North Carolina's athletic teams are known as the Tar Heels. They compete as a member of the
National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA)
Division I level (Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) sub-level for football), primarily competing in the
Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) for all sports since the 1953–54 season. Men's sports include baseball, basketball, cross country, fencing, football, golf, lacrosse, soccer, swimming & diving, tennis, track & field and
wrestling; while women's sports include basketball, cross country, fencing, field hockey, golf, gymnastics, lacrosse, rowing, soccer, softball, swimming and diving, tennis, track & field and volleyball. The NCAA refers to UNC-Chapel Hill as the "University of North Carolina" for athletics. As of December 2024, the university had won 51 NCAA team championships in eight different sports, tied for 7th all-time. These include twenty two NCAA championships in
women's soccer, eleven in
women's field hockey, five in
men's lacrosse, six in
men's basketball, one in
women's basketball, one in women's tennis, three in women's lacrosse, and two in
men's soccer. Consensus collegiate national athletes of the year from North Carolina include
Rachel Dawson,
Erin Matson,
Katelyn Falgowski,
Ryleigh Heck,
Ashley Hoffman,
Leslie Lyness,
Cindy Werley in field hockey;
Phil Ford,
Kenny Smith,
Sean May,
Lennie Rosenbluth,
Tyler Hansbrough,
Jerry Stackhouse,
Antawn Jamison,
James Worthy and
Michael Jordan in men's basketball; and
Mia Hamm (twice),
Yael Averbuch,
Amber Brooks,
Crystal Dunn,
Whitney Engen,
Kate Faasse,
Lorrie Fair,
Meredith Florance,
April Henrichs,
Debbie Keller,
Casey Nogueira,
Heather O'Reilly,
Cindy Parlow,
Catherine Reddick,
Lindsay Tarpley,
Shannon Higgins,
Kristine Lilly, and
Tisha Venturini in women's soccer.
Men's basketball Carolina has enjoyed long success as one of the top college basketball programs in the country. The program claims 7 national championship teams, six
NCAA National Championships and one retroactive championship, for the
1924. This championship was awarded by the
Helms Foundation and the
Premo-Porretta Power Poll. UNC has also won eighteen
Atlantic Coast Conference tournament (ACC) titles, and thirty-three
ACC regular season titles. Under coach
Frank McGuire, the Tar Heels won one national championship in 1957. The
1956-57 team went undefeated on their way to the school's first NCAA tournament championship. McGuire was succeeded by
Dean Smith. After struggling early in his tenure, Smith entrenched the Tar Heels as a basketball powerhouse over his 36 years as head coach. At the time of his retirement, Smith's 879 wins set the record for the most wins of any men's college basketball head coach. Under Smith, the Tar Heels won two national championships, 13 ACC Tournament championships, and one
NIT Championship. Smith is also credited with popularizing the
four corners, which he employed until the introduction of the
shot clock in college basketball. Smith is also credited with developing "
The Carolina Way," epitomized by his motto of "Play hard, play smart, play together," and by other team-oriented practices including "point to the passer," where the player who scores a basket thanks his teammate for the assist. In 2003,
Roy Williams, an assistant under Smith from 1978 to 1988 and the head coach of
Kansas, returned to his alma mater. In Williams' second season as head coach, the Tar Heels won the 2005 NCAA national championship. Williams would go on to win two more national titles (2009 and 2017) in his 18 seasons as Tar Heel head coach. Williams passed his mentor Smith's 879 win total, finishing his career with 903 wins, 485 of which came in Chapel Hill. Williams retired on April 1, 2021, and was replaced by assistant coach
Hubert Davis. Davis, who played for Tar Heels from 1988 to 1992 under Smith, also had a lengthy career as an NBA player, and spent several seasons as an analyst for
ESPN before being hired by Williams as an assistant coach in 2012. He became the first
African American head coach for UNC men's basketball, and led the team to its NCAA-record 21st final four in the 2021-22 season. On March 24, 2026, Carolina fired Davis after five seasons at the helm.
Women's soccer Anson Dorrance coached the women's soccer team at Carolina from its inception in 1979 until 2024. In his 46 years as head coach, Dorrance won 38 ACC championships and 22 national championships on the way to over 1,000 victories as a head coach. In 2019, following the demolition of
Fetzer Field, a new combination soccer and lacrosse stadium was opened on the same site, named Dorrance Field in his honor. Damon Nahas replaced Anson Dorrance as interim head coach prior to the 2024 season and was promoted to head coach on December 9, 2024.
Field hockey Karen Shelton led the Carolina field hockey program for 42 years prior to her retirement following the 2022 season. She won 10 NCAA national championships and 25 ACC titles, both records for the sport. Shelton was replaced by former star player
Erin Matson, who herself was a member of four of UNC's national championship teams (2018–2020, 2022), and is the only athlete to win the ACC's player of the year award five times. In Matson's first season in 2023, she led the Tar Heels to their 11th national title, becoming the youngest head coach ever to win a Division I national title in any sport (at age 23).
Mascot and nickname football game.|alt=A man dressed as a devil and a ram face each other. The university's teams are nicknamed the "
Tar Heels", in reference to the state's eighteenth-century prominence as a
tar and
pitch producer. The nickname's cultural relevance, however, has a complex history that includes anecdotal tales from both the
American Civil War and the
American Revolution. There is also an
anthropomorphic ram mascot who appears at games. The modern Rameses is depicted in a sailor's hat, a reference to a
United States Navy flight training program that was attached to the university during World War II.
The Carolina Way Basketball coach
Dean Smith was widely known for his idea of "The Carolina Way", in which he challenged his players to, "Play hard, play smart, play together." "The Carolina Way" was an idea of excellence in the classroom, as well as on the court. In Coach Smith's book,
The Carolina Way, former player Scott Williams said, regarding Dean Smith, "Winning was very important at Carolina, and there was much pressure to win, but Coach cared more about our getting a sound education and turning into good citizens than he did about winning." The October 22, 2014, release of the Wainstein Report alleged institutionalized academic fraud that involved over 3,100 students and student athletes, over an 18-year period from 1993 to 2011 that began during the final years of the Dean Smith era, challenged "The Carolina Way" image. The report alleged that at least 54 players during the Dean Smith era were enrolled in what came to be known as "paper classes". The report noted that the questionable classes began in the spring of 1993, the year of Smith's final championship, so those grades would not have been entered until after the championship game was played. In response to the allegations of the Wainstein report, the
NCAA launched their own investigation and on June 5, 2015 the NCAA accused the institution of five major violations including: "two instances of unethical conduct and failure to cooperate" as well as "unethical conduct and extra benefits related to student-athletes' access to and assistance in the paper courses; unethical conduct by the instructor/counselor for providing impermissible academic assistance to student-athletes; and a failure to monitor and lack of institutional control".
Rivalries The
South's Oldest Rivalry between North Carolina and its first opponent, the
University of Virginia, was prominent throughout the first third of the twentieth century. The 119th meeting in
football between two of the top public universities in
the east occurred in October 2014. One of the fiercest rivalries is with Durham's
Duke University. Located only eight miles from each other, the schools regularly compete in both athletics and academics. The
Carolina-Duke rivalry is most intense, however, in
basketball. With a combined eleven national championships in men's basketball, both teams have been frequent contenders for the national championship for the past thirty years. The rivalry has been the focus of several books, including Will Blythe's
To Hate Like This Is to Be Happy Forever and was the focus of the HBO documentary
Battle for Tobacco Road: Duke vs Carolina. Carolina holds an in-state rivalry with fellow
Tobacco Road school,
North Carolina State University. Since the mid-1970s, however, the Tar Heels have shifted their attention to Duke following a severe decline in NC State's basketball program (and the resurgence of Duke's basketball program) that reached rock bottom during Roy Williams' tenure as evidenced by their 4–36 record against the Tar Heels. The Wolfpack faithful still consider the rivalry the most bitter in the state despite the fact that it's been decades since Tar Heel supporters have acknowledged NC State as a rival. Combined, the two schools hold eight NCAA Championships and 27 ACC Championships in basketball. Students from each school often exchange pranks before basketball and football games.
Rushing Franklin after victory over Duke|alt=A large gathering of people on a street with a bonfire in the right side of the image. While students previously held "Beat
Duke" parades on
Franklin Street before sporting events, today students and sports fans have been known to spill out of bars and residence halls upon the victory of one of Carolina's sports
teams. In most cases, a Franklin Street "bonfire" celebration is due to a
victory by the
men's basketball team, although other Franklin Street celebrations have stemmed from wins by the
women's basketball team and
women's soccer team. The first known student celebration on Franklin Street came after the
1957 men's basketball team capped their perfect season with a national championship victory over the
Kansas Jayhawks. From then on, students have flooded the street after important victories. The colors were chosen years before by the
Dialectic (blue) and Philanthropic (white) Societies, the oldest student organization at the university. The school had required participation in one of the clubs, and traditionally the "Di"s were from the western part of North Carolina while the "Phi"s were from the eastern part of the state. |alt=A bunch of people standing with cap and gowns while two people stand on a grass field. Society members would wear a blue or white ribbon at university functions, and blue or white ribbons were attached to their diplomas at graduation. When football became a popular collegiate sport in the 1880s, the
Carolina football team adopted the light blue and white of the Di-Phi Societies as the school colors.
School songs Notable among a number of songs commonly played and sung at various events such as
commencement,
convocation, and athletic games are the university
fight songs "
I'm a Tar Heel Born" and "
Here Comes Carolina". The fight songs are often played by the bell tower near the center of campus, as well as after major victories. "I'm a Tar Heel Born" originated in the late 1920s as a tag to the school's alma mater, "
Hark The Sound". ==Student life==