North Carolina
Why Bill Belichick Coaching North Carolina Makes Sense
The widespread, dismissive reaction to the very premise of Bill Belichick coaching the North Carolina Tar Heels? That was so last week.
This week it’s much more real. The potential bombshell move of the most successful coach in NFL history to a middle-tier Atlantic Coast Conference program has not been dismissed and cannot be dismissed. At least not yet.
“We’ll see,” The Hoodie Himself said on ESPN’s Pat McAfee Show on Monday. “We’ll see.”
But that note of caution ended a 15-minute appearance that made this all seem quite serious. It revealed how far down the road Belichick is with North Carolina, and how much thought he’s put into coaching college ball for the first time in his 72-year life.
ESPN had earlier Monday reported that Belichick met for five hours Sunday with North Carolina chancellor Lee Roberts. And Belichick described both a vision and a potential recruiting pitch for what his college program would look like.
Bill Belichick emphasized “IF” he was coaching in a college program, it would be “a professional program.” 👀 @PatMcAfeeShow
“The college program would be a pipeline to the NFL for the players that have the ability to play in the NFL.” pic.twitter.com/p2raPzm2DN
— ESPN (@espn) December 9, 2024
“Capital letters, IF, I-F, I was in a college program, it would be a pipeline for the NFL,” Belichick said. “It would be an NFL program at the college level and an education that would get them ready for life after football. [Players] would be ready for [the NFL]. It would be an NFL program, but not at the NFL level.”
It’s possible Belichick is carrying out a convincing play-action fake to put some urgency in NFL franchises to come hire him right now (the Chicago Bears, New York Jets and New Orleans Saints have already fired their coaches and could have discussions with him). It’s possible North Carolina is nothing but a useful negotiating tool for him. But it seems increasingly realistic that arguably the most incredible coaching move in college football history is close to happening.
People thought Deion Sanders to the Colorado Buffaloes was a wild departure from the college football norm? Belichick to North Carolina would top it, for different reasons.
As of this past weekend, there were questions of alignment, though. Multiple sources with insight into Carolina’s search to replace Mack Brown describe an aura of conflicting ideas and agendas.
“There’s a lot of cooks in the kitchen,” one source says. “North Carolina is making Auburn look reasonable right now.”
On one track, there is respected longtime athletic director Bubba Cunningham. On another track, there are other university administrators—notably board of trustees chairman John Preyer, who has a history of heavy-handed commentary and actions regarding athletics.
Preyer might not be going rogue, per se, but sources say he has been the point man with Belichick and is not operating in full harmony with Cunningham. Preyer had previously publicly blasted Cunningham for how he fired Brown last month, calling it “shameful.” He also has been critical of the ACC, and the UNC board sought an audit of athletic department spending.
So there already was tension before this coaching search began. That seems to have intensified.
Cunningham’s version of the search was pretty conventional, centering on candidates with head coaching experience and college experience. The Tulane Green Wave’s Jon Sumrall had at least one conversation with UNC officials, as did Army Black Knights coach Jeff Monken. Former Atlanta Falcons head coach (and UNC graduate) Arthur Smith was an early name in the mix.
But Sumrall withdrew his name from consideration on Sunday. Other potential candidates such as the Iowa State Cyclones’ Matt Campbell and Liberty Flames’ Jamey Chadwell are not going to pursue the job, sources say.
That could be because they see this increasingly lining up for Belichick. Put it this way: Nobody else is in the forefront for the job at the moment.
If it happens, Belichick might be the oldest hire in FBS history at 72. It certainly would be the most-decorated NFL hire in FBS history.
A lot of people have questioned Belichick’s ability to relate to teenagers in recruiting. They’ve got it wrong. A coach who has no track record needs relatability, not this guy.
If those doubting that Belichick could recruit watched his interview with McAfee, they saw the best possible recruiting pitch on a shelf behind Belichick. There sat three of his six Lombardi Trophies for winning the Super Bowl. If getting developing players ready for the NFL is the best way to recruit elite high school talent, who has more street cred than Belichick?
If this happens, it seems highly likely Belichick would largely entrust the recruiting to one set of staffers and the coaching to another. That’s largely possible under modern NCAA rules that have enlarged staff sizes and freed up responsibilities.
The potential UNC plan: Recruiters get the players and deliver them to an NFL Lite staff (one that probably would include Belichick’s son, Stephen, currently the defensive coordinator of the Washington Huskies). Belichick can largely let the talent come to him. Sanders doesn’t make home recruiting visits for Colorado, and Belichick might not need to make them, either.
He’s a master at player evaluation, player development and football strategy. Surround Belichick with player procurement experts and let him do what he does best.
North Carolina would need to make a full commitment to funding and staffing its NIL operation, playing at the same level as the top SEC and ACC football brands. And it might need to make a commitment to Stephen Belichick as a successor-in-waiting. It seems like a worthwhile gamble.
North Carolina football has rarely been more than an occasional player on the national level, serving mostly as something for fans to watch while waiting for basketball season. But the sport’s importance to the overall athletic department is abundantly clear. If Carolina finally wants to take an all-in swing at big-time football status, a legendary coach might be poised to fall into its baby-blue lap.
What seemed like a flight of fantasy last week is much more real this week. The Tar Heels shouldn’t let this opportunity to reinvent their football program slip away.
North Carolina
North Carolina man extradited to Pa. for $100,000 ATM theft spree: police
A 42-year-old North Carolina man on Tuesday was extradited to Pennsylvania after state police said he stole more than $100,000 from ATMs in Snyder and Union counties.
Between Sept. 30 and Oct. 1, Antoni J. Garcia-Cordoba, of Raleigh, North Carolina, stole from four ATMs at Central Penn Bank and Trust locations, state police said.
In a five-hour span, Garcia-Cordoba took $43,000 from three separate ATMs in Snyder and Union counties, according to a police report. On Oct. 1, he stole an additional $58,000 from an ATM in Titusville, bringing the total amount stolen to $101,000.
Garcia-Cordoba is charged with two counts of corrupt organizations – employee, a first-degree felony, and two counts of theft by unlawful taking, a third-degree felony.
After being in custody at a jail in Boone County, Missouri, Garcia-Cordoba was extradited to Union County on Tuesday.
He is being held in the Union County Prison after being unable to post $100,000 bail. A preliminary hearing is scheduled for Jan. 13, 2026.
North Carolina
11 firefighters and 2 others injured after North Carolina house fire and explosion
SALISBURY, N.C. — Eleven firefighters and two other people were injured in a house fire explosion in the Piedmont region of North Carolina, officials said.
Salisbury Fire Chief Bob Parnell said firefighters did not have life-threatening injuries but were getting treated for contusions, concussions and smoke inhalation following the fire Monday evening. Two other people were taken to the hospital, but Parnell said he didn’t know their conditions and couldn’t confirm whether they were in the house at the time of the fire.
The Salisbury Fire Department responded to the single-family home around 5 p.m. and found it engulfed in flames.
Eleven of the 22 firefighters at the scene went inside the house to search for occupants and “get water on that fire,” which preceded the explosion, Panell said at a news conference.
“It was enough force that the outside walls blew out, the roof came up and went back down,” Parnell said.
An investigation of the fire and explosion is continuing.
North Carolina
Harrison Bertos scores in OT to help Washington beat N.C. State 3-2 and win first Men’s College Cup
CARY, N.C. (AP) — Harrison Bertos scored 1:54 into overtime after Washington blew a two-goal lead in the second half, and the Huskies beat North Carolina State 3-2 to win the Men’s College Cup at First Horizon Stadium on Monday night.
It was the first national championship for unseeded Washington (16-6-2), who became the first team to win six road matches in the tournament — beating six seeded teams along the way under the guidance of coach Jamie Clark. The Huskies won in their second trip to the final after losing 2-0 to Clemson in 2021.
No. 15 seed N.C. State (16-3-4) made the final for the first time behind coach Marc Hubbard. The Wolfpack were aiming for the school’s first national championship since Jim Valvano led the men’s basketball team to the title in 1983.
Zach Ramsey scored unassisted with 1:12 remaining in the first half and Washington took a 1-0 lead into the break. It was only the second time this season that N.C. State trailed at halftime.
Ramsey scored into an empty net after Wolfpack goalkeeper Logan Erb couldn’t corral the ball at the top of the box. It was Ramsey’s second goal of the tournament.
Richie Aman sent a cross to the center of the goal and Joe Dale knocked it in for a 2-0 lead in the 62nd minute.
Donavan Phillip answered in the 66th, scoring with an assist from Nikola Markovic to cut it to 2-1 with his fourth goal of the tournament. The Wolfpack entered 11-0-1 when Phillip scores.
Taig Healy scored the equalizer with 3:28 remaining with assists from Justin Mclean and Calem Tommy.
Egor Akulov had an assist on Bertos’ winner.
Huskies keeper Jadon Bowton, the only remaining player from the 2021 squad, had five saves.
Erb saved six shots for N.C. State, which was the last school to concede a goal this season.
The temperature was 28 degrees when the match between two teams that had never faced each other began.
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