Mack Brown wont be back at North Carolina for the 2025 season after all.
A day after Brown said that he intended to return next season, UNC said it is firing the longtime coach. Brown will still coach in the team’s season finale against NC State on Saturday.
Brown, 73, was one of just three active coaches with a national championship along with Georgias Kirby Smart and Clemsons Dabo Swinney. The 2024 season was the sixth year of his second stint with the Tar Heels and the team had taken a step back the past two seasons.
North Carolina (6-5) lost four straight games after a 3-0 start to the season. The Tar Heels gave up a shocking 70 points to James Madison in a 70-50 loss to start that streak and the fourth loss was a 41-34 defeat to Georgia Tech after the Yellow Jackets scored the go-ahead TD on a 68-yard run with 16 seconds to go.
The Tar Heels are 3-1 since that four-game losing streak, but they lost 41-21 at Boston College in Week 13. The Eagles rushed 52 times for 228 yards and three scores in the win while North Carolina only mustered 36 yards on 25 attempts thanks to seven sacks of QB Jacolby Criswell.
Brown returned to coaching in 2019 after a stint at ESPN following his departure from Texas after the 2013 season. After he turned Tulane into a six-win team two seasons after the Green Wave went 1-10 in Browns first season as a college head coach in 1985, he was hired at North Carolina in 1988.
The Tar Heels were 2-20 in his first two seasons before posting eight straight winning seasons. Brown left North Carolina for Texas after the program went 10-1 in 1997.
At Texas, Brown took the Longhorns to two national title game appearances. Texas famously won the Rose Bowl over USC at the end of the 2004 season thanks to Vince Youngs iconic run and then lost to Alabama in the BCS title game in Pasadena at the end of the 2009 season. Texas QB Colt McCoy was knocked out of that game with a shoulder injury and it was the first of Alabamas six national titles under coach Nick Saban.
Texas won at least 10 games in nine straight seasons from 2001 through 2009. However, things went sideways after that BCS title game loss. Texas was 5-7 the following season and never won 10 games again under Brown. As Texas scuffled to an eight-win season in 2013, Brown resigned that December and said that Texas hadnt been living up to the standards it had set during his tenure.
Brown’s firing is the first for a power conference coach this season as North Carolina now has a head start on its coaching search. Very few power conference coaches are expected to lose their jobs this offseason thanks to a lack of top-tier candidates and the impending player revenue-sharing agreement via the House settlement.