PITTSBURGH -- — A rare mistake by Kenny Pickett nearly cost No. 25 Pittsburgh.
The senior quarterback turned darkhorse Heisman Trophy candidate made up for it by doing what he's done so often during his record-breaking season: make something incredibly difficult look incredibly easy.
Pickett atoned for a late interception that allowed North Carolina to force overtime by firing a strike through a downpour at soggy Heinz Field to tight end Lucas Krull during the first possession of overtime for an 11-yard score that put the Panthers back in front.
Didn't know about the rain.
Pitt's defense did the rest, harassing Tar Heels star Sam Howell into a desperation fourth-down heave that landed in the outstretched arms of Panthers defensive back M.J. Devonshire to finish off a 30-23 victory.
UNC's O-line has been its Achilles heel all season. How? How can you not provide a great QB with competent protection?
"Listen, everyone's talking about offense," Pitt coach Pat Narduzzi said. "You win championships with defense. And that was a championship-level performance."
One that kept the Panthers (8-2, 5-1 Atlantic Coast Conference) in control of the Coastal Division with two games to go. Pitt will earn its second trip to the ACC title game in four years if it wins out or if it beats Virginia next week and Miami drops any of its final three games.
Neither of those is a gimme but as either/or it is likely.
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"It's awesome but all the records, awards, accolades, it's really a team effort," Pickett said. "I want to thank my teammates, coaches. It's been a heck of a run, but we're not done yet."
Maybe not, but Pitt flirted with the idea while letting a 16-point halftime lead slip away. Howell threw for a touchdown and ran for another to get the Tar Heels (5-5, 3-4) within 23-20 with 5:34 to go.
Pitt opted to stay aggressive. Maybe too aggressive. Pickett's pass on the first snap of the Panthers' next drive bounced off two pairs of hands before North Carolina linebacker Jeremiah Gemmel grabbed it at the Pitt 35.
The Tar Heels drove to the Pitt 3 before settling for a game-tying 21-yard field goal by Grayson Atkins on fourth down instead of going for the win in regulation.
It's a decision that will eat at North Carolina coach Mack Brown for a while. He initially wanted to keep Howell and the offense on the field before changing his mind.
"It's easy to sit here and second guess myself but if I knew it was going to pour the rain, it would have been more fair to take the one shot," Brown said.
How can you second guess yourself on 4th and goal from the 3 with ~2 minutes left on the road when your team has come from 17-0 down? Wouldn't eat at me at all.
Brown cited his team's solid second-half defense and the momentum Howell generated late as reasons he chose to kick. Then the rain came and North Carolina's shot at a second upset of a ranked team in five days washed away.
Playing on offense first, it took Pitt all of four plays to reclaim the lead when Pickett hit the 6-foot-6 Krull just across the goal line.
Needing to respond, North Carolina went backward. Three plays lost a yard and on 4th-and-11 Howell found himself running near midfield while being chased before launching a rainbow into a sea of players in Pitt jerseys that Devonshire grabbed to set off a giddy — if wet — celebration.
That has everything to do with UNC's woeful offensive line and nothing to do with the rain.
HOWELL vs. PICKETT
More than 30 NFL executives — from scouts to general managers — turned out to watch two quarterbacks expected to hear their name called pretty early in next year's draft.
Pickett dominated early, throwing for 208 yards and two scores in the first half alone. Howell overcame a shaky first half in which he was sacked five times, dominated late. He threw for 182 of his 296 yards in the second half and used his legs to extend plays when the protection in front of him broke down, which happened frequently.
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THE TAKEAWAY
North Carolina: When the Tar Heels can protect Howell and get stops on defense, they're dangerous. When they don't, they're a mess. While Brown praised his team's resilience, the fact North Carolina keeps falling into massive holes is a problem.
Pitt: The Panthers' hope for the program's first 10-win season since 2009 remains very much alive thanks in part to a defense that's been hot and cold all season. Pitt found a way to make things difficult enough for Howell to build a lead and Pickett's poise in overtime helped the Panthers avoid the kind of "Pitt being Pitt" loss that's become a trademark of sorts for most of the last four decades.
Right idea, wrong phrase, it's "Same old Pitt" to
fans. 6-5 since 1980. There used to be a football verb, "Clemsoning." Somehow Clemson always managed to pick the one rotten pomegranate at the victory buffet. Then they started winning national championships. The difference here is that Pitt is not building on this. It was a surprise that Kenny Pickett came back for a fifth year and next year he will be gone. We will lose the standard ~25% of the roster. We do have our highest-rated (21st) recruiting class ever under Pat Narduzzi coming in and they will likely pay off in future years but there is no replacing a fifth-year senior quarterback who is the raison d'etre for this season, when all the stars aligned, when Clemson went Clemsoning, when Miami couldn't get out of its own way for half the season, when Florida State remains mired in dystopic mediocrity, when North Carolina can't protect Howell. As AP says, this year is likely to end in the
second trip to the ACC final in four years (the first resulted in a bludgeoning by Clemson), and this time they have a pretty good chance of winning the thing playing Woke Forest, but next season will not see three-in-five.
