Elliott gets warm reception from state’s coaches

By Jerry Ratcliffe

Photo: UVA Athletics

The first time Tony Elliott went recruiting taught him a valuable lesson that he’s never forgotten.

It was his first job at South Carolina State and he was sent out on his first solo recruiting mission. He was somewhat bushwhacked and wasn’t prepared for some severe backlash from a disgruntled high school coach.

“I remember I was so excited to go recruiting and I pulled up to a school, was a young coach, so excited,” Elliott said. “Nobody had told me that the relationship had been strained, so I went in and the coach just undressed me. He let me know how upset he was with my school.”

Caught by surprise, all Elliott could do was apologize to the coach and promise him that he hoped to do things differently over time.

Fast forward to the past two months, and Elliott visiting myriad of high schools in the state of Virginia. He was aware that some schools had been disappointed that UVA and Virginia Tech hadn’t managed to keep some of the state’s best players within the Commonwealth’s borders.

A handful or less of the high school coaches had a beef with Virginia because of a couple of incidents involving former assistants from Bronco Mendenhall’s staff.

So when Elliott dropped in on those schools, he didn’t know what to expect. His mind drifted back to that first recruiting trip at South Carolina State.

“To be honest, every school we went to was excited to see us,” Elliott said this week.

Still, he wanted to increase his odds of a warm welcome. It was a brilliant move on his part.

“I brought in reinforcements,” Elliott chuckled. “I was smart. So when we went down to the beach (the talent-rich 757 region of the state), I made sure Marques and Slade walked in there first. They were the celebrities and I was just a tag along.”

Marques is Marques Hagans, Virginia’s wide receivers coach and a former quarterback/receiver for George Welsh and Al Groh. Hagans hailed from Hampton High School where he was a prep star. Slade is Chris Slade, who starred at Tabb High School and became an All-American defensive end for Welsh before going on to a long NFL career.

Hagans has been a UVA assistant for quite some time, while Slade just returned to his alma mater after a successful decade of coaching high school ball in Atlanta. Both remain legendary in the Tidewater region of the state, if not the entire state, at least among UVA legions.

“I think [accompanying Hagans and Slade] helped, especially in the Tidewater,” Elliott said. “It was much better than I anticipated because I thought there would be a little bit of tension and that I would have to mend some relationships. I was prepared to stand there and take it like I did that first one.”

Elliott and his staff are trying to reconnect and renew relationships to gain the trust of the state’s high school coaches for the future.

None of that was too relative on Wednesday, the February national signing day, when Elliott officially introduced a 10-man addition to Virginia’s 2022 recruiting class, combined with 11 previous players who signed back in December’s national signing period. (See below for a complete list of the 21-man class and new bios).

There were only two signees from the state, both having signed two months ago, something that Elliott promised will not be the case going forward. This 21-man class is from a total of 14 states and includes five players from the transfer portal.

Virginia’s recruiting class was damaged by several players who decommitted after the coaching change. Elliott was playing from behind in recruiting in hoping to just find bodies to fill as many gaps in the class as he could, particularly along the offensive line, after his entire starting line exited via the transfer portal.

“I think we all know the situation,” Elliott said Wednesday. “With the transition, we lost several guys that really hurt our numbers, so [rebuilding the depleted offensive line] was the primary focus and we also wanted to supplement the defensive line with a couple of guys.”

The majority of the new signees were offensive linemen after O-Line coach Garett Tujague went on an intense recruiting spree the past few weeks, extending his work all the way to Utah in order to land some wide bodies for his position room.

Among the new grad transfers via the portal were offensive lineman John Paul Flores from Dartmouth, Mac Hollensteiner from Georgetown, along with defensive lineman Paul Akere from Columbia. UVA previously landed Michigan State defensive end Jack Camper, who has already enrolled, and Wisconsin wide receiver Devin Chandler.

While Wednesday was signing day, coaches can still add to their roster from high schools or the transfer portal going forward.

“I’m just really excited about how the staff went out and scrambled and worked hard,” Elliott said. “We were playing a little bit of catch-up, but we were able to fulfill some needs, particularly on the offensive line.”

Elliott said that future needs include edge rushers, possibly a running back, another tight end, at least one secondary player and “you can’t ever have enough defensive linemen.”

Virginia got a boost in that department when veteran D-lineman Aaron Faumui came back from the portal.

The fact that the new staff could land some players from the portal didn’t hurt, particularly that all of them have at least two years of eligibility remaining and college playing experience, which gives them an edge over incoming high school players.

“We prefer that, especially when they’re coming in at ground zero with a chance to help establish the foundation of the championship culture we want to establish going forward in the locker room,” Elliott said. “It wasn’t a prerequisite.

“First time recruiting in the portal was a challenge because we were on some guys that we thought we were going to have a good shot at and before we knew it, we were out of the ball game.

“Other guys popped up, so it wasn’t necessary that they had two years but it’s a great benefit to us because now, especially at the positions that they are coming in, they give us experience, the ability to bring some leadership and then on the field they have two years to produce.”

The following is a list of individuals who make up this year’s signing class, courtesy UVA Media Relations:

Name POS HT WT Hometown HS/Previous School
Paul Akere* DL 6-4 250 Carrollton, Texas Hebron (TX)/Columbia
Dawson Alters* OL 6-2 275 Miami, Fla. St. Thomas Aquinas
Tapuvae “Snoop” Amaama* OL 6-4 330 Lehi, Utah Skyridge
Will Bettridge K 5-10 156 Miami, Fla. Gulliver Prep
Mckale Boley* OL 6-6 305 Hattiesburg, Miss. Oak Grove
Stevie Bracey LB 6-0 219 Atlanta, Ga. Lovett School
Xavier Brown RB 5-11 175 Lexington, Ky. Lexington Christian
Jack Camper DE 6-5 250 Virginia Beach, Va. IMG Academy/Michigan State
Devin Chandler WR 6-0 178 Huntersville, N.C. Hough/Wisconsin
Delaney Crawford ATH 6-3 180 Corona, Calif. Corona School
Houston Curry* OL 6-7 265 Fountain Inn, S.C. Hillcrest
Noah DeMeritt* OL 6-6 345 Kingsland, Ga. Camden County
John Paul Flores* OL 6-5 300 Arlington, Texas All Saints Episcopal (TX)/Dartmouth
Karson Gay TE 6-6 226 Chattanooga, Tenn. Boyd-Buchanan School
Mac Hollensteiner* OL 6-6 310 Bethesda, Md. Landon/Georgetown
TT Jones* DL 6-5 260 Hoover, Ala. Hoover
Davis Lane Jr. QB 6-1 184 Lynchburg, Va. Liberty Christian
Trey McDonald LB 6-4 212 Chattanooga, Tenn. Baylor School
Blake Steen* OL 6-5 318 Miami, Fla. St. Thomas Aquinas
Dakota Twitty WR 6-5 213 Columbus, N.C. Thomas Jefferson Classical
Sean Wilson WR 6-5 214 Brooklyn, N.Y. Canarsie

* February signee

Below are bios for the Tuesday’s signees:

Paul Akere • DL
Hebron (TX)/Columbia
Carrollton, Texas

CAREER: Played in 22 career games with 10 starts as a defensive end … In his three-year, 22-game career, registered 6.0 sacks for 41 yards, 10.0 tackles for loss for 53 yards, 49 total tackles (31 solo) with one forced fumble.

2021: Named an FCS ADA Academic All-Star … Second team All-Ivy League honoree as a defensive lineman … Named a CoSIDA Academic All-District selection … Earned second team All-Ivy League honors by Phil Steele Magazine … Started all 10 games as a senior defensive end … Ranked No. 9 in the Ivy League in sacks (5.0-39 yards), ranked No. 10 in the Ivy League in tackles for loss (9.0-51 yards), and finished the year ranked No. 5 on the squad in tackles, impressive for a defensive lineman, with 42 (27 solo) … Had a four-game stretch with at least one sack (Sept. 25-Oct. 22) … Finished with five tackles (two solo), 1.5 tackle for loss and 0.5 sack for six yards in season finale at Cornell (Nov. 20) … Made five tackles with 1.0 tackle for loss, 0.5 sack and forced a fumble at Brown (Nov. 13) … Finisehd with six tackles (six solo) at Dartmouth (Oct. 22) … Finished with six tackles (four solo) with 2.0 tackles for loss for nine yards and 1.0 sack for five yards vs. Penn (Oct. 16) … Registered four tackles (three solo) with 1.0 sack for nine yards at Central Connecticut State (Oct. 9) … Registered one sack for seven yards and three solo tackles at Princeton (Oct. 2) … Most productive performance came vs. Georgetown when he led the Lions with eight tackles (six solo), 2.5 tackles for loss, and a sack (Sept. 25) … Made first career start with one assisted tackle in season opener vs. Marist (Sept. 18). 2020: Season canceled due to COVID pandemic. 2019: Played in all 10 games as a sophomore defensive lineman … Listed all year on the depth chart as a backup defensive end … Earned varsity letter on year … Finished the year with six tackles (three solo) with 1.0 sack for two yards and 1.0 tackle for loss for two yards … Totaled at least one tackle in four consecutive games … Finished with one tackle at Yale (Nov. 2) … Registered first career sack for two yards and one tackle vs. Penn (Oct. 19) … Made one tackle vs. Central Connecticut State (Oct. 12) … Made one tackle at Princeton (Oct. 5) … Made a career-high two tackles vs. Georgetown (Sept. 28). 2018: As a first-year, saw action in the season’s first two games on the defensive line … Made one tackle in career debut at Central Connecticut State (Sept. 15).

HIGH SCHOOL: A 2018 graduate of Hebron High School in Lewisville, Texas, where he played four years of varsity football for head coach Brian Brazil … Two-time All-District 5-6A selection … Earned unanimous first team all-district honors as a defensive lineman in 2017 and second team all-district honors as a tight end in 2016 … Earned academic all-state honorable mention honors as a senior … Two-time football team captain … Totaled 70 tackles (35 solo), averaged 7.8 tackles per game, 4.5 sacks and recovered three fumbles in nine games played during senior year … Led the Hawks to an 8-3 overall record and 6-1 district record as a senior … Led the Hawks to an 8-4 overall record, 5-2 conference slate as a junior … Named a two-star recruit by 247sports.com … Also played three seasons on the Hawks basketball team … Served as team captain in basketball as a junior and guided the Hawks to an undefeated district record and district championship 2016-17 … Named All-District 5-6A selection in basketball and Defensive Player of the Year as a junior … Also competed in track and field as a junior and senior … Threw the discus (145-4) … Involved in community service activities including the Hands of Hope community mentorship program, visiting elementary schools and feeding the homeless. 

Dawson Alters • OL
St. Thomas Aquinas
Miami, Fla.

Three-star recruit according to 247Sports, Rivals.com and ESPN … ranked the 14th best center in the country by ESPN.com … named an UnderArmour All-American and invited to play in the 2022 UnderArmour All-American Game in Orlando … played his senior season at St. Thomas Aquinas for head coach Roger Harriott … Helped STA to the 2021 7A State Championship after going 14-1 … recipient of the Henry O. Langston 7A Scholar-Athlete Award presented to the student-athlete with the highest GPA on each of the qualifying teams at the annual FHSAA State Football Championships … played junior season (2020) for TRU Prep Academy after football season at University School was canceled …  played alongside fellow UVA commit Blake Steen at STA.

Tapuvae “Snoop” Amaama • OL
Skyridge
Lehi, Utah

Three-star recruit according to 247Sports and Rivals.com … No. 12 overall recruit in Utah according to 247Sports … First-team All Region 4 by Deseret News … second-team all-state for class 6A by the Deseret News … Helped Skyridge to an 11-2 record in 2021 and to semifinal round of state 6A playoffs Played in the 2021 Polynesian Bowl in Hawaii that puts the top high school players in the country on one field together to compete in an annual All-Star game.

Mckale Boley • OL
Oak Grove
Hattiesburg, Miss.

Three-star recruit according to 247Sports, Rivals and ESPN … Ranked the 34th best player in Mississippi according to ESPN … played for Drew Causey at Oakdale High School … helped Oakdale reach the 2020 state championship after posting a 13-0 record … reached the state championship game in 2019 … all-conference selection … Invited to play in the 2021 Benard Blackwell Classic All-Star Football game … played soccer all the way up until his junior year … his father Michael Boley played football at Southern Miss where he was a three-time All-Conference USA selection and 2004 C-USA Defensive Player of the Year as a linebacker … father played nine NFL seasons for the Falcons, Giants and Bengals and won Super Bowl XLVI with the New York Giants.

Houston Curry • OL
Hillcrest
Fountain Inn, S.C.

A three-star recruit according to 247Sports, ESPN and Rivals.com … ranked the No. 25 overall recruit in South Carolina according to 247Sports … Played for Anthony Frate at Hillcrest High School … Two-sport standout at Hillcrest playing baseball and football … 2021 SFCA 5A All-State selection … SC Region 1 AAAAAA All-Region honoree as a senior in 2021… selected to play in the 2021 Touchstone Energy Cooperatives Bowl, a north/south matchup of South Carolina’s top high school football players … named the Hilcrest Offensive Line MVP his senior season … Won 2021 5A State Baseball Championship … earned 2021 All-Region honors in baseball.

Noah DeMeritt • OL
Camden County
Kingsland, Ga.

Three-star recruit according to 247Sports, Rivals and ESPN … four-year letterwinner at Camden County, playing for Bob Spire (2018-2020) and Jeff Herron (2021) …  Earned all-state and all-area team honors … Four-time Region 1 7A All-Region selection, including three first team nods.

John Paul Flores • OL
All Saints Episcopal (TX)/Dartmouth
Arlington, Texas

PREVIOUS SCHOOL: CAREER: Started all 20 games in his final two seasons (2019 & 2021) in which Dartmouth led the Ivy League in rushing and won back-to-back league championships … Dartmouth lost three games in his four years in Hanover including an 18-2 mark as a starter. 2021: Second Team All-Ivy League selection … started all 10 games at left tackle … Dartmouth ranked No. 1 in the Ivy League and No. 21 in FCS with 193.7 rushing yards per game … Dartmouth went 9-1 on the season, captured the 20th Ivy League title in program history and ranked 23rd in the final FCS Coaches Poll. 2020: Season canceled due to COVID-19 pandemic … selected for a spot on the Phil Steele Preseason All-Ivy League Third Team. 2019: Earned the starting job at left tackle and kept it the entire season … played a big part in Dartmouth winning its 19th Ivy League title and ending the season ranked in the top 25 … helped pave the way for Dartmouth to lead the Ivy League in rushing yards per game (167.0) and rank second in scoring offense (33.3 points per game) … effective pass blocker as well, contributing to the ultra-efficient passing game that ranked second nationally in passing efficiency … part of the unit that allowed fewer sacks that any other Ivy League squad … the offense was also third in the FCS in third-down conversion percentage at over 50 percent.

HIGH SCHOOL: Texas Association of Private and Parochial Schools all-state first team and academic all-state first team … three-sport athlete was also TAPPS Class 5A basketball all-state second team and academic all-state first team … threw the shot and discus at All Saints, earning all-state honors as a junior.

PERSONAL: Son of Eleazar and Clara Flores … one of four football-playing brothers, plus has a sister … born on Feb. 10, 1999 … oldest brother Jacob was an All-Ivy League center for Dartmouth and spent a year in the Green Bay Packers organization … brother Charlie played on the Columbia offensive line … youngest brother Michael will be a senior offensive lineman at Dartmouth in 2022 … sister attends Harvard … high school of 100 students was featured in a USA Today story for having no fewer than 10 seniors heading to DI college football teams in 2018.

Mac Hollensteiner • OL
Landon/Georgetown
Bethesda, Md.

PREVIOUS SCHOOL (GEORGETOWN) – A two-year starter for the Hoyas … appeared in 19 games, primarily at right tackle, including all 10 in 2021 … 2021 Phil Steele FCS All-Patriot League Fourth Team selection … Georgetown did not compete in 2020 due to COVID19 pandemic … member of the team’s leadership council and the Student Athlete Advisory Committee … listed on the Patriot League Academic Honor Roll in 2019 and 2020 … recipient Georgetown’s 2019 Robert Dahut Memorial Award for most improved.

HIGH SCHOOL: Was a two-year starter at Landon High School, serving as a team captain his senior year … Helped lead Landon to the Interstate Athletic Conference (IAC) Championship in 2017 … Named First Team All-IAC as a senior … Was also a member of the basketball team, serving as a team captain … In the classroom, was a four-year member of the honor roll.

TT Jones • DL
Hoover
Hoover, Ala.

Three-star recruit according to 247Sports, ESPN and Rivals.com …  three-year letterwinner at Hoover High School playing for Josh Niblett … Was a second team all-state and second team all-region selection as a senior … Hoover was a combined 34-5 in his final three season including a 12-1 mark in 2021.

Blake Steen • OL
St. Thomas Aquinas
Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.

Three-star recruit according to 247Sports … went 39-10 and won three state championships at STA … played alongside fellow UVA commit Dawson Alters during his senior at STA.

Bronco’s ranch is up for sale, signaling that he’s moving on

By Jerry Ratcliffe

bronco mendenhall

Former Virginia coach Bronco Mendenhall (Photo: UVA Athletics)

Exactly two months ago, Bronco Mendenhall told us that he needed to pause and figure out the next chapter in his life. It appears that the former Virginia football coach has figured things out.

Apparently the Mendenhall’s are leaving the area.

Their “ranch” in Ivy has been put up for sale. The 28-acre property, which was often a place Bronco would bring recruits and players on his team to ride horses, has been listed for an asking price of $4.875 million.

It’s a five-bedroom, four-bathroom home with 6,800 square feet of living space.

The ranch was Bronco’s sort of “Fortress of Solitude,” where Superman would retreat to get away from the world and relieve the stress. Mendenhall would often mention how he would go home after football and ride horses or rope cattle.

Mendenhall said he needed to pause his life after shockingly stepping down following UVA’s season-ending loss to Virginia Tech. He said he needed to think about the next step, whether it would be returning to football or doing something else with his life, and be intentional about where “we re-enter and how and whatever that is.”

“I don’t know if it ever would be college football again, but this is the purpose,” Mendenhall said. “There was a sense of clarity to me that I need to step back from college football and reassess with my wife as a partner, our future and the next chapter of our lives.”

Podcast: Which assistant coach does Tony Elliott not let drive?

“The Jerry Ratcliffe Show” welcomes Chris Graham to talk UVA football recruiting and the UVA hoops team as the ‘Hoos prepare to face ACC leader Miami.

Women’s Basketball: Virginia/Syracuse Game rescheduled for Feb. 8

uva basketballThe Atlantic Coast Conference announced today that the Syracuse at Virginia women’s basketball game has been rescheduled for Tuesday, Feb. 8. The game was originally slated for Jan. 16 but postponed due to inclement weather.

Following the ACC’s modified 2021-22 COVID-19 Game Rescheduling Policy, the previously postponed game has been rescheduled and will tip at 6 p.m. on ACC Network Extra.

The full 2021-22 ACC women’s basketball schedule can be found on theACC.com.

Virginia Football adds 10 signees to 2022 recruiting class

uva footballVirginia football coach Tony Elliott announced Wednesday the addition of 10 student-athletes to National Letters of Intent or Grants in Aid for the 2022-2023 academic school year.

Including the early signing period in December, a total of 21 student-athletes make up the Cavaliers 2022 recruiting class.

February signees

Paul Akere • DL

Hebron (TX)/Columbia
Carrollton, Texas
COLLEGE CAREER: Played in 22 career games with 10 starts as a defensive end … In his three-year, 22-game career, registered 6.0 sacks for 41 yards, 10.0 tackles for loss for 53 yards, 49 total tackles (31 solo) with one forced fumble. 2021: Named an FCS ADA Academic All-Star … Second team All-Ivy League honoree as a defensive lineman … Named a CoSIDA Academic All-District selection … Earned second team All-Ivy League honors by Phil Steele Magazine … Started all 10 games as a senior defensive end … Ranked No. 9 in the Ivy League in sacks (5.0-39 yards), ranked No. 10 in the Ivy League in tackles for loss (9.0-51 yards), and finished the year ranked No. 5 on the squad in tackles, impressive for a defensive lineman, with 42 (27 solo) … A two-star prep recruit by 247sports.com.

Dawson Alters • OL

St. Thomas Aquinas
Miami, Fla.
PREP CAREER:
Three-star recruit according to 247Sports, Rivals.com and ESPN … ranked the 14th best center in the country by ESPN.com … named an UnderArmour All-American and invited to play in the 2022 UnderArmour All-American Game in Orlando … played his senior season at St. Thomas Aquinas for head coach Roger Harriott … Helped STA to the 2021 7A State Championship after going 14-1 … recipient of the Henry O. Langston 7A Scholar-Athlete Award presented to the student-athlete with the highest GPA on each of the qualifying teams at the annual FHSAA State Football Championships … played junior season (2020) for TRU Prep Academy after football season at University School was canceled …  played alongside fellow UVA commit Blake Steen at STA.

Tapuvae “Snoop” Amaama • OL

Skyridge
Lehi, Utah
PREP CAREER:
Three-star recruit according to 247Sports and Rivals.com … No. 12 overall recruit in Utah according to 247Sports … First-team All Region 4 by Deseret News … second-team all-state for class 6A by the Deseret News … Helped Skyridge to an 11-2 record in 2021 and to semifinal round of state 6A playoffs Played in the 2021 Polynesian Bowl in Hawaii that puts the top high school players in the country on one field together to compete in an annual All-Star game.

Mckale Boley • OL

Oak Grove
Hattiesburg, Miss.
PREP CAREER:
Three-star recruit according to 247Sports, Rivals and ESPN … Ranked the 34th best player in Mississippi according to ESPN … played for Drew Causey at Oakdale High School … helped Oakdale reach the 2020 state championship after posting a 13-0 record … reached the state championship game in 2019 … all-conference selection … Invited to play in the 2021 Benard Blackwell Classic All-Star Football game … played soccer all the way up until his junior year … his father Michael Boley played football at Southern Miss where he was a three-time All-Conference USA selection and 2004 C-USA Defensive Player of the Year as a linebacker … father played nine NFL seasons for the Falcons, Giants and Bengals and won Super Bowl XLVI with the New York Giants.

Houston Curry • OL

Hillcrest
Fountain Inn, S.C.
PREP CAREER:
A three-star recruit according to 247Sports, ESPN and Rivals.com … ranked the No. 25 overall recruit in South Carolina according to 247Sports … Played for Anthony Frate at Hillcrest High School … Two-sport standout at Hillcrest playing baseball and football … 2021 SFCA 5A All-State selection … SC Region 1 AAAAAA All-Region honoree as a senior in 2021… selected to play in the 2021 Touchstone Energy Cooperatives Bowl, a north/south matchup of South Carolina’s top high school football players … named the Hilcrest Offensive Line MVP his senior season … Won 2021 5A State Baseball Championship … earned 2021 All-Region honors in baseball.

Noah DeMeritt • OL

Camden County
Kingsland, Ga.
PREP CAREER:
Three-star recruit according to 247Sports, Rivals and ESPN … four-year letterwinner at Camden County, playing for Bob Spire (2018-2020) and Jeff Herron (2021) …  Earned all-state and all-area team honors … Four-time Region 1 7A All-Region selection, including three first team nods.

John Paul Flores • OL

All Saints Episcopal (TX)/Dartmouth
Arlington, Texas
COLLEGE CAREER: Started all 20 games in his final two seasons (2019 & 2021) in which Dartmouth led the Ivy League in rushing and won back-to-back league championships … Dartmouth lost three games in his four years in Hanover including an 18-2 mark as a starter. 2021: Second Team All-Ivy League selection … started all 10 games at left tackle … Dartmouth ranked No. 1 in the Ivy League and No. 21 in FCS with 193.7 rushing yards per game … Dartmouth went 9-1 on the season, captured the 20th Ivy League title in program history and ranked 23rd in the final FCS Coaches Poll.

Mac Hollensteiner • OL

Landon/Georgetown
Bethesda, Md.
COLLEGE CAREER: A two-year starter for the Hoyas … appeared in 19 games, primarily at right tackle, including all 10 in 2021 … 2021 Phil Steele FCS All-Patriot League Fourth Team selection … Georgetown did not compete in 2020 due to COVID19 pandemic … member of the team’s leadership council and the Student Athlete Advisory Committee … listed on the Patriot League Academic Honor Roll in 2019 and 2020 … recipient Georgetown’s 2019 Robert Dahut Memorial Award for most improved. 

TT Jones • DL

Hoover
Hoover, Ala.
PREP CAREER:
Three-star recruit according to 247Sports, ESPN and Rivals.com …  three-year letterwinner at Hoover High School playing for Josh Niblett … Was a second team all-state and second team all-region selection as a senior … Hoover was a combined 34-5 in his final three season including a 12-1 mark in 2021.

Blake Steen • OL

St. Thomas Aquinas
Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.
PREP CAREER:
Three-star recruit according to 247Sports … went 39-10 and won three state championships at STA … played alongside fellow UVA commit Dawson Alters during his senior year at STA.

Clark shows leadership as Virginia’s defense helps shut down BC

By Jerry Ratcliffe

tony bennett

Photo: UVA Athletics

Tony Bennett could see it in his point guard’s eyes. There was an unmistakable fire, the kind Bennett was calling upon from his team as it heads down the home stretch of the season.

Coming off a close loss at Notre Dame, the Virginia coach knew his team needed to win its home game against Boston College on Tuesday night. Projected on the outside of next month’s Big Dance, every win is precious at this time of year.

Senior point man Kihei Clark clearly got Bennett’s pre-game message.

“I said, ‘Give everything you got on defense,’” Bennett shared with media in the postgame of UVA’s 67-55 over the Eagles. He continued, “This cannot be a lukewarm defensive game. You’re going to have to give all you got.”

His team responded, once again avoiding back-to-back losses for the season. Clark and his teammates pressured BC into 10 turnovers, leading to 20 UVA points, the deciding factor in a physical game. It was exactly what everyone expected, yet another rock fight between two teams not as offensively blessed as some of their ACC neighbors.

Boston College coach Earl Grant knew that committing 14 turnovers (UVA only scored off 10 of those, so it could have been worse) in a 57-possession game spelled doom for his squad (9-12, 4-7), which has struggled to win on the road.

Meanwhile, BC couldn’t pressure the Cavaliers into similar miscues. UVA had nine turnovers, but only three in the first half.

“Yeah, there weren’t a lot of live-ball turnovers, but that’s what you’ve got to expect when you’ve got a senior point guard running the show for them [Clark],” Grant said. “I thought he did a good job keeping them poised and staying to the offensive actions.”

If there were ever a time that Virginia needed leadership from its most experienced player, it’s now, and Clark didn’t disappoint. He has a calming effect on his teammates, and while he might not be the most vocal leader, he certainly made up for it with his action.

Clark led four Cavaliers in double-figures scoring with a season-high 19, including a career-high 10 for 10 free throws to go along with one of only three Virginia 3-pointers on the night (UVA’s seven 3-point attempts were the team’s lowest in six years).

“I thought Kihei came in with great energy, great ball pressure at the pickup point,” Bennett praised his point guard. “Sometimes you just look in a guy’s eyes, and you see their posture and you can hear it in their voice. I thought he was terrific in that way.”

In what Bennett described as a “blue-collar” game between two of the nation’s slower-paced teams (Grant actually said that Virginia tried to speed BC up at times in the game), there were plenty of bumps and bruises. Flagrant fouls were exchanged, with Francisco Caffaro slamming into the floor after getting a cut from BC big man James Karnik.

Rugged defense — Bennett has said that Virginia is at its best when it plays that way — kept the team in the game early until the offense finally came alive. The Cavaliers went on a 16-5 run late in the second half for a 26-19 lead, sparked by Clark’s triple, back-to-back inside buckets by Kadin Shedrick and two jumpers by Armaan Franklin.

From there, UVA never looked back, with four Cavaliers scoring in double digits, the third straight game that has happened.

Clark thought that both Shedrick and Franklin bounced back from mediocre performances that drew some Bennett ire (he addressed that to both of them before Tuesday’s game). Neither had lived up to Bennett’s expectations in South Bend, but responded well against BC.

“They’re players, they know what it is,” Clark said. “You just have to bounce back. I mean you can’t dwell too much on the past. We are in the ACC and at this rate, anybody can beat anybody. We just forget about the past and try to bounce back strong. That’s what good ball players do.”

Cavaliers get back in win column with 67-55 triumph over Eagles

By Scott Ratcliffe

uva-basketball

Photo: UVA Athletics

Virginia had four players in double figures in a 67-55 win over visiting Boston College on Tuesday night. It was the 11th victory in the last 13 meetings for the Cavaliers (13-9, 7-5 ACC) over the Eagles, and the seventh in a row over BC at John Paul Jones Arena.

Senior forward Jayden Gardner, who posted 17 points and 5 rebounds, sealed the contest with a three-point play with 57 seconds left, while Kihei Clark scored 14 of his game-high 19 points in the second half. Those two combined to go a perfect 17 for 17 from the free-throw line, as Virginia knocked down 26 of 29 from the stripe.

Kadin Shedrick set a career high with 13 points to go with his team-high 8 rebounds, while Armaan Franklin added 12 points, including a pair of 3-pointers.

After building a five-point advantage by halftime, the Wahoos scored the first six points of the second half, giving them their first double-digit lead of the evening, 36-25, as the Eagles (9-12, 4-7) missed their first eight shots of the half.

The Hoos extended the lead to as many as 15 points, but Quinten Post’s basket midway through the second half trimmed it to nine, 46-37.

A pair of Clark free throws pushed the UVA lead back to 15, 55-40, with five minutes and change. Down by nine with 1:55 to play, the Eagles looked to have a three-point opportunity to potentially make it a two-possession game, as the Cavaliers went over two minutes without scoring, but Jaeden Zackery was whistled for a flagrant foul and the Hoos began to drain the clock en route to the win.

Virginia shot 44 percent (19 for 43) overall and 43 percent from downtown (3 for 7), forcing 14 BC turnovers and winning the battle of the boards, 27-26. Reece Beekman didn’t score (0 for 3 FG), but registered a game-high 7 assists to go along with two steals. Virginia is now a perfect 9-0 on the season in games following a loss.

The Eagles were led by James Karnik’s 16 points before he fouled out in the final minute of play. Demarr Langford added 11 points, as BC shot 40 percent (19 for 47) and 24 percent from the 3-point line (5 for 21).

FIRST HALF

It took a while for UVA to get things going offensively, going 4:10 without a point, and making just one field-goal attempt in the first eight-plus minutes of the contest (1 for 8).

Gardner was able to draw fouls and get to the free-throw line, picking up six of Virginia’s first eight points from the stripe to keep the Hoos from falling behind early.

Gardner finally got a field goal to drop, ending a Cavalier drought of over six minutes to cut the BC lead to 11-10. Franklin followed with Virginia’s first 3-pointer of the night, and then Stattmann gave his team the lead for the first time, 15-14, with a pair of free throws with 9:37 on the clock.

The Hoos turned up the intensity in the later stages of the half, forcing their second shot-clock violation of the game as part of a 7-0 run to take a 26-19 lead with just over three minutes left.

The Eagles responded with a late 6-2 spurt to get within three with time winding down, but Clark sank a baseline jumper to beat the buzzer, giving the Cavaliers a 30-25 edge at halftime.

UVA finished the half shooting 43 percent (10 for 23), registering 15 points off of BC’s eight first-half giveaways.

Box Score

Team Notes

Courtesy UVA Media Relations

  • Virginia improved to 13-9, 7-5 ACC
  • UVA is 8-4 at John Paul Jones Arena
  • UVA forced two shot clock violations (25 in 2021-22)
  • UVA trailed 10-4, but used a 13-3 first-half run to gain a 17-14 lead
  • UVA used a 7-0 run to gain a 26-19 lead
  • UVA led 30-25 at halftime
  • UVA went on a 13-2 run to start the second stanza
  • UVA converted its first 14 free throws and finished 26 of 29
  • UVA’s seven 3-point attempts were its fewest since attempting seven vs. Clemson on Jan. 19, 2016

Series Notes

  • Virginia is 18-8 all-time vs. Boston College, including a 13-8 ACC mark, in the series that dates back to 1971-72
  • UVA has won three straight games vs. BC and 11 of the last 13 games
  • UVA is 10-2, including a seven-game winning streak, against Boston College in Charlottesville
  • UVA has limited BC to 58 or fewer points in seven of the last nine meetings
  • Head coach Tony Bennett is 12-5 all-time against Boston College

Player Notes

  • Double Figure Scorers: Kihei Clark (19), Jayden Gardner (17), Kadin Shedrick (13), Armaan Franklin (12)
  • Shedrick had a career-high 13 points
  • Clark had a season-high 19 points
  • Clark’s 10 free throws (10 attempts) marked a career high
  • Gardner reached double figures for the 17th time (91st career)
  • Shedrick reached double figures for the sixth time (8th career)
  • Clark reached double figures for the 11th time (45th career)
  • Franklin reached double figures for the 15th time (29th career)
  • Beekman (2 steals) extended his steal streak to 12 games
  • Kody Stattmann matched a career high with three steals and added two blocks

UP NEXT

The Hoos’ next two games are against the two teams currently tied for first place in the conference standings, hosting Miami Saturday at 5 p.m. (ACC Network) before traveling to Duke Monday night at 7 (ESPN).

Women’s Tennis: Navarro, Chervinsky earn ACC weekly honors

Courtesy UVA Media Relations

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Virginia women’s tennis sophomore Emma Navarro (Charleston, S.C.) has been named the ACC Co-Player of the Week while Elaine Chervinsky (Baltimore, Md.) was named the ACC Freshman of the Week.

Navarro defeated No. 9 Connie Ma of Stanford at the No. 1 singles position (6-2, 6-7, 6-4) to help lead Virginia to a 4-3 victory over the Cardinal. Navarro broke Ma’s serve at 4-4 in the third set, going on to serve out a 6-4 victory in the clinching match.

NC State’s Jaeda Daniela was named the co-Player of the Week with Navarro.

Chervinsky went 2-0 in doubles (with Natasha Subhash) and 2-0 in singles during ITA Kick-Off Weekend to help lead UVA to wins over James Madison (4-0) and Stanford (4-3) to advance to the ITA National Team Indoor Championships. Chervinsky had a dominant win in the opener against JMU and then battled through a three-setter with Stanford’s Alexandra Yepifanova, picking up a late break to win the final set 7-5.

Navarro was named the ACC Player of the Week three times last season. This is Chervinsky’s first conference honor.

Men’s Tennis: Ryan Goetz named ACC Player of the Week

Courtesy UVA Media Relations

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Virginia men’s tennis senior Ryan Goetz (Greenlawn, N.Y.) has been named the ACC Men’s Tennis Player of the Week.

Goetz won the clinching match in the Cavaliers’ victory over Georgia Tech in the ITA Kick-Off Weekend, earning UVA a spot in next month’s ITA National Team Indoor Championship. Goetz posted two dominant singles victories and also won both doubles matches while partnering with Iñaki Montes, helping UVA win the doubles point in each.

This is the first time Goetz has been named the ACC Player of the Week. He was named the ACC Doubles Team of the Week last season alongside Chris Rodesch after the tandem clinched both doubles points at 2021 ITA Kickoff Weekend matches.

This is the second-straight week that a Cavalier has been named the ACC Player of the Week after Montes earned the accolade last week.

Brian Courtney named ACC Wrestler of the Week

Courtesy UVA Media Relations

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Brian Courtney, a graduate student who competes at 133 pounds on the Virginia wrestling team, has been named the ACC Wrestler of the Week.

Courtney won a pair of matches on the week, opening up the Cavaliers’ dual against No. 24 North Carolina with a 5-3 decision in overtime against No. 10 Jaime Hernandez. The win over Hernandez was the first over a top-10 opponent for Courtney and helped Virginia in the dual with the Tar Heels that was tied 16-16 after all weight classes were completed and awarded to North Carolina on criteria. It was also the first loss on the season for Hernandez.

Courtney won his second match of the day in an extra countable match after the dual, rallying to defeat Joe Heilmann 6-4 in sudden victory for his second overtime win of the night. Heilmann was an ACC Wrestler of the Week selection himself earlier this season and last year.

Elliott has covered the bases in whirlwind of transition

By Jerry Ratcliffe

tony elliott

Virginia football coach Tony Elliott. (Photo by Crystal Graham)

Tony Elliott’s head usually doesn’t hit the pillow until after midnight now that he has transitioned from assistant coach to head coach.

The first 51 days of his evolution have been a whirlwind for Virginia’s new boss man.

“The transition has created bags under my eyes, oh my gosh,” Elliott said in his first meeting with media since his introduction as head coach. “I had long days as an assistant, but as head coach it’s long days, and actually a lot more intense.”

Coming from Clemson, where he spent 11 years, moving up to co-offensive coordinator, there were lots of tasks he had to confront when taking over Bronco Mendenhall’s program.

Elliott had to hire a staff, deal with the comings and goings of the transfer portal, visit high school coaches around the state, try to finish up recruiting for the Class of 2022 (national signing day is Wednesday), and so much more.

Whirlwind would be a gross understatement.

“Every minute of the day you’re being pulled in a thousand directions and so it’s really about the ability to capture your thoughts and maintain your thought while entertaining another thought and another conversation,” said Elliott, who didn’t have to deal with that much back at Clemson, where such problems fell into the lap of head coach Dabo Swinney.

“That’s been the biggest adjustment or me, is to say, OK, I’m thinking about this, but I’ve got to be able to hold onto this thought and talk to this person here, and by the end of the day you’ve had numerous situations like that and you’re into the bed at night still thinking about everything that’s going on. It’s a good problem. It’s a lot until I’m able to process it all, figure it out and delegate.”

Elliott decided to retain three members of Mendenhall’s staff, two of them — Marques Hagans and Clint Sintim — former standout UVA football players, and offensive line coach Garett Tujague, who came to UVA from BYU with the former head coach.

Elliott blended those three with a selection of coaches from around the country, several of them from the service academies, to round out his staff.

Most assumed he reached out to the coaches from Army, Navy and Air Force to instill discipline to his program, but that wasn’t at all what Elliott was thinking. More on that in a moment.

Elliott decided to keep all the staff in operations that Mendenhall had put into place, and because that process was rolling, the new head coach wanted to let that be.

“I didn’t want to blow that up,” Elliott said. “I wanted to keep some continuity for the players.”

But he was on his own with all the rest.

“Then there was recruiting, then you’ve got donors, then you’ve got hiring coaches, then you’ve got your wife calling, and all kinds of stuff going on,” he said.

If he gets stuck and needs advice, there are three football gurus in his life that Elliott calls on. One of them is Swinney, who coached him as a receiver for the Tigers, and hired him as a coach. The others are Woody McCorvey, who has been associated with college football for 43 years, and Sly Jones, the first guy to take a chance on him as an assistant coach at South Carolina State.

“[Jones] is a guy I’ve been leaning on through the last few years from the head-coaching standpoint,” Elliott said. “Those are the three guys that I will lean on to help me navigate going forward.”

McCorvey is now chief of football administrators at Clemson, having worked there the first time on Danny Ford’s staff in the 1980s. McCorvey was also Swinney’s position coach at Alabama, and came back to Clemson in 2009, Swinney’s first full year in Death Valley.

Elliott wasn’t thinking military discipline at all when he reached out to hiring several coaches from the academies. Instead, when he thought about the type of prospects that fit the Virginia profile, he realized he needed assistants who knew how to identify and recruit players of character, players who could fit academically, and coaches who could “do more with less.”

Elliott had long-standing relationships with most of the staff he brought on board, so knew they could handle the challenge.

“It was a match made in heaven that they’re coming from Air Force, Army, Navy,” Elliott said. “Their backgrounds were what I was looking for. They understand the importance of that.”

Curome Cox, who was brought along by new defensive coordinator John Rudzinski from Air Force, fit that profile.

“John said if there was one guy he could bring along with him, that was his guy,” Elliott said. “I felt like I owed that to John to at least consider [Cox]. When he came for an interview, it was confirmed that I was convinced it was the right thing to hire him.”

Rudzinski was not hired because he had coached all the nuances of the 3-4 defense.

“For me, it was more finding a guy who understood how to coach a certain type of individual, who could recruit a certain kind of individual, considering the academic requirements that are part of our program,” Elliott said. “Not so much tied to the 3-4 scheme because I believe in being multiple.

“When you break it down, [Rudzinski] was probably 50-percent four down. Nowadays, you have to be multiple. You cannot sit still and just line up. I know as an offensive guy that if you just lined up in one particular front all day long, it made it easier for me to be able to put together a plan.”

Instead, Elliott wanted a guy who was passionate about young people, first and foremost, with a high football IQ, who understood defense.

The “does more with less” comment required some elaboration and Elliott was happy to explain that thought.

“If we can keep that mindset as we increase the level of talent and keep that foundation of doing more with less, we’ll be able to maximize the ability of the guys we recruit in the future,” Elliott said.

He understood from his days at Furman, also an academic-oriented program, that recruiters had to find players that fit that mold. Coaches from service academies also understood that philosophy.

Virginia’s new offensive coordinator, Des Kitchings, had crossed paths with Elliott over the years. They were both on the Furman staff for about a week, but Elliott was plucked by Clemson and Kitchings by Air Force.

“For years, we’ve been trying to link back up,” Elliott said of Kitchings, who came to Virginia from the Atlanta Falcons, where he was running backs coach. “I’m honored he would leave the NFL to be part of what we’re trying to build here.”

Keith Gaither, running backs and special teams coach, and Kevin Dowling, defensive tackles coach, started in the HBC ranks as Elliott did. Both Gaither and Dowling started their careers at Winston-Salem State while Elliott was at South Carolina State.

“They went on their way and they didn’t realize that I was interviewing them over my career, so I was excited for those guys,” Elliott said.

It took time to hire a staff, but Elliott, who is know to be very deliberate about almost everything he does, put it simply:

“I wanted to make sure we had the right people on the bus, and in the right seats on that bus.”

From the outside, it appears the bus roster is in proper order.

(NEXT: What’s Tony Elliott’s offense going to look like?)

Men’s Lacrosse: Virginia voted No. 1 in ACC preseason poll

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Virginia was voted No. 1 in the 2022 ACC men’s lacrosse preseason poll, while Connor Shellenberger, Cade Saustad and Petey LaSalla were named Preseason All-ACC selections.

Coming off back-to-back national championships in 2019 and 2021, the Cavaliers were also voted No. 1 in the nation according to the USILA, Inside Lacrosse and USA Lacrosse Magazine top-20 polls.

Shellenberger (First Team), LaSalla (Second Team) and Saustad (Honorable Mention) were also named Preseason All-Americans according to Inside Lacrosse. In 2021, Shellenberger and LaSalla garnered postseason all-conference honors.

Virginia opens its 2022 regular season on Saturday (Feb. 5) when it hosts Air Force at Klöckner Stadium at 1 p.m.

2022 ACC Preseason Coaches Poll 

  1. Virginia, 23
  2. Duke, 17
  3. Notre Dame, 16
  4. North Carolina, 12
  5. Syracuse, 7

2022 Preseason All-ACC Team    

Attack 

  • Chris Gray, Gr., North Carolina
  • Pat Kavanagh, Jr., Notre Dame
  • Connor Shellenberger, R-So., Virginia

Midfield 

  • Brendan Curry, Sr., Syracuse
  • Tucker Dordevic, R-Jr., Syracuse
  • Nakeie Montgomery, Gr., Duke

Defense 

  • Kenny Brower, Jr., Duke
  • Arden Cohen, Gr., Notre Dame
  • Cade Saustad, R-Jr., Virginia

Goalie: Liam Entenmann, Jr., Notre Dame
Face-off: Petey LaSalla, Sr., Virginia
Long-stick midfielder: Tyler Carpenter, Jr., Duke
Long-stick midfielder: Brett Kennedy, R-Sr., Syracuse
Short-stick midfielder: Conner Maher, Sr., North Carolina
Short-stick midfielder: Ryan Hallenbeck, Gr., Notre Dame 

Another offensive lineman commits to Virginia, amounting to eight new ones

By Jerry Ratcliffe

uva footballVirginia quarterback Brennan Armstrong must be feeling pretty good these days about teammates having his back for the 2022 football season.

The Cavaliers have landed yet another offensive line commitment with possibly more to come.

Blake Steen, a 6-foot-5, 315-pound, 3-star lineman from St. Thomas Aquinas in Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., announced via Twitter that he has committed to Virginia over Vanderbilt, Jackson State, New Mexico State, Tennessee State and Mississippi Valley State.

He is the teammate of Dawson Alters, another offensive lineman from St. Thomas Aquinas, who previously committed to UVA’s Class of 2022.

Steen is the sixth high school offensive lineman to commit to the Cavaliers in the past two weeks, along with two transfer portal linemen.

Steen visited Charlottesville this past weekend, was offered and accepted. He made the visit along with his older brother, Tyler Steen, a three-year offensive tackle starter at Vanderbilt, who has entered the transfer portal.

Tyler Steen, who has two years of eligibility remaining, is 6-5, 315.

The two brothers’ father, Daris, played football at LSU and is a retired U.S. Marine. Their grandfather was a Medal of Honor winner from the Vietnam War.

Nick Jackson signs with Hook Sports Marketing

nick jackson

UVA linebacker Nick Jackson. Photo courtesy UVA Athletics.

Virginia football student-athlete Nick Jackson has signed a representation agreement with Hook Sports Marketing, a Charlottesville-based firm. HSM will represent Jackson in Name, Image and Likeness opportunities.

“We’re thrilled to partner with Nick,” said Hook Sports Marketing founding partner Chip Royer. “He’s a terrific ambassador for the football program. Not only is he a leader on the defensive side of the ball, but as a student in the McIntire School of Commerce, Nick is serious about his academic pursuits and preparing to make a difference in the business world.”

Jackson is a two-time all-ACC selection and led the conference in tackles in 2021. The team captain was named to the 2021 ACC Academic Honor Roll.

HSM actively seeks opportunities for the student-athletes it represents to make public appearances, conduct clinics, promote businesses through a variety of marketing channels and create licensed apparel.

Jackson joins fellow UVA student-athletes Reece Beekman (men’s basketball), Matt Brownstead (men’s swimming), Kihei Clark (men’s basketball), Chase Coleman (men’s basketball), Jeff Conner (men’s lacrosse), Mikaila Fox (softball), Armaan Franklin (men’s basketball), Jayden Gardner (men’s basketball), Ryan Goetz (men’s tennis), Cam Lexow (women’s soccer), Matt Moore (men’s lacrosse), Jayden Nixon (men’s basketball), Amber O’Dell (women’s tennis), Amanda Sambach (women’s golf), Kadin Shedrick (men’s basketball), Jack Simmons (men’s lacrosse), Alexis Theoret (women’s soccer) and William Woodall (men’s tennis), who are represented by HSM. HSM also has partnerships with the firms representing Brennan Armstrong (football), Nate Savino (baseball) and Kyle Teel (baseball).

For more information on NIL sponsorship opportunities with UVA student-athletes, business representatives may contact Todd Goodale by email at goodale@hooksportsmarketing.com or by phone at (434) 981-0004.

 

2022 Virginia Football schedule unveiled

Courtesy UVA Media Relations

uva footballThe Atlantic Coast Conference released the 2022 football schedules today (Jan. 31). Virginia will open the season on Sept. 3 against Richmond as part of a 12-game slate. Game times and games designated for Homecomings and Family Weekend will be announced at a later date.

The Cavaliers will play seven home games, hosting Richmond (Sept. 3), Old Dominion (Sept. 17), Louisville (Oct. 8), Miami (Oct. 29), North Carolina (Nov. 5), Pitt (Nov. 12) and Coastal Carolina (Nov. 19). All seven home games will be played on Saturdays.

UVA will be on the road at Illinois (Sept. 10), Syracuse (Friday – Sept. 23), Duke (Oct. 1), Georgia Tech (Thursday – Oct. 20) and Virginia Tech (Nov. 26) for the Commonwealth Clash presented by Smithfield.

Schedule Notes

  • Virginia opens the season against Richmond for the eighth time and the first time since 2018. UVA is 6-1 all-time when opening a campaign against the Spiders with wins coming in 1893, 1894, 1979, 2010, 2012 and 2018.
  • In non-conference action, Virginia will make its first trip to Illinois. The Cavaliers topped the Fighting Illini 42-14 this past season at Scott Stadium. It marks the first time Virginia has played at a Big Ten opponent since facing Indiana in Bloomington, Ind., during the 2018 season.
  • UVA will play at Syracuse for the first time since 2005, a contest that ended with a UVA field goal as time expired in a 27-24 victory.
  • Virginia will play four-straight home games for the second since 2020 (and the third time since 2011). The schedule exactly matches the 2020 slate when the Cavaliers hosted four consecutive opponents at Scott Stadium before hitting the road to wrap up the regular season at Virginia Tech.
  • The Cavaliers will take on Coastal Carolina at home on Nov. 19, the first ever meeting between the two schools. It marks the first of three meetings scheduled (2022, 2024 and 2025).
  • Seven bowl-eligible teams from the past season are on the 2022 schedule: Old Dominion (Myrtle Beach Bowl), Louisville (First Responder Bowl), Miami (Sun Bowl-did not play), North Carolina (Duke’s Mayo Bowl), Pitt (Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl), Coastal Carolina (Tailgreeter Cure Bowl) and Virginia Tech (Pinstripe Bowl).

Season Tickets

First-time season ticket holder can now place a deposit for the 2022 season. Fans can make their $50 deposit to secure season tickets at this link. A representative of the Virginia athletics ticket office will respond with options regarding seating location and pricing.

2022 renewals and new season ticket sales will take place later in the month of February.

2022 Virginia Football Schedule

Sept. 3 Richmond
Sept. 10 at Illinois
Sept. 17 Old Dominion
Sept. 23 at Syracuse (Fri.)
Oct. 1 at Duke
Oct. 8 Louisville
Oct. 15 OPEN
Oct. 20 at Georgia Tech (Thurs.)
Oct. 29 Miami
Nov. 5 North Carolina
Nov. 12 Pitt
Nov. 19 Coastal Carolina
Nov. 26 at Virginia Tech

 

Podcast: Tony Elliott presser wrap, UVA-Boston College preview

“The Jerry Ratcliffe Show” welcomes Chris Graham as the guys discuss Tony Elliott’s Monday press conference, and then turn their attention to Tuesday’s Virginia-Boston College ACC hoops showdown.

Teel featured on D1Baseball Preseason All-America Team

Courtesy UVA Media Relations

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Kyle Teel celebrates with third base coach Kevin McMullan after his seventh-inning grand slam gave the ‘Hoos the lead for good. Photo courtesy UVA Athletics.

Sophomore Kyle Teel was listed on D1Baseball.com’s Preseason All-America team as a second team selection at designated hitter. He started a total of 53 games as a true freshman in 2021 at three different positions (DH, RF, C).

Teel became the first Cavalier ever to garner first team freshman All-America honors from D1Baseball last season after leading all UVA hitters with a .335 batting average and co-leading the team in home runs with nine. Teel was the first UVA freshman to lead the team in hitting since 2008.

As a first year Teel was also listed as a third team All-ACC selection and was an ACC All-Freshman team honoree. He was integral in UVA’s run to the program’s fifth College World Series appearance earning All-Columbia Regional Team selection. In the deciding game of the Super Regional against Dallas Baptist he hit the program’s first ever grand slam in the NCAA Tournament to put UVA ahead 5-2 in the seventh inning. He reached base safely in the final 26 games of the year and went 7-for-12 (.583) with a double and two RBI in three College World Series games.

Virginia hosts Boston College on Tuesday at JPJ

Courtesy UVA Media Relations

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Photo courtesy UVA Athletics.

Virginia (12-9, 6-5 ACC) hosts Boston College (9-11, 4-6 ACC) in ACC action on Tuesday, Feb. 1. Tipoff at John Paul Jones Arena is set for 6 p.m. on ACC Network.

For Openers

  • Virginia has a two-game winning streak vs. Boston College.
  • Virginia is seventh in the ACC at 6-5, while Boston College is tied for ninth at 4-6.
  • The Cavaliers have averaged 66.4 points per game and allowed 53.8 points per game in their 12 wins.
  • UVA has not lost back-to-back games since dropping three consecutive contests from Feb. 15-24 last season.

Broadcast Information

  • The Virginia-Boston College game will be televised on ACC Network and streamed online at WatchESPN.com and ESPN App.
  • The game will also be broadcast on Virginia Sports Radio Network, VirginiaSports.com and Virginia Sports app.
  • Live statistics will be available on VirginiaSports.com and Virginia Sports app.

The Head Coach

  • Dean and Markel Families Head Men’s Basketball Coach Tony Bennett has a 307-112 (.733) mark in 13 seasons at UVA and 376-145 (.722) career mark in 16 seasons as a head coach.
  • Bennett won his 300th game at Virginia with the 61-43 victory against Lehigh on Nov. 26, 2021.
  • The three-time National (2007, 2015 and 2018) and four-time ACC Coach of the Year (2014, 2015, 2018 and 2019) guided the Cavaliers to their 10th ACC regular-season championship in 2020-21.
  • In 2018-19, Bennett led the Cavaliers to their first NCAA national championship, a share of their ninth ACC regular-season title and a school-record 35 wins.
  • Bennett has led UVA to 10 consecutive postseason appearances (2012-21) and seven consecutive NCAA tournaments (2014-21).
  • UVA is 155-67 (.698) in ACC play (87-23 at home & 68-44 away), 174-34 (.837) at home and 152-45 (.772) in non-conference action (86-9 at JPJ) under Bennett.
  • Bennett ranks third all-time in winning percentage (.698) among ACC head coaches with 100 or more ACC wins.

Hoo Are These Cavaliers?

  • The Cavaliers play defense, take good shots, share and take care of the basketball, rebound, and play more defense.
  • UVA is led by its returning backcourt of Kihei Clark (9.2 ppg & 4.2 apg) and Reece Beekman (8.3 ppg, 4.8 apg, 3.7 rpg & 2.2 spg), and the additions of transfers Jayden Gardner (14.3 ppg & 6.9 rpg) and Armaan Franklin (11.8 ppg).
  • The Cavaliers added transfers Gardner (East Carolina) and Franklin (Indiana) to fill the void left by standouts Sam Hauser (16 ppg), Jay Huff (13 ppg) and Trey Murphy III (11.3 ppg).
  • Gardner averaged 18.5 points and 8.9 rebounds in 79 career games at East Carolina, while Franklin averaged 11.4 points and shot 42.5 percent from 3-point range in 2020-21.
  • Francisco Caffaro (4.5 ppg & 4.3 rpg) and Kadin Shedrick (6.3 ppg, 5.0 rpg & 2.6 bpg) anchor the paint. Shedrick started the first 16 games, while Caffaro has started the last five contests.
  • Kody Stattmann (37.8% 3FGs), Taine Murray (38.1% 3FGs), Igor Miliĉić Jr. (36.4% 3FGs) and Carson McCorkle (33.3% 3FGs) provide perimeter shooting off the bench.

Virginia All-Time vs. Boston College

  • Virginia is 17-8 all-time vs. Boston College, including a 12-8 ACC mark, in the series that dates back to 1971-72.
  • The Cavaliers defeated the Eagles 61-49 in the lone meeting between the teams last season.
  • UVA has won 10 of the last 12 games in the series.
  • UVA is 9-2, including a six-game winning streak, against Boston College in Charlottesville.
  • UVA has limited BC to 58 or fewer points in six of the last eight meetings.
  • Head coach Tony Bennett is 11-5 all-time against Boston College.

Last Time vs. The Eagles

  • Jay Huff matched a then-career high with 18 points along with five blocked shots to guide then-No. 22 Virginia to a 61-49 win at Boston College on Jan. 9, 2021.
  • Sam Hauser added 17 points and 10 rebounds for his third straight double-double, and Kihei Clark chipped in 12 points.
  • UVA overcame an 8:44 scoring drought in the first half and committed just seven turnovers.
  • The Hoos limited the Eagles to 30.9 percent shooting.
  • DeMarr Langford led Boston College (2-9, 0-4 ACC with 14 points.

Last Time Out

  • Nate Laszewski and Dane Goodwin each had 16 points to lead Notre Dame (14-6, 7-2 ACC) to a 69-65 win over Virginia (12-9, 6-5 ACC) on Saturday, Jan. 29.
  • Jayden Gardner (22 points, 10 rebounds) and Francisco Caffaro (11 points, 12 rebounds) each registered double-doubles for the Cavaliers, whose six game-winning streak vs. the Irish ended.
  • Notre Dame drilled 10 of 23 3-pointers and limited the Cavaliers to 3 of 14 from beyond the arc.
  • The Irish shot 46.8 percent and remained unbeaten at home.
  • Virginia won the rebound battle 39-26 and owned a 14-0 advantage in second chance points.
  • Reece Beekman added 13 points and Kihei Clark added 12.

On The Horizon

  • Virginia hosts Miami in ACC action on Saturday, Feb. 5. Tipoff at John Paul Jones Arena is set for 5 p.m. on ACC Network.

Men’s Tennis: No. 6 Virginia blanks Georgia Tech to advance to ITA Indoors

Courtesy UVA Media Relations

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The No. 6 Virginia men’s tennis team (5-0) picked up a 4-0 victory against Georgia Tech (3-1) on Sunday (Jan. 30) in the final of ITA Kickoff Weekend matches at the Boar’s Head Sports Club.

The victory earns the team an invitation to the 47th Annual ITA National Team Indoor Championships, being held Feb. 18-21 in Seattle, Wash.

Senior Ryan Goetz clinched the victory for the Cavaliers with a straight-set win on court five.

In doubles, the teams split 6-2 decisions on courts two and three Goetz and Iñaki Montes coming out ahead on court two, leaving the point to be decided on the top court. Senior William Woodall and sophomore Chris Rodesch edged the No. 3-ranked team of Andres Martin and Marcus McDaniel 6-4 to win the point for the Cavaliers.

Virginia won four of six first sets in singles. Rodesch, who had dropped his first set against Martin 6-3, had picked up a 6-3 win in the second set to force a decider against the No. 9-ranked singles player. Their third set did not have a chance to begin as three of Rodesch’s teammates closed out straight-set wins to give UVA the victory.

Fifth-year senior Gianni Ross and sophomore Jeffrey von der Schulenburg won on their respective courts within a minute of one another. Ross topped Angel Guerrero 6-2, 6-2 on court six while von der Schulneburg won 6-4, 6-0 against Chen Dong on four. Goetz finished off a 6-2, 6-2 victory against Pablo Schlecher to give UVA the 4-0 victory.

Head coach Andres Pedroso

“We knew Georgia Tech was gonna be tough. We had a really tough battle last year with them at the ACC Championship so we knew they were coming with everything they had. The guys were ready. You could tell in doubles. You could tell in singles. They went on their runs in doubles and we just hung in there and stay composed. We’ve talked a lot about that just staying composed throughout the match. And it paid off.

“I think Georgia Tech is gonna have a deep run in the ACC so it’s good to face them now, to see what they have and see how we matchup against them.”

Notes

  • Virginia has only failed to advance out of ITA Kickoff Weekend twice in the 14 years of the tournament
  • The National Team Indoor Championship features 15 schools that have advanced by winning their respective ITA Kickoff Weekend regionals and host-school Washington
  • The Cavaliers have won six ITA National Team Indoor Championships, including four-straight from 2008 to 2011 and most recently in 2017 when the tournament was held in Charlottesville

#6 Virginia 4, Georgia Tech 0

Singles competition

1. #13 Chris Rodesch (VA) vs. #9 Andres Martin (GT) 3-6, 6-3, unfinished
2. #52 Inaki Montes (VA) vs. Keshav Chopra (GT) 6-3, 4-4, unfinished
3. #71 Bar Botzer (VA) vs. Marcus McDaniel (GT) 3-6, 4-4, unfinished
4. #66 J vd Schulenburg (VA) def. Chen Dong (GT) 6-4, 6-0
5. #27 Ryan Goetz (VA) def. Pablo Schlecher (GT) 6-2, 6-2
6. Gianni Ross (VA) def. Angel Guerrero (GT) 6-2, 6-2

Doubles competition

1. Chris Rodesch/William Woodall (VA) def. #3 Andres Martin/Marcus McDaniel (GT) 6-4
2. Inaki Montes/Ryan Goetz (VA) def. Keshav Chopra/Pablo Schlecher (GT) 6-2
3. Chen Dong/Angel Guerrero (GT) def. Bar Botzer/J vd Schulenburg (VA) 6-2

Order of finish: Doubles (2,3,1); Singles (6,4,5)
A-136

 

Women’s Basketball: Virginia falls at Florida State, 62-37

Courtesy UVA Media Relations

uva basketballThe Virginia women’s basketball team (3-15, 0-8 ACC) suffered a 62-37 loss at Florida State (10-9, 4-5 ACC) on Sunday (Jan. 30) at the Tucker Center in Tallahassee, Fla.

The Cavaliers struggled from the field as the Seminoles cruised to their fourth conference victory of the year.

Grad student guard Amandine Toi led the team with 10 points. Sophomore guard Kaydan Lawson came off the bench to lead the defensive efforts with six rebounds.

The first quarter was a back-and-forth battle between the two teams with five lead changes and three ties. A three-pointer from Toi gave the Cavaliers a 9-6 advantage midway through the period, but the Seminoles retook the lead and held a 14-11 advantage heading into the second quarter.

The two teams continued to battle in the second period with a jumper from junior guard Taylor Valladay making it a 16-13 deficit for the Cavaliers with 7:59 remaining in the half. It would be the last field goal the Cavaliers would make in the period with Florida State building up a 28-16 halftime lead.

Toi ended the Cavaliers’ shooting drought by hitting a three-pointer 14 seconds into the second half, however it failed to ignite a rally. It was almost another five minutes before Valladay would make UVA’s second field goal of the period, a jumper at the 4:51 mark. Florida State led 35-21 after the Valladay jumper. Florida State would score the final 13 points of the quarter, the end of a 20-2 run, to lead 48-21 heading into the final frame.

The Cavaliers kept pace with Florida State in the fourth, with UVA outscoring the Seminoles 16-14 in the quarter.

UVA coach Tina Thompson

“We’re disappointed in our effort tonight. We started that first quarter kind of doing the things that we talked about – our game plan offensively and defensively – and something happened. And we just kind of went away from all the things that were necessary for us to stay in this game and give ourselves an opportunity to win. It’s almost like a broken record. I’m saying the same things over and over again. But the reality is that what it is going to take to win in this conference. You have to be disciplined. You have to execute. You have to defend. We have the ability to do so. We just have to decide that we’re going to do it over and over and over again.”

Notes

  • Virginia shot 24.4 percent (11-of-45); Florida State shot 40.3 percent (25-of-62)
  • Florida State held a 37-33 edge in rebounding
  • Florida State scored 25 points off Virginia’s 24 turnovers
  • The Seminoles outscored the Cavaliers 34-6 in the paint
  • Virginia led for 3:52 in the first quarter
  • Virginia went 1-of-11 (9.0 percent) in the second quarter from the floor but was 3-of-4 from the free throw line. UVA went 2-of-9 from the field in the third (22.2 percent)
  • Mir McLean scored seven points with five of those coming from the free throw line

 Next up

  • Virginia travels to play at Boston College (14-6, 5-4 ACC) on Thursday, Feb. 3 at 7 p.m.
  • The Cavaliers will be back home on Sunday, Feb. 6 when they take on Clemson (7-13, 1-8 ACC) for UVA’s National Girls and Women in Sports Day celebration. The game tips at 4 p.m. and airs on the ACC Network