How the Heels Stole the Coastal Division

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 How the Heels Stole the Coastal Division
‘Steal’ is an operative word: can something that belongs to no one be ‘stolen’? By any measure, Virginia Tech has owned the Coastal so far, and the ACC at large: VT has won the division twice in its three-year existence and blew out the eventual champion the year it finished second; that doesn’t even include the Hokies’ conference title in 2004, before the ... [link]

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Comments (1)

  • Digital Headbutt Digital Headbutt
    +1

    I am still very cautious about my Heels, while I do expect them to go bowling, I'm not ready to predict a Coastal division championship just yet.

    On the other hand...

    WHOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO

    Posted 7/23/2008 [reply] [flag]

Links (4)

Recruiting news and other links
Published 7/23/2008 by ATL_eagle (noreply@blogger.com) at Eagle in Atlanta -- atleagle.com
... anyone else tired of reading about the ACC underachieving? Although I don't think ticket prices were the major factor in Jacksonville's struggles, I do think Tampa will do a better job hosting the ACC Championship Game. John Swofford gave a state of the conference speech on the final day of the ACC Kickoff. Two ACC items from SMQ. The first takes a look at the shifting national perception of Florida State. The other looks at North Carolina. (Just our luck that UNC comes back in our rotation during their ascension.) ...

How the Heels Stole the Coastal Division
Published 7/24/2008 by T.H. at Carolina March: Front Page Posts
How the Heels Stole the Coastal Division Sunday Morning Quarterback goes into great detail on how UNC could wind up outpacing Virginia Tech for the Coastal Division crown. Skepticism waning... homerism rising...

Friendly Fire: Addressing the Constructive Criticisms of My Pre-Preseason Top 25
Published 28 days ago by T Kyle King at Dawg Sports: Front Page Posts
... for. . . . QB T.J. Yates is returning to start as a sophomore and Greg Little is an emerging threat in the backfield, a 6’3, 215 pound tailback who can move the chains on 3rd and 4 or less. UNC converted 29% of third downs last year, by the way. Even bad offensive teams think that’s really bad. Chan Gailey would admit that’s bad. Offense was this team’s achilles heel last season, but it improved with young players as the year progressed. SMQ has extolled the virtues of North Carolina and expressed his concerns about Virginia Tech, and, ...

One last shot at a countdown...
Published 3 days ago by Todd at Roll 'Bama Roll: Front Page Posts
... week three may be an early stumbling block, but Maryland is supposedly installing a west coast style offense this season and haven't been much of a threat to get far beyond .500 over the past few seasons, so a trip to College Park shouldn't be a terribly difficult road tilt. Of the conference slate, adding Miami to the rotation while North Carolina drops off the schedule could be a blessing. Da U is certainly on the rebound but not too terribly far into their upswing just yet while, depending on who you ask, North Carolina has a better than decent chance of taking the Coastal ...