Virginia QB Armstrong likes the fit with coach Elliott

Virginia quarterback Brennan Armstrong appeared on the Packer and Durham show on the ACC Network. Armstrong evaluated the option of entering the 2022 NFL draft but decided to return for another season. New head coach Tony Elliott quickly made a good …

Virginia quarterback Brennan Armstrong appeared on the Packer and Durham show on the ACC Network.  Armstrong evaluated the option of entering the 2022 NFL draft but decided to return for another season.

New head coach Tony Elliott quickly made a good impression on the Cavs quarterback.

“The feel with coach Elliott when he first got here.  I had no questions that it would be a good fit.  It was just whether or not I felt like I should leave to go to the draft or come back,” Armstrong told Packer and Durham.

Armstrong believes he can help his draft stock by playing one more season at Virginia and believes they have the ability to make to win the Coastal Division.

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Former Michigan State football DE chooses Virginia

A former MSU DE is transferring to Virginia

Michigan State football defensive end Jack Camper made a decision at the conclusion of the 2021 season to enter his name into the transfer portal. Camper was a member of MSU’s 2017 recruiting class, coming to East Lansing from the IMG Academy. Camper spent the last five seasons as a member of the Spartan football program.

After being given a sixth year of eligibility due to COVID-19, Camper will be using that year at another power five school, making a decision to head back to his home state and finish his career off at Virginia.

In his time at MSU, Camper totaled 29 tackles, 4.5 tackles for loss and 1 sack.

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Virginia vs SMU: Wasabi Fenway Bowl Prediction, Game Preview

Virginia vs SMU: Fenway Bowl prediction, game preview, how to watch, lines, and why each team might or might not win.

Virginia vs SMU: Wasabi Fenway Bowl prediction, game preview, how to watch.


Virginia vs SMU: Wasabi Fenway Bowl How To Watch

Date: Wednesday, December 29
Game Time: 11:00 am ET
Venue: Fenway Park, Boston, MA
How To Watch: ESPN, Live stream on ESPN+
Records: SMU (8-4), Virginia (6-6)

CFN Predictions | Bowl Schedule

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Virginia vs SMU Fenway Bowl Preview

Easily the funkiest and, potentially, wildest of all the bowl games, there’s absolutely nothing normal about this.

It’s the inaugural Wasabi Fenway Bowl being played in Fenway Park. It’s going to – most likely – be cold, it’s going to get going on a Wednesday morning, and both sides are trying to figure out their respective coaching staffs.

There’s all of that, and it should also be a wild offensive show.

It’s the final game for retiring Virginia head coach Bronco Mendenhall, whose team crashed late in the season with four straight losses despite throwing for 1,474 yards over the stretch.

The Cavaliers have the No. 2 passing offense in America just behind WKU, but they don’t play a lick of defense – especially against the run – and will try to win this by throwing and throwing some more.

On the other side, SMU lost head coach Sonny Dykes to the TCU job, former Miami offensive coordinator Rhett Lashlee is taking over, and in the meantime there’s been a hodge-podge of coaches getting the team ready for the game.

The Mustangs led the American Athletic Conference in total offense with a high-powered passing attack that averaged over 300 yards per game. Like Virginia, they’re going to throw and throw some more.

Why Virginia, SMU Will Win
Prediction, What’s Going To Happen, History
Fenway Bowl Top Players To Know

NEXT: Why Virginia Will Win, Why SMU Will Win, Wasabi Fenway Bowl Prediction

Tigers swung and miss, but are in the transfer portal game

As The Clemson Insider reported on Thursday, Clemson has been battling Michigan for one of the nation’s top offensive linemen in the NCAA transfer portal – University of Virginia grad transfer center Olusegun Oluwatimi, who earned second-team …

As The Clemson Insider reported on Thursday, Clemson has been battling Michigan for one of the nation’s top offensive linemen in the NCAA transfer portal – University of Virginia grad transfer center Olusegun Oluwatimi, who earned second-team All-ACC honors this season and was one of three finalists for the Rimington Trophy.

The information we had indicated Michigan was the team to beat, as the Wolverines were on him first, and that Clemson came into the picture later but had made a good push.

We wanted to pass along the latest we have gathered from our sources on where things stand with Oluwatimi.

From the sources we spoke with, it sounds like Oluwatimi plans to stick with Michigan, which is not a surprise based on what we previously heard from our sources about the Wolverines being the first team on him upon his entrance into the portal in early December.

The good news to take away from this is that it appears as if Clemson will now be a player in the transfer portal moving forward. As Swinney has stated in the past, though, if the Tigers do use the portal, it will only be for an elite, all-conference type of player such as Oluwatimi.

It looks like the Tigers didn’t win the battle for Oluwatimi, but times have changed, and this case shows that Clemson is going to play the portal game to some degree.

The Tigers will be disappointed in not getting Oluwatimi, but we saw Dabo Swinney get involved and put on a full-court press for him. The biggest factor here is that Michigan got on him earlier, so that may be a lesson learned for Clemson in future transfer portal pursuits.

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Swinney told Elliott all he needed to hear, to take UVA job

Clemson head coach Dabo Swinney has said that Tony Elliott is like a son to him, and Elliott certainly feels he has a father-son bond with Swinney as well. “He is like a father to me,” Elliott said on Monday during his introductory press conference …

Clemson head coach Dabo Swinney has said that Tony Elliott is like a son to him, and Elliott certainly feels he has a father-son bond with Swinney as well.

“He is like a father to me,” Elliott said on Monday during his introductory press conference as Virginia’s new head football coach.

Elliott, who spent 11 seasons at Clemson as an assistant coach under Swinney, including the last six as offensive or co-offensive coordinator, first formed a relationship with Swinney in 2003 – Swinney’s first year as an assistant at Clemson, when he was the wide receivers coach, and Elliott’s final season as a receiver for the Tigers.

At that time, Elliott – who came to Clemson as a walk-on in the fall of 1999 – had already graduated and was deciding whether to return for one more season at Clemson or to go ahead and start his career in the engineering field.

That’s when Swinney stepped in and convinced Elliott to come back, and the point when they began to build a bond that will last a lifetime.

“Our relationship started in 2003 when he came to Clemson,” said Elliott, who finished his career with four letters and 44 games, including four as a starter as a senior in 2003.

“I was asked to come back for my last year, and right after the bowl game, (former Clemson receivers coach) Rick Stockstill leaves to take another job, and we’re sitting in limbo. I was already a graduate and I was debating whether or not I was going to come back, and then Coach Swinney came along. He didn’t have a reason to believe in me. I was a former walk-on, wasn’t a scholarship guy. Asked to come back, and there was some dudes coming back in that room from a receivers standpoint. But he saw something in me, and he believed in me and he gave me an opportunity. And from there, the bond has been strong ever since.”

Swinney has long served as a mentor to Elliott, who has been a candidate for plenty of various coaching vacancies but stayed selective in his search for the right head coaching position.

He knew Virginia was the right job and situation for him when he heard Swinney say it.

“He’s always been in my corner,” Elliott said. “He understands who I am, he understands the right fit, and he’s been the one that’s helped me to stay patient, to look for the right fit, to make sure that I get into a situation where there is alignment. There were jobs that he would give me his blessing on, and there were jobs that he wouldn’t give me his blessings on. And when I heard him say that he felt like Virginia was the perfect fit for Tony Elliott, then that’s all I needed to hear.”

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Does Desmond Howard think Tony Elliott is a good hire for UVA?

On ESPN’s College Football Live, ESPN college football analyst Desmond Howard weighed in on Virginia’s hire of Tony Elliott as the football program’s next head coach. Howard was asked if it makes sense for Clemson’s former offensive coordinator to …

On ESPN’s College Football Live, ESPN college football analyst Desmond Howard weighed in on Virginia’s hire of Tony Elliott as the football program’s next head coach.

Howard was asked if it makes sense for Clemson’s former offensive coordinator to go to UVA.

“I think Tony Elliott is a really good hire,” Howard said. “I like him as a coach, but I really respect him as a person, too. And you look at his story, man, just a tremendous story. Dabo Swinney gave him his opportunity to be an OC at Clemson, and he’s delivered.”

Elliott was named co-offensive coordinator at Clemson prior to the 2014 Russell Athletic Bowl and was co-offensive coordinator of Clemson’s 2016 and 2018 national championship teams.

Clemson posted an 89-10 record in 99 games since his 2014 promotion, and the Tigers finished in the top 25 in each of his first 10 years as a full-time coach from 2011-20, including top-five finishes in each of the last six seasons before this year.

While coaching Clemson’s running backs from 2011-20, Elliott coached a 1,000-yard rusher seven times, including Wayne Gallman in 2015 and 2016 and Travis Etienne in 2018 and 2019.

“He’s a guy who’s going to develop young talent,” Howard said. “You look at Trevor Lawrence and all these great quarterbacks and players that he’s had offensively, they give Tony Elliott a tremendous amount of credit for their development.

“So, he’s learned at the feet of the master, one of the best coaches we’ve seen for the past eight, nine years — Dabo Swinney — and now he’s ready to take his talents to UVA. So, I think it’s a good hire.”

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Pollack: Elliott will ‘have his hands full’ at Virginia

On ESPN’s College Football Live, ESPN college football analyst David Pollack gave his take on Virginia’s hire of former Clemson offensive coordinator Tony Elliott as the Cavaliers’ new head football coach. “It’s interesting,” Pollack said. “In the …

On ESPN’s College Football Live, ESPN college football analyst David Pollack gave his take on Virginia’s hire of former Clemson offensive coordinator Tony Elliott as the Cavaliers’ new head football coach.

“It’s interesting,” Pollack said. “In the ACC, obviously, so direct competition with Clemson. But I think he’s kind of been waiting for an opportunity and finally gets one. But awesome, awesome human being — meek, mild. Like, everybody will respect him day one.”

Pollack, though, believes Elliott will “have his hands full” in his new gig.

“Virginia’s not an easy job,” Pollack said. “Nobody’s been there consistently and won. You can go back a ways since that’s happened. So, he’s going to have his hands full. But he better be able to develop that talent and get talent to come to UVA, which is not easy.”

For the record, the winningest coach in Virginia football history is College Football Hall of Famer George Welsh, who coached UVA to a record of 134-86-3 from 1982-2000 and retired as the winningest coach in Atlantic Coast Conference history.

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Former Tiger dishes on Elliott leaving for Virginia and his son’s commitment status

The Clemson Insider recently spoke with Patrick Sapp to get some insight on Tony Elliott accepting the head coaching job at the University of Virginia. Sapp hit on a number of topics during the following question-and-answer session, including his …

The Clemson Insider recently spoke with Patrick Sapp to get some insight on Tony Elliott accepting the head coaching job at the University of Virginia.

Sapp hit on a number of topics during the following question-and-answer session, including his thoughts and reactions to his close, personal friend making a significant decision, how this impacts his son, Josh, and where Clemson goes from here.

There are very few people who know Virginia’s new head coach and the inner workings of Clemson’s program better than Sapp, a former Tigers’ linebacker himself. It was only right to catch up with Sapp after Friday’s events unfolded.

Note: This interview was edited and condensed for clarity

Being that you’re close with Tony Elliott, can we get your overall reaction to him accepting the University of Virginia job and him electing to go over to Charlottesville?

Of course, I definitely wanted him to stay at Clemson. It’s just my personal selfishness, as well as I know how my son really feels about Coach Elliott and a lot of his decision on going to Clemson was both Coach Elliott and Coach Swinney. So, I know he’s somewhat disappointed. But for me, I’m happy for him. It’s well deserved. I think if you’re doing it the right way as a program, people are gonna want your coaches. And if that’s the case, which that’s the case with Clemson, you’re gonna lose guys. I think Coach Swinney and those guys stayed at Clemson a long time and have been committed even after being offered numerous jobs over the years.

I knew it was gonna happen. I know Coach Swinney knew it was gonna happen. If you have any understanding of coaching and collegiate football, this day was coming at some point. I’m happy for him, man. It’s well deserved. It’s been well deserved for a long time. I know he thought about it long and hard and prayed about it. He’s made the right decision for himself and his family.

You mentioned that [Clemson 2022 three-star tight end commit] Josh [Sapp] is disappointed, but he plans to still sign with Clemson?

Yes. Yes. Yes. We’re still committed to Clemson, no doubt. I know he and Tony really had a good relationship and he has a lot of respect for Coach Elliott. He’s a bright young man. He understands that these things happen and will happen. But, we’re still committed to the program.

From your vantage point, is losing Tony Elliott and Brent Venables to Virginia and Oklahoma, respectively, a testament to this program and what Clemson has been able to build under Dabo Swinney?

Yeah, no doubt. You look at the great programs. You look at the great head coaches. You always find a coaching tree and kind of trail that leads back to those guys, those great head coaches, and great programs. You just look at the last 40 or 50 years, there are probably six or seven great coaches that you can recall that probably has a tree lineage of coaches 20 deep.

So yes, it’s a testament to the program and again, I knew it was gonna happen. Coach Swinney knew it was gonna happen. I’m sure he’s had some kind of preparation for it. I’m sure he probably didn’t think it would happen with two coordinators in one year at the same time. I know that’s hard to plan for…but, thank God again. I feel like what helps programs move through these things successfully is stability.

Even with [Dan Radakovich] leaving, you have great folks in Graham Neff that have been a part of Clemson for 6-7, 10 years. Even though you lose your [Athletic Director] you still got people there that have been working in that department and working end to end that understand and know Clemson. Same thing with the staff. You got a lot of folks in that building that have been there for a number of years. Even though you’re losing two great guys that are in a lot of ways that’ll be hard to replace, no doubt, but you always got to look at things as an opportunity. I think for Clemson and that staff that’s there and Coach Swinney, he’s gonna look at this as an opportunity to get better — believe it or not — and an opportunity to bring some fresh ideas, some new life, some new energy because all that’s always important. That’s gonna weigh a lot into his decision-making. That’s kind of how we’re looking at it from a parent standpoint and somebody that’s been around the program, myself, as an opportunity. It’s not as if the sky is falling. This is a great — in my opinion — opportunity for Clemson.

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Virginia Football head coach Bronco Mendenhall stuns everyone by stepping down

Virginia head coach Bronco Mendenhall stunned the football world when he stepped down on Thursday.

In an already tumultuous and crazy college football coaching carousel  season, Virginia head coach Bronco Mendenhall announced Thursday evening that he would be stepping down after six years in Charlottesville. Mendenhall, who has been coaching in some form or fashion for 31 years, led Virginia to a 6-6 regular season record in 2021.

“I absolutely want to be at my best in anything that I do for everyone that I’m responsible for, but most importantly, [for] my partner, Holly, it’s 25 years straight, 17 of which I’ve been a head coach,” Mendenhall told reporters shortly after his departure was announced. “I don’t know if anyone — none of you know what that could be like, and I don’t know. 

But what I do know is I want to spend a lot of time with her together, reconsidering the next thing we’re going to do together. That would be my first priority: what are we going to do together, and what’s next for us before we take on anything else.”

Stunned feels like an understatement when describing this development. There was no indication that Mendenhall would be fired let alone resign. The Cavaliers came up a few plays short of competing for the Coastal Division title, falling on the road at Pitt before dropping a heartbreaking loss to in-state rival Virginia Tech.

“It has been a privilege to have Bronco Mendenhall direct the Virginia football team over the past six seasons,” Virginia athletics director Carla Williams said in the official release. “He has done an exceptional job of not just transforming the program, but elevating the expectations for the program. He has established the necessary foundation to propel our football team upward. He is more than a football coach and the impact he has had on these young men will be a positive influence for the rest of their lives.”

Mendenhall met with his team around 4:45pm, the release was issued at 5pm and met with the press at 5:30pm. In all it was a quick turnaround — even with both Williams and University of Virginia president Jim Ryan asking him to stay.

What happens now is the big question.

There are not yet any indications as to who Virginia will hire to replace Mendenhall, if it’ll hire internally or try and jump into the chaotic coaching search pool. Virginia is eligible for a bowl game, and Mendenhall intends to stay on to see that through for his team and coaching staff, despite their surprise with the news.

I’m not going to do it unless I can and feel energetic enough to do all that,” Mendenhall said. “So they saw that and they understand — it doesn’t mean they liked it. But I’m looking to continue to add value, not just ride it out.”

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Virginia Tech vs. Virginia live stream, TV channel, start time, odds, how to watch

The Virginia Tech Hokies will meet the Virginia Cavaliers in ACC action on Saturday afternoon from Scott Stadium.

The Virginia Tech Hokies will meet the Virginia Cavaliers in ACC action on Saturday afternoon from Scott Stadium.

Virginia Tech will look to bounce back after a 38-26 loss to the Miami Hurricanes and are in need of a win to become bowl eligible today. As for Virginia, they come into this one on a three-game losing skid and will look to turn that around in this rivalry game.

As always this will be a great matchup, here is everything you need to know to watch and stream the action.

Virginia Tech vs. Virginia

  • When: Saturday, November 27
  • Time: 3:45 p.m. ET
  • TV Channel: ACC Network
  • Live Stream: fuboTV (watch for free)

How to watch College Football this season

fuboTV has complete NCAA college football coverage (CBS, FOX, ESPN) as well as ACC Network, Big 10 Network, ESPNU, Pac12, and more. fuboTV includes every network you need to watch every college football game in your market.
fuboTV is available on your phone, tablet, desktop, TV, connected TV Devices including Roku. Apple TV, Amazon Fire TV plus many more.
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NCAA Football Odds and Betting Lines

NCAA odds courtesy of Tipico Sportsbook. Odds last updated Saturday at 2:45 p.m. ET.

Virginia Tech vs. Virginia (-6.5)

O/U: 64.5

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