SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Brian Kelly has postponed No. 2 Notre Dame's Thanksgiving dinner for two days — perhaps for good reason.
His Fighting Irish (8-0, 7-0 Atlantic Coast Conference) need to be light on their feet when they take on the explosive offense of Mack Brown's 25th-ranked North Carolina Tar Heels (6-2, 6-2) on Friday afternoon.
"They're an extremely talented team," Kelly said. "We've played similar teams — Clemson comes to mind. (The Tar Heels) don't go away – they have come back in fourth quarters and won football games. They keep playing."
Led by 6-foot-1, 220-pound quarterback Sam Howell, the Tar Heels are averaging 563.4 yards (fourth among FBS schools) and 43.1 points (10th) per game. Their abundance of returning offensive talent includes running backs Javonte Williams and Michael Carter, wide receivers Dyami Brown and Dazz Newsome and tight end Garrett Walston.
Howell, who threw for 3,641 yards and 38 touchdowns to lead the Tar Heels to a 7-6 finish in 2019, is on pace to shatter those marks. He has already thrown for 2,631 yards and 23 touchdowns, averages 15.7 yard per completion and ranks ninth in passing efficiency (182.6).
Brown is seventh in receiving yards (829) and eighth in TD receptions (8) while Williams leads the nation in touchdowns (18) and is seventh nationally with 868 rushing yards.
"They have two great backs, so we have to be tied into the running game," Notre Dame strong safety Shaun Crawford said. "We have to wrap up and bring them down because they are great after contact. They have great receivers on the outside — a lot of speed, a lot of skill."
After reaching No. 5 in mid-October, the Tar Heels suffered a pair of three-point road losses at Florida State (31-28) and Virginia (44-41) when they couldn't overcome double-digit deficits and fell out of the Top 25. But even there, the penchant for comebacks was plain.