Your guide to breaking news, recruiting updates and important offers from TechSideline.com!

TSLMail is powered by our sponsors:

 

 
   Welcome to TSLMail #124 - Friday, April 9, 2004    
What is TSLMail?
  Click here to find out

Questions/Problems?
  Click here

TSL Links
  Home Page
  Football Home
  VT Hokie News
  Football Recruiting
  Message Board

TSL Products
  The TSL Extra
  TechLocker.com

TSLMail Archives
  Complete Archives

 

To Remove Yourself From This Email List: see the bottom of the email.

To Change Your Email Address: first remove the old email address (see the bottom of this email for instructions), and then add the new email address to the list by clicking here.

To Subscribe to This Email List: click here

   Featured Items TechLocker.com!


Load up on golfing supplies from TechLocker.com!
Click here to see all of our golfing supplies!
Hats, visors, vests, club covers, balls, umbrellas, and more!

Leather Toiletry Kit Bag   $39.99
Travel in style. Andrew Phillips Leatherworks has created the best in traditional kit bags. This genuine leather bag snaps open like a doctors bag and has a zipper to keep your items secure. The VT logo is embossed in soft genuine leather.

 

   Advertise on TechSideline.com!


Advertise Your Business On TechSideline.com!

TechSideline.com has come a long way since its conception in 1996. We are the #1 media source and community covering Virginia Tech athletics; producing an average of 110,000 unique viewers and over 6 million page views each month.

We reach a coveted demographic (you know who you are) 24/7, 12 months out of the year. Furthermore, TechSideline.com provides a powerful advertising opportunity, leveraging our unique two-way medium to clearly and precisely communicate our sponsor’s marketing goals to our loyal community. This permission marketing approach has resulted in unprecedented marketing success for all our sponsors, "brick and mortar" and dot-com alike.

Each custom sponsorship varies in investment according to the desired target reach, frequency, geographic territory, category, and/or time your campaign requires. In a nutshell, our custom targeted sponsorships allow you to focus your message and product to the right customers in the right market at the right time.

To learn more, please contact Trey Copeland at (434) 823-9714 or [email protected] . To view a list of our sponsors, please visit our Sponsors Page.

   Tech Sports News

Going to Dinner This Weekend? Visit Beamer's and Get 25% Off!
by Will Stewart, TechSideline.com

If you've got dinner planned this weekend, be sure to stop by Beamer's Restaurant in Christiansburg or Roanoke, where you can get 25% off, using our exclusive TechSideline.com coupon!

Enjoy a great meal surrounded by all things Hokie! Serving two locations in Roanoke and Christiansburg, Beamer's serves everything from burger and sandwiches to fresh seafood and their famous Prime Rib. Click here for a complete menu and details on a special 25% off coupon for TSL community members.


ACC Football Rivalries: Duke, Wake, GT
by Will Stewart, TechSideline.com

For last week's article on the Clemson/VT football rivalry, we had gobs of material, because the Hokies played the Tigers six times in the 80's and three more times in the late 90's and 2000. I have readily available sources (Hokie Huddlers, media guides, and good ole TSL) for info on those games.

But there are three ACC schools with whom the Hokies don't have much of a recent history: Duke, Wake, and Georgia Tech. The Hokies have played Wake Forest 32 times and Duke just 11 times, and the last time the Hokies played either one was back in 1984, 20 years ago (more on that later).

As for Georgia Tech, the two teams -- incredibly -- have played just once, a 1990 nail biter that ended in a 6-3 Yellow Jacket win.

Duke (Duke leads series 4-7-0): Yes, you read that right. Duke leads the series with VT, taking 7 out of 11 games. Once the Hokies enter the ACC next fall and start playing the Blue Devils regularly, the series figures to even out quickly, but for now, Duke's got the lead.

Even more interesting than that -- to me, anyway -- is that Duke once led the series 7-1-0, before the Hokies won three in a row from 1982-1984 to make things a little more respectable.

The two teams played in 1937 and 1938 -- both VT losses -- and again from 1948 through 1951, again all VT losses. They played a game in 1969, and the Hokies broke through for a win, then lost again to a Ben Bennett-led Duke team in 1981, 14-7, to make it 7-1-0, Duke.

The Tide finally turned in 1982, when the Hokies traveled to Duke for a regionally-televised matchup. I have no documentation of this game, because my Hokie Huddler collection doesn't go back that far (the Huddler didn't launch until 1984), but I do have a faint memory of being 17 years old and watching it on TV.

Duke schooled VT in the first half and took a 21-0 lead into half time, but in one of the more remarkable comebacks in VT history -- especially when you consider that this was Bill Dooley's offense operating -- the Hokies scored 22 second-half points to win on a 2-point conversion late in the game.

The next game, in 1983, was a good one too, because it featured Duke's outstanding quarterback, Ben Bennett, who passed for over 3,000 yards in 1983 and ended up his career as the NCAA's career passing yardage leader, with 9,671 yards passing. (That record has since fallen.)

Bennett was going up against a Hokie defense led by junior Bruce Smith, who was in the middle of a 22-sack season, still a Hokie record. 1983 was my freshman year at VT, and if memory serves correctly, Smith laid a whipping on Bennett, sacking him four times in a 27-14 win in Lane Stadium.

"Smith and I talked about my family, his family, world affairs, just about everything," Bennett joked after the game, in a quote included in the VT football media guide. "We had plenty of time to get to know each other. He spent the afternoon with me."

Durham Herald-Sun columnist Frank Dascenzo wrote in June of 2003, twenty years later, "Bruce Smith once sacked Duke quarterback Ben Bennett. When the Blue Devils quarterback, wobbly and wounded, got up and headed for the wrong bench, Smith turned him around and pointed him in the right direction and said, 'Hey man, I've hit you enough. You're all right with me.'"

The following season, without Bennett, the Blue Devils were just cannon fodder for the Hokies, and Tech won again in Lane Stadium, this time by the score of 27-0. Smith had two sacks, Duke only spent four plays on Tech's side of the field, and the Blue Devils had (-4) yards rushing and 72 yards passing. Duke's 68 yards of offense was a Tech defensive record until UAB only got 65 yards in 1997. (UAB later broke that record, too, gaining just 63 yards in 1999).

This fall, on September 18th, in Lane Stadium, this long-dormant rivalry renews. The Hokies figure to have the upper hand for a while.

Wake Forest (Hokies lead series 20-11-1): This used to be a pretty good series. The teams first played in 1916, and from 1954 to 1984, they played every season but 1967, 1973, and 1974.

From 1978-1984, Bill Dooley went 4-3 against Wake Forest, and the last one was a thriller. Tech won a seesaw 21-20 game in Winston-Salem to open the 1984 season, the senior campaign of Bruce Smith's career. Midway through the fourth quarter, Wake was leading 20-14 and had penetrated to Tech's three yard line, where they faced a second and goal.

Wake false-started, sending the ball back to the eight yard line, then Bruce Smith flushed Wake's QB out of the pocket into a Cornell Urquhart sack at the 15. The Demon Deacons lost three more yards on the next play, and kicker Doug Illing, who had kicked two field goals and two extra points on the day, came on for what was probably a game-clinching 34-yard field goal ... but he missed.

VT then did something unusual for a Bill Dooley offense: they strung together a long, methodical game-winning drive. The VT offense had just 128 yards and seven first downs to that point, but they went on a 12-play, 80-yard drive that picked up five first downs and netted a five-yard Eddie Hunter run to put the Hokies up 21-20 with 2:08 to go.

Down the field Wake Forest charged. They very nearly scored on a long pass that was knocked down by Derek Carter and Ashley Lee. Undeterred, Wake threw a 22-yard pass to Tech's 48 with less than 20 seconds to go, then completed a 25-yarder to put the ball at the Tech 23. Illing rushed on to try a 40-yard game winning field goal, but he pushed it to the right, and the Hokies had the win.

After the game, Wake's head coach said, "Those of you who think it's that much coaches' talk or get bored when coaches talk about the kicking game and penalties ... tonight's game reinforces why these things are so important to us."

The coach's name? Al Groh.

VT and Wake will play October 9th in Winston-Salem.

Georgia Tech (GT leads the series 1-0): These two teams have only played once, but it was a memorable one. In 1990, the Hokies went to #7 Georgia Tech hoping to derail the national championship dreams of the Yellow Jackets. GT had just dropped #1 UVa from the ranks of the unbeaten the week before.

Virginia Tech was 5-4, with bowl dreams still in place. They had lost three games in the fourth quarter, to Maryland (20-13), South Carolina (35-24), and Temple (31-28), and had fallen to #2 FSU in Tallahassee 39-28 after being up 21-3 in the second quarter.

This GT game would be more of the same heartbreak.

The Hokies rolled up 340 yards of offense and threatened many times, but fumbles and missed field goals kept them from scoring. Likewise Georgia Tech, hung over from their big win over UVa, struggled to score. The game was 0-0 in the fourth quarter, when the Hokies found themselves with a second and goal from the GT 4-yard line.

Tech tried two straight alley-oop passes to basketball-player-turned-goal-line specialist John Rivers, but both were incomplete. Tech settled for a 22-yard Mickey Thomas field goal to go up 3-0 with 8:16 left.

GT quickly penetrated deep into Tech territory but also had to settle for a field goal, tying the game 3-3 with 5:09 left.

The Hokies couldn't get over midfield with their next drive, but punter Chris Baucia pinned GT at their own 16-yard line with 1:10 to go. No problem, right? Wrong. A few Shawn Jones passes and a gift from the ACC referees -- they ruled William Bell was inbounds on a 15-yard reception, though he was bobbling the ball as he ran out of bounds -- moved the ball to the VT 23. Jones threw two incompletions, and Bell ran two yards, setting up a 38-yard field goal for GT's Scott Sisson, who was having a Chris-Kinzer-1986 kind of season.

The Hokies called their last two timeouts to ice Sisson, who was as un-iceable as Kinzer was in his heyday. The second timeout backfired, as the swirling wind in Bobby Dodd stadium died down, allowing Sisson to kick the field goal in calm air. He hit it with 8 seconds to go, and VT's goose was cooked, 6-3. That dropped VT to 5-5 overall, and although the Hokies would maul Virginia 38-13 to finish the season, there was no bowl game for the Hokies. (But a nice invitation to the Big East Football Conference did follow.)

The two teams were scheduled to play again to open the 2000 season in the BCA Classic in Lane Stadium. It was the beginning of Michael Vick's sophomore season, and ESPN was in town for the highly-anticipated game. But as you know, a thunderstorm broke out right before kickoff, and for an hour, Lane was drenched in a torrential downpour, amid dangerous lightning (including one lightning bolt that nailed Lee Corso's rental car and led him to utter his famous quote, "I don't know what a Hokie is, but God is one of them!").

The game was cancelled, and the two teams are still waiting on the rematch, which will come this October 28th, on a Thursday in Atlanta.

   TechSideline.com Pass - Your Ultimate Ticket to Hokie Sports!


TechSideline Pass - $34.95 a Year

(Monthly and Quarterly options also available)

  • Feature Articles
  • Interviews with recruits
  • Editorials
  • Flash recruiting updates from Chris Horne, our in-house specialist
  • Recruiting prospect and class evaluations
  • A subscribers-only Recruiting message board (only accessible to subscribers)
  • A subscribers-only message board for general discussion

As an additional bonus, all subscribers will receive a 10% discount on all purchases made at Techlocker.com, our online store providing Hokie-related apparel and gift items. If that's not enough, you should know that your subscription will help support your favorite website, TechSideline.com.

For more info on TechSideline Pass, and to subscribe, click here. To give TSL Pass as a gift (one-year subscriptions only), click here.

-- Will Stewart

   TechSideline.com Updates From the Past Week


A Gym Rat's Notebook #13: A Look Ahead: The Frontcourt
by Elijah Kyle, 4/8/04, 11:40 pm
The move isn’t exactly a substantial leap from say, Baltic Avenue to Park Place next season, but to avoid being Pac-manned by the Donald Trumps of the world, the Virginia Tech men’s basketball team should get used to repeating the magic words of the real estate industry: location, location, location.
in TSL Pass

Hokies Announce Hiring of Dunkenberger
by Will Stewart, TechSideline.com, 4/6/04, 4:20 pm
As expected, Virginia Tech announced the hiring of Beth Dunkenberger as the new head women's basketball coach, in a press conference held at 3 p.m. at the school. In her comments, Dunkenberger highlighted hard work and recruiting as the cornerstones that will improve upon the women's program that former coach Bonnie Henrickson built.
in News and Notes

Hokies to Hire Dunkenberger
by Will Stewart, TechSideline.com, 4/5/04, 9:00 pm
Multiple media sources indicate that Virginia Tech will announce later this week the hiring of Western Carolina's Beth Dunkenberger as the new head women's basketball coach. Dunkenberger, the 2002-03 Southern Conference Coach of the Year, was an assistant coach at Virginia Tech for nine years under former head coach Carol Alfano. She was born and raised in Shawsville and received a Master's degree from VT in 1990.
in News and Notes

The 2004 Top Gun Recruiter
by Will Stewart, TechSideline.com, 4/5/04, 4:25 pm
Before writing the "State of the Program" article on recruiting, we thought it wise to review how each recruiting coach is doing, and to hand out our 2004 Top Gun Recruiter Award. If you'll remember, we gave a comprehensive review about a year ago in our article "Naming VT's Top Gun Recruiter," in which we crowned Jim Cavanaugh as VT's recruiting champion over Bryan Stinespring and Charley Wiles. Let's take a look at the 2004 results and see how that affects our Top Gun ranking.
in TSL Pass

Humes Breaks Leg; Out 3-4 Months
by Will Stewart, TechSideline.com, 4/3/04, 10:40 pm
Tech tailback Cedric Humes fractured the fibula in his left leg in a football scrimmage Saturday and will be out 3-4 months. Humes will have surgery on the leg on Sunday, and the Hokies anticipate that he'll be back in time for the season opener in the BCA Classic on August 28th.
in News and Notes

Rookie Diary #7: The Second Pro Day
by TechSideline.com, 4/2/04, 3:15 pm
On Thursday, March 25th, VT held the second of two Pro Day workouts. This one was more lightly attended than the first, on March 18th. It marks the end of the pre-set workouts, and from this point on, NFL teams will start paring down their lists and will start meeting with players individually, sometimes at their colleges and sometimes at the pro team's facilities. In this update, Nathaniel Adibi tells us about the second Pro Day.
in TSL Pass

 
    TSLMail is a trademark of TechSideline.com - Copyright © 2004 - All Rights Reserved
 
To delete your address from this mailing list click here.