In a bruising battle on Monday night at Dorrance Field — one that featured a combined 33 fouls between the two teams — UNC found itself blanked in another one-goal contest, losing to the No. 17 Clemson Tigers, 1-0.
The defeat marked the third time in a month the Tar Heels failed to find the back of the net, a recent trend head coach Carlos Somoano is searching for answers to fix.
“We have to figure something out and it’s either someone clicking or at some point, we’re going to have to look at some changes,” he said. “Maybe we’ll give someone else a shot, but at the same time I don’t want to create insecurities within the players.”
Against Clemson, the Tar Heels’ offense looked to snap out of its bitter trend and came out firing.
In the 12th minute, sophomore midfielder Juan Caffaro chipped a twisting shot on goal to kickstart what Somoano hoped to be a revamped attack. Less than nine minutes later, first-year midfielder Sam Williams tallied North Carolina’s second shot on net.
UNC’s effort to unleash scoring attempts early on did show improvement with the attack. Those two shots on goal matched the team's total in North Carolina’s previous game against Notre Dame.
Earlier this season, several Tar Heel veterans called on the team to start soul-searching in hopes of growing confidence in the attacking third.
“(Scoring) is a decision you have to make,” junior defender Riley Thomas said after North Carolina’s draw to UNCW on Sept. 20. “You can practice it all you want, but it comes down to coming out here and doing it. We have to make that decision within ourselves, and as a team, it comes down to coming out here and getting the job done.”
Yet, any signs of the offense breaking through against the Tigers were soon shut down. Williams’ boot in the opening half was the final scoring chance of the night for UNC.