Rookies help Cavaliers build toward future
These guys have been hyped for so long they're starting to resemble a George Lucas production.
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These guys have been hyped for so long they're starting to resemble a George Lucas production.
CHAPEL HILL, N.C.-The Virginia women's soccer team is a resilient bunch. The Cavaliers have dethroned champions and fallen to unranked cupcakes, but they have not been fazed by any of it. Last night, however, was just too much to take.
The Virginia women's soccer team went 0-3 against its top ACC rivals and lost three of its last four regular season games. Yet as the Conference Tournament begins today in Chapel Hill, the No. 16 Cavaliers have a realistic shot at the ACC title.
Perhaps it was only appropriate that the Virginia women's soccer team, playing its final regular season game on Halloween afternoon, needed less than 50 minutes to suck the life from the Tennessee Lady Volunteers yesterday at Klöckner Stadium.
An opposing forward running free on the flank of the defense would be cause for concern for most soccer teams. Not the Virginia women; they know that attacker won't be streaking toward the goal unchecked for long. Ashley Meeker will get there. She almost always does.
Football placekickers are a beleaguered bunch. They receive little fanfare, except for game-winning 60-yarders, and earn the wrath of fans and media alike should they flub an extra point or a chip-shot field goal.
Virginia men's tennis coach Dick Stockton will be one of 10 people inducted into the Trinity University Athletic Hall of Fame today.
High school power forward Kyle Cuffe has chosen St. John's over Virginia and two other schools, several recruiting sources reported yesterday.
Last week, April Heinrichs announced that her Virginia women's soccer team stood on the threshold of greatness. Since that proclamation, the Cavalier record is 2-0-0, but they're still waiting at the threshold, fumbling around for the key.
So you're the Virginia women's soccer coach and your upcoming weekend slate features No. 2 Florida and unranked George Mason. Which game are you more worried about? The easy pick is the unbeaten, defending national champion Gators, but not if the coach in question is April Heinrichs.
A week after putting up five goals in the midst of a veritable monsoon against Maryland, the Virginia women's soccer team extended its two-game scoring drought to 199 minutes as William & Mary sent the Cavaliers to their second straight 1-0 defeat last night at Klockner Stadium.
About eight minutes into last night's rain-drenched women's soccer game, John Fogerty, courtesy of the Klöckner Stadium P.A., wondered aloud "who'll stop the rain?" Maryland could not do anything about the weather and sure couldn't do much about the Cavaliers either.
St. Louis Rams quarterback Kurt Warner wasn't in Phoenix Monday night for the 49ers/Cardinals game, but the San Francisco coaches might have invoked his spirit.
At first glance, Julie Harris' weekend didn't seem to make much sense.
Carryn Weigand's five-year Cavalier career culminated in consecutive terms as co-captain because she uses her head. Usually that refers to athletic intelligence, but lately it has come to have a literal meaning as well.
The Stanford and Hartford women's soccer teams will be at Klockner Stadium this weekend for the Coca-Classic tournament, but it still remains to be seen which Virginia squad will show up.
RALEIGH, N.C. -- In the preseason, coach April Heinrichs anointed her Cavalier women's soccer team the best in the impressive history of the program. A pair of surprising early season losses did little to further that notion, but this weekend Virginia showed their ACC neighbors to the south exactly why they deserve that lofty billing.
Watching a Virginia women's soccer game, Katie Tracy is one of the first players to stand out. She's yelling encouragement to her teammates from her spot at center midfield, out-fighting her opponents for headers and loose balls and generally doing all the things a reigning team MVP should do.
Watching a Virginia women's soccer game, Katie Tracy is one of the first players to stand out. She's yelling encouragement to her teammates from her spot at center midfield, out-fighting her opponents for headers and loose balls and generally doing all the things a reigning team MVP and "unsung hero" should do.
I watched tennis last week.