Virginia Cavaliers
Oct. 22---College Football---
North Carolina 7 ... Virginia 5---College Football---
North Carolina got a two-yard touchdown pass to Rikki Cook in the first quarter for all the points it would need, and the defense took care of the rest only allowing a Connor Highs field goal in the fourth quarter. Virginia had a great chance to get in field goal range getting to the Tar Heel 36, but Marques Hagans was picked off. UNC was able to run down the clock to :06 and got the punt off, but had to run one more play after getting penalized after the ball was kicked by a celebrating Mike Mason. ---College Football---
Player of the game: North Carolina LBs Tommy Richardson and Larry Edwards combined for 21 tackles. ---College Football---
Stat Leaders: UNC - Passing: Matt Baker, 13-24, 98 yds, 1 TD, 1 INT---College Football---
Rushing: Ronnie McGill, 23-118. Receiving: Jesse Holley, 4-46---College Football---
Virginia - Passing: Marques Hagans, 14-28, 109 yds, 1 INT---College Football---
Rushing: Wali Lundy, 18-60. Receiving: Deyon Williams, 5-42---College Football---
What to take away from this game: There weren't many dumb mistakes against North Carolina, the defense played well, and Cavs had a great shot late, but simply couldn't get the offense on track and couldn't take advantage of any mistakes and breaks in momentum. Marques Hagans couldn't get anything going deep, while Wali Lundy never got room to roam. This was a tough, hard-fought defensive battle, and North Carolina's defense simply played better. ---College Football---
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Oct. 15
Virginia 26 ... Florida State 21---College Football---
Virginia took a 26-10 lead helped by two Marques Hagans touchdown passes and four Connor Hughes field goals, but the defense had to hang on for dear life as Florida State got a 22-yard touchdown pass to Chris Davis and a 32-yard Gary Cismesia field goal to pull within five. The Noles had one last chance, but Drew Weatherford's first pass was picked off by Tony Franklin to seal the win. FSU's other touchdown came on a 58-yard Lorenzo Booker run in the first quarter. Virginia was held to 20 yards rushing. ---College Football---
Player of the game: Virginia QB Marques Hagans completed 27 of 36 passes for 306 yards and two touchdowns.---College Football---
Stat Leaders: Florida State - Passing: Drew Weatherford, 35-59, 377 yds, 1 TD, 3 INT
Rushing: Lorenzo Booker, 7-69, 1 TD. Receiving: Willie Reid, 7-100---College Football---
Virginia - Passing: Marques Hagans, 27-36, 306 yds, 2 TD---College Football---
Rushing: Wali Lundy, 9-26. Receiving: Jonathan Stupar, 5-66, 1 TD---College Football---
What to take away from this game: Talk about turning your season around, Virginia might not have gotten back into the ACC title race, but it certainly revived its bowl chances with the win over Florida State. Marques Hagans came up with one of the great unsung performances of the season not making any major mistakes against the pressure of the Seminole defense. While he didn't run, he used his quickness to buy time for the passing game. Kai Parham has to start getting a little bit of publicity as one of the nation's best linebackers. He did a little of everything. ---College Football---
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Oct. 8---College Football---
Boston College 28 ... Virginia 17---College Football---
BC QB Quinton Porter threw a 19-yard touchdown pass to Tony Gonzalez and Brian Toal ran for two short touchdown runs in a sloppy game with the two teams combining for four turnovers and 22 penalties for 199 yards. Marques Hagans threw two touchdown passes to give Virginia a 14-7 lead early in the second quarter, but the offense was only able to manage a 37-yard field goal from Connor Hughes the rest of the way.
Player of the game: Boston College QB Quinton Porter completed 25 of 37 passes for 301 yards and a touchdown with an interception. ---College Football---
Stat Leaders: Boston College - Passing: Quinton Porter, 25-37, 301 yds, 1 TD, 1 INT
Rushing: Andre Callender, 11-119, 1 TD. Receiving: Larry Lester, 7-93---College Football---
Virginia - Passing: Marques Hagans, 21-35, 195 yds, 2 TD, 1 INT---College Football---
Rushing: Michael Johnson, 11-61. Receiving: Deyon Williams, 6-78, 1 TD---College Football---
What to take away from this game: With Florida State, Virginia Tech and Miami on the schedule, the loss to Boston College might mean the season has slipped away. There's not enough of a running game with nothing consistently going with 155 yards against the Eagles, and there's still not enough in the passing attack to scare anyone despite Marques Hagans playing relatively well. The run defense is getting rolled over and desperately needed Ahmad Brooks back.---College Football---
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Oct. 1---College Football---
Maryland 45 ... Virginia 33---College Football---
Three fourth quarter touchdown runs, including two from Lance Ball and Keon Lattimore's second scoring run of the day, were enough for Maryland to get by Virginia. The Cavaliers got four Connor Hughes field goals, two Marques Hagans touchdown runs and a 31-yard interception return for a touchdown by Chris Cook, but the defense couldn't slow down a Terp attack that rolled up 570 yards of total offense. ---College Football---
Player of the game: Maryland RB Lance Ball ran 17 times for 163 yards and two touchdowns. ---College Football---
Stat Leaders: Maryland - Passing: Sam Hollenbach, 25-33, 320 yds, 2 TD, 2 INT
Rushing: Lance Ball, 17-163, 2 TD. Receiving: Danny Melendez, 9-125, 1 TD
Virginia - Passing: Marques Hagans, 17-35, 270 yds, 2 TD---College Football---
Rushing: Marques Hagans, 17-55, 2 TD. Receiving: Deyon Williams, 5-62
What to take away from this game: Virginia's offense hasn't been 100% sharp all season long, but it was the defense that failed against Maryland allowing 570 yards to a mediocre Terp attack. Virginia isn't going to win many games when it gets outrushed (250 yards to 136), and it didn't help that Maryland was able to rumble at will in the fourth quarter. Marques Hagans had a good game, but he needs more help from the rest of the running game. Wali Lundy has to get back to being Wali Lundy.
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Sept. 24---College Football---
Virginia 38 ... Duke 7---College Football---
Virginia QB Marques Hagans threw four touchdown passes with two to Deyon Williams, and Cedric Peerman added a 17-yard touchdown run in the easy win. The Cavalier defense forced four turnovers and only allowed 215 yards of total offense. Kai Parham made 12 tackles for the Cavaliers. ---College Football---
Player of the game: Virginia QB Marques Hagans completed 13 of 21 passes for 174 yards and four touchdowns. ---College Football---
Stat Leaders: Duke - Passing: Zack Asack, 7-13, 87 yds, 1 TD, 2 INT---College Football---
Rushing: Justin Boyle, 14-44. Receiving: Ronnie Williams, 4-32---College Football---
Virginia - Passing: Marques Hagans, 13-21, 174 yds, 4 TD---College Football---
Rushing: Cedric Peerman, 10-46, 1TD. Receiving: Deyon Williams, 4-49, 2 TD
What to take away from this game: Virginia beat Duke in a blowout, but the team still didn't look all that sharp. Granted, injuries have been a problem, and things are only getting worse with star offensive lineman D'Brickashaw Ferguson going out with a leg injury. Even so, the team is still 3-0 going into a good road trip to Maryland. If Marques Hagans can build on this performance, and the rest of the team can get healthy in a hurry, the Cavs has the potential to make some serious noise as the season goes on. ---College Football---
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Sept. 17---College Football---
Virginia 27 ... Syracuse 24---College Football---
Virginia's Connor Hughes hit a 19-yard field goal with one second to play for the win. The Cavaliers appeared to have the game in hand after a 70-yard touchdown run from Michael Johnson, but Syracuse came back on a three-yard Perry Patterson touchdown run and a 27-yard John Barker filed goal. The play of Virginia QB Marques Hagans on the final drive mixing up a few scrambles with some short passes proved to be the difference. Patterson ran for two scores for the Orange; Cedric Peerman scored twice for the Cavaliers. ---College Football---
Player of the game: Virginia QB Marques Hagans completed 16 of 26 passes for 147 yards and a touchdown with three interceptions, and ran 14 times for 108 yards. ---College Football---
Stat Leaders: Syracuse - Passing: Perry Patterson, 18-27, 172 yds, 1 TD---College Football---
Rushing: Damien Rhodes, 27-79. Receiving: Joe Kowalewski, 8-96, 1 TD---College Football---
Virginia - Passing: Marques Hagans, 16-26, 145 yds, 1 TD, 3 INT
Rushing: Marques Hagans, 14-110. Receiving: ---College Football---Deyon Williams, 7-62
What to take away from this game: Shaky, shaky, shaky. Virginia's defense had troubles against a mediocre Syracuse offense, while the Cavalier attack, without Wali Lundy, was saved by the play of Marques Hagans. Hagans wasn't sharp all game long, but he made the key plays needed to keep several drives alive, and he was calm and cool on the final, game-winning drive. Even so, the team still needs a lot of work after struggling way too much in the first two weeks. If the Duke game is a problem, then it'll really be time to worry.
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Sept. 3
Virginia 31 ... Western Michigan 19---College Football---
Down 24-3, Western Michigan worked its way back to within five helped by a 55-yard C.J. Wilson interception return for a touchdown and three Nate Meyer field goals. Virginia finally put the Broncos away on a 12-play, 69-yard drive helped by a Marques Hagans scramble for a first down and ending with a one-yard Cedric Peerman touchdown run. Hagans ran for a touchdown and threw for another.---College Football---
Player of the game: In the loss, Western Michigan WR Greg Jennings caught 16 passes for 156 yards---College Football---
Stat Leaders: WMU - Passing: Robbie Haas, 33-49, 271 yds---College Football---
Rushing: Mark Bonds, 30-119. Receiving: Greg Jennings, 16-156---College Football---
Virginia - Passing: Marques Hagans, 17-25, 252 yds, 1 TD, 2 INT ---College Football---
Rushing: Jason Snelling, 7-72. Receiving: Deyon Williams, 5-79---College Football---
What to take away from this game: The Virginia defense has to feel a little bit shell-shocked after being picked apart by the Western Michigan short passing game while the Cavalier offense struggled too much to put the game away. QB Marques Hagans didn't have a great game, but he made enough good plays to keep the Virginia offense moving when it had to and had the key scramble late when the offense really needed it. Chalk this up to opening day; hopefully the kinks were worked out before the Syracuse game. ---College Football---
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2005 Schedule
Sept. 3 - Western Michigan (2-9, 1-7 in MAC) – Offense: The offense wasn't always consistent last year, but the hope is for a that to change with QB Ryan Cubit working with his dad, the head coach, and with plenty of experience at every spot. There will be more two-back sets and a potentially devastating receiving corps with, arguably, the best receiver in the MAC in Greg Jennings and the best tight end in Tony Scheffler leading the way. The line is full of veterans that need to stay healthy until the depth develops. The key will be to improve the running game that was one of the worst in the nation last year.
Defense: Gone is the 4-2-5 alignment that led to the nation's 115th ranked defense and 114th scoring D, and in comes a more normal 4-3 bringing the extra safety up to linebacker. There's experience returning, but not a lot of playmakers. The first step is stopping the run after the front six got shoved all over the place last year. The next goal will be to generate a more consistent pass rush. The corners are inexperienced and will get lit up early, but there's enough speed and athleticism to hope for things to be better by midseason. ---College Football---
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Sept. 17 – at Syracuse (5-6, 4-3 in Big East) – Offense: The offense struggled way too much failing to get anything going in the passing game and finishing 100th in the nation in passing. Quarterbacks Perry Patterson and Joe Fields have to be more consistent, but they also need help with a young receiving corps that could struggle early on. The attack is being changed up a bit to throw it more in a West Coast attack, so the opportunities will be there. The offensive line is decent, but non-descript.---College Football---
Defense: The hiring of Greg Robinson as head coach should do nothing but help a defense that slipped into the abyss finishing 101st in the nation. There was little production against the run, nothing happening against the pass, and few clutch stops. There should be an improvement with a ton of returning experience led by a good-looking front seven. The corner is in the secondary where the corners have to make more plays after getting repeatedly torched last season.---College Football---
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Sept. 24 - Duke (3-8, 0-8 in ACC) – Offense: The Blue Devils can go nowhere but up after finishing dead-last in total offense averaging 266 yards per game and averaging 16.6 points per outing. There's experience returning among the skill players with quarterback Mike Schneider returning for his third year as a starter getting two fantastic tight ends, Andy Roland and Ben Patrick, to work with. The backfield will be a strength as long as Cedric Dargan can stay healthy, but they won't produce much behind a rebuilding offensive line that returns one starter.---College Football---
Defense: The defense couldn't stop anyone's running game finishing 113th in the nation and allowed 426 yards per game of total offense. Expect that to change as the line has gone from a weakness to a strength with star tackle recruit Vince Oghobaase taking over in the middle along with the hopeful return of end Phillip Alexander from a broken leg. The secondary will be fine led by corner John Talley, but the linebackers will be a concern early until two new starters get their feet wet.---College Football---
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Oct. 1 – at Maryland (6-5, 3-5 in ACC) - Offense: The Terp offense was non-existent for most of last year averaging a mere 298 yards and 17.7 points per game. Take out the 45-point explosion against woeful Temple and the 55-point destruction of Duke and Maryland would've averaged a mere 10.6 points per outing. Things won't be much better unless there's more production at quarterback. Sam Hollenbach will get the first look, but mobile Jordan Steffy and last year's starter, Joel Statham, will be in the hunt. There's little proven production from the rest of the skills spots, but there's a world of speed and athleticism. The line should be far better; the coaching staff raves about this group.---College Football---
Defense: Despite some huge losses (Shawne Merriman, Chris Kelley, Dominique Foxworth), last year's 21st best defense should turn out to be fine thanks to D'Qwell Jackson and a sensational linebacking corps. The back seven can move, and there might not be a faster cornerback pair in America than Gerrick McPhearson (4.28 40) and Josh Wilson (4.35). Pass rush is a concern without a true dominator to rely on, so the D will have to manufacture pressure early until young prospects like Trey Covington and Omar Savage can come through.---College Football---
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Oct. 8 – at Boston College (8-3, 5-3 in ACC) – Offense: The Eagle offense will be tough to stop in every phase if the receiving corps comes around. Larry Lester has to go from being a nice secondary target to a go-to receiver, while star corner Will Blackmon has to be a big-time threat. Quarterback Quinton Porter is back and ready to roar after redshirting last year using his experience and decision making ability to be a strong leader of the veteran attack. L.V Whitworth and Andre Callender form a strong 1-2 rushing punch behind the ACC's best line that returns all five starters.---College Football---
Defense: The Eagles will once again have a stingy defense after allowing a mere 333 yards and 17 points per game. The linebacking corps is terrific with all three starters returning led by weakside star Brian Toal. The line has tremendous potential working around All-American and future NFL millionaire Mathias Kiwanuka. Size is the only concern in a very productive secondary.---College Football---
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Oct. 15 - Florida State (projected finish 8-3, 6-2 in ACC) – Offense: Is this the weakest Florida State offense in since 1981? The starting quarterback situation is a potential mess with Xavier Lee not looking ready for primetime this spring, Wyatt Sexton suspended and Drew Weatherford hurt. The best receivers are true freshmen, and the line doesn't appear to be anything special. What the Noles do have are two fantastic running backs with Leon Washington and Lorenzo Booker needing to carry the offense until Lee gets his feet wet. Talent-wise, there's enough here to be explosive after fighting through a ton of growing pains, but the jury is out on whether or not Jeff Bowden is enough of a top-shelf offensive coordinator to be able to lead the attack to a better season after finishing 61st in the nation in total offense.---College Football---
Defense: The linebacking corps is among the best in America and safety Pat Watkins is a first round draft pick, but the rest of the defense is a major question mark after finishing seventh in the nation and fourth in scoring defense. The loss of rising star NG Clifton Dickson to academic problems and CB Antonio Cromartie to a knee injury is a huge hit for the rest of the D. The secondary will turn out to be fine if the star recruits of last year can quickly progress.---College Football---
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Oct. 22 – at North Carolina (3-8, 3-5 in ACC) – Offense: Coordinator Gary Tranquill did a masterful job last year helping the Tar Heels to a big season finishing second in the ACC in total offense. The line is outstanding and the receiving corps is deep and underrated. There are concerns in the backfield needing new quarterback Matt Baker to be consistent, while inexperienced running backs Vince Wilson and Barrington Edwards need to pick up the slack for injured junior Ronnie McGill.---College Football---
Defense: Nine starters, not including top tackle Chase Page, return to a defense that finished 109th in the nation allowing 446.5 yards and 31.83 points per game. The most work has to be done in the run defense with the veteran linebacking corps needing to make far more plays to allow the safeties to play pass defense. The young, inconsistent line has to generate more of a pass rush and the secondary has to pick off more passes. ---College Football---
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Nov. 5 - Temple (predicted finish: 1-10) – Offense: The loss of do-it-all QB Walter Washington is a good and a bad thing. He was the Big East's best player, but the offense became too reliant on him. Pure passer Mike McGann will retake his starting job, but there's no depth whatsoever. The backfield and offensive line will lead to a strong rushing attack, but the new receiving corps has to make the offense more explosive.
Defense: Injuries, inexperience and inconsistency led to a miserable season from the defense allowing 439 yards and 36 points per game. Despite the loss of the two best players, LBs Rian Wallace and Troy Bennett, things should be better with a solid front wall helped by the return of Antwon Burton in the middle and an experienced secondary helped by the healthy return of CB Ray Lamb. ---College Football---
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Nov. 12 - Georgia Tech (7-4, 5-3 in ACC) – Offense: The offense's job will be to simply hold serve so the fantastic defense can win games. That could be a problem. QB Reggie Ball has been too erratic over his first two years throwing 18 interceptions last season. But unlike the talented backup quarterbacks, Ball is mobile making him more valuable playing behind an infant line that needs a ton of work. The running backs are among the best in the country if P.J. Daniels can stay healthy. Sophomore WR Calvin Johnson has future first-round draft pick written all over him, but there isn't a proven number two man to take the heat off.
Defense: It'll be a shock if this isn't one of the nation's best defenses. Nine starters (11 if you include DT Mansfield Wright who moved to offensive guard and CB Dennis Davis who returns from shoulder problems) come back from a defense that was a brick wall against the run and only allowed 18.9 points per game. The defensive front is tremendous with four starters who can do it all and four reserves ready to step into the rotation. Gerris Wilkinson leads a good linebacking corps that's missing experienced depth. The secondary will be better than ever with Chris Reis moving from linebacker to safety and Davis returning to man the corner spot opposite of Reuben Houston.---College Football---
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Nov. 19 - Virginia Tech (9-2, 6-2 in ACC) – Offense: The offense was efficient last year, but it didn't move the ball much averaging almost 31 points per game despite only averaging 366 yards. Now this should be a devastating attack as long as Marcus Vick plays like he's supposed to. There are two great quarterback prospects (Sean Glennon and Cory Holt) also in the mix, but Vick is the type of player who can make this loaded attack special. There's too much talent at running back and receiver for one football, and the line is big and will be fine in time. Expect big, explosive numbers, but the question is whether or not someone can pick up the leadership slack left by Bryan Randall.---College Football---
Defense: While this probably won't be the killer defense it was last year when it finished fourth in the nation and second in scoring defense, it'll still be impressive with a tremendous front four, an experienced linebacking corps, and All-America corner Jimmy Williams leading the secondary. Depth is a bit of a problem in the back seven with decent, but mostly inexperienced prospects being shuffled around to find the right fit. Like always with the Hokies, expect plenty of great athletes, lots of big plays, and another good year.
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Nov. 26 – at Miami (10-1, 7-1 in ACC) – Offense: The Cane offense is long on great prospects, but short on proven production. Unlike last year when the attack relied on experience over potential, players like QB Kyle Wright, RB Tyrone Moss and WR Lance Leggett have more excitement around them and have more NFL potential. Moss and Leggett have given a glimpse of what they can do, but Wright, or Kirby Freeman, has to show the maturity and poise to handle one of college football's most glamorous and highly scrutinized positions. The offensive line will be more than solid, but it needs Eric Winston and Tyler McMeans to return to pre-injury form.---College Football---
Defense: This will be one of the best defenses in the country, if not the best. The only concern is with a run defense that was surprisingly soft last year allowing 155 yards per game. If that's tightened up, this will be a killer with 11 players returning who started six or more games last year. That doesn't include superstar Devin Hester taking over the full-time job at one of the corners. The linebacking corps has the potential to be one of Miami's best ever.---College Football---
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