2008 North Carolina Tar Heels football team

2008 North Carolina Tar Heels football
Conference Atlantic Coast Conference
Division Coastal
2008 record 0–5, 8[1] wins vacated (0–4 ACC, 4 wins vacated)
Head coach Butch Davis
Offensive coordinator John Shoop
Offensive scheme Pro-style
Defensive coordinator Everett Withers
Base defense 4–3
Home stadium Kenan Memorial Stadium
(Capacity: 60,000)
2008 ACC football standings
Conf     Overall
Team   W   L         W   L  
Atlantic Division
Boston College xy   5 3         9 5  
#21 Florida State x   5 3         9 4  
Maryland   4 4         8 5  
Wake Forest   4 4         8 5  
Clemson   4 4         7 6  
NC State   4 4         6 7  
Coastal Division
#15 Virginia Tech xy$   5 3         10 4  
#22 Georgia Tech x   5 3         9 4  
North Carolina   0 4         0 5  
Miami   4 4         7 6  
Virginia   3 5         5 7  
Duke   1 7         4 8  

Championship: Virginia Tech 30, Boston College 12
  • $ BCS representative as conference champion
  • x Division champion/co-champions
  • y Championship game participant
  • North Carolina vacated 8 wins, including 4 ACC wins
Rankings from AP Poll

The 2008 North Carolina Tar Heels football team represented the University of North Carolina in the 2008 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Tar Heels played their home games at Kenan Memorial Stadium in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, competed in the Atlantic Coast Conference, and were led by second-year coach Butch Davis. The Tar Heels began their season on August 30 against McNeese State at Kenan Memorial Stadium. The team went 4–4 in conference play and 8–5 overall, but in 2011, North Carolina vacated all its wins from the 2008 and 2009 seasons.[1]

Recruiting

The Tar Heels received 16 letters of intent on National Signing Day, February 6, 2008. One student athlete had already enrolled before National Signing Day and one signed several days later, making this class smaller and less-heralded than the previous year's class.

Coaching staff

After signing a contract extension at the end of the 2007 season, Butch Davis enters his second season as head coach. Chuck Pagano resigned as defensive coordinator and defensive backs coach to become an assistant coach with the Baltimore Ravens in the NFL. He was replaced by Minnesota assistant Everett Withers.[2][3]

Name Position [4] Seasons in Position
Butch Davis Head Coach 2nd
John Blake Associate Head Coach / Recruiting Coordinator / Defensive Line 2nd
Ken Browning Running Backs 15th
Jeff Connors Strength and Conditioning Coordinator 8th
Steve Hagen Tight Ends 2nd
John Lovett Special Teams Coordinator / Defensive Assistant 2nd
Sam Pittman Offensive Line 2nd
John Shoop Offensive Coordinator / Quarterbacks 2nd
Tommy Thigpen Linebackers 4th
Charlie Williams Wide Receivers 2nd
Everett Withers Defensive Coordinator / Defensive Backs 1st

Roster

Wide Receiver
  • 1 Brooks FosterSenior
  • 2 Cooter Arnold – Senior
  • 3 Kenton Thornton – Junior
  • 15 Anthony Parker-Boyd – Sophomore
  • 19 Josh Washburn – Junior
  • 23 Quentin Plair – Sophomore
  • 34 Brett Long – Senior
  • 82 Todd Harrelson – Freshman
  • 83 Dwight JonesFreshman
  • 85 Rashad Mason – Freshman
  • 87 Brandon TateSenior
  • 88 Hakeem NicksJunior
Offensive Lineman
  • 60 Zack Handerson – Sophomore
  • 64 Jonathan CooperFreshman
  • 65 Cam Holland – Freshman
  • 66 Mike Ingersoll – Sophomore
  • 67 Morgan Randall – Sophomore
  • 68 Mike Dykes – Freshman
  • 69 Lowell Dyer – Junior
  • 70 Alan Pelc – Sophomore
  • 71 Carl Gaskins – Freshman
  • 72 Kyle Jolly – Junior
  • 73 Aaron Stahl – Junior
  • 74 Sam Ellis – Sophomore
  • 75 Garrett Reynolds – Senior
  • 76 Bryon Bishop – Senior
  • 77 Kevin Bryant – Freshman
  • 79 Calvin Darity – Senior
Half-back
Tight End
  • 80 Ed Barham – Sophomore
  • 81 B.J. Phillips – Sophomore
  • 86 Randy White – Freshman
  • 89 Richard QuinnSenior
 
Quarterback
  • 7 Mike Paulus – Freshman
  • 11 Cameron Sexton – Junior
  • 13 T.J. YatesSophomore
  • 14 Braden Hanson – Freshman
Running Back
  • 5 Jamal Womble – Freshman
  • 8 Greg LittleSophomore
  • 20 Shaun DraughnSophomore
  • 30 Carter Brown – Sophomore
  • 32 Ryan Houston – Sophomore
  • 45 Devon Ramsay – Freshman
Fullback
  • 4 Bobby Rome – Junior
  • 6 Anthony Elzy – Sophomore
  • 43 Curtis Byrd – Sophomore
Defensive tackle
  • 9 Marvin AustinSophomore
  • 91 Tydreke Powell – Freshman
  • 93 Cam ThomasJunior
  • 94 Brian White – Junior
  • 96 Tavares Brown – Junior
  • 97 Aleric Mullins – Junior
Defensive End
Cornerback
  • 12 Charles Brown – Sophomore
  • 16 Kendric Burney – Sophomore
  • 23 Jordan Hemby – Junior
  • 24 Tavorris Jolly – Sophomore
  • 26 Richie Rich – Junior
  • 29 Brian Gupton – Freshman
  • 34 Johnny WhiteSophomore
  • 37 LaCount Fantroy – Freshman
 
Linebacker
  • 35 Herman Davidson – Freshman
  • 36 Kennedy Tinsley – Junior
  • 41 Mark Paschal – Senior
  • 44 Chase RiceSenior
  • 45 Alex Crisp – Sophomore
  • 47 Zach BrownFreshman
  • 49 Ryan TaylorJunior
  • 52 Quan SturdivantSophomore
  • 53 Kenneth Harris – Freshman
  • 54 Bruce CarterSophomore
  • 55 Linwan Euwell – Freshman
  • 57 Dion Guy – Freshman
  • 57 Hayden Hunter – Sophomore
  • 58 Ebele Okakpu – Freshman
Safety
  • 7 Josh Stewart – Sophomore
  • 10 Melvin Williams – Junior
  • 21 Da'Norris SearcySophomore
  • 25 Matt Merletti – Sophomore
  • 27 Deunta WilliamsSophomore
  • 28 Jonathan Smith – Sophomore
  • 31 Trimane Goddard – Senior
  • 32 Tyler Caldwell – Junior
  • 43 Jabir Jones – Senior
Long Snapper
  • 51 Trevor Stuart – Sophomore
  • 58 Mark House – Sophomore
Punter / Place Kicker
  • 11 Casey Barth – Freshman
  • 16 Trase Jones – Sophomore
  • 17 Grant Schallock – Sophomore
  • 18 Jay Wooten – Freshman
  • 19 Terrence Brown – Senior
  • 29 Reid Phillips – Sophomore

Schedule

Date Time Opponent# Rank# Site TV Result Attendance
August 30 6:05 PM McNeese State* Kenan Memorial StadiumChapel Hill, North Carolina ESPN360 W 35–27  (vacated) 58,000
September 11 7:45 PM at Rutgers* Rutgers StadiumPiscataway, New Jersey ESPN W 44–12  (vacated) 42,502
September 20 3:30 PM Virginia Tech Kenan Memorial Stadium • Chapel Hill, North Carolina ABC/ESPN L 17–20   59,800
September 27 12:00 PM at Miami (FL) Dolphin StadiumMiami Gardens, Florida ESPN2 W 28–24  (vacated) 35,830
October 4 7:00 PM No. 23 Connecticut* Kenan Memorial Stadium • Chapel Hill, North Carolina ESPN2 W 38–12  (vacated) 59,500
October 11 3:30 PM Notre Dame* No. 22 Kenan Memorial Stadium • Chapel Hill, North Carolina ABC/ESPN W 29–24  (vacated) 60,500
October 18 3:30 PM at Virginia No. 18 Scott StadiumCharlottesville, Virginia (South's Oldest Rivalry) ABC/ESPN2 L 13–16 OT  52,342
October 25 12:00 PM Boston College Kenan Memorial Stadium • Chapel Hill, North Carolina Raycom W 45–24  (vacated) 48,000
November 8 12:00 PM No. 20 Georgia Techdagger No. 19 Kenan Memorial Stadium • Chapel Hill, North Carolina Raycom W 28–7  (vacated) 59,000
November 15 3:30 PM at Maryland No. 17 Byrd StadiumCollege Park, Maryland ABC/ESPN L 15–17   46,113
November 22 12:00 PM North Carolina State Kenan Memorial Stadium • Chapel Hill, North Carolina Raycom L 10–41   60,000
November 29 3:30 PM at Duke Wallace Wade StadiumDurham, North Carolina (Victory Bell Game) ESPNU W 28–20  (vacated) 30,322
December 27 1:00 PM vs. West Virginia* Bank of America StadiumCharlotte, North Carolina (Meineke Car Care Bowl) ESPN L 30–31   73,712
*Non-conference game. daggerHomecoming. #Rankings from AP Poll. All times are in Eastern Time.

Did not play: Clemson, Florida State, and Wake Forest.[5] The spring football game is on March 28, 2009.[6]

Game notes

McNeese State

1 2 3 4 Total
McNeese State 0 14 6 7 27
North Carolina 7 7 7 14 35

Brandon Tate put on a dazzling one-man show, scoring on an 82-yard punt return and putting North Carolina ahead for good with a 57-yard TD catch to help the Tar Heels hold off McNeese State 35-27. Tate finished with a school-record 397 all-purpose yards for the Tar Heels, who showed little else in an unimpressive start to their second season under Butch Davis. In a game suspended nearly two hours due to weather, they blew a 14-0 first-half lead and had to rally from a third-quarter deficit against Football Championship Subdivision McNeese State, who outplayed the Heels much of the way. T.J. Yates had 221 passing yards and 2 TDs.[7]

Rutgers

1 2 3 4 Total
North Carolina 0 17 21 6 44
Rutgers 3 3 0 6 12

T.J. Yates threw three touchdown passes and the Tar Heels won for the first time outside North Carolina since 2002, beating error-prone Rutgers 44-12 in a nationally televised game that pitted Butch Davis against his former pupil, Greg Schiano. Hakeem Nicks and Brandon Tate combined for 10 catches, 204 receiving yards, and 3 TDs as the Heels offense rolled over Rutgers. Carolina's defense generated 4 Rutgers turnovers (3 INTs and a fumble) and scored off of a 66-yard interception return by Bruce Carter.[8]

References

  1. 1 2 North Carolina has vacated all wins from the 2008 and 2009 football seasons: "North Carolina Response to Notice of NCAA Allegations" (PDF). September 19, 2011. Retrieved September 19, 2011.
  2. "Butch Davis Agrees To Contract Extension." tarheelblue.com. Retrieved on January 28, 2008.
  3. "Pagano Headed Back To NFL." tarheelblue.com. Retrieved on February 12, 2008.
  4. "North Carolina Coaching Staff." tarheelblue.com. Retrieved on January 28, 2008.
  5. "ACC Releases North Carolina's 2008 Football Schedule." tarheelblue.com. Retrieved on February 12, 2008.
  6. "Spring Football Showcase Set For March 28." tarheelblue.com. Retrieved on February 9, 2009.
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