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Welcome to TSLMail #251 - Friday, November 3, 2006 |
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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 130,000 unique viewers and over 8.5 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
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For more information, just click
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Virginia Tech has played some classic games with Miami in the Orange Bowl. The Hokies have won three times in Coral Gables, beginning in 1996, and all three have been nail biters that went down to the wire. As a fan, it’s impossible to decide which of those games was the most exciting. If you don’t remember the games, or if you just want to bring back some old memories, we’ll recap the games for you in this week’s TSLMail. In 1996, the game had Big East championship implications. Virginia Tech entered the game ranked #21 in the nation at 7-1 overall and 4-1 in the Big East. Miami was 6-2, with a perfect 4-0 record in Big East play. The Hurricanes were ranked #18 in the country at the time. Miami had lost their previous two games in the Orange Bowl, but both were out of conference games to Florida State and East Carolina. They were still very much in the picture for an Alliance Bowl. So were the Hokies, whose only Big East loss had come to Syracuse in late September. The teams combined for a lot of yards, but not a lot of points. Jim Druckenmiller threw for 202 yards during the game, while Miami quarterbacks Scott Covington and Ryan Clement combined for 340 yards. The Hokies struck first on a one yard Ken Oxendine touchdown run in the first quarter. Oxendine ran for 89 yards on 19 carries during the game. Miami answered later in the first quarter when Clement found Chris Jones in the end zone for a two yard touchdown pass to tie the game at seven. Things got off to a fast start, but neither team scored again until Druckenmiller hit Michael Stuewe with a 13 yard touchdown pass in the third quarter to make it 14-7, Hokies. As Miami drove to tie the game in the fourth quarter, Keion Carpenter stepped in front of Covington’s 4th and 4 pass on the goal line and returned it 100 yards for the game clinching touchdown with 1:54 remaining. Victors by the score of 21-7, the Hokies won the remainder of their games and went on to play Nebraska in the Orange Bowl. In 1998, Virginia Tech traveled to the Orange Bowl in September. Both teams were 2-0 heading into the game, and the Hokies were ranked #21 in the nation. Most people thought the game would be close, and as it turned out, it was the first overtime game in Virginia Tech history. The Hokies were going against a future NFL All-Pro team at the Miami skill positions: WR Reggie Wayne, WR Santana Moss and RB Edgerrin James. All of those players had big games, but the Hokies managed to win nonetheless.
Things didn’t look good in the second quarter, when Scott Covington touchdown passes to Wayne and Moss put Miami up 13-3 (one extra point attempt was no good). But the Hokies rallied. Late in the second quarter, Al Clark found fullback Cullen Hawkins for a 14 yard touchdown to make the score 13-10 at halftime. In the third quarter, Clark led the team back down the field and scrambled in from 13 yards out, giving the Hokies a 17-13 lead. But Miami wasn’t done. Covington hit Reggie Wayne on an 84 yard touchdown to put the ‘Canes back up 20-17. Shayne Graham later hit a 19 yard field goal to tie the game at 20, but Graham missed a 35 yarder that would have ended the game late in regulation. In overtime, Al Clark threw a 24 yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Ricky Hall to take a 27-20 lead. Tech’s defense shut the door on Miami’s possession, recording back to back sacks and then deflecting the ‘Canes' last heave to the end zone. The Hokies went on to go 9-3 with a 38-7 Music City Bowl victory over Alabama. Perhaps Tech’s most memorable trip to the Orange Bowl was the 2004 game. The Hurricanes and Hokies were playing for the ACC Championship in their first year in the expanded conference. Miami was favored in the game, but Virginia Tech fans felt very good about their chances. The Hokies took an early lead in the second quarter behind Bryan Randall’s three yard touchdown pass to tight end Jeff King to cap a 10 play, 80 yard drive. Miami’s only touchdown came in the second quarter after they blocked a Virginia Tech punt. The Hurricanes had to drive just 15 yards for the touchdown to tie the game at seven. Brandon Pace drilled a 45 yard field goal with four seconds left in the first half to give the Hokies a 10-7 lead going into halftime. Miami answered in the third quarter with a field goal of their own to tie the game at 10. The game, and the ACC Championship, was decided in the fourth quarter. True freshman Eddie Royal came up with two big plays in the fourth quarter to beat Miami. First, he returned a punt from the Tech 42 yard line to the Miami 39. And on the very next play, he beat Miami All-American cornerback and future NFL first round draft pick Antrel Rolle on a crossing pattern. Randall hit him perfectly, and Royal took it in from 39 yards out. Miami blocked the extra point, so the Hokies were clinging to a 16-10 lead with 11:29 remaining. But the Tech defense shut down the Miami offense all day long. The Hurricanes never made it past their own 32 yard line the rest of the game, and the Hokies batted down three passes in a row at the line of scrimmage on Miami's last possession to seal the victory. How will the 2006 game compare to those classics of the past? We’ll find out on Saturday night. Join us at Champs Sportsbar in Blacksburg to watch the game!
All week long, all the content on TechSideline.com has been free, to give non-subscribers a taste of the great subscription content on TSL. The following articles, which are usually pay content, were free this week: Tyrod Taylor OK; Ready for Stretch Run - November 3, 2006TSL Recruiting Report from "SportsBeat With Mike Harris", for 11/1/06 - November 2, 2006 Josh Oglesby's Unofficial Visit to Virginia Tech - November 2, 2006 Evans Once Again Surpasses 2,000 - November 1, 2006 Clemson Game Analysis: Perfect Plan Comes Together - October 31, 2006 4-Star LB/S Ready to Set More Visits? - October 31, 2006 Phoebus Standout Lists Two on Top - October 31, 2006 Monday Thoughts: The Clemson Game - October 30, 2006 DT Tribbey Excelling in Senior Season - October 30, 2006 That's a ton of great content, and that's just one week's worth. We hope that this free look at our content has convinced you that a subscription to TechSideline.com's TSL Pass content is well worth it. TSL Pass is only $4.99 per month, or $49.99 per year (two months free), and only $24.99 per year for Virginia Tech students. Click here to subscribe.
Message from TechSideline.com's Will Stewart: I'm participating in a Muscular Dystrophy Association (MDA) Lock-up event on Tuesday, November 14th. I'll be thrown into a maximum security jail (cleverly disguised as a Comfort Inn), and the only way I can get out is to raise $5,000 "bail" for MDA. I'm counting on you, TSL's readers and subscribers, to donate enough money to get me out. This is a fundraiser, of course, and it's unlike anything TSL has ever done before. TSL has gotten so huge over the years, that with the number of people we reach, raising money for charitable causes should be easy. We really think that TSL's vast, generous readership can make a lot of difference in the community, and this is your chance to prove us right. If this is successful, and we think it will be, we may participate in other fundraisers in the future. It's very simple: just click on the link below to make a donation and help me get out of jail that day. Every dollar donated by TSL's readership through the link below will be collected together and credited to my "bail" (TechSideline.com's donation to the MDA) and will be used to help LOCAL MDA families. This particular lockup event is to benefit the Radford/Dublin/Pulaski area. Here are some other notes and details:
To donate by check: Make checks payable to "MDA" and mail to: MDA Lockup Checks must arrive by November 13th in order for me to have them in my possession when I go to the Comfort Inn -- er, jail -- the next day. To donate by credit card: Click below. Please contribute, even if it's a small amount – individuals, consider donating $25 or more, and businesses, please consider donating $100 or more. When I walk into jail on November 14th, I want it to be as the top donor in this lockup event, and the money won't be donated in my name; it will be donated in the name of the TechSideline.com community. Contribute Here to Will's Bail
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