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Tar Heels thrash Blue Devils

With the win, North Carolina likely can look forward to a bowl game.

By Nate Taylor
ntaylor@newsobserver.com
  • http://media.charlotteobserver.com/smedia/2011/11/26/21/46/l0Ici.Em.138.jpg|192

    Gio Bernard loses his helmet after being stopped by Duke's Curtis Hazelton, Matt Daniels and Tony Foster late in the fourth quarter Saturday at Kenan Stadium. North Carolina won 37-21. PHOTOS BY Robert Willett - rwillett@newsobserver.com

  • http://media.charlotteobserver.com/smedia/2011/11/26/23/25/NoiLj.Em.138.jpg|473

    Dwight Jones finished with 101 yards and three touchdowns on 10 catches in Saturday's win, North Carolina's eighth straight against rival Duke.

  • http://media.charlotteobserver.com/smedia/2011/11/26/21/50/hO70h.Em.138.jpg|236

    North Carolina's Gio Bernard races for a 48-yard touchdown. Robert Willett - rwillett@newsobserver.com


CHAPEL HILL Bryn Renner didn't let the moment escape.

After everything the Tar Heels had been through this year - the NCAA violations, their coach being fired and losing four ACC games within a little more than a month - Renner wanted to thank the man who he said pushed the Tar Heels to another win: interim coach Everett Withers.

Saturday's 37-21 victory against rival Duke at Kenan Stadium increased North Carolina's bowl prospects, and it allowed the Tar Heels to keep the Victory Bell. But this win also allowed Renner to thank Withers and give him a game ball in front of his teammates.

"We wanted to get the Victory Bell for coach Withers," Renner said. "I think that was big for us to incorporate a game ball for him."

After a home win against James Madison to start the season, it was Withers who gave a game ball to former coach Butch Davis, who was fired a week before practice began.

If this was Withers' last home game as North Carolina's coach, Renner made sure he went out a winner.

Renner led the Tar Heels (7-5, 3-5 ACC) on two critical scoring drives in the second half after Duke had closed within two points.

Renner watched Duke backup quarterback Anthony Boone enter the game with eight minutes left in the third quarter.

Boone excelled at times, including his 11-yard touchdown pass to Donovan Varner. Boone not only drove the Blue Devils (3-9, 1-7) down the field, but he had given them confidence by accounting for every yard on the drive: passing for 33, running for 21 and catching a halfback pass for 21.

"They scored on a couple of great plays," Renner said. "We knew we had to keep scoring points."

Withers put the ball, and the game, in Renner's hands when North Carolina took over on its own 30. Renner completed all four of his passes on the drive, including an 18-yard touchdown to Dwight Jones.

"We just got into a rhythm and we've been seeking that a lot this year," Withers said. "We got it at a very important time in the game."

When North Carolina's offense went on the field for its next possession, after Boone was intercepted by Gene Robinson, Renner orchestrated a 91-yard scoring drive to put the game out of reach. That drive ended with Renner finding Jones for an 8-yard pass.

"I'm blessed to be able to throw him the ball, and I know he's going to come down with it every time," Renner said of Jones, as the pair each finished with three touchdowns. "I think when we made it 30-21 with that drive we could feel a sense that we had the momentum."

Throughout this season Withers, a first-time coach, and Renner, a first-year starter, have had to learn their jobs quickly. When the game was over, Withers addressed his Tar Heels by telling them a victory in their bowl game would give them just as many wins as they had last year - which Withers claims would be an accomplishment.

That's when Renner knew he had to express his gratitude to Withers in the locker room. Withers said he wasn't surprised by the gesture.

Bryn "wanted to do it, and I know he was behind it," Wither said of the game ball. "It was a moment in the locker room where they really wanted to show me appreciation. It was really nice."

Taylor: 919-829-4538

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