Friday, December 31, 2010

Heels win!

That headline does not do tonight's improbable win over Tennessee justice.  In the last 2 minutes there were enough weird and wacky plays for a life time of games, let alone one, let alone the something called the Franklin Mortgage Music City Bowl.


With a minute and a half left the Heels were dead, trailing 20 to 17 (Carolina was only down 3 thanks to HUGE a blocked extra point by Dante Paige-Moss)  AND Tennessee had the ball after a dropped pass by Dwight Jones on 4th and 20.  


I even left them for dead; at that point I tweeted: 'Heels first game ended w/ a dropped pass by our best receiver (Pianalto) and loss to an SEC team (LSU); last game ends the same way (Jones and Tennessee)."


But we had two times out left, the defense held and forced Tennessee to punt, and yadda yadda yadda, Carolina got the ball back on our 20 with 39 seconds left.  T.J. Yates, who has been so inspirational all season, completed a 35-yard pass to 'Woody' Harrelson, a play that netted 15 more yards after Tennessee was whistled for spearing/leading with the helmet.


The spearing was a huge blunder as it almost immediately put Carolina in field goal range.  But it was not the biggest blunder of the last minute and a half.


Fast forward to 16 seconds left.  Carolina is out of time outs but has moved the ball to the LSU 28.  The key phrase is OUT OF TIME OUTS.  Instead of throwing a pass to the sideline, a play that would have given the field goal unit a chance to take the field, Butch Davis called a running play.  The good news - Sean Draughn ran for 9 yards to the 17 yard line.  The bad news - and it was bad - was that the running play left almost no time to spike the ball and therefore give the kicking team a chance to take the field.


At that moment the Carolina Tar Heels became the Carolina Keystone Cops.  While Yates was trying to get the offense set - which was taking a long time since the Heels had gained almost 10 yards -  the field goal unit started taking the field.


Panic ensued, but more importantly the clock was winding down.  


Luckily, Yates kept his head ("If you can keep your wits about you while those around you are losing theirs, then you are a man my son" - from If, by my main man Rudyard Kipling) and realized that time was more critical than yardage.  He ran under center, took the snap, and spiked the ball with one second left.  Of course, with the kicking team running around Carolina was whistled for having too many men on the field.  


The penalty moved the ball back to the 22, but most importantly the penalty stopped the clock. The kicking team took the field - correctly this time - and Casey Barth calmly nailed a 39-yard field goal to send the game into overtime.


In the second overtime a Quan Sturdivant interception set up another Barth field goal, this time from 22 yards, and somehow the Heels won a game that Butch Davis should have lost.


For me, this game reminded me of how resilient and determined the Heels team has been, and how much of an embarrassment Butch Davis has been as a coach. 


You don't have to be Vince Lombardi to know that when you are OUT OF TIME OUTS you don't run it with 16 seconds left.  You need quick plays, and at that point in the game quick=pass.  Then to see the kicking team run out onto the field, when we had yet to spike the ball or kill the clock?  The team was obviously unorganized and panicky.  


Disorganization and a lack of discipline have been a problem all season for the Heels.  During the season it usually manifested itself in too many stupid penalties.  That happened tonight, too, but the running play with 16 seconds left and the kicking team taking the field were the whipped cream and cherry a top an undisciplined team sundae (in case you're wondering, that last line was NOT from Kipling).


I honestly don't see the appeal of Butch Davis.  It's not like he's winning 10 games a season, or the Heels are playing for the ACC championship every year.  Instead, we get 8 wins, embarrassing headlines about agents on campus, players cheating in class and getting thrown off the team, and a football team that wins IN SPITE of their coach's clock management or organization.  


I imagine Carolina can find some one else who could win 8 games a year, take us to a middling bowl game, AND not embarrass a university known throughout the country for doing things the right way when it comes to student-athletes. 


I support firing Butch Davis before he embarrasses the university any more.


Who DO I support? The Tar Heel players.  Like I said earlier, the players have been inspiring in the face of the suspensions and injuries.  Tonight a number of Heels stepped up and made plays, the first among equals being Yates. 


Statistically he had a mediocre game, but leadership-wise he WAS Carolina football tonight.  His decision to spike the ball is the most vivid example.  But I also loved his 39-yard touchdown to Dwight Jones to end the first half, a smart, savvy, improvisational play.  


Of course, Barth was cool as the other side of the pillow in making a clutch field goal with one second left.


Tight end Robert Taylor, a senior like Yates, had 9 catches including two big ones in final drive in regulation.


Draughn carried the load all game and scored on a nifty 58-yard run in the first quarter.


Quentin Coples was huge on defense, and the unsung play of the game was Paige-Moss' blocked extra point.  


That blocked point after touchdown symbolizes this team. It's a minor detail, the extra point, and there was every reason for Carolina to pack it in at that point.  But that was true for the entire season.  When Greg Little and Marvin Austin were kicked off the team the entire Carolina squad could have given up the season.


But Paige-Moss did not give in on that extra point, and he and Yates and Barth and Taylor and Coples and Highsmith and Burney and Sturdivant and etcetera did not give in on the season, either. 


Pretty good stuff.  


GO HEELS!


PS: Fire Butch Davis

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

"We could have just easily did an extra point and just went through the motions," Paige-Moss said. "But by me doing what I do always in practice by getting my hands up, we was able to kick a field goal to tie it up and win it in overtime."