Belichick expects ‘strong NFL presence’ as he fills out staff soon, says ‘a lot of people’ want to come to Carolina

By R.L. Bynum

Bill Belichick hears from many people who want to come to Carolina, expects to fill out his coaching staff in two weeks with a “strong NFL presence,” and is prepared for a big month for the program.

Those were the biggest takeaways from Belichick’s appearance Monday afternoon on “The Pat McAfee Show” on ESPN.

“A lot of guys into the portal. A lot of people contacting us, want to come to Carolina,” said Belichick, who has already secured 10 transfer portal commitments.

Belichick, who didn’t go to Boston for UNC’s 27–14 Fenway Bowl loss Saturday to UConn, said he’s having fun adjusting to being a college coach.

“It’s been good,” he said. “Really [have] enjoyed it. The school has been great. Chancellor and the staff and administration have really been behind us. Got a lot of positive things going. A lot of players want to come to Carolina, so that’s a good thing.”

Belichick’s segment starts at 1:17 in the above video.

Belichick said that recruits — both high school players and transfer portal players — will visit the UNC campus this Saturday and on Jan. 11.

“The weekend of the fourth, we’re still open on some transfer portal players before school starts, and then just the whole month of January is kind of a big recruiting month,” said Belichick, adding that he’s working on the high school recruiting class of 2026. “Still some portal guys that will be left over and [we’ll] start the offseason program with players that we have and get things rolling there. So it’s a big month for us.”

Besides General Manager Mike Lombardi, Freddie Kitchens and his son Steve Belichick as the defensive coordinator, Belichick has plenty of spots to fill but is playing a waiting game as coaches finish their seasons.

“I’ll really start to move on that this week and next week,” Bill Belichick said. “A lot of coaches that are potentially available that will be on the staff are either still involved in college football bowl games, playoffs or still involved in the NFL, which we still have another week of the regular season, and then some of them are in the playoffs as well.

“We’ll see how that plays out,” he said. “But there’ll be a strong NFL presence on the staff, but not exclusively. We have some other people too that we’re working on. So, try to put together the best that we can — coaches that will help the players and help produce winning football at Carolina.”

Belichick said that building a roster isn’t more difficult than it was at New England, where he won six Super Bowl titles, but said there are a lot of contrasts.

“It’s just different, but it’s good,” he said. “You feel like you’re just talking to younger players who have the same aspirations of being good and developing their career in college football to lead to the NFL, as opposed to college players who are actually out of eligibility and heading into the NFL. So, it’s a little bit different conversation. But it’s kids that want to be good, kids that love football, and kids that want to play for your team, whether it’s New England or Carolina. It’s a lot of the same thing.”

Unlike when he was an NFL coach, he’s recruiting not only players but also parents, high school coaches, and the people who train the players.

He compared this time of year for a college football coach to two periods during the NFL calendar. One is the time before NFL free agency opens, when there is a lot of talk, and the other is the few hours after the NFL draft when teams are trying to re-sign players to fill out rosters and deal with agents and players.  

Belichick joked that he’s joined the 21st century by being active on Instagram.

“My Instagram account’s been been busy, so scrolling through that,” he said. “I never thought I’d be saying that.”


Month/
date
Score/
time
OpponentRecord/
TV
September
1 L, 48–14vs. TCU0–1
6W, 20–3at Charlotte1–1
13W, 41–6vs. Richmond2–1
20L, 34–9at UCF2–2
October
4L, 38–10vs. Clemson2–3,
0–1 ACC
17 (Fri.)L, 21–18at California2–4, 0–2
25L, 17–16, OTvs. No. 16 Virginia2–5, 0–3
31 (Fri.)W, 27–10at Syracuse3–5, 1–3
November
8W, 20–15vs. Stanford4–5, 2–3
15L, 28–12at Wake Forest4–6, 2–4
22L, 32–25vs. Duke4–7, 2–5
29L, 42–19at N.C. State4–8, 2–6

Transfer portal transactions

(Next season’s classes listed)

Senior defensive lineman Melkart Abou-Jaoude • 6–5, 260 pounds • Delaware
2024: 11 games, 10 tackles, 17 assists, 6.5 sacks for 50 yards, 8 QB hits


Senior offensive tackle William Boone (2 years of eligibility) • 6–6, 349 pounds • Prairie View A&M
2024: 12 games, team-high 782 snaps; didn’t allow a sack


Redshirt sophomore quarterback Ryan Browne • 6–4, 210 pounds • Purdue
2024: 8 games, 34 of 76, 532 yards, 4 touchdowns, 2 interceptions, 127.5 quarterback rating


Junior defensive back Coleman Bryson • 6–2, 210 pounds • Minnesota
2024: 13 games, 14 tackles, 6 assists, 3 passes defended (pick-six below from 2022 season)


Junior tight end Connor Cox • 6–6, 251 pounds • South Carolina
2024: 4 games, 1 catch, 9 yards, 1 TD


Fifth-year cornerback Thaddeus Dixon • 6-1, 186 pounds • Washington
2024: 13 games, 26 tackles, 17 assists, 2 tackles for losses, 1 interception, 10 passes defended, 1 forced fumble


Senior defensive back Gavin Gibson • 6-0, 185 pounds • East Carolina
2024: 13 games, 25 tackles, 27 assists, 3 interceptions, 3 pass breakups


Sophomore linebacker Khmori House • 6-0, 213 pounds • Washington
2024: 12 games, 19 tackles, 16 assists, 1 interception, 4 pass breakups, 1 QB hit


Redshirt sophomore wide receiver Aziah Johnson • 6–0, 175 pounds • Michigan State
2024: 12 games, 16 catches, 276 yards, 2 touchdowns; 1 rush, 15 yards


Fifth-year center Christo Kelly • 6–4, 305 pounds • Holy Cross
2024: Started 12 games, part of line that allowed 1.08 sacks per game, 11th-best in country


Fifth-year offensive lineman Daniel King • 6–5, 340 pounds • Troy
2024: 12 games, 429 snaps at right tackle, 360 at right guard, allowed 2 sacks, named All-Sun Belt second team


Senior offensive lineman Chad Lindberg • 6–6, 315 pounds • Rice (Georgia before that)
2024: Played 11 games after playing 20 games and 139 snaps for Georgia


Sophomore offensive tackle Miles McVay • 6–6, 340 pounds • Alabama
2024: 5 games, 94 snaps


Sophomore defensive tackle C.J. Mims • 6–2, 302 pounds • East Carolina
2024: 12 games, 4 tackles, 19 assists, 1.5 sacks, 1 forced fumble


Redshirt freshman wide receiver Jason Robinson Jr. • 5–10, 151 pounds • Washington
2024: Redshirted after catching 68 passes for 900 yards as a senior at Long Beach Poly


Junior place-kicker Adam Samaha • 5–11, 195 pounds • Michigan
2024: didn’t play (Wolverines had Big Ten Kicker of Year Dominic Zvada)
2023: 1 game, 1 extra-point attempt made • Hit 60-yard FG in training (in below video)


Sophomore safety Peyton Waters • 6–1, 182 pounds • Washington
2024: 13 games, 3 tackles, 2 assists


Redshirt senior defensive lineman Pryce Yates • 6–4, 265 pounds • UConn
2024: 7 games, 12 tackles, 9 assists, 3.5 sacks for 23 yards, 5 QB hurries; Fenway Bowl defensive MVP


(Next season’s classes listed)

Redshirt sophomore 5–11, 180-pound defensive back Ty Adams
2024: 4 tackles



Sophomore 6–3, 300-pound offensive lineman Aidan Banfield
2024: 62.8 Pro Football Focus grade best in country among true freshmen


Fifth-year 6–5, 310 fifth-year center Austin Blaske
2024: Started 11 games with Pro Football Focus grade of 85.6


Junior 6–0, 230-pound linebacker Amare Campbell
2024: 12 games, 42 tackles, 30 assists, 11 tackles for losses, 6.5 sacks, 1 forced fumble


Fifth-year 5–11, 220-pound running back Caleb Hood
2024: 4 games, 7 carries, 3 yards, 1 catch, 29 yards


Senior 6–1, 190-pound wide receiver Kobe Paysour
2024: 12 games, 19 catches, 330 yards


— Offensive linemen Zach Greenberg (committed to James Madison), Jakiah Leftwich (Central Florida), Malik McGowan (UNLV), Andrew Rosinski (Georgia Tech), Howard Sampson (Texas Tech) and Eli Sutton (Austin Peay)
— Running back Jordan Louie
— Quarterbacks Conner Harrell (Charlotte), Michael Merdinger (Liberty) and Jacolby Criswell (East Tennessee State)
— Linebackers Ashton Woods (West Virginia) and Caleb LaVallee (Florida State)
— Defensive lineman Travis Shaw (Texas)
— Defensive backs DeAndre Boykins and Tyrane Stewart
— Place-kicker Noah Burnette (Notre Dame)

Reported Belichick’s staff members

General manager Michael Lombardi — Worked in NFL 1984–2016, including Cleveland Browns general manager in 2013 and assistant to the coaching staff for the New England Patriots 2014–16
Director of Player Personnel Joe Anile — NFL scout for the New England Patriots and Jacksonville Jaguars
Assistant Director of Player Personnel Andrew Blaylock — Assistant athletics director for player personnel at Central Florida the last three seasons; had similar positions at Appalachian State 2016–22 and Texas State 2015–16
Defensive coordinator Steve Belichick — Defensive coordinator last season at Washington; New England Patriots defensive coach 2012–23
Strength and conditioning coach Moses Cabrera — New England Patriots assistant strength coach 2011–15; head Patriots strength and conditioning coach 2016–23
Offensive assistant coach Bob Diaco — Was defensive coach at LSU the last two seasons; has coached in college since 1999.
Offensive-line coach Will Friend — Offensive coordinator last season at Western Kentucky; was offensive line coach at Tennessee (2018–20), Auburn (2021–22), Mississippi State (2023) and Tennessee; offensive coordinator/offensive line coach at Colorado State (2015–17) and offensive line coach at Georgia (2011–14)
Cory Giddings — Will be part of player personnel staff; Director of Player Personnel at Central Florida the past two seasons, working with Blaylock there, and before that at Appalachian State
Armond Hawkins — Was secondary analyst and assistant director of recruiting last season at Washington. Before that, he spent one season at Arizona, one season at Colorado and two seasons at Southern Cal.
Defensive assistant coach Chris Jones — CFL coach 2002–18, 2021–2024; 2018 CFL Coach of Year at Saskatchewan; head coach in 2015 of Grey Cup champion Edmonton Eskimos; Cleveland Browns defensive assistant coach 2019
Offensive coordinator Freddie Kitchens — UNC run-game coordinator and tight ends coach 2023–24; interim UNC coach for 2024 Fenway Bowl; head coach Cleveland Browns 2019; Assistant coach with New York Giants (2020–21), Browns (2018), Arizona Cardinals (2007–2017), Dallas Cowboys (2006), Mississippi State (2004), North Texas (2001–03), LSU (2000) and Glenville State (1999)
Offensive assistant coach Matt Lombardi — Was an offensive analyst last season at Oregon; NFL assistant with Las Vegas Raiders and Carolina Panthers
Running backs coach Natrone Means — A UNC running back (1990–92) who was a two-time All-ACC pick, he has been with the program since joining Mack Brown’s staff as an offensive analyst in 2021.
Offensive assistant coach Garrick McGee — Was wide receivers coach at Louisville the last two seasons. Has coached in college since 1996.
Chris Mattes — The former professional lacrosse player had been the New England Patriots’ Director of Football Development, and had been with the team the last eight seasons.
Assistant coach Billy Miller — IMG Academy assistant head coach 2014–21, head coach 2022–24
Special teams coach Mike Priefer — NFL assistant coach since 2002; head special teams coach at Kansas City (2006–08), Denver (2009–10), Minnesota (2011–18) and Cleveland (2019–22).

Photo via ESPN screenshot

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