Showing posts with label Hokies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hokies. Show all posts

Friday, February 10, 2012

Virginia vs. Virginia Tech: Cavs, Hokies both have questions to answer

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Gerry Broome/AP - Virginia Coach Tony Bennett, left, will be without center Assane Sene for approximately six weeks after Sene had surgery on his ankle.

Smaller TextLarger TextText SizePrintE-mailReprints By Steve Yanda and and Mark Giannotto,

In the span of roughly 12 hours this past week, Virginia senior center Assane Sene went from hoping to play Sunday against Virginia Tech to optimistically aiming to return by regular season’s end, his injured ankle needing surgery that will require approximately six weeks of recovery time.

And Virginia Coach Tony Bennett’s team shifted from a squad with a clear-cut identity to one that has at least one critical question to answer as it attempts to build on the Cavaliers’ best start to a season (15-2, 2-1 ACC) in three decades: How challenging will it be to fill a 7-footer’s shoes?

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This was not the context under which most observers expected Sunday’s contest to be played. Virginia Tech (11-7, 0-4 ACC) was supposed to be the team that entered John Paul Jones Arena with unanswered questions about its collective makeup. But in the wake of Sene’s injury, both teams have critical issues to address.

“They’re the antithesis of our team,” Virginia Tech Coach Seth Greenberg said this past week in reference to the Cavaliers, and at the time, that statement was true.

Whether it remains true will become evident Sunday, when Virginia’s adherence to the principles of Bennett’s system will be tested more than at any point this season. Sene did not produce significantly on offense or, somewhat surprisingly given his size, on the boards. But he was a key and experienced cog on a Virginia defense that has been one of the stingiest in the nation.

At the very least, Sene represented another big body, and the Cavaliers do not possess those in large supply. Taking into account Sene’s injury — he underwent surgery Friday morning to repair a fractured right ankle — and the late-December transfers of redshirt freshman forward James Johnson and sophomore guard KT Harrell, Virginia is down to eight scholarship players, only three of whom stand taller than 6 feet 6.

The onus will be placed on sophomore forward Akil Mitchell and freshman forward Darion Atkins in the coming weeks. They must serve as capable interior complements to fifth-year senior forward Mike Scott, be disciplined on defense and stay out of foul trouble.

During Thursday’s 70-38 win at Georgia Tech, Mitchell — who likely will replace Sene in the starting lineup — tied for the team high with seven rebounds in 22 minutes. Atkins recorded two blocks and a steal in 17 minutes. They contributed to Virginia’s most lopsided road victory over an ACC opponent since 1983, a margin that surprised Bennett given the team’s shaky practice session a day earlier.

When asked afterward for comment on Virginia Tech, Bennett said: “They’re a different team, but they certainly have some talent. We’ll have to be ready. .?.?. This league, if you’re not right, anybody beats you, and you have a chance to beat anybody. You wouldn’t have seen [Thursday’s result against Georgia Tech] coming.”

The Hokies have been somewhat predictable, though that’s not to say they have a shortage of issues in need of solution. Virginia Tech has yet to shoot better than 40 percent in an ACC game this season and has struggled to hold its own in the paint. Greenberg’s squad has held second-half leads in five of its seven losses.

“People think we’re a bad team, but we’re really not,” Virginia Tech junior guard Erick Green said. “We’re a great team. We just don’t do the little things like give it our all for 40 minutes instead of playing for just 20 minutes.”

Sunday will mark the first time since December 2001 that these two programs will meet with Virginia ranked and Virginia Tech not. The Cavaliers have climbed to No. 15 in the Associated Press poll, but they understand that taking the slumping Hokies lightly would be a mistake. They’ve learned a lot in recent days about how much can change in a short period of time.

“People are going to be on our side because we’re good, because we’re playing well right now,” Virginia junior guard Jontel Evans said. “But we can’t get into that. We just have to continue to do the things that got us here, just continue to get wins.”

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Saturday, February 4, 2012

National Signing Day: Hokies poised for resurgent recruiting year in Virginia

When it comes to recruiting, Virginia Tech Coach Frank Beamer isn’t shy about his desire to lock up what he calls the six-hour radius around Blacksburg. That means the Hokies “home” recruiting territory essentially stretches from Atlanta to Baltimore.

But Beamer is also fond of saying he believes there is enough talent in the state of Virginia to win a national championship. So it was surprising last year when the Hokies signed just five of the state’s top 25 players, according to Rivals.com, instead getting 12 recruits from out-of-state. It was the fewest top 25 in-state players Virginia Tech had signed since Rivals started tracking such stuff in 2002.

This year, though, the Hokies are poised to reel in more of the state’s top 25 players than they have since 2008, and could set a record if things fall right when National Signing Day arrives Wednesday. Virginia Tech has received oral commitments to its 2012 recruiting class from 10 of the top 25 players from Virginia, and four more are debating whether to pick the Hokies this week.

Currently, the top-ranked in-state commitment for the Hokies is running back J.C. Coleman of Oscar Smith High in Chesapeake, Va. Coleman, the No. 5 prospect in the state per Rivals, is already enrolled in school for spring practice and will get an opportunity to compete for the starting tailback job now that David Wilson is preparing for the NFL draft.

But the Hokies will hear from two of Virginia’s top five recruits – two-time All Met Ken Ekanem of Centreville High and Richmond-area wide receiver Joel Caleb, the state’s No. 1 recruit – on signing day. Defensive tackle Korren Kirven of Lynchburg, Va., and All Met offensive lineman Jackson Matteo of Broad Run High in Ashburn could also pick Virginia Tech Wednesday.

That the Hokies have done so well recruiting the state this year is perhaps a credit to the changes Coach Frank Beamer made during last year’s offseason. After watching Virginia Coach Mike London beat him on the recruiting trail a year ago, Beamer brought in two new assistants (his son, Shane, and former Hokies linebacker Cornell Brown) while also altering the in-state recruiting responsibilities of his entrenched staff.

Virginia Tech also has more scholarships to work with this year. According to Beamer’s official website, the Hokies could sign as many as 28 recruits this year. The Hokies only had enough room to enroll 18 players in 2011.

NCAA rules prohibit schools from signing more than 28 players and enrolling more than 25 in any given year. Teams are only allowed 85 scholarship players total. But there are ways to maneuver around this through gray shirting, meaning certain recruits will delay their enrollment until at least January 2013 and therefore not count against the 2012 scholarship limits. Others could fail to qualify academically and be forced to spend a year at prep school.

Beamer, however, believes there are enough in-state recruits for both the Hokies and Virginia to be successful, and this year could go a long way toward proving that. Though Virginia Tech has done exceedingly well in the Commonwealth, the Cavaliers haven’t been slouches this year, either.

Together, Virginia Tech and Virginia have gotten oral commitments from 17 of the state’s top 25 players. That would be the most since 2005 when Virginia Tech and Virginia combined to sign 20 of the top 25 recruits from Virginia. But with four of the top 25 waiting to announce until Signing Day and still considering either the Hokies or the Cavaliers, there’s a chance this could be a record year in-state for both schools.

We’ll have much more on Signing Day here at Hokies Journal throughout the week, including live streaming video of Ekanem’s announcement as well as updates throughout Wednesday as Virginia Tech receives national letters-of-intent from its 2012 recruits.


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