2004 ACC Football Champions. Taste it. Balance it on your
tongue and savor the delightful flavor. Roll it around and experience the
full-bodied essence. Sit back and let the palate enjoy the richness. It tastes
pretty good, doesn’t it? As sweet as Sugar.
The Virginia Tech football team completed its improbable
and intoxicating run through its inaugural ACC season by capturing the
championship last Saturday after knocking off Miami. A run that began late last
August in the sweltering humidity of Washington’s FedEx Field reached its
successful conclusion in the warmth of the late-afternoon Miami sun over the
Orange Bowl. As deliriously-happy Hokies celebrated and stunned Miami partisans
looked on in disbelief, Tech captured not only its first ACC championship the
first year the Hokies were eligible to win it. There is a wall in the ACC
headquarters at the Grandover Business Park in Greensboro that contains the
names of all conference football champions; Virginia Tech will now be added.
That is sweeter than Sugar.
The story of the 2004 Virginia Tech football team is a
delicious one that combines all of the elements of great literature. Character,
setting, plot, emotion, irony and redemption; it’s all here. It’s a shame
Dumas did not live during the age of college football.
Frank Beamer headlines the Tech football season. Frank had
seen the solid program he built at Tech develop some cracks in the foundation.
Criticism developed when he could not meet the lofty expectations generated
during the ultra-successful years of Michael Vick. Tech teams had faltered down
the stretch of the past three, MV-less years, culminating in a near-total
collapse during the final month of the 2003 season. There was grousing from the
fan base and ridicule from certain media outlets. Frank’s response was to make
a sober assessment of all facets of his program, from the top all the way down.
Things, from the defensive scheme to attitudes among the players, were changed.
It is now obvious they were changed for the better. There seems little question
that Frank Beamer is the ACC’s Coach of the Year.
A strong contributing factor to Tech’s championship run
was exceptional leadership from this year’s senior class. This had generally
been lacking since 1999 when Corey Moore rallied first a defense and then the
entire team behind him, setting example after example throughout the season. The
2004 seniors had seen some members of their class greatly contribute to the 2003
problems by placing personal NFL draft goals ahead of team ones. Those players
are no longer around and the remaining seniors determined that they would not
allow that to happen this year. It did not. All of this year’s seniors
contributed in their own manner, capping careers of trial with triumph. This
senior class provided examples of outstanding leadership that hopefully
subsequent classes will seek to emulate.
On defense, among the starters, Vincent Fuller, James
Griffin and Eric Green over came the loss of an All-American (DeAngelo Hall) and
forged a solid secondary. Mikal Baaqee, the prime returnee from a 2003
linebacking group that became the lightning-rod of last year’s defensive
criticism, rose to the challenge of the talented freshmen that joined him. It is
difficult to find a defensive play in the Miami tape, run or pass, where he is
not around the ball.
However, the starr of this defense, to my mind, was Jim
Davis. Beset by injury that limited his effectiveness and caused him to miss the
entire 2003 season, Davis worked hard and overcame adversity. Bright and
articulate, he became the public face of the defense. He also put his money
where his mouth was. Davis anchored the defensive line and provided big plays
when they were required. His sack of Carolina quarterback Darian Durant, taking
the Tar Heels just out of tying field goal range, was as big a play delivered by
a Tech player this season. It was fitting that during the last series of his
collegiate regular season, there was Davis swatting away not one but two Brock
Berlin passes. Jim Davis put team goals ahead of personal ones. Here’s
thanking Jim for a splendid senior season and wishing him a long and fruitful
NFL career.
On offense, well, who do you expect? James Miller and Jon
Dunn had very good years, holding down the right side of an offensive line that
improved as the year went along. The O-line provided sterling play during the
last two games when Tech needed to run the ball and erase time from the clock.
Still, the 2004 Virginia Tech football season was the story of Bryan Randall.
Randall’s career was bittersweet, but any lows faded as he strode from the
Orange Bowl having led his team to the ACC championship. He arrived at Tech at
what was probably the worst possible time for a quarterback. The early and
unexpected departure of Michael Vick denied him the luxury of a red-shirt year
and he was thrust into the starting position in 2002 before he was really ready.
He endured scathing criticism from some Tech fans, upset that he was not more
Mike-like. Things were not helped midway through his time at Tech when a new
position coach arrived and pronounced him a good candidate for strong safety, or
when the brother of Tech’s most celebrated quarterback entered the program
carrying that status-enhancing pedigree. Randall’s situation was not improved
last year when coaching indecision caused a generally unsuccessful rotation that
basically caused both quarterbacks to constantly peer over their respective
shoulder. Bryan steadfastly refused to allow any negativity to penetrate his
being. He always took full responsibility for any failures and reveled in team
success, even in games such as last year’s Miami win, in which he personally
contributed little. Along the way, he continued to work hard and developed into
a solid quarterback that should be ACC Player of the Year. He was not the most
talented quarterback ever to play the position at Tech and he never became
Michael Vick. Instead he became Bryan Randall, ACC Champion.
This ACC championship is special to all Hokies, but I
would submit none more so than to those of my generation and above. The ACC
passed on a Tech membership when the conference was formed. We remember the snub
in 1977 when Tech received only two affirmative votes. This was the conference
that claimed it did not want us, and it took a tumultuous expansion process for
Tech to ultimately gain admittance. For over fifty years, all Virginia Tech had
ever asked for was a chance to fairly compete against its regional rivals and
peer universities that comprised the ACC. We have now shown what can happen when
finally given that chance.
This ACC championship is indeed sweet. Tech fans should
savor it fully, wringing every last gram of joy from the experience. The Hokies
will return to New Orleans for another Sugar Bowl, their third. This time it is
as Virginia Tech, 2004 ACC Football Champions.