Tar Heels’ Howell working to find chemistry with new faces
The losses are significant. They include the elite 1-2 punch of 1,000-yard rushers in Michael Carter (1,245 yards) and Javonte Williams (1,140 yards), with Williams finishing fourth in the Bowl Subdivision ranks with 22 total touchdowns and both ranked in the top six nationally in rushing. UNC also lost a 1,000-yard receiver in Dyami Brown (sixth in FBS with 1,099 yards) and Dazz Newsome, who cracked the 1,000-yard mark in 2019.
That means Howell will rely on new players just about anywhere he delivers the ball.
“I think this year my leadership will be challenged because we’ve got a lot of young guys that are going to have to step up and play,” Howell said. “So I’m trying to take those guys under my wing and kind of develop those guys into players that can play on the field this fall.” In Year 3 of his second stint with the program, Coach Mack Brown compared it to his first year back in Chapel Hill. There was inexperienced talent with the running backs while the receivers were still inconsistent and battling drops.
The difference is Howell was a true freshman settling into college back then. Now he’s one of the nation’s top quarterbacks, showing the confidence to push the ball downfield and a soft touch on defense-stretching deep balls. Howell threw for 3,586 yards and 30 touchdowns last season, finishing in the top six of the FBS ranks in both categories. He’s already tied UNC’s career record for TD throws (68) entering his junior season.
With proven big-play potential surrounding Howell, last year’s Tar Heels finished in the top 10 nationally in total offense (537.2) and scoring (41.7). Howell must help players like rising sophomore receiver Josh Downs and Tennessee graduate transfer running back Ty Chandler thrive as the successors.
Downs, in particular, has ample opportunity. He had two touchdown catches for 75 yards in the Orange Bowl loss to No. 5 Texas A&M after Brown opted out and declared for the NFL draft.
“As a group, we want to make huge plays and keep working,” Downs said. “For myself, I want to better myself, get Sam’s trust that even though Dyami and Dazz are gone, he’s still got dudes to throw the ball to.”
The team has used spring team drills to look closer at younger players, allowing Howell more time to observe who is doing well or needs some informal coaching.
That’s precisely what Mack Brown wants from the guy who makes the Tar Heels’ offense hum.
“You go back and look at last year’s College Football Playoff teams. They all had great quarterbacks,” Brown said. “You look at the NFL in the last two rounds, headed toward the Super Bowl. They all had great quarterbacks. So modern-day football, it’s not just a defense and kicking game anymore; you’ve got to score points.
“If you don’t have a quarterback, it’s hard. And we’ve been so blessed. … There’s no doubt that Sam Howell gives us some margin of error until those guys can grow up.”