By Jeff White (jwhite@virginia.edu)
VirginiaSports.com
CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. — When they learned of the tragedy that struck the University of Virginia football program, Anthony Gill and his wife, Jenna, immediately began thinking about how they could help the team’s players and coaches heal.
Gill’s sport of his choice, of course, is basketball, not football, but his years at UVA helped shape him. He remains committed to his alma mater and to Charlottesville, two communities to which Jenna also has strong ties. And so the Gills reeled at the news that defensive end D’Sean Perry and wide receivers Lavel Davis Jr. and Devin Chandler had been slain in a Nov. 13 shooting that wounded two other UVA students, including tailback Mike Hollins.
“We know how close-knit the community is there,” said Gill, a forward with the NBA’s Washington Wizards. “The University is the city, and there’s no escaping it. Everywhere you go, it’s a reminder of what transpired with the team. So we wanted to try to help out as much as we could. We put our brains to it and we thought, ‘What better way than to get them to a game?’ We were just trying to refresh their minds and get their minds off of [everyday concerns].”

And that’s exactly what happened Friday, when three busloads of Wahoos—in all, about 100 players and staffers—traveled to D.C. As guests of the Gills and the Wizards, the UVA contingent saw Washington take on San Antonio at Capital One Arena. On a night when the 6-foot-8 Gill was a plus-10 in 18 minutes off the bench, the Wizards defeated the Spurs 136-124.
“It was an awesome experience,” Virginia head football coach Tony Elliott said. “Really, really humbled that Anthony Gill would put that together for us and make it available for our guys to be able to come up and watch, and, man, he played well too.”
Gill, who’s from High Point, N.C., spent one year at the University of South Carolina before transferring to UVA in the spring of 2012. After sitting out the 2012-13 season—the NCAA’s rules for transfers were different then—he became one of the ACC’s top post players. During the three seasons Gill played for the Cavaliers, they went 89-19 and made three trips to the NCAA tournament. Virginia advanced to the Sweet Sixteen in 2014, to the second round in ’15, and to the Elite Eight in ’16.
That the Gills would reach out to the football program is “an indicator of how strong the UVA family is,” Elliott said, “and it doesn’t just reside in one area. It crosses all of the different walks of life on Grounds, from academics to athletics to everything else that’s involved with UVA. They were really, really gracious, and the guys were really, really grateful. They had a good time. And what it does, too, is it gives us an opportunity to be together as a team. So that’s what I was most grateful for: the opportunity just to have these guys outside of football spending time together as a team.”
