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Adams, Deacs hurdle N.C. State

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Photo gallery: Wake Forest 30, N.C. State 24 

First Look: See 198 images from the game

 WINSTON-SALEM – With one final chance to get the ball back, N.C. State couldn’t stop the guy who grew up near its campus.
Four tacklers had a shot at stopping Wake Forest running back Josh Adams of Cary before he plowed forward for the first down that clinched a 30-24 win for the Deacons on Saturday at BB&T Field.
After Adams caught a flare pass, cornerback DeAndre Morgan hit him square and hard, about 7 yards short of the first-down marker. Adams shook his way free of Morgan, then Alan-Michael Cash and two other would-be N.C. State tacklers.
Adams’ 10-yard gain for a first down allowed the Deacons (3-2, 1-1 ACC) to run out the clock.
"Once I got stopped, I was like, I can’t afford to be stopped by this one man,” Adams said. “I just kept my head down and kept my feet moving.”
The missed tackles were the final, decisive error in a mistake-filled game for the Wolfpack. N.C. State (3-2, 0-1) committed three turnovers.
Seven first-half penalties on N.C. State gave Wake Forest 80 yards. Russell Wilson’s Football Bowl Subdivision-record streak of consecutive passes without an interception ended at 379 as Josh Bush and Kenny Okoro intercepted him.
Still, the Wolfpack had a chance to get the ball back and win until Adams refused to be tackled.
"We’ve just got to make a tackle there at the end of the game,” said N.C. State coach Tom O’Brien. “Call a timeout, you get the ball back and take four more shots at it every time. We didn’t make the tackle. That kid wanted it more than we did.”
N.C. State would have liked to get the ball back for Wilson, who passed for 275 yards and two scores, and rushed for 41 yards and another touchdown. But Wilson had his chance.
He’d picked on redshirt freshman cornerback Okoro for most of the game and had Donald Bowens open on a post route on first-and-10 from the Wake Forest 29-yard line. But Wilson’s throw sailed over Bowens, allowing Okoro to hustle back and pluck the ball out of the air in the end zone.
"I don’t really know (what happened), to be honest with you,” Wilson said. “I got hit. I tried to give him a chance, and we didn’t come up with it. So it’s all right.”
Wake Forest senior quarterback Riley Skinner outdueled Wilson, throwing for 361 yards and three touchdowns despite intense pressure from the Wolfpack’s overwhelming defensive front. Willie Young sacked Skinner three times, causing a fumble on the second play from scrimmage that led to the game’s first touchdown.
Cash added two of N.C. State’s six sacks. But on third-and-23 from the Wolfpack 25 in the fourth quarter, Skinner zinged a scoring pass to Chris Givens on a post route to extend the Wake Forest lead to 27-17.
After Wilson couldn’t match Skinner late, the Wolfpack lost in Winston-Salem for the fourth straight time. Senior running back Toney Baker – who lost a fumble in the second quarter - called the loss “devastating” because of N.C. State’s mistakes.
O’Brien, who’d called the Wolfpack a “bad” football team the week before because of mistakes in a come-from-behind win over Pittsburgh, was disappointed again.
"We continue to self destruct,” O’Brien said. “We have to (correct) that on the practice field. We’ve got to do that with coaching. And some guys have to grow up, too. Some of it’s youth, and that’s no excuse. But they’d better grow up. Fast. Or we’ll have a long season.”
Wake Forest, which was coming off a devastating loss of its own, was facing a long season until Adams caught the ball and made sure he reached the first down marker. The Deacons had lost in overtime at Boston College the previous week.
Winning helped them avoid an 0-2 ACC start and gave Adams a reason to stand tall when he returns to his hometown.
"I think that’s self-explanatory,” Adams said. “I don’t have to talk too much about that, because I’m from that area. It means a lot to beat these guys, of course, for our team, overall.”

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Wake

Considering that Wake is a small private school, I have always been happy when we (Wake) win as many as we lose.   The last few years continue to amaze me.   Coach Grobe has turned iron into gold.

N C State

State will rebound, Wilson is just to good a quarterback. Myrtle Beach golf packages

Surprise

Interesting. A State fan already talking about basketball? Amazing.

Random stuff

TOB has got to be losing sleep over the missed tackles on that last first down. Josh Adams deserves a boatload of credit for keeping at it, but the tacklers have to wrap him up. No excuse for not giving RW one last chance.

Regarding that last interception, is it just me thinking that Donald Bowen gave up on that too easy? No doubt it was not Russell's best effort, but couldn't Bowen at least try to break up the play. It didn't seem to me there was that much separation between the two until Donald stopped. Just wondering.

It would also be nice if the opponents kickoff returns could be held to say 35 yards or so. State might want to consider on-side kicks all the time. Even if the return team keeps possession, they are likely to have worse field position than they have been getting on a normal kickoff.

Last but not least was the double whammy. Just about the same time Josh Adams breaks all those tackles to seal the game, Notre Dame comes from behind again at the last minute to beat Washington. The luck of the Irish piled on to add to a tough night. If it weren't for UVa, BC and Michigan State, I'd be overcome with depression.

You have no idea

Did not see the game, but plenty of freinds told me about it. They thought Bowen gave up on that route as well.

You may be on to something with the on sides kick strategy. As few yards as Wake apparently had to go, looks like State has been knocked off the #1 defense in yards allowed pedistal. Of course this is no surprise.

Also looks like the "best in the State" won't be a repeat this year. Along with the best QB in the ACC race.

Of course my team is appearing (or not) to be so anemic and lifeless, except for the defense, that I have no right to say anything.

At least we have baseball to look forward to.

Quick follow up

On Bowens, I dvr'd the game and watched it yesterday. The color commentator talked about Bowen quitting on the play at great length, which I missed the first time because I was in a restaurant watching the game without sound. Bowen's seems a little tentative to me, maybe because he missed most of the last two years. Whatever. That's just one more example of the kinds of mental errors that kept the Pitt game close and lost the Wake game.

State's special teams, especially covering kickoffs and punts is horrible. Without checking, I would bet that the opposing team in each FBS game had way better starting field position on offense as compared to the Pack. State needs to shore up this area like now. Meanwhile, I will stick with my onside kick strategy.

TJ Graham is a track guy in a football uniform. I don't know where he is on the depth chart, but it shouldn't be at the top. You can't teach speed, but apparently you can't teach soft hands either. Throw him a pass longer than 10 yards and let the adventure begin. Not that it matters, but someone should show him some film on Joshua Cribbs of the Cleveland Browns, so he can see what a real punt and kick returner looks like.

I am not displeased with State's defense, other than the bonehead mental errors. The secondary has been burned, but they are young and will get better. Bottom line, the defense is playing well enough for the Pack to win and they will improve as the season plays out. 

Don't count RW out as the best QB in the ACC. My son agrees with your inclination, but I don't. There is a lot of football to play and I expect State to improve as a team. If that happens, RW's final stats will compare favorably to his counterparts in the ACC. It is true though that there is good competition at the position this year and it will be fun to watch it play out. 

Looking back, that wasn't so quick after all. Oh, well.

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About the blogger

Ken Tysiac has covered the ACC for The Charlotte Observer since 2003, and spent the previous eight years covering Clemson for the Anderson Independent-Mail and then The State in South Carolina. He grew up in Rochester, N.Y., and is a graduate of the University of Notre Dame.

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