Hammer, Meet Nail

Tech rolls to seventh straight over UVa. with 37-7 drubbing

The gap between the football programs at Virginia and Virginia Tech was made obvious again on Saturday, on and off the field. The Hokies won their seventh straight in the series and 11th in the last 12 in typical dominating fashion, 37-7.

“They are the measuring stick right now. You are humbled by the fact that that’s where you’ve gotta go. That’s what I aspire to be, our program to be. A team that win games and consistently competes for championships,” said UVa. coach Mike London, whose team finished its first season with him at the helm with a 4-8 record overall and a 1-7 mark in Atlantic Coast Conference play.

Which is pretty much what those in the know had expected from the Cavs heading into the 2010 season, given how little London had to work with.

In the other locker room, Tech coach Frank Beamer was singing the praises of his bunch, which reached the 10-win mark for the seventh consecutive season.

“We were at a point where we were just trying to win the next game. But it makes a statement about these players and this coaching staff. We had good players. We just had two tough losses. Some teams would have taken it to the house. But this team didn’t. They supported each other. We have a tight-knit group here. So far, it’s been quite a year. The two losses make you appreciate these 10 wins even more. I’m proud of these guys,” said Beamer, whose regular-season ACC sweep had been projected by the cognoscenti, but came after a pair of losses to open the 2010 season that included an improbable 21-16 loss to James Madison at home on Sept. 11.

The talent gap on the field is a big part of the reason that Virginia Tech has dominated the series with Virginia in recent years, to the point that it can hardly be called a rivalry at this point, any more than the relationship between a hammer and a nail can be referred to as a rivalry.

Just as important: how the teams respond to adversity.

“With our offense, when its third down, there is no doubt that we should get the first down. Our players are big enough, tough enough and physical enough. It’s disappointing that we didn’t do it,” Virginia offensive coordinator Bill Lazor said of the back-to-back plays inside the Virginia Tech 15 late in the first half where UVa. failed to convert a third-and-one and fourth-and-one and turned the ball over to Tech on downs.

The Hokies, up 14-0 at the time, drove down to the Virginia 23 and scored just before halftime with a Chris Hazley 40-yard field goal that made it 17-0 at the break.

Virginia Tech (10-2, 8-0 ACC) needed just 50 yards of offense to score its two first-half touchdowns – converting a Marc Verica interception into a five-yard TD run by Ryan Williams and then driving 45 yards in three plays following a failed fake-punt to score on a Tyrod Taylor-to-David Wilson 20-yard pass.

Tech was more its usual dominant self in the second half, extending the lead to 37-0 on scoring runs by Williams, Darren Evans and Wilson before Virginia got its only score of the day with 2:59 to go in the fourth on an 11-yard TD pass from third-string quarterback Ross Metheny to senior tailback Keith Payne.

The Hokies still have plenty of business to attend to – an ACC Championship Game appearance next Saturday, then a bowl game. For Virginia, it’s already 2011.

“I’ll be working tirelessly to attract the type of young man that can help us win on the field,” London said.

The injection of a dose of we think we can, we think we can, we think we can into the chemistry in Bryant Hall couldn’t hurt things to that end.

Story by Chris Graham. Chris can be reached at freepress2@ntelos.net.

Hammer, Meet Nail

Tech rolls to seventh straight over UVa. with 37-7 drubbing

The gap between the football programs at Virginia and Virginia Tech was made obvious again on Saturday, on and off the field. The Hokies won their seventh straight in the series and 11th in the last 12 in typical dominating fashion, 37-7.

“They are the measuring stick right now. You are humbled by the fact that that’s where you’ve gotta go. That’s what I aspire to be, our program to be. A team that win games and consistently competes for championships,” said UVa. coach Mike London, whose team finished its first season with him at the helm with a 4-8 record overall and a 1-7 mark in Atlantic Coast Conference play.

Which is pretty much what those in the know had expected from the Cavs heading into the 2010 season, given how little London had to work with.

In the other locker room, Tech coach Frank Beamer was singing the praises of his bunch, which reached the 10-win mark for the seventh consecutive season. Continue reading “Hammer, Meet Nail” »

Some D, please

Reading through the postgame quotes from UVa. football coach Mike London on VirginiaSports.com, you’d think it was Marc Verica and not the porous Virginia defense that gave up 55 points to Duke on Saturday.

“It is great that he sets the school record for passing, but the scoreboard reads what it does. If I was sitting in that position, you have to play better and cannot make those mistakes,” London said after the 55-48 loss in which Verica threw for a school-record 419 yards and also had four touchdown passes, but also threw three interceptions, which Duke converted into 16 points.

Virginia was playing from behind all day, down 14-0 less than five minutes in, 21-7 at the end of one quarter, then after taking a 28-24 lead in the third quarter on a Verica-to-Kris Burd 19-yard touchdown pass had to rally from two 12-point fourth-quarter deficits, finally taking the lead at 48-47 on a six-yard TD run by Keith Payne with 2:26 left.

Read the rest of this column at VaSportsOnline.com.

Some D, please

Reading through the postgame quotes from UVa. football coach Mike London on VirginiaSports.com, you’d think it was Marc Verica and not the porous Virginia defense that gave up 55 points to Duke on Saturday.

“It is great that he sets the school record for passing, but the scoreboard reads what it does. If I was sitting in that position, you have to play better and cannot make those mistakes,” London said after the 55-48 loss in which Verica threw for a school-record 419 yards and also had four touchdown passes, but also threw three interceptions, which Duke converted into 16 points.

Virginia was playing from behind all day, down 14-0 less than five minutes in, 21-7 at the end of one quarter, then after taking a 28-24 lead in the third quarter on a Verica-to-Kris Burd 19-yard touchdown pass had to rally from two 12-point fourth-quarter deficits, finally taking the lead at 48-47 on a six-yard TD run by Keith Payne with 2:26 left. Continue reading “Some D, please” »

QB change in the offing at UVa.?

There’s an old saying in football that if you’ve got two quarterbacks, that means you don’t really have one. Virginia coach Mike London has that, one better.

“We’ll look at it, look and see how they did, and try to find out who can move the team and who can get us in position to make those makeable third downs, those opportunities to score points – all the things that a quarterback has to do,” London said after benching starter and fifth-year senior Marc Verica in the third quarter of UVa.’s 44-10 loss to rival North Carolina following Verica’s third interception of the game.

Kevin Reddick returned the pick 22 yards for a picksix that gave UNC a 37-10 lead and effectively put the kibosh on whatever hopes the ‘Hoos had for a big second-half comeback.

Verica was booed as he trotted off the field, and then fans greeted backup Ross Metheny, a redshirt freshman, with wild applause when he took the field for the next Virginia offensive series. After the game, Verica seemed resigned to the fate of being relegated to the bench, and took a shot at Virginia fans on his way there.

Read the rest of this story at VaSportsOnline.com.

QB change in the offing at UVa.?

There’s an old saying in football that if you’ve got two quarterbacks, that means you don’t really have one. Virginia coach Mike London has that, one better.

“We’ll look at it, look and see how they did, and try to find out who can move the team and who can get us in position to make those makeable third downs, those opportunities to score points – all the things that a quarterback has to do,” London said after benching starter and fifth-year senior Marc Verica in the third quarter of UVa.’s 44-10 loss to rival North Carolina following Verica’s third interception of the game.

Kevin Reddick returned the pick 22 yards for a picksix that gave UNC a 37-10 lead and effectively put the kibosh on whatever hopes the ‘Hoos had for a big second-half comeback. Continue reading “QB change in the offing at UVa.?” »

In the game plan, a concession

That was my first thought after watching Virginia struggle to try to move the ball in the first half in its 33-21 loss at Georgia Tech on Saturday.

My second thought: Is it accurate to even use the term try to describe the game plan on offense after what we saw in the first half?

Yeah, sure – Marc Verica ended up throwing for 239 yards, but a lot of that came in the fourth quarter when the game was out of reach. Verica threw for just 22 yards in the first half on 6-of-11 passing.

That’s right. Virginia threw the ball 11 times in the first two quarters and gained 22 yards for its trouble.

Two yards per attempt.

Read the rest of this column on VaSportsOnline.com.

In the game plan, a concession

That was my first thought after watching Virginia struggle to try to move the ball in the first half in its 33-21 loss at Georgia Tech on Saturday.

My second thought: Is it accurate to even use the term try to describe the game plan on offense after what we saw in the first half?

Yeah, sure – Marc Verica ended up throwing for 239 yards, but a lot of that came in the fourth quarter when the game was out of reach. Verica threw for just 22 yards in the first half on 6-of-11 passing.

That’s right. Virginia threw the ball 11 times in the first two quarters and gained 22 yards for its trouble.

Two yards per attempt. Continue reading “In the game plan, a concession” »

Virginia blasts VMI, 48-7

Ho-hum. Virginia jumped out to a 31-7 halftime lead and didn’t let up in rolling past visiting VMI 48-7 Saturday in Charlottesville.

Marc Verica threw for 224 yards and three touchdowns, and coach Mike London got some live game action for his two freshman backups, Ross Metheny and Michael Rocco, each of whom took their first snaps as collegians and posted their first career TD passes.

“We talked a lot about not having a (second) quarterback with any game experience, and there wasn’t a clear-cut guy over the next guy. The next best thing was to put them in a venue, in a game, and see how they manage the game outside of practice,” London said after the game, which wasn’t much in question after UVa. (2-1) scored three touchdowns in an eight-minute span overlapping the end of the first quarter and the first six minutes of the second quarter.

Read the rest of this story at VaSportsOnline.com.

Virginia blasts VMI, 48-7

Ho-hum. Virginia jumped out to a 31-7 halftime lead and didn’t let up in rolling past visiting VMI 48-7 Saturday in Charlottesville.

Marc Verica threw for 224 yards and three touchdowns, and coach Mike London got some live game action for his two freshman backups, Ross Metheny and Michael Rocco, each of whom took their first snaps as collegians and posted their first career TD passes.

“We talked a lot about not having a (second) quarterback with any game experience, and there wasn’t a clear-cut guy over the next guy. The next best thing was to put them in a venue, in a game, and see how they manage the game outside of practice,” London said after the game, which wasn’t much in question after UVa. (2-1) scored three touchdowns in an eight-minute span overlapping the end of the first quarter and the first six minutes of the second quarter. Continue reading “Virginia blasts VMI, 48-7” »

Second half powers Cavs over Spiders

Virginia posted 488 yards of total offense and wore down a game Richmond squad in the second half en route to a 34-13 season-opening victory on Saturday.

The win came in the first game under new head coach Mike London, a former UVa. defensive coordinator who left Richmond for Charlottesville to replace the departed Al Groh.

A 26-21 loss to I-AA William and Mary to start the 2009 season was the beginning of Groh’s undoing. The impressive win over the I-AA national-title contender UR in 2010 gets the London regime off to a positive start.

Virginia posted 488 yards of total offense and wore down a game Richmond squad in the second half en route to a 34-13 season-opening victory on Saturday.

The win came in the first game under new head coach Mike London, a former UVa. defensive coordinator who left Richmond for Charlottesville to replace the departed Al Groh.

A 26-21 loss to I-AA William and Mary to start the 2009 season was the beginning of Groh’s undoing. The impressive win over the I-AA national-title contender UR in 2010 gets the London regime off to a positive start.

Link to story package on VaSportsOnline.com.

Second half powers Cavs over Spiders

Virginia posted 488 yards of total offense and wore down a game Richmond squad in the second half en route to a 34-13 season-opening victory on Saturday.

The win came in the first game under new head coach Mike London, a former UVa. defensive coordinator who left Richmond for Charlottesville to replace the departed Al Groh.

A 26-21 26-14 loss to I-AA William and Mary to start the 2009 season was the beginning of Groh’s undoing. The impressive win over the I-AA national-title contender UR in 2010 gets the London regime off to a positive start. Continue reading “Second half powers Cavs over Spiders” »