Jr.), all the top players in the Heels? secondary are first-year starters. Goddard, a second-year starter, is one of Carolina top-three tacklers (47) and leads the team in pass break-ups (4). He?s the ACC Defensive Back of the Week after recording 10 stops, a pass breakup and an interception against Maryland.

The cornerbacks, Charles Brown (5-10, 190) and Kendric Burney are both freshmen who also like to hit people. The pair has combined for 74 stops this season.

Overall, a total of 28 freshmen (true or redshirt) have played for UNC this year, making the Tar Heels one of the youngest team in the nation.

Offensively, North Carolina?s rushing attack continues to evolve. In the last five games, UNC has averaged 121 yards rushing. That significant improvement from the first four games when the Heels earned only 80 yards a game on the ground.

White (5-10, 210) and Anthony Elzy (5-10, 210) have accounted for most of Carolina?s rushing yards. The two redshirt freshmen are joined by true freshman Ryan Houston (6-2, 250) as the only UNC runningbacks with at least 100 total rushing yards.

The improved running game is welcomed by Yates who has carried a lot of the offensive load this season. Except for throwing more interceptions (14) than touchdown passes (12), the redshirt freshman has been pretty solid. He?s third in the ACC in passing yards (228 ypg.) and total offense (220).

Yates has completed 62 percent of his passes and is the seventh freshman in ACC history to pass for more than 2,000 yards in a season. But he had trouble against the Terps who frequently disguised their defensive schemes, especially up front.

Carolina has plenty of talented wide receivers capable of big plays. Yates? top-three targets are Nicks (6-1, 215, So.), Brandon Tate (6-1, 195, Jr.) and Brooks Foster (6-3, 205, Jr.). All have been involved in pass plays of 50-yards or more this season.

Nicks ranks third in the ACC in both receptions per game (6.2) and receiving yards per game (78.0). His 56 catches rank third in UNC single-season history. He?s scored 4 touchdowns. Foster is the Heel?s No. 2 receiver (23 catches, 2 touchdowns).

Tate leads the team at 19.3 yards per catch and has recorded 3 touchdowns. He?s also dangerous running the football with 100 net yards and a TD in only 9 attempts.

All the experience on the offensive line is on the right side. Redshirt senior center Scott Lenahan (6-1, 290), redshirt junior guard Calvin Darity (6-3, 300) and junior tackle Garrett Reynolds (6-7, 295) are all second-year starters.

Barth is one of the ACC?s top kickers. The Lou Groza Award semifinalist has made 13-of-14 field goal attempts this season and 24 of his last 25 overall. Junior college transfer, Terrence Brown, is ranked sixth in the league in punting with a 42.1 yard average.

Tate leads the ACC in all-purpose yards per game (150.7) and is in the top-10 in the league in both kickoff returns (24.0) and punt returns (9.8). He needs 125 yards to become the ACC?s all-time leader in career kick return yardage.

Carolina?s special teams have blocked 3 punts this season.

NOTES: This will be the 97th meeting between State and Carolina. The Heels lead the series 63-27-6 and they have won 11 of the last 14 meetings, including three straight...The State-Carolina series the fourth-most played series in the ACC...In the last 15 State-Carolina games, the team with the most rushing yards has won 14 times. The only exception was 2004 when State ran for 304 yards, but lost 30-24...During State?s 3-game winning streak, the Wolfpack has either won or broken even in the turnover battle in each game...The Wolfpack is last in the ACC in turnover margin (-13). Carolina is eleventh (-8)...State will be after its first single season, four-game winning streak since 2003...Darrell Blackman who is third in the ACC in all-purpose yards recorded 194 all-purpose yards in the win at Miami...Defensive end Willie Young ranks fifth in the ACC in tackles for loss after posting three at Miami...In the Wolfpack?s last 3 games, Daniel Evans has averaged 296 passing yards with 6 touchdowns and only two interceptions while completing 57 percent of his throws (74-130)...State has the No. 4 passing offense in the ACC (244) while UNC has the league?s No. 5 pass defense (198)...Jamelle Eugene has rushed for more than 100 yards in two of his last 4 games, averaging 91.3 yards during that stretch...State is last in the ACC in Red Zone offense, scoring 22 times in 30 attempts with 14 touchdowns...How is this for an improving pass rush? Twelve of State?s 20 sacks have come in the last 3 games...Linebacker Ernest Jones leads the Pack in tackles, averaging 9.4 stops a game...Safety DaJuan Morgan who has recorded 22 stops in his last 2 games is the Pack?s ?Disrupter.? He leads the team with 10 pass break-ups. His brother, cornerback DeAndre Morgan, broke up 5 passes at Miami, including two in the end zone... NC State has scored in 148 consecutive games, the fourth-longest streak in ACC history...The Pack is 7-4 in overtime games after its win at Miami last week...NC State?s third down defense has been solid, holding opponents to 35 percent efficiency (No.4 ACC)...Donald Bowens who caught 11 passes for 202 yards and 2 touchdowns against Virginia had only 2 receptions for 9 yards at Miami...Ten Wolfpack starters have missed a total of 32 combined games this season due to injury. A different starter has been forced to the sidelines with an injury in all nine games...Four of Carolina?s six losses have been by 7 points or less.

INJURIES--NC State: WR John Dunlap (ankle)-questionable; SS Javon Walker (knee)-out; FB Ced Hickman (shoulder)-questionable; OT Julian Williams (knee) ?probable; TB Andre Brown (fractured foot)-out; RB Toney Baker (knee)--out for season; TE Anthony Hill (knee)-out for season; FB John Kane (concussion)-out for season; TE Rashad Phillips (rehab from auto accident)-out for season. UNC-CH: None reported.
 

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http://www.newsobserver.com/734/story/766120.html

Robbi Pickeral and Chip Alexander, Staff Writers
If not for a couple of knee injuries four decades ago, North Carolina's Butch Davis and N.C. State's Tom O'Brien might not be meeting Saturday for a new chapter of a century-old rivalry.

After all, much of who they are as coaches now -- Davis a detailed motivator, O'Brien a disciplined leader -- was established during their playing days, when five knee surgeries forced Davis to the sideline at Arkansas, while an injury to a teammate pushed O'Brien into Navy's starting lineup.

"Who's to say what would have happened had I not gotten injured?" said Davis, the son of a high school coach who majored in biology and life science.

The same could be said of O'Brien, who majored in management, then served nine years in the Marine Corps before landing a job as an assistant coach at Navy.

O'Brien and Davis meet for the first time Saturday in their first seasons coaching N.C. State and UNC, with both still learning about a rivalry whose outcome at times has put coaches' jobs in peril.

But the two matched up yearly when they coached at Boston College and Miami, respectively. O'Brien is 0-4 against Davis but was the Eagles' all-time leader in victories in his 10 seasons at BC.

"Could I have predicted that he would one day be a coach?" asked Rick Forzano, O'Brien's head coach as a junior and senior at Navy. "Absolutely not. But I did believe he would be successful in whatever he decided to do."

O'Brien, 59, said he didn't learn so much of the X's and O's of coaching during his playing days, but "the things off the field -- the preparation. And the effort on the field."

Both of which have become his signatures.

O'Brien was a sixth-team defensive end when he started at Navy in 1967, when there were no scholarships limits, he said. He'd worked his way up to second-team by the opening game of his sophomore season, and when the player ahead of him was injured, he stepped in and started for the rest of his career.

Naval Academy graduates were taught "no task is unsurmountable," Forzano said, an attitude that helped O'Brien when he rebuilt a Boston College program that had been soiled by a gambling scandal when he took over in 1996. It's also an attitude he has carried with him this season, when multiple Wolfpack injuries threatened State's confidence and bowl hopes.

Forzano described his former player as "one tough Jesse."

"Even now, I see him on the sideline [on TV] and I see that look," Forzano said. "He's always had that look that makes you go 'Whoa.' He's the kind who can look right through you. I see him on the sideline and I say, 'Yep, that's still Tom O'Brien.' "

Similarly, Davis' drive hasn't changed that much since he was in college, learning from the likes of then-Razorbacks assistants Joe Gibbs, Richard Williamson and Raymond Berry.

After playing linebacker and running back in high school, he was predominantly a defensive end on the freshman team at Arkansas in 1970. He was going to be switched to outside linebacker for his sophomore season, he said, but a torn meniscus in his right knee during the spring game began a series of surgeries and re-injuries that eventually sidelined him for good.

"It seemed like the majority of my career centered around getting well enough to go through spring practice and training camp and two-a days and then get hurt and miss the season,'' Davis said. "I got all the pain and none of the glory."

Back then, that is.

Davis, 55, still attended practices, sometimes on crutches, and eventually became a student assistant, seeing the game from a different perspective -- and from different sides of the ball.

"After he got hurt and couldn't play anymore ... he attended all the meetings, still wanted to learn,'' Frank Broyles, the former Razorbacks coach and current athletics director, said in an interview last year. "He was still determined to help find a way to win."

Sound familiar?

Davis studied the way Gibbs taught, Williamson motivated, Broyles recruited, "and there's no question you steal little bitty tiny things about it,'' said Davis, who used those skills to help win Super Bowl rings as an NFL assistant, resurrect the Hurricanes in the late '90s, and now to try to rebuild the Tar Heels.

"... Once you stop being a player and watch other people coach, their attention to detail, you go, 'Wow, I never looked at it from that perspective -- why you do things 10 times, why you do it over and over to master it, to become efficient at it.' "

Davis' attention to detail should be a good foil to O'Brien's military discipline on Saturday -- and for years to come.

Four decades ago, neither could have imagined that knee injuries could make such an impact.
 
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Caulton Tudor, Staff Writer
It's taken what seems like forever, but a North Carolina vs. N.C. State football game is about to be played amid a relatively low degree of coaching pressure.

That's a good thing, and it should be fertile ground for producing an exciting show on Saturday in the Wolfpack's Carter-Finley Stadium.

For the past couple of seasons, former coaches Chuck Amato of State and John Bunting of Carolina were in such hot water with their fans and administrations that the game itself was less important than its implications.

The same pattern held before Amato and Bunting were hired, too. Carolina's Carl Torbush and State's Mike O'Cain, who were good friends off the field, often met under the same storm cloud of job insecurity. It reached the point that one felt sorry for the other.

Whether the players admit it or not, that sort of tension and uncertainty is impossible to confine to the coaching office. The players aren't dumb. They were instructed to duck questions about a coach's status or the ramifications of any given game, but the players don't live in a vacuum. They know the score. They know perfectly well when their coach is in trouble, and that knowledge definitely affects their play.

The Wolfpack players, at Chapel Hill last year, clearly were scared. They weren't afraid of Carolina, of course. But they knew a loss would probably seal Amato's doom and the result was a hesitant, restrained performance. It was a classic case of a team trying so hard not to lose that all sight of trying to win was forgotten from the moment their 20-14 loss at Clemson the week before was finalized.

Carolina's players arrived from the opposite extreme. Bunting had already been fired, but he was still coaching the team and his players literally had nothing to lose. The Tar Heels gained a modest 260 yards of total offense but won the game by 14 points, primarily because they capitalized on the Pack's mental mistakes.

Lou Holtz, during his coaching stint at State in the 1970s, once said that his greatest fear entering a game against Carolina was showing up with a tense team.

"It's easy to get yourself so wound up that you can't get yourself unwound. That can lead to a complete breakdown in execution," Holtz said.

That sort of anxiety shouldn't undermine the game Saturday. Obviously, there is a certain level of game stakes. The Pack, after a disappointing early season, is trying to inch its way back and win enough games to grab a bowl bid. The Heels can do no better than 6-6, but six wins is the threshold for bowl eligibility.

But a loss won't cause State's Tom O'Brien or Carolina's Butch Davis apply for immediate consideration into the witness protection program.

This is hopefully the first of many showdowns between the two series newcomers. May they both live long, supervise model programs and prosper. More than anything else, that is what the State-Carolina rivalry needs for a while. It's time for the Heels and Pack to again play for something, rather than trying to avoid something.
 

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Chip Alexander, Staff Writer
RALEIGH - It has been a season of redemption for N.C. State quarterback Daniel Evans.

Could it also be one of retribution?

That may be too strong a word or too harsh an emotion for someone like Evans. But there's no denying he is making amends.

The junior from Raleigh lost his starting position in the first half of the season-opening loss to Central Florida. He regained it only after a shoulder injury to Harrison Beck during the Wolfpack's fifth game, a loss to Louisville.

But Evans has played so well the second time around -- throwing the ball, running the team, doing the things NCSU coach Tom O'Brien wants from his quarterback -- that the Pack is winning and Beck now is a second-teamer.

"If I was the backup the whole time, I think it would have been different," Evans said. "But to have [started] and played nine games last year and start this season off with expectations of what I could do and what the team could do, and then to have it go away quickly like that, it definitely made me even more hungry than I would have been otherwise."

Hungry? A year ago, Evans was the starter in losses to East Carolina and Virginia. Since his return this season, the Pack has beaten ECU and Virginia.

"I don't know that's anything supernatural or whatever about it," a smiling Evans said Wednesday. "Any time you lose to a team one year, it's going to stay with you and you're going to want to beat 'em the next year. You want to get one back.

"And going into the Carolina game this year, I feel more prepared and more ready than I did last year."

Father's tale a lesson

UNC is next for Evans and State on Saturday at Carter-Finley Stadium. Another team that inflicted a loss last year.

One lasting image is Evans being sacked late in last year's game inside the NCSU 5 and fumbling the ball. UNC recovered for a touchdown, sealing a 23-9 victory, the Heels' third straight win in the series.

"I felt it was right outside my reach -- I was on the ground and just couldn't get it," Evans said of the loose ball. "That was definitely a tough one to lose for me and us as a team."

That Evans has made the most of his second chance this year may be a testament to his fortitude, his determination.

"He's a pretty stoic person," said Evans' father, Johnny. "I never sensed he was panicked or upset or down. He took it well. He was determined to be strong."

Johnny Evans knows about such things. He was State's quarterback in 1976, Bo Rein's first year as coach. The Pack, after the success of the Lou Holtz years, was 3-7-1 that season, and Evans, then a junior, briefly was benched.

But Evans soon was back, leading State to a 21-13 win over UNC. A year later, the Pack was 8-4 after winning the Peach Bowl.

Daniel Evans had heard all those stories, but father and son revisited some of them again when he lost the starting job.

"He knew the pressures of the position," Daniel Evans said. "... Having been through it and knowing the situation, ... it's always easier when you have someone to empathize with you and talk about it with. He wasn't trying to give me advice so much as he was just someone there to listen to me and someone there with me."

The Evans family is one of strong faith. Johnny Evans is Eastern North Carolina director for the Fellowship of Christian Athletes, and his children have been active in the FCA.

"Daniel has a big-picture view," Johnny Evans said. "He realizes that being benched, or losing a game, is not the worst thing in the world.

"He leaned on his Christian faith. His attitude was, 'I'll grow because of it, learn the lessons of adversity from it and I'll be ready when called upon.' He has that kind of mental toughness."

Daniel's brother, Andrew, is a wide receiver at State. He said Daniel "kept his priorities straight" when things weren't going well and showed strength.

No 'Eureka moment'

O'Brien said he has seen no significant change in Evans' demeanor. It has been more about better proficiency at the position.

"I never questioned his toughness or his competitiveness," O'Brien said. "I think he, with a lot of people on this football team, just learned our way to do things. He's learned and he's executing very well right now for us."

Well enough for State (4-5, 2-3 ACC) to have won three straight games since a bye week Oct. 13. Evans' passing numbers in the wins are impressive -- 889 yards, six touchdowns, two interceptions. He has been protected well by the line, and State's receivers have been reliable.

Evans said there was no "Eureka moment" for him or the offense or any scheme changes.

"I think we're just converting on third down and not turning the ball over," he said. "That's the main thing -- we're not putting our defense behind the 8-ball."

Playing against the Tar Heels in Chapel Hill last year was fun, Evans said, even in a loss. But winning, well, would be better.

"We want to get one back," he said.
 

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BY TONY HAYNES



Raleigh, N.C. ? A little more than 24 hours after his team had disposed of Miami in the Orange Bowl last weekend, NC State coach Tom O?Brien proved to Wolfpack fans that he was already looking forward to this Saturday?s game against North Carolina. Ripping a page out of basketball coach Sidney Lowe?s stylebook, O?Brien donned a bright red jacket on his weekly TV show last Sunday night.



?I think it?s about time we brought out the red jacket,? O?Brien said at the beginning of the show. ?The weather is changing and Carolina is coming to town.?



And although O?Brien will be coaching in this rivalry for the first time when the Wolfpack (4-5, 2-3) hosts UNC (3-6, 2-3) Saturday at noon, he?s not totally in the dark about a series that dates back to 1894. During his time as an assistant coach at Virginia from 1982 to 1996, O?Brien became quit familiar with ACC culture.



?When you?re in Charlottesville for 15 years, I knew the A-B-C rule and knew it was probably founded here in Raleigh,? O?Brien.



And for those of you who?ve been stuck under a rock for the last century, A-B-C translates to ?Anybody But Carolina.?



So it is on Saturday that grandfathers and grandsons, uncles and aunts, fathers, mothers and siblings will park themselves in front of TVs or beside radios for the 97th meeting between the Tar Heels and Wolfpack. As is so often the case, there will be split allegiances in many families. Somewhere in the state of North Carolina, newlyweds will ? for a day ? forget about wedded bliss when one wears Carolina blue and the other NC State red.



Fans of the losing team will dread returning to work on Monday. It?s a trip back to the office that Pack fans have not enjoyed the last three years. Carolina?s current three-game winning streak started in controversy when an apparent game-winning touchdown was wiped off the board.



After watching the replay thousands of times, UNC fans still say T.A. McClendon?s knee was indeed down before the ball crossed the goal line. NC State followers, of course, see it differently.



Their perspectives are as different as red and light blue.



Proving the old, if not overused adage ?you can throw out the records,? the Wolfpack has been favored the last three years, yet has lost all three. The Pack will be a slight favorite again on Saturday.



?It means a lot,? NC State guard Kilani Heppe said when asked what this game meant to the players. ?Yomi [Ojo] and I were talking and we were just redshirts the last time we beat them. Since we?ve been on the field, neither one of us have beaten them. With them being NC State rivals and being right down the road, it means a lot. It should be fun.?



It will be fun if the Wolfpack can continue its trend of winning the turnover battle. After posting a dreadful turnover margin of minus-17 in the first half of the season, NC State has made an about face the last three weeks, collecting four more takeaways than its opponents.



?The coaches have been stressing it and since the beginning of the season, we?ve known that?s been the formula for success,? said Pack quarterback Daniel Evans, who has six touchdown passes and only two interceptions the last three weeks. ?I think it was just a matter of seeing it work itself out after that East Carolina game. We could all take that as a tangible thing that we could build on. The last three games, we?ve won or tied the turnover margin. Hopefully that formula continues to work itself out.?



While North Carolina doesn?t have as many wins to show for it, the Tar Heels have also continued to grow as a football team. After dropping four of its first seven games by seven points or less, the Tar Heels closed out a close one in last week?s 16-13 triumph over Maryland.



The Heels have been particularly impressive on defense lately, holding South Carolina, Wake Forest and Maryland to an average of just 284 yards the last three weeks. Defensive end Hilee Taylor is second in the ACC with eight sacks, while tackle Kentwan Balmer is a handful up front.



After doing a good job against Virginia?s Chris Long and Calais Campbell of Miami the last two weeks, the Wolfpack offensive line has yet another difficult assignment this weekend.



?It?s going to be a great challenge for us,? Heppe said. ?It will test us and see if we?re as good as we?ve shown these last two weeks. They?re big boys, use their hands well and have good speed. It?s going to be kind of a hard hitting deal.?



On offense, North Carolina?s T.J. Yates has been on the type of roller coaster ride normally associated with first-year starting quarterbacks, but he has enough arm strength to take advantage of a pair of big-play receivers. Hakeem Nicks is one of the ACC?s most dangerous wideouts with 57 catches for 702 yards, while Brandon Tate does damage with both his receiving and kick return skills.



?They throw a lot of deep passes and they have enough speed to get to the levels and depths that you need to get too to make it work,? O?Brien said. ?As coaches go around the league and talk to people, one thing that was said about the Carolina receivers is that they?re better than the Florida State kids and better than the Miami kids.?



When O?Brien and Butch Davis face off on Saturday, it will mark the first time these two teams have met with first-year coaches since 1934 when Carl Snavely coached at Carolina and Hunk Anderson at NC State.



?One thing I do know about all rivalries is that they are important and they take on a magnitude,? Davis said. ?It?s a very important week.?



Important to a lot of people, including a pair of coaching newcomers to the rivalry.



?I?m looking forward to this game and this rivalry on Saturday,? said O?Brien. ?I think it?s going to be a great experience and I want to be a part of it.?
 
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NC STATE VERSUS NORTH CAROLINA
This will be the 97th meeting in I-40 series between the Wolfpack and the Tar Heels that began in 1894. It is the Wolfpack's oldest rivalry among ACC teams and the fourth-most played series in the ACC. When the series began, the two teams played home-and-home for several years (1894, 1899 and 1901). The series began on an annual basis in 1919 through 1943 and then after a three-year hiatus, the Wolfpack and the Tar Heels have played every year since 1947 with one exception. In 1952, the game between the two teams was cancelled because of a polio outbreak on UNC?s campus.

The Tar Heels hold a 63-27-6 overall mark over the Wolfpack, including a 27-11- 4 advantage in Raleigh. NC State has lost the last three matchups versus UNC and 11 of the last 14. Five of the Pack?s last six losses to UNC have been by margins of eight points or less with the only exception being last year?s 14-point loss.

FIRST-YEAR HEAD COACHES RARE IN NC STATE-UNC SERIES
Although NC State and UNC have met on the gridiron 96 times, this will mark the first matchup since the 1934 season when head coaches in their first year with the program are standing on each sideline. In 1944, both the Pack and Heels had new head coaches, Beattie Feathers at NC State and Gene McEver for the Heels, but the squads didn?t play that year. You have to go back a decade earlier, when Hunk Anderson was in his first year in Raleigh and Carl Snavely was in his first year at Chapel Hill.

That game was placed at UNC. The outcome? A 7-7 tie.

NORTH CAROLINA NATIVES DOMINATE PACK ROSTER
The Wolfpack roster boasts 49 players who call the state of North Carolina their home. NC State natives also populate the Wolfpack depth chart and of the nine NC State players who have been drafted by the NFL in the past two years, six of them were North Carolinians.

WOLFPACK REMAINS PERFECT ON THE (NEW) SEASON
NC State?s bye-week came at an opportune time for Tom O?Brien?s first Wolfpack team - midway through the 12-game slate. Barraged by injuries, the Pack posted a 1-5 mark in its first six games, but the head coach encouraged his players to wipe that record out of their minds and concentrate on being successful in the next contest ... then the next contest ... then the next.

So far, the Wolfpack is undefeated in that ?new? campaign and has broken several negative streaks along the way. In the first game of the ?new? season, at East Carolina, NC State gained its first road win since November 5, 2005 (Florida State). In the second game of the ?new? season, the Wolfpack won its first ACC game in 10 games, knocking off #21 Virginia, and in the third game, NC State knocked off Miami in overtime, winning its first league road contest in eight tries.

PACK IMPROVES STATISTICALLY
In addition to the Wolfpack?s 3-0 start to the second half of the season in the win-loss column, several other numbers have improved for the Pack as well. Here?s a look at several statistical improvements for NC State:

Category 1st 6 Last 3 Diff.
Total Offense 316.3 377.3 +61.0
Yards Passing 217.3 296.3 +79.0
Pass TDs 1.0 2.0 +1.0
Had Intercepted 2.5 0.67 -1.83
Interceptions 0.3 2.0 +1.7
Third-Down Conv .372 .396 +.024
Fumbles Lost 1.2 0.33 -0.87
Total Turnovers 3.7 1.0 -2.7
Opp. Turnovers 0.8 2.3 +1.5

PACK PARTNERS WITH TOYS FOR TOTS
At the beginning of the 2007 football season, the NC State football team announced a partnership with Coca-Cola and Harris Teeter to collect new toys and donations throughout the 2007 football season to benefit the U.S. Marine Corp?s Toys for Tots campaign. To date, Coca-Cola has donated over $11,000 to the program at the rate of $500 for each touchdown the Wolfpack football team has scored.

Fans attending the Wolfpack?s game against UNC will have the chance to participate in the program. On Saturday from 9 a.m. until noon, Coca-Cola will be in the Fan Zone, located on the front lawn of the RBC Center, collecting new toys to contribute to the U.S. Marines? Toys for Tots campaign. Although all toy donations are appreciated, new toys for toddlers ages 2-4 and pre-teens ages 10-12 are needed most.

Cash donations will also be collected at gates around the stadium from 10 a.m. until noon. Any fan who contributes a new toy or gives a cash donation of any kind will receive a free 2-Liter, compliments of Coca-Cola and Harris Teeter.

As a Marine officer and now as a member of the national board for Toys for Tots, NC State head football coach Tom O?Brien encourages the support of all fans for this worthwhile cause.

?Since 1947, U.S. Marines have been looking after America?s needy children at Christmas through their Toys for Tots program,? O?Brien said. ?By distributing new toys, Marines deliver a message of hope and let children know that someone cares. The toy drive prior to the football game on Saturday is a great opportunity for the Wolfpack Nation to show their giving spirit and help children throughout our community.?

More details about the NC State football/Coca-Cola Toys for Tots campaign is posted on NC State Athletics? official website, www.gopack.com.

EVANS SOLID STARTER AT QB
The season didn?t get off to a very good start for Daniel Evans, but then again, it didn?t get off to a very good start for the entire Wolfpack team. After being named the starter before the season opener, Evans lost his job for the second game of the season. He came off the bench in two later games after starter Harrison Beck went out with an injury, and then started at Florida State when Beck couldn?t go. But although he won the job back due to an injury, Evans has kept his starting job due to his competence.

In the last three games, all of which have been Wolfpack victories, Evans has averaged 296.3 passing yards and has completed 57% (74-130) of his throws. He has thrown six TD passes and been picked off just twice in those three games, posting a whopping 126.52 passing effiency mark. Evans has set career highs for completions (29 vs. ECU), yards (347 vs. UVa) and tied his mark for TD passes (3 vs. ECU and Virginia).

Evans has been especially good in the fourth quarter in the last two weeks, completing 62% of his throws (18-29) for 254 yards, two touchdowns and one interception.

DEFENSE STRONG IN THIRD QUARTER
Tom O?Brien and his staff continually emphasize the importance of coming out strong in the third quarter. The Wolfpack defense has definitely heeded that advice. For the season, opponents are averaging 7.4 points in the first quarter, 9.1 in the second quarter, but just four points in the third quarter.

The defense was particularly strong after halftime in the win over No. 21 Virginia. After allowing the Cavaliers to convert on 6-10 third-down attempts in the first half, UVa was just 1-9 on third down after the break. The Wolfpack ?D? allowed just 97 total yards after halftime, 272 in the opening half.

For the season, NC State has held the opposition to 65 yards or less in the third quarter five times.

PACK UNPACKS
After playing four of its first five games at home in Carter-Finley Stadium, NC State just finished a stint of playing three of four games on the road between Oct. 6 and November 3. The Wolfpack travelled to Florida State on October 6, to East Carolina on Oct. 20 following an open week and then to Miami on November 3.

The Wolfpack won?t leave the state of North Carolina for the rest of the season - playing host to UNC on November 10, making the quick drive to Winston-Salem on Nov. 17 to play Wake Forest, then hosting Maryland on Nov. 24.

Tom O?Brien?s squad was successful on it?s road stint, winning two of the three contests.

NEEDING KNEEs
Continuing on the injury theme, NC State?s football team should get a bulk discount when it comes to doctors performing knee surgeries this year. Nine Wolfpack players have undergone some type of knee surgery since the spring of 2007 and a 10th player (Julian Williams) injured a knee prior to the ECU game and has missed two complete games, even though he didn?t have to undergo surgery. Javon Walker suffered a knee injury at Miami.

Although the Pack has been hampered by various other injuries as well, that particular body part has definitely been the biggest problem. Six players who were listed as starters on the preseason depth chart (or have since become starters) have undergone knee surgery.

Over the spring and summer, wide receiver John Dunlap and quarterback Harrison Beck both had their knees scoped and walkon Zach Williams had reconstructive surgery. Beck and Dunlap missed training time during the offseason (Dunlap missed part of fall camp as well) but were back for the first game.

Three other Wolfpack starters, all of whom were honors candidates heading into the season, have been sidelined by knee injuries. NC State lost its leading receiver and rusher from last season, as well as one of its top defensive players.

In the last week of July, tight end Anthony Hill underwent reconstructive knee surgery for a torn ACL, an injury that will keep him out for the entire 2007 campaign. In the season opener tailback Toney Baker suffered a knee injury that also brought his season to a close. And just two days before the Boston College game, defensive tackle DeMario Pressley twisted his knee and underwent surgery on September 9. Although his injury was not season-ending, it came just after an elbow injury that kept him from starting the season opener and forced him to miss two games.

Those key players aren?t the only ones who have had knee problems. True freshman offensive lineman Mike Golder, who was more than likely going to redshirt the season, also suffered a knee injury and has undergone reconstruction.

Following the Clemson game, starting fullback Patrick Bedics and second-string offensive tackle Jerrail McCuller both went down with knee injuries and had surgery that week.

STARTING LINEUPS CHANGE
Before the Virginia game, the only two positions that had boasted the same starting lineup in every game had been the wide receivers and the linebackers. Following the Virginia game, there is no position that has not had at least two changes in starting lineups.

The ankle injury to John Dunlap kept him completely out of the game, giving Donald Bowens the start, while linebacker LeRue Rumph was able to play, but did not start after missing practice time with an ankle injury of his own.

In nine games, five different lineups have started on the defensive line and in the defensive secondary. Two different players have started at quarterback, while at running back, three different players have started at tailback and two at fullback. The offensive line had started the same five players up until the East Carolina game, when an injury forced a change. Another injury forced a third lineup combo for the O-line against Virginia and a fourth started against Miami.

EUGENE SHOULDERS LOAD
Much ado was made in the preseason about NC State?s incredible depth at tailback. Halfway through the 2006 campaign, however, redshirt sophomore Jamelle Eugene is carrying the rushing load on his able shoulders.

Eugene was listed along with juniors Toney Baker and Andre Brown as a costarter heading into 2007, but was mainly a third-down back to begin the season.

He saw more time after Baker suffered an injury in the season opener, but when Brown fractured a foot in the sixth game at Florida State, Eugene took over (true freshman Curtis Underwood has played just 27 snaps for the season.

In the four games since Brown?s injury, Eugene has rushed for 365 yards (91.5 yards per game) and averaged 33 receiving yards. He led the team in rushing and receiving in both games played in his home state of Florida (Florida State and Miami). Eugene?s 71 gradeable snaps at ECU were the most for a Wolfpack running back since 2000, when Ray Robinson played 72 snaps against Maryland. He topped that tally with 76 snaps in the Virginia game, most since Robinson had 89 earlier in that 2000 season.
 

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North Carolina (3-6) at NC State (4-5) 12:00 PM ESPNU

Why to Watch: As recently as three weeks ago, this one looked like it would be a battle of ACC futility. Now, with both teams having picked up their play, it becomes an interesting matchup with potential bowl implications. NC State has won three straight and needs just two victories to become bowl eligible. After its win over Maryland last week, the Tar Heels need three wins with three games remaining (NC State, Georgia Tech, Duke). Though the upper reaches of the ACC?s divisions remain dreams for these two, the winner of this one can keep hopes alive for a post-season berth and a happy ending to what began as a tough year.

Why North Carolina Might Win: In last week?s win over Maryland, the Tar Heels got 92 yards out of redshirt freshman Johnny White, a great sign since UNC has been looking for some balance in its offense. If Wise can continue to produce, it will open things up for QB T.J. Yates, who continues to be efficient. Wise should have some success, because the Wolfpack continues to be banged up along the defensive front and surrendered 314 yards rushing last week against Miami. The Tar Heel defense is built to stop the run, which has been a staple of the NC State renaissance, while Hilee Taylor (nine sacks) has the ability to disrupt the Wolfpack passing game.

Why North Carolina State Might Win: The Wolfpack has been a completely different team over the past three weeks, a fact that can be proven in its plus-four turnover margin during that time. In the previous six weeks, NC State was minus-17. Expect sophomore Jamelle Eugene (365 yards in his last four games) to test the Carolina front seven, while Daniel Evans, who has been more efficient during the past three games, will work play action to open things up downfield. The improved State secondary picked off three Miami passes last week and held Hurricane QB Kirby Freeman to 1-of-14 passing.

Who to Watch: Last year, sophomore wideout Hakeem Nicks caught 39 passes in a solid debut. So far this season, Nicks has been even more impressive, hauling in 56 passes and scoring four times. The past four games have been particularly productive, yielding 25 catches for 289 yards. Though Nicks hasn?t yet made good on his big-play ability on a consistent basis, he remains the most skilled UNC offensive player and has the ability to make defenses pay which don?t devote extra attention to him.

What Will Happen: Now we see why NC State wanted Tom O?Brien. He has it going and continues the post-season march with a big victory thanks to timely offense and just enough D to get by.

CFN Prediction: NC State 28 ? North Carolina 23... Line: NC State -3.5
Must See Rating: (5 Seinfeld: Season 9 - 1 Bee Movie) ... 2.5
 
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