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In brief: Mail woes, nothing but net

Ball together 

All eyes were on Tonsler Park Sunday night for the Banks Collage Basketball Association Championship. Some fans set up lawn chairs around the court, and others leaned on the fence. Kids played on the playground while parents cheered on their teams. Some people drank beer, others bought sno-cones.

The Charlottesville-based summer and winter basketball league draws high-level amateur players from all over the commonwealth. The championship is the culmination of months of play in Tonsler Park. This year, Team Legends, coached by George Rivera and Eugene Davis, faced off against the defending BCBA champions Team Takeover, coached by Antoine Johnson and Justin Shiflett. Takeover held the lead for the majority of the game, until a turnover early in the second half led to a Legends layup from John “Prototype” Fitch, who then was fouled and went to the line for a one-and-one. Prototype performed under pressure and tied the game, but not long after, a Takeover layup by Demario “Logo” Mattox put them decidedly in the lead, where they stayed for a final score of 55-45. 

Mailing it in  

Slow mail delivery continues to be a problem in Charlottesville. A local source tells C-VILLE that post office management’s poor treatment of carriers has caused area postal employees to quit, call in sick, and look for other places to work.

For years, residents have complained about slow mail delivery in Charlottesville and Albemarle County. After receiving hundreds of messages from constituents about the delays, U.S. Senator Mark Warner visited the Charlottesville Post Office on Route 29 last week, demanding the office address its mail carrier shortage and poor management. Warner and Senator Tim Kaine also sent a letter to U.S. Postal Service Virginia District Manager Gerald Roane urging him to fix these issues.

“I’ve been getting a higher volume of complaints about mail delivery in Charlottesville by far than anywhere else in the commonwealth,” said Warner, according to NBC29. “If you don’t have 14 of your carriers and you need 85, you’ve got to do a better job of hiring folks.”

But according to one local resident with intimate knowledge of the Charlottesville Post Office, office management needs to make it worth working there.

“The treatment of carriers is demanding and dehumanizing. They are treated so badly,” says the source. “Their work is also incredibly hard and draining. They are driving in unairconditioned trucks, and walking in the heat and cold.”

Multiple mail carriers didn’t want to speak to the press about the situation, for fear of retribution from bosses. 

Due to the staff shortages, the stretched-thin carriers have no choice but to work overtime to finish their deliveries, often working in the wee hours of the morning or late in the evening. Some work as many as 72 hours per week, the source claims.

“People are quitting,” says the source. “They’re not showing up to work, calling in sick, finding other employment.”

The Charlottesville Post Office is now holding three job fairs every week, in addition to advertising jobs through mail and online. The starting pay is $18.01 an hour for city carriers, and $19.06 an hour for rural carriers.

Warner said he will return to Charlottesville in three months to make sure the mail delays are solved.

“This is about righting wrongs. We all deserve a criminal justice system that is fair, equal, and gets it right—no matter who you are or what you look like.”

—Governor Ralph Northam, granting a posthumous pardon to seven young Black men from Martinsville who were given unfair trials and executed for the alleged rape of a white woman in 1951

In brief

McAuliffe scoffs at lawsuit

The Republican Party of Virginia filed a lawsuit last week, alleging that Democratic candidate for governor Terry McAuliffe had failed to properly fill out his campaign paperwork and arguing that the former governor shouldn’t be allowed on the ballot this fall. The Associated Press reports that several state election law experts expect the lawsuit to fail. 

Polls show Youngkin trailing

Christopher Newport’s Wason Center polled 800 likely voters and found Terry McAuliffe with a 50 percent to 41 percent edge over GOP candidate Glenn Youngkin. Democratic lieutenant governor and attorney general candidates lead by similar margins. Earlier in August, Roanoke College polled 558 likely voters and found McAuliffe with a 46-38 edge. 

Hospital mandates vax 

UVA Health enacted a vaccine mandate for its employees last week, meaning the 2,000 employees who had so far not gotten the shot will need to get vaccinated or hit the road. The hospital system made the move in light of rising case counts in the region, and also after the FDA approved the Pfizer vaccine for full use.

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The road to Virginia men’s basketball earning the No. 1 seed in NCAA tournament

Editor’s note: Hours after we went to press, it was announced that Virginia’s De’Andre Hunter would be sitting out the NCAA Tournament due to a broken left wrist (he undergoes surgery Monday, March 19). No. 1 Virginia takes on No. 16 University of Maryland, Baltimore County (UMBC) in the South region at 9:20pm Friday, March 16.

There are 0.9 seconds left on the clock, and the Virginia men’s basketball team is nearing the end of what looks like its worst game of the regular season—and that includes the heartbreaking 60-61 overtime loss to Virginia Tech. They’ve consistently chopped a 13-point deficit to two in the second half, but it’s a Louisville player holding the ball on the baseline, ready for the game-ending inbound.

Every Virginia basketball fan is thinking the same thing—“This is it”—as they prepare for the final second to tick away, and for the team’s first road loss of the season.

But somehow—miraculously—there’s a slip of memory. A few footfalls later, the ref blows his whistle for illegal movement with the ball. Possession changes hands.

There’s a scanning of the court by Virginia’s Ty Jerome, a shuffling of feet, a hard pass to the three-point line and a turn-and-shoot. That’s all there’s time for—and it’s enough. Because it wasn’t just any player shooting that three: It was De’Andre Hunter—the ACC’s Sixth Man of the Year. The same player who scored 10 points on March 10—eight of them from the free throw line—to lift Virginia to its third ACC title in program history, beating North Carolina 71-63.

“There are teams that have more individually talented players than Virginia, but I don’t think you could find a team in the country that plays as a team better than Virginia,” says Allison Williams, a sideline reporter for ESPN.

* * *

It wasn’t supposed to be this team, perched atop the AP Top 25 poll standings for five weeks in a row. A team without point guard London Perrantes, without Malcolm Brogdon, last year’s NBA Rookie of the Year. A team that wasn’t even ranked in the top 25 going into the season.

It wasn’t supposed to be this season, either. This was supposed to be a rebuilding year.

But the fact is, it was this team that won the Atlantic Coast Conference title outright and came away as ACC tournament champs. And it was this season that brought the Cavaliers to the NCAA Tournament with a record of 31-2 (17-1 in the ACC, a league record).

Some would look at Virginia’s No. 1 ranking and ask: “How did this team get here?”

And the answer would be: 53.4.

That’s the average number of points per game Virginia has allowed from opponents. The next closest is Cincinnati, a solid four points behind the Cavaliers, at 57.1 points per game.

But Virginia’s always been good at defense, one might counter.

Yes, but even by Virginia’s standards, the team is having an exceptional year. Last year, the Cavs ended the season at 56.4 points allowed per game. The year before it was 60.1. In fact, the only year in the past five where Virginia has defended better was the 2014-2015 season—the year the team leaders were Brogdon, Justin Anderson and Anthony Gill.

And hiding at the bottom of that roster, unaware perhaps that they would be leading the team soon, was redshirt freshman Devon Hall and freshman Isaiah Wilkins.

These two guys have been the heart and soul of Virginia’s team this year, from the very first tip-off against UNC Greensboro to the final game of the ACC Tournament. Wilkins left the ACC final against North Carolina averaging 5.9 points, 1.5 blocks and 6.3 rebounds per game, but he also brings something much more important to the team, something that doesn’t show up in the box score—hustle.

If a ball is loose, you can bet Wilkins is falling all over the floor trying to get it. If a shot leaves someone’s hands, you can bet Wilkins (who landed on the March 12 Sports Illustrated cover) is jumping up to block it. It’s no surprise that he came away as this season’s ACC Defensive Player of the Year.


ACC Tournament and regular season results

2018

Tournament champion: Virginia

Regular season: Virginia

2017

Tournament champion: Duke

Regular season: North Carolina

2016

Tournament champion: North Carolina

Regular season: North Carolina

2015

Tournament champion: Notre Dame

Regular season: Virginia

2014

Tournament champion: Virginia

Regular season: Virginia

2013

Tournament champion: Miami

Regular season: Miami


And then there’s the improvement in Devon Hall, who himself made the All-ACC Second Team. Hall’s managing 12 points and 4.3 rebounds per game (the second-highest on the team, behind Wilkins). Not to mention that he’s shooting 45 percent from behind the arc and a stunning 89 percent from the free throw line—all massive improvements from his performance last year.

So, when you look at this team’s journey, from that early loss to West Virginia to the win over Duke on the Blue Devils’ home court for the first time in 23 years, you don’t have to look much further than those players to understand where the leadership has come from.

“They’ve seen the hard work that it takes to be good, the level of dedication that it takes to be good,” associate head coach Ron Sanchez says. “They’re not coming into this season with a false sense of what’s required. They’ve seen it; they’ve witnessed it; they’ve been a part of it.”

That level of maturity has certainly helped lead the Cavaliers to a top spot in the rankings, but it doesn’t hurt that the players remain coolly unconcerned with what redshirt junior Jack Salt calls “the media stuff.”

“It’s definitely still a good feeling for us and for the fans, but hopefully we just keep it going and take each game by itself,” Salt says, noting that their ranking in the AP Top 25 “doesn’t really matter” to the team.

Answering the questions

“You had question marks,” Sanchez admits, when he’s asked about this year’s London Perrantes-less team. “As far as how much you could get from the young guys, especially if it was their first year. But you had a calming sense about you because you knew you had guys like Devon Hall and Isaiah Wilkins, who have been around.”

Perrantes was more than just a point guard, though. A starter since his freshman season, he was a guiding hand and—perhaps most importantly—a calming force for the team. He knew exactly what to do when the team wasn’t playing at the right tempo or got stuck in a rut. In his last season, he started every single game, scored an average of 12.7 points, and shot 37 percent from the three-point line.

And this team didn’t just lose Perrantes. It lost Marial Shayok and Darius Thompson, both of whom would have been senior guards this year. Neither of them were star players—they didn’t start every game—but both provided some much-needed points off the bench; points that have conveniently been picked up this season by Hunter and Nigel Johnson.

“You lose some experience in Marial Shayok and Darius Thompson, there’s no doubt about it,” says ESPN analyst Seth Greenberg. “But experience is not 100 percent bought into their role and the good of the group. That’s not Virginia basketball.”

He’s not wrong—Virginia has never been a team that relies solely on one or two star players. Every once in a while, a Brogdon or an Anderson comes along to shoulder the offensive weight, but there’s always been more of an equitable distribution. If Tony Bennett is known for one thing, it’s the skill with which he and the rest of his coaching staff manage to take a mid-level recruit and get high-level results.


Duke Blue Devils fans harass Virginia Cavaliers guard Devon Hall (0) as he tries to inbound the ball during the first half at Cameron Indoor Stadium. Photo by: Rob Kinnan-USA TODAY Sports

This season’s big win

Some things in college basketball just don’t go together: Tony Bennett and a frown, Bob Huggins and a suit and—more importantly—the Duke Blue Devils and losing. Or, we should specify, the Duke Blue Devils and losing at home.

“I don’t think I’ll ever forget that,” junior Jack Salt says of the game back in January. It was his first time playing at Cameron Indoor Stadium. The last time he was there he was still a redshirt freshman, watching his teammates from the bench. “It was definitely a hostile environment and a really good feeling to get the win coming out of that arena.”

Even that’s putting it mildly. Playing against Duke at home isn’t just playing in a hostile environment. It’s playing against a top-tier college basketball club that ended the season second in the ACC, with a 26-7 record (13-5 in the ACC), and was only held back form the ACC tournament final by a five-point loss to rival North Carolina.

“It is not easy to win at Cameron,” says ESPN sideline reporter Allison Williams, who’s watched the team firsthand this year. “If you look at Duke’s margin of victory at home this year, they’ve won every game by an average of 20 points a game in ACC play.” She pauses, and then adds: “Virginia won there.”


But the rest of college basketball didn’t see it that way. Or, at least, not until Virginia had clawed its way to nine conference road wins, a regular season title and an ACC tournament trophy.

“There was no talk about potentially winning the ACC,” says ESPN sports writer Andrea Adelson, in regards to the ACC media day back in October when Virginia was predicted to finish sixth in the conference. “So, I think to see where this team is right now and how far they’ve come is a tribute to not only the leadership, but the belief in the system, and the veterans on this team—players like Isaiah—that know what it takes to win.”

The game-changers

Virginia’s upperclassmen aren’t the only players who have led the team this year.

“The way [Hunter] plays on the defensive end is so pivotal for them,” Williams says. “When you can provide a spark off the bench offensively, that’s tremendous. But he does it on both ends. That’s what’s really impressive to me.”

And Hunter isn’t the only player who surprised fans this season. Sophomores Kyle Guy and Ty Jerome, Virginia’s top guards this year (who made the All-ACC First and Third Team, respectively), have stepped into longer minutes and higher box scores. Jerome, who averaged 4.3 points per game last season, is now putting up 10.5. And Guy has also doubled his production—from 7.5 points per game last year to 14.1.

“Ty Jerome has made so many big shots for them, and it doesn’t seem like any moment is too big,” Greenberg says, noting his pace and size (6’4″, 175 pounds) and how well Jerome’s learned Virginia’s noted pack line defense.


Virginia Cavaliers forward Isaiah Wilkins (21) and Florida State Seminoles center Christ Koumadje (21) battle for a loose ball during the second half at Donald L. Tucker Center. Virginia Cavaliers win 59-55 over the Florida State Seminoles. Photo by Glenn Beil-USA TODAY Sports

Coach’s pick

“I think the Florida State game is one that stands out. When things aren’t going well, it tests your abilities and your level of commitment. That game we didn’t start off as well as we wanted to and then we were able to turn it around against a talented, talented athletic team. I think that game spoke highly of the character of the team.”Associate head coach Ron Sanchez


That’s not a coincidence. According to Sanchez, Bennett explicitly told Jerome and Guy that in order for the team to get better, they had to improve individually, something they “took to heart” in the offseason. Those improvements have let Bennett play the same starting five (Hall, Salt, Wilkins, Guy and Jerome) for every game in the regular season (except Senior Night)—an unusual occurrence at any school.

“They’re the only power-five team in the country who’s played the same starting lineup in every game,” Mike Barber, a sports writer at the Richmond Times-Dispatch, says. “That’s unheard of. They’ve played their five oldest guys, they’ve had De’Andre as their sixth man off the bench, and I think that’s a big part of why they’re winning the ACC.”


Photos by Jack Looney

Numbers game

Ty Jerome, guard

2017-2018: 42% field goals, 39% three-point shots, 90% free throws, 10.5 points per game, 2.3 assist-to-turnover ratio

2016-2017: 47% field goals, 40% three-point shots, 78% free throws, 4.3 points per game, 1.67 assist-to-turnover ratio

Kyle Guy, guard

2017-2018: 41% field goals, 40% three-point shots, 84% free throws, 14.1 points per game

2016-2017: 44% field goals, 50% three-point shots, 71% free throws, 7.5 points per game

Devon Hall, guard

2017-2018: 47% field goals, 45% three-point shots, 89% free throws, 4.3 rebounds, 12 points per game

2016-2017: 41% field goals, 37% three-point shots, 78% free throws, 4.4 rebounds, 8.4 points per game

Isaiah Wilkins, forward

2017-2018: 49% field goals, 6.3 rebounds, 5.9 points per game, 1.5 blocks per game

2016-2017: 56% field goals, 6 rebounds, 6.8 points per game, 1.3 blocks per game

Jack Salt, center

2017-2018: 65% field goals, 4.1 rebounds, 3.5 points per game, .7 blocks per game

2016-2017: 56% field goals, 4.1 rebounds, 3.7 points per game, .7 blocks per game

De’Andre Hunter, guard

2017-2018: 49% field goals, 38% three-point shots, 76% free throws, 3.5 rebounds, 9.2 points per game

*Stats through ACC tournament (March 10)


And although you can’t narrow their success down to one or two things, Williams says it’s hard to imagine where they’d be without most-improved Jerome and Guy.

“You could see their potential and now that potential is producing,” Williams says. “They were the question marks, and they’ve been the answer for Virginia.”

It’s a level of consistency not many were expecting from Virginia this year, in what Barber calls “the best league in the country.”

But the question remains: Is it enough to go far in the NCAA tournament?

Learning how to dance

“When they didn’t make that Final Four, it kind of felt like a window was shutting,” Barber says, of the 2016 tournament when No. 1 seed Virginia fell unexpectedly to 10th-seeded Syracuse in the Elite Eight. But it wasn’t just 2016. It was also 2015, when as a two seed the Cavs fell to seventh-seeded Michigan State. And again in 2014, when the No. 1 seeded UVA fell to fourth-seeded Michigan State.

“I think it gets to a point where it becomes mental,” ESPN’s Adelson says about some of Virginia’s disappointing tournament runs. “For them, a lot of it is going to be forgetting about that, forgetting what’s happened in the past, forgetting the fact that people now have this idea that ‘we can’t take them seriously once the tournament starts.’”

Coach Tony Bennett was named ACC Coach of the Year for the third time after the team won the outright ACC regular-season title. Photo by Jack Looney

But you can’t talk about March without talking about weaknesses—and Virginia’s biggest sore spot is a lack of interior scoring. Center Salt and forwards Wilkins and Mamadi Diakite—the three players most often responsible for those easy, under-the-basket buckets—aren’t exactly the most productive on offense. They know how to protect the rim, they rack up blocks and rebounds, but together they average only 14.7 points per game, which puts a lot of pressure on Jerome, Guy and Hall to pick up the offensive slack.

“If Ty Jerome and Kyle Guy have a bad scoring night, I don’t know how this team scores enough to win tournament games,” Barber of the Richmond Times-Dispatch says bluntly. But even so, he points out that every team’s missing something. “Why not be the team that makes the run?”


NCAA Tournament history

2017: No. 5 seed Virginia loses to No. 4 seed Florida in the second round

2016: No. 1 seed Virginia loses to No. 10 seed Syracuse in the Elite Eight

2015: No. 2 seed Virginia loses to No. 7 seed Michigan State in the second round

2014: No. 1 seed Virginia loses to No. 4 seed Michigan State in the Sweet Sixteen

2013: Did not make the tournament


Virginia certainly wants to be that team, but they’re not going to change much to get there. Not because they don’t care, but because they approach every game the same way: with a clean slate, a tough focus on defense and efficiency on offense.

“Our approach to the tournament is going to be the same as it was for the first game of the season,” Sanchez says, laughing slightly that he can’t give a more “dynamic” answer. “To say, ‘If we do this, we can get there,’ that’s incorrect. Who you play, when you play them, how healthy you are—all those things are important. We’ll try to focus on controlling the things that we can control and that’s really it.”

And when it comes to the madness, everyone knows there aren’t many things you can control.

“It’s hard to get to the Final Four,” Greenberg says. “Everyone talks about that, but it’s just really hard to get to the Final Four.”

 

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Current men’s basketball team echoes past successes

Four minutes to play and the game was tied at 60. A sea of orange yelled from the sidelines as the time continued to whittle down. Three and a half minutes gone—still 60.

Two free throws at the 34-second mark and suddenly they’re up by two.

Up by two? The sixth seed? The team that went 15-11?

It was 1976, and the Virginia Cavaliers were about to beat No. 1 seed North Carolina for their first ACC championship, after upsetting No. 3 North Carolina State and No. 2 Maryland.

“We were 0-6 against those teams,” then-head coach Terry Holland said when he was honored at John Paul Jones Arena September 23, on the 40th anniversary of that win, “but with every one of those teams we had a game that went down to the wire. …We knew we could play with them.”

Wally Walker was the leading man for the ’76
Cavaliers, taking home MVP honors at the tournament and leading the Hoos with 21 points in the championship game.

“Just to see them,” Walker says, smiling as he recalls Virginia’s fans. “I mean tears, and people weeping.”

Walker laughs. “But I mean, we were too.”

That second ACC championship would evade Virginia for Holland’s next 14 years. In fact, it would be almost four decades before Tony Bennett’s 2014 dream team would recapture the title.

But 1981 was also a standout year as UVA went undefeated at home. It was the year Holland took his team to the program’s first Final Four.

And it was the year of Ralph Sampson.

Sampson, the 7’4” center for Virginia and three-time College Player of the Year, was untouchable. The Cavaliers went 27-2 that regular season, falling only to North Carolina and Maryland.

No one knew that in 33 years Bennett’s squad would begin duplicating the 1981 team’s accomplishments, logging back-to-back 30-win seasons in 2014 and 2015, and enjoying an undefeated season at home in 2016.

Asked how the two teams compare, Sampson’s answer is quick: “We would have killed them.”

He laughs. “It also starts with the coach, and I think that the coach that they have here in Tony Bennett is phenomenal. They should keep him here forever if they can.”

Take a step back to Virginia’s second Final Four appearance in 1984. The miracle run. The year that Holland’s team went 21-12 in the regular season and wound up losing to Houston in overtime in the Final Four.

For players such as Rick Carlisle, some moments remain painted vividly in memory, like the team’s overtime win against Arkansas that pushed them into the Sweet 16.

“It was a play designed for Othell Wilson,” Carlisle remembers of the final shot. “He went up for the shot and Albert Robinson…got a piece of the shot. It deflected into my hands, and I just grabbed it and let it go, and it went in.”

Moments like these don’t just happen. Standout years like 1976, 1981 and 1984 were the hard work of a coach and a lot of good players—and many will tell you they see aspects of Holland in Bennett.

“He played for his dad, so I got to see his dad coach,” Holland says of Bennett, “and I think they play a lot like we did. I think he’s taken the stuff that his dad did and added on to it and made good use of the caliber that he has on hand.”

Carlisle goes further, saying the coaches share humility, unselfishness and toughness; he believes Holland set the stage for Bennett.

“Without Terry Holland, there wouldn’t be a Tony Bennett.”

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ESPN’s ‘College GameDay’ returns to Charlottesville

For the second straight year, ESPN’s “College GameDay” will head to John Paul Jones Arena for one of the most anticipated basketball matchups in the Atlantic Coast Conference. No. 3 Virginia will take on No. 7 North Carolina February 27 in a battle between the two highest nationally ranked teams in the ACC.

Since 2005, “College GameDay” has filmed at a different school every Saturday for the basketball game of the week, and stars analysts Rece Davis, Jay Williams, Seth Greenberg and Jay Bilas, who discuss upcoming games in college basketball.

This is only the second time that UVA has hosted “College GameDay.” Last January, ESPN was here when No. 2 Virginia lost to No. 4 Duke—UVA’s first loss of the season and only home loss in the past two years.

Although Virginia doesn’t tip off against North Carolina until 6:30 pm, the doors of JPJ will open at 9 am for the pregame show, which is free admission for all. The first 5,000 fans will get a “College GameDay” t-shirt.

Last year’s game day featured hordes of orange-clad students with anti-Duke signs, free t-shirts for those early risers and a half-court shot by UVA student Tyler Lewis.

The show will air twice Saturday on ESPN: at 11 am and just before the 6:30pm tipoff.

Updated 9:49pm with the latest AP rankings.