By Jeff White (jwhite@virginia.edu)
VirginiaSports.com
CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. — For the University of Virginia football team, running the ball effectively against Coastal Carolina was one thing. To follow that effort up with another strong performance on the ground against Boston College was especially pleasing for the Cavaliers’ coaching staff.
UVA, which rushed for 384 yards in a 43-24 win at Coastal on Sept. 21, didn’t come close to matching that eye-catching total in its 24-14 victory over BC at Scott Stadium on Saturday. Led by tailback Kobe Pace (83 yards), the Wahoos netted 121 yards on the ground. But 56 of those rushing yards came during a fourth quarter in which Virginia outscored BC 18-0. The Hoos had rushed for only six yards in the first quarter.
“What I was probably most proud of in this past week’s performance is that it didn’t start as fast as we wanted to,” head coach Tony Elliott said Tuesday during his weekly press conference at the Hardie Center. “Didn’t have as much success offensively or defensively as we initially wanted, but they just kept fighting, and they persevered. And then they were able to have a little success, and that bred more confidence, which allowed them to keep pushing.”
Among ACC teams, Virginia ranked 13th in rushing offense (117.9 yards per game) in 2023. The Cavaliers rank seventh in the ACC this season (180.2 yards per game).
UVA (4-1 overall, 2-0 ACC) hosts Louisville (3-2, 1-1) at 3:30 p.m. Saturday at Scott Stadium.
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— Virginia Football (@UVAFootball) October 7, 2024
Elliott took over at UVA in December 2021, and he said from day one that he wanted his team to be able to run the ball with authority.
“That’s the mentality,” Elliott said. “That’s what we desire to do … For us it’s being efficient, being effective, and I thought in the second half [against BC] we were a lot more effective with the run game, which allows us now to do more things in the pass game, play a little faster with our tempo. There’s a lot of things that come off the ability to be efficient running the football.”
Pace, a senior who began his college career at Clemson, has carried a team-high 61 times for 293 yards and two touchdowns this season. Junior tailback Xavier Brown leads Virginia with 315 yards rushing (on 38 carries).
Brown, who ran for a career-best 171 yards against Coastal, carried five times for 22 yards versus Boston College.
“At that position,” Elliott said, “it’s [sometimes a matter of] who gets the hot hand. I think early on we didn’t have a ton of plays early in the game just because we were three-and-out a couple of times and trying to establish the run. And different calls have different personnel packages. But, yes, he’s a guy that we want to get involved more in the right situations. So, do we have an ideal number for him? No, but I anticipate that he’ll have more than five touches. And he’s a guy that needs more than five touches, because each time he touches it, you’re seeing that he has the ability to have a big play.”
MEA CULPA: Elliott, who’s in his third year at Virginia, opened his press conference by apologizing to Boston College offensive lineman Logan Taylor. Now in his second year as an Eagle, Taylor played at UVA in 2022, and after the game Saturday he came up and hugged Elliott, who was on the field doing a TV interview.
Elliott used the wrong last name when he cited Taylor during the interview, and it’s “been bothering me since then,” he said.
“I didn’t realize it in the moment,” Elliott said. “I want to take a second. because Logan was a great representative when he was here [who] chose to go be closer to family. He was doing a great job for them. So, Logan, I want to apologize for saying the wrong last name. No ill intent. Wish you the best the rest of the way.”
