Candidate details county economic-development strategy
North River Supervisor candidate Marshall Pattie detailed on Thursday a change in economic-development strategy for Augusta County that would boost local small businesses.
“For the past two decades, the Board of Supervisors has followed the strategy of recruiting high-tech and manufacturing firms to the county with limited success. Rather than recruit outside firms, we should focus on growing our small businesses,” Pattie said.
The Pattie plan:
- Raise the materiality for tools and equipment to between $300 and $500. “We currently tax small businesses on every tool and piece of equipment that they own, right down to the last hammer,” Pattie said.
- Eliminate taxes on tools and equipment when the property has fully depreciated.
- Phase out taxes on inventory. “In slow times, inventory grows, and the county reduces the profits of these firms every year,” Pattie said.
- Offer incentives to local business and industry looking to expand. “We have vacant industrial parks that have been sitting there for years. If a firm from Pennsylvania, for example, wants to come here, we provide significant incentives for them to do so. However, we don’t do this for local firms. If a local business wants to expand and hire more Augusta County residents, then I would be willing to offer similar incentives that we offer to outsiders,” Pattie said.
Commonwealth posts revenue growth in August
Gov. Bob McDonnell announced today that August revenue collections increased by 7.8 percent over the prior year. This is the 17th month out of the last 18 in which state revenue collections exceeded the previous year’s amount.
Although August is not a significant month for revenue collections, the revenue increase was primarily driven by a 13.3 percent growth in individual income tax withholding and a 24.6 percent increase in non-withholding receipts (individual final payments based on 2010 tax liabilities). On the other hand, receipts for sales tax and corporate income tax fell. August features the annual sales tax holiday for school supplies. On a year-to-date basis, total revenue collections have risen 8.8 percent, ahead of the revised annual forecast of 3.7 percent growth. Adjusted for the accelerated sales tax program, state revenues have grown 6.7 percent, ahead of the economic base forecast of 3.5 percent growth.
“Following the closure of the fiscal year with our second straight surplus, revenue indicators continue to demonstrate that Virginia’s economy continues to gradually show some signs of improvement,” Governor McDonnell said. “While 7.8 percent revenue growth this month is great news, August is typically not a significant month for revenue collections, so we will look forward to the closure of the first quarter of fiscal year 2012 in September for a more comprehensive view of the Commonwealth’s overall economic picture. The fact is, while Virginia’s economy continues to recover, we still have not fully turned the corner from the deep and long-lasting downturn that has impacted every Virginian. More than 250,000 Virginians are still out of a job, and that is tragic and unacceptable. There are tough days still ahead, and we know that the road back to economic prosperity for all our citizens will be a long and winding one. Virginia is not immune to national trends. Clearly, recent negative news and disappointing projections about the trajectory of the American economy will have an impact here in the Commonwealth. With this in mind, we must redouble our efforts to work together to ensure Virginians can find the good-paying jobs they deserve and that we get our economy back on track. Our administration is committed to implementing aggressive policies that encourage economic growth, help private-sector companies add jobs, reduce government spending, and nurture a strong and growing economy in the years ahead.”
The August revenue numbers are available at this link:
www.finance.virginia.gov/KeyDocuments/RevenueReports/FY2011-2012/2012ReportsList.cfm.
Hurt speaks on Right to Work legislation
Congressman Robert Hurt (R-VA) today delivered the following remarks on the House floor in support of H.R. 2587, the Protecting Jobs From Government Interference Act. As a part of the House’s job creation agenda, H.R. 2587 would remove the federal government as a roadblock to job growth by preventing the National Labor Relations Board from dictating where employers and private businesses can set up their operations. Robert is a co-sponsor of H.R. 2587, which the House will vote on later today. You can watch the video of his floor remarks HERE:
“I thank the gentleman for yielding, and I thank the gentleman from South Carolina for his leadership on this important issue.
“Mr. Speaker, I rise today in support of H.R. 2587, the Protecting Jobs from Government Interference Act.
“Over the past two and a half years, this Administration has vastly expanded the size and scope of the federal government and supported policies that have destroyed jobs, stifled investment and innovation, and slowed our economic recovery in Virginia’s 5th District and across the country.
“One of the most recent and troubling examples of this government overreach is the latest move by the unelected National Labor Relations Board to block Boeing from creating thousands of jobs in South Carolina.
“This kind of government intervention is a direct attack on our economic freedom, and has disastrous effects on 5th District Virginians and all Americans.
“It has the potential to cost thousands of jobs at a time when we need jobs most.
“It dangerously and unacceptably inserts the federal government into the business decisions of private companies.
“And it threatens to undermine the economic competitiveness of all states – such as Virginia – that have Right to Work laws.
“Being the northern-most Right to Work state on the East Coast has helped make Virginia the best place in the country to do business and has helped promote job growth and economic investment across the 5th District and our Commonwealth.
“At a time when millions of Americans are out of work and unemployment remains unacceptably high, Right to Work states should not be penalized by an intrusive and overbearing federal government for their ability to attract new business, investment, and jobs.
“As a part of the House’s job creation agenda, H.R. 2587 would remove the federal government as a roadblock to job growth by preventing the NLRB from dictating where employers and private businesses can set up their operations – putting our economic recovery back where it belongs, in the hands of the people instead of the federal government.
“If we are serious about getting our economy back on track, we must support these kinds of policies that help restore certainty to the marketplace and provide our true job creators with the confidence, freedom, and opportunity necessary to do what they do best – innovate, grow their businesses, and get America working again.
“That is why I am proud to co-sponsor H.R. 2587, and I urge my colleagues to support this bill.”
Warner announces bipartisan debt-reduction panel
U.S. Sen. Mark R. Warner (D-VA) today announced that he has organized a bipartisan coalition representing more than one-third of the members of the U.S. Senate to encourage the members of the congressional “super committee” to seek the broadest possible bipartisan agreement to address the nation’s deficits and debt. This group of 36 Senators — 18 Republicans, 17 Democrats and one Independent — builds upon Sen. Warner’s yearlong efforts, along with Sen. Saxby Chambliss (R-GA), to craft a deficit and debt framework as the two co-founders of the Senate’s bipartisan “Gang of Six.”
“Our 11th hour Gang of Six agreement to eliminate $3.7 trillion from the national debt came too late to be considered as part of the early August deadline to raise the debt limit, but the tough fiscal choices that our nation faces continue to get more difficult every day,” Sen. Warner said. “The 12 members of the super committee have been tasked with reaching a bipartisan consensus on a plan to begin eliminating $1.5 trillion from our debt over the next ten years. Frankly, that’s not nearly bold enough to truly fix our nation’s balance sheet.”
“I am pleased to have partnered once again with my colleague and friend Saxby Chambliss to organize this new bipartisan group representing nearly one-third of the members of the U.S. Senate. Our coalition of 36 senators has agreed to work together to encourage the ‘super committee’ to act boldly to reach the broadest possible agreement to strengthen our economy, encourage more job creation and greater investment, and to begin putting America back on a sustainable fiscal path,” Sen. Warner said.
“We have come together today to demonstrate that there is broad, bipartisan support within the U.S. Senate for a responsible fiscal plan that cuts federal spending, reforms the tax code, and protects and strengthens our entitlement programs over the long-term,” said Sen. Warner.
“If we don’t responsibly address the debt issue now, for the first time in the history of our country, our generation is going to leave the next generation an America that is not as good and wholesome as the America we inherited,” Sen. Chambliss said. “Until we do something about it, that debt is increasing by about $4 billion a day.”
The 36 Senators have agreed to the following statement of principles:
“As a bipartisan group of Senators, we will encourage and support the Super Committee in fulfilling its mission. We are here to support a deficit reduction package consistent with the following principles that should:
Include enough deficit reduction to stabilize the debt as a share of the economy, and put the debt on a downward path, and provide fiscal certainty. We believe a reasonable target is at least $4 trillion, including previously enacted deficit measures. This will send the right message to the financial markets.
Use the established, bipartisan debt and deficit reduction frameworks as a starting point for discussions.
Focus on the major parts of the budget and include long-term entitlement reforms and pro-growth tax reform.
Be structured to grow the economy in the short, medium and long-term.
Work to include the American public and the business community in a broader discussion about the breadth of the issues, challenges and opportunities facing us.”
The 36 participants include these members of the U.S. Senate:
Sen. Mark R. Warner (D-VA)
Sen. Saxby Chambliss (R-GA)
Sen. Lamar Alexander (R-TN)
Sen. Kelly Ayotte (R-NH)
Sen. Mark Begich (D-AK)
Sen. Michael Bennet (D-CO)
Sen. Richard Burr (R-NC)
Sen. Tom Carper (D-DE)
Sen. Dan Coats (R-IN)
Sen. Tom Coburn (R-OK)
Sen. Thad Cochran (R-MS)
Sen. Kent Conrad (D-ND)
Sen. Chris Coons (D-DE)
Sen. Bob Corker (R-TN)
Sen. John Cornyn (R-TX)
Sen. Mike Crapo (R-ID)
Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC)
Sen. Kay Hagan (D-NC)
Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison (R-TX)
Sen. Johnny Isakson (R-GA)
Sen. Mike Johanns (R-NE)
Sen. Ron Johnson (R-WI)
Sen. Mark Kirk (R-IL)
Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-MN)
Sen. Mary Landrieu (D-LA)
Sen. Joe Lieberman (I-CT)
Sen. Claire McCaskill (D-MO)
Sen. Joe Manchin (D-WV)
Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-AK)
Sen. Bill Nelson (D-FL)
Sen. Mark Pryor (D-AR)
Sen. Jeanne Shaheen (D-NH)
Sen. Jon Tester (D-MT)
Sen. Mark Udall (D-CO)
Sen. Roger Wicker (R-MS)
Sen. Ron Wyden (D-OR)
Weekend Watchdog: And the race is on …
It’s time for NASCAR’s Chase for the Cup – also known as Jimmie Johnson season.
Twelve racers begin the chase for the cup Sunday at 2 p.m. at Chicagoland. ESPN has the coverage.
Johnson has won the past five Cups, dominating the last 10 races of the season. With only one win so far this season, Johnson starts the 2011 Chase in fifth place. Throughout the changes in point structure over the past few years, Johnson still manages to find the top spot.
The Nationwide race goes Saturday at 3:30 p.m. on ESPN2.
The Indycar drivers are across the Pacific, racing in the Japan 300 Saturday at 11:30 p.m. on Versus.
Michael Vick returns to Atlanta for NBC’s Sunday night game, bringing the Eagles to battle the Falcons at 8:15 p.m. The Rams travel to New York for ESPN’s Monday night game.
The Redskins host Arizona Sunday at 1 p.m. on FOX, forcing WUSA to leave the timeslot empty. CBS has the late afternoon contest, with the Chargers in New England.
CBS starts its run of SEC football Saturday at 3:30 p.m., with Tennessee heading to Alabama.
ESPN kicks off the weekend in the SEC, with LSU traveling to Mississippi State Thursday at 8 p.m. Friday, Boise State visits Toledo on ESPN at 8 p.m. while Iowa State takes on Connecticut on ESPN2.
ABC has three contests throughout the day Saturday. Auburn visits Clemson at noon, then the 3:30 p.m. features either Texas at UCLA or Washington meeting Nebraska (the game ABC doesn’t show in your area appears on ESPN). Primetime brings top-ranked Oklahoma taking on Florida State.
There’s an ACC doubleheader on Comcast Saturday, starting with Kansas taking on Georgia Tech at 12:30 p.m. Virginia Tech hosts Arkansas State at 4 p.m. The ACC Network offers Duke at Boston College at 12:30 p.m.
Notre Dame tries to get a win Saturday at 3:30 p.m., taking on Michigan State on NBC.
At noon Saturday on ESPN, Penn State battles Temple while ESPN2 has Pittsburgh-Iowa. ESPN’s Primetime coverage has Ohio State going to Miami at 7:30 p.m., followed by Stanford-Arizona. ESPN2 goes with Navy at South Carolina at 6 p.m. before Utah tackles Brigham Young.
Versus heads west at 3:30 p.m., with Texas Tech taking on New Mexico. FX goes with Southern Cal’s game with Syracuse at 8 p.m.
MASN has MAC football Saturday at noon, with Central Michigan meeting Western Michigan.
Tampa Bay, trying to stay in the playoff hunt, meets Boston Saturday on FOX and Sunday afternoon on TBS. FOX also offers the Mets vs. Braves, while ESPN goes with the Cardinals heading to Philadelphia.
The Nationals have an afternoon contest in New York Thursday on MASN, then play the Marlins at home on MASN2. The Orioles have a weekend series with the Angels on MASN.
The PGA tour has the third week of its four-week playoff round, with the BMW Championships. NBC has coverage Saturday at noon, with the final round starting Sunday at 2 p.m.
The WNBA playoffs begin Thursday with a doubleheader on ESPN2. New York heads to Indiana at 8 p.m., followed by Phoenix taking on Seattle. Game 2 of the other series get airtime Sunday, with Connecticut at Atlanta at 3 p.m. followed by San Antonio-Minnesota.
D.C. United heads to Seattle Saturday at 9 p.m., facing the Sounders on Comcast.
Comcast offers ACC women’s soccer Thursday at 8 p.m., as Florida State plays Wake Forest.
ACC volleyball gets coverage Friday at 7 p.m. as Duke visits Wake Forest.
Fishburne postgrad commits to UVa.
UVa. found its point guard of the future – and he’ll be playing this season on the postgrad basketball team at Fishburne Military School.
Teven Jones, a 6-1 prospect from Kannapolis, N.C., verbally committed to the University of Virginia on Wednesday.
Jones joins an elite recruiting class for 2012 being put together by UVa. coach Tony Bennett.
PG coach Ed Huckaby told The Daily Progress that he would put Jones “against any of the top-ten point guards nationally.
“Teven’s talented. He’s tough and he’s talented. He’s going to work his butt off and not take anything for granted,” Huckaby said.
Jones told the Progress that he had been getting offers from other high-profile programs, but decided to commit after making an unofficial visit to UVa. and came away from the experience feeling “comfortable.’
“I was just focused on UVa.,” Jones said.
Get the latest on Fishburne Military School athletics at www.FishburneTimesConnect.com.
AWE: Local business on the verge of hitting it big
It’s thisclose to being another great example of the Great American Success Story.
The Downtown Waynesboro-based Awesome Wrestling Entertainment will make its debut on television on Saturday, Oct. 15, with a live pay-per-view wrestling event that will be broadcast by InDemand, DirecTV, AGTV and Bell TV in Canada to more than 122 million households in North America.
The live TV event is AWE’s attempt to join the heavyweights of pro wrestling like WWE and TNA Impact.
There is a neat human-interest story behind the scenes with the company. Awesome Wrestling Entertainment is based in a small town in Virginia – Waynesboro, Va., population 21,500, far away from the nation’s biggest media markets. And the company’s CEO is a man named Marvin Ward, 37, a former professional wrestler who had to retire in 1997 after suffering a career-ending shoulder injury and in 1999 opened, with his wife, Stacie, a small wrestling-promotion business out of his home.
Ward has said he now has a better appreciation for the term “overnight success.” After 12 years of promoting house shows throughout Virginia and up and down the East Coast, AWE exploded on the scene this summer with a storyline revolving around a decade-old Internet feud between “Big Sexy” Kevin Nash and Ricky Morton of The Rock-n-Roll Express.
Without TV or any house shows in the summer season to back it up, the back-and-forth between Nash and Morton that played out on the Internet and on AWE’s Facebook page caught fire. The company now boasts more than 100,000 Facebook fans, a number that has caught the attention of pay-per-view giant InDemand, which along with DirecTV, AGTV and Bell TV in Canada will be broadcasting AWE’s Night of the Legends on Oct. 15 on live pay-per-view television.
It’s almost hard for Ward to process how quickly things have happened – after years and years and years of banging his head against a wall.
“We knew from the beginning that unless you have millions of dollars, or knew key people in the entertainment industry, then the odds were against us a million to one. But that did not deter us. I am a firm believer that if you have a dream, and you believe in it, then anything is possible,” Ward said.
Even with that as a given, it’s been far from easy. Ward for years promoted shows at high-school gyms and National Guard armories, sometimes making money, “and at times losing money because we would spend more on national-brand talent and advertising to make sure we had large crowds to get attention.”
The losses added up, and Ward and his wife, Stacie, decided to sell their house and moved with their two daughters, Brittany and Hannah, with his parents.
“Every day, we had family and friends tell us we were crazy to continue to fight for this dream,” Ward said.
And now the family is so close to the big time that they can almost taste it. In four short weeks, Ward will join an elite group of wrestling promoters who can put on their resume that they have produced a live broadcast pay-per-view event.
There’s a lot of work to be done between now and then. AWE has not produced a single TV show to date, and it now needs to build up the infrastructure necessary to broadcast live TV throughout North America and a worldwide Internet feed.
Ward and the AWE team have put together an impressive production operation to add to the roster of wrestlers that includes former WWE and WCW stars Kevin Nash, Diamond Dallas Page, Hacksaw Jim Duggan and Terry Funk and homegrown talents Jamin Olivencia, Alex Silva and Sonjay Dutt.
Friends are trying to remind Ward as the days count down toward Oct. 15 that he needs to take time out every so often to enjoy the scenery.
“This is the first time this has ever happened, a company with no prior TV experience and no background in pay-per-view events being given an opportunity like this to go on live TV,” Ward said. “Entertainment executives are saying this is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity that our company is being given, and that we have one chance to finally make it and live the American dream.”
AWE online: www.AwesomeWrestlingEntertainment.com
Virginia: Apple harvest looks good
The weather in 2011 has been hard on many of Virginia’s agricultural crops, but the Virginia Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services says the outlook for the 2011 apple crop is very good. In early September, staff from VDACS’ Office of Sales and Market Development contacted growers representing the state’s major apple-growing areas and the reports are good. Growers indicated that the 2011 harvest should be normal, even if slightly off the five-year average in volume.
Apple trees experienced minimal damage from Hurricane Irene, although Tropical Storm Lee’s torrential rains delayed or interrupted the harvest for some of the earlier varieties because farmers couldn’t get into the fields. That added moisture should increase the size of varieties that are picked later, and the cooler temperatures at night will help the red-skinned apples achieve the bright red color that consumers prefer.
Growers are finished picking Ginger Golds and Galas and are actively packing and selling these varieties now. Harvest of Red and Golden Delicious is just starting in Northern Virginia; in the southwest part of the state the harvest is well underway. Harvest of Rome apples should begin in early October; York apples in early to mid-October; Winesaps, Staymans and Granny Smith apples in mid-October; and then Fujis in late October or early November. Many pick-your-own farms also offer heirloom and heritage varieties of apples.
Apples are big business in Virginia. The state boasts more than 150 commercial growers. VDACS Marketing representatives canvassed the state and determined that apples are selling very well this year, and while some growers are expecting a smaller crop, they say the quality is very good. Virginia farmers produced between 5 and 5.25 million bushels of apples last year for markets in 15 states and more than 20 countries. This year’s harvest may be slightly less, depending on the weather between now and the end of harvest.
Adding to apple’s economic importance is the agritourism factor, the festivals and events that draw Virginians and tourists alike to apple-growing regions each fall. “People go to an apple farm to pick apples for several reasons,” said Matthew J. Lohr, VDACS Commissioner, “but chief among them is that they want to buy local products. Savvy consumers realize that local means fresher and fresher means more nutritious. They like to know the farmer who comes with their food and they like to keep their dollars in the community. But they also want to have fun, and there are few better places to do that in the fall than at a pick-your-own apple farm. While on the farm, consumers can enjoy hay rides, petting zoos, pony rides and shopping. They can buy baked goods, jellies, cider, plants, pumpkins, even fall decorations. In addition, there are a host of apple festivals around the state that may or may not take place on farms, and all of these enhance the local economies.”
Ignite comes to Staunton
This Thursday at 6 p.m. at Darjeeling Café, Staunton Creative Community Fund and Mary Baldwin College will host the first of three Ignite® Staunton events. Ignite is a fast-paced event started by Brady Forrest of O’Reilly Media and Bre Pettis of Makerbot.com. This event, which has been hosted in cities like Seattle, Helsinki, Paris, and New York, is a fun and fast-paced open-mic where presenters share their creative ideas for five minutes to an enthusiastic audience. Staunton will not only be the smallest city to host an Ignite event, but also the first in Virginia!
With a uniquely Staunton flavor, Ignite Staunton will be hearing from presenters speaking about a variety of community-centered passions, ideas, and inspirations. This Thursday’s Ignite Staunton event will hear community members speak on everything from edible forest gardens to using dance to promote positive body image in teens. These events will be held at Darjeeling Cafe on the third Thursdays of September, October, and November. The event opens at 6pm with presentations beginning around 7pm. These fun and fast-paced Ignite Staunton events are interactive and audience members will have the opportunity to provide feedback for the Ignite presenters and to vote for the People’s Choice Award of the night. Staunton Creative Community Fund and Mary Baldwin College will be giving away over $5,000 to help winning concepts become a reality in our community.
Come hear some of Staunton’s finest, wildest, and most inventive ideas during this open-mic for the creative idea!
Help offered for church conflicts
Leaders of churches that sometimes experience turmoil and disagreements—all church leaders, basically—can benefit from a hybrid course at Eastern Mennonite University, offered on four weekends this fall. The course combines teachings from EMU’s conflict transformation program and its seminary.
“Managing Congregational Conflict” was a lynchpin course for Barbara Robbins, a 2011 graduate of the Center for Justice and Peacebuilding (CJP).
“I am a congregational consultant for Virginia Baptist Network,” she said. “I provide coaching and guidance for congregations in conflict, as well as helping congregations work with reorganization and strategic planning.
“The course was the perfect blend of theory and practice,” said Robbins. “I am able to apply projects from that class directly into congregational settings.”
“Managing Congregational Conflict” is open to students in both EMU’s CJP program and to Eastern Mennonite Seminary students, as well as to community members or others who are interested in the topic.
“I entered the CJP program as a mid-life student seeking to fine-tune what I already know and enhance what I was already doing,” said Robbins. “This course brought together the strong foundation in organization studies that CJP brings, into a life application I was interested in.”
Mike Metzler, ’09 grad, took the class while in seminary. “I learned that conflict is an opportunity for change. Conflict is still scary but framing it as an opportunity allows me to move towards conflict with some excitement as well.
“This is one of my top three courses from my master of divinity studies at EMS,” added Metzler, associate pastor at Mountville (Pa.) Mennonite Church. “It builds on the foundational classes in ways that transform the students as well as impacting the congregations in which they are called to serve.”
The course focuses on congregations both as family systems and organizational systems. It also works with the ideas of forgiveness and the theology of forgiveness in congregations.
David Brubaker, PhD, associate professor of organizational studies at CJP, and Mary Thiessen Nation, PhD, adjunct instructor for EMS, co-teach the course.
The course will run Friday 6-9 p.m. and Saturday 9 a.m.-4 p.m. beginning the weekend of Sept. 23-24, and continuing one weekend every month through December.
EMS and CJP collaborate on a number of courses. The two graduate programs offer several courses as options for a graduate certificate in theology for peacebuilding or a dual master of divinity and master of arts in conflict transformation degree.
Press Conference: Frank Beamer
“The one thing I came out of the East Carolina game with is the fact that I’m really proud of how our team hung tough. The drive by our offense to get the go-ahead points, the way our defense played down the stretch and our best punt was our last punt. So there are a few things you take out of the game and realize that the goal right now for us is to improve as a football team and that’s what we’re going to work on this week.
On how you replace David Wang at the guard spot
I think we’ll work Michael Via there this week along with Courtney Prince and Matt Arkema, but we’ll probably put Via there at guard and go from there. We have those two other guys but the thing right now is to get Via there. You know, Via is knowledgeable, he’s been in the battles and he can play several positions for us.
On running the ball 50 times during the East Carolina game
It kind of came about as the game went along, I think you always have to be able to run the football; that’s just something the good teams are able to do. We had our moments throwing it and we had some breakdowns throwing it, but we need to continue to work on both running and throwing the football and do whatever the situation calls for. That’s going to be our objective.
On what you think Logan learned and took away from Saturday’s game
I think he learned about where the ball needs to go and when it needs to go. Anytime you’re playing quarterback and there’s so much going on and there’s just a learning curve there. We’ll go through it with Logan, but the thing I really believe is he’ll learn from this game he’s a smart guy he’ll be better each and every game. I give East Carolina credit, I thought they played tough and got to us a couple of times. In the end I think Logan will learn from this and I don’t have any doubt about that.
On continuing to look at the punter position
We’ll continue to look at it this week. Michael Branthover was bombing them last week in practice. He’s a little bit inconsistent so I’m going to continue to look at that I think competition continues for our kickers and we’ll keep looking at it this week. On how you feel about your nickel package this year I think Cris Hill played well Saturday, probably his best game since he’s been at Virginia Tech; he did several things that were very good. The captains awarded him defensive player of the game and probably should have. To see him play like that, I was pleased to see it. He’s an athletic guy, he’s fast, he’s tough and if he continues to play like that he can really help us. And Kyle Fuller got the coach’s defensive player of the game so that’s two guys that really came through when we needed them to come through.
On how pleased you were with holding down East Carolina’s offensive attack
I thought we played extremely well. The thing you have to do against East Carolina is be able to tackle those good athletes in the open field and for the most part we did a great job with that. They don’t mind throwing it for 3 yards but what they’re hoping is they’re going to gain another 10 and I thought we tackled well in the open field, which was critical for that ball game.
On Arkansas State and what sticks out about them
They’re athletic, have a lot of formations and they’re averaging 480 yards a game. The quarterback is hitting 74 percent of his passes and averaging 282 yards a game. Their defense is athletic and can really run. They’re not as big as some defenses we’ll see but these boys can really, really run. They’re just a good football team coming in here. They hammered Memphis; I’m telling you this is a good football team.
On the development of the defensive line
That’s big. The two freshmen tackles, Corey Marshall and Luther Maddy made improvements and Tyrel Wilson, Zack McCray, and Duan Perez-Means, our defensive ends, they play hard and you see them getting better, so I think we just need to continue in that direction.
Press Conference: Mike London
QUESTION: You mentioned after the Indiana game winning a road game, winning an ACC road game was next on the list. What would that say about this team, and where they are going?
COACH LONDON: That’s the next logical progression in terms of having an opportunity to play. This is our third game. We’ve accomplished the goal of winning the first home game. We’ve accomplished the goal of winning the first-in a long time-away game. Now you ask about the significance of this game-it’s a conference game and it’s an away opponent. All of the games have significance now.
Not just because they’re conference games, but as a team, the type of team we are now, the more wins that we can accumulate, the more positive feelings guys have about themselves, the more opportunities players have a chance to play and all of those things, and the more you can develop other players. We take it one game at a time, and this is the third game and a third game that’s on the road against a very, very good opponent.
QUESTION: It seems like you had an unusually high number of passes batted down at the line of scrimmage when you were on offense the other day. Do you see anything on film that indicates something was different from what you’ve done in the past?
COACH LONDON: I thought they did a good job of rushing when they weren’t pushing up the field. [Indiana was] a defense that was a 4 3, but also had a 3 3 element to it, meaning they covered the nose tackle and they played inside shades on the tackles. Sometimes that’s not conducive to a pass rush, so what you do is try to press the pocket and then you mirror the quarterback. When he throws, you put your near hand up.
So every defensive lineman is taught that, and I think they did a nice job of just situating the fact-whether it was a crossing route or whatever the pattern might have called for. Instead of getting pushed up the field, they were more content to control it and rush, and then when Michael’s hand released, they put their hand up in the throwing lane. It happens in games-3-4, or 4-3.
QUESTION: Does that have something to do with the throws being too low, or was it by chance just the defensive line making a good play?
COACH LONDON: You know, I would say so. You see a lot of games where quarterbacks throw the ball and just barely miss the guy’s hand. Part of it is accuracy and part of it is, even though the guy got his hand up in the throwing lane, the quarterback was able to complete it. There are techniques you can do offensively to get the defender’s hands down-you can help by maybe dropping that back a little bit deeper, more out of pocket passes, whatever it may be. But I’ve been involved in games that had several knockdowns, and like I said, they just did a good job of emphasizing and getting their hands in the throwing lane.
QUESTION: In this building process, is there almost more value in winning a game like you did Saturday – where you were sailing along, fell apart, but ended up winning?
COACH LONDON: I like the 23 3 games to tell you the truth. I think that as the game went on, you know, there was a penalty that sustained the drive, which is very unusual. On the fumble, the ball actually had a perfect bounce and bounced right up into the guy’s hand. It goes all the way for a touchdown.
And so the change of events that happened in the game causes you to reflect, “Hey, listen, either we have to play better or we are going to have to do something to try to catch up and minimize what just happened to us.’
I think the learning point from that was the latter. The guys learned how to handle third down conversions. There was a fourth down conversion. Matt Snyder dropped the pass before the previous pass and made a big catch after that. So I think the ability to learn how to succeed in that area-that’s where the learning curve is for us. I think it will improve us as a football team.
Obviously you always like to win games at a margin that’s comfortable, but you never know what your team is really made of sometimes until you’re faced with adversity or until you have to come back and have a last- literally a last second-win. It was nothing but a positive learning experience for this team.
QUESTION: Can you talk about the 15 play drive that you guys used to tie the game? What does that tell you about your offense? What were you discussing on the sideline?
COACH LONDON: There was the efficiency of operating-very seldom to you see 15 play drives. Sometimes maybe the nature of the offense-a quick strike offense-doesn’t allow for it. Or maybe sometimes offenses are not quite patient enough to run an offense and move it down the field.
But I think collectively, in everybody’s mind, we have the same goal. The protections were good. The routes, the sight adjust, the quarterback’s reads-they were good. You can look back to execution-that’s always the thing in games in the end. At the beginning, and I think in the end, the execution was exactly where we needed it to be when we needed it on some of those plays we made with some of those players.
I know Perry [Jones] felt bad because of the fumble, the way it happened. The return turned into a score for them. Then when he went over in the end zone for the touchdown, he had both hands and elbows and knees wrapped around the ball because he didn’t want to give that up.
And the players are conscious of that-of making sure this is it. Even though on the defensive side, as I said, Cam had the awareness of getting the ball out when he did. It’s a positive thing. It’s a positive thing for the offense to be able to move the ball like that-know where the sticks were, know the timeout situation, know where the first down was.
There were no substitution issues, no penalties. It was good to see what the model of efficiency looks like. Now we just have to keep doing that-beginning of the game, the middle of the game, third quarter, early in the fourth quarter. That’s what we are trying to keep going.
QUESTION: Clifton Richardson had two nice runs against Indiana. What parts of his game does he still need to elevate?
COACH LONDON: He’s getting there. Clifton is a work in progress, and he’ll see more carries and opportunities to get in the game. He provides another type of back-a big back that can run. And we need to get him in the game. We will get him more involved in the game plan. He doesn’t know the whole offense, but with some of these other guys, they are learning as we are going along. Now it’s time for him to accelerate his opportunities to touch the ball.
QUESTION: How is Clifton Richardson as a pass blocker?
COACH LONDON: He’s pretty good.
QUESTION: Against Indiana, there was pressure on the quarterback from your defensive line. Is there more opportunity for that in the future?
COACH LONDON: One of the stats we always take is the pressures and the hits on the quarterback. I think there were three sacks. There were, I believe, close to a dozen pressures, multiple hits on the quarterback,. Unfortunately one of them ended in a personal foul with Cam.
But those are the things-you try to make the quarterback not stay in the pocket. A couple of times he got out of the pocket by athleticism and because there was not a contain element. But I think that we got after him enough that it didn’t turn into a seven on seven pass game where the quarterback sits back there and has all day to throw.
I think that’s the key. That’s why we are hoping a guy like Cam Johnson and Billy Schautz and Jake Snyder have an opportunity to apply more pressure because, as we start going into this game coming up and other games, pass rushes are always an important element of pass defense.
QUESTION: You talked about LaRoy Reynolds and Ausar Walcott last night. Can you evaluate where the linebackers are?
COACH LONDON: I think so. There are measured amounts of improvement. Reynolds has upped his tackle total. He’s been in position a lot of times. He’s running around pretty good. He watches and watches. He does all of the things that a player who wants to be really good does-extra film sessions and taking care of his body and just the little things like that.
All of those guys have taken pride in the fact that Steve Greer, the middle linebacker, calls the defense and gets everybody lined up. The linebackers make the adjustments and move the linebacker inside or outside and make the adjustments with the secondary. As we talked about before, the second time around for them, they are playing the linebacker position much better.
QUESTION: To what do you attribute the growth in that area?
COACH LONDON: We are always talking about ball awareness and being ball alert in practice is every day. Practices have periods when we are talking about getting the ball out, being ball conscious, knowing where the quarterback are. We don’t hit the quarterback in practice. With the bags that we have, we place the football with a Velcro ball strategically, whether it’s up-top or simulating an arm throwing like a quarterback. Basically we have the ball where Cam took the ball from him.
We use the equipment-particularly in tackling quarterbacks. You can use it to keep teaching those things-keep preaching them-getting your hands on the ball, the interceptions, defending the deep ball. We talked about blocking the ball at the line of scrimmage. You just keep doing those things over and over again.
On the flipside, offensively, we talk about protecting the ball-how you hold the ball, when you’re running with the ball and prior to getting hit, how you cover the ball up. How you make sure that these interceptions don’t happen. When you release the ball, you need to make sure you know where you’re throwing it. We spend a lot of time doing that.
QUESTION: Are you doing the same drills defensively as last year?
COACH LONDON: We are doing the same drills as we did last year. The importance, again, is on where the ball. We know how to get it, but in situations, it’s about knowing where it is. We take film clips of all the ball handers and how they hold the ball, where it is. Sometimes they pull it back and try to escape a rush, or they bring it up. Sometimes he will hold it down on his body. We just put an emphasis on that.
QUESTION: Can you talk about North Carolina’s defense?
COACH LONDON: On film, they look big, strong and athletic. They give up 16 points a game, 30 yards rushing-which is phenomenal-197 yards passing, and under 300 yards total offense. That’s a pretty good defense right there if you’re doing things like that.
A lot of good players are back. Number 12 didn’t play last year-he’s back. Zac Brown is as good as advertised. They are a very, very talented team that can run so our work is cut out for us. Their strength is their guys up front, their linebackers.
They play hard. You see the ball – when it’s thrown in the air, they go after it. Sometimes there’s been a fumble where the ball was kicked, and in the Rutgers game, I think they had three or four of the balls come down to one of the defenders. Sometimes it’s a matter of where the ball lands sometimes. The safety had his hands up.
QUESTION: Can you talk about adjustments Robert Randolph has made?
COACH LONDON: At the beginning, during the preseason, we were talking about the strengths of the team and obviously our kickers were one of the elements that we had to get better at.
Robert’s distance has gotten pretty good. We talked about where the offense would have to get the ball in order for him to have a shot at it. I remember last year, getting to the 25 or 27 yard line, sometimes even a 30 yard line, was it. Now, 33-, 35 , 36 yard line. It helps having a guy that’s got a leg like that. I understand it was his second win and I’m sure that it’s something he’ll savor and maybe might have a chance to do again before this season is over.
QUESTION: Perry Jones led the team in carries, rushing yards, catches, and receiving yards Saturday. Can you talk about how much of an impact he has had and how important he is to the offense?
COACH LONDON: Besides also being captain and one of the vocal leaders of the team, Perry’s ability tocatch the ball out in space was critical. There was one play down on the sideline where Michael made a great throw-another one that could have been knocked down-but he made a great throw and Perry caught it.
Again, you try to utilize what your playmakers can do for you, and Perry probably has one of the best hands on the team as far as catching the ball. It’s good to have a weapon like that out of the backfield in a screen-lineup in a slot formation and run routes like that.
QUESTION: Michael Rocco completed 50 percent of his passes. Were you ever considering taking him out of the game?
COACH LONDON: No. We talked about those balls being knocked down. Obviously it’s frustrating. We don’t want that to happen, and there’s ways that you can address that-as I said before, with the offensive line perhaps in a deeper set or drop.
The thing that happened on offense with the fumble…he wasn’t in there, and then they scored twice on the defense. It’s one of those situations that he was running the offense efficiently, and at that point, had a chance to get that drive started early for them. We stayed with him and good thing we did. I know sometimes the fumble procedure might be to pull a guy after that, but you know, he had the opportunity to prove us right or prove us wrong, and he proved himself right by being able to produce.
I’m so happy for his success because now he knows he can do it.
QUESTION: You talked about Perry’s play-making ability, but what makes him a good captain?
COACH LONDON: I’ve said time and time again, that on weekends-Friday or whatever it was-before the season started, there would be one guy out on the field running, hitting the sled, and that would be Perry.
After a while, guys would come by and start looking at him working out. Then after a while they started joining him. I think that type of leadership-don’t have to say a whole lot, just lead by example-those are the types of leaders that a team needs. He’s not the most vocal guy but he does lead by example, and I think the team has benefitted.
QUESTION: You talked about UNC’s defense, but what can you tell us about their offense and special teams?
COACH LONDON: I know they have two excellent running backs, one of them a bigger type back. Bryan Renner is a player. I know his father, Bill Renner well since he’s a coach up there in northern Virginia. They have height at the wide receiver positions. Coach Shoop has been running their offense for a while. They’re very productive and throw the ball. They have a pretty good running game. Just like the defense is athletic and talented, their skill positions are athletic and talented as well. I think the quarterback has done a good job of distributing the ball to their playmakers.
On special teams, I believe their place kicker is up. D.J. Thorpe is a kick returner, and when I was here before, we tried to recruit him. He has those types of skills, I believe, and returned one back 50 something yards during his last game. He’s very explosive.
They are very athletic and very, very powerful. They have a low center of gravity. The guy that covers the center up does a fantastic job of applying pressure. Their inside tackle, again, is very athletic, and has a very good spin move in for getting close to guys on the outside and for having opportunities to apply pressure to the quarterback.
This is a very good team and they have recruited that way in all aspects-offense, defense, special teams. We’ll have to play our best football.
QUESTION: Is there a particular unit you feel needs improvement or that is doing particularly well?
COACH LONDON: After the game, I talked about the resolve of the team. When you’ve had good games and you’ve lost close games, it’s easy to go south. On the sideline, the talk was all positive and that has been the case in the past.
It was positive seeing that mindset. Hopefully guys will start to buy in a little bit about seeing themselves have success.
QUESTION: Looking back at the Indiana game, from a special teams’ standpoint, the punt-touching call has been talked about it. From a momentum standpoint, how did you get your team to bounce back from adversity?
COACH LONDON: No doubt you have to bounce back and react in a way that doesn’t affect you for that next play or the play after. In those situations, where there is an immediate turnover, the other team will think psychologically that you’re down because of that type of play. So that play is over, and you’ve got to think about the next play before you.
I think as I said before, the communication back there can and will get better. We’ll work really hard on making sure next time that we’re really close to see guys running towards the sideline, and it won’t get away. That’s a communication thing, and we’ll get better at that.
QUESTION: I suspect you remember that Randolph missed his first three FG attempts. Head coaches over the years have been notorious for saying they don’t understand kickers. How much interaction do you have with him? Do you remember his slow start?
COACH LONDON: They are a little different and I don’t know how to coach them or teach them. All I can do is encourage. All I can do is try to keep a guy up and open up the possibilities for getting his mind right. Thank goodness for Jeff Alton-he’s a sports psychologist-he talked about the aspects of that.
With Randolph being older and more of an experienced player, it’s been, ‘Coach, I got this.’ He’s very confident in what he does. I think he’s handling this. All of a sudden, I think he’s the No. 1 place kicker in the country right now. I think he’s waiting to back it up. He’s worked hard at it. His leg is a weapon for us, and we have just got to continue to make sure we get the ball into position where we can continue to keep using it.
QUESTION: Are teams throwing away from Minnifield? If so, how much does that pressure Nicholson?
COACH LONDON: That’s a great question. Whether they are making a conscious effort to throw the ball away from him remains to be seen. We try to be multiple in our coverages either way, where we have a safety at top whether it’s him or Trey Nicholson. I think that Chase is the guy that’s more willing to check the people at the line of scrimmage or a conversion for a fade route.
The skill level that Chase has had-I think he’s done a very, very good job of playing defensive corner, playing the run, playing the pass in our nickel situations.
So Chase has embraced the whole role of playing off, playing up, playing trailer, coming off the edge, communicating with the rest of the secondary about what’s going on with what he sees. He’s played that role, and it’s become a significant role for the entire secondary.
QUESTION: Does the game against North Carolina have recruiting implications?
COACH LONDON: They do go after the same type of student athletes we do. But I think what’s been pretty good for both ourselves and for Tech is that the top players in the state have decided that they see themselves having more opportunities here.
I can remember in years past when three or four of the top in state Virginia players would end up there. So, you know, both staffs are doing a pretty good job of addressing that when it comes to recruiting.
We do have two coaches in Carolina, and I know there’s a couple of kids from Virginia who went there. They are both academic type schools. So far, we have been able to kind of continue our message-these are the type of young men we are looking for. They have had to deal with a set of circumstances and issues that it is what it is.
So I know Coach Withers is trying to do a good job of getting that thing to turn back around into what it can be. Right now, we are just focused on targeting the young men that are here in the state. If there are some young men that are in the Carolinas that have the same type of goals we have, we’ll continue to try to recruit those players as well.

















