Time to Teach Boston College a Lesson

Thursday, October 25, 2007 will be the night that Boston College students, fans, and football players learn a few lessons.

Class begins: 7:30 PM

Location: Lane Stadium.

Attendance: Not Recommended

If you failed to realize, Boston College is number two in the BCS polls. They have earned their right to be there. They’ve played and won all seven of their games. The Eagles are off to their first 7-0 start in 65 years.

-They have Heisman caliber quarterback who has thrown 18 touchdowns thus far.

-They move the ball consistently.

-They score.

-They win at home.

-They win on the road.

The Boston College Eagles’ destiny lies within their hands. Win their remaining games and a ticket to the National Championship is all but guaranteed. The quest for a National Championship continues tonight. That’s where the problem lies.

The Eagles will be going into Blacksburg, Virginia; home of the 8th ranked Virginia Tech Hokies. The Hokies have been an ACC powerhouse since they joined the conference by winning the conference title their first year and being runners up the second year. They bring a fast, hard hitting, and intimidating defense to the field annually. The Hokies have NFL talent on that defense every single season. From the Deangelo Halls to the Darryl Tapps to the Xavier Adibi’s and the Vince Halls. The Hokies defense, led by defensive coordinator Bud Foster, knows how to bring the pain.

However, that’s not what Boston College should fear most. Boston College needs to fear the 65,000+ that will fill Lane Stadium tonight. They should fear the sea of orange and maroon that will fill every possible space in the venue to see their Hokies trash the Eagles. They should fear the noise that the Virginia Tech fans will bring from 15 minutes before kickoff until they rush the field. These aren’t ordinary college football fans. A lot of people nationwide haven’t realized this yet, because they have not been there. I have, for four years.

What makes the fans in Lane Stadium so intimidating is their exceptional knowledge of football and their thirst for victory. Nothing dominates the news in Blacksburg the way football does. Football is what brings all the students together. Football is what makes Monday’s in 30 degree weather with 45 mile per hour winds bearable. Football makes this town run.

This is the first big home game for the Hokies. Last time they were on national television, they got trashed and embarrassed by the LSU Tigers in Tiger stadium. Actually, trashed and embarrassed is putting it lightly. This was in week 2. We are now in week 8, but Hokie fans have not forgotten how they were laughed at on message boards around the country. They have not forgotten what it feels like to be humiliated and outplayed when everyone is watching. They are angry. The fans have had weeks full of pent up rage that they will let loose come 7:30 tonight.

I can’t remember the last time there was this much internally stored fury waiting to be unleashed like a caged animal who has been waiting for his opportunity to attack a rival Alpha male. You don’t want to open that cage door because what will be set free is a monster that cannot be controlled. This is Virginia Tech football. Furthermore, you definitely do not want to poke the caged beast with a stick. That is what Boston College’s head coach did by saying that his team is not intimidated by big stadiums or loud fans and having the audacity, the nerve to compare Virginia Tech to Georgia Tech. Jesse Palmer of ESPN went on to say that Virginia Tech doesn’t belong on the same field as Boston College. He is in for a rude awakening.

One thing I know about Virginia Tech students is that they read; and they read everything. They hear everything. They know everything. They know the national perception is that we are annually overrated. They know that people, such as ESPN’s experts, are picking Boston College to come into our house, on our field, and take it to us. The fans know this. They have been poked with the stick for ten days now and tonight is the night Boston College will have to face the animal that are the fans.

Tonight, Boston College is going to learn a lesson.

Boston College has failed to realize what it’s like to be standing less than a foot away from another person and not being able to hear what they’re saying. I do. Boston College doesn’t know what it’s like to see 65,000+ fans jumping and screaming every time they have the ball on offense to the point where they can’t differentiate a football being passed through the air from a sea of maroon in the stands. I do. Boston College doesn’t know what it’s like to feel like the stadium is going to collapse because it is shaking and bouncing violently the entire game. I do. Boston College doesn’t know what it’s like to see 65,000+ alumni and students screaming for their head and saying the nastiest of things because they’ve been drinking all day in the parking lot behind McBryde Hall. I do. Boston College does not know what it’s like to see a Virginia Tech football team run out of the tunnel after “Enter Sandman” has been playing for over 30 seconds and has sent the students into a cult like frenzy in which the entire stadium looks like a giant mosh pit. I do.

Mark Wahlberg has a movie in theatres called “We Own the Night”. I bring this up because Boston College is going to step onto the field tonight for 60 minutes of a brutal, vicious beat down; one that they could never dream of in their most awful of worst nightmares. They will walk off the field tonight after a loss, and with that loss they will take home one more new lesson about Virginia Tech Football and Virginia Tech fans:

We Own the Night.

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Filed under: Boston CollegeVirginia TechCollege Football


Weekend Recap Part 1 of 3

As you know, this weekend was filled with so much. I figured each sport deserves it’s own section of the recap. So I’ll start with College Football in part 1, give you some MLB in part 2, and close it off with NFL in part 3.

College Football

We had another big weekend in college football and it only looks to get better. There is no team this season that is clearly the most dominant and a unanimous pick to win the title like we’ve had in years past with the USC’s of Reggie Bush etc. However, the good thing about that is there is plenty of room for discussion, heated debates, and punches thrown to the face of your friend from another school who said your team is overrated.

This is college football.

Now to the rankings. So let me get this straight; Michigan loses to Appalachian St. by two points when they were favored by 35+ in pretty much every spread that matters, and radio hosts bash the Wolverines, fans talk about how they should be dropped COMPLETELY from the rankings. No if’s and’s or but’s. It didn’t matter that had Michigan made that last field goal, they would still be in the top ten. “Doesn’t matter. They lost. If’s don’t matter. They should be out of the top 25, period.” Fair enough.

Fast forward to week six and #2 USC loses to an unranked Stanford, to whom they were favored to beat by 41 or 43 (depending on the spread you used), and yet, the same radio hosts, Colin Cowherd in particular, talk about how they should remain in the top ten. “Well if they win that game, even by a few, they’re still a top three team.” Really? Really??? Why? Why is it that Michigan should have been kicked out of Division 1 football but USC should be given the benefit of the doubt. “Oh Stanford is an up and coming team. That Jim Harbaugh, he’s.. he’s really something. USC played a good opponent.” Get out of my face with that nonsense. They weren’t ranked! They were 41 point dogs! I said this last week after people like Skip Bayless were praising USC for “showing a lot” by coming up with a tough, close win at Washington. I said it then, and I’ll say it now… top tier teams should blow out unranked or even ranked opponents above 15. I don’t care if you’re at home, if you’re on the road, if it’s raining, snowing, windy, hailing, I don’t give a damn. If you’re ranked as a top team in the nation, you should handle your business. I’m glad USC lost but I’m disappointed to see how the AP still sweats them more than radio sweats Britney Spears god awful single.

One last point before I move on. I also heard people say “Well yeah USC lost but if you put them at 15, that’s not really accurate because you know if they played #2 Cal today, they’d still be favored.” That’s probably true but just because you’re more talented doesn’t mean you should get a free pass when you lose to a team you were favored to annihilate. You have to face some form of repercussions and since the stupid, neanderthal ranking system is all that college football has to offer, this is how you penalize a team for blowing it.

As far as the rest of the country goes…

Well Virginia Tech finally showed that they have some heart. I was glad to see them beat the living hell out of Clemson. The defense looked the way they were SUPPOSED to look all season and the special teams was as good as anyone could imagine. I think the defense and special teams knocked out over 5 Clemson players if I remember correctly. They played angry and angry is good. However, the offense is still sputtering. There is no push on the offensive line and there is absolutely no running game. The best running threat is quarterback Tyrod Taylor and I cannot be sold on a team that cannot control the clock by means of rushing the rock down your throat. They got Duke this week and then a matchup that I’m salivating over;

Thursday Night. Lane Stadium, Blacksburg, VA.

#4 Boston College @ #12 VT.

Should be a great game. I’m not going to make a prediction yet because I want to see if the offense can improve over the next week or so. I will say this though… the Hokies offense better be able to put up a couple of touchdowns and 150+ yards rushing because Matt Ryan is going to bring it.

The Florida-LSU game showed me two things. First, LSU is not clearly the best team in the country. They have the best record and they have the most impressive resume but I wouldn’t be surprised at all if they lost a game, or even two (including the SEC Championship) before it’s all said and done. Second, Florida is a very good, young team… emphasis on “young”. This team has all the talent in the world, they’re getting the top recruits in coming years, and they have a hell of a coach. Look for a USC type of dynasty in the making over the next several years. They outplayed LSU in Tiger Stadium for 95% of the game. They let down for that critical 5%, but again, they are young. When they have the experience under their belts, watch out. One more thing… I don’t want to hear any of this garbage about how USF is the best team in Florida. The best team in Florida wears Orange and blue, period.

Lastly, I was glad to see Wisconsin finally lose. I had been picking them to be upset for the past three or four weeks and was going to continue to pick against them the rest of the season because I’m a stubborn ass. I never believed in them and didn’t care that they had won 14 straight regular season games or whatever the stat was. That means nothing to me, and apparently it means nothing to Vegas either as they were two point underdogs to unranked Illinois. Which reminds me, another coach who’s building a solid program is Ron Zook (ironically, the ex Florida coach). He’s getting solid recruiting and that program is going to be an annual 15’ish ranked team in years coming. Good for Zook.

Now, enjoy the meaningless rankings. Mine are on the left, AP’s are on the right.

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Filed under: FloridaBoston CollegeUSCLSUVirginia TechWeekly RankingsCollege Football