Belichick Gives First Impression of UNC Football Team: ‘We’re Getting There’

The former Patriots coach has two spring practices with North Carolina under his belt, and he’s yelling at anyone he wants.
Belichick Gives First Impression of UNC Football Team: ‘We’re Getting There’
Head coach Bill Belichick of the North Carolina Tar Heels addresses the crowd during halftime of a game against the La Salle Explorers at the Dean E. Smith Center on Dec. 14, 2024, in Greensboro, N.C. Grant Halverson/Getty Images
Matthew Davis
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New North Carolina head coach Bill Belichick  likes getting to put his hands in everything again amid his team’s first two spring practices.

The former longtime New England Patriots head coach and eight-time Super Bowl winner is embracing the transition back to college football. Belichick, 72, took the job in December 2024 after a year away from coaching.

“That’s the great thing about being a head coach—I can coach anybody I want,” Belichick told reporters on Wednesday. “I can coach the line, I can yell at the tight ends, I can yell at the DBs, I can yell at the kickers.”

“I can go to any group I want and coach them. And honestly, that’s the fun part,” he added.

Belichick inherited a program that fired its head coach, Mack Brown, after going 6–7 last season. The Tar Heels have won more than eight games only four times since 1997, and Belichick isn’t making any grand promises to build an instant contender in Chapel Hill.

“We haven’t accomplished anything, but we’re a lot further along than we were five weeks ago,” Belichick said. “We’re getting there.”

That said, Belichick wants to create buy-in and build a strong program. Belichick has already been able to put his stamp on the program with recruiting, the transfer portal, and his staff hires.

“I don’t really have any expectations,” Belichick said. “It’s going to be up to each individual.”

“I know we’ve got a good plan, I know we can do the right things to put a good product on the field,” he added. “Everybody that buys into it and wants to be a part of it, will be a part of it. And if they don’t, they can go somewhere else. That’s their decision.”

In the meantime, Belichick wants to take advantage of something that spring practice offers that NFL organized team activities didn’t—pads. Belichick can build a more physical team earlier than he has in the past, and many of his Patriots teams were known for defense.

“Contact is very limited in the NFL in the spring. There really isn’t any,” Belichick said.

However, he did create one similarity between spring practice and NFL minicamps. He’s focused on assessing and developing the new players.

“It’s kind of similar to what a rookie minicamp would be and time with the rookies,” Belichick said. “We’re starting to put everything together—here’s how we do things, here’s what our expectations are, this is what you need to do to be successful.”

“They’ve embraced that and tried to do it,” he added.

Belichick also expressed an ease in working with younger athletes though that’s not entirely new since he worked with NFL rookies coming out of college.

“The response has been great,” Belichick said. “Granted, those kids are a little bit older, but they’re coming from all different programs and different situations.”

Belichick also addressed the Tar Heels’ quarterback situation but didn’t offer too much on who will start in the fall or if another quarterback could show up in the spring transfer portal. UNC has Max Johnson, who started the team’s first game in 2024, before he broke his leg against Minnesota.

“Right now we’re focused on players that are here, and then whatever happens with the players coming in and portal players, we'll deal with all that later,” Belichick said.

“Max has worked hard. Max makes a lot of progress. He’s still limited, but he’s definitely getting better. And he’s taking it day by day. Nobody’s put in more work than he has,” Belichick added. “We'll see where that takes him, but he’s definitely making progress.”

Johnson, a 6-foot-5 senior, had full seasons at LSU in 2021 and Texas A&M in 2023 before he transferred to UNC after the departure of Drake Maye. An Athens, Georgia, native, Johnson has 5,923 yards passing and 47 touchdowns in 31 career games. Belichick indicated he wants to keep developing the six-year senior amid the road to recovery.

“And if he has a good day, do a little bit more the day after that. And say it doesn’t move on quite as quickly, then we'll slow it down until we can progress,” Belichick said.

Matthew Davis
Matthew Davis
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Matthew Davis is an experienced, award-winning journalist who has covered major professional and college sports for years. His writing has appeared on Heavy, the Star Tribune, and The Catholic Spirit. He has a degree in mass communication from North Dakota State University.