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North Carolina's Tez Walker out of hospital after blindside hit

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Tez Walker shaken up after GT forces a crucial fumble (0:53)

Tez Walker catches Drake Maye's pass but is blindsided on the run, conceding the fumble and staying down for several minutes before walking off the field. (0:53)

North Carolina wide receiver Tez Walker has been released from an Atlanta-area hospital, where he was evaluated after taking a blindside hit late in the fourth quarter of a 46-42 loss at Georgia Tech on Saturday night.

The Tar Heels released a statement Sunday morning saying Walker would travel home with the team.

"Tez is doing better, has been released from the hospital, and is flying back to Chapel Hill this morning," the school said.

Walker made a first-down reception as the Tar Heels were attempting a comeback but was hit without seeing the defender coming and fumbled. He was on the ground for several minutes before eventually walking off with the help of trainers. But as he made his way to the sideline, he appeared unsteady on his feet.

North Carolina coach Mack Brown said during his postgame news conference that Walker was "aware and talking," and North Carolina later said Walker had been taken to the hospital.

The loss was the second in a row for North Carolina, which opened the season 6-0 with hopes to make it back to the ACC championship game. But the Tar Heels have now blown double-digit leads in both defeats to teams that came into their matchup with losing records.

Against Georgia Tech, the Tar Heels' defense appeared to revert to the lacking form from last season, particularly early on. Georgia Tech had 635 yards of total offense. In the fourth quarter alone, the Yellow Jackets scored 22 points and had 246 rushing yards. Brown called the defense "awful" in the fourth.

"I've never seen anybody just take it and run for 10 yards a crack," Brown said. "I told the guys I can't answer what happened right now. I'll watch it on the plane going home; we'll adjust. We've got to grow up, man up and get ready to play next week."

What made that fourth-quarter performance even more problematic was the fact that North Carolina had held Georgia Tech scoreless in the first and third quarters.

"I've been doing this 35 years," Brown said. "I've never seen two quarters that bad and two quarters that good. I thought we were beyond that on defense."

Getting off to hot starts then losing has been a knock against North Carolina. Last season, the Tar Heels started out 9-1 before losing four straight to end the season.

"They're crushed, and I've got to pick them up," Brown said. "Everybody will be down on them. I thought they tried tonight. Started the game 21-7; they checked all the boxes until we didn't. We've got to go back, don't start pointing fingers, don't start second-guessing, stay off the Internet, don't be watching the news and go back to work and get better next week."