Virginia 16, North Carolina 3

1234T
UVA (1-3)063716
UNC (3-2)00303

Final

12:00 PM ET, October 3, 2009
Kenan Stadium
CHAPEL HILL, NC

Simpson carries Virginia past North Carolina

WERE YOU THERE?
Passport

Did you attend this game? If so, start chronicling your sports memories today with ESPN's Sports Passport. Enter the games you attend, upload your photos and share your memories!
I was there »

Team Stat Comparison
 
1st Downs169
Total Yards254174
Passing148135
Rushing10639
Penalties7-544-55
3rd Down Conversions7-194-16
4th Down Conversions0-01-2
Turnovers03
Possession33:3226:28
Air/Ground Leaders
Virginia Passing
 C/ATTYDSTDINT
Sewell13/2413600
Verica3/31200
North Carolina Passing
 C/ATTYDSTDINT
Yates20/3613502
Virginia Rushing
 CARYDSTDLG
Simpson20100116
Jackson41907
North Carolina Rushing
 CARYDSTDLG
Draughn1425010
Houston31607
Virginia Receiving
 RECYDSTDLG
Simpson445016
Jackson430018
North Carolina Receiving
 RECYDSTDLG
Little863023
Wilson328014
Scoring Summary
SECOND QUARTERUVAUNC
FG12:10Robert Randolph 36 Yd 30
FG00:00Robert Randolph 38 Yd 60
THIRD QUARTERUVAUNC
FG05:09Casey Barth 39 Yd 63
FG03:28Robert Randolph 43 Yd 93
FOURTH QUARTERUVAUNC
TD05:49Mikell Simpson 8 Yd Run (Robert Randolph Kick) 163
Associated Press

CHAPEL HILL, N.C. -- Mikell Simpson ran for the game-clinching touchdown in the fourth quarter while Virginia's defense turned in a dominating performance to beat North Carolina 16-3 on Saturday.

Robert Randolph kicked three field goals for the Cavaliers (1-3, 1-0 Atlantic Coast Conference), who came out of a bye week with a desperately needed win after a terrible start to the season. Simpson added 100 yards rushing, but the Cavs didn't need much offense considering the way their defense completely locked down on the Tar Heels (3-2, 0-2).

North Carolina got nothing from its rushing attack, committed three turnovers and managed just 174 total yards. And when Simpson ran it in from 8 yards out with 5:49 left, Virginia had a two-possession lead that sent most of the light blue-clad Tar Heel fans bolting for the Kenan Stadium exits.

The Tar Heels came into the season facing several questions about their offense and knowing that their defense would have to carry the load. The defense did its part for most of the day, with Robert Quinn tallying three sacks and Virginia managing just 254 total yards. But the offense turned in a bad performance for the second straight week, failing to reach the end zone against a defense that was allowing 31 points per game coming in.

It wasn't the kind of performance the Tar Heels expected from a team that was nationally ranked just two weeks ago before a 24-7 loss at Georgia Tech. But for the Cavaliers, it was exactly what they needed after a tumultuous opening month of the season that had led to speculation about coach Al Groh's future.

Virginia had lost at home to Championship Subdivision team William & Mary in the opener, then followed that with a home loss to TCU. The Cavaliers then scrapped some of the spread offense they had installed in the preseason before the Southern Mississippi game and led by 17 points halftime before falling 37-34.

Now the Cavaliers have won 10 of 12 meetings against their cross-border rivals, including all three since Butch Davis took over in Chapel Hill in 2007.

College Football Scores

Other Scores:

Saturday, October 3rd
6 Virginia Tech 34 Final
Duke 26
8 Oklahoma 20 Final
17 Miami (FL) 21
25 Georgia Tech 42 Final
Mississippi State 31
Clemson 21 Final
Maryland 24
Virginia 16 Final
North Carolina 3
Florida State 21 Final
Boston College 28
North Carolina State 24 Final
Wake Forest 30