CHAPEL HILL, N.C. — Ahead of his debut as Tar Heels coach, Bill Belichick strode into Kenan Memorial Stadium like a conquering hero.
The Chapel Hill campus was buzzing with anticipation all afternoon, from watering holes like “He’s Not Here” to the tailgates that started at noon ahead of an 8 p.m. kickoff. Michael Jordan, Lawrence Taylor, and a slew of other stars filed into the stadium as it filled to capacity for the standalone Labor Day showcase.
After his Tar Heels sprinted onto the field, Belichick walked out of the North Carolina tunnel flanked by four law enforcement officers. Pyrotechnics befitting a WWE superstar like The Undertaker at WrestleMania popped behind him. The atmosphere was electric.
And for a moment, it looked like conquering college football might be that easy for the 73-year-old coach.
Belichick’s Tar Heels were met with little resistance as they diced through TCU’s defense on the game’s opening drive, ripping off 83 yards without ever facing a third down.
Next stop: National Championship?
Belichick didn’t emote on the sideline however, and reality soon set in.
This battle won’t be easily won for Belichick. North Carolina brought 70 new players in, along with a new coaching staff — and it looked that way for the rest of the evening.
After UNC’s opening score, the game’s next 41 points went to the visitors. TCU skunked Belichick’s team in all three phases en route to a 48-14 blowout, picking up 542 yards of offense to North Carolina’s 222.
“We need to do a better job all the way around: Coaching, playing, all three phases of the game,” Belichick lamented . “Just wasn’t up to what it needs to be. I know we’re lot better than that. So we’ll need to work on those things and show it on Saturday and turn around, but give TCU credit, they came in and did a good job, and they were clearly the better team tonight. They deserved to win, and they did it decisively.”
With the score just 20-7 at half, a glimmer of hope remained. At the NFL level, Belichick was long revered for his ability to adapt on the fly, and this was a TCU team he didn’t have any preseason film to study. Could he and his seasoned staff unlock something during the break?
Any hope of a brilliant Belichick-ian halftime adjustment was quickly extinguished on the first snap of the third quarter however. TCU running back Kevorian Barnes ripped off a 75-yard touchdown run and went untouched the entire way. Later in the quarter, TCU’s Trent Battle would rush for a 28-yard touchdown. Again, he was untouched by a Tar Heel defender.
Savvy halftime adjustments weren’t the only hallmark of Belichick’s dynastic Patriots program that were nowhere to be found.
North Carolina also lost the turnover battle 3-1, only went 1-for-10 on third down, and could neither establish the run on their own (50 yards) nor stop TCU on the ground (258 yards). Two of quarterback Gio Lopez’s turnovers were returned for Horned Frog touchdowns. Perhaps the most glaring though was UNC’s abundance of missed tackles. If nothing else, Belichick’s teams in New England were seemingly always reliable in that regard.
“We’ve got to do a better job tackling. There’s no doubt about that,” Belichick said. “So we’re just gonna have to work harder on it, tackle better. I mean, there’s no secret to it. There’s no pill you can take.”
As Belichick spoke about the lack of shortcuts to success, he fielded questions in front of a bizarre array of balloons that were floating behind him. The horseshoe featured varying shades of blue along with silver spiked balloons that looked like something out of “Frozen.”
Clearly, they’d been set up before the 34-point loss. Chapel Hill was expecting immediate success.
Monday night wasn’t a coronation, but a reminder that if Belichick is to conquer the college game, there’s far more work to be done. Like tackling, there’s no secret nor magic pill that can fast track building a program.
“They just outplayed us. They outcoached us. They were just better than we were tonight. That’s all there was to it,” Belichick said in front of the balloons. “They controlled both sides of the line of scrimmage. Their skill players played well and they just did a lot more things right than we did.”
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