Virginia
3 takeaways from Virginia Tech's loss to Minnesota in the Duke's Mayo Bowl
Minnesota shortened the Duke’s Mayo Bowl on Friday and leaned on its defense for a 24-10 win over Virginia Tech.
The Gophers ran a 15-play drive in the third and fourth quarters that took 9:20 off the clock and ended with a field goal. They took 4:35 off the clock on the previous possession just to go 29 yards and punt. But it worked. Virginia Tech got just 3 second-half possessions and the Gophers flummoxed each of them.
With the win, Minnesota extended its streak of consecutive bowl victories to 8, a mark that stretches back to 2015. The Gophers end the year at 8-5 while Virginia Tech drops to 6-7.
Here are 3 takeaways from the game.
Minnesota defense dominates
Virginia Tech averaged 8.3 yards per pass attempt — a fine number — but the Hokies were constantly behind the chains. Minnesota sacked Hokie quarterback Pop Watson 5 times. And it held the Hokies to just 4 yards per play on first downs. A disruptive defensive performance had the Hokies out of sorts all night.
Virginia Tech began the game with 3 consecutive 3-and-outs. After an 8-play, 80-yard touchdown march from Virginia Tech to take a 7-0 lead, Minnesota responded with a 21-3 run in the second quarter to take control of the game. In the second half, Minnesota limited the Hokies to 76 total yards of offense and just 18 plays.
The Hokies only got 3 second-half possessions while the Gophers sat on the ball on offense. The lone possession in the third quarter ended in a punt after 7 plays gained only 22 yards. On the Hokies’ final 2 drives, Minnesota held on fourth down twice.
After Max Brosmer threw an interception with 7:03 to play, Virginia Tech had one last chance to tighten things up and make a game of it. Defensive back Dante Lovett caught Brosmer’s pass off a deflection and returned it to Minnesota’s 15-yard-line.
In a 14-point game, the Hokies desperately needed a score. Instead, they went backward. After an 11-yard pass from Watson, 3 straight plays were stopped in the backfield for losses and Virginia Tech was forced to go for it on fourth-and-goal from the 14. Za’Quan Bryan jumped a Watson pass and ended the threat without any damage done.
Minnesota was able to run out the remaining 4:24 to walk away with the victory.
Darius Taylor closes strong
Minnesota tailback Darius Taylor ran it 20 times for 113 yards and a touchdown. He also threw a 10-yard touchdown pass. The 100-yard effort was Taylor’s fifth of the season and the ninth of his Minnesota career. That pushed him into a tie for the 10th-most such games by a Gopher player in program history.
Just a sophomore, Taylor will have a chance to leave his mark all over the Minnesota record book if he stays healthy. With Max Brosmer playing his final game for the Gophers (he went 18-for-29 for 211 yards, 1 score, and the aforementioned pick), Taylor could very well be the offensive engine next season for Minnesota just like Mo Ibrahim was several years ago.
Virginia Tech, shorthanded, does itself no favors
The Hokies were missing their entire starting secondary because of opt-outs and the transfer portal. Their regular starter at quarterback was once again unavailable. There were reasons to enter into Friday night with tempered expectations. Still, Virginia Tech didn’t help itself.
Offensive coordinator Tyler Bowen drew the ire of Hokie fans all throughout the game with his play-calling. After the Hokies’ fourth-quarter interception, Bowen’s sequencing was questionable at best. Rather than let Watson — who has flashed considerable potential late in the year — cook, Virginia Tech split his time with Colin Schlee and never really let Watson find a rhythm. He threw for 254 yards in the win over Virginia on Nov. 30 and threw just 12 passes on Friday.
Derek Peterson does a bit of everything, not unlike Taysom Hill. He has covered Oklahoma, Nebraska, the Pac-12, and now delivers CFB-wide content.
Virginia
Nonprofit serves thousands as food insecurity grows in Northern Virginia
LOUDOUN COUNTY, Va. (7News) — For the past couple of years, Christina Engle has been volunteering from a unique space at Dulles Town Center. But there’s nothing for sale at this storefront, free food prepared alongside a healthy serving of emotional support.
“We always have fresh produce,” said Engle.
Entrepreneur Nupur Panjabi founded Anna Sudha Community Kitchens to address a pressing need: many people suffering in a country teeming with excess.
“Anna means food, and Sudha means nectar of love. Our mission is to spread love through food. This is my way of just trying to make a difference,” said Panjabi.
This community kitchen has been around for only a few years, but due to demand, it produces and delivers an average of 6,500 meals a month from a 2,000-square-foot space in the Dulles Town Center.
Panjabi said her business model works because of a surrounding community willing to donate not only money but also time. Almost everyone associated with this non-profit is a volunteer, like Christina Engle.
“I was homeless for about a year and a half, me and my family,” added Engle.
For Engle, a life of struggle inspired her to be here for others.
Engle said, “A lot of people don’t have relatives or anything like that for the holidays, so when they come in, we make them feel special, and loved, and wanted.”
The need, according to Panjabi, has actually deepened due to recent economic challenges in the region.
“They’re making barely enough money to pay their rent and keep their cars. They don’t have money to buy food, so that’s where we come in,” said Panjabi.
For Panjabi, food is merely an ingredient in a much larger narrative: caring for those who don’t have much in a unique space defined by love.
“It’s very natural for a human being to be judgmental and to get rid of those judgments, that is the journey,” concluded Panjabi.
Virginia
Conservation group sues EPA over PFAS contamination in Virginia waterways
Virginia
Virginia nursing home sale sparks concern over staffing, quality of care: ‘It needs to get better’
SOUTH HILL, Va — A resident of a Southside Virginia nursing home is raising concerns over quality of care, staffing levels, and on-site leadership of the facility after it changed hands.
Ronalds Rawlings said each day at Twin Lakes Rehabilitation and Nursing brings an unexpected challenge. He describes his experience living at the South Hill long-term care facility as inconsistent, ever since new ownership took over.
“I wake up in the morning, like, what’s next?” he said. “At least at first, it was consistent at first, but now it’s like, I’m at the point where it’s time to go.”
VCU Health’s Community Memorial Hospital used to operate what was called The Hundley Center but sold the facility to the New Jersey-based Eastern Healthcare Group on April 1, according to VCU Health. With it, came the name change to Twin Lakes and a shift in ownership type from non-profit to for-profit.
Rawlings, who’s lived at the nursing home since 2023, said one of the biggest differences he’s observed over the past several months is a decrease in the number of employees, as he alleged in a complaint to the Virginia Department of Health (VDH), the state agency that oversees nursing homes.
“The nurses that are charged with my care are doing a very good job. Now, those nurses are working to the max. They are short-staffed,” Rawlings said.
He claimed in his complaint those issues have led to medications not arriving on time and showers not occurring as frequently.
When asked whether the facility was short-staffed when it was run by VCU Health, Rawlings answered, “No.”
Rawlings said he has not yet received VDH’s findings pertaining to his complaint, and Eastern has not returned CBS 6’s request for a response to his allegations.
Drop in reported staffing levels
However, data from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), which regulates nursing homes at the federal level, confirms a considerable drop in staffing levels following the acquisition.
It shows the facility went from a 5-out-of-5 star “well above average” staffing rating from January through March to a 2-star “below average” staffing rating from April through June. CMS determines those ratings in part based off quarterly staffing reports that providers are required to submit. Higher staffing levels “may mean higher quality of care for residents,” according to CMS.
During the same time period, CMS data shows that under VCU Health, there was nearly one whole extra hour of reported total nurse staffing hours per resident per day on average. The facility reported an average of 3.96 total nurse staffing hours per resident per day from January through March but reported 2.98 hours of the same from March through June.
According to the most recent data before the sale, CMS gave the Hundley Center a 5-out-of-5 star overall quality rating, which indicated it also performed well during health inspections.
VDH has not yet conducted a health inspection of Twin Lakes since the ownership change, but Eastern Healthcare Group as a chain has an overall quality rating from CMS of 1.4-out-of-5 stars, as of July 2025, which indicates the group’s 17 facilities have performed poorly on inspections and staffing measures.
Only 22 of the country’s 600+ nursing home chains had a lower overall quality rating, according to CMS data.
CBS 6 has asked Eastern for a response to the company’s ratings, and we have not yet heard back.
Disciplinary action against on-site leadership
Rawlings said he was also troubled by past findings against the leadership put in place at the facility after the ownership change, as both the administrator Shondel Samuels and director of nursing Latarsha Brown have been recently disciplined by the state.
“I think that probably sparked a concern for everybody’s safety,” Rawlings said.
According to licensing board reports, Samuels and Brown were formerly the administrator and director of nursing at Henrico Health and Rehabilitation Center at the time of a 2023 inspection that resulted in serious findings. Henrico was identified by CMS in January 2025 as Virginia’s poorest performing nursing home based off results of its last three years and cycles of inspections.
Citing the results of the 2023 inspection, the Board of Long-Term Care Administrators in July 2025 placed Samuels’ license on probation, in part because it found she failed to protect residents from multiple instances of abuse and retaliated against a resident who complained to an ombudsman by issuing them a discharge notice.
The board said Samuels “accepted little responsibility” in her role as administrator and instead claimed issues cited by the board were caused by factors outside of her control.
Then earlier this month, the Board of Nursing placed Brown’s license on probation, in part finding she engaged in abuse of residents and failed to properly address neglect at Henrico Health and Rehab. CBS 6 was there for a public hearing in November when an attorney for the state made that case to the board.
“She at the very least allowed negligence or abusive behavior to go on at this facility on her watch, potentially that she even participated in it,” Aaron Timberlake, an adjudication specialist for the Virginia Department of Health Professions, said during the hearing.
Brown denied wrongdoing and argued she was a new director of nursing at the time with limited knowledge. She told the board that she and Samuels were given direction by their previous leadership that she believes they would not have followed themselves.
“I have very much taken responsibility for the actions that I played. However, I do know that in certain situations from these allegations, I know I was named, but I did not take part in them,” Brown told the board.
The board did not find the testimony from Brown or Samuels, who testified as a witness in Brown’s case, credible, according to the case findings.
The probation mean that Samuels and Brown can continue practicing but will be subject to additional training, reporting requirements, and state monitoring for at least two years.
Board documents show both women were terminated from the Henrico facility after the 2023 inspection. Public records show the Commonwealth initiated licensing proceedings against them in 2024, and VDH licensing records show the pair was working at Twin Lakes as of September 2025.
CBS 6 asked Eastern if and when it was made aware of the licensing actions against Samuels and Brown and if both are still employed at Twin Lakes, and we have not heard back. CBS 6 also reached out to Samuels and Brown directly regarding their cases, and they have not provided comment.
“The state got to have more oversight,” Rawlings said about the facility. “They got to be held accountable. You got to hold them accountable.”
Rawlings said while there are some bright spots at Twin Lakes, such as the availability of activities and dedication of staff, he’s worried about where the facility is headed under new owners.
“Your way of business is failing,” he said. “The things that are going on at Twin Lakes, it just needs to get better.”
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