Virginia’s Reed banking on versatility landing him a spot in the NFL Draft
When NFL scouts came to see Joe Reed play at Virginia this past fall, many of them commented to Cavalier coach Bronco Mendenhall that “this guy is a running back.”
When NFL scouts came to see Joe Reed play at Virginia this past fall, many of them commented to Cavalier coach Bronco Mendenhall that “this guy is a running back.”
Virginia’s football program just landed its future pass rusher, Josh McCarron, a four-star sack machine from Everett, Washington.
Maybe Virginia wide receiver Hasise Dubois’s not the fastest guy in the country, and he didn’t get to show anyone his 40 time due to all the Pro Days cancelled around the country. Speed is nice, but it’s not everything.
No sooner had Virginia’s first Coastal Division championship football season ended than Bronco Mendenhall pointed toward the future. One of his priorities for the 2020 UVA campaign was to take the running game to the next level.
Hopewell native Ronnie Walker Jr., a running back who played his first two collegiate seasons at Indiana University, is transferring to Virginia, head coach Bronco Mendenhall announced on Friday morning.
Jordan Mack, one of the stalwarts of Virginia’s defense for the past four years, spends his days awaiting the NFL Draft pretty much the same way as the rest of us.
The Virginia athletics department will stream an abbreviated edition of the Cavalier football team’s 2017 victory at Boise State on Wednesday, April 15 at 7 p.m. ET.
I can’t remember the exact year I met Bill Millsaps, but my experience was quite the same as his with Red Smith. I had read him from afar, admired his style and he quickly became my idol, my sportswriting hero.
Bronco Mendenhall’s Cavaliers made the cut on Wednesday night for the nation’s No.1-ranked cornerback, in Virginia Beach’s Tony Grimes.
Under the watch of current head football coach Bronco Mendenhall, “Thursday’s Heroes” has provided support for 63 young people and their families in the Charlottesville area since its inception nearly four years ago.
I’ll never forget meeting Bryce Perkins for the first time. It was a cold day in Charlottesville, even colder if you were accustomed to Arizona’s climate, where Perkins grew up and played college football before crossing the country to seek his quarterback fortunes.
Washington State teammates will never forget how much joy Bryce Beekman brought to their lives. Beekman, the older brother of Virginia basketball signee Reece Beekman, and former teammate of UVA QB Bryce Perkins at Arizona Western Community College, died unexpectedly last week at the age of 22.
Spring football practice is a time for new leaders to step in and get adjusted to their new role. That was to be the scenario for Virginia quarterback Brennan Armstrong, who is champing at the bit to get his chance to lead the Cavaliers offense as the new starter.
Virginia landed its fifth commitment for the Class of 2021 on Friday, when the Cavaliers gained three-star wide receiver Jesiah Davis of Charlotte’s Providence Day School.
Virginia outside linebacker Charles Snowden was enjoying his Spring Break in Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., with a few of his teammates, when he received the news. UVA had announced that it would utilize online-only classes for the remainder of the spring semester to help prevent the spread of COVID-19.
If Bodo’s Bagels ever feels the need to advertise, it doesn’t have to search far for endorsements. The latest of those during a Virginia football webinar with the Wahoos’ two Bryce’s — Bryce Perkins and Bryce Hall — earlier this week.
It has been a long haul for Bryce Hall. We all saw Virginia’s lockdown cornerback go down in a heap, writhing in pain on the night of Oct. 11 at Miami as Wahoo Nation held its collective breath.
Like every kid that played football growing up, Virginia’s Bryce Hall and Bryce Perkins have both long dreamed of suiting up for a game in the National Football League.
Bronco Mendenhall said that the NFL Combine and college all-star games’ collective snubs of former Virginia quarterback Bryce Perkins was a mistake.
Malachi Fields, a 6-foot-4, 200-pound quarterback/wide receiver from Monticello High School, has committed to UVA.