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Pitt hosts nemesis Tar Heels Thursday

PITTSBURGH — Pittsburgh has accomplished plenty since joining the Atlantic Coast Conference in 2013. The Panthers have beaten Clemson. They’ve taken down Penn State. They’ve won a Coastal Division championship.

One thing they haven’t done is find a way to get by North Carolina. That needs to change on Thursday night if Pitt (6-3, 3-2 ACC) wants to keep alive its hopes of capturing the Coastal for the second straight year. Pitt is 0-6 against the Tar Heels (4-5, 3-3).

“We’re going to have to get after them boys,” defensive lineman Patrick Jones II said. “We can’t keep losing to them if we want to accomplish our dreams ... This is a step we need to get over right here, beating North Carolina.”

The Tar Heels are the only Coastal opponent the Panthers have yet to take down. North Carolina has gone just 2-14 in the ACC the previous two seasons, with both wins coming against Pitt. The return of Mack Brown has brought the Tar Heels back to respectability, though the margin for error remains thin.

Eight of North Carolina’s nine games have been decided by seven or fewer points, with the outcome for all eight determined in the final 80 seconds. The list includes a 21-20 loss to reigning national champion Clemson on Sept. 28. In their past two games, the Tar Heels came up with a goal-line interception to hold off rival Duke 20-17, then lost 38-31 to Virginia when their final drive stalled across midfield with a minute left.

“I’m encouraged we keep getting better,” Brown said. “I’m encouraged they fight every week and we haven’t had a down game. They’ve been very competitive and they’ve tried really hard. . All those things are real positive. We’ve still got to make the plays to win the game at the end.”

The Panthers aren’t much different. All six of Pitt’s victories and two of their three losses have come by 10 points or fewer. The Panthers have grown comfortable playing in tight situations. Good thing, because it figures to happen again against the Tar Heels.

Asked if both teams could save a lot of time by just choosing to start with the score tied and five minutes left on the clock, Pitt quarterback Kenny Pickett laughed.

“We want to go out there and take care of business,” Pickett said. “But judging by the way the season’s going, we’re expecting a dogfight every game. We’ll be ready for either.”

UNC quarterback Sam Howell has been terrific as a true freshman, both in giving the Tar Heels a chance to win now and to build for the future of Brown’s program revamp. Howell flipped his commitment from Florida State shortly after Brown was hired and has thrown 26 touchdowns against just five interceptions.

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