South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

Happy to play the heel

UNC storms back at home, wrecks Wake’s playoff hopes

- By Aaron Beard

CHAPEL HILL, N.C. — For the second straight year, Wake Forest couldn’t protect a big second-half lead at North Carolina. This time, though, it likely cost the Demon Deacons any chance of playing their way deeper into the College Football Playoff race.

Ty Chandler ran for career highs of 213 yards and four touchdowns and North Carolina overcame an 18-point deficit to beat Wake Forest 58-55 on Saturday, handing the Demon Deacons, ranked No. 9 in the CFP rankings, their first loss in a nonconfere­nce matchup of Atlantic Coast Conference teams.

It ended with the unusual sight of Tar Heels fans storming the field to celebrate a win against their instate foe, though not one that will count toward the league standings.

“I’ve told them: every Saturday you build memories,” Tar Heels coach Mack Brown said. “That’s what you do. And this is a game that they will remember for the rest of their lives. And I’m really, really proud that my name is associated with them.”

Chandler’s big day included a 50-yard breakaway run with 1:12 left to make it 58-48. That was the final blow for the Tar Heels (5-4) in rallying from a huge third-quarter deficit to beat the Demon Deacons (8-1) for the second straight year, following a 21-point comeback last year by erasing a 45-27 deficit with 7:38 left in the third.

“It just felt like a rerun of last year’s game,” Wake Forest coach Dave Clawson said.

“Pretty similar,” quarterbac­k Sam Hartman echoed.

The Tar Heels felt it too, even down big. “What we were saying on the sidelines is: we’ve been here before,” UNC quarterbac­k Sam Howell said.

The loss doesn’t impact the Demon Deacons’ pursuit of their first ACC title since 2006 since it was part of a home-and-home nonconfere­nce series announced in 2015 with the schools not meeting as often amid the expanded ACC’s scheduling model. But the goal Clawson mentioned after last week’s rout of Duke — being in the playoff discussion — is likely gone.

“We just, we weren’t sharp,” Clawson said. “You say that and we scored 50-something points. But we weren’t as sharp as we needed to be. We certainly played well on offense and scored a lot of points, but with as well as North Carolina played, we had to be a little bit better. And we weren’t.”

Hartman threw for 398 yards and five touchdowns and ran for 78 yards and two more scores for Wake Forest. A.T. Perry and Jaquarii Roberson each hauled in a pair of touchdown grabs to lead a 615-yard effort from the offense.

But that high-scoring unit, one of the best of the Bowl Subdivisio­n, stalled at a critical time with three straight empty drives. And it came against a much-maligned defense that had struggled to show many tangible signs of improvemen­t this season, a key piece of UNC’s struggles in going from ranked No. 10 in preseason to unranked before October.

Howell threw for 216 yards and a touchdown and ran for 104 and two more scores in a matchup of high-profile quarterbac­ks. And the Tar Heels scored on their last five full drives, four for touchdowns.

“We were just breathing life into each other and encouragin­g each other and keeping it going,” Chandler said, adding: “That’s what it came down to: just being able to respond. And we did a great job of that.”

The Demon Deacons begin a closing stretch of three straight league games that will determine whether they win the Atlantic Division race, starting with next Saturday’s visit from North Carolina State.

The Tar Heels have a short week and visit No. 25 Pittsburgh on Thursday in what will be another high-profile quarterbac­k matchup with Kenny Pickett.

 ?? GRANT HALVERSON/GETTY ?? Defensive lineman Tomari Fox celebrates after UNC’s comeback victory over No. 9 Wake Forest on Saturday.
GRANT HALVERSON/GETTY Defensive lineman Tomari Fox celebrates after UNC’s comeback victory over No. 9 Wake Forest on Saturday.

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