The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Trubisky, North Carolina have big ACC contest

- By Aaron Beard The Associated Press

Mentor graduate and North Carolina QB Mitch Trubisky has been a roll and he will look to keep that going Sept. 24 against Pittsburgh in what could be an ACC shootout.

CHAPEL HILL, N.C. >> North Carolina improved enough defensivel­y last season to edge Pittsburgh on the way to winning an Atlantic Coast Conference division championsh­ip.

Roughly a year later, it’s unclear if the Tar Heels are capable of doing it again.

The teams that finished 1-2 atop the Coastal Division meet in their league openers Saturday, with the Tar Heels facing the familiar challenge of trying to hold up physically against the Panthers’ pounding ground game. But unlike last year — when the Tar Heels’ defense went from awful to adequate — that unit doesn’t enter the game with many positives.

They’re coming off a performanc­e coordinato­r Gene Chizik described as “soft.”

“Soft defense is a choice, and that’s the choice we made,” Chizik said. “We’ve got to improve this week or this game could get ugly.”

UNC (2-1) ranks 106th nationally against the run (226.7) and allows 28 points per game. That includes last weekend’s 56-28 win against James Madison in which the Championsh­ip Subdivisio­n team scored touchdowns on its first three drives, while both Chizik and head coach Larry Fedora later noted they didn’t remember the Tar Heels making a good defensive play until the second quarter.

Pitt (2-1) is ranked 21st nationally in rushing (239 yards per game), with tailback James Conner cracking the 100-yard mark in each of the past two games. Two years ago, Pitt ran for 305 yards at UNC — Conner had 220 yards and four touchdowns — but the Tar Heels held Pitt to 153 in last year’s 26-19 road win while Conner was out recovering from a knee injury and being treated for lymphoma.

Some other things to know about Saturday’s Pittsburgh­North Carolina matchup:

Trubisky’s roll

UNC quarterbac­k Mitch Trubisky enters with momentum. He completed 24 of 27 passes for a career-high 432 yards last week. That included setting a single-game program record by completing his last 18 passes. He enters this one with a programrec­ord 156 throws without an intercepti­on. And he’s coming off a game when he finally connected on the deep ball.

Pitt’s pass defense

The Panthers were especially vulnerable to the pass last week, surrenderi­ng 541 yards through the air — including a national-best 296 yards receiving by James Washington. So how will Pitt handle UNC’s attack if Trubisky is connecting with deep threat Mack Hollins or receiver Ryan Switzer? “Fundamenta­lly you have to play with good technique,” Pitt coach Pat Narduzzi said. “That’s what we try to play at every position on the field. You better play good technique when you’re playing against great wide receivers.”

Peterman progressin­g

Narduzzi is quick to defend quarterbac­k Nate Peterman, who passed for a season-high 237 yards against Oklahoma State with a touchdown and an intercepti­on while completing less than 50 percent of his passes (14 of 29). Narduzzi said Peterman has played “above average the last two weeks,” adding: “If he continues to do that, we will be fine.”

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