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. Read more

The AFP on WREL: Tuesday, Nov. 23, 2010

Chris Graham joins WREL’s “Online with Jim Bresnahan” to talk sports.

The focus is on the annual rivalry game between Virginia Tech and Virginia. The Hokies are once again prohibitive favorites. Is there any hope for ‘Hoos fans out there for an upset? Chris doesn’t think so.

A wrap of the I-AA seasons for Liberty and JMU, a scan around the local teams still in the high-school football playoffs and a quick discussion of the recent struggles being endured by the UVa. basketball team take us to the finish line.

Press Conference: Mike London

Virginia football coach Mike London talks with the news media on Monday. Virginia (4-7, 1-6 ACC) travels to Virginia Tech (9-2, 7-0 ACC) on Saturday.

QUESTION:   What is the game plan as far as Tyrod Taylor? 

LONDON:  I tell you what, you’ve seen a lot of people try to game plan him certain ways, but he’s such a phenomenal athlete that you’ve got to worry about doing some other things, but also being very conscious of where he is. 

I remember when I was recruiting him, and knowing the family and what a great young man he is.  It’s just really neat to see the way he’s blossomed into being a great person and a great player.  But there’s no way you say you can defend him like this, like that, because he has all the tools, the arms, the legs to get out of it.  He’s become a really good quarterback in terms of the passing game.

He’s an athletic guy that makes things happen for him. We’ve got enough to worry about with not just him, but the running backs and wide receivers.  They have a host of players that are the reason why they’ve had success – it is not only because of Tyrod – but some of the other guys on the team as well.

Read the rest of this story at VaSportsOnline.com.

Press Conference: Mike London

Virginia football coach Mike London talks with the news media on Monday. Virginia (4-7, 1-6 ACC) travels to Virginia Tech (9-2, 7-0 ACC) on Saturday.

QUESTION:   What is the game plan as far as Tyrod Taylor? 

LONDON:  I tell you what, you’ve seen a lot of people try to game plan him certain ways, but he’s such a phenomenal athlete that you’ve got to worry about doing some other things, but also being very conscious of where he is. 

I remember when I was recruiting him, and knowing the family and what a great young man he is.  It’s just really neat to see the way he’s blossomed into being a great person and a great player.  But there’s no way you say you can defend him like this, like that, because he has all the tools, the arms, the legs to get out of it.  He’s become a really good quarterback in terms of the passing game.

He’s an athletic guy that makes things happen for him. We’ve got enough to worry about with not just him, but the running backs and wide receivers.  They have a host of players that are the reason why they’ve had success – it is not only because of Tyrod – but some of the other guys on the team as well. Read more

Can Virginia Tech get the ACC back in the national-title mix?

Two words: national championship. It’s why they play college football, ultimately.

it’s been a while since the ACC has been a relevant factor on the national-championship scene. Virginia Tech seems poised to make some noise to that end in 2010.

“That’s our goal. I think if you’re in the hunt enough times, one of these days, it’s going to work out. That’s our plan. There’s no denying that that’s our goal at Virginia Tech. That’s our plan,” said Tech coach Frank Beamer, once again the preseason favorite to win the Atlantic Coast Conference and a solid #6 in the preseason USA Today coaches poll.

Beamer’s Hokies have been in the hunt off and on for the last decade, starting with the 1999 team that went 11-0 in the regular season and took a lead into the fourth quarter of an eventual 46-29 national-title game loss to Florida State.

Link to story on TheNewDominion.com.

Taylor: Depth makes him a dual threat

Tyrod Taylor is the key to the run at a national championship that Virginia Tech fans are hoping is in the offing in 2010.

The key to Taylor’s season, and thus the Hokies’ season, could be the continued development of his backups.

“We’re much better-equipped at backup quarterback this year than we were last year at this time,” Tech coach Frank Beamer said, talking about his #2 quarterback, redshirt sophomore Ju-Ju Clayton, and his #3, redshirt freshman Logan Thomas.

“Number one, Ju-Ju has had a lot of reps. Number two, Logan has been there the whole time, at spring practice. So we’re much more ready for a second quarterback to come in there than we were last year at this time,” Beamer said.

Cracking the code, what Beamer is saying there is that offensive coordinator Bryan Stinespring can feel a little more assured unleashing Taylor’s full complement of skills. After running for 738 yards in 2008, when he split time at QB with Sean Glennon, Taylor ran for just 370 yards in 2009 as Stinespring and Beamer pushed Taylor to stay in the pocket and avoid the injury bugaboos that took him off the field for stretches in his freshman and sophomore seasons.

Link to story on TheNewDominion.com.