Virginia
Virginia Downs LIU, Buffalo At Armbar At The Armory
ALBANY, N.Y. – The Virginia wrestling team (2-0) kicked off dual competition with a bang on Friday night (Nov. 17), taking wins over LIU (2-2) and Buffalo (4-4) in the Armbar at the Armory event. Virginia defeated LIU by a score of 41-3 and Buffalo by a score of 37-6.
DUAL 1: Virginia 41, LIU 3
Virginia raced out of the gates against the Sharks of LIU in the opening dual of the night, claiming the first five bouts of the evening. The Cavaliers took three of those five victories with bonus points as Marlon Yarbrough (133) pinned his opponent and Jack Gioffre (141) claimed victory by tech fall and Dylan Cedeno (157) won by major decision. Yarbrough’s pin was the first of three from Virginia in the dual.
After LIU took a decision at 165, Justin McCoy (174) and Hudson Stewart (184) both posted pins before Colden Dorfman (197) and Ryan Catka (285) both posted major decisions to close the dual.
DUAL 2: Virginia 37, Buffalo 6
The Bulls took the first bout of the dual before Virginia would answer with four straight victories that included a major decision from Yarbrough (133) and a pair of tech falls from the Gioffre brothers at 141 and 149. Buffalo would pick up its second victory at 165 pounds.
The Cavaliers then won four straight down the stretch, including a pin from Hudson Stewart (184) to close out the dual and lock up the victory.
NOTES ON THE DAY
- Virginia improved to 3-0 all-time against LIU and has scored at least 40 points in all three duals.
- The Cavaliers are now 1-1 all-time against Buffalo with the Friday night victory.
- Virginia posted four pins on the night while tallying 13 total bonus-point victories across the duals.
- Transfer Ryan Catka made his debut at heavyweight for the Hoos in the opening dual vs. LIU.
- Nick Sanko also made his first appearance of the season, wrestling at 165 pounds against Buffalo.
FROM HEAD COACH STEVE GARLAND
“It was a really good start to the dual season for us. We have been preaching hunting bonus points since the preseason and the guys have been responding of late. We still have a lot of little things we need to improve on, but I’m loving the mentality right now.”
VIRGINIA 41, LIU 3
125: Kyle Montaperto dec. Robbie Safaris (LIU), 8-2 – UVA 3, LIU 0
133: Marlon Yarbrough pinned Chris Betancourt (LIU), 6:32 – UVA 9, LIU 0
141: No. 21 Jack Gioffre tech fall Davin Matthews (LIU),18-2 (6:44) – UVA 14, LIU 0
149: No. 30 Michael Gioffre dec. Drew Witham (LIU), 7-6 – UVA 17, LIU 0
157: Dylan Cedeno major dec. Rhise Royster (LIU), 12-2 – UVA 21, LIU 0
165: James Johnston dec. Michael Murphy, 4-1 – UVA 21, LIU 3
174: No. 9 Justin McCoy pinned Blake Bahna (LIU), 3:33 – UVA 27, LIU 3
184: Hudson Stewart pinned Anthony D’Alesio (LIU), 4:07 – UVA 33, LIU 3
197: Colden Dorfman major dec. John Duzsa (LIU), 15-5 – UVA 37, LIU 3
285: Ryan Catka major dec. Aeden Begue (LIU), 16-4 – UVA 41, LIU 3
VIRGINIA 37, BUFFALO 6
125: Max Elton (BUF) dec. Kyle Montaperto, 3-2 – BUF 3, UVA 0
133: Marlon Yarbrough major dec. Cole French (BUF), 9-0 – UVA 4, BUF 3
141: No. 21 Jack Gioffre tech fall Andy Lucinski (BUF), 20-5 (6:33) – UVA 9, BUF 3
149: No. 30 Michael Gioffre tech fall Kaleb Burgess (BUF), 20-5 (6:34) – UVA 14, BUF 3
157: Dylan Cedeno dec. Nick Stampoulous (BUF), 2-0 – UVA 17, BUF 3
165: Hunter Shaut (BUF) dec. Nick Sanko, 4-1 – UVA 17, BUF 6
174: No. 9 Justin McCoy dec. Dylan Schell (BUF), 9-2 – UVA 20, BUF 6
184: Hudson Stewart pinned Chase Kranitz (BUF), 2:04 – UVA 26, BUF 6
197: Ethan Weatherspoon over Sam Mitchell (BUF) by injury default – UVA 32, BUF 6
285: Ryan Catka tech fall Robbie Unruh (BUF), 21-6 (6:18) – UVA 37, BUF 6
UP NEXT FOR THE HOOS
Virginia has the Thanksgiving holiday off before the Hoos continue dual competition on the road at North Dakota State on Saturday, Dec. 2.
Virginia
West Virginia Mountaineers: Transfer 101: Ashton Woods
West Virginia has jumped into the transfer portal to address a need at the linebacker position with a commitment from North Carolina linebacker Ashton Woods.
Woods, 6-foot-3, 225-pounds, appeared in six games during his true freshman season for the Tarheels but did not record any statistics. A former four-star prospect that was rated as the 17th best linebacker prospect in the nation according to Rivals.com.
Prior to picking North Carolina, Woods held a long list of scholarship offers including USC, Tennessee, Oklahoma, Miami (Fla.), Auburn, Nebraska, Kentucky and a long list of other schools.
The Georgia native entered the transfer portal Dec. 27 and will have three years of eligibility remaining in his career.
WVSports.com breaks down the transfer of Woods and what it means to the West Virginia Mountaineers football program both now and in the future.
The data:
Woods only saw two defensive snaps in his true freshman season but brings a strong profile considering he tallied 151 tackles, eight sacks, 20 tackles for loss, two interceptions and two forced fumbles as a senior in high school.
The early enrollee has excellent size at the position and was able to see the field in his first year with the program which isn’t an easy thing to do.
Fitting the program:
West Virginia has only six true inside linebackers on the roster and one of those is a true freshman that means that as long as Woods is able to adjust quickly there are going to be chances for him to compete for time on the field.
Woods has the size and pedigree that you want to see out of young players that you pull from the transfer portal and that should translate to Morgantown.
It’s an addition from the state of Georgia where he played at an extremely high level in high school and now will have a chance to make the most of his opportunities. The fact that he will have at least three years remaining is critical.
Recruiting the position:
West Virginia still needs more experience at the linebacker position and the program has been active when it comes to searching for those options in the portal. Expect that to continue even with the addition of a high upside option like Woods.
Virginia
Virginia Tech Football: ESPN Expert Gives Biggest Takeaway From Hokies Loss to Minnesota in Dukes Mayo Bowl
It was a fitting end on Friday night for Virginia Tech in the Dukes Mayo Bowl vs Minnesota. After coming into the year with ACC title aspirations, the Hokies disappointing season ends at 6-7. Losing the bowl game was not at all surprising considering the players the Hokies had missing, but it was the final chapter in a season that started with big hopes.
After the game, ESPN’s David Hale gave his biggest takeaway for the game, as well as naming an MVP for Minnesota’s win:
Takeaway: “Minnesota extended the longest bowl winning streak in the country to eight games, largely dominating a severely depleted Virginia Tech team that was missing its starting quarterback, running back, receivers, pass rushers and defensive backs. Max Brosmer, playing in his last collegiate game, threw for 211 yards and finished the season with 2,828 yards passing — the third-highest total in school history. The defense came up big all night, limiting the Hokies offense to 223 total yards and nine first downs. Twice in the fourth quarter, Virginia Tech drove inside the Minnesota 20 but the Gophers stopped the Hokies both times on fourth down, including a game-sealing interception with 4:24 remaining. There was one highlight for Virginia Tech: Kicker John Love made a 60-yard field goal, the second longest in school history. Minnesota coach P.J. Fleck got the ceremonial mayo bath after the win, his sixth bowl victory at the school. The other 34 coaches in program history have combined for seven.”
MVP: WR Elijah Spencer. Spencer finished with six catches for 81 yards and two first-half touchdowns, tying the school record for receiving touchdowns in a bowl game.
All eyes shift to next season now for the Hokies. They are still working on adding talent through the transfer portal and getting quarterback Kyron Drones back healthy. Next year will be a big season for Brent Pry and this program and the work to have a big 2025 season starts now.
Virginia Tech Football: Hokies Kicker John Love Breaks Duke’s Mayo Bowl Record
Virginia Tech Basketball: Instant Takeaways From The Hokies win against Miami
Virginia Tech Football: Hokies fall in Duke’s Mayo Bowl 24-10, Officially Ending The Disappointing 2024 Season
Virginia
Highlights and Notes: Louisville 70, Virginia 50
CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. – For the first time since 1990, the Louisville men’s basketball program was triumphant on the road against Virginia, leaving Charlottesville with a resounding 70-50 victory on Saturday.
The Atlantic Coast Conference put together a highlight tape of the matchup, which you can see here:
(Photo of Chucky Hepburn: Jamie Rhodes – Imagn Images)
You can follow Louisville Cardinals On SI for future coverage by liking us on Facebook, Twitter/X and Instagram:
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You can also follow Deputy Editor Matthew McGavic at @Matt_McGavic on Twitter/X and @mattmcgavic.bsky.social on Bluesky
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