Showing posts tagged “Cam Sexton”

UNC - Georgia Southern preview: Heels need statement from offense

Jacob Swiger · 8 Oct 2009, 8:53 PM · Comment


North Carolina (3-2) vs. Georgia Southern (3-2)

[3:30 p.m., Oct. 10, Kenan Memorial Stadium]

ESPN360.com

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Will the Tar Heels be fired up for another FCS team? (Photo by Rob Rowe)

“Hello Roy Williams, goodbye Butch Davis.”  At least, that’s what UNC fans seem to be pondering this week as the Heels play what needs to be a morale booster against Georgia Southern.

Although UNC must win for reputation sake, this game carries no postseason importance.  The Heels can only count one win against an FCS team for the six-win bowl requirement.

Sleeping on the Eagles will be dangerous, though.  With 14 returning starters and nothing to lose, the pressure will be entirely on the Carolina low-octane offense.  One thing is for sure; panic will ensue if the Heels lose and fall to 3-3.

Continue reading »

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UNC’s Sexton Opts to Graduate

Jacob Swiger · 14 Jan 2009, 2:18 PM · Comment


Cam Sexton

Cam Sexton

Redshirt junior quarterback Cameron Sexton has decided to graduate at the end of this semester and possibly transfer to a Division II school for his final year of eligibility.

“I have always been a competitor and I have more goals I want to accomplish on the football field,” Sexton said in a statement released Wednesday. “I’ll always be grateful for the opportunities I had at North Carolina.”

Sexton entered the season third on the depth chart behind sophomore starter T.J. Yates and the much-heralded freshman Mike Paulus.

Yet Sexton ended up splitting time with Paulus after Yates went down due to injury and Paulus struggled against Virginia Tech and Miami.

Sexton had a breakout performance against Miami, throwing for 242 yards and two touchdowns.
Continue reading »

Football, UNC-Chapel Hill , , ,

Wolfpack mug the Heels 41-10 (for real)

Forrest Norman · 22 Nov 2008, 10:12 PM · Comment


UNC got mugged by the Wolfpack Saturday.

I could write about linebacker Mark Paschal’s excellent game, or the fact that QB TJ Yates showed a sign or two of returning to the form he was in before an injury forced him to sit out for most of the season, but that would be gilding the 41-10 turd that was today’s game.

Coach Butch Davis, still steaming after the Heels managed to find a way to turn over the ball for a sixth time with almost no time left, said it best in his postgame comments: “Six turnovers - you can almost totally disregard any of the other stats. Once you get past the turnovers, there are other things that certainly contributed to today’s loss - giving up big plays in the secondary, balls being thrown deep and not being contested, guys being open - all of those things contributed to the way that we played today.”

TJ Yates

TJ Yates

Davis answered questions about starting Yates over backup Cameron Sexton who, for the most part, played the part of steady hand and maintained the team’s positive momentum after Yates’ injury.

“You can’t look in the rearview mirror,” Davis opined. “How do you know? We feel that both of those guys are pretty good quarterbacks. They have both had some pretty good success. Was T.J. nervous coming back for the first time? Conceivably, maybe so.”

Yeah, could be. Continue reading »

Football, N.C. State, UNC-Chapel Hill , , ,

Boosterism

Forrest Norman · 25 Oct 2008, 7:05 PM · Comment


As a “sports blogger,” I’m not really sure what ethical parameters are supposed to guide me. I guess if a UNC athletic department official offered me $20 to say that Boston College’s cheerleaders smell like bourbon, or that I heard that Randy Shannon huffs amyl nitrite and drinks PBR, I wouldn’t do it. I might take the money, but I’d never write anything I knew to be false.

I am, however, fairly certain that I don’t have to pretend to the same kind of impartiality that news reporters fake. I’m free to be a fan.

Hakeem Nicks

Hakeem Nicks

At first, this didn’t matter much. I like football, I live in North Carolina, I knew I’d enjoy covering the ‘Heels, but I didn’t care much whether they won or lost. To be honest, I expected them to be terrible, but I thought that, in some ways, it might be more interesting to cover a bad team than a good one.

But now I’m a convert. These guys don’t have the most high-profile players, a media-anointed coach, or the most historic program. They play for a school whose academic standards are high enough to make recruiting tricky. They’re not in, or near, a major urban center likely to attract high profile players. They lost starting QB TJ Yates early in the season, and their best offensive player, future NFL starter Brandon Tate, two weeks ago. Neither will return. Coming into Saturday’s game, they had two in-conference losses, one to Virginia Tech when Yates went down, and the other to erratic Virginia in their first game without Tate.

But this has been a strange and exciting season for North Carolina under Coach Butch Davis, an old hand brought in to raise the program’s reputation. Strange because they keep winning games despite allowing opponents to beat them in total yards and time of possession, and exciting because they make big plays, offensively (usually big passes to Hakeem Nicks or Tate), defensively (the team is intercepting the ball at a record-setting pace), and on special teams (specifically punt blocks).

Last week, against see-saw Virginia, they finally outgained an opponent - and lost.

Saturday, North Carolina faced another ACC foe, 5-1 Boston College. BC has an ace QB, Chris Crane, and is known for scoring in bunches. Having lost two in-conference games, UNC had to win to keep their bowl hopes alive.

However, UNC lost their first Tate-less contest last week, and I was pretty skeptical that they could keep pulling rabbits out of a hat every game. Continue reading »

Football, UNC-Chapel Hill , , , ,

The Fighting Tar Heels, plus a moment with Roy

Forrest Norman · 12 Oct 2008, 10:17 AM · Comment


Alright, this’ll have to be quick, mainly because I wasn’t able to go to the game, and a TiVo malfunction precluded me from watching the whole thing. In fact, I think I’ll supplement this summary with a Roy Williams anecdote, seeing as how basketball season is within sniffing distance.

Butch Davis

Butch Davis

The Tar Heels beat storied Notre Dame to continue their surprising season Saturday. OK, they didn’t exactly triumph over the Notre Dame of yore, but Charlie Weis’ team, after suffering through a hellish ‘07, was 4-1 coming into Saturday’s game, and looks to be on the up. So, another win over a name team for the Heels, bringing their record to 5-1 and further cementing the impression that, in the long-term, Coach Butch Davis will make North Carolina a contender in the ACC, and in the short-term, North Carolina could be looking at some interesting bowl scenarios after the regular season.

What’s most interesting about the Notre Dame game is how UNC won. Much like last week’s win over (previously) undefeated UConn, a glance at the stats would lead a casual observer to believe that UNC probably lost the game. But the Heels have developed an expertise in turning opponents’ mistakes into points—in this case capitalizing on turnovers by talented, precocious Notre Dame QB Jimmy Clausen.

So, the defense has been good at forcing mistakes (already exceeding their interception total for last season) and the offense has been able to score when it counts. This is promising, and it has to say something about defensive savvy and overall endurance. But the fact that UNC has had to scrap for almost every win (yesterday’s game against Notre Dame was decided in the final seconds, as was the win against Miami), and that they tend to let opponents score between interceptions and fumbles, is troubling. They’re going to have to play better to beat really good teams, but they seem to be closer to that level than they’ve been in years. And they’ve certainly improved their performance in close games over last year’s 4-8 squad, which lost four games by four points or less.

 

Cam Sexton

Cam Sexton

The other high point for UNC in Saturday’s game: QB Cam Sexton, filling in for injured starter TJ Yates, continues to get the ball to the team’s best offensive assets, receivers Brandon Tate, Hakeem Nicks and Brooks Foster. Against Notre Dame, Sexton passed for 201 yards and ran for a 4-yard TD early in the fourth quarter. Nicks had nine receptions for 141 yards. Tate, however, went out in the first quarter with an injury sustained while returning a punt. He walked off the field under his own power, but there’s no word on the prognosis yet.

 

Next up, a trip to Charlottesville for the even-steven Cavaliers (3-3, 1-1). This is the club that Duke throttled earlier this fall. This is also the club that knocked off East Carolina yesterday, 35-20.  

_______________________

So, a couple weeks ago, I spent all of five minutes with UNC basketball coach Roy Williams at a UNC football game.

Well, we waited for an elevator, rode on the elevator, and walked down a hallway together. I didn’t even try to talk to the guy. First of all, what’s the point? But even if I’d wanted to offer thanks and praises, or ask him to lay hands on me, I would have had to find an opening, because this guy was swarmed. I felt uncomfortable just watching. Everyone wanted a piece, and Roy just smiled and took it as everyone within a 20-foot range yelled greetings and, hilariously, basketball advice.

The strangest thing was how touchy-feely people were with Roy. He was accosted on the elevator by an alum, and this guy (Carolina blue sweater vest, pressed khakis, Titleist visor) stood inches from Roy’s face, talking about how he was sure he and Roy had some friends in common and wouldn’t it be great to go out to dinner sometime, and by the way he had no doubt, none whatsoever, that a national championship was in store for Roy’s boys this year. … And on he went.

When the elevator door opened for his floor, he didn’t just shake Roy’s hand, like many of the others I’d seen (a pattern which would repeat three times during a short walk from the elevator to the box where Roy was watching the game, culminating with a guy who I’m pretty was a janitor giving Roy a hearty handshake and mini-hug).

This good old boy patted Roy’s belly. Patted his belly! How is that an acceptable salutation?

Granted, as UNC coach, Roy is public property to some degree, and he also doesn’t have the forbidding mien of a Nick Saban. He looks like a nice guy, often has a grin on his face. … But how that translates into a license to pat his belly. … Roy just took it all with a happy smile. Maybe he’s been that way ever since Ty Hansbrough decided to play another year, or maybe he gulps down a handful of Xanax before facing the good burghers of Chapel Hill in public situations. All I know is that I had an almost irresistible urge to ruffle his hair and kiss him, softly, on each cheek, before we parted ways.

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