Departures may hurt East Carolina facing Pitt in Military Bowl

Pitt missed out on bigger things late in the regular season, but the Panthers still can capture a nice finishing prize.

Pitt takes on East Carolina in the Military Bowl on Saturday at Annapolis, Md.

The roster for East Carolina (8-4) looks ravaged by departures, but that can’t be a concern for the Panthers.

“It really doesn’t matter. They are football players and they all got hearts,” Pitt coach Pat Narduzzi said. “It comes down to who plays with more toughness and who wants it the most.”

Pitt (8-4) entertained major bowl or College Football Playoff aspirations until the last week of the regular season, when it lost to Miami a week after winning at nationally ranked Georgia Tech. The Panthers also had a November loss to Notre Dame.

A bowl victory would put Pitt at nine or more victories for the third time in five seasons.

“It’s a celebration and it’s an opportunity to go out and play one more football game with your football team,” Narduzzi said. “This is the last time this ‘25 team will play together. Again, tradition, we try to uphold that tradition all the time.”

The depth chart is largely intact for Pitt other than linebacker Kyle Louis and running back Desmond Reid preparing for the NFL Draft.

The Panthers will look for quarterback Mason Heintschel to continue his strong production. Heintschel, who became a midseason starter with notable successes, has thrown for 15 touchdowns and rushed for two TDs.

It’s not so simple for East Carolina. The Pirates will be without quarterback Katin Houser, who’s intending to enter the transfer portal. He threw for 19 touchdowns and more than 3,000 yards during the regular season.

East Carolina coach Blake Harrell said he hopes his team’s personnel changes at least make Pitt uneasy in preparations.

“Let’s go let it rip, go have fun with it,” Harrell said. “… I’m sure that’s what Pitt’s doing right now, making some preparations for what they think might be coming.”

The Pirates will be without receivers Yannick Smith and Jayvontay Conner, who combined for more than 900 receiving yards and eight touchdowns. Both entered the transfer portal.

This is further complicated by the departure of offensive coordinator John David Baker.

This puts Mike Wright (formerly of Vanderbilt, Mississippi State and Northwestern) and/or Chaston Ditta in the quarterback role for East Carolina.

“Somebody has to stand back there and take some snaps,” Harrell said. “Thankfully, we’ve had some guys do that this year. Chaston Ditta has taken some snaps back there. Mike Wright has taken some snaps back there.”

Then this week, word came that running back London Montgomery, who led East Carolina with 742 rushing yards and seven touchdowns, is skipping the bowl in advance of exiting the program.

East Carolina is trying to win the Military Bowl for the second year in a row against an Atlantic Coast Conference opponent after defeating North Carolina State last December. Harrell was finishing his first partial season as head coach in that postseason game.

It’s easy this time for the Pirates to be in the underdog role.

“We’ve got 30 seniors playing their last college football game with each other and for the Pirates,” Harrell said.

Defensive coordinator Josh Aldrich also left East Carolina, heading to South Florida. Defensive line coach Roy Tesh will oversee the defense, though Harrell will return to a role as defensive play caller.

Pitt is 2-5 under Narduzzi in bowls. His first bowl with the Panthers was in the Military Bowl 10 years ago in a loss to Navy.

–Field Level Media

Dec 28, 2024; Annapolis, MD, USA; North Carolina State Wolfpack wide receiver Wesley Grimes (6) is hit by East Carolina Pirates linebacker Dameon Wilson (23) and Pirates defensive back Gavin Gibson (5)  during the first half of the Go Bowling Military Bowl at Navy-Marine Corps Memorial Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Tommy Gilligan-Imagn Images

86-yard run carries East Carolina past NC State in Military Bowl

East Carolina’s Rahjai Harris broke off a dazzling 86-yard touchdown in the final two minutes of a record-setting night, and the Pirates snapped a three-game losing streak to the North Carolina State Wolfpack with a 26-21 win in the Military Bowl in Annapolis, Md, on Saturday.

With East Carolina trailing 21-20, Harris zipped around the left end, cut back and outran the Wolfpack secondary at 1:33 to give the Pirates (8-5) their fifth win in six games.

The Pirates’ Dontavius Nash intercepted a deflected pass by quarterback CJ Bailey as the Wolfpack (6-7) attempted a rally past midfield. A short brawl broke out between the teams with 38 seconds left.

Harris, a senior, set his career high and a Military Bowl record with 220 rushing yards on 17 carries.

Quarterback Katin Houser went 18-of-29 passing for 147 yards and two interceptions. He rushed for 84 yards on 13 attempts with two touchdowns.

Bailey completed 19 of 26 passes for 230 yards with three scores and an interception, while Hollywood Smothers rushed for 139 yards on 15 carries.

Tamarcus Cooley recorded two interceptions for the Wolfpack, who lost for the third time in four games.

On third-and-6 later ECU’s opening series after stopping NC State on a fourth-and-1 at the Pirates’ 24, Houser called his own number and rumbled in untouched from 19 yards to cap a 75-yard drive for a 7-0 lead with 4:43 remaining in the first quarter.

Smothers’ 44-yard run put NC State in position for its first points, but Kanoah Vinesett pulled a 34-yard field goal wide left at 13:34 of the second.

East Carolina kicker Noah Perez answered on the next possession by drilling a 24-yard field goal with 7:17 to go for a 10-0 advantage.

The Wolfpack finally capitalized with their best drive of the half by going 78 yards in 11 plays. Bailey ended it with a pass of 8 yards to Dacari Collins with 1:58 left, but Perez booted a 42-yarder with six seconds left for a 13-7 halftime lead.

In the third, Houser kept the Pirates a perfect 4-for-4 in scoring on their possessions by dashing in from 4 yards at 9:17 for a 20-7 lead while the defense continued to hassle Bailey.

However, Bailey fired two scoring passes early in the fourth quarter, striking from 15 yards to Justin Joly on fourth-and-2, and then using a trick play to hit Smothers for a 33-yard score to take the one-point lead at the 9:49 mark.

–Field Level Media

Sep 14, 2024; Greenville, North Carolina, USA;  East Carolina Pirates head coach Mike Houston looks on against the Appalachian State Mountaineers during the first half at Dowdy-Ficklen Stadium. Mandatory Credit: James Guillory-Imagn Images

East Carolina fires head coach Mike Houston

East Carolina fired coach Mike Houston on Sunday morning, one day after the team lost for the fourth time in five games to drop to 3-4 on the season.

The Pirates allowed Army quarterback Bryson Daily to rush for a career-high five touchdowns in a 45-28 setback to the Black Knights on Saturday.

Houston, 52, has posted a 27-38 record in five-plus seasons with the Pirates. They are 5-14 since picking up a 53-29 win over Coastal Carolina in the 2022 Birmingham Bowl.

“After earning back-to-back bowl invitations, we looked poised for continued success,” East Carolina athletic director Jon Gilbert said. “Unfortunately, we have not seen the results we all want, and a change is needed to move the program forward. We have high expectations and those are not changing.

“We are confident we will identify the right leader for our football program. I believe ECU is a premier job with a passionate fan base, unprecedented support from our Pirate Club donors, and great facilities that continue to improve. Right now, we are focusing on our student-athletes as they compete for a postseason opportunity in the final five regular-season games.”

Defensive coordinator Blake Harrell will serve as interim head coach of the Pirates for the remainder of the season. East Carolina hosts Temple next Saturday in Greenville, N.C., in American Athletic Conference action.

–Field Level Media

Oct 19, 2024; West Point, New York, USA; Army Black Knights quarterback Bryson Daily (13) celebrates after scoring a touchdown during the second quarter against the East Carolina Pirates at Michie Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Lucas Boland-Imagn Images

Bryson Daily sets TD records as No. 23 Army tops East Carolina

Bryson Daily matched a school record with five rushing touchdowns to lift No. 23 Army to a 45-28 victory over East Carolina on Saturday in West Point, N.Y.

Daily ran for a career-high 171 yards and scored on touchdown runs of 17, 31, 1, 3 and 4 yards. The two-time reigning American Athletic Conference Offensive Player of the Week has rushed for a school-record 19 touchdowns on the season.

Daily also completed 7 of 10 passes for 147 yards, highlighted by a 13-yard touchdown toss to Miles Stewart.

Kanye Udoh had 19 carries for 102 yards for the Black Knights (7-0, 6-0 AAC), who have won 11 games in a row dating back to last season. Army, in addition, has yet to trail at any point this season.

East Carolina’s Katin Houser completed 24 of 38 passes for 282 yards with three touchdowns and an interception. He also rushed for a score.

Chase Sowell had seven catches for 138 yards and joined Winston Wright Jr. and Anthony Smith in reeling in a touchdown reception for the Pirates (3-4, 1-2), who have lost four of their last five games.

The Black Knights continued their run of scoring touchdowns on their opening possession to seven games after Daily found Stewart in the right corner of the end zone. The connection capped a five-play, 66-yard drive.

Trey Gronotte drilled a 32-yard field goal to complete a 14-play drive at the start of the second quarter.

Daily extended Army’s advantage to 24-0 following a pair of touchdown runs. He used a spin move to escape an attempted tackle of defensive lineman Samuel Dankah before scampering for a 17-yard touchdown with 9:10 remaining in the second half.

East Carolina turned the ball over on downs on its next possession, and Daily bulled his way through the line and scored from 31 yards out on the next play.

Daily sandwiched short touchdown runs around Sowell’s 53-yard scoring reception to stake the Black Knights to a 38-7 lead late in the third quarter. The Pirates scored a pair of touchdowns to trim their deficit before Daily added his fifth touchdown to effectively seal the win.

–Field Level Media

Michigan wide receiver Cornelius Johnson makes a catch against East Carolina defensive back Shavon Revel during the second half of U-M's 30-3 win on Saturday, Sept. 2, 2023, at Michigan Stadium.

Report: Top CB Shavon Revel Jr. tears ACL, out for season

East Carolina cornerback Shavon Revel Jr., a projected first-round pick in the 2025 NFL Draft, tore his left ACL in practice this week and will be sidelined the rest of the season, ESPN reported Friday.

He made a highlight-reel play in the Pirates’ 21-19 loss to Appalachian State on Saturday with an interception and a 50-yard return for a touchdown in the first quarter.

In 24 games over two-plus seasons with East Carolina, Revel has 71 tackles, one sack, 16 pass break-ups, three interceptions and a fumble recovery.

Committed to the Pirates, he turned down opportunities to transfer to schools rich with NIL money in the offseason.

Before the injury, draft analysts put Revel on track to become East Carolina’s first-ever top-20 pick and the first player from the school taken in the first round since running back Chris Johnson was selected by the Tennessee Titans with the No. 24 overall pick in 2008.

–Field Level Media

Oct 22, 2022; Greenville, North Carolina, USA;  East Carolina Pirates quarterback Holton Ahlers (12) gets ready too hand the ball off against the UCF Knights during the second half at Dowdy-Ficklen Stadium. Mandatory Credit: James Guillory-USA TODAY Sports

Cincinnati can extend home dominance vs. streaking East Carolina

East Carolina will look to extend its winning streak to four games and continue one of its best starts in school history when the Pirates visit two-time defending American Athletic Conference champion Cincinnati on Friday.

The Pirates improved to 6-3 for the first time since 2014 when Andrew Conrad made a 33-yard field goal as time expired in a 27-24 nonconference win at BYU on Oct. 28. The Pirates return to league play, where they are 3-2, against the Bearcats (7-2, 4-1), who are coming off a 20-10 win over Navy on Saturday.

Cincinnati is led by quarterback Ben Bryant, who has completed 63.3 percent of his passes for 2,358 yards with 18 touchdowns and six interceptions. Charles McClelland has rushed for 727 yards and six touchdowns.

Tyler Scott has 42 receptions for a team-high 686 yards and eight scores. Tre Tucker has 45 catches for 530 yards and a score.

East Carolina, which is seeking its best start since finishing the regular season 9-3 in 2013, has dropped four straight games to Cincinnati and 10 of the past 11 meetings.

The Bearcats have won a school-record 31 straight home games and East Carolina hasn’t won there since 2001, when the teams were in Conference USA.

“We’ve got a quick turnaround for a team that is playing really, really well,” Cincinnati coach Luke Fickell said. “I think they’ll have 13 days off before they play us. We’re excited about the opportunity.”

The Pirates are led by Holton Ahlers, who has completed 70.1 percent of his passes for 2,632 yards with 18 touchdowns and five interceptions. Keaton Mitchell has powered the rushing attack with 863 yards and nine touchdowns.

Ahlers’ favorite targets are Isaiah Winstead, who has 64 receptions for 871 yards and three touchdowns, and C.J. Johnson, who has 44 catches for 702 yards and eight touchdowns.

“I think Holton is playing the best ball of his career right now. I think so many of the guys surrounding him are playing the best ball of their careers,” East Carolina coach Mike Houston said. “That’s offensive line, receivers, running backs, tight ends — there are so many guys gelling together.”

–Field Level Media

Oct 15, 2022; Greenville, North Carolina, USA;  East Carolina Pirates cornerback Malik Fleming (1) celebrates breaking up a pass attempt against the Memphis Tigers during the second half at Dowdy-Ficklen Stadium. Mandatory Credit: James Guillory-USA TODAY Sports

High-flying ECU visits free-falling BYU

With East Carolina coming off its best win of the season and BYU coming off its worst loss, the teams meet in a nonconference tilt Friday night in Provo, Utah.

After a 3-3 start, East Carolina (5-3) has won two straight — following up a four-overtime thriller against Memphis with Saturday’s impressive 34-14 rout of UCF.

The Pirates never trailed, building a 17-0 first-half lead against the Knights, who had entered the game 5-1 and were undefeated in AAC play. When UCF closed the gap to a touchdown early in the second half, East Carolina outscored the visitors 17-3 the rest of the way.

There was little time for the Pirates to celebrate, with a short week turning their attention immediately to BYU (4-4).

“They’re coming off a couple of tough losses, but we do expect them to get a couple guys back this weekend,” Pirates coach Mike Houston said of BYU. “One of the stiffest challenges of the year will be us going on the road and trying to get a win this Friday night.”

ECU junior safety Jireh Wilson was named AAC Defensive Player of the Week after he recorded his second interception, recovered a fumble and posted three tackles (one solo) in the win.

Meanwhile, it’s been six weeks since the Cougars’ fans stormed the field following a 26-20 win over then-No. 9 Baylor.

BYU has lost three in a row, with Saturday’s 41-14 loss at Liberty more damaging than previous losses to Oregon, Notre Dame and Arkansas.

A fourth consecutive loss would endanger the Cougars’ bowl chances. After facing the streaking Pirates, BYU faces Boise State, FCS school Utah Tech (a non-major opponent that won’t help in bowl consideration) and goes to Stanford.

Saturday in Lynchburg, Va., Liberty won for the seventh time in eight games and Flames fans did their own field-storming.

“I look forward to seeing who wants to come out of this mess,” Sitake said. “It is an easy filter for me, (to) see who wants to join the fight and who wants to not be a part of it. We will get through it.”

On offense, BYU had just 258 yards on 50 plays, but defense has been the Cougars’ bigger problem.

Sitake made changes after the Cougars gave up 644 yards in the 35-52 loss to Arkansas, and he took over defensive play-calling duties from coordinator Ilaisa Tuiaki.

Still, nothing worked, as Liberty rolled up 547 yards, including 300 on the ground.

–Field Level Media

Oct 13, 2022; Orlando, Florida, USA; UCF Knights quarterback John Rhys Plumlee (10) throws a pass during the first quarter against the Temple Owls at FBC Mortgage Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Mike Watters-USA TODAY Sports

High-powered QBs headline tilt between UCF, East Carolina

UCF is aiming for its fifth straight victory on Saturday when it travels to Greenville, N.C., to face East Carolina.

The Knights (5-1, 2-0 American Athletic Conference) are coming off their highest-scoring showing of the season, a 70-13 thrashing of Temple.

UCF quarterback John Rhys Plumlee completed 18 of 22 passes for 373 yards and four touchdowns, and also ran for 37 yards and three scores. His seven total touchdowns tied a program record, and the performance earned him AAC Offensive Player of the Week and a Manning Award Star of the Week.

On the season, Plumlee — who transferred to UCF from Ole Miss — has 1,516 passing yards, 11 passing touchdowns, 468 rushing yards and seven rushing touchdowns. His 157.5 passer rating is the second-best in the conference.

Plumlee is the key to an offensive unit that is putting up 41.3 points per game, which is 13th best in FBS.

“The offense is starting to get into rhythm,” second-year UCF coach Gus Malzahn said. “It’s all coming together. We have a chance to be a really good offense.”

East Carolina (4-3, 2-2) has a talented quarterback of its own in Holton Ahlers.

The fifth-year senior has thrown for 2,124 yards and 17 touchdowns, while rushing for 108 yards and two scores. Ahlers owns career records in the American for completions and passing yards, and he needs just four more touchdowns through the air to tie former Memphis quarterback Brady White for the all-time lead in passing scores.

Ahlers is coming off a quadruple-overtime win over Memphis, in which he passed for 304 yards and a touchdown and rushed for another score.

“Short memory, though, because we’ve got another very challenging game coming up against a very talented UCF team who is off to a great start this year,” ECU coach Mike Houston said this week. “UCF’s offense is explosive with Plumlee and his surrounding cast there. It’s probably our biggest challenge of the year so far.”

UCF and ECU are tied 10-10 in the head-to-head series, but the Knights have six straight wins over the Pirates in a streak that dates back to 2016.

–Field Level Media

Sep 10, 2022; Greenville, North Carolina, USA;  East Carolina Pirates quarterback Holton Ahlers (12) throws the ball against the Old Dominion Monarchs before the game at Dowdy-Ficklen Stadium. Mandatory Credit: James Guillory-USA TODAY Sports

ECU, Tulane with chance to gain traction in AAC play

East Carolina and Tulane had strong bounce-back performances a week ago. Up next, the Pirates will visit the Green Wave to continue their American Athletic Conference schedules on Saturday in New Orleans.

Two weeks ago, East Carolina (3-2, 1-1 AAC) lost its conference opener at home to Navy, 23-20 in double overtime. Then the Pirates went on the road and defeated South Florida 48-28 in a game moved from Tampa to Florida Atlantic’s stadium in Boca Raton, Fla., because of Hurricane Ian.

Holton Ahlers passed for 465 yards and six touchdowns, and C.J. Johnson caught seven of Ahlers’ passes for 197 yards and four touchdowns. Ahler’s grandmother passed away days before the game.

“I think it was important for him and his family that he did play and what an incredible performance,” East Carolina coach Mike Houston said. “I can’t say enough positive things about it. Just so happy for him. What a great way to honor someone that was a huge part of his life in just doing that for her on Saturday.”

Tulane (4-1, 1-0) lost at home to Southern Miss 27-24 two weeks ago before winning at Houston by the same score in overtime.

The Green Wave played without starting quarterback Michael Pratt, who has an unspecified injury to his throwing arm. Justin Ibieta started in Pratt’s place but was sidelined for good during the first series when he suffered a shoulder injury.

Redshirt freshman Kai Horton stepped in and threw three touchdown passes, including a game-winner after the Cougars had kicked a field goal on the first possession of overtime.

“We feel like Michael’s going to have the opportunity to play this week,” Tulane coach Willie Fritz said. “He looked alright (in practice). I haven’t had a chance to really talk to him, but we feel practice isn’t the same as a game.

“We are being careful what we are throwing at him right now. Hopefully he’s going to be fine Saturday.”

East Carolina ranks fourth in the American in scoring offense and scoring defense. The Pirates are averaging 35.2 points and allowing 20.6 per game; Tulane is averaging 32.4 and allowing 14.2, the latter ranking second in the conference.

–Field Level Media

North Carolina State Wolfpack quarterback Devin Leary (13) passes to a teammate. The North Carolina State Wolfpack lead the Florida State Seminoles 14-0 at the half Saturday, Nov. 6, 2021.

Fsu V Nc State622

No. 13 NC State renews rivalry with East Carolina

No. 13 NC State and East Carolina will renew an in-state rivalry when the two sides kick off their season Saturday afternoon in Greenville, N.C.

Host ECU is coming off its best season in several years. The Pirates won seven games under Mike Houston last season and were poised to go bowling for the first time since 2014 until the Military Bowl was canceled due to a COVID-19 outbreak among Boston College players.

Among the key returners for ECU is quarterback Holton Ahlers. Now a fifth-year senior, Ahlers threw for 3,126 yards and 18 touchdowns last season. He also rushed for six touchdowns and caught one, too.

NC State coach Dave Doeren tried to recruit Ahlers to the Wolfpack several years ago. This will be the second time Doeren has tried to gameplan against him.

“He was mobile. Still is. Has a good arm. Sees the field. He is good on his feet. The same reasons I recruited him then are the same reasons he’s a four-year starter for them,” Doeren said Monday. “He’s a big, strong kid who can move around. He’s super smart, and he has a lot of game experience.”

This is Doeren’s 10th season at NC State and many expect this Wolfpack team to be his best yet. NC State’s No. 13 preseason AP ranking is its highest since 1975.

Leading the Pack is their own talented quarterback, junior Devin Leary. He threw for 35 touchdowns last season and led NC State to a 9-3 finish.

Leary was voted as the ACC Preseason Player of the Year and has been named to watchlists for the Manning, Maxwell, O’Brien and Camp awards.

NC State also has four returning starters on the offensive line and 10 returning starters on a defense that was second best in the nation against the pass, holding opponents to a 52.7 percent completion rate.

“The good news about playing an interstate rival like this where there’s a lot of history, is the summer is not nearly as hard on the coaches to motivate the players,” ECU offensive coordinator Donnie Kirkpatrick told 247sports. “That first game, they know they’re playing a really good team and they know that game is a really important game. So, their focus is there.

“The negative is this team is really freaking good.”

This will be the 32nd meeting between the Wolfpack and the Pirates. NC State has won the last two games — in 2019 and 2018 — but lost the last two meetings that were played in Greenville, in 2016 and 2010. The Wolfpack hold the all-time advantage in the series with an 18-13 record.

Former ECU head coach Ruffin McNeill — who took the Pirates bowling four times between 2010 and 2015, and went 2-0 against the Pack — is now on NC State’s staff as a special assistant to Doeren. For McNeil, an ECU graduate who was inducted into the East Carolina Athletics Hall of Fame last year, this will be his first trip to Greenville as an opponent.

“I’m sure it’ll be emotional,” McNeill told 247Sports. “But then it will get straight to the competition part.”

–Field Level Media