i probably have a 1% chance of ever winning in duel against you
Holy crap. Georgia Tech (now unranked) upsets undefeated #5 Clemson 31 to 17. Figures. After the Yellow Jackets lost to Virginia and then Miami, I was cussing the hell out of them. Then they come out tonight and prison shank the one team in the ACC I would've never thought they could beat.
Yet Withers said in the radio interview: "When you have as many schools in this state as we have, and the recruiting base gets watered down a bit, I think the kids in this state need to know the flagship school in this state. They need to know it academically. If you look at our graduation rates, as opposed to our opponent’s this week (N.C. State), graduation rates for athletics, football, you’ll see a difference. ... If you look at the educational environment here, I think you’ll see a difference."O’Brien fired back Thursday to reporters, saying of Withers: "Here is a guy that’s on a football staff that ends up in Indianapolis (at a Committee on Infractions hearing to determine the Tar Heels’ penalties) ... If you take three things that you can’t do in college football, you have an agent on your staff. You’re paying your players. And you have academic fraud. That’s a triple play as far as the NCAA goes. So I don’t know that he has anything to talk about or they have anything to talk about. If that’s what people want in their flagship university in North Carolina, then so be it."O’Brien was painting with a broad brush there, but his points were basically valid. And while N.C. State’s player graduation rate isn’t where O’Brien wants it to be, his team is not the one that has been accused of nine major NCAA violations and that has been in turmoil for more than a year.Withers was apparently referring to the fact that, according to data provided by the NCAA for the freshman class of 2004, UNC’s football team had a graduation success rate of 75 percent compared to 56 percent for N.C. State. UNC’s federal graduation rate, which doesn’t count transfers or players who left early, was at 58 percent compared to 50 percent for N.C. State.