Daily Press

Irish turn back UNC’s challenge

- By Aaron Beard

CHAPEL HILL, N.C. — Ian Book kept No. 2 Notre Dame’s offense moving, while the Fighting Irish defense locked down Sam Howell and No. 25 North Carolina’s potent offense for the final three quarters to record a 31-17 victory over the Tar Heels on Friday.

Book threw for 279 yards and a score and ran for 48 yards for the Fighting Irish (9-0, 8-0 ACC, No. 2 in the College Football Playoff rankings), using his mobility and elusivenes­s to keep plays alive on a night when both offenses frequently faced long fields.

Receiver Ben Skowronek got Notre Dame its first lead with his 13-yard run around the right side midway through the third quarter. Kyren Williams ran for 124 yards — including a 47-yard carry with about 5½ minutes left as the Irish burned clock and sealed the game.

Williams closed that drive with his second rushing TD, a clinching 1-yarder with 1:20 left that kept the Fighting Irish alone atop the ACC standings, ahead of No. 4 Clemson and No. 10 Miami.

More impressive, though, was a defensive effort that forced Howell and the high-scoring Tar Heels to work for every gain after the opening quarter.

UNC(6-3, 6-3) sprinted to touchdowns on its first two drives, but Notre Dame surrendere­d only one field goal from there. The Tar Heels

came in averaging 43 points and 563 yards, yet they were unable to buy time for Howell to push downfield for big gains, nor to open running lanes for a pair of backs averaging better than 100 yards rushing each in Javonte Williams and Michael Carter.

By the end, UNC had finished with a season-low 298 yards while Howell — one of the national leaders in passing yardage and touchdowns — threw for just 211 yards and a score. He also ran for a touchdown.

The takeaway

Notre Dame: The Fighting Irish came in with a defense that ranked among the nation’s best by allow

ing just 85.1 yards rushing and 16.6 points. That unit came up big even after losing safety Kyle Hamilton to a first-half targeting call, sacking Howell six times while surrenderi­ng just 87 yards rushing.

Meanwhile, Book guided Notre Dame to four touchdown drives of at least 75 yards, with no turnovers, while playing behind a reconfigur­ed line that had lost two starters to injuries.

UNC: Coach Mack Brown had said this game would be a measuring stick for his program against a team positioned to reach the fourteam playoff. The Tar Heels got off to a fast start, but then struggled to sustain drives and finished with 173 yards after the first two scoring drives.

 ?? GERRY BROOME/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Notre Dame running back Kyren Williams gets by North Carolina linebacker Jeremiah Gemmel on Friday.
GERRY BROOME/ASSOCIATED PRESS Notre Dame running back Kyren Williams gets by North Carolina linebacker Jeremiah Gemmel on Friday.

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