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Running back: Charlottesville stares down football with no fans

By Julia Stumbaugh

The ball had barely slipped out of Virginia Tech wide receiver Damon Hazelton’s hands when the first University of Virginia students’ feet hit the turf.

The incomplete pass meant UVA had beaten its fiercest rival for the first time in 15 years. Nothing, not fences or Scott Stadium employees, could keep the hillside student crowd from spilling onto the field, where players were whipping off their helmets to shout their triumph to the sky.

Like most memories, the field rush looks different in the light of the pandemic. The celebration that felt so natural and effortless last Thanksgiving—bare hands on sweaty shoulders, singing “The Good Old Song” linked arm-in-arm—now feels a world away. 

Today, as the Cavaliers prepare for their September 19 rematch against Tech, Scott Stadium stands empty. And when football players take the field, their calls will echo in a mostly vacant stadium: In order to adhere to Virginia crowd safety regulations, stadium crowds will be limited to 1,000 people—team family members only—in an arena with a regular capacity of 61,500. 

Despite the enormous amount of money UVA athletics generate, the school’s most profitable sports—football and men’s basketball—operate on surprisingly thin profit margins. According to The Daily Progress, in the 2017-18 financial year, the university athletics program had a deficit of about $340,000, despite generating over $100 million in revenue.

Even football, the most profitable sport, brought in only about $6.5 million after costs in the fall of 2018, according to a financial report filed with the NCAA. In 2018-19, UVA spent $25.9 million on its football program and brought in $32.4 million total. Almost $6 million came from ticket sales. That means that without a crowd at Scott Stadium, the university’s biggest moneymaker could become another red line in its athletics budget.

But the loss of a football crowd will reverberate much further than Grounds. 

“Football weekends are huge here in the Charlottesville area,” says Brantley Ussery, director of marketing and public relations at the Charlottesville Albemarle Convention & Visitors Bureau. “Hotels are going to feel it in terms of their occupancy rates. Typically we’re sold out on home football weekends. And the impact goes beyond the hotels and also goes to the wineries, the restaurants, and all the other tourism-related businesses that benefit from all those additional fans that come on the weekends.”

Charlottesville and Albemarle draw millions of visitors to central Virginia every fall. In 2018, the city and county took in a combined $21.9 million in tourism-related taxes, not to mention a whopping $654.4 million in tourism dollars that cycled into the local economy, reports The Daily Progress. 

Visitors come for the wine and the views, but also for the football. UVA home games attracted an average of almost 48,000 people per game in 2019. In a normal year, that would mean thousands of out-of-town visitors heading downtown on six of Charlottesville’s busiest Saturdays of the year.

This, however, is no normal year. Food and occupancy tax revenues bottomed out in April and have climbed steadily since then, but June 2020 tax revenue was still down almost 50 percent compared to June 2019, reports the Free Enterprise Forum. The $2 million in lost tourism taxes stung for a city already operating on a pandemic-reduced budget.

Charlottesville, so dependent on tourism, has no choice but to remain hopeful. “We have seen slow and steady increases over the last couple of months,” Ussery says. “Each month looks a little bit better than the month before…we just hope that continues as we go into the fall season.”

The team finalized its schedule on Friday, announcing a slate of 11 games. Ten of those will be played within the ACC. 

Despite the schedule confirmation, there’s no guarantee the season will proceed as planned. Two of the NCAA’s Power 5 conferences have already called off their seasons. Across the country, COVID-19 outbreaks on campuses have pushed administrations to move classes online or send students home. Other ACC rivals like the University of North Carolina and North Carolina State are proceeding with football even though classes are all virtual.

At UVA, which is holding some in-person classes, the football team has been living and practicing in a “bubble,” limiting contact with the outside world as much as possible. After practicing in full face shields, players return to an isolated residence hall. They also receive regular COVID tests, none of which have returned positive for the virus since July 24. 

“Our players are getting ready to move off Grounds, and the students are coming, and some of our classes will be in person,” Mendenhall told the Richmond Times-Dispatch in late August. “And so, by that very design, the bubble is broken.”

Each year, as the leaves start to turn, Mincer’s lines the sidewalk outside its Corner storefront with racks of orange and blue sportswear.  It’s no coincidence that six of Mincer’s 10 busiest weekends correspond with the six UVA home games every season.

“Since Scott Stadium is within walking distance, people are always just around the Corner all day,” says Cal Mincer, the shop’s vice president. “It’s a big spike for us.”

It’s a similar story for The Draftsman Hotel. Along with graduation weekend, home football games are when the hotel is most likely to sell out—especially if the visiting team is within driving distance, like Virginia Tech or UNC.

“The fall also has parents’ weekend, so it’s a pretty predominant peak season for us,” says Walter Burton, manager of The Draftsman. “You’ve got fall weddings, you’ve got parents’ weekend, you’ve got football games. Just those three dynamics, it helps boom the economy here in Charlottesville.”

This year, Corner businesses aren’t sure what to expect. Fans won’t be heading to Scott Stadium, but perhaps they’ll find their way to town on football Saturdays nonetheless.

“I would like to think, just because of Charlottesville and the attraction and people’s support of the football team and sports teams at UVA, we will probably still get some folks that are just going to come to the area, just to be a part of the atmosphere and the culture of UVA and Charlottesville,” Burton says.

“I don’t know if [limited ticket sales] will cause a big spike in people hanging out on the Corner, and then that’ll be good, because they’ll be at Boylan or something watching the game,” says Mincer. “Or if that’ll just kill all the traffic for the Saturdays.” 

For now, Mincer’s attitude is the same as The Draftsman’s, and the tourism bureau’s, and the athletics department’s, and the entire city of Charlottesville’s: There’s nothing to do but wait, see, and hope for the best.

“We don’t really know what to expect,” Mincer says. “And even if we did, there’s not a lot we can do to prepare for anything. We’ll be open, and we hope people come.”

 

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In brief: America’s Dad, Virginia’s tampons, A12’s price tag and more

New contender for America’s Dad?

Senator Tim Kaine stopped by his campaign office in York Place September 21 for a pizza party with nearly three dozen University of Virginia Democrats.

Supporters passed around campaign signs that said “America’s Dad,” although Kaine may have some competition for the title—a spokesman for Bill Cosby told reporters recently that Cosby is still America’s Dad, despite his conviction for sexual assault.

In an exclusive interview on the vital topic of “dad jokes,” Kaine confessed that he groaned when his staff introduced the signs during his 2016 vice presidential campaign. “I kind of found myself in the center of all these dad jokes. And I mean, this is a very dad thing to say, but until I was in the center of them, I didn’t know there was such a thing as a dad joke.”

Urban Dictionary defines a dad joke as an “indescribably cheesy” or dumb joke made by a father to his kids. “We’re in a business where people get called a lot of names, and being made fun of because of my dad quality? I’ll take that,” says Kaine.

Smells of pepperoni and cheese wafted through the air as Hillary Clinton’s former running mate also fielded questions about his favorite type of ’za.

“I will always have Canadian bacon, mushroom, and black olive if I can,” he said. “Not everybody has Canadian bacon. It was more popular back in the day, and with Trump in a trade war against Canada, I’m sure there’s no more Canadian bacon.”

Believe it or not, he was also there to talk politics. As was 5th District congressional candidate Leslie Cockburn, who was preaching to the choir when she said one of her top priorities is debt relief for folks with student loans.

Like his young constituents, Kaine said he believes in climate science, marriage equality, and reasonable rules to “stop the carnage of gun violence.”

“I feel like politics is a lot like a train that’s run away and we need to pull the emergency brake,” Kaine told the crowd of students. And when recruiting young supporters, he said he no longer just talks about the differences between Republicans and Democrats.

“It’s not just that there’s a difference between the two sides,” he says. “It’s that you make a difference.”

As for defeating opponent Corey Stewart? “I feel good about what I see, but we take nothing for granted.”


Quote of the week

“If someone chooses to visit a Virginia Department of Corrections inmate, he or she cannot have anything hidden inside a body cavity.”—Spokeswoman Lisa Kinney tells the AP why women can’t wear tampons or menstrual cups when visiting state prisons.


In brief

Tourism bureau slam

Adam Healey, interim executive director for the Charlottesville-Albemarle Convention and Visitors Bureau, called the agency a “weak marketer,” its messaging “confusing,” and its positioning “dusty” rather than modern, according to Allison Wrabel’s story in the Daily Progress. And he wants to bump the bureau’s advertising budget from around $400,000 to $6 million.

Weekend traffic fatalities

UVA engineering grad student Rouzbeh Rastgarkafshgarkolaei, 27, died on U.S. 29 in Culpeper around 4:50am September 23, when his 2006 Audi sideswiped a Dodge Caravan, ran off the road, and caught fire. Virginia State Police said speed was a factor. That same day, Mary Elizabeth Carter, 19, died when her Mazda crossed the center line in Louisa and struck a Ford F150. Police said she wasn’t wearing a seatbelt.

Jowell Travis Legendre faces multiple charges. Charlottesville Police

Student assaulted, robbed

A UVA student was robbed and sexually assaulted around 9:30pm September 19 on the 500 block of 14th Street NW, city police said. Louisa resident Jowell Travis Legendre, 29, was arrested the next day and charged with object sexual penetration, forcible sodomy, robbery, grand larceny, and credit card larceny.

Well endowed

UVA’s endowment jumped almost $1 billion in the last fiscal year, from $8.6 billion to $9.5 billion. Even more impressive, the endowment has seen a 10.9 percent annual return over the past 20 years, according to COO Kristina Alimard.

Nuts wanted

The Virginia Department of Forestry is seeking acorns and nuts from 12 different species, mostly oaks, from state landowners. The department wants to plant them at its Augusta Forestry Center for tree seedlings.

 

 


Pricey preparations

While Jason Kessler was in D.C., Virginia State Police sent 700 officers to Charlottesville during the
August 12 anniversary weekend that brought out hundreds of anti-racist activists, students, and
mourners, but little to no opposition. The cost?

$3.1 million, according to VSP spokesperson Corinne Geller, who says the department has submitted the bill to the Virginia Department of Emergency Management for reimbursement. That number includes: $953,000 for equipment and vehicles,
and $885,000 in salaries (for officers who would have been working anyway). It does not include costs for Charlottesville, Albemarle, and UVA.

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In brief: August 11 bombshells, sexual harassment and more

What UVA knew

Through a public records request, the Chronicle of Higher Education obtained nearly 3,000 documents from the University of Virginia before, during and after the notorious August 11 tiki-torch march through Grounds. “Together, the emails shed light on the mentality of a university administration and a campus police force that were caught off guard by a throng of white supremacists who used one of the nation’s premier public institutions as the staging ground for a demonstration reminiscent of Nazi Germany and the worst days of the Ku Klux Klan,” writes reporter Jack Stripling in his November 20 article.

The biggest bombshells

They might come as tourists. “Of course we anticipate that some of them will be interested merely in seeing Mr. Jefferson’s architecture and Lawn,” President Teresa Sullivan wrote the Board of Visitors in an email on August 9, two days before the Friday night march.

The Cassandra figure. Captain Donald McGee with university police warned his supervisors August 8 that there could be a repeat of the tiki-torch march held in May and the Rotunda and Lawn might be targeted because white nationalist Richard Spencer is a UVA alum.

If charcoal grills are allowed… McGee noted that the torches were a fire hazard, but university police were unaware they could enforce UVA’s open flame policy.

Blame the victims. Sullivan was famously videoed chastising a student for not telling the administration what the Unite the Righters’ plans were. “Don’t expect us to be reading the alt-right websites,” said the president. But student and faculty warnings appeared unheeded.

Call the first lady. Religious studies prof Jalane Schmidt heard chatter about a march Friday afternoon, but fearing she wouldn’t be taken seriously because she’s an activist, she notified Mayor Mike Signer’s wife, Emily Blout, an assistant media studies professor, who said UVA knew since 3pm and that she “went to the top.”

We’ve got this covered. University Police Chief Mike Gibson expressed confidence that the upcoming situation was under control when offered assistance from the city and county police, which kept officers nearby on standby. When the march started, one lone UVA officer was spotted on the Lawn.

Eli Mosley lied? The Unite the Right security guy, Identity Evropa’s Mosley, told UVA police the group assembling at Nameless Field was smaller than he expected, would march up University Avenue and not through Grounds—and would pick up its trash.

“In my 47 years of association with the University, this was the worst thing I have seen unfold on the Lawn and at the Rotunda. Nothing else even comes close.” —Professor and Lawn resident Larry Sabato in an email to Sullivan August 11 after the neo-Nazi march through Grounds.

 

 

 


In brief

And so it begins…

Cramer Photos

National Book Award winner and UVA creative writing professor John Casey is the focus of a Title IX complaint filed by former MFA student Emma Eisenberg, who alleges he touched her “inappropriately” at social functions, didn’t call on her in class and referred to women using the c-word. Casey is preparing a response, according to NBC29.

White power playbook

The apparently bogus UVA White Student Union posted a screed on Facebook that’s almost exactly the same as one posted for hoax organizations in 2015 at more than 30 schools, including UC Berkeley, Penn State and NYU. UVA says the owner of the page is likely not a UVA community member, and the White Student Union is not an official school organization, the Cav Daily reports.


“I felt like [August 12] was so volatile and it changed the mood of the whole country. My thought was: If these men aren’t held accountable, it will convey the message nationally that you can beat the life out of someone and just get away with it.”—Shaun King on why he dedicated himself to identifying violent alt-righters from the rally, as reported by the Daily Progress


Citizen oversight

City Council gave the go-ahead November 20 for a civilian review board to look at complaints against the Charlottesville Police Department or its officers.

City and county oversight

The Albemarle Board of Supervisors and City Council seek seats on the board of the Charlottesville Albemarle Convention and Visitors Bureau, to which they contribute more than $1.7 million in tax dollars. The current bureau hired Clean, a Raleigh, North Carolina, advertising agency, according to the Progress. Previously, the now-defunct Payne Ross handled advertising.

Tired of vigils

Martyn Kyle

Five years ago, just before Thanksgiving, Sage Smith headed to West Main to meet Erik McFadden and was never seen again. Earlier this year, Charlottesville police declared the case a homicide and named McFadden a person of interest. Smith’s grandmother, Cookie Smith, told the Daily Progress she’s tired of candlelight vigils and was organizing a sock drive for the homeless.