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Below is the official transcript of NC State Head Coach Dave Doeren’s session with the media at the ACC Kickoff this morning.

Q. Coach, you return a great deal of players on both offense and defense, but you lose both your punter and place kicker, two of the very best in the league. What are your thoughts about coming into the season in that vulnerable area?

COACH DOEREN: Well, we knew that was going to happen a couple years ago. We had a bunch of different types of specialists come through our camps, felt like A.J. Cole and Kyle Bambard were two really good guys, not just from a kicking standpoint, but the personalities. They were both athletic. Bambard was a quarterback also, was the Player of the Year actually in their division as a quarterback. He’s an all-around football player, competitor. We needed to find guys that were mature enough that could handle playing as a freshman because we knew we were going to lose our guys at the same time. We did it two years out. Both of those young men stayed home for a whole year and gray shirted, which means they enroll at a later date after they’ve signed their letters of intent. A.J. Cole went on missions, foreign countries, helped rebuild villages. These guys are further along than I think most freshmen would be from a maturity standpoint. They’re both talented. The thing about kicking and punting, it’s like being a golfer a little bit. You can go to the range and look like a really good golfer. You get on the tee and there’s thousands of people up and down the fairway, maybe we’re not as good a golfer anymore. We’re not going to tell how good they are until they get in games and see how they can handle the pressure of college kicking. They’re both really talented. We’re really excited about their futures. Hopefully they’ll be ready early. We have Jackson Maples who is a local, went to Pinecrest High School, who is on the roster that has a really strong leg, redshirted for us last year, did all of our scout team kicking. We’re excited about him. We signed Tyler Griffiths to come in and snap, he’s tremendous. Was a linebacker. We know he can run and tackle on our punt team, as well.

Q. How much time would you say you spend on Twitter and how do you use it to your advantage? What is the red light?

COACH DOEREN: Okay, you’re talking about per day time on Twitter?

Q. Yes.

COACH DOEREN: I don’t know. My wife would tell you too much, for sure. There’s a lot of different things on that form of social media that you can find in recruiting. Then there’s also things you can find about people, I think. We’re always trying to figure out who’s the best fit. We actually do look at their pages, their pictures, what they write. There’s several kids that we’ll stop recruiting when we see some of the things they put on those pages. We’re always trying to find not only the great player, but the right person for our program, the right fit for our program. Obviously I’m in communication as much as I can be. I do feel like recruiting is one of my strengths. As a head coach I’m very active in that role. I’m messaging as much as I can with certain guys, building relationships with them that maybe another school’s head coach doesn’t do that. We feel like it gives us an advantage that I will. So I don’t know how many minutes or hours, but I’m on there a lot. Enough where it bothers people at home probably, you know what I mean? As far as the red light, the red light is what happens at NC State when we win a big game, whether it’s football, whether it’s basketball. They light up the tower on campus. We use that illustration for when we add a member to our family. When we get a recruitment, we say, The red light is on in Raleigh. It’s a way to acknowledge somebody making a life’s choice to be part of our football family.

Q. You’ve had quarterbacks of differing styles your first year with Thomas, Mitchell. Now you have Jalen coming in, taking over the backup role. What have you seen from him? What kind of competition has he given Jacoby?

COACH DOEREN: First of all, it’s the third year I’ve been at State and first year I’ve had a returner at that position, the first year I had a backup that we recruited to be a scholarship quarterback. I’m excited about the depth and the talent that we have there. I feel like we’re in a great situation because Jalen traveled to every game last year, was in every game plan meeting with Coach Canada, took valuable reps in this off- season, and is with Jacoby day in, day out. Jacoby is a tremendous preparation guy. He’s getting to watch a veteran guy go through it, a guy that’s going through it the right way. He’s really dedicated, Jacoby has dedicated himself to the cause. So for Jalen, I think he’s in a tremendous position. I tell kids all the time, they want to play right away, all of them do, if you’re a three-year starter at that level, that’s a lot. If you start at quarterback for three years at the ACC or SEC, you’re a pretty good football player now. He’s going to be able to do that after Jacoby is gone. If we feel like there’s a moment in a game, injury in a game, we don’t have to change what we do. We have another 6’6″ guy that can run and throw and is tough. It’s a great scenario to have on your team. It’s the first time I’ve had it since I’ve been here. I do sleep good at night from a quarterback standpoint knowing that’s what we have. Just like every year, you have different things. Last year no one asked about our kicker and punter. Now that’s the unknown. Our left tackle is a new guy. That’s an unknown. At least at quarterback we don’t have that problem.

Q. Coach, when Mike Rose was in here yesterday, he had a lot of fun, but he was very confident. He said, We’re not here to play for third place behind Clemson and Florida State. How optimistic are you? Do you like to see that kind of confidence coming from your players?

COACH DOEREN: Well, you can’t beat teams if you don’t believe you can beat ’em, that’s for sure. I think at the end of the season we were playing very confident team football. I think our guys believed they could beat anybody in the country. We started to play like it. Now we’ve got to go out there and do it. I don’t think there’s a man in our locker room that doesn’t believe we can. That’s exciting as a coach, to know you have that kind of confidence. We just have to make sure we back it up with the work and preparation that it’s going to take. Those are great football teams that are well-coached. I do feel good about the mindset. The fact that we’ve walked over some hot coals. We’ve rebounded and found a way to stick together and be resilient. There’s a good bond in our locker room right now.

Q. You raved about Jacoby the minute you landed him as a transfer. Is it possible to overstate the impact he’s had on the program? Can we overstate how important he’s been to the transformation?

COACH DOEREN: No, I don’t think you can. I told everybody last year, it’s his team because he’s the quarterback. The quarterback’s the CEO of your football team. We’re going to go, any team is, you can go from Pop Warner to NFL, if you look at their quarterback play, if it’s good, if he manages the team the right way, if he’s tough, if he’s a leader, those teams probably win some games. Vice versa, if you have a team that has no identity at that position, they’re probably not very good. So he’s helped us immensely. I was excited when I got him because I’ve known him since he was a freshman. He comes from a great program. Was coached by a great high school coach in Jack Daniels. He was a state championship basketball player at point guard. I knew what I was getting because I’d known him for so long. I knew what we needed. I was coming from a program at Northern Illinois that had tremendous quarterback play in Jordan Lynch one year and Chandler Harnish they year before. They were both Player of the Year in our league. I knew that we were champions at Northern because I had a championship quarterback. So to know I was getting one that had that pedigree, once you have that you can build around it. You can have a lot of other things, but if you don’t have, that it’s hard to reach the goals you have as a program.

Q. You recruited Reggie Gallaspy. What a runningback. Will he have an immediate impact? Is he something down the road?

COACH DOEREN: Well, he’s going to have an immediate impact, it’s just whether it’s on the field right away. He already has in the way he works. He’s a really, really good role model. He hasn’t been on a list since he’s been here. He works his butt off. Nobody has anything to say about him but good things. He’s a great teammate. How fast he plays. We have two good backs in front of him. He may not play a lot as a freshman, he might. Even if he redshirts, he’s going to have an impact because of the type of person Reggie is. I’m blessed and happy to have him on our football team. He made a great choice I think to be here, to be around his mom. I know his community is proud, our state is proud to have him on our team. So far so good. We have a lot of good backs. That’s the problem or the privilege, I guess, we have as coaches, to decipher how we’re going to use them all this year.

Q. I know you have a good relationship with Coach Shafer. One of his assistants has ended up on your staff. What does George bring to you?

COACH DOEREN: There’s a lot of ties to Northern Illinois. Coach Novak was a great coach there. He’s produced a lot of good coaches on this tree. Coach Canada, my offensive coordinator, Scott Shafer, Narduzzi, George McDonald, they were all on the same staff together at Northern Illinois. Those guys know each other. George is a guy that I’ve known of for a long time because of my relationship to those other coaches. We needed somebody that could come in and help a position group become more detailed, could teach them just the finer points of playing that position and elevate their play and production. We felt like as a team, that was one position group that had some really good talent but needed more production. So when I interviewed George, just a tremendous teacher, his passion for the position, the detail that he explained things to me, I knew he was the right guy for the job. Now he’s got to sort out who’s right for what thing, how he’s going to use them all. But we have great confidence in him.

Q. Coach, a massive structure has emerged out of the ground across from your practice field. How much of an extra bounce in your step, to see that now, does that give you?

COACH DOEREN: Our indoor football complex is tremendous. It’s full size. We have a great campus now. It’s a football campus. The Murphy Center always has been one of the best facilities in the ACC. We had three practice fields that were a short walk from it. Now we have the indoor, where regardless of what Mother Nature chooses to do, we can get great work in. For our players’ safety to be on good footing every day, for the development of our team, when we get the program where we want it to be, those key games that everyone is talking about that are in December, you have to have a place to practice. Last year during the bowl, we were outside in sideways rain getting ready to play a game in Florida. So to have that for our December practices, eventually to have it for our off-season changing of direction and conditioning. If you picture my first spring at NC State, we go to our off-season program to work on change of direction and explosion, we’re on wet grass, everybody is falling down all over the place. I’m like, How am I going to get these guys better? To know I don’t have that problem anymore, it’s unbelievable. Blessed to be able to be at a school that could raise that money as fast as they could.

Matthew is Publisher and Co-Owner of Pack Insider. He is also the Lead Pastor of The Point Church in Cary, NC.

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NC State Football

WATCH: Dave Doeren’s Weekly Press Conference Before Syracuse (with transcript)

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NC State Head Coach Dave Doeren met with the media for his weekly press conference yesterday leading up to the Wolfpack’s game against Syracuse this Saturday. You can watch the videos BELOW, and read the transcript UNDERNEATH.













Recapping the game, like I said after, I was very proud of how we responded after a really tough moment with Grayson’s (McCall) injury. In reflection, it’s probably 30 years of being on a college field, the scariest moment I’ve had and felt so bad for him and his parents.

I thought our trainer, Justin Smith, our head athletic trainer, did an amazing job on that field with his team and the docs managing the chaos of the moment, keeping everybody calm. Did a tremendous job, and after the game, when information was coming back on how everything was going, communication was great. I got to spend time with Grayson and his family at the hospital. After the game, all the scans and things they did came back clean, and he was in good spirits. He has been released, actually Saturday night was released, and is with his girlfriend and his parents recovering.

He’s in the concussion protocol, and we’ll give him time to go through all the steps that he wants to go through before we talk any more about what the next steps are. I think it’s only fair to him and his family to allow them that opportunity and be supportive of him as he goes through this tough time. Thankful that he is, for the most part, okay.

It was just a concussion, and when you see a guy get hit in college football or in pro football in the head, it’s one thing, but when the helmet comes off and then he gets hit, that’s another, and so that was a really weird thing. I don’t think there was any malicious intent. It was a clean hit from the side when this helmet came off and the other player coming in.

It was a tough play, and, you know, a lot of people have asked me about the play. Was it targeting? Wasn’t it? And I’m not here to criticize our officials at all. I do think that the rule probably needs to be studied.

The letter of the law, that rule, he was not a defenseless player as a runner, and if you hit somebody with the crown of your head or you launch yourself into somebody’s head with the crown of your head, that’s targeting, and in that particular case, it was the front of the guy’s helmet that actually hit Grayson, and so, obviously, when you see a play like that, you think, ‘Why does it matter what part of the head hits him at all?’ Scary moment. Talked to him on the phone a little bit ago. He’s in good spirits. He’s excited to be back around the team, and we’ll go through all the proper steps with him and be there right behind him.

When I was talking to him at the hospital, we were talking about the play itself. He hadn’t seen it, and his dad and mom were in the room, and he said, ‘Coach, I thought about sliding, and then I said, no, I’m not doing that,’ and he just has given the game so much. He’s such a competitor.

He’s such a warrior, and I know myself and everybody around here, we were pulling hard for him, and so it’s just not what you expected in the game. Turning from that event to our sideline, seeing our guys and how emotional they were, because, in the moment, wasn’t even thinking about the rest of the guys, thinking about him, and like, ‘Dang, how are we going to get these guys back on track here? This is tough,’ and it was. There were a lot of tears on our sideline, and so, I was proud that we got back in the game.

CJ Bailey came in and did a really nice job. Didn’t get a lot of reps last week as a backup. You never get as many as the starter, and then the disappointment is that we didn’t finish. Really disappointed in that.

It’s something that we take a lot of pride in as a program, and had plenty of opportunities in the fourth quarter. 10 minutes left in the game, 10-point lead, and multiple, multiple times, plays presented themselves to us that we could have got off the field defensively or made a play defensively or a third and three on offense where we don’t protect the way that we’re capable of. Just felt like we didn’t finish, and that was disappointing. Really disappointing as a coach, and so I own that, as always.

I’ve got to get our team to finish better, and our players will own that as well. They got to finish, but I’m proud of CJ, and this team will battle for him. I thought Kendrick Raphael really battled in that game, ran hard, protected well.

Our outside receivers continue to improve. I thought Noah Rodgers, Wesley Grimes, Terrell Anderson and Keenan Jackson all caught the ball well and did some things with their legs after the catch. Justin Joly did the same.

Made a really nice play on third down and strained for a first, and we ended up scoring on that drive and then had the touchdown later in the game.

Negatives, we had two turnovers that we forced on defense that we got zero points out of offensively in the third quarter.

We scored right before the half. Knowing we’d get the ball back to open the third quarter, I thought, ‘Alright, we can get some momentum here’ and didn’t, went three and out, so that was a disappointing drive. We got beat in protection in some critical spots. We had some guys wide open on a couple plays and CJ got rushed and couldn’t get the ball to him.

We had KC (Concepcion) on a screen and go, and then on that third and three, we had a high-low route, and he couldn’t throw the ball to him, so we got to be better.

It wasn’t just on the O line. There were two on running backs and then on the O line. We got to be better in those moments.

You know, on defense, we got two takeaways, and then we had a couple strips we didn’t capitalize on.

One of them was one of the plays I’m mentioning. You know, (Tamarcus) Cooley does a great job stripping the quarterback. The ball’s right there, and three of our players are there, one of theirs, and they get the ball back, and that would have ended the game.

I thought our DB’s played man-to-man coverage very well in the game. Didn’t make enough plays when we were in zone defense. Obviously, they out-jumped us for one in the corner of the end zone on a third and ten, which is a play we need to make. We had poor eyes at linebacker a couple times on play action, and then the roughing penalty was a critical error.

We were really good on third down defensively, eight of 11 successfully. We were 0-3 on fourth down, and those were all in the fourth quarter.

Our special teams was really kind of a wash in the game. We were 3-4 on field goals. I think our punter is better than he showed. He had one extremely good punt, excuse me, and they called us for being in the backfield, which I don’t see on film, which hurt his average, but he did have a shanked punt earlier in the game, and their punter did as well, so really the special teams were not a factor for either team in that game, and in the past, they have been.

Now we move on. We’re at the halfway point of the season, 3-3, obviously not where we want to be, but we have a lot to play for, and excited about the next opportunity with Syracuse. They’re a 4-1 team coming off an overtime win on the road at UNLV.

Really good quarterback in Kyle McCord, obviously a nationally known guy from Ohio State, really good arm, poised, experienced. He’s won a lot of games.

The receivers have a lot of experience. Pena is a guy we’ve seen for a long time, and he’s a good returner as well.

Gadsen was out last year, but the year before we played him, and he made a lot of plays on us, and receiver #7 Meeks. The running back, Allen, is an experienced back, and they get the ball to him a lot of ways. They’re putting up really good numbers on offense, particularly in the air, and will be a great challenge and opportunity for us.

Defensively, they play a lot of different things. They’ve been four down. They’ve been three down.

The entire game, sometimes they do both in the game, so there’s a lot, really, two systems that they’re merging. Number 10, Diggs, is a disruptive player, plays defensive end and linebacker, has eight TFLs and four sacks. They’re big up front.

They have a really big D-line. A lot of experience, nine guys in their defensive depth chart that have been starters at one time. And Pena, like I mentioned, is a really dynamic returner.

Excited to have our night game at home. We’ve had three straight home or noon games, and I know from a crowd standpoint, we’ve always had great energy in our night games. We’ll be in our all-black uniform and hope that we have an incredible crowd.

You know, with our fans, I know all of us wanted better than 3-3. Trust me, no one’s more disappointed than me and our players, but I also know NC State’s about fighting and not giving up, and that’s where we’re at. We’ve been in worse situations and rallied and had really good finishes, and that’s what we’re going to try to do.

We’ve got six games, six opportunities. We’ll take them all one at a time, and we’ll work our butts off with a lot to play for, a lot to fight for, and I know it’s frustrating. I feel your pain, but I know one thing about this school.

We don’t quit. We dig in and fight, and we stick together, and that’s what I’m asking for with our fans. We need your help in this game.

Crowd noise matters at home. You’re playing a team that throws the ball on the road, and having you behind us would mean a lot.

Any update on Hollywood Smothers, Brandon Cisse, Dacari Collins, Val Erickson?

No. I don’t have to discuss injuries, Cory, so I’m not going to. I’m giving you the update on Grayson because of how public the injury was, but there are no rules around that, and I’d rather not talk about their health.

What have you seen from CJ Bailey up to this point?

He’s handled adversity very well. He’s got great energy and enthusiasm and belief in himself. He gets better with each game.

You can see him improving. And he loves football, you know. He just really enjoys the process of going through the game plan and practice.

He’s not an excuse guy either. When he makes a mistake, he’s the first one to own it. I just think he’s a guy people want to play for.

He’s also a great teammate. I mean, he hurts for Grayson, and Grayson’s a good mentor to him. And Lex Thomas is the same way.

Those guys are really tight, that group of guys. And so, CJ’s going to play well. He’s going to come in and play really well.

I’m excited for him.

How would you assess where the running game is at this point of the season?

I would say early on it was pretty bad, and it got better. I thought it got quite a bit better against Clemson. NIU, not great.

I think we had some good runs in that game. But we didn’t turn the ball over, and that was a physical front.

Had some good runs in this game.

I think if you watch the game, how our game plan was, there was a lot of plays that were runs where we threw the football. And so, we took the numbers, took the leverage, I guess you’d say. Had we handed off some of those, there could have been some pretty explosive runs if you look at how the box was on some of those plays.

So, there are improvements in some ways.

Am I happy with it? No. I’ll tell you what I am happy with.

I’m happy with how hard the receivers are blocking. I think Kendrick Raphael is running really hard, physical, making plays with his feet. So, I am happy with that part of it.

But we can get better there.

What have you seen in Kendrick Raphael?

He’s gained weight. He worked really hard in the offseason to help himself, one, for his health, but two, for protection, to be able to take on linebackers. I think he learned a lot last year being a little undersized. So, his work ethic has helped his durability and strength.

The game is a little bit slower for him. I think he’s just got reps, and you get better and better. But he’s really competitive, and I’m not surprised.

The high school he played at, Naples High, that have split back veer offense. He’s kind of both tailbacks in that offense, or fullbacks half the time and tailbacks half the time. They blocked as much as they ran the ball.

So, he was brought up as a tough running back, not some guy that’s just a skill back back out there. He likes the contact of the game.

Were the total amount of passing attempts reflective of RPO play calls?

Yeah, it’s both.

We wanted to get the ball to our outside guys, but a lot of the run game in college football, not just for us, if people are going to play a certain way in the secondary, you’re going to take what they give you at times, with bubbles or smokes or slants or hitches or outs, and make people put bodies on bodies to lighten the box,? And so, when we were getting those lighter boxes, softer secondary pictures, we were throwing the ball out there more because of what they were presenting. And that’s why the numbers were up. If you actually look at the play itself, you’re going to see a lot of run blocking going on on those quick throws because they were run plays with tagged RPOs.

4th and 9 QB Scramble in the final drive

Obviously, he wasn’t a quarterback that ran around a lot. We had a four-man pass rush called, and we did a poor job executing the line stunt. We got no penetration, no disruption.

The game we had called was actually a really good game for quarterback draws and things like that, and we didn’t execute it very well. We had worked hard on that. I know it was something Coach Wiles spoke a lot about yesterday in our meeting.

He was disappointed in that play. Felt like we’d be able to capture the quarterback with that game, and obviously they did a better job than we did on that play. That was a tough one.

You get somebody fourth and nine, you’ve got to get off the field.

Have you talked to the ACC about the hit on Grayson being targeting?

Yeah, I’ve talked to the league, and I can’t discuss that conversation. That’s private.

I have a lot of respect for Al Riveron, head of officials, and that’s one thing we don’t do is publicly talk about those conversations. I think he and I are on the same page with the fact that the targeting rule itself needs to be studied. I think the language in it puts the refs in a tough spot, particularly on a play like that one.

I mean, you guys have watched a lot of football. There’s not a lot of plays where a helmet comes off and at the same time someone else is coming in to hit them like that. And so it really highlights the rule and the verbiage of the rule.

I do think in talking to him there’s going to be a lot of conversation from an officiating side about the language of targeting and is this the right way to officiate the rule. I know he felt terrible about what happened, and I have a lot of respect for him and how he does his job.

Should the play have been ruled dead because his helmet came off?

Yeah, that’s a good question. The ball came out simultaneously, so they didn’t rule it dead.

I could see where that could happen. But, again, you’re asking me to officiate and I’m not an official. I mean, some of those calls are on the field in the moment.

If a guy continues to play with his helmet off, you usually see that. But, as you know, that play he went directly to the ground. And so, I don’t know, it’s a tough one.

Would you ever tell a player you don’t feel comfortable putting them back out there?

Yeah, I’m going to always first start with the doctors and the family and the young man. And, obviously, if I felt that way, I have no problem making that call.

But I’m going to start with them. And I think that’s the right way to do it. I have three sons, and I would want them to be treated the same way that I’m going to treat these guys.

And if that’s where we’re at, that’s where we’ll be. But I have no problem making that decision if that’s where we end up. But the steps are not head coach first.

It’s medical team first, family, and then bring the head coach in. Here’s where we’re at.

Do you get a sense that you’re at that point with Grayson at all?

Yeah, I mean, like I told you, I’m going to let them go through the steps.

And once we do that, then we’ll have a conversation publicly. But he deserves that opportunity. I’m not going to supersede what he’s asking for.

Preparing for Syracuse’s changing defensive scheme

I think we’ve got to get into our game plan here and see where we think their weaknesses are and what their tendencies are and why they’re getting into these fronts. You know, how random is it? Is it more down a distance? Is it more formation related? Is it just this team they did that and it never showed up again? Like, when you just watch five games, it’s all over the place. You know what I mean? But when you start to really get into it, you can find out how challenging it’s really going to be.

And at this point, I couldn’t tell you that. We’re in the middle of game planning right now, but for a freshman quarterback, he’s seen a lot, man. I mean, Clemson presented everything. NIU did a lot of stuff on defense. CJ’s already seen a lot.

And he’s got a veteran center with him. We’ll have to make the plan, obviously, one that he feels good about. And that’s our job as coaches to help him with that.

Is this a week where maybe Grayson being on the sideline helping out could be really vital for your team, speaking to Bailey?

Yeah, Grayson’s going to be a coach one day, I have a feeling, and he’s pretty damn good with those guys. So if that’s where he’s at helping them, he’s great with those guys on the sideline and no matter what it is, whether they’re playing us an odd the whole game, 4-2 the whole game, or both, he’s going to be really good with those guys on the sideline.

Syracuse’s success in the transfer portal this offseason

I mean, you see it both ways in some cases, but yeah, I think the portal can be a transitional thing, particularly for a new coach coming in, where they may have had some glaring spots, as you mentioned. I mean, getting the quarterback that they have right now has completely changed his opportunity as a head coach in year one. You go back to when I got here and I got Jacoby Brissett, but he had to sit out for my first year and we went from three wins in year one to eight wins in year two because of that position change? I mean, that position is the most important in football.

You can look at every NFL team, every college team, every high school team, if there’s a really good player at quarterback, they usually have a pretty good record. They usually do and they got a good quarterback. Kyle McCord’s a good player.

Thought’s on Tamarcus Cooley’s development

Yeah, I’m really impressed with his improvement.

His last two games, he’s been very good in coverage, in zone, blitzing, fitting the run. He’s getting better and better each week.

Really talented athlete. We knew that when he got here. He had a lot to learn and to his credit, he really worked hard at improving.

Coach Freddie Aughtry-Lindsay does a great job with our Nickels. Tamarcus has been a positive influence on our team. A spark for our defense, for sure.

Adding a lot of Defensive Backs in the offseason, and how the depth chart has worked out

Well, I think some of it’s because of injuries and losses that we had. Guys leaving our team to go play more somewhere else. And when you add guys and then Devan Boykin got hurt in the bowl game, it was a position group that we felt like needed some older players and competition in the room while we developed some of the younger guys.

Dameon Fagan’s injured as well. And so our returning guys weren’t healthy and we had some good freshmen coming in who I really am excited about. And Ronnie Royal’s going to be a really good player here.

Assad (Brown) is going to be a really good player. Jivan Bailey’s getting better. But you don’t want to go from senior to true freshman at every spot.

You want to have that differential. And so we knew we needed to add some guys. And yeah, did we take too many? I don’t think so.

I mean, they’ve all played and competed and some of them have been banged up along the way. But the reason we did is pretty obvious.

What tests did Grayson go through?

Yeah. I mean, he went through every test you can go through, but I’m not going to get into it. I mean, look, he’s at the trauma center.

That’s the number one trauma center in Wake County. They put every single resource into what they do and had really glowing results coming out of there other than he has a concussion, you know? So you feel good about it because as you all know, head injuries can have a lot of other things, swelling, blood and all, none of that. So, you know, feel fortunate that all we’re dealing with is a concussion.

But for him, there’s been multiple in his career, as you know. But the hospitals here in Wake County, and we’re fortunate, in the research triangle to have the medical care that we do.

Thoughts on Justin Joly

Yeah, he’s a really good ball catcher. He’s good yards after catch.

He’s hard to tackle. He’s quick feet, good in space, elevates for the ball, can track the ball. He’s competitive.

He’s getting better without the ball. I mean, that’s the biggest area we’ve been working hard with him. How to block in space, how to be good on different types of blocks, and when the pictures change, defenses aren’t always how they line up, how to adjust, and he’s continuing to improve in that. But he’s been a great asset to our offense, and he’s just getting better each week.

He works really hard, and he’s a fun kid to coach.

Quarterbacks love big targets for sure, and having a guy that can sit in space and make plays and it doesn’t have to be a perfect ball for him to bring it in with his catch radius, that helps a quarterback tremendously.

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NC State Football

NC State vs. Syracuse: Odds, Spread, Total, Analysis

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NC State (3-3) is currently a 4.5-point underdog against Syracuse (4-1) in their upcoming game this Saturday in Carter-Finley. The Total is sitting at 54.5. The Money Line for NC State is +150. The Money Line for Syracuse is -185.

  • NC State is 0-6 Against the Spread in 2024.
  • Syracuse is 2-3 Against the Spread in 2024.
  • The Total has gone Over in 4 of the Wolfpack’s 6 games.
  • The Total has gone Under in 3 of the Orange’s 5 games.
  • NC State is 0-7 Against the Spread in their last 6 games.
  • Syracuse is 2-4 Against the Spread in their last 6 games.
  • NC State is 2-4 Against the Spread in their last 6 games against Syracuse.
  • The Total has gone Under in 5 of the last 7 games between the two teams.

NC State

Syracuse

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NC State Football

NC State vs. Cal Kickoff Time & TV Network Announced

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NC State and California will kickoff on the West Coast at 3:30pm on October 19th. The game will be televised on the ACC Network.

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Under Dave Doeren, NC State is 9-16 at the 3:30 time slot. If you include 3pm and 4pm kickoffs, the Wolfpack is 14-17 between 3-4pm since 2013.

2023

Virginia Tech – 35-28 (W)

2022

Syracuse – 9-24 (L)

Boston College – 20-21 (L)

UNC – 30-27 (W) (2OT)

2021

Clemson – 27-21 (W)

FSU – 28-14 (W) (4pm)

Syracuse – 41-17 (W) (4pm)

2020

Duke – 31-20 (W)

Georgia Tech – 23-13 (W) (4pm)

2018

Clemson – 7-41 (L)

FSU – 47-28 (W)

2017

South Carolina – 28-35 (L) (3pm)

Notre Dame – 14-35 (L)

Clemson – 31-38 (L)

UNC – 33-21 (W)

Arizona St. – 52-31 (W) (3pm)

2016

Wake Forest – 33-16 (W)

2015

Clemson – 41-46 (L)

UNC – 34-35 (L)

Miss St. – 28-51 (L)

2014

South Florida – 49-17 (W)

FSU – 41-56 (L)

Clemson – 0-41 (L)

Boston College – 14-30 (L)

Louisville – 18-30 (L)

Wake Forest – 42-13 (W)

2013

Central Michigan – 48-14 (W)

Wake Forest – 13-28 (L)

Syracuse – 10-24 (L)

FSU – 17-49 (L)

Duke – 28-30 (L) (4pm)

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NC State Football

NC State vs. WFU: Offensive PFF Grades Report

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NC State lost to Wake Forest 30-34 on Saturday in Carter-Finley Stadium. Here’s a PFF Grade Report for the Wolfpack Offense in Week 6.

Freshman Quarterback CJ Bailey – 84.8
Redshirt Senior Left Tackle Anthony Belton – 77.9
Junior Tight End Justin Joly – 75.7
Sophomore Running Back Kendrick Raphael – 71.9
Redshirt Freshman Wide Receiver Noah Rogers – 68.0
Redshirt Junior Left Guard Anthony Carter Jr. – 67.3
Freshman Wide Receiver Keenan Jackson – 63.9
Redshirt Sophomore Right Tackle Jacarrius Peak – 63.0
Redshirt Senior Center Zeke Correll – 62.7
Freshman Wide Receiver Terrell Anderson – 61.8
Junior Wide Receiver Wesley Grimes – 61.4
Redshirt Senior Running Back Jordan Waters – 59.9
Sophomore Wide Receiver Kevin Concepcion – 57.3
Redshirt Junior Wide Receiver Jakolbe Baldwin – 54.1
Redshirt Senior Right Guard Timothy McKay – 53.3
Junior Tight End Dante Daniels – 39.7

Notes

  • This was the highest grade of CJ Bailey’s career.
  • This was Anthony Belton’s highest grade of the season, and the 2nd highest grade of his career.
  • This was Kendrick Raphael’s highest grade of the season, and the 3rd highest grade of his career.
  • Wesley Grimes started instead of the injured Dacari Collins.

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