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Kicker Noah Burnette leads UNC football to season-opening win over Minnesota

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North Carolina Tar Heels place kicker Noah Burnette (98) prepares to kick a field goal during the second half of North Carolina’s game against University of Minnesota at Huntington Bank Stadium on Thursday, Aug. 29, 2024. UNC won 19-17.

MINNEAPOLIS — At 12:15 a.m. on Friday, Drake Maye wrote on X, “Noah Burnette! Nothing new,” with a goat emoji at the end. 

UNC's former quarterback took to social media to praise the graduate for leading the Tar Heels to victory after a 45-yard field goal in the last minutes of play.

But Burnette hadn't seen the post after UNC's season-opening 19-17 win over Minnesota. He barely had time to go on his phone.

If Burnette were to go online, he'd be flooded with compliments. 

And it's well-deserved, given the kicker's performance on Thursday. Burnette recorded four field goals in the second half and was responsible for 12 of UNC's 19 points. In a low-scoring affair — the fewest points in a win by North Carolina since 2012 — Burnette's efforts allowed the Tar Heels to squeak by. 

“In the last few years, we haven't won games where one of the phases didn't play well, and we found a way to win this game,” head coach Mack Brown said. “And that's what's so important.”

Burnette is now 13-for-13 on field goals of 40 or more yards. He even extended his range, completing a career-high 52-yarder. 

After the game, Burnette shrugged off the new record.

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North Carolina Tar Heels place kicker Noah Burnette (98) speaks during a post game press conference after North Carolina defeated University of Minnesota at Huntington Bank Stadium on Thursday, Aug. 29, 2024. UNC won 19-17.

“Basically just hit my ball,” he said. “A lot of people have questioned my distance, my range. So it felt good to get that one under the belt and just continue to work to just hit the same ball every time I go out there.”

The Tar Heels needed everything Burnette could give on Thursday.

Graduate quarterback Max Johnson threw for just 28 yards in the first half, and when he exited the game with an injury in the third quarter and was replaced by sophomore quarterback Conner Harrell, Burnette proved to be a reliable three-point boost. 

Brown said their confidence in him was high. That should come as no surprise to those who remember UNC's dramatic 47-45 double-overtime victory over Duke last season. Burnette made all six of his field goal attempts.

But he hasn't always been that clutch.

In the last home game of the 2022 season, the Raleigh native missed a game-tying field goal in double overtime against N.C. State. 

Still, Burnette chose not to transfer. UNC brought in a new kicker, Ryan Coe, for the 2023 season. Then, when Coe was injured early last season, Burnette seized the opportunity to return as UNC's kicker.

“They brought in Coe for competition,” Burnette said last fall. “It made me a better kicker. Obviously, when he goes down, I knew I had to step up.”

Cue the Duke game, where Tar Heel fans rushed the field. It was a proud moment for Burnette, but he wasn't satisfied — he didn't want to be known for just one performance. 

Burnette's been hitting the ball a lot better this season, allowing him to maximize his distance. Experience has helped, too. Now that he's been in more high-pressure situations, Burnette said he doesn't get in his head as much.

When he sets up, everything fades to the distance. It’s quiet. 

Well that, and a couple of Minnesota fans saying some things on the sideline.

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“Getting into that position again and making it,” Burnette said, “I don't want people to just think that it was a fluke in the Duke game. I want it to be something that people trust me to go out there and make those kicks.”

And, as his teammates indicated on Thursday, there's nobody they'd rather see in Burnette's place. 

“I believe in Noah in every single play,” graduate defensive lineman Jahvaree Ritzie said. “Literally on the sideline we're all saying, ‘You got this Noah. You got this Burnie. Burnie gon' get this.’ No doubts, no fears in Burnie. He gon' step up every single time.”

@shelbymswanson

@dthsports | sports@dailytarheel.com 


Shelby Swanson

Shelby Swanson is the 2023-24 sports editor at The Daily Tar Heel. She has previously served as an assistant sports editor and senior writer. Shelby is a junior pursuing a double major in media and journalism and Hispanic literatures and cultures.