Week 11

ajoytoy

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3-2 (+4.91) last week

ytd 48-56-3 (-5.95)

2 Unit Plays: 10-9

3 Unit Plays: 1-1

5 Unit Plays: 1-0

My biggest play of the year cashed last week with the Pack pulling the huge upset in Tallahassee :clap:

Pack now have a big challenge in travelling up to Boston to play the Eagles this weekend

will be back later in the week with the plays, but will post some good info from the net

glta

toy :)
 

ajoytoy

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Tony Haynes: Wolfpack Rolls "Lucky Seven" at Florida State
New defensive scheme helps Pack turn back Seminoles.


Nov. 6, 2005

By Tony Haynes

Tallahassee, Florida - To Florida State quarterback Drew Weatherford, it must have looked like NC State had 15 defenders on the field. His first glimpse came on one of FSU's initial drives of Saturday's game against the Wolfpack. The Seminoles' redshirt freshman quarterback retreated into the pocket, looked downfield and saw nothing but a sea of white jerseys. What he saw, but probably couldn't comprehend, was a new defense that featured seven defensive backs. The new scheme, put in place by head coach Chuck Amato and his defensive staff this week, helped the Pack secure a stunning 20-15 victory over the 9th ranked `Noles on Saturday night at Doak Campbell Stadium.

The win, NC State's first over a top 10 team since another memorable triumph in Tallahassee back in 2001, left open the distinct possibility that the Wolfpack (4-4) may indeed end up playing in a bowl game after all. In a jubilant Pack lockerroom after the game, representatives from three different bowl games offered their congratulations to Amato.

Now really, who would have thought that scene possible when the Pack trailed Southern Mississippi 14-0 in the third quarter last week? After roaring back to win that game 21-17, a strident, confident NC State team walked into one of college football's most intimidating venues on Saturday afternoon and played like a club that fully expected to beat the Seminoles again.

And the operative word is `again.'

Coming in, the Wolfpack was the only ACC team to have whipped FSU three times since Bobby Bowden's program joined the league in 1992.

Make that four, now. Also, make it two victories in Tallahassee. No other ACC team can claim even one.

For 18 years, Amato - then a Florida State assistant coach -- sat, listened and learned from one of his coaching mentors, the venerable Bowden. Now since returning to NC State, his record against the old boss is 3-3. And every time these two teams meet, it seems as though the Wolfpack has a new gimmick that confounds the Seminoles.

In this particular case, it was the seven defensive backs package. Employing three down linemen, one linebacker and seven DBs in obvious passing situations, NC State had Weatherford looking like a redshirt freshman that he is instead of a player who was the ACC leader in passing and total offense.

Finishing 19-of-38 for 181 yards, Weatherford had three huge interceptions that turned the tide in NC State's favor after halftime. Two of the picks were made by redshirt junior A.J. Davis before a third, this one by Garland Heath, salted the game away when FSU was trying to drive for a game-winning touchdown.

All three interceptions came when there were seven defensive backs on the field.

"I wanted to do this because I just had some thoughts about some things," Amato responded when asked about the surprising strategy. "It really worked well. We had three tall people going after the quarterback that can really get after people. I thought it could work well, I really did. Our kids executed it, and that's the whole thing."

And Florida State's Greg Carr, the speedy 6-6 receiver who leads the ACC in touchdown receptions? He had zero catches against the Pack's well-conceived bracketing zone coverages.

Of course, it didn't hurt the Pack's cause when Florida State all but abandoned its running game after NC State jumped out to a 20-10 lead in the third quarter. After picking up just 27 yards on 15 carries in the opening half, the Seminoles would run the football only eight more times in the second half.

"I was so concerned about them running the football on us," said Amato. "It sounds crazy when you're playing the number one passing team in the league and you say that you have to stop the run to beat them. But I really felt strong about that."

Meanwhile, on the other side of the ball, NC State was getting another monster game from freshman running back Andre Brown, who backed up last week's 248 yard eruption with 179 yards on 26 carries against FSU. If it was Florida State's intention to take Brown away early in the game and force quarterback Marcus Stone to do the heavy lifting, it didn't show. On the Pack's second play from scrimmage, Brown sent a lightning bolt through Doak Campbell Stadium with a 65-yard run that gave NC State a quick 7-0 advantage.

From there, the tone was set for the NC State defense to let it all hang out.

For Florida State, third and long meant that sea of white jerseys in the secondary. And even though NC State was rushing only three in those situations, all-world defensive ends Mario Williams and Manny Lawson still managed to rush Weatherford and briefly used back-up Xavier Lee into the type of throws that are normally reserved for Florida State's opponents.

"Every time we ran the ball we'd end up with second and long," Bowden said. "They did a great job and had a great scheme. When they play a scheme like that, they force you to execute. They say, `okay, we're going to give you time to throw the football, but we're going to have so many guys back, you better throw it straight.' They did a better job of executing their part of it than we did of executing ours."

FSU converted just 2-of-16 third downs and was forced to punt a total nine times. Those are not the sort of numbers one would expect from a team that had been leading the ACC in total offense with an average of 444 yards per game.

But maybe the Seminoles hadn't seen many ends like Mario Williams and Manny Lawson, or a heat-seeking missile of a linebacker like Stephen Tulloch. And one thing they had definitely not seen before Saturday was the unexpected wrinkle that threw their big-play offense so off kilter.

It was a roll of the dice by Amato and company that truly turned into a "Lucky 7."
 

ajoytoy

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Wolfpack Ignited By Stone's Spark
QB Marcus Stone is 2-0 as starter.


Nov. 7, 2005

By Tony Haynes

Raleigh, N.C. - The statistics say that Marcus Stone is 19-of-43 passing for 213 yards and two touchdowns in two games as NC State's starting quarterback. No, those aren't the type of numbers that will cause people to start comparing the redshirt sophomore to former Wolfpack star Philip Rivers. But in the minds of his teammates and head coach Chuck Amato, the only stat that matters is that Stone is unbeaten in his first two career starts. Coming off back-to-back victories over Southern Mississippi and Florida State, the Pack (4-4, 2-4) hopes to ride the emotional wave into this Saturday's game at Boston College (6-3, 3-3).

Oddly enough, Stone has completed only one pass in the first half of his two starts. In the opening 30 minutes of play against the Golden Eagles, he was just 1-of-7 for 17 yards and two interceptions. His only completion was a screen pass that was eventually fumbled by tailback Tony Baker.

Likewise, his only first half completion against the Seminoles was also a screen pass that ended up gaining only eight yards.

Yet, in both games, Stone has been more productive and looked more confident after halftime, going a combined 17-of-29 for 188 yards with no interceptions.

"The more experience I get and the more games I play, it's going to change," Stone said. "I've just got to keep working on my fundamentals and keep studying tape. I believe the more I play the more comfortable I'll feel. I'm always ready to play, but I guess I'm just more relaxed coming out after halftime."

Perhaps it's more a case of what Stone didn't do at Florida State that allowed the Wolfpack to post its second win in Tallahassee in three trips. Engineering a fairly low-risk game plan that relied on short passes and the running game, Stone played four quarters against the Seminoles' speedy defense without throwing an interception. In fact, it was the first turnover-free football game NC State has played all year.

"In the last seven quarters he hasn't thrown an interception," Amato said. "When you play a really good team like Florida State and you play really good defense, you win the kicking game until the last five minutes of the game and you have no turnovers, you have a chance. You've got a chance against anyone you play when you do that."

Stone was named the starter after redshirt senior Jay Davis struggled in back-to-back losses to Clemson in Wake Forest. At the time, Amato wasn't sure what he was going to get out of a player who had not seen very much game experience. As much as anything else, the change was made to create a spark that was obviously missing when the Wolfpack fell to 2-4.

"Marcus has got a demeanor about him," Amato said. "When he first got here, I said `Marcus, we're going to redshirt you, but in the meantime, you get in Philip Rivers' back pocket for the next 12 games and learn everything you can.' I think he learned a lot from him and he's an imposing individual."

A.J. Nicholson, Florida State's all-conference linebacker, can vouch for Stone's imposing 6-4, 230-pound frame. During a third down collision on the FSU sideline on Saturday, Nicholson went down, while Stone stayed on his feet.

"They both got hit pretty good," Amato said. "Those young men on the sidelines see that and they say `wow,' utter reckless abandon with no worry about his own safety because he was doing it for the team. But he needs to learn how to slide."

Stone's ability to post a pair of wins has, of course, been aided by a suddenly resurgent running game led by freshman Andre Brown and an offensive line that seems to be coming together at the right time. In Davis's six starts, the Pack was averaging just 90 yards rushing per game. But with Stone under center the last two weeks, the Wolfpack has averaged 246 yards on the ground. Brown erupted for 248 yards against Southern Mississippi before ripping off 179 more at FSU.

"I definitely believe that the running game helps out a lot as far as opening things up for the passing game," said Stone. "Andre Brown has been great running the ball and it's been a lot easier on me when I drop back. It takes a lot of pressure off me. The offensive line has definitely been coming together more. You can see that five bonding a lot better."

Stone has also been getting plenty of support from the man he replaced. Instead of sulking over his demotion to back-up status, Davis has been a positive asset, watching coverages from the sideline and providing helpful advice to his lesser experienced understudy.

"[Davis] has been great," Stone said. "He's been so supportive on the sidelines. If I come off and have a bad read or bad series, he'll keep my head in it and tell me what he sees. He's been real supportive."

Said Amato: "Jay has been a trooper. I really understand what he's going through. He said that he would do everything and anything to help Marcus Stone and North Carolina State win football games, and that would be his role on the sideline. He hasn't deviated from that. He's proud to be a part of this program and he's proud to be helping Marcus in any way that he can."

More Pack Points: Oddly, both of NC State's ACC wins have come against ranked teams on the road. Georgia Tech was ranked 23rd when the Wolfpack won in Atlanta. Saturday's victory came over a Florida State team that was ranked 8th in the coaches poll. Defense has been the name of the game for the Pack over the last three weeks as opponents have averaged just 232 yards and 65.7 yards rushing. Also during that stretch, NC State has recorded 15 sacks, eight of which have come from junior end Mario Williams.
 

ajoytoy

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Upsets fuel bowl hopes
UNC, NCSU pull off a rare double
J.P. Giglio, Staff Writer

It takes six wins to make a bowl game. It took a minor miracle -- at least in a historical context -- for N.C. State and North Carolina to get to 4-4 on Saturday and start legitimately thinking of a bowl destination.
With N.C. State's upset of No. 9 Florida State, 20-15 in Tallahassee, and UNC's 16-14 win over 19th-ranked Boston College, both schools beat ranked teams on the same day.

How rare was that coincidence?

Since The Associate Press started ranking teams in 1936, UNC and N.C. State have beaten ranked opponents on the same day only once before Saturday.


Once in 69 years!
On Oct. 24, 1992, N.C. State beat 18th-ranked Clemson and UNC beat 19th-ranked Georgia Tech.

Saturday's big wins re-energized their respective fan bases, which were already knee-deep in their hoop dreams after uninspired October stumbles -- State to Clemson and at Wake Forest and UNC at Louisville.

Now fans are hoping for Atlanta, and the Peach Bowl, but rationalizing a holiday trip to Boise, for the MPC Computers Bowl.

Both coaches are backing off the hoopla and locking into full-time cliche mode.

"The only thing we're concerned about is practice on Monday and getting ready for Boston College," said Wolfpack coach Chuck Amato, who improved to 4-12 against ranked teams. "We'll go from there. Period."

As for John Bunting, who has gone 2-4 against ranked teams this season and 5-19 since 2001:

"It's a three-game schedule. Maryland is a huge game for us."

Then asked about possibly going to a second straight bowl, Bunting said:

"You won't hear me talk about the bowls."

The bowl talk will increase in the next three weeks. N.C. State plays at Boston College, which fell out of the top 25, on Saturday and then hosts Middle Tennessee (Nov. 19) and Maryland (Nov. 26).

UNC faces Maryland on Saturday in Chapel Hill and then closes with Duke (Nov. 19) and at Virginia Tech (Nov. 26).

It could be Maryland, also 4-4, which decides the bowl fate of the Pack and Heels. Terps coach Ralph Friedgen has been a nemesis for both Bunting and Amato, going a combined 6-1 against the two schools.

The Terps embarrassed the Heels 59-7 in 2002 and 59-21 in 2003, and the two haven't met since.

State lost three straight to Friedgen before beating the Terps last year.

Ranked. Unranked. Maryland or Middle Tennessee, N.C. State and UNC only care about taking the momentum from Saturday and finishing at least 2-1.

"All we want to do is go out and keep winning," N.C. State safety Garland Heath said. "Things happen in a season. Things happened to us. Now things are happening to the other teams. It's good to be on the winning end of things."
 

ajoytoy

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No. 19 Boston College Falls To North Carolina, 16-14
Three UNC field goals and kickoff return prove to be the difference


CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP) - The kick came low and short, bouncing to Wallace Wright at his own 10-yard line. With defenders racing toward him, he nervously bobbled the ball a couple of times before finally gaining control.

Then he started running.

"My whole mentality was to pick up the ball and go, find somewhere to go," Wright said. "Protect the ball first, then get up-field and get whatever yards I can get."

He got them all.

Wright returned that opening kickoff 90 yards for a touchdown, Connor Barth broke out of a season-long slump with three field goals and North Carolina held off No. 19 Boston College 16-14 Saturday.

Jesse Holley set career highs with eight catches for 125 yards for the Tar Heels (4-4, 3-2 Atlantic Coast Conference), who got their second consecutive upset at home. Two weeks ago, they beat then-No. 23 Virginia 7-5, and their defense was every bit as stingy in this one.

"Well, that may not have been as pretty as some people would like it to be," North Carolina coach John Bunting said, "but it certainly is what I have been looking for in terms of having a complete game. It was a whole effort."

After the Eagles (6-3, 3-3) drove 63 yards on their opening drive to tie it 7-7, they gained only 274 the rest of the way. Coach Tom O'Brien went to backup quarterback Matt Ryan in the fourth quarter, and he made the final margin much closer with a 10-yard touchdown pass to Larry Lester in the final minute.

But North Carolina tight end Justin Phillips recovered the ensuing onside kick to hand BC its second loss in a row. The first came about 10 days ago at Virginia Tech and dropped the Eagles out of contention for the Atlantic Division title, and this one means they are left fighting for bowl positioning down the stretch in the crowded ACC.


Quinton Porter was 16-for-26 for 144 yards before giving way to Ryan, and leading rusher L.V. Whitworth was held to 58 yards.

"You've got to give it to them, obviously they addressed it all after that first drive," Porter said. "I thought we'd get into a rhythm and get it going."

Wright set the tone early, even though his return hardly was a thing of beauty. He appeared hemmed in deep in his own territory before breaking a tackle, then picked up a nice block from Brandon Tate to reach open space along the sideline.

It was the second time this season North Carolina scored on the opening kickoff, with Tate going 100 yards for a TD against Utah.

"It's the best feeling in the world," Wright said. "I've been waiting for years for that to happen. It couldn't have been a better day."

Barth did his part, too. The sophomore came in 3-for-11 in 2005 - with misses on his previous three kicks - but was perfect against the Eagles. His 20-yarder late in the first quarter gave the Tar Heels the lead for good, and he added one from 44 yards in the third quarter to stretch the margin to 13 points.

"Everyone has so much support for me, especially my teammates, just keeping me up, telling me how much confidence they have in me," Barth said. "And it's just awesome to have teammates like that. That's what's helped me so much."

That proved to be more than enough to hold off BC, particularly with a plodding-yet-consisent offense providing just enough for an edge in field position. Matt Baker was 20-for-32 for 211 yards and one interception, while Ronnie McGill gained a bruising 75 yards on 20 carries.

"We had them on their heels," Baker said. "We tried to keep the ball, I thought they looked a little tired. So we just kept pounding the ball."

And Holley continued his impressive season. Early in the fourth quarter, the Tar Heels took over on their own 9 when Holley was at his best. He reached behind him to rip a pass out of the hands of linebacker Tyronne Pruitt that went for 17 yards on third-and-10, then later put North Carolina in field goal range with a dazzling, leaping catch over DeJuan Tribble.

The 29-yard gain put North Carolina on BC's 30, and although Baker threw his lone interception on the next play, the Eagles were out of chances.

"Man, I got in the zone," Holley said. "It just was like nothing else mattered. I didn't care what coverage they were in. I didn't care who was draped over me, where the ball was thrown."

O'Brien wouldn't commit to a starting quarterback next week against North Carolina State, and by now, Porter and Ryan both probably should be ready. Each has played in seven of the eight games.

"Whatever happens next week, happens," Ryan said. "I'm just disappointed that we lost."
 

AR182

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toy,

nice hit on your team last week.....

the question is......can they do it again ?

good luck this week...
 

Irish

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toy

great hit last week.....good luck this week!

Cheers
Irish
 

ajoytoy

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AR182 said:
toy,

nice hit on your team last week.....

the question is......can they do it again ?

good luck this week...
thx guys...I sure hope they can have a repeat performance...just dont know how BC is going react with their recent losses...Pack is peaking at the right time, but their early season problems put them in a tough spot...should be a good game regardless...saturday night...espn...
 

ajoytoy

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Gary Hahn's Scouting Report: Boston College
Wolfpack and Eagles meet Saturday night at 7:15.


Nov. 10, 2005

NC STATE (4-4, 2-4) at No. 25 BOSTON COLLEGE (6-3, 3-3)

DATE: Saturday, November 12, 2005

TIME: Kickoff: 7:15 p.m. (EST) Alumni Stadium, Chestnut Hill, MA (44,500)

RADIO: Wolfpack Sports Network: 6:00 p.m. (EST)

TELEVISION: espn2

OPPONENT----North Carolina's offense never reached the end zone, but the Tar Heels managed to beat Boston College at home last Saturday 16-14. Three field goals and a special-teams touchdown were enough to get the job done while Carolina's improved defense held the Eagles in check.

Connor Barth broke out of a season-long slump with field goals of 20, 22 and 44-yards while Jesse Holley set career highs with eight catches for 125 yards as the Tar Heels (4-4, 3-2) pulled off their second consecutive upset at home.

Wallace Wright electrified the Kenan Stadium crowd when he returned the opening kickoff 90-yards. After bobbling the kick and appearing to be hemmed in, Wright broke a tackle. Then he got a block to spring him down the right sideline and raced into the end zone untouched.

After the Eagles drove 63 yards on their opening drive to tie the game 7-7 on Andre Callender's 3-yard run, they gained only 274 the rest of the way.

Trailing 16-7 late in the third quarter, Quinton Porter drove BC into the red zone, but they came away with nothing. On second-down from the Carolina 19, Porter was sacked for a 12-yard loss. That was followed by a false start penalty that took the Eagles out of field goal range.

Two series later, with the offense continuing to sputter and the game in the fourth quarter, BC Coach Tom O'Brien replaced Porter with backup Matt Ryan. The sophomore made the final margin much closer with a 10-yard touchdown pass to Larry Lester in the final minute.

The ensuing onside kick was not a good one and North Carolina's Justin Phillips recovered at the Boston College 41. The Tar Heels ran out the clock handing BC its second loss in-a-row and dropping the Eagles into a fight for bowl position in the crowded ACC.

Porter was 16-of-26 passing for 144 yards before giving way to Ryan while BC's leading rusher L.V. Whitworth was held to only 58 yards. Ryan completed 10-of-14 passes for 93 yards.

Carolina's offense provided just enough for an edge in field position and an 8-minute advantage in time of possession. UNC's Matt Baker was intercepted once, but threw for 211 yards on 20-of-32 attempts. Ronnie McGill led the Heels rushing attack with 75-yards on 20 carries.

Boston College is third in the ACC in total offense (387), No. 2 in pass offense (249) and is averaging nearly 25 points a game. The Eagles also lead the ACC in first downs, and third down conversion percentage (.459). In addition to UNC, the Eagles only losses this season have come at the hands of Florida State (28-17) and Virginia Tech (30-10).

Turnovers have hurt BC this season. The Eagles are -6 in turnover margin, just below NC State's -5 total.

Ryan, who has completed 65.5 percent of his passes and is fifth in the ACC in passing efficiency, will get the nod at quarterback against NC State. It will be his third start this season after leading Boston College to wins over Clemson and Ball State when Porter was injured. Ryan (6-5, 221) also engineered BC's comeback victory over Wake Forest when he replaced Porter in the second half.

Protecting Ryan will be the biggest offensive line in the ACC. The Eagles average 6-6, 314 pounds across the front. The beast of the group is sophomore right tackle Gosder Cherilus (6-7, 320) while senior center Pat Ross (6-4, 298) will be starting his 35th consecutive game on Saturday. BC's offensive line has allowed only 10 sacks this season.
The top receiving targets for Ryan are all seniors. Will Blackmon (40 catches, 3 TD) is also a backup cornerback. He's caught 16 passes in his last 3 games and is third in the ACC in receptions per game (4.4). Converted safety Larry Lester (32 catches, 2 TD) and tight end Chris Miller (22 catches, 3 TD) are also very reliable. That trio accounts for 43 percent of BC's catches and receiving yards. Another man to watch is junior Tony Gonzalez who has 20 receptions for a team-leading 16.5 yards per catch and 3 touchdowns.

Whitworth and Calendar, both sophomores, are among the top-10 rushers in the ACC and get most of the carries. The pair has combined for 83 percent of BC rushing yards (1,036) and 5 touchdowns. However, when the Eagles have a short-yardage situation or get near the goal line, starting outside linebacker Brian Toal is the man. The 6-1, 238 pound sophomore has 6 rushing touchdowns.

NC State's newfound ground game will get a big challenge Saturday because Boston College leads the ACC in rushing defense, allowing only 95 yards a game. That's good enough for ninth-best nationally. The Eagles have held 5 of their 9 opponents to 100 rushing yards or less and they have the ACC's third best scoring defense (16 ppg.).
Leading the BC defense is All-America end Mathias Kiwanuka (6-7, 262). The 2004 Big East Defensive Player of the Year is so impressive he was voted ACC Preseason Player of the Year before he even played a snap in the league. Kiwanuka, a senior, leads the team in tackles for loss (7.5) and sacks (3.5) and is touted as a future first-round NFL draft pick. Sophomore end Nick Larkin and senior tackle Alvin Washington have combined for 6 sacks while redshirt freshman backup tackle Keith Willis (6-1, 266) has broken up a team leading five passes.

With Ray Henderson (6-3, 245, Sr.) in the middle and Toal and Ricky Brown (6-2, 235, Sr.) outside, BC has a solid trio of linebackers. Henderson is the team's No. 2 tackler with 55 stops. Toal has recorded 7 tackles for loss.

Free safety Jamie Silva (5-11, 205, So.) is the Eagles top tackler. Of his 65 stops, 47 have been solo hits. Silva shot to the top of BC's defensive stats following back-to-back outstanding performances against Virginia (14 solo tackles) and Wake Forest (11 stops). DeJuan Tribble, a sophomore cornerback (5-9, 189), leads BC in interceptions (2) and is among the team's top tacklers.

The Eagles are third best in the ACC in red zone defense (NC State is No. 2) allowing opponents only 9 touchdowns in 28 trips inside the 20-yard line. However, the defense has forced only 10 turnovers all season, the lowest total in the ACC.

Blackmon is a dangerous return man. He leads all active players nationally in career kickoff return yardage (2,569). His punt return average this season (9.0) is impressive and he's seventh in the ACC in kick returns (21.1 avg.). Although he has not taken a return the distance this year he is capable. The senior is the first player in BC history to return a kickoff and a punt for a touchdown in the same season (2004).

Sophomore Ryan Ohliger missed 5 of his 11 field goal attempts, including 3 inside 39-yards. That inconstant performance sent him to the bench in favor of senior William Troost. So far, Troost is 1-of-2 with a 26-yarder as his longest made field goal.

A 41.3 yard punting average has sophomore Johnny Ayers among the ACC's top-five. He's dropped 13 of his 45 attempts inside the opponents 20-yard line, but has had two punts blocked.

NOTES: The Pack's defense has held its last 3 opponents to an average of 233 yards total offense and 66 rushing yards... In its last two games, State has averaged 247 yards rushing. In the previous four games, the Pack averaged only 56.5 net rushing yards. Andre Brown is the ACC Rookie of the Week for the second straight week after rushing for 179 yards and a touchdown at FSU. The freshman was also named ACC Offensive Back of the Week....Cornerback A.J. Davis, who intercepted two passes at FSU, is this week's ACC Defensive Back of the Week...In the last 2 games, the Pack is 7-of-30 on third down (.233)... Boston College is converting 46 percent of its third down opportunities... Pack linebacker Stephen Tulloch is No. 2 in the ACC with an average of 12.2 tackles per game....Mario Williams has recorded 10.5 tackles for loss and 8 sacks in the last 3 games and is No. 2 in the ACC in tackles for loss... Darrell Blackmon leads the ACC in kickoff returns (31.1)... In 70 games under Chuck Amato, the Wolfpack has entered the fourth quarter with the score differing by seven points or less 34 times...Both of State's ACC victories this year have come on the road...The Pack is 2-1 versus ranked teams this season...In the second half of both his starts, Wolfpack quarterback Marcus Stone is 17-of-29 passing for 188 yards, 2 touchdowns and no interceptions. He's only 2-of-14 for 25 yards and 2 interceptions in the first half of those games...In its last 3 games, State has been flagged for a total of only 16 penalties...For the first time in 19 games, the Wolfpack did not commit a turnover in its victory at Florida State...Boston College has lost two straight games. The Eagles have not dropped three straight since the 1998 season.

INJURIES--NC State: DT John McCargo (foot)-out; CB Jeremy Gray (foot)-questionable; OG Kalani Heppe (shoulder separation)-out; OG Dwayne Herndon (stinger)-questionable; WR Geron James (shoulder surgery)-out.Boston College None reported.
 

ajoytoy

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week(end) plays:

week(end) plays:

oregon* -4.5 (-102)
baylor +8 (-105)
ohio state -18 (-110)
fresno state -9 *(-110
w. mich* -3 (-105)
arizona -13 (-102)
col* -2.5 (-102)
ucla -3.5 (+101)
ncsu +5 (-105)

* pool plays
 

ripken8

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good luck toy,

took baylor +8 with ya but went with bc-4.5 sat night...
 

jpblack34

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Best of luck Toy...BTW, what is the pack's record ATS when they are road dogs the past two years? Want to make sure what I have is correct. Thanks in advance. JP
 

ajoytoy

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jpblack34 said:
Best of luck Toy...BTW, what is the pack's record ATS when they are road dogs the past two years? Want to make sure what I have is correct. Thanks in advance. JP
I have
2-2 last year
2-1 this year
 

trolln4walii

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GL this week toy. Some great info..thanks for sharing. We're not on any of the same plays this week (which is good for you ;) ) and opposite on a couple. Going against your boys this week (how could I after they've won me the green the last two :scared ). All the same, wishing you the best :mj14:
 

ajoytoy

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adding some plays (final plays for the weekend):

adding some plays (final plays for the weekend):

oregon* -4.5 (-102)
baylor +8 (-105)
ohio state -18 (-110)
fresno state -9 *(-110)......W
w. mich* -3 (-105)
arizona -13 (-102)
col* -2.5 (-102)
ucla -3.5 (+101)
ncsu +5 (-105)
memphis +18.5 (-110)
fsu -1 (-110)
alabama +3 (-106)
oregon st. -5.5 (-115)
wisconsin -2.5 (-110)
colorado st. -8 (+103)

bol to all
 
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