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College World Series


Saturday's games
Stanford 16, Florida State 5
Georgia 7, Miami 4

Sunday's game
UNC 8, LSU 4

Monday's game
Miami 7, Florida State 5

Tuesday's game
UNC vs. Fresno State, 7

ACC Basketball


ACC
All
1) UNC
14-2
36-3
2) Duke
13-3
28-6
3) Clemson
10-6
24-10
4) Virginia Tech
9-7
21-14
5) Miami
8-8
23-11
6) Maryland
8-8
19-14
7) Georgia Tech
7-9
15-17
8) Wake Forest
7-9
17-13
9) Florida State
7-9
19-15
10) Virginia
5-11
17-16
11) BC
4-12
13-17
12) N.C. State
4-12
15-16

Schedule/Results
2006-07 results
2006-07 standings
ACC champions
ACC national champions
ACC in the Final Four

ACC Football


ATLANTIC
ACC
All
Boston College
6-2
11-3
Clemson
5-3
9-4
Wake Forest
5-3
9-4
Florida State
4-4
7-6
Maryland
3-5
6-7
N.C. State
3-5
5-7
COASTAL
ACC
All
Virginia Tech
7-1
11-3
Virginia
6-2
9-4
Georgia Tech
4-4
7-6
UNC
3-5
4-8
Miami
2-6
5-7
Duke
0-8
1-11

Pre-preseason preview '08
2008 schedule
2007 results
2006 results
2007 BCS nonconference results
2006 BCS nonconference results
2006 standings




BLOG POSTS

Pre-preseason football preview

Wake Forest and N.C. State
Boston College and Clemson
Florida State and Maryland
Va. Tech and UVa
Miami and Ga. Tech
UNC and Duke

If you thought the ACC was bad last year, or the year before, or the year before ... brace yourself for 2008. The league could be even worse, if that's possible.

Attrition, either through the NFL Draft, graduation or suspensions, has hit the division champs, Boston College and Virginia Tech, hard.

Traditional powers Miami and Florida State, who went a combined 12-13 in 2007, are no longer reloading but out-and-out rebuilding. FSU is doing so with the handicap of an academic scandal.

The ACC, and Coastal Division in particular, is so bad that Duke could equal its combined win total since 2004 before October ends.

[More:]

But Duke, as the worst team in Division I-A football, is only a fraction of the ACC's image problem. The ACC's biggest problem since expanding in 2004 has been the lack of an elite, national-title caliber program. When FSU owned the ACC in the 1990s, they were a top-5 team every year and twice the national champion (1993 and 1999).

The ACC hasn't won its BCS bowl since the Noles beat Virginia Tech in the Sugar Bowl for the '99 title.

FSU was supposed bring the rest of the ACC up to its level. Instead the ACC has sucked the Seminoles into an vortex of mediocrity — they are 31-20 since expansion, closer to South Florida (28-21) than Southern California (47-5).

Miami, who started the decade 46-4 as a Big East member, couldn't escape the ACC's stink either. The Canes are 30-19 in four ACC seasons and are below .500 (12-13) the past two.

The only team to rise above — or perhaps because it has been able to beat up the ACC — is Virginia Tech. The Hokies are 42-11 since joining the conference. Even the conference champs need heavy doses of plaster this offseason after losing eight players to the NFL Draft and leading rusher Branden Ore, who was kicked off the team.

Even with the significant personnel losses, Virginia Tech will be the unanimous preseason choice to win the pathetic Coastal, whose laundry-list of problems include:

• Virginia: Whatever games spectacular defensive end Chris Long, the second overall pick in the draft, didn't win by himself, quarterback Jameel Sewell did. Long's gone and Sewell's academically ineligible, as is end Jeffrey Fitzgerald and corner Chris Cook.

• Georgia Tech: Chan Gailey's out, Paul Johnson's in. Johnson's option offense could work but he's missing Tashard Choice, the ACC's leading rusher.

• Miami: Randy Shannon went 5-7 in his first season, with an inexcusable 2-6 against the ACC (and one of those wins over Duke).

• UNC: The only program of the six who could be considered on the upswing but quarterback T.J. Yates missed spring practice and there's still Tyler Hansbrough-sized holes on defense.

• Duke: Who's still Duke, despite new coach David Cutcliffe. The same Duke that has won four games since 2004.

In short, the ACC is going backwards in its fifth post-expansion football season. The opposite direction of where the power move was supposed to take the so-called basketball conference.


Comments, Pingbacks:

Comment from:UNCAlumnus [Visitor]
05/08/08 at 22:35
I'm looking for some good progress from UNC this year. With their division down, they could even make a little noise. Look out, Hokies.
Comment from:c dubs [Visitor]
05/09/08 at 08:43
"Duke is still Duke, even with David Cutcliffe."

Duke will be the biggest surprise of the season. I don't see Duke losing to UNC or Wake and Miami (last year and the year before) with Cutcliffe at the helm. Fair number of close games for Duke last year. Seeing is believing, but I think Cut will have Duke competing very soon.
Comment from:Beezer [Visitor]
05/09/08 at 10:27
d cubs,

you make the dumbest comments at this blog than anyone here. have a good day!

you still won't win a game this season. maybe in 2 to 3 years you will get that all elusive ACC game you so desire for. and when I say you I really mean just you!!
Comment from:A Deacon Fan [Visitor]
05/09/08 at 14:08
We'll See Dukies! This article is written based on FSU and Miami being down! Wake has been on the rise....and I love us beating FSU for a change! Look for the Deacons to be strong! I'll be interested to see what this author writes next week about the Deacs!
Comment from:Silent Sam [Visitor]
05/12/08 at 23:40
Fair number of games that WEREN'T close too:

UConn 45 Dook 14
VPI 43 Dook 14
FSU 25 Dook 6
Clempson 47 Dook 10
GT 41 Dook 24
Notre Dame 28 Dook 7

Dook is still Dook!
Comment from:rbl [Visitor] · http://blogsarchive.newsobserver.com
06/24/08 at 21:16
Carolina and Duke will be improved in 2009, and the traditional rivalry game at the end of the season will take on significance in coming years. There is no reason for UVA, Maryland, and Georgia Tech, to mention a few salient examples, being better than Carolina and Duke.
Comment from:rbl [Visitor] · http://blogsarchive.newsobserver.com
06/24/08 at 21:17
Carolina and Duke will be improved in 2009, and the traditional rivalry game at the end of the season will take on significance in coming years. There is no reason for UVA, Maryland, and Georgia Tech, to mention a few salient examples, being better than Carolina and Duke.

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About This Blog
J.P. Giglio
and the N&O sports staff produce ACC Now.
Email J.P.



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