By Jeff White (jwhite@virginia.edu)
VirginiaSports.com
CHARLOTTESVILLE — After a stretch of three games in which they mainly faced opponents’ backup quarterbacks, the Virginia Cavaliers are preparing for a date with one of college football’s brightest young stars at that position: North Carolina’s Drake Maye.
In a Coastal Division game to air on ACC Network, UVA (3-5, 1-4) meets No. 17 UNC (7-1, 4-0) at noon Saturday at Scott Stadium.
A redshirt freshman whose brother Luke helped UNC win an NCAA title in basketball, Maye leads the nation in total offense and ranks third in passing efficiency and passing yards per game. In eight games, he’s completed 196 of 275 passes (71.3 percent) for 2,671 yards and 29 touchdowns, with only three interceptions. He’s also averaging 4.5 yards per rush.
“You can tell watching him on film that the game’s not moving too fast for him,” UVA head coach Tony Elliott said Tuesday. “That’s one of the things with freshman quarterbacks and all young guys in general: the game moves extremely fast. But for him he’s in control of the offense. You can tell that’s very comfortable. He understands what they’re doing. He has his progressions. If his progression’s not there he’s going to find the running back on a check down or he’s going to take off and extend the play with his legs.”
The Tar Heels, who are averaging 41.8 points per game, will be up against a UVA defense that’s gone eight-plus quarters without allowing a touchdown. In each of its past two games—a 16-9 win over Georgia Tech and a 14-12 loss to Miami—Virginia held its opponent to fewer than 275 yards.
Still, no matter how well the defense has been playing coordinator John Rudzinski, who came to UVA from Air Force after last season, shutting down UNC’s offense will be difficult. The Heels have scored at least 27 points in every game this season. The Cavaliers, meanwhile, have scored more than 20 only once: in a 34-17 victory of Richmond, an FCS team.
To win Saturday, “we’ve got to be prepared to score points,” Elliott said. “I think the objective every time you step on the field from an offensive perspective is to go score. So the biggest thing is for us we’re moving the ball. I’ve been kidding with the guys and just challenging them. I said, ‘We can’t be allergic to the end zone.’ Hopefully we’ll shake those allergies and we’ll find ways to put it in the end zone.”
Against Miami, the Wahoos had at least three pass plays that could have produced touchdowns, Elliott said, “and that’s 21 points on the board. So the guys have responded to the challenge. I think the guys are going to be excited to play, [and] they were excited to play last week. Offensively, the objective is to score points every time you touch the ball. So we’re going to challenge these guys to throw and catch and block, give the quarterback some time, and then hopefully we can play complementary football with the defense.”
HOME STRETCH: Four regular-season games remain for Virginia, which is in its first season under Elliott. The next three are at Scott Stadium, where the Hoos have won 23 of their past 30 games.
As disappointing as the loss to Miami was for the Cavaliers, the players “showed up with a great mindset on Monday,” Elliott said. “They probably recovered from the outcome of the game quicker than the coaches. But I think the guys understand where we’re trying to go as a program. I think they’re invested in helping build the foundation of this program. I think we’re also in a stretch of the season where they got some rivalry games coming up, they got some personal vested interest in some of these games coming up.
“So really it’s been spirited practices on Monday and Tuesday, and we really haven’t had to do much in terms of lifting their spirits. But then also too I let them know that we’re moving forward. We’re building a program. And, yes, I want to win every single game. But the objective is to make sure that we get the fundamentals right. I think the guys have turned the corner in terms of believing what we’re trying to build from a program standpoint and they’re excited about the opportunity that they have left … So there’s still a whole lot left to play for this team.”
