All in All, Not Too Shabby
by Jim Alderson, 1/12/05
The dust settles on the Virginia Tech 2004 football
season. I assume that by now everybody has gotten over their Bourbon Street
hangovers, quenched the Mississippi burning fires kindled by the propane of yet
another Tech Sugar Bowl appearance, and have recovered from a New Orleans
experience that left them laid out like Lenin in his tomb. Some of us,
unfortunately, are still dealing with the aftereffects of a rather extraordinary
way to quit smoking [I finally found a way to fulfill that resolution made over
so many New Year‘s], but life and TSL Pass columns go on.
It will take some time, probably years, to apply the
proper perspective to Tech’s '04 season. It was a year that began with a loss
in the DC suburbs against the nation’s best team and ended with the same in
New Orleans against the country’s second-best outfit. In between those two
defeats there was another against NC State, but also ten victories and an
inaugural ACC season that yielded an inaugural ACC championship. All things
considered, it was a pretty darn good year by most any standard.
Tech came up short in both of its cracks against the
country’s elite teams, demonstrating the difference between the Top Ten and
the Top Two. USC and Auburn were both a little better than Tech and both won by
just a little bit. Tech joined twenty-three other teams in losing to the Trojans
and Tigers, the only one to lose to each. I notice you don’t hear too much
anymore about Tech’s easy schedule.
Tech might not have been MNC-caliber, but they certainly
had the stuff with which to conquer their new conference. Included among the
seven ACC wins were two against old foes on the last two weeks of the regular
season. Tech punctured the hype that ballooned out of Hooville, sending algroh
slinking home to ponder that there is a little more to winning championships
than braggadocio. The next week, in a made-for-television epic that found the
ACC’s two Big East imports vying for the conference championship of their new
league, either outright or shared, Tech knocked off Miami in the Orange Bowl to
bogart the title. People named algroh, Bowden, Amato and Friedgen certainly were
provided with ample evidence as to why it was necessary for the ACC to undertake
a football expansion. Florida State took over ACC football when they arrived in
1992 and twelve years later the new kids were at it again. That was quite the
football conference you were running, guys.
2004 was the year Tech re-appeared on the nation’s
football radar. The program had suffered the loss of the media darling status
conferred during 1999 through a series of sub-par finishes. There was no better
way to deal with the reduced prominence applied by the media than to prove the
media wrong again, which is what Tech did. Sixth-place finish my eye. As for
certain members of the media, a certain former Roanoke sports editor must
certainly be reacting with horror at both Tech’s championship and his
shortened life span. One cannot also help but wonder whether a Tech-bashing
national football writer has swallowed his keyboard or is attempting to eat the
words on his screen. His silence regarding Tech’s title has become rather
deafening.
The Virginia Tech football program reacted very well to
the disappointments of past few Novembers. There was a re-dedication to
championship football from the big guy on down, along with attitude adjustments
and what turned out to be program addition by player subtraction. This
demonstration that one cannot win big by resting on one’s past laurels will be
knowledge that future Tech football teams will hopefully find very useful. It
can also be hoped that Tech underclassmen have learned much from the outstanding
senior leadership provided to this team and commit themselves to providing the
same when it becomes their turn. It takes talent to win championships, but it
also takes character and leadership, and this Tech team possessed it.
2004 was certainly the year of the Tech football team, but
it was also the year of the Tech football fan. Much was made with Tech’s
entrance to the ACC of the impact of the vaunted Hokie Nation. It was there for
all to see. The season began with Tech fans packing FedEx Field, creating one of
the more remarkable scenes in college football or any other kind. The season
ended with Tech fans once again turning the French Quarter into the far
southwestern corner of our state. In between, Tech fans flocked by the thousands
to Winston-Salem, Atlanta, Chapel Hill and even Miami, providing the Tech team
with solid fan support wherever they played. I don’t imagine the ADs at Wake
Forest, Georgia Tech or Carolina are too upset with the cash infusion given
their budgets by Tech fans. “Gee, I wonder how many more Syracuse would have
brought” are probably not words spoken around those offices, especially since
the ACC got the huge television contract, anyway. One can only imagine how much
tickets Tech's road game at Duke will cost next year.
Speaking of next year, it is hard not to notice that the
hype for the 2005 Virginia Tech football team has already begun to build.
Pre-season football hype is a staple in Blacksburg, last year’s modest
expectations notwithstanding. At the risk of being labeled a NATT, I would point
out that four of the top five teams in this year’s ACC standings all had
experienced senior quarterbacks, a most important requisite for a successful
season. Next year’s Tech quarterback will have scant experience. But, then,
neither did Tech’s QB in 1999.
In any event, next year is next year, and there will be
plenty of time to dwell on the lofty pre-season expectations likely to be heaped
on the '05 Tech team, which most definitely will not include a sixth-place
prediction. This is still the time to marvel at the '04 edition. It was a Tech
team that far exceeded predictions and expectations. It went 10-3 and won the
ACC, in the process sweeping its biggest rivals, knocking off three ranked teams
and five bowl ones. It enabled the Tech program to escape the long shadow cast
by the 1999 team, carving out its own place in Tech football history. It came up
just short against the best in the nation, but still proved itself to be a
pretty darn good football team. All in all, not too shabby.
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