By Jeff White (jwhite@virginia.edu)
VirginiaSports.com
CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. — One hundred and seventy media members cast ballots for the ACC preseason football poll, and collectively they picked Virginia to finish 16th out of the league’s 17 teams.
Five games into its third season under head coach Tony Elliott, UVA is 4-1 overall and 2-0 in the ACC. The Cavaliers aren’t worried, though, about proving prognosticators wrong. They’re focused on proving that their self-belief was justified.
“We know that we’re a really good football team and not a lot of people are going to believe in us,” sophomore quarterback Anthony Colandrea said Saturday afternoon after Virginia rallied to defeat Boston College 24-14 at Scott Stadium.
“Not a lot of people believed in us in that game or any game we play, and we know that everyone in our locker room believes that we can win any football game we’re in.”
In 2022, when the Wahoos’ season was halted after 10 games, they won three games, and they finished 3-9 last season. Many outside the program expected Virginia to struggle again this season, but “I told these guys, we’re not worried about that,” Elliott said. “We want to prove ourselves right.”
The Cavaliers found themselves trailing 14-0 early in the second quarter Saturday, exactly the slow start they wanted to avoid. But they’d erased a 14-point deficit in a comeback win at Wake Forest on Sept. 7, and they didn’t panic against the Eagles (4-2, 1-1). The Hoos scored 18 fourth-quarter points Saturday.
“They didn’t get down,” Elliott said of his players. “They didn’t start pointing fingers. They all looked at themselves in the mirror and said, hey, we’re going to figure out what it takes.”
Broadcast highlights from today's win vs. Boston College!#GoHoos pic.twitter.com/Mg5545nPfa
— Virginia Football (@UVAFootball) October 5, 2024
One of the Hoos’ many standouts was senior safety Jonas Sanker. He returned a fumble 40 yards for a touchdown with 6:02 to play, and Will Bettridge added the PAT to make it 24-14.
BC never threatened thereafter. The Eagles turned the ball over on downs on their next drive, and then UVA defensive back Kendren Smith, a graduate transfer from Penn, sealed the win by picking off a Thomas Castellanos pass with 3:04 remaining.
“As a program we grew up today,” Elliott told his players afterward. “We took a step. That was a complete team win, all three phases.”
Sanker attributed the Cavaliers’ comeback to “being steady, not getting emotional, not getting down on ourselves, just having confidence … We could be down 21 points, we could be down seven points, but it doesn’t matter. We’re going to go out there and we’re going to execute and we’re going to what we’re supposed to do.”
Elliott said he believes “that the guys in the locker room are buying into what we’re trying to build as a program, and they’re learning how to win close games, they’re learning how to win four-quarter games. And so I believe it just shows that the foundation that we laid in those first two years is starting to produce some results. But we’re far from where we want to be.”
UVA HOW WE FEELIN’??#UVAStrong | #GoHoos⚔️ pic.twitter.com/H6WQnL44HW
— Virginia Football (@UVAFootball) October 5, 2024
UVA came up with three takeaways Saturday, all in the second half. The first was an interception by defensive end Chico Bennett Jr., who came down with a pass deflected by the right hand of defensive tackle Anthony Britton early in the third quarter.
“It was a fun moment,” Bennett said of his first career interception.
Two plays later, the Hoos took a lead they never relinquished. Tailback Kobe Pace ran for 20 yards on first down, and then Colandrea teamed up with wide receiver Malachi Fields on a 30-yard touchdown pass with 10:39 to play. On a pass from Colandrea to wideout Andre Greene Jr., Virginia added the two-point conversion to go up 17-14.
UVA is one of five ACC teams unbeaten in conference play. For the Hoos, the key to handling success, Bennett said, will be staying humble.
“It’s a great feeling, obviously, to be 4-1,” Bennett said. “But overall, we know what we’ve got to do, because Coach Elliott always emphasizes reload, recalibrate and attack. And so that’s the mindset.”
The Eagles came to Charlottesville with a 7-1 all-time record against UVA, and for the first 17 minutes it appeared they would continue their dominance in the series. At the end of the first quarter, Virginia had one first down, and BC went up 14-0 with 13:08 left in the second quarter.
The Cavaliers managed to stay connected, though, and grew stronger as the game went on. The first of Bettridge’s three field goals made it 14-3, and a pivotal sequence late in the first half kept BC from taking a commanding lead. The Eagles picked up a first down at the UVA 35, but their next three plays netted only one yard, and they ended up punting.
Virginia took over at its 3-yard line with 1:44 left in the half. Two penalties on BC—the first a targeting call—helped the Hoos drive across midfield and into the red zone. On the final play of the half, Bettridge’s 33-yard field goal cut the Eagles’ lead to 14-6.
Elliott said he sensed his team’s confidence growing late in the second quarter. “I started to see kind of the body language shift. [BC’s] body language kind of slowed down a little bit, ours picked up a little bit, and we were able to keep that momentum even through halftime.”
A year ago, in Chestnut Hill, Mass., Boston College rallied for 17 unanswered third-quarter points in a 27-24 win over UVA. On Saturday, the Hoos were the ones celebrating an stirring comeback.
“We’re going to fight,” Sanker said. “We’re going to battle back. Last year they did a great job of that. This year it was our turn.”
UP NEXT: For the first and only time this season, Virginia will play a second straight home game. At 3:30 p.m. next Saturday, UVA takes on ACC rival Louisville at Scott Stadium. The game will air on ACC Network.
No. 22 Louisville (3-2, 1-1) lost 34-27 to visiting SMU on Saturday afternoon.
Virginia has dropped two straight games to Louisville, which leads the series 7-5. When the teams met last season, the Cardinals rallied for a 31-24 win at L&N Federal Credit Union Stadium in Louisville.
