Virginia
Virginia Tech Hokies vs. Rutgers Scarlet Knights: The Good, Bad, and the Ugly
It was Miliary Appreciation Day and a White Effect Game
The best part of the start of the game? The flyover by the three Army UH-60 Blackhawk helicopters to honor their fellow service members, and the swearing in of a large number of Army ROTC cadets.
You could tell something was off though because it was a day game, and they brought out the big marshmallow roaster effects and a smoke generator. The smoke was barely a poof here and there, and one of the marshmallow roasters stopped working after the first jet of flame.
Maybe that was an omen of some kind or another, but the Hokies even lost the coin toss, again. That is one that seems to be defying any statistical odds in the Spock notice that he was beating the computer at 3D chess.
There was just something off about the whole beginning of things. Even the rain couldn’t make up its mind if it was going to douse us or keep trucking to the southeast without doing more than block out the light and mess up the camera settings.
This G, B, and U isn’t going to be a long one. It unfortunately could be a copy and paste from the last one, and the one before. That’s going to be the final note, too.
The Good That Did Happen, Anyway
Bhayshul Tuten was listed as a doubtful by the media folks in the pregame shows. There were quite a few walking wounded including backup Offensive Lineman Laythe Ghannam so the already shifted around line was shifted around again. But the good thing that happened was that Tuten, right knee all trussed up in a lineman’s knee brace, was out on the field, dressed out, and ready to go. It ended up the best thing to happen for the Hokies in the game. Tuten accounted for 18 of Tech’s points on powerful long runs. He had 122 yards for an average of over 8 yards, and most of that was pretty evenly distributed. The truth is that without Tuten the team had almost no offense.
To go with Tuten’s runs, was the banged up offensive line. Lots of folks will still gripe about it, but the O-Line actually did the blocking for Bhayshul Tuten, and gave Kyron Drones more than enough time on most pass plays (not all, but most). The oddity here is that their run blocking has improved greatly even if it has made the pass blocking look a bit less accomplished by comparison. There is still much work to be done, but the Offensive Line wasn’t the major set of woes in this game on that side of the line of scrimmage.
Okay… Found Two ‘Goods’ but the Bads Cometh
As I told someone on the sideline as I was waddling back down the field to take pictures of the Rutgers side of the field after the Hokies’ first possession. “That’s it… That’s how we lose this one…
Another Wasted Slow Start
Bowen limped in, and the Hokies went three and out on three really poor play calls that were also executed without much enthusiasm. It’s almost like the players knew that they weren’t going to move the sticks when that ‘jet sweep’ to Jaylin Lane was clobbered just behind the line of scrimmage. Then 2nd and long was a dud that made up nothing and the third down pass was a total play breakdown and a throw short of the sticks that fell incomplete. It was a really disappointing start, and even as the defense stopped Rutgers for their own three and out, it just didn’t feel like when Tech got the ball back that they were going to do much of anything with it. Well, the bad went to worse as Lane, on review, was hit with a fumble on that punt return and Rutgers drove it straight into the endzone to score the first points of the game on the first embarrassing error.
The Old Turnover Bug is One Thing, Drops and Wasted Opportunities Abounded.
Tech struggled with hanging on to the ball when it had possession. Tech gave up 2 fumbles, and a critical interception that stopped the 2-minute drive to try to win or tie. Tech’s passing game was terrible. Kyron Drones had more than enough time to hit 3-4 second routes, but there were just none to be had. He was offered either screen pass patterns short of the line of scrimmage and nowhere near the line to gain, or impossible naturally low percentage deep balls that he ended up overthrowing. Drones did not have his best day, no. But his offensive coordinator did absolutely nothing to help him for the 4th game in a row. Drones did gain yards on a few purposeful runs, and some scrambles, but by and large the Hokie offense was one dimensional (and almost won on that dimension, alone).
Can you imagine what would happen if Drones had half of Rutgers’ QB’s pass patterns to throw? Rutgers averaged 10.8 yards per passing attempt. Tech’s average was 5.1. (That included several 3, I think but I haven’t watched the replay.) ultra-low percentage deep throws that were called with no real intermediate checkdown patterns. Tech would be at 3rd and medium (4 or 5) and just need to get the patterns past the line to gain to move the sticks, and somehow chose to throw impossible bombs. The big problem, there, is that Felton is struggling to get to the ball, and when he does get there, he’s having difficulty hauling it in.
Not Much Zebra Laundry, But What Was, Really Hurt
Tech was only penalized 4 times, but it was for 34 yards total. One penalty was a totally bogus pass interference call on Mansoor Delane which on the stadium replay showed nothing more than incidental contact that always happens on pass plays. The crowd protested, and nothing could be done, the Scarlet Knights got their much needed first down after that third and long, and frankly the situation stunk because of some other sketchy flags during critical plays.
What You Don’t Play, You Don’t Practice
Tech’s secondary was having a really tough day. Rutgers, when it wanted to, could drive the ball right up the field with a mixture of intermediate passes and only occasional rushes. The truth is that Tech’s run defense was pretty good, and held Rutgers to 2.9 yards a carry. And they lost 34 yards total. The team that was expected to run all over Tech’s defense didn’t. That might have been a “Good” that could be listed, BUT! Rutgers didn’t run, it passed for significant intermediate yardage, and when it needed to move the ball, it did at will, through the air. Tech’s pass defense was just not ready for that sort of challenge and is probably a hat tip to Schiano’s OC but should also be a real warning to the Hokie defensive staff. The secondary was just not prepared for what hit them, and they had trouble adjusting.
There is Just Too Much Ugly…
You can fill in the ellipsis with some list of issues that are really ugly things that are hitting this program. Have you ever been waiting for an elevator that just never seemed to show up? Yep, everyone has. It’s common in high rise situations. What do you do? You can stand and wait for the thing, doing something else, like talking up a friend or stranger. You can take the stairs, but if it’s an express to some high floor you aren’t doing that… so you get frustrated and keep punching the call button hoping that the danged machine will finally pay attention to you and the elevator car will magically appear.
Well, I feel like “that” guy. The ugly thing about this season, last season, and the season before… and before… that several seasons. This offense does not work! How many times does somebody have to slam their head against a brick wall before they figure out that what they are doing is not doing a thing to the wall? The play calling is poor. The game planning is impossible to call anything but pedestrian, and the plays, themselves, are right out of the first few chapters of a high school “Power Spread” playbook.
The offensive assistants (The Dancing Itos – are an OJ Trial reference and I am dating myself, I suppose) grind, gesticulate, glower, and wave away for 10 or even 30 seconds only to produce a lame dive-play that gains 2 yards. Or that ridiculous slot receiver jet sweep that opened the Rutgers game. If you wanted to go wide with an opening run, why not run a toss sweep to Bhayshul Tuten on the field side? Why follow it up with another lump into the line of scrimmage to put your QB, who seems to be struggling a bit this season, into a third and long situation where the defense can pin their ears back and make him throw it away or to a dump off receiver short of the sticks?
It all makes no sense, and the occasional gap busting gash run for significant yardage on one play does not make up for the 10 plays that were tanked into the line of scrimmage for little or no significant gain.
Not only that but this team has had several opportunities to close out games with 2-minute drill plays that put the ball in position to score quickly and there is nothing in the play cupboard that even approaches an effective 2-minute offense. A huge percentage of games are played to draws until the final five minutes of the game, and for an offense to not have a 2-minute drill is a glaring deficiency. The reality is that such a drill requires an intermediate passing game that this team has only made an accidental acquaintance of.
There are already full-throated cries for changes coming from the peanut gallery. Many aren’t even willing to wait for a new season. Currently Hokie Nation is in a mood, and it’s the last ugly, here.
Yes, the last Ugly is the mood that a huge chunk of the fanbase is in right now. They were sold a Cadillac only to lift the hood and find a sewing machine running a bondo plastered hooptie. That’s when fans get disillusioned and stop showing up and caring.
We’ll leave it at that, for now.
The Pictures are up on Facebook.
Friday, which is a terribly short time to prepare to be plucked by a team with a bird mascot, too. The road trip to Miami portends to be brutal. I see little hope that the game planning and play calling will “suddenly and miraculously” get better. Let us hope that the walking wounded list coming out of Coral Gables isn’t too long to put up a good fight against Stanford.
GO HOKIES!!!!
Virginia
Virginia Roberts Giuffre: Epstein accuser’s memoir sells 1m copies in two months
A posthumous memoir by one of Jeffrey Epstein’s best-known accusers, Virginia Roberts Giuffre, has sold 1m copies worldwide in just the two months after its release.
Publisher Alfred A Knopf announced on Tuesday that more than half the sales for Nobody’s Girl came out of North America; in the US, the book is now in its 10th printing after an initial run of 70,000 copies. Giuffre’s book, co-written by author-journalist Amy Wallace, was published in early October.
The memoir helped revive criticism of Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, formerly a British prince, whom Giuffre alleged had sex with her when she was 17. And it heightened demands that the Justice Department release its files on Epstein, who killed himself in prison in 2019 while awaiting trial on sex trafficking charges.
Giuffre died by suicide in April at age 41.
“This is a bittersweet moment for us,” Giuffre’s family, including siblings Sky Roberts and Danny Wilson, said in a statement. “We are enormously proud of our sister, and the impact she continues to have on the world. We’re also filled with so much sorrow that she couldn’t be here to witness the impact of her words. In her absence, our family remains committed to ensuring her voice is everlasting.”
Within weeks of Giuffre’s book being published, King Charles III stripped Mountbatten-Windsor of his remaining titles and evicted him from his royal residence.
Mountbatten-Windsor has long denied Giuffre’s claims but stepped down from royal duties after a disastrous November 2019 BBC interview in which he attempted to rebut her allegations.
He paid millions in an out-of-court settlement in 2022 after Giuffre filed a civil suit against him in New York. While he didn’t admit wrongdoing, he acknowledged Giuffre’s suffering as a victim of sex trafficking.
This week Giuffre’s family expressed their “deep disappointment” after the Metropolitan police announced Mountbatten-Windsor will not face a criminal investigation in the UK over allegations against him.
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In Australia, the crisis support service Lifeline is 13 11 14. In the US, the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline is 1-800-273-8255. In the UK, Samaritans can be contacted on 116 123. Other international suicide helplines can be found at befrienders.org
Virginia
Virginia voters nominate candidates in Fairfax, Prince William ahead of January special election – WTOP News
Voters in several Northern Virginia districts are nominating candidates Tuesday who could be elected to serve on the state’s House of Delegates.
Voters in several Northern Virginia districts are nominating candidates Tuesday who could be elected to serve on the state’s House of Delegates.
Whoever wins Tuesday’s contests will compete in a special election on Jan. 13, 2026, for vacated seats in the Virginia General Assembly, where Democrats currently hold a 63-37 majority.
The series of shake-ups comes as several Democratic lawmakers step down from the House of Delegates to join Gov.-elect Abigail Spanberger’s administration.
Two of the resigning lawmakers represent Northern Virginia: Del. David Bulova, of Fairfax City and Fairfax County; and Del. Candi Mundon King, of Prince William and Stafford counties.
Last week, Spanberger named Bulova as her pick for Virginia’s next secretary of natural and historic resources.
And the future governor tapped King to serve as the secretary of the commonwealth.
Each party has until Dec. 17 to submit a nominee to the Virginia Board of Elections for next month’s special election, according to a writ of special elections filed by Virginia House Speaker Don Scott.
District 11: Fairfax City and part of Fairfax County
Democrats
Five candidates are running for the Democratic nomination in a firehouse primary, including the exiting delegate’s wife, Gretchen Bulova, as well as Vanessa Cardenas, So Lim, Douglas Shuster and Denver Supinger.
Any voter registered in Virginia House of Delegates District 11 can participate — but they have to sign a declaration of support for the Democratic Party, according to the democratic committees in Fairfax County and Fairfax City. In a firehouse primary, the political parties organize the contest, not the state.
District 11 includes all of Fairfax City and portions of Fairfax County. If you’re not sure whether your home sits within the district’s boundaries, check out this website.
The caucus locations are open 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. at these locations:
- Fairfax Presbyterian Church at 10723 Main Street
- Jim Scott Community Center at 3001 Vaden Drive
- Fairfax County Government Center at 12000 Government Center Parkway
Gretchen Bulova is the chair of the Fairfax County 250th Commission and the county’s history commission.
Cardenas is also a Fairfax City resident who works as the executive director of America’s Voice, which works to garner support for policy changes that create paths toward full citizenship for immigrants.
At a candidate forum on Sunday, Lim introduced herself as a progressive Democrat. She served three terms on the Fairfax City Council.
Shuster is the president of the Miller Heights Neighborhood Association and works at an advisory firm.
Supinger, former chief of staff to Del. Karrie Delaney, is the founder of a consulting firm that specializes in social impact strategy, political advocacy, and policymaking, according to its website.
It’s the second time Fairfax voters have participated in a firehouse primary this year, after earlier nominating candidates who competed to replace the late Rep. Gerry Connolly in June. Democrat James Walkinshaw ultimately won that special election in September.
Republicans
The Fairfax County Republican Committee confirmed with WTOP that Adam Wise will be the nominee, and there will be no caucus held.
Wise had previously run for the District 11 seat in November but lost to David Bulova, the incumbent.
District 23: Parts of Prince William and Stafford
Democrats
A Democratic caucus will also be going on in Virginia House of Delegates District 23 on Tuesday, according to the Democratic committees in Prince William and Stafford counties.
The caucus is scheduled to run from noon to 7 p.m. at these locations:
- Dumfries Community Center at 17757 Main Street, Dumfries
- Porter Branch Library at 2001 Parkway Boulevard, Stafford
Two candidates qualified to be on the ballot: Woodbridge Supervisor Margaret Franklin and Muhammed “Sef” Casim.
WTOP will report on the full ballot once the Republican nominee is finalized.
What’s happening in January
Voters in District 23 and District 11 will head to the polls on Jan. 13, 2026, for a special election to replace Dels. Bulova and King.
Early voting will be open from Jan. 3 to Jan. 10.
Outside of Northern Virginia, a separate special election is being held on Jan. 6, 2026, to replace representatives headed to Spanberger’s administration. Voters in the Richmond area will elect a new state senator in House District 15 and a new delegate in District 77.
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Virginia
Top 25 Virginia Girls High School Basketball State Rankings – Dec. 15, 2025
The high school basketball season is underway in Virginia and it’s time to unveil the first High School on SI girls Top 25 of the regular season.
Princess Anne, the preseason No. 1, remains at the top, followed by The Saint James Performance Academy. Bishop Ireton, Catholic-Virginia Beach and Menchville complete the Top 5.
The second 5 include Virginia Academy, Saint Anne’s-Belfield School, Osbourn Park, Saint Paul VI Catholic and Shining Stars Sports Academy. Shining Stars moved into the Top 10 after defeating then-No. 7 Norfolk Christian Academy at the She Got Game Classic at The St. James Complex in Northern Virginia over the weekend.
Five teams – Clarke County, Briar Woods, Loudoun Valley, Potomac Falls and Washington-Liberty – enter this week’s poll.
Here’s this week’s High School on SI Virginia girls basketball Top 25:
Preseason rank: No. 1
Record: 5-0
The Cavaliers are averaging nearly 80 points a game.
Preseason rank: No. 2
Record: 5-2
The Strivers’ two losses have been by a total of 18 points.
Preseason rank: No. 5
Record: 4-1
The Cardinals defeated then-No. 4 Osbourn Park at the She Got Game Classic.
Preseason rank: No. 3
Record: 4-4
The Crusaders went 1-2 at the She Got Game Classic.
Preseason rank: No. 6
Record: 4-0
The Monarchs topped Rosedale Christian Academy (Md.) and Mallard Creek (N.C.) at the She Got Game Classic.
Preseason rank: No. 8
Record: 6-0
The Patriots have wins over then-No. 9 Saint Anne’s-Belfield School and Maryland Top 25 schools Elizabeth Seton, St. Mary’s Ryken and Our Lady of Good Counsel.
Preseason rank: No. 9
Record: 6-2
The Saints split two matches at the She Got Game Classic.
Preseason rank: No. 4
Record: 4-2
The Yellowjackets defeated Saint Neumann-Goretti (Pa.) and Southern-Garrett before falling to then-No. 5 Bishop Ireton at the She Got Game Classic.
Preseason rank: No. 10
Record: 4-2
The Panthers dropped decisions to then-No. 4 Osbourn Park and Christ the King (N.Y.) at the Art Turner Memorial.
Preseason rank: No. 11
Record: 5-2
The Panthers handled then-No. 7 Norfolk Christian Academy at the She Got Game Classic.
Preseason rank: No. 7
Record: 3-3
The Ambassadors have dropped decisions to then-No. 5 Bishop Ireton and then-No. 11 Shining Stars Sports Academy.
Preseason rank: No. 12
Record: 4-1
The Lancers’ only setback came against No. 1 Princess Anne.
Preseason rank: No. 13
Record: 5-1
The Knights dropped a 57-48 decision to then-No. 6 Menchville in the opening week.
Preseason rank: No. 14
Record: 5-2
The Panthers have won five straight, including victory over Whitney Young (Ill.) at She Got Game Classic.
Preseason rank: No. 18
Record: 4-0
The Wolverines have won their four decisions by an average of 31 points.
Preseason rank: No. 22
Record: 6-0
After back-to-back two-point wins (then-No. 20 Centreville and then-No. 23 Gainesville), the Saxons routed Lake Braddock and West Springfield.
Preseason rank: No. 23
Record: 6-1
The Cardinals’ only blemish is a two-point loss to Langley.
Preseason rank: No. 15
Record: 5-1
The Stallions dropped a 56-534 decision to Gainesville in the season opener.
Preseason rank: Not ranked
Record: 5-0
The Eagles own a pair of victories over Loudoun Valley.
Preseason rank: Not ranked
Record: 4-0
The Falcons opened the season with a win over then-No. 16 Heritage.
Preseason rank: Not ranked
Record: 5-2
The Vikings are riding a three-game winning streak after loss to Clarke County.
Preseason rank: Not ranked
Record: 5-1
The Panthers own victories over then-No. 16 Heritage and then-No. 19 Chantilly.
Preseason rank: No. 19
Record: 5-1
The Chargers’ only loss is a 44-43 decision to Potomac Falls.
Preseason rank: No. 20
Record: 3-2
The Wildcats’ losses to Langley and Gainesville are by a total of seven points.
Preseason rank: Not ranked
Record: 4-1
The Generals have won four straight by a margin of 44 points.
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