With
the ACC having put the wraps on a football season that saw newcomers Tech and
Miami waltz in and snatch two of the league’s top three bowl bids, attention
turned to the conference’s signature sport, at least for a while longer,
basketball. And what a week it was. The highlight, at least from this Tech fan’s
perspective, was the Hokies picking up their first ACC basketball win, knocking
off Clemson. So much for all of that 0-17 chatter.
The Tigers have historically been the ACC’s
worst program and they demonstrated they were not giving up that designation
without a fight. Clemson coach Oliver Purnell also kept intact his perfect
record, achieved through stints at Radford, Old Dominion, Dayton and now the
Tigers, of having never won in Cassell Coliseum. The names on the jerseys of
Purnell’s teams may change, but not the result in Cassell.
Tech won this game through what is fast becoming
the signature of this program under Seth Greenberg, strong defense, particularly
on the perimeter. With little in the way of scoring punch and practically
nothing passing for an inside game, Greenberg has created strong defense as the
base of his program. Good fundamental defense is the foundation of any
successful program in any sport, so it is a wise place to start. Defensive
principals infused into the Tech program now will pay dividends down the road,
when hopefully the talent level will be a bit higher than the skimpy amounts
currently on hand.
Seth Greenberg has managed to develop something
not seen in quite a while around Tech, a backcourt of reasonably good quality.
Jamon Gordon and Zabian Dowdell are not going to be confused with Chris Paul and
Justin Gray, or Daniel Ewing and JJ Redick, but they are the best seen at Tech
in some time. A program that suffered through chronic guard problems during the
regimes of the two previous coaches can now count on quality backcourt play most
every game. This hasn’t been seen at Tech in a decade; you have to back to
Shawn Good and Damon Watlington entirely too many years ago. Strong guard play
is a necessity in the ACC, and Tech can now field at least a competitive
backcourt.
The core of the Tech team for hopefully the next
couple of seasons is coming into focus. Gordon, Dowdell, Coleman Collins and
Deron Washington are all starting now and look to be the nucleus of the next two
Tech teams, assuming all goes as planned. Continued development by Marquie Cooke
and Wynton Witherspoon, along with any development at all by Robert Krabbendam,
gives Seth, assuming everybody hangs with the program and the past problems of
players transferring does not reappear, seven players to form the foundation of
the Tech program.
The most pressing need will be an inside game.
For the immediate future, Greenberg will have to hope for rapid development into
ACC-caliber players from the lightly-recruited Hyman Taylor and Terrance Vinson.
The specter of mass defections as seen under Stokes and Hussey will remain
hanging over this team until it does not, but if everybody sticks with the
program, a baseline for Tech basketball is in place. It is probably not a group
that is going to stray too far from the bottom of the ACC standings, especially
considering the collections of prep wunderkinds the rest of the league is
amassing, but it should make Tech reasonably competitive with a good chunk of
the ACC and, more importantly, the confusion of the past eight years or so
appears to be ending.
Greenberg looks to be a solid basketball
tactician, another refreshing departure from Tech’s recent past, but coaching
becomes a lot easier when there is top talent on hand. With a foundation in
place and the bleeding looking to have ended, the challenge now for Greenberg
will be to upgrade the talent levels to something a little more in line with the
rest of the conference, and do it at what is the ACC’s toughest recruiting
sell. But considering that Ted Roof is managing to defy all odds and bring some
highly-regarded football players to the ACC’s bleakest football outpost at
Duke, who knows what is possible.
This season of firsts continued for Virginia Tech
last Saturday, with another being notched in addition to the initial basketball
victory. The game was televised by the ACC’s powerhouse regional
Jefferson-Pilot/Raycom television partner. For this chronologically-mature Hokie
who grew up watching the Pilot Life ACC basketball package, it was immensely
satisfying to see the JP/Raycom logo overlaying Cassell. It reinforced the sense
of belonging to the area’s dominant conference. The identity of the outfit
televising the game might pale beside other firsts already experienced, such as
the first ACC football game coinciding with the first ACC football win, the
first ACC championship, or North Carolina in Cassell for a league game, but it
was indeed another source of Tech pride.
There are other firsts to come this year, such as
watching Tech take the floor in a fortnight or so at Cameron Indoor Stadium, an
occasion that will cause me to actively desire a Duke basketball defeat for the
first time since 1976 in the Greensboro Coliseum, or the first time Tech plays
in the revered ACC Tournament. JP/Raycom televising a Tech ACC game is a little
thing, but they add up to the sum of Tech now being a bona fide member of the
ACC. Tech is quite a ways away from having ESPN and Dick Vitale on hand for a
meaningful league game, the sort of which we have long experienced in football,
but small steps include having a basketball game aired by our region’s
venerable basketball network.
Of course, the reason Tech and Clemson were on
the regional network was because the league’s higher-profile games were all
selected by ABC and the Fox Sports Network, the flip side of Tech sauntering
into the ACC and grabbing a sizable chunk of the conference‘s football
television package, but so what. At this stage of Tech basketball, their initial
sail with the pilot means something, at least to me.
There is basketball at Tech. Tech might be a long
way from being able to compete in basketball with Duke, Wake or Carolina, but
they are not the league embarrassment so recently forecast, either. Luddite
newspaper columnists may bemoan UNC not playing Wake Forest a second time during
the regular season due to the presence of Tech in the league, but they need to
get over it already. The roundball Hokies might not be taking the conference by
storm as their football counterparts did, but they are not going winless,
either. Tech basketball has a pulse, albeit a weak one amid a fan base that
seems far more concerned with football recruiting and the release of a schedule
whose first game will be almost eight months away, but it is beating. The
remaining schedule is likely to prove very difficult for the undermanned Hokies,
but Tech’s first ACC basketball victory has been notched.