Gene Chizik has to repeat what he did during his first stay at UNC.
Drake Maye’s first-game heroics might have won the night, but Carolina’s defensive story was not so positive. The talented Florida A&M offense racked up 279 passing yards and stayed in the game until the fourth quarter despite supposedly being overmatched.
New defensive coordinator Gene Chizik was hired to replicate what he did when joining Larry Fedora’s staff before the 2015 season, and the Tar Heels went on to give up 15 fewer points and 62 fewer yards per game than in 2014 while winning the ACC Coastal Division.
The Heels did even better the next year before Mitch Trubisky turned pro and Chizik left coaching; then the 2017 offense couldn’t score enough and eventually led to the first of two terrible seasons, Fedora’s firing and Mack Brown’s return to coaching at his old school.
Now, the head coach and DC find themselves in the same position as the Tar Heels were before turning around their defense and program. Deposed coordinator Jay Bateman’s numbers got progressively worse during his three seasons in Chapel Hill.
The reunion of Chizik and Brown had some good moments, such as two takeaways and three sacks. But the Rattlers are not the same caliber of team that Carolina will face once Power 5 play begins with Notre Dame on September 24 followed by eight straight ACC games.
Fans watching Saturday night saw too many FAMU receivers get open and running backs slipping into the edges of Chizik’s defense, which Brown acknowledged afterward by saying it was the first time in five years that his old friend and colleague was calling defenses.
Depending on cornerback Tony Grimes’ injury, the secondary might become even more of an Achilles Heel behind a deeper and tougher defensive front that held FAMU to 56 yards rushing.
If the App State game in Boone Saturday is close, that may signal the Tar Heels aren’t quite ready for the big time.
Unlike Bateman, who coached most of his career from the sideline, Chizik is calling defenses from up in the coaches’ box with co-DC Charlton Warren as his sideline manager. The “friendly skies of Carolina football” has long been the derogatory nickname for the Tar Heels’ pass defense, and Chizik is on the spot to shut that down again.
Featured image via Inside Carolina/Ross Martin
Chapelboro.com does not charge subscription fees, and you can directly support our efforts in local journalism here. Want more of what you see on Chapelboro? Let us bring free local news and community information to you by signing up for our biweekly newsletter.
Podcast: Play in new window | Download
Subscribe:
Related Stories
‹
![]()
Chansky's Notebook: Keep it Going!Can North Carolina and the ACC stay bowl unbeaten? After NC Central and East Carolina won their bowl games, the Old North State and the also 2-0 ACC will try to keep their spotless postseasons going. The Big Four of North Carolina all qualified for bowl games from the ACC’s impressive total of nine teams […]

Chansky's Notebook: Whose Hangover?Guess we could call this game the QB Bowl or the Meltdown Bowl. There are several themes of the Holiday Bowl Wednesday night at 8 when the unranked Tar Heels take on No. 15 Oregon in a game where you could play whoever has the ball last will win. The Ducks have quarterback Bo Nix, […]

Chansky's Notebook: Turnover, TamperingMack Brown had his pre-bowl press conference and let it all hang out. The Carolina football coach is excited about his new coaching hires, upset about what the transfer portal and NIL are doing to the game and is glad his team has a chance to beat 15th-ranked Oregon, which is a two-touchdown favorite in […]

Chansky's Notebook: Longo GonzoWas Phil Longo looking, hired away or asked to leave? Yesterday, we talked about the Carolina defense and how it could be weakened moving forward by losses to the transfer portal. That unit has been shredded for years, including the four in Mack Brown’s return. Today, it is the offense. Coordinator Phil Longo has taken […]

Chansky's Notebook: Dilemma For DefenseSo far, 8 of 11 UNC transfers are from the defense. These are still uncharted waters with the college transfer portal interfacing with NIL payments and how much one has to do with the other. As Carolina announced its wide range of collectives to help athletes, this is more about the football program than profits. […]

Chansky's Notebook: Tar Heels Win? Yes!Call me crazy, but Carolina will bring home the ACC championship. Yes, Clemson is the best team in the ACC and a touchdown favorite over the Tar Heels in the championship game in Charlotte. But, statistics aside, here is why UNC wins its first conference football crown in 42 years. And it’s all about why […]

Chansky's Notebook: A Different AirThe thirteenth game is a lot different from last year, isn’t it? Sparked by having three players named first-team all-conference, and 11 honored overall, a completely different atmosphere permeated Carolina football as the Tar Heels get ready, in their minds, to win UNC’s fifth ACC championship but the first in 42 years. You remember the […]

Chansky's Notebook: Weekend WoesAre you over-timed out after the weekend? I am. I’m pretty sure they don’t keep records like the strange occurrence of beginning the Thanksgiving weekend with a double overtime game in football and ending it with a quadruple overtime in men’s basketball. Six overtimes on the field and court, and both hard-to-take defeats. Thank goodness […]

Chansky's Notebook: Not Coach-SpeakDoes Mack Brown like talking to the media? Sure seems like it. The Carolina football coach must spend more time in press conferences and interviews than any of his compatriots. And he does more of it than his first stint in Chapel Hill, when he gabbed a lot but didn’t show much of himself. On […]

Chansky's Notebook: Just Win, Baby!Mack Brown calls it a trap game, and indeed it could be. His Tar Heels are a 21-point favorite over 4-6 Georgia Tech Saturday at 5:30 in Kenan Stadium, but while the Carolina coach prefers a blowout, he will take a one-point win since the Jackets lead the ACC in takeaways (forcing turnovers). As the […]
›