Connect with us

Virginia

Can Notre Dame avoid a senior day hiccup vs. Virginia? 3 keys and a prediction

Published

on

Can Notre Dame avoid a senior day hiccup vs. Virginia? 3 keys and a prediction


SOUTH BEND, Ind. — There was a time when senior day felt more like a final exam than an end-of-school party. Games like Saturday’s matchup with Virginia were tripwires, as Notre Dame got wrapped up in its feelings rather than focusing on the game.

There were losses to Louisville, Virginia Tech, Syracuse and UConn. There were escapes against Boston College and Navy. None of those results happened that long ago, even if they date back to the end of the Charlie Weis era. But they might as well have been from a different generation considering how Notre Dame has figured out how to compartmentalize the extra tension that comes with a final game inside Notre Dame Stadium.

“We all have to make sure you get your emotions under control before that song plays, before we’re gonna kick that ball off or return,” Marcus Freeman said. “You have to get your emotions back in check

That all assumes Saturday is the final game Notre Dame will play here this season. And maybe that helps with context.

Advertisement
The Pulse Newsletter

Free, daily sports updates direct to your inbox.

Free, daily sports updates direct to your inbox.

Sign UpBuy The Pulse Newsletter

Notre Dame has won its past six home finales by an average of 37.2 points. Freeman’s two senior sendoff games — Wake Forest and BC — were victories by a combined 99-7 score.

It all makes this weekend feel a bit more predictable for No. 8 Notre Dame (8-1) as it hosts Virginia (5-4) at 3:30 p.m. ET on NBC. If the Irish simply keep doing what they’re doing — getting responsible play from Riley Leonard and exemplary work from their defense — they should cruise into their bi-coastal final acts, facing Army at Yankee Stadium next weekend, with rival USC to follow during Thanksgiving weekend.


Notre Dame tight end Mitchell Evans (88) has 18 catches for 154 yards and one touchdown this season. (Matt Cashore / Imagn Images)

With all that in mind, here are three keys and a prediction for Saturday:

Advertisement

Build up Greathouse and Evans

A 52-3 blowout is full of offensive wins. It’s just that what Notre Dame did with slot receiver Jaden Greathouse and tight end Mitchell Evans against Florida State might be the start of a trend. Arguably Notre Dame’s two best weapons in the passing game, Greathouse and Evans combined for 10 targets, seven catches, 87 yards and one touchdown last week.

Evans had an acrobatic 17-yard catch the officials correctly ruled an incompletion after a replay. But the moment looked a lot like Evans from last year when he dominated Ohio State and Duke. If that version of Evans is finally back, now more than a year removed from his torn ACL, the Irish offense might find a new gear.

“(Evans) played the best game he’s played all year,” Freeman said. “The most complete game in the run and pass game that he’s played all year. It was great to see him make that touchdown, and that catch was a big-time catch. I know it was incomplete, but that’s the Mitchell Evans we’ve been waiting on.”

Greathouse is second on the team with 23 catches, 310 yards and one score. It’s not the season the Irish expected from a potential lead wide receiver, but the sophomore looked the part on tunnel screens against Florida State after getting open deep against Navy.

“He just continues to show up,” offensive coordinator Mike Denbrock said. “I mean, every time we lean on him or put him out there and put him in a position to make a play, he’s been consistent, and he’s made them, and they’ve been explosive.”

Advertisement

If the Irish can string success together for Evans and Greathouse, the passing game could end the season on a high note.

Don’t miss Cross in the middle

When Howard Cross went down with a high ankle sprain last week, it put a major dent in Notre Dame’s defensive line for the short term. The defensive tackle won’t play against Virginia and might not play again until the game against USC. With reserve defensive tackle Jason Onye away from the team for personal reasons, one of Notre Dame’s great strengths has been cut in half.

A rotation of Rylie Mills, Gabe Rubio and Donovan Hinish does feel like a first-world problem for a defense that ranks in the top 10 in almost every major category. But the Irish have been slightly vulnerable against the run (No. 25 at 3.47 yards per carry allowed). Losing Cross won’t make that any better; not that the Irish need to concede it will get worse.

Mills and Rubio are prototypes, both 6-foot-5 and pushing 300 pounds. Hinish is three inches shorter and nearly 25 pounds lighter. Yet the coaching staff feels like the junior can hold up at the point of attack.

“We say it all the time, keep recruiting guys that love the game as much as you,” defensive coordinator Al Golden said. “All you have to do is turn on the tape, and you’ll understand his passion for the game.

Advertisement

“What you can’t see is his preparation, his tenacity. He’s dogged every day in terms of here’s what I gotta do, and I’m gonna do it. He’s a blessing to have on this team.”

Virginia may not stress Notre Dame’s short-handed defensive tackle rotation, with the Cavaliers ranked 91st in yards per carry (3.93) and 85th in rushing yards per game. A week later against Army might be a different story, with the Black Knights No. 1 in rushing at 334.49 yards per game, which is 66 yards per game more than No. 2 Boise State.

Just keep winning

The path for Notre Dame to get into the College Football Playoff is clear.

Win out and the Irish will head to the 12-team field, no questions asked. But hosting a first-round game is slightly more complicated, not that the Irish can’t have their path cleared by the end of this weekend.

Only two CFP contenders have a single-digit point spread on Saturday, with one matchup a win for Notre Dame either way. No. 7 Tennessee heads to No. 12 Georgia (7:30 p.m., ABC) in what is probably an elimination game for the loser. If the Vols score an upset, it eliminates the Dawgs from the CFP conversation and makes Georgia one of the season’s biggest disappointments. If Georgia wins, Tennessee likely falls into “first four out” territory thanks to a weak schedule. The Vols have a quality home win over Alabama, and that’s it. Tennessee doesn’t have another win over an FBS program with a winning record, with only UTEP and Vanderbilt remaining.

Advertisement

A Tennessee win is probably best for Notre Dame because it knocks out one of college football’s most talented rosters. But either way, the Irish benefit.

Any other result that benefits Notre Dame would feel like chaos, like Texas losing at Arkansas (Noon, ABC), Oregon losing at Wisconsin (7:30 p.m., NBC) or BYU losing at home to Kansas (10:15 p.m., ESPN). All would help the Irish move up the polls and probably improve Notre Dame’s shot at a home Playoff game.

But the most important thing is for Notre Dame to win.

Prediction

After two-plus seasons of searching, it feels like Freeman has found his groove on the sidelines. Mentions of his inexperience are down. Consistent performances are up. That reliability should carry through the regular-season home finale. It’s hard to see the Cavaliers finding much success against one of the nation’s best defenses. It’s also hard to see Virginia bottling up Leonard. It all means the Irish will pull away in the second half, continuing their push toward the Playoff.

Notre Dame 35, Virginia 14

Advertisement

(Top photo of Jaden Greathouse: Michael Reaves / Getty Images)



Source link

Virginia

15 things to know about the budget deal Virginia lawmakers just reached

Published

on

15 things to know about the budget deal Virginia lawmakers just reached


Virginia has a budget deal.

It’s late in the sense that the expectation had been the General Assembly would work this out before it adjourned back in March. However, it comes 12 days before the state starts a new budget year, so lawmakers will apparently not be taking things to the brink. The legislature reconvenes Monday to take up the spending plan that House and Senate negotiators released Friday night.

The exact details (which will be voluminous) haven’t been posted on the General Assembly’s website yet. We do, however, have a 68-page summary that outlines what’s in the deal. The headliner: a compromise on data center taxation that keeps the controversial tax incentives in place but creates a new tax on the electricity they use.

Advertisement

The other highlights — as seen from the standpoint of Southwest and Southside — include funding to start construction of an inland port in Washington County and expand the Virginia Tech Carilion School of Medicine, as well as language authorizing a formal partnership between George Mason University and Averett University. One surprise: $100,000 to fund a statue in Roanoke of the late judge and lawmaker Onzlee Ware.

Gov. Abigail Spanberger and legislative leaders had earlier reached an agreement on how to legalize retail sales of cannabis. That’s now included in the budget deal, with sales starting July 1, 2027. See the earlier story by Cardinal’s Richmond-based reporter Elizabeth Beyer for details.

Here’s an overview of what we know — with the caveat that more details will be forthcoming when the actual budget language is available.

1. Data center taxation compromise

An aerial view of data centers in Ashburn in Loudoun County. Courtesy of Theodore Christopher.

The main reason that the budget took so long is that Senate Finance Chair Louise Lucas, D-Portsmouth, spent weeks insisting that the state should eliminate its tax breaks for data centers eight years early. That brought pushback from both the governor and House leaders, who worried that would send a signal to other business sectors that the state can’t be trusted.

This deal keeps the tax breaks for data centers intact (they’re set to expire in 2035). Instead, it creates a tax on the electricity that data centers consume. When that was floated earlier in the week, business groups pushed back against it. The version in the budget deal calls for the revenue collected through that tax to be capped at $600 million a year — and says that any monies collected over that be refunded on a pro-rated basis at the end of the fiscal year. It was unclear what the reaction to this will be, but collecting $600 million a year seems a significant climb-down compared to those who wanted to do away with the tax exemption that forgoes $1.9 billion per year in exchange for $9.1 billion in gross domestic product from data centers.

Advertisement

The summary also says there will be at least four items in the budget that will set in motion new regulations. Among them are references to “data center noise regulation language” and “data center cooling water scarcity regulations.”

2. Inland port in Washington County

The Oak Park Center for Business and Industry in Washington County, a possible site for an inland port. Courtesy of Washington County.

An “inland port” does not involve water or ships. Instead, it’s the industry term for a freight hub that collects cargo headed to or from a water port. Virginia already has an inland port near Front Royal that facilitates rail shipments to and from Hampton Roads; it’s also spurred thousands of warehouse and trucking jobs in the northern Shenandoah Valley.

Legislators in Southwest Virginia — led by state Sen. Todd Pillion, R-Washington County — have been pushing for several years to create a similar inland port in Southwest Virginia, specifically at the Oak Park Center for Business and Industry in Washington County.

This deal includes $20 million to get construction started. (Pillion is one of the budget negotiators so was in a position to make sure this money was included in the budget.)

3. Virginia Tech Carilion School of Medicine and other healthcare workforce funding

The Department of Neurosurgery will be the 12th at the Virginia Tech Carilion School of Medicine, pending approval by the State Council for Higher Education in Virginia. Courtesy of Virginia Tech/Ryan Anderson.

The school in Roanoke is slated to get $13 million for expansion as part of a larger $74.4 million plan to expand the healthcare workforce.

Nursing programs at James Madison University, Radford University and the University of Mary Washington will get a total of $7.6 million.

The budget deal also includes $6 million for the Virginia Tech Patient Research Center and $500,000 for workforce development programs in the Roanoke Valley and Alleghany Highlands in healthcare and biomedical sciences fields.

Advertisement

4. Interstate 81

Interstate 81 near Exit 132, the Dixie Caverns exit. Courtesy of the Virginia Department of Transportation.

The budget directs the secretary of transportation to “evaluate options to Accelerate I-81 Projects; including tolling options as long as there are 2 toll-free lanes in each direction.” That seems to foreshadow a third lane that might have tolls. Del. Terry Austin, R-Botetourt County and a budget negotiator, said Secretary of Transportation Nick Donahue wanted that provision.

5. Virginia Coalfields Expressway

The section of the Coalfields Expressway at Southern Gap in Buchanan County is now open to traffic.
The section of the Coalfields Expressway at Southern Gap in Buchanan County has opened to traffic. Courtesy of Jonathan Belcher.

The slow-moving road project that’s slated to run through Buchanan County and Dickenson County gets $7 million for improvements to U.S. 460 in Buchanan County.

6. New College Institute

The New College Institute campus at the Baldwin Building in Martsinville.
The New College Institute campus at the Baldwin Building in Martinsville. Cardinal News file photo.

The budget changes the name of the Martinsville-based center from the New College Institute to the West Piedmont Higher Education Center and includes funding in the second year of the two-year budget. When then-Gov. Glenn Youngkin introduced his budget back in December, he had zeroed out that second-year funding.

7. George Mason University/Averett University

a large brick building with many windows and white columns in front, the main hall at Averett University, stands behind a historic marker about the school
Averett University in Danville. Photo by Grace Mamon.

Del. David Reid, D-Loudoun County, has pushed for a formal partnership between the public school in Northern Virginia and the private school in Danville as a way to expand GMU’s reach. The budget deal includes the language to make that happen. It’s unclear what that will mean in practice, but the budget language authorizes George Mason to work with Averett on both undergraduate and graduate programs as well as other workforce-related issues. There’s no money attached, but the language lists multiple groups that would be allowed to help fund this work, including the GO Virginia economic development program, the Tobacco Commission, the Virginia Economic Development Partnership, the Danville Regional Foundation and other nonprofits.

“I’m pleased GMU will now have official authorization to move forward in what is probably the most dynamic economic area of the Commonwealth,” Reid said in a text message.

8. Onzlee Ware statue in Roanoke

Onzlee Ware
Onzlee Ware Courtesy of RMC2012

An unexpected item was $100,000 for a “Roanoke commemoration.” Legislators said this was for a statue to the late Onzlee Ware, the first Black state legislator west of the Blue Ridge and later a judge.

House Appropriations Chair Luke Torian, D-Prince William County, was cited as the proponent of this measure. “Onzlee was a bit of a mentor to Torian,” said Del. Sam Rasoul, D-Roanoke, a member of the House Appropriations Committee.

9. Local referendums on sales tax increases for schools

At present, nine localities are authorized to hold referendums to increase the local sales tax, with the proceeds going to schools. There’s been a push to expand that power statewide. In this year’s General Assembly session, bills related to these local referendums were set aside with the expectation that they’d simply be written into the budget. Now they are, with the sales tax increase capped at 1%.

10. State funding formula

A panel will be appointed to study whether and how to change the state’s school funding formula; $1.3 million is set aside for this.

11. New or renovated college buildings

There’s money (unclear how much) to renovate Derring Hall at Virginia Tech and Darden Hall at the University of Virginia’s College at Wise.

Advertisement

12. Institute for Advanced Learning and Research

The Center for Advanced Manufacturing at the Danville institute is slated to get money for expansion, although it was unclear how much.

13. Housing

The lack of housing — and the high cost of what is available — has been the subject of legislative attention. Among the initiatives: This budget deal authorizes a state loan for Newport News to develop housing around the shipyard as well as other housing construction initiatives in Fairfax County and Prince William County.

14. Richmond Coliseum

The budget deal includes $15 million to help Richmond demolish the Richmond Coliseum, which has been deemed to be obsolete.

15. Tourism

About 3,800 people attended the inaugural Blue Highway Fest last year in Big Stone Gap. Photo courtesy of the town of Big Stone Gap.
The Blue Highway Fest last year in Big Stone Gap. Photo courtesy of the town of Big Stone Gap.

Included in tourism funding is $100,000 for the annual Blue Highway Fest in Wise County. We’ve previously written about that award-winning music festival. Another tourism-related funding item is $305,000 for Breaks Interstate Park, the Virginia side of which is in Dickenson County.

You can read the full summary below. We’ll take a deeper look at the budget deal once we can see the actual language.

Advertisement





Source link

Continue Reading

Virginia

Virginia Lottery Mega Millions, Pick 3 Night results for June 19, 2026

Published

on

Virginia Lottery Mega Millions, Pick 3 Night results for June 19, 2026


play

The Virginia Lottery offers multiple draw games for those aiming to win big.

Advertisement

Here’s a look at June 19, 2026, results for each game:

Mega Millions

Mega Millions drawings take place every week on Tuesday and Friday at 11 p.m.

13-16-21-26-50, Mega Ball: 12

Check Mega Millions payouts and previous drawings here.

Pick 3

DAY drawing at 1:59 p.m. NIGHT drawing at 11 p.m. each day.

Advertisement

Night: 1-0-5, FB: 2

Day: 0-3-3, FB: 3

Check Pick 3 payouts and previous drawings here.

Pick 4

DAY drawing at 1:59 p.m. NIGHT drawing at 11 p.m. each day.

Night: 6-7-5-6, FB: 0

Advertisement

Day: 7-9-2-7, FB: 9

Check Pick 4 payouts and previous drawings here.

Pick 5

DAY drawing at 1:59 p.m. NIGHT drawing at 11 p.m. each day.

Night: 2-6-7-3-1, FB: 8

Day: 9-5-2-5-7, FB: 6

Advertisement

Check Pick 5 payouts and previous drawings here.

Cash Pop

Drawing times: Coffee Break 9 a.m.; Lunch Break 12 p.m.; Rush Hour 5 p.m.; Prime Time 9 p.m.; After Hours 11:59 p.m.

Coffee Break: 05

After Hours: 08

Prime Time: 05

Advertisement

Rush Hour: 02

Lunch Break: 04

Check Cash Pop payouts and previous drawings here.

Cash 5

Drawing every day at 11 p.m.

34-36-42-44-45

Advertisement

Check Cash 5 payouts and previous drawings here.

Millionaire for Life

Drawing everyday at 11:15 p.m.

02-20-28-51-54, Bonus: 02

Check Millionaire for Life payouts and previous drawings here.

Feeling lucky? Explore the latest lottery news & results

Advertisement

This results page was generated automatically using information from TinBu and a template written and reviewed by a Center for Community Journalism (CCJ) editor. You can send feedback using this form.



Source link

Continue Reading

Virginia

Predicting Virginia Tech’s 2026 Statistical Leaders

Published

on

Predicting Virginia Tech’s 2026 Statistical Leaders


Most of the names that will fill Virginia Tech football’s 2026 stat sheet were wearing other uniforms last fall. James Franklin rebuilt this roster through the portal in a matter of weeks, which means projecting statistical leaders is less about what happened in Blacksburg and more about what these players did somewhere else. Here is a breakdown on who should lead the Hokies in each major statistical category.

Advertisement

Passing yards and passing touchdowns: Ethan Grunkemeyer

No other quarterback on the roster has taken a college snap, so the depth chart writes itself at the top. What makes Grunkemeyer more than a default pick is the 1,339 yards he threw for across seven Penn State starts, plus the head start he has on the offense after following coordinator Ty Howle to Blacksburg. He spent last year learning this scheme while everyone else is starting from zero. As long as he stays healthy, Grunkemeyer is the easy pick for these categories.

Rushing yards and rushing touchdowns: Marcellous Hawkins

Few backs produced in tougher conditions in 2025. Hawkins gained 749 yards on 6.3 per carry, drew an 84.6 Pro Football Focus grade, highest on the roster, and racked up 562 yards after contact, doing it against fronts that loaded the box because Virginia Tech gave them no reason not to. A passing game with some teeth should only loosen things up, and Jeffrey Overton Jr. figures to handle a meaningful share of carries without threatening the bulk of the workload.

The touchdown lead comes with a wrinkle worth pausing on. Hawkins reached the end zone just once on the ground all season, while quarterback Kyron Drones piled up nine rushing scores. Drones is gone, off to the NFL with the Green Bay Packers, which leaves that production up for grabs and the lead back in line to claim it. Overton, who broke a 38-yard touchdown run against Miami in November, is the back most likely to chip into the total.

Advertisement

Receiving yards: Que’Sean Brown

The most accomplished pass catcher in the room arrived from Durham. Brown posted 846 yards at Duke last season and 1,291 across his past two years, headlined by a 178-yard, two-touchdown showing in the Sun Bowl. Projected as the primary slot, he occupies the spot where targets concentrate in a timing-based passing game. Greene offers continuity and a higher floor, but Brown’s track record points to the bigger ceiling.

Advertisement

Receiving touchdowns: Luke Reynolds

Zero touchdowns at Penn State last year. That’s the case against Reynolds. The case for him is everything else: a five-star pedigree, a 6-foot-4, 250-pound frame built for red-zone mismatches, and a Howle offense with a track record of feeding the tight end near the goal line. The spring game gave a glimpse of what Virginia Tech’s offense will look like, with ght ends outgaining receivers 205 yards to 157 on Virginia Tech’s 428 total receiving yards. Reynolds led every target on the field, catching all five passes thrown his way for a game-high 69 yards.

Tackles and tackles for loss: Kaleb Spencer

With Caleb Woodson off to Alabama and Jaden Keller out of eligibility, the top of the linebacker room emptied out, and Spencer is what’s left standing. The Miami transfer quietly led the 2025 team in tackles with 67 while starting five games and playing all 12, and he’s logged more than 500 snaps in Blacksburg. He also led the team in tackles for loss, at 9.0, and as the every-down mike, he’s built to live in the backfield again. Sophomore Noah Chambers, who posted 44 tackles as a true freshman, is the closest thing to a challenger, while Kemari Copeland and any of the new edge rushers who pop could chip into the loss column. For now, the proven leader keeps both.

Sacks: Kemari Copeland

Advertisement

Copeland led the Hokies in sacks last season, and the tape backs up the kind of explosive athlete he is. He owns Virginia Tech’s all-time squat record, putting up 605 pounds for 10 reps, a number that turned heads well outside the football program when he set it. That kind of lower-body power shows up on Saturdays, where he’s capable of collapsing a pocket from the interior, not just the edge.

Interceptions: Jaquez White

No Hokie pulled away in the takeaway department last season, so the safer bet goes to the player who’s done it before. White intercepted three passes and broke up 11 more at Troy, production that earned him second-team All-Sun Belt honors. He’s joining a secondary that struggled to create turnovers a year ago, and a corner with his track record of finding the ball is exactly what that group needed. Isaiah Brown-Murray, the returning CB1 with a pick and five breakups of his own, is the closest thing to a rival for the lead.

Advertisement

Add us as a preferred source on Google



Source link

Continue Reading
Advertisement

Trending