Giving Thanks
What are you most thankful for this Thanksgiving? That was the question we posed to several members of the Boys & Girls Club in Waynesboro this week.
“I’d have to say … well, my parents., because they’re very helpful. They care for me and all that … and my brother and my sister. They’re, like, there for me and stuff like that. I like how they’re always there for me. My mom and stepdad are always helping out with each other, making a team. We’re strong together. My family members, all together we’re strong,” said Tylik Mawyer, 12, a student at Kate Collins Middle School.
“I’m thankful for God because he’s the one that made all of us, and He’s the one that made this Boys & Girls Club. And I love the Boys & Girls Club,” said Rachel Obiro, 8, a student at Westwood Elementary School.
“I’m most thankful for my family … how my mom and dad love me, and how they take care of me and my little brother,” said Re’sun Stevenson, 9, a student at Wenonah Elementary.
“My family, and the people who give me the stuff for Thanksgiving. And my brothers. And my mom and my dad,” said Michaela Williams, 8, a student at Wenonah.
“I’m thankful for my family and my friends. And my three brothers and my sister,” said Shiona Hodgins, 9, also a student at Wenonah.
“Turkey! Turkey, stuffing and the rest of the food. Mostly my mom,” said Aalayah Hubbard, 8, a student at Berkeley Glenn Elementary.
More on the Club at www.AugustaBGClub.org.
Press Conference: Frank Beamer
Opening Statement: “I think this Virginia team is playing with a lot of confidence and they should. They’re playing well. Playing extremely well. Playing hard. I think the quarterback is making good decisions for them. Running backs are excellent. Big and strong up front offensively. The receivers – they have some playmakers out there. Defensively, again, strong up front. Physical. So we got our work cut out for us.”
On response to national criticism of Virginia Tech’s early season schedule: “Not really. What I would say is that I think we’re a football team that has improved. Improved where we are. I’m proud of where this football team is. And I also think people respect our program. I think the coaches that-I don’t know where we’re ranked in all the polls to be quite honest with you-but I think in the Coaches Poll, are we fourth or fifth or something?”
Clarification from Mark Giannotto on Virginia Tech’s ranking: “Yeah you’re fourth in the Coaches Poll, fifth in the Harris Poll and sixth in the AP Poll.”
On clarification of rankings: “Yeah, but I do think fourth is respect for our program, how we do things and how we have consistently been able to win here at Virginia Tech. I think that’s a reflection on that.”
On if he’s surprised of Virginia’s recent winning streak: “No, they’ve had a great month. They’ve had some great wins and played some great football. They’ve played some excellent football, so they deserve all the credit.”
On how much more difficult his job and the jobs of the coaching staff become when the in-state rival is playing well in terms of recruiting: “Well I think it’s good for the state of Virginia, for both programs here in the state to be doing well. We’ll continue to do the things we do and we’ve been doing them this way for a long time and been able to recruit well for a long time, so we’re going to continue to do the things we’ve done for a lot of years.”
On what he thinks the biggest difference is this year with Virginia: “I think the quarterback makes a difference. I think those two running backs or actually three running backs – (Perry) Jones, (Kevin) Parks and (Clifton) Richardson make a difference. I think they’re a year older in their defense. They got a couple guys up front that are seniors there in 94 (Matt Conrath) and 56 (Cam Johnson) that I think really help them out. I think they’ve added some skill to their football team, which helps them out. I think that’s made a difference.”
On if he can provide an update on Andrew Miller and Alonzo Tweedy and their status for Saturday: “No we’re going to have to see how that goes this week.”
On if 2007 was the last time the Virginia Tech-Virginia game meant something: “Yeah, I believe you’re right in saying that. I think so. But you better check that.”
On if the players have a greater respect for Virginia and a greater sense of urgency going into this week: “I think our players have always had respect for Virginia. I don’t think it’s ever been any other way. Certainty when you look at it, it means who wins the Coastal and who gets a chance to play in the ACC Championship. I think they understand how important it is.”
On if he can give a reason on why David Wilson’s fumbling issues have come up again: “No, I just think he gets running so hard with so much effort sometimes and the ball gets around there. But I don’t think it’s anything. He’s not fumbling guy. He runs hard and runs with great effort. He’s not a fumble guy.”
On Detrick Bonner’s game playing the whip linebacker position on Thursday against North Carolina: “I thought it was ok. At times, he played like a new guy playing a new position. But he always played with great effort. He’s a tough guy and the more he plays it (whip) the better, he’ll get.”
On if he expects Bonner to play whip again on Saturday: “It’s early in the week here. We’re just starting our game plans today-or yesterday really.”
On the offensive line’s early game struggles against UNC: “Well the first one (play), we just got in the wrong formation and missed a block. That was it, but what I was proud of was I don’t think we ever panicked. We kept doing our thing and got things corrected.”
On if he saw the ending of the Virginia-Florida State game on Saturday: “I did watch the end of it. It was back and forth there quite a bit to be honest with you. A lot of things going on that were really going to determine the ball game. So it was one of those type game.”
On if he’s ever been in a game like the Virginia-Florida State game when the teams were brought back on the field after time had expired: “No, I don’t believe so. I can’t recall one like that.”
On Virginia’s running back Perry Jones lining up in different spots and how that makes it difficult on defenses: “Yeah, the kid’s got 41 catches. That’s a lot of catches. They’re moving him around. Is he a back, is he a wide receiver? Certainly they’ve got a lot of flexibility there and you better be able to adjust.”
Agritourism initiative plants seeds for coordinated, strategic economic growth
Agritourism could be a path to profit for small area farms. Since the early 1700s, farming has been central to the spirit and success of the Shenandoah Valley. Today agriculture continues to play a fundamental role in the Valley’s community and economic health.
Agricultural tourism, or agritourism, merges the world of travel with special farm-related experiences. Across the country, there is growing interest in connecting and promoting agricultural assets. “Travelers are seeking authentic, local products and experiences,” says Sheryl Wagner, Staunton’s director of tourism.
A new agritourism grant from the Virginia Department of Housing and Community Development will coordinate and strengthen this key regional strength. The Fields of Gold initiative aims to inventory and map the region’s agricultural assets, sites, and businesses; study the impact of agritourism on the local economy; and promote the region as an agritourism destination. $56,250 in project funding is available to support the initiative.
Program expectations include:
Distinguishing the Shenandoah Valley region as a premier agritourism destination;
Opening new and profitable markets for local farm products, services and experiences;
Generating expenditures by tourists including meals, lodging, and retail purchases;
Create new jobs both on and off the farm; and
Rebuilding valuable connections between rural and urban populations.
Local officials, farmers and business people are rallying behind the Fields of Gold idea. “Our area is blessed with an abundance of farms, wineries, orchards, farmers markets, pick-your-own fields, and local-food restaurants that attract visitors to our area in increasingly larger numbers,” says Amanda Glover, assistant director of economic development for Staunton.
Staunton’s growing reputation as a culinary destination is due, in part, to an emerging slate of farm-to-fork restaurants such as Staunton Grocery and Zynodoa. When restaurateurs and retailers sell local farm products, they increase demand for these local products and provide a significant portion of farm revenue for producers.
“Since its inception, Staunton Grocery has helped at least one local farmer increase production and shift from part-time farming to full-time farming,” says Ian Boden, chef and owner. “The local food economy is totally integrated,” he continues “restaurants help sustain agriculture in the surrounding area.”
Jeff Goode, owner of Zynodoa restaurant, adds, “we buy from local producers, and the farm-to-table connection is also a culinary draw for visitors who travel to the Valley. We have the luxury of being able to source some of the best ingredients available anywhere in the country – right in our own back yard.”
The Greater Augusta Regional Chamber of Commerce recently launched the first annual Agritourism Festival at Hermitage Hill Farm & Stable in Augusta County, which attracted more than 600 people.
“Incredibly positive things can come from connecting and growing our clean, green industry of agritourism. By turning our agricultural dollars back into the local economy we are contributing to the future vitality of our family farms and creating a quality of life that is second to none,” says Nancy Sorrells, a member of the Augusta County Board of Supervisors and member of the Fields of Gold Steering Committee.
Already, over a quarter of the total value of agricultural products sold in Virginia comes from the Central Shenandoah Region. “Agritourism destinations like Barren Ridge Vineyards, Ox Eye Vineyards, Polyface Farm, and Andre Viette Nurseries are local economic anchors, attracting visitors and providing jobs,” says Dennis Burnett, director of economic development for Augusta County.
Through this collaborative effort, the region hopes to create opportunities for farmers, entrepreneurs and existing agribusinesses to grow their business and increase their profits, while at the same time, giving the general public opportunities to learn about and enjoy the many faces of agriculture.
Survey efforts are currently underway to collect information on the region’s agritourism businesses, activities, farm retailers and restaurants featuring local products. Please let the CSPDC know if you run an agritourism business seasonally, year-around, part-time or full-time by filling out a survey at www.surveymonkey.com/s/Fields_of_Gold.
Verizon to union: The grill must go, or else
In recent days, sparks are still flying over a controversial “Unify Main Street” BBQ dinner attended by several community groups that gathered with Communication Workers of America Local 2204 near Verizon headquarters on Nov. 3 in support of a fair contract for Verizon employees and for preserving middle-class jobs in the Shenandoah Valley.
In a clear act of retaliation against the union’s involvement in the community event, a Verizon manager has demanded that the BBQ grill used to cook the group’s food be removed from the company’s property before Thanksgiving.
“I just learned from a union newsletter this morning that, when my union friends got to work last week, their boss gave them an ultimatum,” said Donald Wilson Bush, a member of several Occupy Wall Street/Unify Main Street groups forming in the Valley, “Either they move the grill away from Verizon property by Thanksgiving or else Verizon management will throw it away in the company dumpster.”
Presented in the questionable context of a concern for “worker safety,” this demand on the part of local Verizon management to remove the grill followed publication of a Letter to Editor on Tuesday, Nov. 15 sent to the Staunton News Leader by Harry J. Mitchell, Verizon’s director of public relations in Richmond.
In his letter, Mitchell referred to the community-sponsored BBQ event as filled with “empty rhetoric,” and argued against the CWA’s proposition that middle-class jobs in America are due, at least in part, to years of successful contract negotiation between leaders of organized labor and corporate management.
“Mr. Mitchell is certainly entitled to his own opinion, but he is not entitled to his own facts,” Bush replied. “Clearly, as any fair study of labor history will prove, the upward trajectory of middle-class growth in America shows that he is absolutely mistaken about the positive impact that organized labor relations have had on the livelihoods of working class people all around the world.”
“I was shocked to learn that the BBQ grill in question has been on company property for at least 12 years and has been used by management and associates alike for different events,” Bush continued. “It has never been a safety concern before. This is simply what happens when you try to unify groups of people in the community like we did in support of CWA’s current campaign against corporate greed.”
The BBQ grill in question will be given to a family of Verizon customers living in Staunton after it is removed from Verizon property this week. The family receiving the grill says that it will be used again in future community-sponsored BBQ events that support middle-class jobs.
Tea Party group endorses Allen
Today George Allen received the endorsement of over more than 100 Tea Party leaders from across Virginia for his candidacy for the United States Senate seat currently held by Democrat Jim Webb.
Allen is a heavy favorite to win the Republican Party nomination to run for the Senate in 2012. He faces a field of challengers that most prominently includes former Virginia Tea Party leader Jamie Radtke.
“Gov. Allen’s belief in Tea Party principles is evident in his desire to cut government spending and bring a greater degree of accountability to Washington,” said Coby Dillard, co-founder of the Hampton Roads Tea Party. “When elected, I believe he will carry our shared beliefs to the halls of the Senate, and continue the fight to leave a more fiscally responsible nation as a gift to future generations.”
“George Allen will restrain this over-reaching federal government and preserve the individual freedoms and rights that our Founders envisioned. He has a proven track record of implementing pro-growth policies that help businesses create jobs, and the experience we need to get it done,” said Laura Alcorn, co-founder of the Richmond Patriots. “George Allen is a true conservative leader who shares our core principles. We know he will fight for our Virginia values and we are proud to fight with him.”
“The reckless policies coming out of Washington are eroding our liberties and bankrupting our future,” said Tea Party activist Carl Tate. “Now, more than ever, we need George Allen’s strong, steady leadership to get our country back on track and help America ascend again. The path we are on leads to crushing debt, high unemployment and a dangerous dependency on the federal government. George Allen is a proven, conservative leader who will fight for our values and we need him back in the U.S. Senate.”
Delegate introduces bills to require reporting in abuse cases
State Del. Bob Marshall has introduced bills adding coaches or athletic directors of private sports teams (HB 3) and institutions of higher learning (HB 4) to the list of those who are required to report child sexual abuse, and other similar abuse, to local authorities.
“The indifference and inaction of coaches at the University of Pennsylvania in the face of observed sexual abuse of young boys over a period of year is disgusting beyond description. Most people were shocked to learn that the Pennsylvania law was unclear on the duty imposed on coaches in such situations. Pennsylvania is toughening its state laws, and Virginia needs to do the same,” Marshall said.
The scandal that has brought this issue to light, actually reported at Penn State, involved a former prominent assistant football coach whose alleged crimes appear to have been covered up or at the least swept under the rug by university officials.
“These bills are needed because victims of sexual abuse, especially young boys, tend to keep such abuse to themselves,” Marshall said.
“If coaches with whom we entrust our children refuse to do the right thing on their own by attempting to stop, or at least report, abuse when they see it, then Virginia needs to impose that duty on them. Silence and inaction in the face of such evil is morally unacceptable and ought to be legally unacceptable.” Marshall said.
Local TV show ready to hit the big time
The “Virginia Dreams” of a group of local country-music artists will soon take “Center Stage” on national TV.
“What we hope to do is showcase our local talent to the world,” said “Virginia Dreams Center Stage” host Tim Spears, who announced today that the country-music TV showcase will debut on RFD-TV in January.
RFD-TV is beamed into 42 million households across the United States via cable and satellite TV.
“For every star that comes in, at one time they were a local talent somewhere,” said Spears, who joined “Virginia Dreams Center Stage” in 2009.
The show got going a year earlier with a Christmas TV special put together by Nelson and Rose Swartz, the owners of the Harrisonburg Auto Mall. With the initial success of the Christmas special, “Virginia Dreams Center Stage” spun off on its own as a showcase for local Shenandoah Valley talent broadcast on the Harrisonburg-based ABC affiliate WHSV.
Spears in the program’s second season started mixing in big names like Linda Davis, T. Graham Brown, Janie Fricke and Helen Cornelius with the local talent.
The formula has proven successful.
“The show has just taken off,” said Spears, citing the show’s 6.7 local Nielsen rating as evidence of the foothold that “Virginia Dreams” has gained as it heads toward its fourth season on WHSV.
In a nice little personal twist for Spears and the cast, “Virginia Dreams Center Stage” will serve as a lead-in for reruns of the country-music TV classic “Hee Haw” when it debuts on RFD-TV on Sunday nights in January.
“I used to sit with my granddaddy and watch ‘Hee Haw’ on Saturdays and Sunday afternoons,” Spears said. “Sitting back as a 12-, 13-, 14-year-old kid, watching the stars, Buck Owens, Roy Clark, so forth, on ‘Hee Haw,’ and knowing I wanted a career in country music, I never expected to be tied to their show on national television.”
Virginia’s struggles continue with narrow victory over Drake
Sophomore guard Joe Harris scored a game-high 18 points and senior forward Mike Scott scored 14 points and had a game-high nine rebounds to lead Virginia to a 60-52 victory over Drake in the Cavaliers’ final game at the 2011 U. S. Virgin Islands Paradise Jam on Monday (Nov. 21).
Harris’ 18 points are a season high and Scott has led Virginia in rebounding in every game this season.
UVa finished with a 2-1 record at the Paradise Jam and is now 4-1 on the season. Drake was 1-2 in the tournament and is now 3-2 on the season.
Junior forward Ben Simons led Drake with 14 points and sophomore guard Rayvonte Rice had 12 points for the Bulldogs.
“Tough tournament, it really is,” Virginia head coach Tony Bennett said after the game. “I wish we would have had the chance to play Marquette. They’re a heck of a team.
“But our staff, we were talking about it, Alabama came here [last year] and went 0-3 in this tournament. And in these settings, especially the third game, a lot of crazy stuff happens when you watch these tournaments. Whether it’s poor shooting, turnovers, you see that stuff happen.”
The Cavaliers ended the first half on a 10-2 run over the final 9:04 to take a 26-15 halftime lead. Harris had 10 first half points for Virginia.
“We had a good first half,” Bennett said. “Even at the start of the second half, got in a little rhythm offensively and started stretching the lead out, and then all of the sudden a couple of those empty possessions we talked about came, and we really got shaky.”
UVa scored the first six points of the second half to build its lead to 32-15 with 16:20 left in the game before the Bulldogs started to mount a comeback. A 7-0 run by Drake reduced the Cavaliers’ lead to 36-27 with 12:13 left in the game and the Bulldogs eventually cut the lead to four points on three occasions. The Cavaliers answered each time on a layup by senior guard Sammy Zeglinski, a jumper by Scott and finally, with 42 seconds remaining, two free throws by freshman guard Malcolm Brogdon.
Brogdon’s two free throws were the first of eight consecutive made free throws by Virginia coming down the stretch, two each by four different UVa players as the Cavaliers held on for the victory.
Brogdon finished with eight points and five rebounds for Virginia.
“I’m glad we weathered the storm in that second half,” Bennett said. “We really did, because we got shaky with the ball. Maybe in the past we wouldn’t have been able to recover, but I thought after we finally calmed down, we had to break the press, we had to make free throws, we had to try and get stops. But to be able to overcome that adversity, I take as a positive.”
For the game the Cavaliers shot a season-high 52.6 percent (20-38) from the field, including 63.2 percent (12-19) in the second half. UVa made 87.0 percent (20-23) of its free throws in the game, but did not make a three-point field goal (0-5). It’s the first time Virginia has not made a three-point field goal in a game since Dec. 4, 2005 at Georgia Tech.
Drake shot 39.0 percent (16-41) from the field for the game, including 20 percent (2-10) from three-point range, and 78.3 percent (18-23) from the free-throw line. The Bulldogs shot 55.6 percent (10-18) from the field and 84.2 percent (16-19) from the free-throw line in the second half.
Drake out-rebounded the Cavaliers 24-23 and each team had 16 turnovers.
Virginia returns to action on Friday (Nov. 25) at John Paul Jones Arena when the Cavaliers host Green Bay. That game is scheduled to begin at 7 p.m.
Press Conference: Mike London
COACH LONDON: After what happened on ESPN GameDay, all of a sudden I got flooded with a bunch of, ‘Hey, will you wear our pin?’ requests. Being in law enforcement, when my ex-partner left the Richmond police and went to work for the DA for a while … I wore it out of respect for law enforcement and everything. Any pin or any opportunity I have to wear something that comes my way, I’ll put it on.
QUESTION: It seems like the team has knocked down every obstacle that everybody said it couldn’t do. Can you just talk about facing those obstacles and your approach, psychologically, in addressing them?
COACH LONDON: More of it is is just kind of the approach that you take with the guys that, when negative things happen – ‘Oh, here we go again.’ That’s been kind of a theme of the whole season—whether it’s on the field or whether it’s something that happened in a classroom or in the community, whatever it is. You don’t have to keep reliving that statement every time something happens.
You have an opportunity to do something about it. Change the way you behave, change the way you study, change the way you prepare—different things like that.
It’s just not accepting that as an excuse for the outcomes here the last couple of seasons. Sometimes, as a person and as a team, you just have to draw the line in the sand a little bit and say that this is what we’ve got to do to be better. Either be with us or not.
Unfortunately, the first year, there were more than a handful of young men that—whether it was academically, socially or on the field—decided that this wasn’t the type of culture that they could thrive in or be in.
We had to part ways. It’s tough. It’s tough now. It’s tough that you have to demand certain things from young men, coming from a school that has the type of academic requirements that this one has. But all you that are fathers out there, you should want your sons to behave in a certain way; and when they don’t, then they’re going to have to be disciplined. It hurts.
But hopefully what you create after a while is a culture of, ‘Listen, if I don’t go to class, I’m not going to play this quarter. If I don’t make sure I keep my assignments with my tutor, that brand new pair of Nikes, they’re not coming to me.’
It’s a long-winded answer but I’m trying to get to the answer of your question. It’s just the expectations that these guys have while they’re here, while they’re going to school here. Hopefully it’s carried over to the field, that we had to draw a line in the sand here a little bit. These young guys now are 11 games into the season or older.
The improvement that was expected defensively, I think, was made and has been made and things like that. I don’t have a magic wand. I’m not a guru on any of that stuff.
But I think that it’s been a really neat season—just to watch the growth and development and the maturation process of a lot of these guys that have come in. That’s why you coach. That’s why you coach and you try to affect young men’s lives in a lot of aspects. It’s good to see the results of positive things happening to these players in this program.
QUESTION: As a head coach maybe it’s different, but Kris Burd was in here before and a lot of these guys have said that their goal was to win six games. Now the team has won eight with a chance to go to the ACC Championship game. You talk about academics and community almost before football. When do you appreciate them achieving what they set out to do, and maybe even more?
COACH LONDON: What’s really good is when you come in on the beginning of a process or you’re the next guy in. I’ve been a son and a husband longer than I’ve been a lot of other things.
When you come in, you have a certain way. My parents have infused me with a particular way of how to treat people—with energy and just all those different things.
When you come in with your own plan and you have that sort of background and you put your plan together and you have a background…Again, one of the best things that happened to me was being a police officer because you literally see the worst of what human beings do to each other.
What you see is the broken homes, you see the battered wives, just all the different things. Then when you have a guy that comes in and he’s got an outright talent, that’s great. But then you try to go deeper and find out more about the young man. You find out some of the real issues he’s had with his life, then you have your own life experiences. Coaching lends itself to helping young men achieve goals.
I’ve been a young parent. I know what it’s like. I know what it’s like if you have a child in college, transfer, driving on the bus, taking them to the baby-sitter. Then get on another bus and go to school and be a student-athlete.
Being a police officer, you know those type of things. When you get cut from an NFL team, you know the feelings of that. When you fail at a marriage, when you know the feelings of that.
When these guys come with the issues that they bring … They’ve got talent, and they come with the issues that they bring. I’m not a football guru. I’m not, ‘Get on the board, Xs and Os,’ and things like that, but I can relate to what young men are going through and then tap into that.
This is what you need to do to turn your situation around. We can be successful if you’re part of it. It may not have anything to do with being on the field with Xs and Os. Faith, family and football—those are my priorities. If guys buy into that or want to buy into it, so be it, this is the right place for them. If not, then I can’t explain any other way other than just how I’ve grown up and how I try to bring people into the program that can really thrive.
I looked at the game at Florida State. You look at those guys…I’m looking across the field and they look like an NFL team standing there. I look at my guys – I look at their guys. But you know what? It truly doesn’t matter about what you see. It’s about how you play.
That’s all. All we’re judged on is how we play, how we produce. I’m hoping with another game left, another big game left, that the same approach of being prepared, being confident, having gone through the season with different things being accomplished, that this is another opportunity that presents itself.
We rise to the challenge. We rise to the challenge, but along the way, they will have done things in the classroom and in the community that, when they’re done playing, they can walk away from here with a positive college experience.
I know we’re here to talk about football and the Virginia Tech rivalry and things like that, but if you asked the question of what it is that I think is important, that’s the answer to it.
If you want to ask football-specific technical questions, I’ll be more than happy to answer that, too.
What you see as a coach, when you watch your guys executing a game plan, you see that confidence that’s kind of exuding from them. It’s a great thing to see when the maturity part starts to catch up with the execution part because it hasn’t always been that way.
The maturity part is when guys create errors or make errors that young players wouldn’t make, or the execution part is not where it needs to be when you’re a older player. ‘How could you line up off sides? Or how could you be involved in a penalty like that? You’ve been here a while.’ You’re always looking for that part of the players’ development. They’re not perfect games, watching the last couple of games with guys executing and coming to the sideline, it’s been, ‘Coach, I understand. I got you on this. It won’t happen again.’ Or, ‘We’re going to win this game.’
We’ve come a long way from that point. Last year, it was like, ‘Oh here we go again.’ Again, all I can point to is four games, where the last play of those four games has decided whether we won or lost. And where whether we executed or didn’t execute dictated the record as it stands right now.
To come out successful on that just lends itself to creating more energy, more positive feelings about the way you feel about yourself.
Football is a game where, ‘Okay, that game is over, next game up, what are you going to do now.’ I can’t speak to other programs, but for this program to be in a position to have improved like that and to come a long way, that’s very important to our development as we continue to try to recruit better, retain guys in school. The product out on the field plays better—just all those things. That’s part of it. I could answer just a ‘yes’ or ‘no’ type of thing, but with the answers that I give you, I try to give you a little foresight in it and then also try to give you true and honest answers at the same time.
QUESTION: The last few games have come down to the final play, and your team has prevailed. Do you sense a certain confidence and momentum with this team?
COACH LONDON: We’ve said before winning breeds success and success breeds confidence. That confidence breeds that, when you’re on the field and something good or something bad happens the way it was before, it’s, ‘Oh, here we go again.’
The way it is now—‘I got you. We’ll turn this around, we’ll get it done’—lends you to staying in games. Regardless of the stadium or the sound or if the chief is throwing down the thing on the field and all that stuff like that—regardless of all those things, there’s a part of you just that continues to block it out and say that all that matters is what happens on the field.
I think the season has been indicative of that, as we’ve gone on – the last couple of games. It started with Georgia Tech, then we went on the road and played Miami. It started to just kind of snowball a little bit. This game really kind of put it in perspective that we are in every game. We should be in every game we play. We should expect to win every game we play.
It hasn’t always been like that, but that’s the mindset now. We’re very aware of the challenge that faces us on Saturday for sure.
QUESTION: Before the game Saturday night, you talked about David versus Goliath. How important is it to get the team in the right mindset before the game?
COACH LONDON: We watch film on Sunday. On Mondays, when I leave you guys, we go back and the coordinators and I talk. We try to figure out what the theme of the game will be, should be, how the game can be played, what needs to be done and those type of things.
There will be a theme for this one also. But coming out of that game and going into Tallahassee … I think Oklahoma was the last team that won in there. They held them to 13 points.
For all the teams that have played there, the mystique and the tradition can be intimidating. As a football team, when you’re getting better, you have to go beyond those things. The guy on the horse doesn’t play. The people, the fans, they don’t play.
You’ve got to play and you have to execute. All you can rely on is what you’ve been taught, what you’ve learned, how you react to situations. The game happens. They do something well, you have to react. Bad things happen in the game. You have to react.
Good things happen in the game, and you’ve got to maintain your composure and continue to act and react. I think it’s boiled down to more about that and the improvement of this team than one person. I don’t know if we have a team of superstars. I don’t think we have a team of superstars.
We’ve got a bunch of guys that have a role. They play their role. They embrace their role. When the team wins, everyone gets credit for the win.
QUESTION: The last two weeks, Virginia Tech has been on Thursday night football. Have you watched those games with any eye towards getting a little head start on your preparation?
COACH LONDON: Well, I can say this, you appreciate the opportunity to play on national TV. We got back Sunday at like 4:00 in the morning and our band was there.
It was great. Our band was there and celebrated with our players a little bit. I went to bed around 5:30, 6:00. I don’t know what time the players went to bed, hopefully shortly after they got back.
It was a physical game. Tough, physical game. Billy Schautz—we lost our defensive end. He broke both bones in his leg and had surgery in the morning. It was a physical game.
To play on Thursday and then the next day being a Friday, you kind of gain a little bit of a preparation advantage.
But it is what it is.
QUESTION: But did you watched the Thursday night Tech game?
COACH LONDON: Yeah, I watched it, but I knew that we were going to get the TV copy with the announcers on it and everything like that.
More than that, Thursdays are still nights when we’re preparing for the teams that we’re playing and actually putting the final touches on the game plan for the upcoming game.
But, yes, we did have a chance to watch some of what they did Thursday night.
QUESTION: Do you feel any pressure going into the Tech game?
COACH LONDON: They’re a good team. There’s a reason why they’ve been the ACC champs. They have players that have phenomenal talent. They’re in a position where they can backup what they’ve talked about, what they’ve done.
We’re in a position where all we want to do is keep getting better and get to the point where we can continue to compete—recruiting, on the field, and any aspect of being in-state rivals.
Now the game is here, and it’s another opportunity to control your own destiny as far as what happens to your program. We’re excited about that challenge.
QUESTION: Do you wish you had 10 or 15 more scholarships to offer?
COACH LONDON: No. When you’re putting the team together, part of the things is the profile of the young man you want. Recruiting has accelerated so much. I know in basketball, they have rules. Football is a physical game. Particularly with guys up front, you want to see their development.
At the same time, where the rules allow you to have your evaluations and your contacts and your camps and things like that, you have to stay out in front of the curve and make sure that you do the best you can in identifying that profile student-athlete who can help you win but also who will stay in school, who you don’t have to chase around, and who will be a young man that will do well in the community, all those things.
Speaking in general terms of the young men that we are presently recruiting, they are young men we feel fulfill that profile that we’re seeing.
And we’re not done yet. There’s still some that are out there that, at this point in time, are probably waiting to see what is going to happen with this program.
Hopefully through the national TV exposure, the message that we keep trying to extol on everyone about the best of both world opportunities, some of the best players in the country will take a look at this school.
We always want the best in-state players. That’s the main focus. But when you can also finish up your class with some of the best players in and around the country that are interested because they see you having success, then that makes it even much more important.
QUESTION: How gratifying is it to see the defense’s improvement this season after a rocky start under Coach Reid last year?
COACH LONDON: There never was a point where there were any issues with Coach Reid. The coaches that are on staff, I have a tremendous amount of respect for their football knowledge and their passion and energy for the game.
You guys have spoken to him on many occasions. He has an energy and passion and understanding of football that’s one of the best that I’ve been around. Being a defensive guy, too, I know there’s going to be issues with the transition from a 3-4 to a 4-3.
I have the utmost confidence in all my guys, in all my coaches. It’s important to me to have staff consistency. It’s important for me that we’re all on the same page with what goes on, on the field and off the field.
These coaches are involved with the guys’ academic lives and social lives as much as I am. With all the heat that was going on last year, in these staff meeting rooms, we circled the wagons. I said, ‘Listen, these are the guys I hired. I believe in these guys. I believe in you guys.’
‘I believe in you guys. You stick with the plan. The players see it. When the players see it, that’s another element that’s added onto the confidence part of it. We’re doing the same things we were doing last year conceptually, but the players have been developed and coached well into the positions and the techniques that they need play.
In this sport, you’re always looking to say, ‘It’s that person’s fault, it’s that person’s fault.’
Ultimately, I have to answer to all the questions about how the guys perform. But coming from where we were and knowing where we’re going, I felt very comfortable about what we’re doing. It’s the same thing with some of these guys. Coming from where they were and watching their development as to where they are and where they’re going, I feel very comfortable about that also.
Now the key is to continue that and to continue to get better—recruit high-profile student-athletes that can come in here and help us win. That’s what’s going on now.
QUESTION: Can you talk about Chase Minnifield’s play, running down the Florida State player at the 1-yard line and saving four points? What does it symbolize when you see something like that?
COACH LONDON: I went back, looked at all the plays were made, and that was probably the single most important play thus far to date because of what it exemplified. Chase came from the other side of the field. I guess you could characterize it as he ran him down, made a great play getting him down. After that, the next play was a run, and then an incomplete pass.
Then we got a sack, and they kicked a field goal. I think that’s indicative of our season: somewhere along the line, in all of these games that we have played, someone has done something that you look back at and you’re like, ‘Man, that was a huge play.’
That never-quit-type attitude—that’s what is expected. When the best players on your team do those types of things and those young players and the players that are second teamers or guys who don’t play much see that…when the bar is set like that—like the Perry Joneses, the catches that they make and the runs—you drag other people along or you bring them in with the expectations of how you can be a really good team. That play right there was probably one of the most important plays of our season because of it lent this game against Virginia Tech to being the next most important game of our season.
QUESTION: How much more motivation, excitement, and urgency is there surrounding this rivalry game, knowing it is one of the biggest games for this program in a very long time?
COACH LONDON: It’s great to know that in November we’re still talking about Virginia football being relevant. It’s great to know that that there’s a lot at stake here.
It’s an opportunity to play in the last game of the year that decides whether you have a chance to play for goals that you’ve set coming into this season. They’ve been on this side of the ledger for a long time. This is new, unchartered territory for us.
There doesn’t have to be any fake hype or fake talk, anything like that. We don’t need any Twitter account stuff, Facebook stuff, going back and forth. We’re in-state rivals, and it would be characterized to say that’s how they feel about us and we feel about them.
I have a tremendous amount of respect for all those coaches because I know them. When I was an assistant coach at Richmond, I interviewed for the position that Jim Cavanaugh got.
You know and you respect the men that you’re going against, but you also understand that you’re the in-state rival. You want to beat the in-state rival in everything that you do.
Right now, they’ve had a number of years of success in that regard. We stand here and get ready to play and want to be able to challenge them in recruiting. We want to be able to challenge them on the football field. And that’s what you do. I can’t put it any other way.
I know somebody would like me to trash talk, but that’s not me. I don’t go in that direction. It is what it is—the implications of this game and the opportunities that are presented to it.
QUESTION: You were on the staff the last time UVa beat Virginia Tech, in 2003. What do you remember from the locker room celebration?
COACH LONDON: When you’re playing your in-state rival, you have guys on your team that literally grew up with or were teammates with, played against, know somebody from the family, of someone on the other team, particularly any of our in-state guys.
You can remember, when you win a game like that, then the implications of winning the game, particularly for this one, what it will mean for the program, all the way up until this point. It’s one of those games. I’ve heard that ticket sales are brisk, if there are going to be any left.
QUESTION: It’s sold out.
COACH LONDON: That’s the way it should be. Again, you’re playing your rival. There’s a lot at stake. The excitement that it creates within the state and within college football itself…Coach Beamer, a couple of games ago or last game, was recognized as one of the winningest coaches in college football.
All the things he’s done for his program and the things that we are moving towards accomplishing with our program in years to come—we’re hoping there’s going to be a battle for everything, for the recruits and for everything that’s on the field.
Like I said, it’s great for the state of Virginia to have this. It’s great for the state of Virginia that the recruits, the best players decided to stay in-state. That’s what it’s all about also, the best players in our state playing in-state and playing for us. Not only for them, but for Richmond and ODU and William and Mary and James Madison and the Division IIs, Division III schools. It’s great when the byproduct of what’s going on can focus on the state of Virginia and the state of Virginia football players. There’s a lot of young men that don’t have an opportunity to get scholarships. If a young man sends his questionnaire to somewhere out in wherever, saying that he’s from Virginia, we need to make sure that we recruit that young man. To me, everybody wins from that standpoint. The ACC wins on this regard, too.
So let’s play. We’re ready to go. Not right now. I don’t want to play right now. Let’s play on Saturday.
QUESTION: After watching the film from the FSU game, what are your thoughts on the penalties that were called and the incomplete pass call?
COACH LONDON: When it comes to disputing calls and things like that, we turn in those calls that we had questions with and then we get a response back later on about agree, disagree, not enough, indisputable evidence—whatever it might be.
After looking at the game and the face mask issue—was it a face mask issue or wasn’t it—I don’t know. To end on that fourth down play would have been a tough deal. The catch/non-catch issue, I’m anxious to see the interpretation of that because the referee that was there said the ball’s caught, clock continues to run, time runs out. They were getting ready to run their field goal team out.
I’m anxious to see what that interpretation will be. The disconcerting signal, is another one I’m interested in hearing the interpretation of. You’ll talk to Oday Aboushi in a few minutes about how, during the course of a game, defenders may talk about snap counts and things like that. Whatever it might be, that goes on all the time, a lot.
Again, it was called and I’m looking for the explanation of that. But in the end wide left, that’s all I can say.
QUESTION: This is your fourth year as a head coach. Talk about your success thus far.
COACH LONDON: You guys know me. I am humble, and I would rather be humble voluntarily than humble involuntarily. I’m blessed with the opportunity that I have here in-state, being from Virginia, being a Virginia guy, going to college here, going to elementary school here.
What matters to me is when you get someone and you’re in charge of them. With the story about being a police officer and what happened in south Richmond a couple of years ago, the story about my daughter Ticynn and the bone marrow transplant…what I do for my players is what any man that’s a father or a coach or a teacher should do.
The opportunities that you’ve had to still be here on earth and save your daughter’s life…Any person should want to be able to give back to a young man, whether it’s Oday Aboushi or David Watford or whoever it might be. This is not about football to me. It’s a people thing. If they feel empowered enough to play hard then I’ve done my job, because people don’t care about what you know until they know about how much you care.
I believe that. Hopefully as we build this program and when guys are done playing, when the Chris Longs of the world and Brandon Alberts reach back and are ask about their relationships or jobs or opportunities outside of football, they think enough of you to do those type of things. Then maybe the message has gotten across. The first round draft picks and things like that—it’s nice and it’s flattering, but I want to be able to raise other people’s sons to be productive members of society. To have a great college experience – ask Doug Doughty. Doug’s daughters were in our football office. Hopefully the two of them had an experience of being around us where they could say, ‘you know what, I was treated with class and with dignity there.’ That’s the way it should be.
Whether it was by me or the players or anybody else. Again, it’s not a football thing. Maybe it should be. Maybe it should be just about football only. But to me, it’s not.
QUESTION: How aware are you of the fact that the team has lost seven straight games to Tech?
COACH LONDON: I’m not aware of it until you guys say something. The facts are the facts of the matter. But also, every year, we’re a different team. We’re a new team. You can stay 11 years straight or whatever, and those are the facts. But where they were, where they were playing, who was on staff—those things are the variables that change. From the historical aspect of it, I’d make it known. And it doesn’t really have anything to do with catching a ball, running a route, but it’s something that’s another piece of what it is that we have to address. Because they’ll read about it or they’ll hear about it from somebody else. So I’ve stepped to the forefront and said, ‘Listen, so there’s not a distraction, this is what it is.’
Now, let’s get to focusing on running the right route, being in the right gap and those things and then that becomes the motivating factor of executing on the field. And then, again, add to it that this is the rivalry game and it’s a chance for us, for this program to be in a position that we haven’t been in since, what, the mid-90s, 1995.
Inside the Radio Hour
Augusta Free Press LLC was at the November installment of the Wayne Theatre Alliance’s River City Radio Hour at the Gateway Theatre in Downtown Waynesboro.
If you missed this month’s Radio Hour, you missed Richard Adams and The Boogie Kings, Hank Fitzgerald, comedian Irv Beadles and the River City Players finishing out another installment in the Night Hawk mystery series.
AFP gives you a taste of the Radio Hour.
Diabetes Awareness: Your life matters
In support of National Diabetes Awareness Month, the Waynesboro Family Y – a leading nonprofit for strengthening community through healthy living – is encouraging individuals to learn how to assess their risks for developing type 2 diabetes and take steps to prevent the disease.
Nearly 26 million Americans currently have diabetes and a staggering 79 million people have prediabetes, a condition in which individuals have blood glucose levels that are higher than normal, but not high enough to be classified as diabetes. People considered high risk for developing type 2 diabetes or who suffer from prediabetes can develop a number of other chronic diseases, including heart disease and stroke.
Who should be tested for pre-diabetes and diabetes?
The American Diabetes Association recommends that testing to detect pre-diabetes and type 2 diabetes be considered in adults without symptoms who are overweight or obese and have one or more additional risk factors for diabetes. In those without these risk factors, testing should begin at age 45.
Risk factors for pre-diabetes and diabetes-in addition to being overweight or obese or being age 45 or older-include the following:
•being physically inactive
•having a parent, brother, or sister with diabetes
•having a family background that is African American, Alaska Native, American Indian, Asian American, Hispanic/Latino, or Pacific Islander
•giving birth to a baby weighing more than 9 pounds or being diagnosed with gestational diabetes-diabetes first found during pregnancy}
•having high blood pressure-140/90 mmHg or above-or being treated for high blood pressure
•having HDL, or “good,” cholesterol below 35 mg/dL, or a triglyceride level above 250 mg/dL
•having polycystic ovary syndrome, also called PCOS
•having impaired fasting glucose (IFG) or impaired glucose tolerance (IGT) on previous testing
•having a history of cardiovascular disease
If results of testing are normal, testing should be repeated at least every three years. Doctors may recommend more frequent testing depending on initial results and risk status.
Act now! Consult your physician and get tested. Make changes in your diet and increase your level of physical activity. Consult one of the Waynesboro Family YMCA’s knowledgeable Fitness Staff members to set up an appointment for Personal Training. Your life matters and small changes can mean a healthier and more meaningful quality of life in your future. Start now!
More on the Waynesboro Y at www.WaynesboroYMCA.com.


















