UNC Dominates Football Recruiting Effort In ACC ByLEWHEGE The 1963 colleKe football season is five weeks away, and as usual, the top recruiting team in the ACC was North Carolina. In recent seasons, only Clemson has managed to hold its own with UNC in recruiting. Clemson was placed on probation last winter and had its worst recruiting campaign in five years, leaving Carolina as the king of the hill in recruiting. Why do the Tar Heels outrecruit Siate, Duke, Wake Forest and its other ACC rivals every year? There are several reasons for this trend. First, the UNC program has stability. Bill Dooley established that in his tenure as Tar Heel coach, and with the exception of one off year, Dick Crum has continued that characteristic of the UNC program. By contrast, State has changed coaches four times in the last few years. After Lou Holtz turned the Wolfpack program around, he vanished. Bo Rein brought stability to the State program and won the school's last ACC title in 1979. He resigned and took the LSU job, only to die in an airplane crash soon after. At the suggestion of Holtz, State then hired Monte Kiffin (instead of Pat Dye). Kiffin was a disaster and wrecked the program that Holtz and Rein worked hard to build. State then hired Miami (Ohio) coach Tom Reed, it's fourth head coach in seven years. Duke s record is worse than State s. The Blue Devils tolerated Mike McGee for too long. After years of poor coaching management, McGee was fired and former Elon coach Red Wilson was han ded tte job. The Devils made vast strides in its program, and even accomplished the miracle of beating Carolina last year. For this achievement, Wilson was fired. Steve Sloan was a loser at Mississippi, not the worst situation in the country to be in. In his infinite wisdom, Duke AD Tom Butters hired Sloan. Wake Forest occasionally pulls an upset or two, but Ihe norm for the Deacons is a record in the 3-8 range. A couple of years back, former coach John Mackovic gave eight "win one for the Gipper" speeches, and the Deacs lucked their way to an 8-3 rec