Virginia shocks the No. 2 Blue Devils if...
By Will Searcy | January 27, 2006The Virginia men's basketball team is hot; winners of three ACC games in a row and tied for second in the conference standings.
The Virginia men's basketball team is hot; winners of three ACC games in a row and tied for second in the conference standings.
Last weekend, the men's and women's swimming and diving teams traveled down to North Carolina and defeated longtime rival North Carolina at their last home meet.
There are certain things that change for a team from year to year. A new freshman class comes in, the old seniors graduate, the new seniors take on increased responsibilities.
Of the many Debbie Ryan-isms, one stands out the most in these tough two weeks of play. "[Just] keep taking one game at a time," junior center Siedah Williams said.
Virginia fans are riding high right now. We're talking Keith Jenifer high. And who can blame them?
In front of the second-largest crowd in team history, No. 1 Virginia ousted Virginia Commonwealth behind the clutch performances of sophomore Somdev Devvarman and senior Doug Stewart.
After a three-game road trip to start the season, the Cavaliers are home and ready to defend their No.
Everybody who sees Sean Singletary today should thank him. No, they should all bow down and worship the ground he walks on, in the futile hope that maybe, just maybe, some of his basketball prowess will rub off on them.
There is just no stopping him. Buoyed by Sean Singletary's 22-point, second-half scoring outburst, Virginia cruised to a 71-51 victory over Miami last night at U-Hall.
My last column, which ran years ago in 2005, was the Waterworld of columns for me. Translation: not good.
Riding high on the wave of momentum built by two straight conference victories
With the first column of the semester, it seems only fitting to have a year in review column detailing who should be feeling the love and who should be left out in the cold.
In the quieter and less publicized world of club sports, at the end of last year, one club sports team finally overcame a 25-year championship drought.
Buying a rebounding ring that prevents shots from going in the hoop will only cost you about $15.
As the student section rushed the court at University Hall to celebrate Virginia's 72-68 win over No.
DURHAM, N.C. -- For the Virginia men's and women's swimming and diving teams, every meet is important.
Virginia wrestler Anthony Burke won the opening 125-pound class match against Ohio State's Nathan Costello, but the Buckeyes won the next seven to beat the Cavaliers 28-10 at Memorial Gymnasium yesterday. Virginia fell to 5-4 on the season.
Most people would agree that there are correct and incorrect things to say after a game. When it comes to heartbreaking losses, however, the fine line between them becomes less detectable.
2005 ACC Rookie of the Year Crystal Langhorne struggled to find her game for much of the night against a hostile Virginia defense, but the sophomore scored four of No.
Perhaps this old building has some magic left in it yet. U-Hall was rocking Thursday night as Virginia upset No.