Bill Belichick has been unafraid to do things his own way since taking charge at the University of North Carolina, and he has snubbed a longstanding Tar Heels tradition
Bill Belichick is nearing his first game as UNC head coach, but Tar Heels fans will have a hard time getting their questions answered by the head coach after he opted out of a long-standing tradition.
Belichick, who won six Super Bowls across six glorious seasons in charge of the New England Patriots, will not feature as a weekly guest on the Tar Heels’ coach’s radio show. Instead, the team’s general manager, Michael Lombardi, will field fans’ questions each week.
Coach’s radio shows are a long-established custom across college football, and Belichick’s predecessor in Chapel Hill, Mack Brown, appeared on a self-titled weekly show throughout his six seasons in charge of the Tar Heels. It is the latest example of Belichick, 73, bucking the trends of college football since he took charge of UNC with 24-year-old girlfriend Jordon Hudson in tow.
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The show, which is broadcast on the Tar Heel Sports Radio Network from the Top of the Hill Restaurant & Brewery, has been rebranded as ‘Carolina Football Live.’
The first show will be broadcast on Aug. 27, and Belichick will make an appearance. However, a press release from the school has confirmed that Lombardi will be the headline guest moving forward.
Lombardi, 66, has a long association with Belichick, working as his director of player personnel at the Cleveland Browns in the early 1990s. They later reunited in 2014, with Lombardi spending two years as an assistant to the Patriots’ coaching staff.
After leaving the Pats, Lombardi spent several years working in the media. He had stints as a regular contributor on FOX Sports and ‘The Pat McAfee Show.’
UNC’s season begins with the visit of TCU to Chapel Hill on Sep. 1. Games follow against Charlotte, Richmond and UCF before a blockbuster showdown with ACC rivals Clemson.
Belichick has spoken to the media sparingly since taking charge at UNC, but he was optimistic about the team’s prospects at the ACC media day last month.
“The support’s been overwhelmingly tremendous. Not only supportive, but engaged and very excited,” he said. “We want to match that excitement and put that on the field.
“Mike and I have worked together for a long time, going all the way back to the start of Cleveland. Mike in the general manager role and myself in the head coaching role, we have a lot of experience in dealing with kind of what the college football landscape is now, similar.
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“Not the same, but similar in terms of NIL, revenue sharing, free agency, if you will, and recruiting post-draft type recruiting as opposed to drafting.
“Mike has done a great job of reinforcing the roster. We had a number of players here that have been here that we’re excited to work with. We have 70 new players from last year that weren’t on the roster last season.
“Everybody has got a lot of focus, obviously, on the TCU opener, which is in our sights, but really right now the big thing for us is just stacking good training days one on top of another, one at a time, and being ready to go, not only for the opener but for the entire regular season and the ACC schedule.”










