Virginia
The Plus/Minus: Virginia Women’s Basketball Surges Late Past UNC
It was a bad day in Chapel Hill. Virginia knocked off North Carolina in men’s tennis. Princeton beat the Tar Heels in men’s lacrosse. And this loss to Virginia puts UNC in the unenviable position of rooting for Duke to win against Florida State to keep a top-4 double-bye for the ACC Tournament.
Plus
A win is a win and with this win, Virginia claims their first signature victory of the season. Yeah, UNC was without Alyssa Ustby and Reniya Kelly, both 10 point scorers, but everyone has injuries. UVa has been without Yonta Vaughn for most of the season and Paris Clark has battled through illness and injury all season. UNC is the No. 8 team in the nation, playing at home, on Senior Day. UNC was playing for an additional day of rest for Ustby and Kelly, which they now may have lost.
Plus
The women played one of the more desultory games of the season midweek at SMU. I wrote that the game, “was NOT an advertisement for women’s basketball.” Well, this game was. And it was two senior 5s who were the stars of the show. UNC’s Maria Gakdeng recorded a career-high 25 points on 9/10 shooting and a 7/8 outing at the free throw line. Her counterpart, Latasha Lattimore, scored 23 points on 10/14 shooting and showed her range by going 2/4 from three. Gakdeng, for her part, dished out five assists and grabbed five offensive rebounds. They went at each other all game, each showcasing beautiful footwork and the experience that befits fourth-year seniors.
Tash slashes through the lane for ✌️#GoHoos🔸⚔️🔹 #GNSL pic.twitter.com/Iv4zQ3LbQR
— Virginia Women’s Basketball (@UVAWomensHoops) March 2, 2025
Gakdeng had the edge in effectiveness as she was able to force Lattimore and Edessa Noyan into foul trouble while only picking up one foul herself.
Minus
UNC opened up a 10-point lead at the end of the first quarter and it ballooned to 18 points with just three minutes left in the half. UNC put on a clinic in how to run the fast break:
Tell ’em 😮💨
📺 | The CW pic.twitter.com/rixO80oKE1
— Carolina Women’s Basketball (@uncwbb) March 2, 2025
Two players ahead of the ball, wide and on each wing. And Indya Nivar can make a nice easy pass.
This is what an all-too-typical (even at this late stage of the season) Virginia fast break looks like.
COUNT IT 😤 #GoHoos🔸⚔️🔹 #GNSL pic.twitter.com/IQJdI8gsTo
— Virginia Women’s Basketball (@UVAWomensHoops) March 2, 2025
Breona Hurd puts her head down and goes coast-to-coast into a 1 v 2 at the rim. She made the bucket and the and-1, but going 1 v 2 is a loser’s move. Unfortunately, twice early in the second quarter (and again, later in the third) Hurd, so emboldened by her success here, tried to go 1 v 2 at the rim. It didn’t go well.
Plus
Virginia closed the first half on a 7-0 run and kicked off the third quarter on an 8-2 run. That’s how you make a 17-point deficit go away.
Following the SMU game I opined that Kymora Johnson, who’d been scoreless in the first half, might just be a slow starter. She had another first-half goose egg in this one, but there might just be a method to her madness. This is a thin Virginia team. RyLee Grays is still out and Coach Amaka Agugua-Hamilton has seemingly lost complete confidence in Casey Valenti-Paea and Taylor Lauterbach to the point that she would rather play just six players than give Casey or Taylor any time on the floor.
Johnson knows she is going to play all 40 minutes and she also knows that the fourth quarter is more important than the first one. Johnson spent the first half dropping seven assists and getting two steals and letting her teammates do the running. Johnson followed her scoreless first half with nine third-quarter points. For the game, Johnson had 15 points, 11 assists, and was just one rebound shy of her second career double-double.
Minus
UNC and Virginia both misplayed their final sequences.
Down 74 – 73 with 27 seconds remaining, UNC could hold the ball for the last shot and potentially win the game. Except that Indya Nivar scored within nine seconds. UNC held the lead, but now Virginia could score.
Which they did, six seconds later when Clark went to the rim. She was fouled and she made both her foul shots.
Which still gave UNC 13 seconds (!) left to score. They didn’t. Johnson grabbed the rebound and was fouled. She’s a great free throw shooter and she made both.
The lack of situational awareness is shocking.
Minus
What is worrying is that Johnson isn’t shooting well from deep lately. She did have a 6/11 night against Stanford, but outside of that, over her last 10 games, she’s connected at a 26% clip (12/45.) That’s not good.
Plus
Paris Clark (3/6) and Edessa Noyan (4/6) picked up the slack from deep as the Hoos shot a collective 11/23 (48%) from beyond the arc. Long-range shooting isn’t Clark’s game, but if she is getting into the groove – 5/11 the last two out – then it should afford her better driving lanes. For her part, Noyan tied her career high with 16 points, while Clark had 17 points. Three Cavs scoring more than Johnson in a single game? 48% from three? You can win a lot of games that way.
🗣️ YEAH, P!#GoHoos🔸⚔️🔹 #GNSL pic.twitter.com/XkVrFHhzJB
— Virginia Women’s Basketball (@UVAWomensHoops) March 2, 2025
Read More: Matt’s Takeaways
Looking Ahead
This was the final game of the ACC season and the tournament begins on Wednesday, March 5th in Greensboro. Even though there are still games to play as I write this, Virginia is locked into the 10th seed and will play, once again, on the first day of the tournament. They will play the second game on Wednesday at 3:30pm. I’m hoping that Miami is the last team in because Haley Cavinder is a baller and is the best player on the bottom four or five teams.
I will be there from tip-off to the championship game on Sunday. It will be my third year bringing the sights and sounds of tournament week. I hope you’ll join me.
🎤
🎶That good ol song of Wahoowa 🎶 pic.twitter.com/SsdUjdHtKk
— Jerzy Walker (@JerzyWalker) March 2, 2025
The Plus/Minus: Virginia Women’s Basketball Too Much for SMU
The Plus/Minus: UVA Women’s Basketball Thrashes Stanford
Kymora Johnson Scores 33 Points, UVA Women’s Basketball Beats Stanford 89-69
The Plus/Minus: Virginia Women’s Basketball Can’t Overcome Cal
Sparked by Mo Johnson’s Triple-Double, Virginia Looks to Finish Strong
Virginia
Va. hemp growers worry about the future of their industry amid state and federal shifts
(VIRGINIA MERCURY) – “We needed this rain,” farmer and entrepreneur Graham Redfern said from his front porch in Caroline County Wednesday as U.S. Rep. Eugene Vindman, who represents Virginia’s 7th District in Congress, approached.
The lawmaker was there to learn about the crops and products at Redfern Hemp Co., one of the state’s small businesses whose future hangs in the balance between soon-to-start federal restrictions on hemp THC products and Virginia’s not-yet-finalized retail cannabis market.
The rain was one certainty for Redfern, and a welcome one at the start of his planting season. But another, he said, is that most of his products will become illegal later this year, when the federal hemp crackdown kicks in.
“It’s scary,” Redfern said of thinking six months forward. He added that some of his staff members are thinking about looking for other jobs.
Redfern’s company, which employs 14 full-time staff and 5 part-time staff, makes body creams, dog treats, chocolates and gummies from hemp. His products offer calming and pain management effects for customers, while other parts of the hemp plant help create oils, birdseed and fibers.
Tamra Herndon, a longtime customer of Redfern, said the products have been helpful for her mental and physical health.
As an amputee, she experiences “phantom pain” where her left leg used to be, along with joint pain from walking on her prosthetic leg. The combination of THC and CBD in Redfern’s products helps both ease aches and calm anxiety.
Read more on virginiamercury.com
Copyright 2026 Virginia Mercury. All rights reserved.
Virginia
Virginia Beach to spend $1M on positive ad blitz following shootings, curfew
Atlantic Avenue Association hopes to attract locals with “Own the Beach”
VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. (WAVY) — People living in or near cities like Washington D.C., Charlotte, Philadelphia and Pittsburgh could soon be seeing a fresh batch of advertisements promoting the Oceanfront resort.
Tuesday, City Council voted unanimously to spend $1 million to fund the SURGE campaign. It’s an immediate ad blitz designed to combat any negative sentiments potential visitors may have garnered by recent events, according to Deputy City Manager Amanda Jarratt.
Saturday night shootings in March and April left total of 14 people injured at the resort. As a result, City Council instituted an all-ages curfew at 9:30 p.m. for weekends — later overturned — that business owners said effectively turned off the city’s economic engine and communicated an unwelcoming message.
Jarratt said the campaign looks to leave all that in the past.
“Over the last few weeks, unfortunately, we’ve experienced several issues that have potentially have negative impact on our perception and reputation,” Jarratt said. “And so this is a concerted effort to actively reinforce our family-friendly brand and maintain focus on increased visitor tourism for this 2026 resort season.”
The city’s Convention and Visitors Bureau will focus on “the drive and fly markets” in proximity to Virginia Beach, with digital media placements with streaming services and online travel platforms.
The city hasn’t tracked an overwhelming negative reaction to events this spring, Jarratt said, but “felt it best to be proactive.”
“While there may be some concern over gas prices, certainly airline prices have increased as well, … we feel like more individuals are going to be traveling domestically, and we want to ensure that they are visiting the city of Virginia Beach,” Jarratt said.
The money for the ads comes from the Tourism Advertising Program Special Revenue Fund. Traditionally $11.4 million each year is spent on marketing, according to Jarratt. She points to the $2.6 billion in 2024 visitor spending as return on investment.
“I think it’s terrific,” said George Kotarides, owner of Dough Boy’s Pizza. “I applaud them for doing that. But we’re hoping that we can move into a more localized campaign in conjunction.”
Saturday, the Atlantic Avenue Association has organized “Own the Beach.” Kotarides, who founded the association, helped to organize the effort out of concern for the resort’s reputation in the region following the last two months.
“It’s quiet, you know? It’s not as active as it normally is,” Kotarides said. “So we’re hoping that this creates a little bit of energy.”
Own The Beach is a campaign where, so far, nearly 60 businesses have agreed to offer $10 deals on Saturday.
“We got amusements, attractions, dessert and sweets, restaurants, bars, parking, there’s a couple parking lots offering $10 all day parking, so there’s a lot of different businesses that are participating,” Kotarides said.
He called it a pilot program, of sorts, to see if it attracts locals for a day.
“We just need to take this as an opportunity, really, to start fresh and do something new and different and try to make a little lemonade out of lemons, if you will, and get people together, get the community together,” Kotarides said.
To read a complete list of deals from participating businesses click here.
Virginia
Virginia Sen. L. Louise Lucas has been vocal advocate for marijuana legalization
PORTSMOUTH, Va. (AP) — Virginia Sen. L. Louise Lucas has carved out a reputation as a fierce and outspoken advocate during her political career. One issue, in particular, has been at the forefront of her agenda: legalization of marijuana, which she says disproportionately affects members of the African American community.
She felt so strongly about the issue, she sponsored a legalization bill and opened her own cannabis shop. Now, she’s under the microscope as federal law enforcement appears to have raided that business. It wasn’t immediately clear what they were looking for but it’s drawn attention to Lucas and her 34-year career in politics.
In 2019, she became the state’s first Black woman to hold the leadership post of Senate president pro tempore after Democrats seized the majority.
The next year, she appeared at a protest of a Confederate monument that led to felony charges against her. A judge later dismissed the charges.
Lucas was born in Portsmouth and worked at the Norfolk Naval Shipyard earlier in her life, where she was the first female ship fitter, according to a biography in the state library.
She has been the CEO of a Portsmouth business that runs residences, day programs and transportation for intellectually disabled adults. And in 2021, Lucas opened a store in her hometown of Portsmouth, The Cannabis Outlet, that sells legal hemp and CBD products.
“Let’s talk about pot,” Lucas said in a social media post on X in 2022. “Yes, we legalized it and I even opened the Cannabis Outlet after we did! But the job isn’t done. People are still in jail for something that is legal today.”
An armored FBI vehicle and several agents were seen outside Lucas’ cannabis store on Wednesday. The FBI would say only that it was conducting a court-authorized search warrant in Portsmouth.
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