Virginia
Virginia Tech vs. Wake Forest, How to Watch, Preview
If there is one thing the Virginia Tech men’s basketball team can be thankful for, it’s that the month of February is over. The Hokies went 2-5 in the month and fell off the NCAA Tournament bubble. Yes, they can hang their hat on beating Virginia at home by 34 points, but that’s about all.
With the calendar turning to March, Virginia Tech has three games remaining before the ACC Tournament begins in two weeks in Washington D.C. Unless the Hokies sweep their final three conference games, they are looking at the prospect of playing on the opening day of the tournament, which is a less than ideal situation. They do have two of their final three in Blacksburg beginning Saturday night.
5:30 p.m.. 18-10 (10-7 ACC). 448. CW Network. March 2. ACC. . 15-13 (7-10 ACC). 447
This game will begin at 5:30 p.m. ET and be broadcast on the CW Network and streamed on FuboTV.
The Hokies come into the game off a loss at Syracuse Tuesday night that dropped to 7-10 in the ACC. They return home to get a Demon Deacons team that beat Duke at home last Saturday, but then went out to Notre Dame and lost to the Irish Tuesday night.
For Virginia Tech, it’s straightforward. When they get Lynn Kidd involved early and often offensively, that opens up the floor for the rest of his teammates. Sean Pedulla has been playing well lately and they need Hunter Cattoor to knock down some shots early and often to get into a rhythm. Tyler Nickel has been big off the bench and defensively, they need to keep Wake Forest off the boards and not allow second-chance points.
Virginia Tech saw up close how good the Demon Deacons are back in December when they went to Winston-Salem and were blown out. Wake Forest is a desperate team in terms of earning wins to get into the NCAA Tournament and the Hokies will get their best shot on the road at Cassell Coliseum.
Virginia
What Ryan Zimmerman, others say Mississippi State can expect from Brian O’Connor
STARKVILLE – Brian O’Connor was 32 when he was hired as Virginia’s baseball coach in 2003.
He had never been a head coach and was taking over a Virginia program that had only made three NCAA Tournaments. It was also before social media and college baseball boomed into what it is today.
“There wasn’t much in the way of knowing people back then,” said Ryan Zimmerman, who played at Virgina from 2003-05 before a 17-year career with the Washington Nationals. “Obviously, he was well regarded and came in as a good baseball guy, but we really didn’t know what to expect or what it was going to be like.”
It turned into a program-changing hire for the Cavaliers, who quickly became one of the top teams in the ACC. That success was sustained for 22 years as O’Connor led the Cavaliers to 18 NCAA Tournaments, seven College World Series and one national championship.
But that run at Virginia ended when Mississippi State pried O’Connor away to be the Bulldogs’ new coach in 2026. They doubled O’Connor’s salary, and there are immediately high expectations with MSU ranked No. 6 in the preseason.
Some fans are calling 2026 the most highly anticipated season in program history before opening day against Hofstra on Feb. 13 (4 p.m., SEC Network+).
The Clarion Ledger spoke with several of O’Connor’s Virginia players to learn what makes him such a great coach, how they think he’ll do at Mississippi State and how they reacted to him leaving Virginia.
“I think he’ll do great,” said Tyler Cannon, a Virginia baseball Hall of Fame shortstop from 2007-10. “I really do. He’s an unbelievable coach, but he’s an even better leader. The guy never sleeps.”
Why Virginia players think Brian O’Connor will succeed at Mississippi State
Virginia had a 29-25 record, but placed sixth in the ACC in 2003. O’Connor quickly brought Virginia back to the NCAA Tournament in 2004 with a 44-15 record and second-place finish in the ACC.
That began a run of 14 consecutive NCAA Tournament appearances.
“I think the thing with him that really separates him from other coaches is his ability to adapt and adjust,” said Stephen Schoch, a Virginia pitcher from 2020-21. “He’s not married to a system.”
Virginia won its national championship in 2015, but the team wasn’t a powerhouse from opening day to the championship. In fact, the team nearly missed the ACC Tournament but won five of its last six conference games to be a No. 7 seed in the 10-team field.
The Cavaliers were a No. 3 seed but swept the regional and then Maryland in the super regional. Virginia only lost one game throughout the entire NCAA Tournament.
“It was always the poise he showed,” said Alec Bettinger, a Virginia pitcher from 2014-17. “It’s a word he used a lot with us, especially the pitchers having poise in big situations. Not getting too high, not getting too low. I always remember in big situations, bad calls, great plays, whatever it might be, you would look at the end of the dugout and his expression didn’t change much until the job as over.”
O’Connor has had extreme continuity on his coaching staff, and brought many of his assistant coaches with him to Mississippi State.
Kevin McMullan, MSU’s new associate head coach, was at Virginia since 2003. Matt Kirby, another new MSU assistant coach, was at Virginia for 14 seasons, 12 as a volunteer assistant.
The only other members of O’Connor’s Mississippi State staff who didn’t previously work for him are pitching coach Justin Parker and data/video analytics coordinator Jonathan French.
“I think the thing that just stands out the most is the consistency and the way they treat each person whether you are supposed to be the best player on the team or whether you’re a guy that walked on,” Zimmerman said. “They do really get the best out of each and every person.”
Virginia players react to Brian O’Connor leaving for Mississippi State
O’Connor was hired on June 1, approximately one hour after the Bulldogs were eliminated by Florida State in the Tallahassee Regional final. Rumors and reports began surfacing well before then that O’Connor was likely becoming the next Mississippi State coach. Virginia’s season ended short of the NCAA Tournament on May 21.
“I had mixed feelings,” Cannon said. “Nothing against (O’Connor) whatsoever. I was just more sad about him not being in a Virginia uniform anymore is the best way to put it. But the way I look at it, I’m obviously super happy for him.”
“I think a lot of people were obviously upset,” Zimmerman said. “Kind of like I told everybody, all good things come to an end at some point. And to do what they did for 20-plus years is remarkable.”
Some of the players said they’ll use it as an opportunity to catch a game at Dudy Noble Field.
“(O’Connor) is one of my favorite people in college baseball, so seeing him go to one of the programs I really like and really want to see have success, I couldn’t be happier about that,” Schoch said.
Sam Sklar is the Mississippi State beat reporter for the Clarion Ledger. Email him at ssklar@usatodayco.com and follow him on X @sklarsam_.
Virginia
Shooting death of Arlington, Virginia, mother Sandra Burt Carrera still unsolved 35 years later
It’s been 35 years since Suanne Burt Sardi last spoke with her older sister, Sandra.
Thirty-five years since the two women hung up the phone on an early morning in January, promising to check in again in the afternoon.
Thirty-five years since 41-year-old Sandra Burt Carrera was found shot to death in her Arlington, Virginia, home.
And for 35 years, the tragedy has gone unsolved.
Suanne was only 25 years old on January 15, 1991, when she received a phone call from her 11-year-old nephew, Alex Carrera. “He said, ‘Aunt Suanne, my mother’s dead. She’s shot in the head,’” Suanne told Dateline. “It just seemed inconceivable.”
And it was. Just hours earlier, Sandra had been alive and well. The sisters had been catching up on the phone. Sandra was living in Arlington, Virginia, where she worked in marketing for HOK Architecture. “She loved living in D.C.,” Suanne recalled. “She just thought it was so exciting.”
“She was very warm, she was very funny, and bright,” Suanne said. Sandra was 16 years older than Suanne and “was kind of like a second mom” to her. She was dedicated to her work, carving out her place in the architecture industry — first in Pittsburgh, and then in Washington, D.C. But according to Suanne, “her number one job was mom” to her son, Alex.
Sandra moved to Arlington following her divorce from Alex’s father. According to Suanne, the divorce had been amicable, and Sandra had started dating again.
On the morning of January 15, Sandra and Suanne spoke on the phone. Sandra told Suanne that the man she was seeing had come over the night before, but had already left before they got on the phone. They talked for a bit before Suanne had to hang up. “I remember the last thing I said was, ‘I have to go, I have to get to econ class.’ And she said, ‘OK, I’ll call you later.’” The sisters made plans to talk again in the afternoon around 2:00 p.m., and then said their goodbyes.
The afternoon came and went. Suanne, who was earning her MBA at the University of Pittsburgh, was having friends over that night. “I never thought about the fact that she didn’t call me,” Suanne said. “And then at six o’clock that night, Alex called me.”
According to Suanne, Alex forgot his keys to the house when he went to school that day, so he went to play with a neighbor after school. Around 6:00 p.m., he noticed the lights were on at his house, so he headed home. The front door was unlocked, and when he went in, he saw his mother’s body. Alex called 911, and shortly after that, called Suanne and his father, who lived in Pittsburgh, to tell them what had happened. “Absolutely horrific,” Suanne said. “It still makes me shake, thinking about all of it, all these years later.”
The Arlington County Police Department reported to the scene and continues to be the primary investigating agency. Media Relations and Public Affairs Manager Ashley Savage provided a response to Dateline’s questions regarding Sandra’s case via email.
According to Savage, the Arlington County Police Department arrived at the scene at approximately 6:09 p.m., where Sandra was found “fully clothed, laying on her side at the bottom of a short flight of stairs.” The manner of death was ruled homicide, and the cause of death was a gunshot wound.
According to Suanne, Sandra had been shot “execution-style” three times in the head. “She was blown out of her shoes and off the landing, onto the floor down below,” she said. “It’s absolutely just brutal.”
According to Arlington County PD, Sandra’s “home is not believed to have been disturbed.” Nor do they believe anything was taken from the home.
Suanne says that when she was on the phone with her sister earlier in the day, Sandra told her she was going to run errands on the way home from dropping Alex off at school, stopping for cash and to get groceries. “The groceries were sitting on the dining room table, and the cash was on the steps, totally undisturbed,” Suanne said.
“Her home was processed, and various personal items and forensic evidence were collected,” Savage wrote Dateline. “Various evidence has been tested throughout the years but has not led to the identity of a suspect.”
The weapon used to kill Sandra has not been located. “During the course of this investigation, detectives conducted a comprehensive investigation into Sandra’s life with the goal of identifying the individual(s) responsible for her death,” Savage wrote. “Despite these efforts, no arrest has been made in her case.”
Suanne summed it up: “The biggest problems were there were no witnesses, there’s no clear motive, and they never had a weapon.” The investigation stalled.
Over the last 35 years, the Arlington County Police Department has led the investigation into Sandra’s murder, receiving help from various agencies, including the FBI. “As this is an open investigation, additional details regarding their assistance is not releasable to ensure the integrity of the open investigation,” Savage wrote.
“The passage of time does not diminish the need for answers and accountability in this senseless act of violence that took Sandra’s life,” Savage wrote. “Anyone who knew Sandra or who lived in the area of Windgate Townhomes in Arlington, VA on January 15, 1991, is encouraged to reach out to the Arlington County Police Department. Detectives continue to follow-up on investigative leads in this case and remind the public that any information, regardless of how small it may seem, could be the tip that leads to justice on behalf of Sandra and her family.”
In the years since Sandra’s death, the family has faced the immense grief that comes with such a violent loss. “We were really, really close,” Suanne said. “We were best friends.”
As this year marks the 35th anniversary of Sandra’s death, Suanne “feels a sense of urgency” to find answers. In her sixties now, she longs for justice to be served in her sister’s case, and looks forward to what a fresh look could mean for Sandra’s story.
If you have information about Sandra’s case, please contact the Arlington County Police Department’s Homicide/Robbery Unit at 703-228-4180 or ACPDTipline@arlingtonva.us. Information may also be reported anonymously through the Arlington County Crime Solvers hotline at 1-866-411-TIPS (8477).
If you have a story to share with Dateline, please submit it here.
Virginia
Virginia Tech expert explains Olympian Lindsey Vonn’s ACL injury, how she is still competing
BLACKSBURG, Va. – For many athletes, ACL-related injuries can put them out of a sport for long periods of time. Olympian Lindsey Vonn isn’t letting that happen – but how?
Vonn crashed while training for the 2026 Winter Olympics on Jan. 30 and ruptured her ACL. Robin Queen, a Virginia Tech professor of biomedical engineering, explained why exactly the ACL is so important, even in a sport like skiing.
“The ACL is particularly important for stabilization when someone is pivoting or twisting and when they are landing from a jump or out of the air.”
Robin Queen, a Virginia Tech professor of biomedical engineering
Queen also stated that this is a rare occurrence to see an athlete back on their feet this quickly following such an injury. She emphasized that, when athletes do continue in a sport prior to their ACL being reconstructed, they will wear a knee brace. Many athletes also have better body awareness, which can help with stabilization.
“It is important to understand that there is a mental aspect to her being able to ski, and ski well. Often following an ACL rupture, there is a greater fear of movement and a fear of reinjury, so she will be managing the typical physical and mental demands of competing at an elite level while also potentially worrying about the stability of her knee and how it will feel while she is competing.”
Robin Queen, a Virginia Tech professor of biomedical engineering
You can read the full write-up from Virginia Tech here.
Copyright 2026 by WSLS 10 – All rights reserved.
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