North Carolina
Fall Snapshot: North Carolina Tar Heels
(Photograph Courtesy of North Carolina Athletics)
Welcome to the Fall Snapshot collection. All through the autumn I will probably be taking an early have a look at all 75 DI males’s faculty lacrosse groups and giving a snapshot of the place every is heading into the 2023 season.
Head Coach: Joe Breschi (fifteenth yr, 2008-Current)
North Carolina 2022 Document: 8-6 (1-5 ACC)
Key Departures: Chris Grey (A), Nicky Solomon (A), Cole Herbert (M), Jacob Kelly (A), Sean Morris (D)
Key Returners: Lance Tillman (M), Henry Schertzinger (M), Matt Wright (LSM), Alex Breschi (SSDM), Connor Maher (SSDM), Paul Barton (D), Collin Krieg (G), Zac Tucci (FO), Andrew Tyeryear (FO)
Switch Additions: Logan McGovern (A), Sean Goldsmith (A), Harry Welford (M), Griffin Gallagher (M), Andrew Geppert (D), JT Rosselle (LSM)
North Carolina was one of many groups that underperformed essentially the most in 2022. Beginning the yr as a preseason high 10 group and a yr faraway from a Championship Weekend look, expectations had been excessive for the Tar Heels regardless of the lack of its complete first midfield and the perfect defenseman in faculty lacrosse.
Struggles highlighted the Tar Heels 2022 marketing campaign as they ended the yr with an 8-6 (1-5 ACC) document, out of the NCAA Event, and nowhere to be discovered within the ultimate high 20 rankings. And thru the ultimate 5 weeks of the season, the Tar Heels went 1-4 with its solely win coming over Syracuse, 14-13.
Merely put, North Carolina wasn’t in a position to change its most important losses or discover solutions the place it wanted them essentially the most. Now, in 2023, all eyes will probably be on the Tar Heels to see if they will certainly get again on observe.
Burning Questions
What Does The Assault Unit Look Like?
Final season, North Carolina was tasked with having to interchange its complete beginning midfield. This time, it’s the assault unit that should get replaced. Tewarraton Finalist and NCAA all-time factors chief Chris Grey is gone and takes with him his 80 factors (48G/32A) from final season. Nicky Solomon (20G/17A) and Jacob Kelly (20G/15A) are additionally gone. The three beginning attackmen mixed for 152 factors (88 targets) final season and accounted for 54% of the Tar Heels’ scoring output. Grey alone accounted for 29% of that output.
Filling the holes left open on this assault line, and particularly the position of Grey had, goes to be a monumental process for this North Carolina group. Whether or not or not the Tar Heels can, at the least, produce at a excessive sufficient stage on the place to win video games persistently would be the query that dominates the storyline of this group in 2023.
The Tar Heels have added a pair of switch attackmen who will probably be anticipated to assist fill that void instantly. Logan McGovern is available in from Bryant, the place he put up 54 factors off 19 targets and 35 assists as a junior this previous spring. Sean Goldsmith is a grad switch from Mercer and had 35 targets and 16 assists for 51 factors in 2022. These two will probably assist kind the core round which this assault unit will probably be constructed. The Tar Heels additionally usher in highly-touted freshman Dominic Pietramala (Boy’s Latin, Md.) on the place.
Can The Protection Enhance?
North Carolina ranked 52nd in DI in scoring protection as they allowed 12.86 targets per sport final season. Twice (vs Ohio State, vs Duke) the Tar Heels allowed 18-plus targets. Protection was the this group’s biggest weak spot final season and the one space the place the best quantity of enchancment will probably be wanted in the event that they wish to get again on observe.
LSM Matt Wright (27GB/12CT) was the group’s high producing pole final season as its high LSM. Tyler Schwarz (14GB/4CT) was the secondary LSM as a freshman and in addition returns, in addition to SSDMs Alex Breschi (18GB/8CT) and Conner Maher (43GB/8CT). That group was productive and highlighted an in any other case unhealthy and injury-impacted protection. The identical will be mentioned for goalie Collin Krieg. He adopted up a stellar freshman marketing campaign with a 2022 season that noticed him make 182 saves with a 50.3% save share.
At shut, the Tar Heels noticed a large number of gamers come out and in of the lineup all season, partly as a result of accidents. Paul Barton (22GB/7CT), Blake Gable (19GB/5CT), Sean Morris (8GB/5CT), Maxwell Cooney (3GB/4CT), and Collin Loughead (6GB/3CT) had been all main items of that rotation. Barton began six video games as a freshman whereas Gable began 10 as a sophomore. Cooney performed within the first 4 video games and began the primary three earlier than lacking the remainder of the season as a result of damage entire Loughead performed in 9 video games with 5 begins. Morris is the one one not returning as he has exhausted his eligibility. Along with that group who returns, the Tar Heels have additionally introduced a pair of graduate switch poles in Andrew Geppert from Brown and JT Roselle from Marist, who was the MAAC LSM of The 12 months in 2022.
Will The Faceoff State of affairs Swing Again Up?
In the course of the 2021 season, the duo of Zach Tucci and Andrew Tyeryar proved to be one of many higher one-two punches in faculty lacrosse. As a group, the Tar Heels went 53% on the dot whereas Tucci and Tyeryar went Tucci went 56.8% and 51.9% individually, ending the yr ranked twenty second and thirty second in faceoff win share.
This previous season, North Carolina went 51.5% as a group on the dot whereas Tucci went 119-for-219 (54.3%) whereas Tyeryar went 59-for-115 (51.3%). Each high faceoff males battled damage at instances. Graham Schwartz and Chase Mullins, who has since left this system, additionally noticed restricted motion. Whereas the general numbers don’t present an enormous drop, however the story towards ACC competitors is completely different. The Tar Heels went 44% on the dot in ACC play and didn’t go 50% or over towards any ACC group.
Tucci, Tyeryar, and Schwartz are all again in 2023 and will probably be joined by a pair of freshman in Colin Hannigan (Springfield, Pa.) and George Kalos (Hough, N.C.).
Potential Breakout Participant
Dewey Egan, Assault, Sophomore
Egan arrived in Chapel Hill final fall as a highly-touted recruit and made an affect within the restricted motion he noticed. Egan performed in 9 video games and began every of the final three contests, ending the season with 5 targets and one assists. Now a Sophomore and with many holes to fill on that Carolina offense, Egan might present a stable reply.
Freshman Class
North Carolina brings in one other very robust group of freshman that would make a direct affect with its 2022 recruiting class. Headlining the group is attackman Dominic Pietramala (Boy’s Latin,Md.) who’s rated as a five-star and ranked No. 2 within the class by Inside Lacrosse. Attackman James Matan (Gonzaga, D.C.) and midfielder Tayden Bultman (Ridgefield, Conn.) are additionally five-star recruits, per IL.
North Carolina
Mark Robinson attempts to quash GOP dissent as neighboring states' governors abandon his campaign • NC Newsline
Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson is attempting to rally Republican support in the final stretch of the North Carolina governor’s race — but it won’t include the GOP governors in all four neighboring states.
In the days since CNN published an investigation connecting Robinson to a series of explicit racial and sexual posts online, the governors of South Carolina, Georgia, Tennessee and Virginia — all Republicans — have distanced themselves from Robinson’s candidacy.
Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee, head of the group for GOP governors, has withdrawn his endorsement. Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp said he “will not be offering further support,” while Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin’s office similarly said he had “no plans” for future support. And South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster plans to direct his attention elsewhere.
“I don’t think I’ll be going back to North Carolina,” McMaster told South Carolina reporters. “They haven’t asked me to come. I have been there before. I campaign for a lot of Republicans, and I will continue to do that. But I think there are others that may need help as well.”
The comments come as the Republican Governors Association, the campaign group dedicating to electing GOP governors, halted spending in the state despite it being one of the only competitive races this cycle. RGA’s most recent spending expired on Tuesday; they have not made any new investments.
Robinson, meanwhile, has sought to rally what remaining support he has left among Republicans, while stamping out criticism within the party. In a short video posted to social media Wednesday, he appears to be speaking on a video call on a computer.
“This morning I spoke with Republican leaders across the state and made it clear: This is an election about policies, not personalities,” Robinson wrote. “Now is not the time for intra-party squabbling and nonsense.”
“A surefire way to destroy this country is to start attacking each other rather than enemies at hand,” Robinson wrote in another post. “As Republicans, we should have one mission, and that is VICTORY in November.”
His campaign did not respond to a request for comment on the four governors distancing themselves from Robinson.
NC GOP candidates want answers — but those in top races stop short of calls to step aside
The reception from North Carolina Republicans down the ticket have been slightly less chilly.
GOP candidates for statewide office have urged Robinson to get to the bottom of the online comments. He has hired an attorney to investigate CNN’s reporting, and today pledged “complete cooperation.”
Hal Weatherman, the Republican candidate for lieutenant governor, said if Robinson can prove the allegations are false, “he will win in a landslide.” If not, “he will lose, because the comments being attributed to him are highly disturbing.”
Weatherman said Republicans in the state “need to stay focused on winning our own races.” He did not call for Robinson to step aside as nominee if he cannot find evidence that proves he did not make the online comments.
U.S. Rep. Dan Bishop said he was “focused on winning the attorney general’s race.”
“As a matter of law, any decisions about how to proceed in the governor’s race rest solely with Mark and are between him and the people of North Carolina,” Bishop wrote on social media.
One Republican candidate has explicitly called for Robinson to step aside if he’s unable to refute the allegations made in the CNN story — Brad Briner, the nominee for state treasurer.
“If Mark Robinson cannot put these allegations to rest in the coming days, he should step aside for a candidate that can turn the focus of the campaign back to issues like inflation, healthcare costs and taxes that voters tell me they are concerned about,” Briner wrote.
U.S. Sen. Thom Tillis did not explicitly call for Robinson to step aside, but did write on social media that if the reporting is true, Robinson should “take accountability for his actions and put the future of NC & our party before himself.” He gave Robinson a deadline of Friday. U.S. Sen. Ted Budd called the allegations “disturbing,” and said Robinson should prove they’re not true.
Robinson has not listed any public events on his campaign website since Monday.
Several media outlets reported Wednesday that top staffers in the lieutenant governor’s state office have issued resignations this week. Robinson announced Thursday afternoon that Krishana Polite would serve as his new chief of staff. She previously served as the deputy chief of staff.
North Carolina
North Carolina GOP focusing on 'hand-to-hand political combat' to ramp up ground game in battleground state
RALEIGH, N.C. — North Carolina Republicans are taking both a data-driven and hand-to-hand approach to target key voters in the battleground state whose electoral votes are historically decided by just a small fraction of people.
Republicans won North Carolina in the past three presidential elections, but the results have consistently come down to just a couple of thousand votes, with former President Trump winning by about 4% in 2016 and 1% in 2020. The last Democrat to win the state, former President Obama in 2008, won by less than 14,000 votes.
As Republicans ramp up their get out the vote efforts this cycle, leaders at the forefront of the movement told Fox News Digital that they are focusing their resources on encouraging early voting and delivering their message to the key 1% to 2% that could swing the election for either party.
Jason Simmons, chair of the North Carolina Republican Party, told Fox News Digital that there has been an “overwhelming” response to their knocking on doors and grassroots activism.
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“We’ve been very engaged with all of our grassroots activists and have a very enthusiastic response. People are fired up. As I travel from one end of the state to the next, you see our Trump captains really engaging with the voters of North Carolina, taking the message of why it’s important in this year to go out more so than ever,” Simmons told Fox. “They’re out there every day knocking [on] doors, making phone calls, talking to the voters of North Carolina about the issues that matter most.”
Republicans in the state are also using data to help turn out the vote for residents who haven’t been engaged in voting in past elections.
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“It’s really drilling down into the data and identifying those voters that we know will vote our way, especially the low- to mid-propensity voters, by getting in front of them and talking to them about those issues that matter most to them and then encouraging them to make that plan and to go vote,” Simmons said.
After speaking with voters across the state, Simmons said the economy, inflation and the southern border are the issues of top concern among North Carolina voters.
Republicans are also investing in encouraging early voting this cycle, and according to Dallas Woodhouse, state director for a conservative training outfit, American Majority, the data reveals that more early voting would benefit the GOP in 2024.
“We have field teams out right now educating conservative voters about the importance of actually voting early, voting by mail in North Carolina, how it is safe to vote by mail. We’re trying to turn around some of the trends that were difficult for conservatives in 2020 and 2022,” Woodhouse said. “What we know is that the earlier you get the vote in, the more efficient it is for candidates, for parties. And if you wait till the last minute, you are at risk of illness and bad weather and your cost per vote goes way out.”
Woodhouse said that by Election Day, America Majority expects to have knocked on half a million doors in the state, reached a million voters by phone and a million and a half voters through text messages.
“All you can do is go out and fight every day, go out, push the message of free markets, limited government, strong national defense, and get people out to vote what they do from theirs up to them.”
Woodhouse added that the presidential race in North Carolina is going to be “razor-close to the end.”
“The fact is, North Carolina is razor-close. … So, voter by voter or house by house, that’s what you’re into: hand-to-hand political combat to get every single voter to the polls.”
Mark Robinson, North Carolina’s lieutenant governor and the Republican gubernatorial candidate, recently came under fire after CNN published a report alleging that Robinson had previously made salacious comments, such as referring to himself as a “Black Nazi” on pornographic websites in the late 2000s. Just days later, his campaign released a statement that staff in various senior roles had stepped down.
“It’s very unfortunate, and it’s disturbing, troubling, the remarks that we’ve seen and the allegations attributed to Mark Robinson,” Simmons told Fox of the recent controversy. “But ultimately, it’s up to him to go and talk to the voters of North Carolina and show them that these are not his words, his values. And we’ll continue to talk to the voters of North Carolina about those issues that matter most to them.”
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Both Trump and his Democrat opponent, Vice President Harris, have been campaigning throughout the Old North State with just weeks left until the highly anticipated presidential contest on Nov. 5.
North Carolina
Trump rails against Iranian threats, courts crucial swing state voters: 3 takeaways from NC speech
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WASHINGTON – Former President Donald Trump took to the stump Wednesday to address issues ranging from Iranian threats to the economy, courting voters in the crucial state of North Carolina as the 2024 race for the White House enters its final stages.
“This is a very important place, a very important state,” Trump said during a speech in Mint Hill, near Charlotte.
North Carolina has long been viewed as a pivotal swing state, though it has backed Republicans in every presidential election since 2008. Still, some say the Tar Heel State is suddenly at risk for the GOP nominee because of the scandal engulfing gubernatorial candidate Mark Robinson.
Trump didn’t mention Robinson, who’s facing backlash over a CNN report alleging he made shocking comments on a pornography website. The former president hasn’t retracted his support for Robinson, who insists he’s staying in what’s expected to be one of the tightest governor races this fall.
The former president instead promoted his economic plans, while denouncing those of his opponent, Vice President Kamala Harris.
At the start of his 67-minute speech, Trump stressed intelligence reports that Iran is targeting him. He also suggested that Tehran might be involved the two recent assassination attempts against him − despite assertions from authorities that there is no evidence of Iranian involvement.
“As you know, there have been two assassination attempts on my life, that we know of, and they may or may not involve – but possibly do – Iran,” Trump said.
Here are USA TODAY’s top takeaways from the Wednesday speech.
Bashing Iranian threats
Trump in North Carolina said the U.S. government should warn Iranian officials that their country and its cities would be blown to “smithereens” if any harm comes to presidential candidates.
“If I were the president, I would inform the threatening country, in this case Iran, that if you do anything to harm this person, we are going to blow your largest cities and the country itself to smithereens,” Trump said. “We’re going to blow it to smithereens. You can’t do that, and there would be no more threats. … But right now we don’t have that leadership.”
Trump traveled to North Carolina the day after his campaign announced that intelligence officials briefed the former president about “specific threats from Iran to assassinate him in an effort to destabilize and sow chaos in the United States.”
American officials have accused Iran of hacking Trump computers, but said there is no evidence linking the regime to the two attempts on Trump’s life.
In discussing Iran with a supportive crowd, Trump again invoked the July 13 attempt on his life, when a bullet whizzed just past his head – nicking his ear and drawing blood. A week ago Sunday, authorities arrested and charged him with attempted assassination after he carried a rifle onto Trump’s golf course in West Palm Beach, Florida.
After the North Carolina speech, the Trump campaign announced that he will return to Butler for a rally on Oct. 5.
U.S. officials and Trump aides have long said they suspect Iran will seek revenge on Trump for the killing of Iranian Gen. Qasem Soleimani, which occurred during Trump’s term in the White House.
Secretary of State Antony Blinken, appearing on NBC this week, said that “this is something we’ve been tracking very intensely for a long time – an ongoing threat by Iran against a number of senior officials, including former government officials like President Trump, and some people who are currently serving the administration. So it’s something we take very, very seriously.”
Courting North Carolina voters
This was Trump’s second North Carolina rally in four days, following a CNN report that Robinson made the offensive online posts.
The report was sweeping. CNN accuses Robinson of frequenting a pornographic website between 2008 and 2012 and posting a variety of comments that are sexually explicitly, racist, transphobic or insulting in other ways.
The outlet also reported the Robinson called himself a Black Nazi, and that he supported some degree of slavery in the United States, as well as supporting Nazi leader Adolph Hitler over then-President Barack Obama’s leadership.
Robinson has denied being the author of these posts; he also did not attend either of the recent Trump rallies in his state.
As during an airport rally Saturday in Wilmington, North Carolina, Trump gave shout-outs to prominent North Carolina Republicans, but did not so much as mention Robinson’s name, his party’s candidate for governor.
The North Carolina governorship is one of the major races Republicans have hoped to pick up in November. However, in recent polls, North Carolina Attorney General Josh Stein, the Democratic nominee, has led Robinson by as much as 10 percentage points.
The Harris campaign – citing Trump’s repeated praise of Robinson in months past – has revved up get-out-the-vote efforts in North Carolina since the CNN story broke. Polls in the presidential election show a tight race in a state that Trump carried in both 2016 and 2020, and probably has to win to have a chance of regaining the White House.
Focusing on the economy
Trump made the economy a major theme of his Wednesday speech event, just as he did Monday in Savannah, Georgia.
The Republican nominee promoted plans to reduce taxes and business regulations, along with efforts get companies to bring jobs back to the U.S. from overseas. He also defended calls for more tariffs on companies that move jobs from America to other countries. Trump has made economic policies the focal point of his campaign for weeks, though he again on Wednesday offered few details of how he would make these promises a reality.
Trump also attacked Harris over her own economic program, as well as inflation, illegal border crossings, Ukraine, the Middle East – and the impact of all that on state of North Carolina. He particularly focused on the furniture manufacturing industry, a longtime factor in the swing state’s economy which has seen major upheaval in recent decades.
“This November,” he said, “the people of North Carolina are going to tell her we’ve had enough.”
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