I
don't like to share. This less-than-stellar character trait first surfaced
during my childhood, a good chunk of which was spent hanging around the nearby
house of my grandparents. My grandmother was a lady who delighted in pumping
large quantities of sugar into her grandchildren and was constantly baking
cakes, pies, cookies, brownies or just handing us a spoon and letting us eat it
directly from the sugar bowl. It tended to make her quite popular among us. I
had a problem, however. My grandmother, when presenting yet another of her
sugary confections that developed the sweet tooth that I still have, steadfastly
refused to allow me to eat the entirety of what popped out of her oven. She
insisted I share with my brother and what seemed to be the dozens of cousins
always at her house. Not much has changed over the years. I still like sugar and
I still don’t like to share. Especially when it comes to Virginia Tech
football championships and bids to the Sugar Bowl.
Tech astounded most everyone, including the ACC media,
many of its fans and probably the coaching staff, by clinching at least a share
of the ACC football championship last Saturday by knocking off the Hoos. While
this is already a stellar accomplishment for a team picked to finish sixth by
the media sages last August, it is only a share. Whether Miami and Florida State
gets to share in that championship will be settled this Saturday in the Orange
Bowl. As usual, I want it all.
Tech grabbed the championship last Saturday with a
remarkable fourth quarter demolition of the Hoos, checkmating their own designs
on the ACC title. It would seem that brilliant reclamation project by
Grandmaster algroh ran into trouble not only against the ACC’s Florida
contingent but anybody else at the top of the standings, too. How did that
happen? Wasn’t this supposed to be the Year of the Hoo? Did not the ACC media
spend all of last summer attempting to outdo themselves in who could lavish the
largest amount of praise on the Hooville genius who in a mere four years had
established a juggernaut? Of course, that was the same media that disdainfully
proclaimed Tech a fading power and consigned them to the middle of our new
conference home. Right state, wrong team, guys.
To what was no doubt the astonishment of all those media
types, it was Virginia Tech walking off the field at Lane Stadium last Saturday
proclaiming themselves ACC champions. And, as the Hoos prepare to make travel
plans for a holiday extravaganza in the vacation destination that is Boise, and
algroh has his agent send out feelers to gauge NFL demand for a coach who can’t
win the big game, an interest likely to be light, it is Frank Beamer and his
staff and team that has established dominance in the state for the fifth time in
the last six years and the ACC for the first time in the last one year. It is
also the Tech guys who are preparing for a game this Saturday to determine
whether they get to grab the entire ACC football trophy for themselves or are
forced to share it with the Canes and Noles.
I’m sure, as Cedric Humes shed Hoo tacklers on that
touchdown run, administering what ABC’s Brent Musberger aptly described on my
game tape as the “coup de Commonwealth,” it was a very satisfied Frank
Beamer who reflected on just what his maligned program has accomplished this
year. It was likely a short reflection as he pondered that there is still more,
much more, for this Tech team to play for in 2004 and who provided the next
obstacle. It is our old friends the Canes.
The conference may change but the song remains the same:
Virginia Tech and Miami will play to settle a league championship. This might be
new stuff for our new league but it is old hat for the Hokies and Canes. As the
Li’l E persistently refused to acquire a champion, or at least one that has no
business being anywhere closer to the BCS than a Pittsburgh television set, it
must thrill them to no end to prepare to observe Top Ten teams [according to the
AP, anyway, at the moment my favorite poll] Virginia Tech and Miami square off
for the ACC marbles. In the meantime, Tech and Miami will get it on for the
Sugar Bowl. When John Swofford wrecks a competing conference, he doesn’t screw
around.
Virginia Tech and Miami play to determine whether a former
Big East team wins the ACC football championship outright or whether they share
it with another former BE team and the ACC’s one prior claim to football fame.
It might be a new experience for the ACC to have a late game with this kind of
magnitude; it is old hat for the Hokies and Canes to settle things among
themselves. It was pretty much the norm in the BE, where the two combined for
eight of the eleven round-robin championships. The teams and rivalry shifted to
the ACC but not much else has changed. It will be business as usual this
Saturday afternoon.
Miami is certainly holding most of the advantages in this
latest title clash; the Canes got an off-week to rest and prepare while Tech was
engaged in that slugfest against the Hoos. Miami will also hold the home tropics
advantage, as the weather come kickoff in the Orange Bowl will be quite a bit
different from that experienced this week in Blacksburg. Tech will counter with
the intangible as well as tangible of being a team that seems to absolutely
refuse to lose and displays a weekly grit and determination to win no matter
what the obstacles in their path. This bunch of Hokies is not as physically
talented as some of their immediate predecessors but has turned talent
subtraction into successful addition as they swept aside previous November
collapses, compiling a 3-0 record in this one on its way to the ACC
championship. The 2004 Virginia Tech team has captured the imagination of a
spoiled and jaded Tech fan base like no Tech team since 1999. It has been a fun
ride since things looked a bit bleak in September following the NC State game.
There will more than likely be some other things at stake
Saturday in the Orange Bowl other than how many names appear inscribed on the
wall at the ACC headquarters in Greensboro. This game will probably decide
whether Bryan Randall or Brock Berlin captures the Player of the Year award in
the conference. The Coach of the Year honor could also be at stake between Frank
Beamer and Larry Coker, although John Bunting of North Carolina will get strong
support from that state’s provincial media. Bunting will deserve support, too,
as his Tar Heels, like Tech, performed far better this season than forecast.
However, most reading this should not have much trouble figuring out for whom my
Coach of the Year vote would go if I had one.
Virginia Tech and Miami in a big game this Saturday.
Again. The two schools are picking right back up in the ACC where they left off
in the Big East. Tech already has clinched at least part of the ACC
championship. Things are still the same in our new conference and as they were
when I was a child at my grandmother’s house: I don’t want to share. I also
still like Sugar.