UNC falls short but shows improvement in OT loss

David HaleOct 25, 2025, 05:32 PM ETCloseCollege football reporter.Joined ESPN in 2012.Graduate of the University of Delaware.Follow on X

Virginia wins in OT as UNC’s 2-point attempt comes up just short (0:33)Benjamin Hall comes up inches short on a failed 2-point conversion as North Carolina loses to Virginia. (0:33)

CHAPEL HILL, N.C. — North Carolina still hasn’t won a game against a Power Four opponent under Bill Belichick, but Saturday’s 17-16 overtime defeat against No. 16 Virginia showed the improvement he has long promised is finally unfolding on the field.

The Tar Heels dominated Virginia at the line of scrimmage, racking up six sacks and largely eliminating the Cavaliers’ run game, but a failed 2-point try in overtime proved the difference.

“It’s one thing for people to say we’re getting better,” North Carolina wide receiver Jordan Shipp said, “but now we’re showing it. That’s a top-20 team in the country that went down to the last play of the game.”

Shipp wasn’t celebrating a moral victory. In the locker room after the game, he said he shed tears, knowing how much work this team had put in and how close it had come to its first ACC win of the season.

North Carolina’s defense held Virginia to 259 yards and didn’t allow a second-half point. The offense managed 359 yards — a relative pittance, but still a season high — and for the second straight week, UNC had a shot to win with its final possession, which is a drastic improvement after four early blowouts.

Perhaps another sign of North Carolina’s improvement was Belichick’s postgame news conference, where he was in vintage form.

He was effusive in the team’s need to avoid catastrophe near the goal line. After a three-point loss at Cal and Saturday’s one-point defeat to Virginia, what stood out was the Heels’ three red zone turnovers, including two that were within inches of reaching the end zone.

If the miscues remain an issue, UNC seems to be finding an identity that it lacked earlier in the season.

“We’ve spent more time with these guys, and everybody’s improving,” Belichick said. “Some guys are getting more playing time or are being used in different roles as we see ways for them to help the team be productive. It’s evolving. Some of it is the players improving, and some of it is identifying things guys can do to help us.”

But if there’s a turning point for UNC, it might’ve come during the open date two weeks ago. The Heels had just been blown out against Clemson and numerous news stories erupted — including the cancellation of a planned documentary on the team, rumors of dissatisfaction among players (including a locker room fight) and reports that Belichick was angling to get out of his contract, a story he firmly denied.

“I feel like it helped us a lot,” Shipp said. “It’s always good to be under a spotlight. I feel like that’s what brought everybody together. You see, sometimes, people trying to trash people’s names on social media, and people are there to defend them. … You’re supposed to have your brother’s back, no matter what’s going on. There’s a lot of that going on in this building.”

Virginia wins in OT as UNC’s 2-point attempt comes up just short (0:33)Benjamin Hall comes up inches short on a failed 2-point conversion as North Carolina loses to Virginia. (0:33)

Benjamin Hall comes up inches short on a failed 2-point conversion as North Carolina loses to Virginia. (0:33)

CloseCollege football reporter.Joined ESPN in 2012.Graduate of the University of Delaware.Follow on X

But if the Heels weren’t celebratory, there was ample reason to feel good.

What went into the decision to go for two in the first overtime?

Who was QB Gio Lopez’s first target before rolling out on the two-point play?

How much did UNC need these past two games to show real improvement on the field?

All that adversity united the struggling Tar Heels, Shipp said.

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