Yuma Sun

ACC could benefit from show of force behind 3 ranked teams

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There is a growing look of mediocrity in the middle of the Atlantic Coast Conference’s standings.

The league appears to have sagged in the middle even as the ACC’s headliners have been quite impressive. There are three Top 25 teams – No. 2 Notre Dame, No. 4 Clemson and No. 12 Miami – sitting atop the league.

No other ACC team is ranked, creating a top-heavy appearance in the league which this week has been dealt two postponeme­nts due to COVID-19 positive tests.

A fourth ACC team could soon join the top three in the Top 25. By edging Wake Forest 59-53 last week, North Carolina (6-2, 6-2 ACC) holds fourth place in the league and is just outside the Top 25.

Duke coach David Cutcliffe doesn’t believe the league is top heavy, saying there’s plenty of talented teams battling for position in the middle of the ACC, despite the .500 records.

If he’s correct, those teams will need strong finishes in the final weeks of the season.

That starts with Saturday’s game between Virginia Tech, which has lost two straight, and Pittsburgh, which had its scheduled game at Georgia Tech postponed last week. The ACC also could be boosted if North Carolina State, which had lost two straight before beating Florida State, finishes the season on an upswing.

N.C. State (5-3, 5-3) has an opportunit­y to build momentum from its 38-22 win over Florida State when it faces undefeated No. 21 Liberty, which already has wins over Syracuse and Virginia Tech, on Saturday night.

Winning records are not necessary for bowl bids this season, thanks to damage done to schedules by

the coronaviru­s pandemic. Even so, pride is on the line.

“I want to be separated from the group, but each game is a one-game season,” said Pitt coach Pat Narduzzi. “We want to win each one of them. Again, it’s called pride. I’ve got pride in our work and who our kids are and what this program represents. So to me it comes down to pride. And I just want to keep going where we are.”

Cutcliffe said the cluster of five teams hovering within a game of .500 is proof the league is deep. The group includes Virginia Tech, Boston College, Wake Forest,

Pitt and Virginia.

“I think the league is a lot better than people realize,” Cutcliffe said. “... There’s a lot of good football teams, there’s a lot of balance.”

Cutcliffe said Boston College “has had a very good year.”

Every team has been challenged by the pandemic, including Cutcliffe’s Blue Devils. The ACC announced Tuesday night that Wake Forest’s game at Duke on Saturday won’t be played due to coronaviru­s issues and injuries within the Demon Deacons’ program.

Wake Forest officials say they will work with

Duke and the ACC on the possibilit­y of rescheduli­ng the game. Demon Deacons coach Dave Clawson said COVID-19 testing has been “a weekly battle.”

“And when I tell you guys that every time we test, I lose sleep and I hold my breath until we get the test results back,” Clawson said. “I mean, that is an every-otherday-event. There’s been a lot of rewards this season. I’m glad we’re playing. I think the players would tell you that they’re glad we’re playing. But there’s certainly been many unique challenges.”

Georgia

Tech’s efforts

to end a three-game losing streak have been derailed by having consecutiv­e games against Pitt and Miami postponed. The home game against Pitt was reschedule­d for Dec. 12, while the Miami game is tentativel­y set for Dec. 19 but may not be played.

Georgia Tech has not played since a loss to Notre Dame on Oct. 31, leaving coach Geoff Collins feeling he must find new ways to keep his players’ attention.

On Tuesday, Collins said he might introduce kickball, dodgeball or a home run derby to the practices “just to get the competitiv­e juice

into play and let the guys have a little fun along with playing football and getting ready. ... These are unpreceden­ted times.”

Syracuse (1-7, 1-6) was devastated by the pandemic even before the season and sits at the bottom of the standings. Top running backs Abdul Adams and Jarveon Howard opted out before the opener, and safety Andre Cisco and defensive back Trill Williams opted out after injuries during the season and both will enter the NFL draft. Starting quarterbac­k Tommy DeVito also is out with a leg injury and unlikely to return.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? PITTSBURGH HEAD COACH PAT NARDUZZI wears a face shield as he watches his team play against Notre Dame during a game on Oct. 24 in Pittsburgh.
ASSOCIATED PRESS PITTSBURGH HEAD COACH PAT NARDUZZI wears a face shield as he watches his team play against Notre Dame during a game on Oct. 24 in Pittsburgh.

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