North Carolina
North Carolina Senate approves bill that will reduce wait-time for permit holders to drive unsupervised
Extra younger North Carolina drivers would not have to carry a learner’s allow as lengthy earlier than advancing to unsupervised driving in laws permitted by the state Senate on Thursday.
The invoice in essence extends and modifies state regulation permitted throughout the COVID-19 pandemic that shortened from 12 months to 6 the time that a teen needed to maintain the allow earlier than getting what’s known as a restricted provisional license. That regulation, which was designed to assist youngsters with delayed driver’s training courses, expired Jan. 1.
The measure, which handed 38-5 and now heads to the Home, would reinstate the six-month minimal for the remainder of 2023 earlier than settling completely at 9 months. The measure would not get rid of different necessities to acquire the restricted provisional license, akin to being a minimum of 16 years outdated, logging 60 hours behind the wheel with a supervising driver — normally a father or mother — and passing a street check.
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Sen. Vickie Sawyer, an Iredell County Republican and invoice sponsor, stated the laws responds to younger drivers’ requests and would additionally extra carefully align the ready interval with that of younger drivers in Virginia and South Carolina.
The invoice additionally would barely ease passenger constraints for a restricted provisional licensee. Present regulation says when an unsupervised driver carries members of the family underneath age 21, no unrelated particular person underneath 21 can be a passenger. The invoice says the motive force may ferry an unrelated passenger underneath 21 on the similar time, however just for journey to and from faculty.
North Carolina has a three-step graduated license system for teen drivers that may start at 15. A baby can obtain a full provisional license as quickly as age 16 1/2.
North Carolina
Key Ole Miss Transfer Target Thaddeus Dixon Chooses North Carolina Over Rebels
The Ole Miss Rebels have made strong moves in the transfer portal this offseason, but the program missed out on a key contributor on Saturday when cornerback Thaddeus Dixon pledged to the North Carolina Tar Heels.
Ole Miss was in the race late for Dixon, but a deciding factor in his decision to join the Tar Heels may have boiled down to Carolina’s hiring of former Washington assistant Armond Hawkins as defensive backs coach. Dixon is a transfer from the Washington Huskies, so familiarity in his new home likely played a role.
READ MORE: Will Ole Miss QB Austin Simmons Continue Playing Baseball in 2025?
So, where do the Rebels go from here? Ole Miss has already gained some key pieces in its secondary out of the transfer portal (including CB Jaylon Braxton of Arkansas), but Lane Kiffin’s team will probably still be seeking some help in the defensive backfield as the transfer portal continues to move.
According to On3’s current transfer portal class rankings, Ole Miss has the third-best haul in the country, behind Texas Tech and Missouri. The Rebels have seen 23 players transfer into the program so far this offseason, and that number could continue to grow between now and kickoff of the 2025 season.
Ole Miss opens its 2025 campaign on Aug. 30 at home against Georgia State.
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The Pete Golding Effect: How Ole Miss Football Will Reload Defensively in 2025
North Carolina
Thaddeus Dixon Joins in Husky Exodus to North Carolina
In a postseason recruitment that was raw and revealing at times, where decorated cornerback Thaddeus Dixon suggested in social media postings that University of Washington football fans wanted him to come back more than the coaches, apparently received all the assurances he needed at North Carolina.
On Saturday, the senior defensive back from Long Beach, California, told On3 he would join the Tar Heels for his final season of college football, adding to a growing list of one-time UW players and coaches headed to Chapel Hill.
So far, the departing group includes linebacker Khmori House, safety Peyton Waters, wide receiver Jason Robinson Jr., defensive coordinator Steve Belichick and defensive analyst Armond Hawkins, all moving from Montlake to the ACC.
The 6-foot-1, 187-pound Dixon would have given the Huskies three highly accredited corners, joining fellow UW starter Ephesians Prysock and Arizona transfer Tacario Davis, to fill out a secondary that could have had few equals this coming season, and still might.
Dixon reportedly took recruiting visits to Mississippi and North Carolina, and fielded overtures from Michigan, before settling on the Tar Heels.
The disconnect for Dixon appeared to show up when the Huskies landed a portal commitment from the 6-foot-4, 190-pound Davis, a second-team All-Big 12 pick this past season, presumably to take his vacated spot.
The 6-foot-4, 193-pound Prysock and Davis teamed together at Arizona in 2023, with both earning All-Pac-12 honorable-mention accolades.
Dixon originally was supposed to run out of college eligibility when the season ended, hence the Huskies went looking for cornerback help, but the NCAA gave the veteran an extra year when it changed the rules governing players with junior-college backgrounds. He came to the UW from Long Beach Community College.
One of the Huskies’ top individual success stories this past season, Dixon went from a back-up player in 2023 to unseat returning starter Elijah Jackson, who opened all 15 games for the national runner-up team.
Moving into the lineup, Dixon started 12 of 13 games and received All-Big Ten honorable-mention honors for Jedd Fisch’s coaching staff. He had a team-best 10 pass break-ups, an Apple Cup interception and several textbook tackles in the open field. He’s easily made himself into an NFL prospect.
With three accomplished cornerbacks, the Huskies could have picked two starters and put the odd man out at nickelback.
Dixon clearly wasn’t going to go that route at the UW, likely figuring his past performance should have provided him with more cornerback guarantees.
For the latest UW football and basketball news, go to si.com/college/washington
North Carolina
Bill Belichick's girlfriend seemingly shuts down rumors coach will leave North Carolina for NFL
Bill Belichick’s girlfriend on Thursday seemingly shut down any talk of her boyfriend leaving the North Carolina Tar Heels football program for a job in the NFL.
Jordon Hudson responded to rumors that suggested Belichick had one foot out the door when it came to his Tar Heels gig. Belichick had been rumored to be interest in coaching the Dallas Cowboys, but the head coaching job wasn’t open until he had already committed to North Carolina. CBS Sports reported that Belichick didn’t sign his contract with the school.
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She posted a photo on her Instagram showing the two posing with a football and Belichick dressed in Carolina blue.
“Pictured: two people who are overtly committed to @uncfootball,” she wrote as the caption.
Michael Lombardi, who is the general manager of the North Carolina football program, also threw cold water on the rumors of Belichick jumping back to the pros.
EX-NFL COACH JON GRUDEN RIPS STATE OF COLLEGE SPORTS
“Bill is recruiting in DC today, and Baltimore tomorrow. His focus is on North Carolina football, hiring staff members and developing the team. The NFL isnt a option so please stop making it one. Thank you,” he wrote on X in response to the CBS Sports report.
“The reception towards UNC and Coach Belichick has been amazing from every school we visit. We are going to fight to keep North Carolina players here and bring the best to Chapel Hill,” he added.
Belichick was hired as the Tar Heels’ coach in December. He called the job a “dream come true.”
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“I’ve always wanted to coach in college football,” Belichick said in his introductory press conference. “It just never really worked out. Had some good years in the NFL, so that was OK. But this is really a dream come true.”
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