After breezing through three nonconference games, the Wolfpack (3-0) have joined Boston College as the only unbeaten teams in the wide-open league.
But now it's time to find out just how serious their candidacy is. They open ACC play this week at defending league champion Georgia Tech (2-1, 1-0).
"Certainly, there's a lot more confidence in this football team being 3-0," coach Tom O'Brien said Monday. "But when you look at the challenge staring us in the face, we're not going to wear our arms out patting ourselves on the back."
With a quarterback who finally appears to have found his groove after spending the summer playing pro baseball, and a defense that has stabilized after what seems like perpetually shaky play, this might shape up as the best N.C. State team that O'Brien has had since he arrived in 2007.
For a change, the Wolfpack are off to a hot start. They've won their first three games for the first time since 2002, when eventual NFL first-round draft pick Philip Rivers was under center.
Now comes the next challenge: Winning their ACC opener. At no point during O'Brien's first three seasons in Raleigh has N.C. State been above .500 in league play. They've started 0-3 in the conference - or worse - every year under him.
The players say they don't sense any overt extra pressure with the ACC season starting, but admit it might be there underneath the surface.
"It doesn't really matter to us if it's a conference game or a regular game," linebacker Audie Cole said. "Either way, you prepare the same. But we all kind of have it in the back of our mind. We all know that we went 2-6 in the ACC last year ... and that's something we're not trying to repeat."
There's no doubt the Wolfpack have faced more resistance this year than early in 2009, when their 3-1 start included wins over two FCS teams.
But the competition still probably doesn't compare to what they'll face in the coming weeks. After Georgia Tech comes a visit from a Virginia Tech team that finally may have found its footing after starting 0-2. Down the road they will take on Atlantic Division favorite Florida State and tougher-than-expected Clemson.
This year's start included a rout of outmanned Western Carolina, a win at Central Florida in which N.C. State held off a late rally by the Knights and, just five days later, a thorough domination of a Cincinnati team that's transitioning to a new staff after the old regime led them to consecutive berths in the BCS. Quarterback Russell Wilson was one of the ACC's players of the week after he threw for 333 yards and three touchdowns in the victory over the Bearcats.
Still, O'Brien says it's too early to worry about what will happen once ACC play gets rolling.
"I think the most important thing we can do is focus on Georgia Tech, and that's the only thing we have control over right now," O'Brien said. "That's been how I've approached things ever since I've been a head football coach. I don't worry about what's happened in the past, other than to learn from it, make sure that we don't keep making the same mistakes and that we take the positives and build on that.
"But you can't be worried about what your record's going to be after the third game of the year. You have to focus on the team you're playing at hand, and then it'll all shake out one way or another. It doesn't matter if we're 0-3 or 3-0. We still have to play Georgia Tech this week."
http://accesswdun.com/article/2010/9/232399