By Jeff White (jwhite@virginia.edu)
VirginiaSports.com
CHARLOTTESVILLE — They cleared the arena between games, so it wasn’t a true doubleheader. But four hours of basketball were played Monday night at John Paul Jones Arena, and they produced two season-opening victories for the University of Virginia.
In a game that started at 5 p.m., the UVA women dominated the second half and ran away to an 85-59 win over George Washington.
At 9 p.m., the UVA men tipped off against North Carolina Central University. There were some anxious moments for the Cavaliers in the second half, but they pulled themselves together and pulled away for a 73-61 victory in front of a spirited crowd of 13,238.
Virginia’s fall teams are still competing, but hoops season has arrived, and with it comes optimism for both programs. The enthusiasm at JPJ was palpable Monday night.
“Thank you to all our fans that came to the game,” said head coach Amaka Agugua-Hamilton, who’s in her first year with the women’s team. “That was a really good crowd. We hope to continue to build on that, but there was definitely energy in the building, and we fed off of that.”
Congratulations @UVACoachMox on the first of many wins #GoHoos⚔️🔶 #GNSL pic.twitter.com/HIIjSasASr
— Virginia Women's Basketball (@UVAWomensHoops) November 8, 2022
Amped-up crowds and big wins are nothing new, of course, for the Virginia men, who are in their 14thseason under head coach Tony Bennett. Under Bennett, the Wahoos have become perennial powers in the ACC, and they’ve advanced to the NCAA tournament eight times, winning a national championship in 2018-19. (They would have played in the NCAAs in 2019-20, too, had the COVID-19 pandemic not forced the cancellation of the tournament.)
The women’s program has not been as stable or successful during that span.
In 2009-10, Bennett’s first season at UVA, Hall of Fame coach Debbie Ryan led the women’s team to the NCAA tournament. But the Hoos did not get back to the NCAAs until 2017-18, their seventh and final season under Ryan’s successor, Joanne Boyle.
After Boyle retired, Tina Thompson posted a 30-63 record in four seasons as Virginia’s head coach. Thompson’s tenure ended in March, and UVA turned to Agugua-Hamilton, who arrived with an impressive résume.
In three seasons under Agugua-Hamilton, who goes by “Coach Mox,” Missouri State went 74-15. If not for the pandemic, the Lady Bears would have advanced to the NCAA tournament in each of those seasons. They reached the Sweet Sixteen in 2020-21.
Their offices aren’t far apart in JPJ, and Bennett and Agugua-Hamilton have forged a friendship and studied each other’s coaching styles.
“We text back and forth at different times,” Bennett said Monday, “and I’ve had a handful of opportunities to stop and watch a portion of their practice. I just love the spirit and the energy. They’re trying to establish a toughness. They’ve brought in some excellent players. They’ve committed some high-level young kids, and they’re really enthused about what can happen here.
“You see that. They have a plan, and they’re really working that plan and coaching the young ladies hard and well.”
Bennett’s sister Kathi is a former head coach of several women’s programs, including Indiana, Evansville and Northern Illinois. “So he has a great respect for women’s basketball,” Agugua-Hamilton said.
She’s sat in on UVA men’s practices, Agugua-Hamilton said, and picked up “little nuggets here and there. Of course, that’s been amazing.”
Basketball aside, though, “I think he is one of the most amazing people I’ve ever met,” Agugua-Hamilton of Bennett, “and just his approach to life and an approach to growing and impacting the next generation is really admirable.”
The UVA men, whose record under Bennett is 317-117, are coming off an uncharacteristic season. For the first time in nearly a decade, Virginia missed the NCAA tournament. The Hoos gained valuable experience in three NIT games, though, and they returned their top six scorers from 2021-22: forward Jayden Gardner, guards Armaan Franklin, Kihei Clark and Reece Beekman, and post players Kadin Shedrick and Francisco Caffaro.
Also back are swingman Taine Murray and guard Chase Coleman, and the roster includes five newcomers: graduate student Ben Vander Plas and freshmen Leon Bond III, Ryan Dunn, Isaac McKneely and Isaac Traudt.
“We do have some more options this year,” Bennett said.
Against NCCU, eight players logged at least 10 minutes apiece for the Cavaliers, including McKneely, the only freshman to see time. The Eagles, who trailed by eight at halftime, rallied to take a 44-43 lead with 14:17 remaining, at which point “I heard some nervous energy from the fans in the crowd,” NCCU head coach LeVelle Moton said.
Those nerves didn’t last. The Hoos answered with a 10-2 run that started with a Clark 3-pointer, and they didn’t falter thereafter.
When the Eagles went ahead, Shedrick said, part “of me was just hoping this wasn’t last year all over again. We all just realized we had to lock in at that moment and we couldn’t let them continue to build momentum. The crowd stayed in it, which we all really appreciated, and we stayed in it too. We played hard and we were able to pull away, which was really good. I’m not sure if last year’s team would’ve been able to do that early in the season, so that’s an area where we’ve improved.”
Franklin, whose 3-point shooting carried the Cavaliers in the NIT, hasn’t cooled off. He was 4 for 7 from beyond the arc against NCCU and finished with a game-high 21 points.
“We had some breakdowns in our defensive coverage,” Moton said, “and Franklin really made us pay.”
Gardner led Virginia with nine rebounds, and Shedrick contributed 10 points, seven rebounds, two assists, two steals and two blocked shots. Beekman and Caffaro added 10 points each.
Coming off a season in which they shot only 32.3 percent from 3-point range, the Cavaliers were 11 for 25 (44 percent) on Monday night.
“There’s gonna be games sometimes where the shots are not going in, so you got to find other ways,” Bennett said. “But last year was a challenge … I don’t know if we’re a great outside shooting team, but we’re better, and we have more depth, and those are two important things.”
