Press Conference Information
Virginia will hold a press conference to introduce new Fralin Family Head Football Coach Tony Elliott on Monday, Dec. 13 at 2 p.m. ET. There are several options for fans to watch the press conference. A live stream will be available on UVA’s athletics website VirginiaSports.com. The event will also be live streamed on Facebook at @VirginiaCavaliers. The ACC Network will broadcast the press conference live.
By Jeff White (jwhite@virginia.edu)
VirginiaSports.com
CHARLOTTESVILLE – When the head football coach’s job at the University of Virginia unexpectedly opened early this month, ACC Network analyst Eric Mac Lain thought immediately of Clemson offensive coordinator Tony Elliott. So did Don Munson, Clemson’s director of broadcasting.
“I think that the fit between Tony and Virginia is like a hand in glove, to be honest with you,” Munson said Saturday. “I always knew when he took a head coaching job that he probably wanted to go to a school that really specified academics. And, to me, that’s what Virginia is all about.”
Mac Lain, a former offensive lineman at Clemson, said he saw Elliott as a logical choice at UVA “because of the fact that he is not only such an amazing coach, but has such an academic background.”
Elliott earned a degree in industrial engineering from Clemson, and that foundation helps him understand “what it takes to have such a high standard of excellence in the classroom as well,” Mac Lain said.
Virginia announced the hiring of Elliott on Friday afternoon, officially ending a search that began on Dec. 2. That’s when Bronco Mendenhall, the Cavaliers’ head coach for the past six seasons, announced he would step down after the team’s bowl game this month. (UVA will face SMU in the Dec. 29 Wasabi Fenway Bowl in Boston.)
𝙒𝘼𝙃𝙊𝙊𝙒𝘼🔶⚔️🔷
A proven champion ✅
An offensive mastermind ✅
A developer of NFL talent ✅
We got our guy! Welcome to Charlottesville, Coach Tony Elliott!
🔶⚔️🔷#GoHoos pic.twitter.com/bq9oenL8Qk— Virginia Cavaliers (@VirginiaSports) December 10, 2021
Elliott comes to UVA after 11 seasons as an assistant on head coach Dabo Swinney’s staff at Clemson, which won two national titles during that span. Elliott was the Tigers’ co-offensive coordinator for seven seasons and handled the job himself this year, when he was also assistant head coach.
In 2017, Elliott received the Frank Broyles Award as the nation’s top assistant coach. He and his wife, Tamika, have two sons, A.J. and Ace.
“I think it’s an absolute home run,” Mac Lain said. “I’m super excited for him to stay in the conference, and Virginia is a place that I think you can go and win right away. Duke, maybe not so much, for various reasons, but Virginia has all the pieces.”
Elliott, who was born in California, was 9 years old when he survived a car crash that killed his mother. His father wasn’t a big part of his life then, and Elliott ended up living with relatives in South Carolina.
An outstanding student, Elliott attended the Air Force Academy’s prep school in Colorado. He decided not to pursue the military, however, and enrolled at Clemson after being admitted there. He didn’t plan to play football in college, but Elliott had a change of heart and joined the Tigers’ program as a walk-on wide receiver.
“He didn’t have great speed, he didn’t have great quickness, and he was a little stocky for a wideout,” Tommy Bowden, who was then Clemson’s head coach, recalled Friday. “But he had tremendous hands, tremendous toughness, and he knew the assignments.”
In 2003, when Elliott was a senior, his teammates elected him one of Clemson’s captains. “That shows you the respect that he earned,” Bowden said. “It’s unusual that a walk-on can be elected captain that didn’t come in as a great star or anything athletically.”

His personal and leadership qualities will help Elliott relate not only to his players at Virginia, Bowden said, but also with the school’s administration.
“I think they’ve got the total package in a guy like him,” Bowden said.
As a student at Clemson, Elliott received an ACC Weaver-James-Corrigan Postgraduate Scholarship, and he made the conference’s all-academic team. Like Munson and Mac Laine, Bowden believes Elliott’s academic credentials will “be a tremendous asset for him coaching at a place like Virginia.”
Elliott’s position coach at Clemson was Swinney, who released a statement Friday.
“I just can’t tell you how happy I am for Tony and Tamika and Ace and A.J.,” Swinney said, and also just how proud I am of Tony,” Swinney said.
“Man, it’s really, really been an amazing journey for me to watch Tony since 2003. He was in my first receiver group — a captain. And I’m not quite old enough to be his dad but I look at him like a son. He really is special. I love him and his family with all my heart. I’m just so proud of him and all that he’s done since I hired him in 2011.”
Elliott, who coached running backs and tight ends at Clemson, was promoted to co-offensive coordinator late in Mac Lain’s college career, and they’ve remained close.
“The biggest thing for me was the fact that he treated you like a man first and a football player second,” Mac Lain said. “He much more cared about our development as future fathers, future husbands, citizens in society, than as football players. Any time that I would speak to him, I knew that he cared about me, Eric Mac Lain the person, and not just the player.
“That was such a huge piece, because you can trust that guy so easily, and he’s going to win those players’ hearts so quickly at Virginia … He’s fascinating, man, and he’s a genius. It was so much fun sitting in meetings with him and seeing the game through his eyes and listening to how he saw things and how he would break things down. I couldn’t be more happy for the guy.”
