Virginia
Virginia Women’s Basketball Earns Scrappy Win Over Campbell to Remain Unbeaten
For the primary time since 1997, the Virginia ladies’s basketball workforce has began the season 6-0. UVA overcame a poor taking pictures evening and one other sluggish begin to draw back for a 62-41 victory over Campbell on Wednesday evening at John Paul Jones Area to stay undefeated on the season.
Neither workforce operated successfully on the offensive finish of the ground and that development began proper from the start of the sport. There have been 11 mixed turnovers between the 2 groups within the first quarter. A 3-pointer from Svenia Nurenberg gave Campbell a 12-10 lead on the finish of the opening interval.
The second quarter noticed each the Cavaliers and the Combating Camels expertise prolonged scoring droughts, together with a scoreless stretch of over 5 minutes for Virginia. A turnaround jumper from Cady Pauley lastly ended that drought and UVA ended the second interval on a 6-2 run to take a 22-18 halftime lead.
Whether or not it was extra as a result of stingy defenses of each groups or as a result of dangerous shot choice and poor ball safety, the end result was a horrific first half of offense total. Campbell turned the ball over 13 occasions within the first half, whereas Virginia had 9 first-half turnovers. UVA shot 34% from the ground and didn’t hit a single three-pointer, whereas Campbell shot 35% and hit simply two of 11 three-point makes an attempt. Virginia managed to take the lead by gaining a bonus on the within and on the boards. UVA had eight offensive rebounds and 10 second probability factors and outscored Campbell 20-12 within the paint within the first half.
The third quarter noticed extra offensive struggles, as neither workforce hit a area aim for a stretch of over 4 minutes. Virginia shot 4/17 from the ground within the third, however discovered success driving to the basket and drawing fouls. The Cavaliers went 11/13 from the free throw line to win the quarter 19-15 and stretch their result in 41-33 coming into the fourth.
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As has been the case in a number of of UVA’s video games to begin the season, the Cavaliers lastly discovered a rhythm when it mattered most. Sam Brunelle hit Virginia’s first three-pointer greater than 32 minutes into the sport as a part of an 11-0 explosion for the Cavaliers to open up a 14-point lead. It was clean crusing from there, because the Hoos continued to play stifling protection and abuse their benefit within the paint, ending with a 36-22 edge in paint factors. Campbell completed with 25 turnovers and Virginia scored 25 factors off of these takeaways to assist seal the win. UVA outscored Campbell 21-8 within the fourth quarter and scored 40 factors within the second half to safe the 62-41 victory.
Camryn Taylor led the best way with 13 factors for the Cavaliers and London Clarkson joined her in double figures with 10 factors on an environment friendly 5/6 taking pictures from the ground. The unsung hero of the evening was McKenna Dale, who didn’t rating some extent however recorded eight rebounds, two steals, one block, and one help in simply 17 minutes of motion. Taylor Valladay had eight factors, 4 assists, two rebounds and two steals and Mir McLean had seven factors, seven rebounds, and a steal earlier than fouling out.
With the victory, Virginia (6-0) has now eclipsed its win whole for the complete 2021-2022 season (5-22), a outstanding turnaround for the Cavaliers of their first season below Coach Mox.
UVA will probably be again in motion this weekend with the Cavalier Traditional in Charlottesville. Virginia will host Minnesota on Saturday at 2pm and East Carolina on Sunday at 2pm at John Paul Jones Area.
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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
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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)
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Virginia
Five Takeaways From Virginia’s 70-50 Loss to Louisville
Virginia went cold from three-point range and struggled on both ends of the floor down the stretch as the Cavaliers (8-6, 1-2 ACC) suffered a 70-50 loss to Louisville (10-5, 3-1 ACC) in their first game of 2025 on Saturday evening at John Paul Jones Arena. Here are our five key takeaways from UVA’s loss, which was the first time the Cavaliers had ever lost to Louisville at John Paul Jones Arena.
There was stretches of Saturday’s game where the Cavaliers were going punch-for-punch with the Cardinals. A three-pointer from Andrew Rohde made it a four-point game with 15 minutes left in the first half, but that was the closest UVA ever got, as Louisville outscored Virginia 29-13 over the last 15 minutes of regulation. While the Virginia defense had been playing fairly well up to that point, the Cavaliers had too many breakdowns and gave up way too many open looks for the rest of the game. Unfortunately, the other end of the floor was the much bigger issue for Virginia.
Virginia came into the game ranked 27th in the country in three-point shooting, converting at 38.5% as a team. Against Louisville on Saturday, the Cavaliers went a dismal 5/26 from beyond the arc. Isaac McKneely and Andrew Rohde went a combined 5/12 from three, which isn’t bad, but the rest of the team shot 0/14. There were a couple of three-point attempts that rimmed out and UVA missed a few open shots, but the Cavaliers struggled mightily to generate open looks against Louisville and it showed in the final perimeter shooting numbers.
Part of Louisville’s ability to pull away in this game was the sharpshooting of Reyne Smith. UVA knew Smith was Louisville’s best three-point shooter and yet Smith continued to make the Cavaliers pay for losing track of him off of screens. Smith drained five three-pointers and most of them were open looks. Virginia needs to take a hard look at the tape from this one and replicate what Louisville was doing with Reyne Smith for Isaac McKneely. As a side note, Smith and the Louisville bench scored 34 points as compared to just two points for the Virginia bench.
The Cardinals won the rebounding battle 42-25 and had 14 offensive rebounds to UVA’s six. The Cavaliers were fortunate that Louisville only scored 10 second-chance points. There was an obvious gap in athleticism between these two teams, but more concerningly, there was an evident gap in the levels of energy, aggressiveness, and desire with which the Cardinals pursued rebounds that the Hoos simply couldn’t, or wouldn’t match.
We’ve talked at length about UVA’s point guard situation and the lack of depth this team has in terms of ball-handlers and offensive facilitators. Dai Dai Ames is UVA’s best ball-handler, but in the last two games, he has played just nine and ten minutes, respectively. He was 0/2 from the floor and scored zero points against Louisville. Andrew Rohde played a good game and he deserves some recognition for his efforts, recording 16 points, three assists, and three steals. But when Andrew Rohde is the team’s primary, and in some ways, only offensive playmaker, that underscores some of the fundamental offensive flaws this team is facing right now.
Up next, Virginia heads west for a pair of games in California, starting with a late-night contest at Cal on Wednesday at 11pm ET (ESPNU).
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