Login

 

February 2012
M T W T F S S
« Jan   Mar »
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
272829  

Stats

  • Total Stats
    • 4 Authors
    • 4,174 Posts
    • 101 Tags
    • 89,545 Comments
    • 1,412 Comment Posters
    • 47 Links
    • 161 Post Categories
    • 7 Link Categories
PageRank Checking Icon

Hey Look! A National Writer Wrote Something Positive About UNC Football!

Haven’t see that in….oh….two years?

SI.com’s Andy Staples catches up with Larry Fedora as he settles into the job of rebuilding UNC football.

When Fedora got the job, he quickly went to work defending against negative recruiting spawned by the scandal. While Cunningham had explained to Fedora what should happen in the case, coaches from other schools filled the heads of North Carolina recruits with all manner of gloom and doom. Fedora drained dozens of his precious sugar-free Red Bulls as he worked the phones attempting to calm prospects’ fears. “The unknown enabled them to say whatever they wanted to say,” Fedora said. “So we had to put out a lot of fires with the kids. Not only that, you’re doing that at the same time you’re trying to build a relationship with a kid. So a kid doesn’t know whether to trust you or not because your relationship is so new.”

Assistant head coach Vic Koenning boarded a plane bound for Tobacco Road after he helped Illinois win the Emerald Bowl. When Koenning hit the ground in North Carolina, he also turned into a recruiting firefighter. What made Koenning maddest? He said many of the blazes were started by members of the staff that got North Carolina into this mess in the first place. “You’d like to be able to control the situation by not being in that situation,” Koenning said. “But there was nothing we can do about it, so we’ve got to just take it. What’s disappointing is that the guys who were a part of that were some of the worst offenders.”

Fedora believes he got the message across to most recruits, but he is sure he lost some. “It’s unfortunate for them,” Fedora said. “They wound up a school that was their second choice because of something that was fabricated.”

Fedora hopes his spread offense and the 4-2-5 defense run by Koenning and Dan Disch will allow the Tar Heels to win enough games to make all their recruiting targets forget the scandal. Because Fedora had such a late start, he has spent most of his time recruiting. Monday was the first day the staff had any significant time to break down North Carolina’s current roster. Fedora inherited a solid quarterback in Bryn Renner and a potential star in tailback Giovanni Bernard, but he knows his roster has holes. “It is what it is,” Fedora said. “You’ve got five receivers to work with this spring, and you’re trying to run a spread offense. You can sit there and cry about it, or you can say, ‘OK, how do we make this work?’”

This summer, Fedora will once again re-read the dogeared copy of Sun Tzu’s The Art of War that he bought in 1991. He’ll try again to convert the ancient Chinese military leader’s concepts to the football field. The most important: Attack undefended locations — a strategy Fedora considers the guiding principle for the spread offense.

Fedora was on hand for the UNC-Duke game on Wednesday night having brought about twenty in-state 2013 prospects to campus for “Junior Day.” There were immediate dividends for Fedora with two Durham Hillside players giving the UNC head coach verbal commitments. Not that a verbal commitment 51 weeks before signing day is worth very much but it does get the recruiting season off on the right foot. Overall, Fedora has been impressive early on. He has generated positive PR for the program by appearing on ESPNU during its national signing day coverage. Articles like this one by Staples sheds the kind of light on the program missing through the almost two years of scandal.

Ultimately that is what you would expect and why cutting the Butch Davis era loose was necessary even if handled haphazardly. Fedora is a young coach with a passionate and outgoing approach. He surrounded himself with a quality staff none of who were tied to the recent unpleasantness. That means any questions Fedora or his staff deal with concerning the NCAA scandal are rare and concerned with impact not what happened. While the NCAA has yet to issue the final report it is clear Fedora and UNC football are already moving beyond the investigation with an optimistic look towards the future. Barring a bowl ban or debilitating scholarship reductions the momentum Fedora has built thus far can continue unabated.

UPDATE: Here is video of Larry Fedora reacting to the verbal commitments from Khris Francis and Korrin Wiggins last night.

On one level I don’t know how much he ought to be doing this. It looks like he is scaring both of these guys a little bit. Here is hoping they don’t switch commits six months from now.

Share This Post:
[Bloglines] [del.icio.us] [Digg] [Facebook] [MySpace] [Technorati] [Windows Live] [Yahoo!] [Email]

7 comments to Hey Look! A National Writer Wrote Something Positive About UNC Football!

  • PRGuy

    “He said many of the blazes were started by members of the staff that got North Carolina into this mess in the first place.” Translation: “The outgoing staff was scaring off UNC recruits in hopes they would follow the coaches to their new schools.”

    I know this stuff happens everywhere, but if true, I’m very disappointed it happened at Carolina. Wishing all the best to Fedora and his energetic staff.

  • TarHeelVeal

    I think Coach Fedora is an excellent addition to UNC athletics. I love that type of excitement and energy from a head coach that he shows in the video. I also love that he uses Sun Tzu’s “The Art of War” to teach his players football philosophy. Great book that, if they buy into it, can really help team unity and strength. I think the UNC football program had a VERY promising future!! Guess I better start buying fedora’s to wear to the football games or should we all just sport visors? =)

  • TarHeelVeal

    *HAS a VERY promising future.

  • notoriousii

    Until I looked back up at the screen, I thought you had mistakenly posted a video of BD…

  • Andy In Omaha

    Fedora seems like he has a lot of fire to him. I think that’s a good thing, considering I got sick and tired of Butch and Withers standing on the sidelines like a bump on a log whenever the game wasn’t going their way.
    I hope these two kids stick with their commitments and Fedora is able to own the state in recruiting.

  • deepenwide

    I think those kids are going to go home and tell their parents how excited their coach was to have their commitment. If a coach isn’t excited that you are coming to play for him then how can you be excited to come to play. Fedora’s seems to be the kind of guy that gets the best out of what he has. That and a little luck will take you a long way. So good luck coach. Take them as far as you can.