David Hall – The Virginian-Pilot https://www.pilotonline.com The Virginian-Pilot: Your source for Virginia breaking news, sports, business, entertainment, weather and traffic Tue, 17 Sep 2024 00:19:06 +0000 en-US hourly 30 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 https://www.pilotonline.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/POfavicon.png?w=32 David Hall – The Virginian-Pilot https://www.pilotonline.com 32 32 219665222 Rahne: ODU still has ‘a lot’ it can accomplish this season despite 0-3 start https://www.pilotonline.com/2024/09/16/rahne-odu-still-has-a-lot-it-can-accomplish-this-season-despite-0-3-start/ Mon, 16 Sep 2024 22:40:05 +0000 https://www.pilotonline.com/?p=7371093 NORFOLK — Ricky Rahne’s team doesn’t play this week, but the Old Dominion coach has a few goals for the coming days.

Rahne wants his players to build confidence. He wants to further evaluate his players, especially the younger ones. And he wants his players, who have yet to win a game this season, to put in enough work while getting themselves healthy after a frustrating start.

The Monarchs (0-3) have Saturday off before heading to Bowling Green next week for their final non-conference game.

Close losses to South Carolina and East Carolina, followed by last week’s 37-17 home loss to Virginia Tech, have ODU reminding itself that there are still plenty of reasons to soldier on.

“We need to win games,” Rahne said Monday at his weekly news conference. “We’ve had the opportunity to win games, and we haven’t done it. And that is my job. But our season is very, very far from being over. We have a lot — a lot — of things to accomplish left in this year.”

The full Sun Belt Conference schedule, which begins Oct. 5 at Coastal Carolina, remains in front of the Monarchs. A league title is still firmly within reach.

Despite the losses, Rahne’s players believe the locker room is in fine shape.

“We’re all still working towards the same goal: winning the conference championship,” said safety Jahron Manning, who had a career-high 11 tackles against the Hokies. “I know a lot of people think about the 12-team playoff championship and everything like that. We’ve pretty much let that go out of our heads. So we’re mainly focused on Sun Belt and getting that goal accomplished.”

The Monarchs’ offense continues to be troubled at the line of scrimmage. After surrendering 62 sacks last season, they’ve given up an average of five per game this year.

This week is anything but a vacation.

“We need to grow,” running back Aaron Young said. “This is a big week for us. It’s huge. Day in and day out, we need to find a way to get better each day. Don’t let this week just slip away. Be in the moment every day and trust the process.”

Asked Monday about the sacks, Rahne gave a detailed breakdown of technical issues the team’s linemen have battled, most of them based on footwork and leverage at the point of attack.

After ODU rushed for 243 yards and passed for just 50 against Tech, Rahne gave a more general description of a blocker’s job.

“It’s a difficult thing,” he said. “Let’s just be honest. That’s why those guys get paid $30 million at the next level, right? Because it’s not an easy thing to do to go backward at a level and be able to react when you’re 300, 315 pounds, and you’re going against some of the greatest athletes in the world. But guess what: That’s what’s required, so we need to do it.”

ODU practiced Sunday night. Tuesday and Wednesday practices will follow, with sprinkles of a game plan for Bowling Green.

The players will lift weights and run on Thursday as their coaches scatter to recruit through the weekend.

Meanwhile, the players will work on what Rahne calls “eye discipline,” which involves not being fooled by motion, jukes or shifts.

Before Saturday’s game, the Monarchs had played in 14 one-score games in their previous 16 outings. It’s a phenomenon that can make a kicker feel especially valuable.

“I go to bed at night thinking, ‘How can I help this team?’ ” kicker Ethan Sanchez said. “Being a kicker, I’m not the biggest. I’m not the strongest. I’m low-key fast, though, and I do think I could help the team out with these one-score games.”

Kicker speed aside, Rahne had certain metrics going into the Tech game that weren’t met.

The Monarchs wanted to win the rushing yardage battle, which they didn’t. They didn’t want to give up extra yards on sacks or by failing to sustain blocks, which they did. And they wanted to get more turnovers than their opponent, which they didn’t.

The Hokies held ODU to zero yards of offense in a dismal third quarter that served as the game’s turning point.

It’s one of the reasons most of ODU’s players will stay on campus and work toward getting better this week despite the lack of a game.

“I think even the kids want it to be like an NFL bye week, where they see the guys going off to the Bahamas and everything,” Rahne said. “One, you don’t have a private plane. Two, you have class, and he doesn’t.”

David Hall, david.hall@pilotonline.com.

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7371093 2024-09-16T18:40:05+00:00 2024-09-16T20:19:06+00:00
Virginia Tech rolls up 465 yards of offense in dominating victory against ODU https://www.pilotonline.com/2024/09/14/virginia-tech-rolls-up-465-total-yards-in-dominating-victory-against-odu/ Sun, 15 Sep 2024 01:33:16 +0000 https://www.pilotonline.com/?p=7368623 NORFOLK — Colton Joseph wasn’t the answer Old Dominion needed at quarterback Saturday night. Neither was Quinn Henicle.

In fact, the Monarchs had few answers for Virginia Tech at all.

Kyron Drones passed for 176 yards, rushed for another 117 and accounted for two touchdowns to lead Tech to a thoroughly dominant 37-17 win over the Monarchs at a packed S.B. Ballard Stadium.

The loss left ODU (0-3) winless this season while giving the Hokies (2-1) a 4-2 lead in the all-time series.

Bhayshul Tuten added 115 rushing yards and a pair of scores for Virginia Tech, which held a whopping 465-293 advantage in total offensive yards.

The Monarchs punted eight times, committed seven penalties for 74 yards, mustered just 50 passing yards from two backup quarterbacks and converted 1 of 12 on third down.

After leading 14-10 at halftime, the Hokies blew the game open.

“We didn’t play well enough in the third quarter to give ourselves a chance to win that football game,” ODU coach Ricky Rahne said. “I felt like we were ready and poised to play well in that quarter, and we didn’t. So that’s obviously on me.”

The Monarchs had played in 14 one-score games over their past 16, something Rahne attributed this week to his team’s competitiveness against a tough schedule.

Saturday’s portion of it proved too tough, especially shorthanded.

Old Dominion quarterback Colton Joseph (2) scrambles out of the pocket with the ball. Old Dominion University faced Virginia Tech at S.B. Ballard Stadium in Norfolk, Virginia, on Sept. 14, 2024. (Billy Schuerman / The Virginian-Pilot)
Old Dominion quarterback Colton Joseph (2) scrambles out of the pocket with the ball. Old Dominion University faced Virginia Tech at S.B. Ballard Stadium in Norfolk, Virginia, on Sept. 14, 2024. (Billy Schuerman / The Virginian-Pilot)

Already without injured All-American linebacker Jason Henderson for a second straight week, the Monarchs turned to their backup quarterbacks after incumbent starter Grant Wilson suffered an apparent left (non-throwing) wrist injury on the final play of the previous week’s 20-14 loss to East Carolina.

Joseph, a redshirt freshman, started and didn’t last the first quarter after Rahne decided to make a change. Henicle, a true freshman, completed 5 of 12 passes for 38 yards.

Neither player had experienced a single college snap.

The Monarchs were outgained 114-0 in the third quarter as Tech kicked a pair of field goals.

“Give credit to them,” said ODU running back Aaron Young, who had 67 of his team’s 243 rushing yards. “They played really hard. They have some talented players, some great coaches. We’ve just got to execute.”

Asked about the dismal performance on third down, Rahne pointed out that poor outcomes on previous downs likely exacerbated the problem.

Indeed, the Monarchs found themselves facing at least third-and-7 on nine occasions.

“We did not play well enough on those (previous) downs,” Rahne said, “which put us in too many third-and-longs, which obviously is going to put you behind the sticks — especially against a team that has very good pass rushers and very good corners.”

By the time Tariq Sims scored on a 16-yard run to pull the Monarchs to within the final margin with just more than three minutes to go, few people in the announced crowd of 22,208 were still around to see it.

The Hokies pretty much put it away when Tuten scored on a 22-yard run to put his team ahead 34-10 with 10:10 to go, turning many of the spectators into traffic-beaters.

Tuten’s 16-yard touchdown burst through ODU’s interior gave Tech a 27-10 lead five seconds into the fourth quarter.

John Love’s 32-yard field goal gave Tech a 20-10 lead midway through the third quarter. The kick came after the Hokies recovered an ODU fumble on the Monarchs’ 18.

Virginia Tech stretched its lead to 17-10 on Love’s 21-yard field goal with 10:53 remaining in the third quarter.

The Monarchs closed the gap to 14-10 on Ethan Sanchez’s 28-yard field goal with 5:14 left in the first half. The score was set up by Tech transfer Bryce Duke’s career-long 48-yard run against his former team.

Leading 14-7, the Hokies had a 33-yard field-goal try tipped wide left midway through the second quarter.

Henicle went 65 yards untouched around the right side to pull the Monarchs to within 14-7 with 13:13 left in  the second quarter.

Old Dominion quarterback Quinn Henicle (10) breaks free for a 65-yard touchdown run in the second quarter. Old Dominion University faced Virginia Tech at S.B. Ballard Stadium in Norfolk, Virginia, on Sept. 14, 2024. (Billy Schuerman / The Virginian-Pilot)
Old Dominion quarterback Quinn Henicle (10) breaks free for a 65-yard touchdown run in the second quarter. Old Dominion University faced Virginia Tech at S.B. Ballard Stadium in Norfolk, Virginia, on Sept. 14, 2024. (Billy Schuerman / The Virginian-Pilot)

Tech took a 14-0 lead on Drones’ 1-yard touchdown plunge on fourth-and-goal with 5:50 left in the first quarter.

The score followed a 48-yard pass from Drones to Jaylin Lane in which Drones fumbled the shotgun snap and recovered deftly.

The Hokies drew first blood when Drones found a wide-open Lane for a 25-yard touchdown pass on the game’s opening possession, giving Tech a 7-0 lead less than three minutes in.

Lane finished with 106 yards and a touchdown on seven catches.

ODU’s players lamented that another one slipped away.

“All credit to them,” said linebacker Koa Naotala. “But just fix a few mistakes, and you don’t know what would’ve happened.”

The Monarchs have a bye week before traveling to Bowling Green.

David Hall, david.hall@pilotonline.com.

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7368623 2024-09-14T21:33:16+00:00 2024-09-15T13:52:35+00:00
Winless ODU seeks ‘internal’ validation in home game against Virginia Tech https://www.pilotonline.com/2024/09/13/winless-odu-seeks-internal-validation-in-home-game-against-virginia-tech/ Fri, 13 Sep 2024 14:08:20 +0000 https://www.pilotonline.com/?p=7364695 NORFOLK — Old Dominion has had two games against tough opponents to prove it’s a good team. With close results both times, the Monarchs have shown they can compete.

Now, they hope, comes the next step, and it’ll have to be taken against a historically successful program.

When Virginia Tech visits S.B. Ballard Stadium on Saturday for a 6 p.m. game, ODU doesn’t need to prove that a Group of Five team can beat one from the Power Four conferences. That’s been done.

The Monarchs opened the 2022 season with a 20-17 home win over Tech. They beat the then-No. 10 Hokies 49-35 at The Steve in 2018, shocking much of the football world.

The current iteration of ODU, quite simply, just needs to show it can play.

“With all due respect to everybody else, I want us to prove it to ourselves,” Monarchs coach Ricky Rahne said. “I want us to continue to prove that we are a good football team to each other so that we can continue to believe in that and have the trust of each other and things like that.”

The Monarchs (0-2) fell 23-19 at South Carolina to open the season, followed by Saturday’s 20-14 home defeat to East Carolina.

The losses ran ODU’s total of one-score games to 14 in its past 16 outings.

The Monarchs forced four turnovers against ECU, but only turned them into seven points.

ODU has averaged 296 yards of total offense and scored just four touchdowns.

“We know we’ve got to be better,” said receiver Diante Vines, a senior transfer from Iowa who came to the Monarchs after building a relationship with offensive coordinator Kevin Decker that started when Vines was in high school and Decker was at Fordham. “The defense gave us the ball four times, and we weren’t able to execute how we’re supposed to. That’s a key thing for us. We know we’ve got to be our brothers’ keeper. They’re doing their job for us to get the ball back, and we’ve got to make some plays.”

Doing it against Tech (1-1) could be a challenge. In a loss at Vanderbilt and a home win over Marshall, the Hokies have averaged 367.5 yards of total offense while finding the end zone seven times.

Among Tech’s weapons is former ODU receiver Ali Jennings, who transferred after the 2022 season.

Jennings, a senior from Richmond, has caught two passes for 91 yards and a touchdown after missing most of last season with an injury. His Norfolk past will have little to do with how he’s regarded by his former teammates.

“I still talk to Ali to this day,” said ODU defensive tackle Denzel Lowry, who starred at Landstown High in Virginia Beach. “He’s still cool people. But when he crosses that line on Saturday night at 6 o’clock, we ain’t homeboys no more.”

As big a deal as it would be for the Monarchs to beat Tech again, it would be a bigger deal for them to beat anybody.

After a bye week, they play at Bowling Green before beginning the Sun Belt schedule Oct. 5 at Coastal Carolina.

“It’s more about the internal thing,” Rahne said. “We’ve got to play good football for ourselves.”

David Hall, david.hall@pilotonline.com.

Virginia Tech (1-1) at Old Dominion (0-2)

Virginia Tech quarterback Kyron Drones (1) looks to throw a pass during the first half of an NCAA college football game against Vanderbilt, Saturday, Aug. 31, 2024, in Nashville, Tenn. (AP Photo/George Walker IV)
Virginia Tech quarterback Kyron Drones has passed for 452 yards and three touchdowns and ran for 32 yards and another score in two games this season. (George Walker IV/AP)

When: 6 p.m.

On the air: ESPN+, 94.1FM

The Hokies: Led by QB Kyron Drones (452 passing yards, three TDs, one INT), Tech ranks sixth in the ACC with 29.5 points per game. The Hokies are not only experienced, they’re experienced together. Their defensive line is a veteran unit with depth, and their skill-position players, like Drones, are candidates to play in the NFL. After opening last season with a 36-17 home win over ODU, Tech lost three straight before finishing the season at 7-6. RB Bhayshul Tuten has averaged 77 rushing yards per game with two TDs.

The Monarchs: The biggest question for ODU this week is who’s going to start at quarterback. Grant Wilson, a junior who passed for 2,149 yards last season, appeared to injure his left wrist on the final play of last week’s 20-14 loss to East Carolina. Coach Ricky Rahne, when asked if Wilson would be available, simply said he’d be evaluated. Backup Colton Joseph, a redshirt freshman, has never taken a college snap. Wilson could join All-American linebacker Jason Henderson, who did not play last week, on the shelf. Rahne said earlier this week that Henderson’s status had not changed. The Monarchs have been carried so far by their defense, which has allowed 377 yards of total offense per game, but just four TDs.

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7364695 2024-09-13T10:08:20+00:00 2024-09-13T16:08:46+00:00
ODU could be without starting quarterback against Virginia Tech https://www.pilotonline.com/2024/09/09/old-dominion-could-be-without-starting-qb-vs-virginia-tech/ Mon, 09 Sep 2024 21:05:31 +0000 https://www.pilotonline.com/?p=7358275 NORFOLK — Old Dominion might have a new starting quarterback this week.

When the Monarchs (0-2) are visited Saturday by Virginia Tech, they might have to dip into their depth chart.

Grant Wilson, a junior who has started ODU’s first two games, spent the seconds immediately following last week’s 20-14 loss to East Carolina doubled over in pain while appearing to hold his left wrist.

Wilson was hurt on the game’s final play, a scramble up the middle that cost ODU the final seconds.

Monarchs coach Ricky Rahne, who rarely discusses specific injuries, wouldn’t say Monday whether Wilson would be available.

“He’s going to continue to be evaluated,” Rahne said. “Whoever gives us the best chance to win the game is going to be the starter. That’s how it is at every single position we have.”

If Wilson can’t go, the job would likely fall to Colton Joseph, a redshirt freshman who is second on the depth chart but has never played a college snap.

Old Dominion quarterback Colton Joseph
Colton Joseph, shown here, likely would start at quarterback for Old Dominion against Virginia Tech if Grant Wilson is unavailable. ODU SPORTS

Senior receiver Diante Vines, a transfer from Iowa who caught six passes for 64 yards against ECU, described Joseph as mobile and accurate.

“He likes to run around,” Vines said. “He’s a fast dude, a little Johnny Manziel-esque sometimes when he tries to run out of the pocket and throw a nice little ball. Colton’s a great quarterback. If he’s out there, I know he’ll handle business how it’s supposed to be.”

In 12 games last season, including 11 starts, Wilson passed for 2,149 yards and 17 touchdowns with eight interceptions. So far this season, he has completed 42 of 72 passes for 389 yards, two touchdowns and three picks.

Wilson could join All-American linebacker Jason Henderson, who did not play last week, on the shelf. Rahne said Henderson’s status had not changed.

Speaking generally, Rahne said it’s the responsibility of him and his staff to make sure players are ready before they return from an injury.

Rahne said he avoids discussing injuries because it can endanger players if opponents are aware of a sore spot.

“If you’ve ever been at the bottom of a football pile, you know why I was so guarded on injuries,” he said.

Vines said it doesn’t matter who starts behind center.

“I’m confident in all our quarterbacks,” he said. “Those guys put in the work all the time. We catch balls from them all the time, too, so I’m confident in how we’ll jell in the field. Whoever’s out there, I know he’ll be able to make some plays for us.”

David Hall, david.hall@pilotonline.com.

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7358275 2024-09-09T17:05:31+00:00 2024-09-09T21:56:15+00:00
ECU defense holds off ODU late, dropping Monarchs to 0-2 https://www.pilotonline.com/2024/09/07/east-carolina-holds-off-old-dominion/ Sun, 08 Sep 2024 01:43:57 +0000 https://www.pilotonline.com/?p=7356256 NORFOLK — Once again, the task was clear for Old Dominion.

A successful two-minute drill would result in a win. An unsuccessful one would lead to another near-miss.

For a second straight Saturday, the Monarchs couldn’t pull it off.

Rahjai Harris rushed for 131 yards and two touchdowns, and East Carolina’s defense made sure ODU ran out of time in a 20-14 non-conference win at sold-out S.B. Ballard Stadium.

The Monarchs (0-2), trailing by the final margin with no timeouts, failed to put together a go-ahead, 90-yard drive in the final 1:53.

ODU found itself facing a similar situation during last week’s 23-19 loss at South Carolina. That time, a Grant Wilson pass was tipped into the arms of a defender.

“We’ve got to get better on offense at two-minute drill,” Monarchs coach Ricky Rahne said. “We’ve done pretty well at it at times. We’ve done pretty well at it in practice at times.”

This one petered out unceremoniously. As the final seconds ticked away, Wilson scrambled to the ECU 35-yard line. The offense failed to line up in time for one more play.

The Pirates (2-0) held a 466-292 edge in yards of total offense and won despite turning the ball over four times.

ECU quarterback Jake Garcia passed for 283 yards, but his four picks helped keep the hosts in the game.

The Monarchs (0-2) lost for the third straight time, going back to last season’s Famous Toastery Bowl. It was ODU’s 14th one-score game in 16 contests.

Aaron Young rushed for 83 yards and a score for the Monarchs, who punted on nine occasions and committed 10 penalties for 95 yards — many of them at the worst possible time.

A 72-yard scoring punt return by ODU’s Isiah Paige was nullified by a pair of penalties with 3:57 to play. It could’ve given the Monarchs the elusive lead.

Instead, down 20-14, ODU got the ball back on its own 26 and went nowhere. Wilson was sacked on third-and-long, and the Pirates failed to run out the clock.

East Carolina defenders Suirad Ware (53) and Ryheem Craig (32) celebrate a sack on Old Dominion University quarterback Grant Wilson (7). East Carolina defeated Old Dominion University 20-14 at S.B. Ballard Stadium in Norfolk, Virginia, on Sept. 7, 2024. (Billy Schuerman / The Virginian-Pilot)
East Carolina defenders Suirad Ware (53) and Ryheem Craig (32) celebrate a sack of Old Dominion quarterback Grant Wilson during the Pirates’ 20-14 victory Saturday night in Norfolk. BILLY SCHUERMAN/STAFF

“Obviously, that’s frustrating,” linebacker Koa Naotala said, referring to the penalties. “But as a team, we can’t rely on penalties giving us yards or taking away yards from us.”

Wilson completed 20 of 34 passes for 192 yards, a touchdown and an interception. He was sacked three times.

Andrew Conrad’s 50-yard field goal gave ECU a 20-14 lead with 9:09 left in the game.

Young’s 1-yard touchdown run pulled the Monarchs to within 17-14 with 4:11 to go in the third quarter. It completed a 13-play, 75-yard drive that consumed nearly five minutes.

Down by a point, the Pirates scored 11 in a minute-and-a-half.

Conrad’s 33-yard field goal gave ECU a 17-7 lead with 9:07 left in the third quarter.

It came after Harris broke free around the left side for a 63-yard touchdown run that gave ECU, after a successful two-point conversion, a 14-7 lead with 10:42 left in the third quarter. The Monarchs fumbled away the ensuing kickoff, which led to the field goal.

In a first half that was unsightly by any measure, the teams combined for 11 penalties and four turnovers. ECU outgained the Monarchs 278-128 in total yards.

The Pirates, who trailed 7-6 at halftime, had a chance to take a lead before the horn. Out of timeouts with just more than a minute to go, they quickly marched to the ODU 6. But with five seconds left, they failed to come set before a snap, and the remaining time was run off.

Wilson hit Kelby Williams on a crossing pattern for a 44-yard touchdown, giving ODU a 7-6 lead with 9:24 left in the first half. The score was set up by Jahron Manning’s 45-yard interception return.

Harris capped ECU’s opening possession with a 22-yard touchdown run to give the Pirates a 6-0 lead just more than three minutes into the game. The run, which preceded a missed PAT, finished off a 10-play, 80-yard drive.

Early in the game, thanks to a strong gust of wind, the top of the left upright in the stadium’s north end zone got caught in the netting behind it, bending the upright outward. The Monarchs’ lone PAT of the half, by Ethan Sanchez, was therefore kicked at the field’s south end after they scored going northward.

A cherry picker was brought out as ODU’s band marched at halftime, and the crowd roared when a worker untangled the mess.

Old Dominion played without All-American linebacker Jason Henderson because of an undisclosed injury. Henderson, a senior, led the nation in tackles per game last season.

Asked about Henderson, Rahne said, “We’ll continue to evaluate.”

Rahne, a former Cornell quarterback, understood Wilson’s thinking in the final seconds to a point.

“With no timeouts — and this is really hard for a quarterback — but you can’t scramble there,” Rahne said. “You’ve got to throw that one away, spike it, do whatever you’re going to do. And that’s a really difficult thing. You see that same problem happen in the NFL. You see it happen everywhere. I’ve watched 12-year NFL quarterbacks make the same mistake.”

The offense in general could be better, Young said.

“Our details are just a slight bit off,” he said. “Once we correct that, I think we’re going to like the results we get.”

Things don’t get any easier for the Monarchs, who will be visited by Virginia Tech next week. First, though, they’ll nurse the wounds left by another one that got away.

“One of the key stats, I knew, was going to be field position,” Rahne said. “When you take the ball away four times, you’re going to have an opportunity to have good field position. And we didn’t take advantage of it. That’s unfortunate, to say the least.”

David Hall, david.hall@pilotonline.com.

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7356256 2024-09-07T21:43:57+00:00 2024-09-09T22:58:39+00:00
ODU joined the Sun Belt Conference 2 years ago. And oh, how the Monarchs have benefited. https://www.pilotonline.com/2024/09/06/odu-joined-the-sun-belt-conference-2-years-ago-and-oh-how-theyve-benefitted/ Fri, 06 Sep 2024 15:22:21 +0000 https://www.pilotonline.com/?p=7341889 NORFOLK — When Old Dominion plays football, it sets into motion a chain of events halfway across the country.

Latorya Credit and her parents and siblings all log in to ESPN+ in the Houston area and watch the games separately, communicating via an eight-person group text that includes her son, Monarchs wide receiver Kelby Williams, in real time.

“Did you see that?” one might write to another.

“How did that slip through your fingers?” one might say to Williams, or “What was your coach thinking?”

Williams doesn’t see the texts until after each game, but the virtual gathering is an anecdotal testament to the power of technology. It’s also partially indicative of the immense value of ODU’s two years as a member of the Sun Belt Conference.

The Monarchs’ football “media value” — a figure calculated by the conference to determine what it would cost to acquire the exposure teams receive by playing on ESPN platforms — went from $46.1 million in 2022 to $52.2 million last year.

To be clear, that’s not money the school receives; it’s money it doesn’t have to pay in exchange for that national footprint.

Additionally, 104 ODU games across all sports aired on ESPN platforms last year, part of the New Orleans-based Sun Belt’s ongoing deal with the network.

The Sun Belt Conference logo is featured on the turf field at S.B. Ballard Stadium in Norfolk, Virginia, on Aug. 19, 2024. (Billy Schuerman / The Virginian-Pilot)
The Sun Belt Conference logo is featured on the turf field at S.B. Ballard Stadium in Norfolk. (Billy Schuerman / The Virginian-Pilot)

It’s a benefit that trickles down to recruiting in every sport, from football to field hockey and men’s and women’s soccer.

College athletes want to play on TV. Fans want to watch them play. Parents around the world, who often wield substantial influence over where their children go to college, really want to watch them play.

Williams had offers from Tulsa, Rice and Ball State, none of which could offer his mother, a former high school track and basketball athlete, a chance to easily see him play every week.

“For him to go to ODU, which is two plane rides away, it’s a big deal for us to stay connected with him,” said Credit, a math coach at an elementary school. “That way, he doesn’t feel like he’s alone, like he’s just there all by himself and his family is not able to see him. Because that was a big deal for Kelby selecting ODU, was that we would be able to at least watch him on television.”

Williams chose the Monarchs when he left Trinity Valley Junior College after the 2022 season.

“It means a lot to be able to have television time,” Williams said. “It kind of makes me feel like a celebrity, one of those people that I watched growing up.”

Men’s soccer games at ODU now trigger a similar scene in Wayne, New Jersey, where freshman midfielder and defender Jett Aktan’s family members gather around their respective TVs.

“They’ll be back home watching the team and me, supporting us from states away,” Aktan said.

“The Sun Belt’s great. ESPN+ is a great way for people around the country to watch.”

But it’s not just athletes’ families watching. According to the conference, a league-record 35.17 million viewers saw Sun Belt football games on TV last season, up from 29.82 million the year before.

It’s a far cry from when the Monarchs were in Conference USA, a vast league that spanned into West Texas and had no such deal with ESPN.

On top of that, the Sun Belt is successful on the fields. It’s one of the country’s best men’s and women’s soccer conferences, and sent a nation-leading 12 of its 14 football teams to bowl games last season.

It’s not lost on coaches when they recruit. In football, ODU competes on the field and in homes with so-called “Power Four” programs from the country’s major conferences.

A commemorative football from the Old Dominion University game against Tulsa in the Myrtle Beach Bowl sits in the office of athletic director Wood Selig in Norfolk, Virginia, on Aug. 29, 2024. (Billy Schuerman / The Virginian-Pilot)
A commemorative football from the Old Dominion University game against Tulsa in the Myrtle Beach Bowl sits in the office of athletic director Wood Selig in Norfolk. (Billy Schuerman / The Virginian-Pilot)

The Sun Belt is considered a “Group of Five” league, with fewer advantages than programs from the ACC, the SEC and the Big Ten.

The disparities between the two levels can be striking. According to the latest data from Sportico, which tracks college sports finances, the University of Virginia generated nearly $141 million in total revenue in 2022-23. Virginia Tech generated nearly $130 million. Both play in the ACC, one of the country’s elite conferences.

ODU’s overall revenue came in at just under $51 million, far below that of the $160 million generated by South Carolina, the Monarchs’ season-opening football opponent. The Gamecocks play in the SEC, widely considered the nation’s top football league.

ODU fell 23-19 at South Carolina on Aug. 31 in a game that went down to the final seconds.

“It’s probably one of the first points that comes out of my mouth to these kids,” the football team’s offensive coordinator, Kevin Decker, said. “I say, ‘We play in the Sun Belt, and it’s the best (Group of) Five conference in the country.’ ”

The Sun Belt, which emphasizes regional rivalries, added ODU, James Madison, Southern Miss and Marshall to its then 10-team football membership in 2022. Conference USA, meanwhile, was bleeding members.

The Sun Belt Conference logo is displayed on the jersey of quarterback Grant Wilson during the game against South Carolina at Williams-Brice Stadium in Columbia, South Carolina, on Aug. 31, 2024. (Billy Schuerman / The Virginian-Pilot)
The Sun Belt Conference logo is displayed on the jersey of quarterback Grant Wilson during the game against South Carolina at Williams-Brice Stadium in Columbia, South Carolina, on Aug. 31. (Billy Schuerman / The Virginian-Pilot)

The fit, it turns out, was perfect.

“I think the move for ODU from Conference USA to the Sun Belt Conference could not have been any better timed than it was,” Monarchs athletic director Wood Selig said. “And it has been an absolute blessing for our athletic department and our entire university to become a Sun Belt Conference member institution, and I say that for a lot of reasons.”

Selig listed Sun Belt commissioner Keith Gill, whom he called “an incredible leader,” as first among his reasons. Another is that the member schools, Selig said, are leaders academically in their states.

“And then you get the obvious ones,” Selig continued. “Gosh, geography: It’s better for our fans to travel to away games. It’s better for our student-athletes with less missed class time. It’s better on the budget.”

For men’s soccer coach Tennant McVea, whose team plays in one of the two toughest soccer conferences in the country, having games on TV is a selling point to potential players.

McVea’s roster includes players from all over the world and the country, like Aktan, who had only seen the Monarchs play on TV when he committed.

“Hey, get online,” McVea, a native of Northern Ireland, said he tells recruits. “You can see us live. Get online this weekend, 7 o’clock. We’re going to be on TV. Have a watch of the game. I want to know what you think about it on Saturday. So definitely a useful tool.”

Women’s soccer coach Angie Hind, a native of Scotland whose team has won three straight conference titles, has a roster that includes players from seven countries and various states around the U.S.

Not just having games on TV, but having them professionally produced, is helpful, she said.

“The first thing a European player will say is, ‘Where can I watch you play?’ ” Hind said. “And now with the technology that we have all over the world, they can tune in live. They can do that. They can get the opportunity to see us, and I think it’s huge.”

Old Dominion University athletic director Wood Selig in his office in Norfolk, Virginia, on Aug. 29, 2024. (Billy Schuerman / The Virginian-Pilot)
Old Dominion University athletic director Wood Selig in his office in Norfolk. (Billy Schuerman / The Virginian-Pilot)

When ODU was in Conference USA, it had football games carried by Stadium, ASN, ESPN+, ESPN3, CBS Sports Network, Fox Sports Network, MASN and CUSA.tv.

Now, other than occasional games broadcast to NFL Network’s 51.5 million homes, all ODU football games are on ESPN platforms. From 2014-21, the Monarchs didn’t play a single home game on an ESPN linear network.

The Monarchs will have had three games on ESPN2 in three years, including a Thursday night home game against Georgia Southern on Oct. 24.

Head football coach Ricky Rahne said part of the Sun Belt’s appeal is its layout.

Trips to places like JMU in Harrisonburg; Appalachian State in Boone, North Carolina; and Coastal Carolina in Conway, South Carolina, simply make more sense while giving athletes “a little bit more of a traditional college experience, if you want to be honest, as opposed to really what’s going on across the country,” Rahne said.

There are also more personal benefits. Like Williams, his mom can see his games with little effort.

“She knows exactly where to find it,” Rahne said. “And it’s not hard for her to find, as opposed to before, where maybe she would call me and say, ‘I can’t find where to find it this week,’ and all that sort of stuff. I think that’s been great.”

Selig agreed.

“Forget what it means with the monetary or even the eyeballs; it’s just so much easier to find,” he said. “And fans are super creatures of habit. And if they’re in the habit of going to ESPN to look for and find you, they’ll continue that, and they’ll continue to find you. If you make them work hard and search and have to dig — Where is ODU playing? How can I get them? — they’re going to give up.”

Having games available on ESPN can be a fine introduction to an otherwise foreign program. High school athletes, or even those looking to change colleges, can catch a glimpse of what they might be getting into.

“They want to see something,” Hind said. “They want to be convinced before they come on campus. And just being able to see that has made a big difference.”

It certainly made a difference in Houston, where Williams wanted his family to be able to keep an eye on him every Saturday.

His mother accompanied Williams on his visit to ODU and helped persuade him to commit.

Credit plans to attend the Monarchs’ Sept. 14 game against Virginia Tech. Otherwise, it’s TV and group texts for her and her family.

That’s fine with her son.

“Now I’m one of those people that my little cousin and them watch, and they think I’m a superstar every time they turn on the TV and see me,” Williams said. “Yeah, it just means a lot to be able to have ESPN record our games and have us out there on television.”

David Hall, david.hall@pilotonline.com.

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7341889 2024-09-06T11:22:21+00:00 2024-09-07T11:13:18+00:00
One game in, ODU’s players are showing accountability as home opener against East Carolina looms https://www.pilotonline.com/2024/09/06/one-game-in-odus-players-are-showing-accountability-as-home-opener-against-east-carolina-looms/ Fri, 06 Sep 2024 15:21:44 +0000 https://www.pilotonline.com/?p=7352697 NORFOLK — After receiver Myles Alston tipped a high pass from quarterback Grant Wilson into the arms of a South Carolina defender late Saturday, the two Old Dominion players didn’t blame each other for squandering the Monarchs’ last chance to win the game.

Both blamed themselves.

The interception, which came with ODU down four points with 1:29 left to play, sealed the Gamecocks’ 23-19 season-opening win.

Minutes later, Wilson was sitting at a table in the bowels of Williams-Brice Stadium, telling the media how he planned to identify his mistakes “so they won’t happen again.”

It’s the kind of accountability Monarchs coach Ricky Rahne likes to see from his players. And he’s starting to see it more often as the team prepares to play host to East Carolina at 6 p.m. Saturday in ODU’s home opener.

“Both guys took responsibility for it,” Rahne said of the late pick in Columbia, Wilson’s second of the game. “Myles was like, ‘I’ve got to catch it,’ and Grant was like, ‘I’ve got to make a better throw.’ I think that that was something that says a lot about the character of those guys. They’re both putting that on them, and they both think that they should’ve done it.”

Senior receiver Isiah Paige caught eight passes for a career-high 115 yards at South Carolina, including a juke-filled 72-yard touchdown reception that landed him on ESPN’s “SportsCenter.”

The play already had received hundreds of thousands of views on social media by the time the team plane landed in Norfolk.

But Paige, a Richmond native, had no idea. He was consumed with something else as the plane’s descent began.

“I really didn’t look at my phone,” Paige said. “I was kind of disappointed in some of the plays I didn’t make. It’s a good feeling now, though. But the plays I didn’t make kind of overwhelmed me in the moment.”

The Monarchs surrendered five sacks Saturday, which recalled a consistent problem from last season.

The issue, Rahne said, wasn’t schematic; rather, it was a lack of technique in terms of standing too upright when blocking. That, too, was to be addressed this week.

When Rahne sat down to face the press after Saturday’s game, the first thing out of his mouth was that he and his players had expected to win the game. That’s despite the major disparities between ODU’s Sun Belt Conference and the Gamecocks’ vaunted Southeastern Conference.

The expectations — and the accountability — led to a set of postgame emotions that Rahne found important to distinguish.

“I think our guys have owned their mistakes,” Rahne said.

“No one was sad,” he said. “Guys have their jaws set, and they’re ready to go and prove that we can play better as a team and that they’re ready to go out there and earn the right to win this one. That was one thing that I noticed very quickly, is guys weren’t hanging their heads. You could see anger and determination in their face, but I wouldn’t say there was necessarily sadness.”

David Hall, david.hall@pilotonline.com.

East Carolina (1-0) at Old Dominion (0-1)

East Carolina's Jake Garcia, right, looks to pass against Norfolk State during a game Saturday, Aug. 31, 2024, in Greenville, N.C. (Scott Davis/The Daily Reflector via AP)
East Carolina’s Jake Garcia, right, looks to pass against Norfolk State during a game Saturday, Aug. 31, 2024, in Greenville, N.C. (Scott Davis/The Daily Reflector via AP)

When: 6 p.m.

On the air: ESPN+, 94.1FM

The Pirates: ECU, on the heels of a dismal 2-10 season, opened with a 42-3 home win over FCS school Norfolk State. But all was not pretty for the Pirates. They won handily despite throwing three interceptions and losing three of four fumbles, something ODU’s coaching staff has identified as a potential weakness. QB Jake Garcia, a transfer from Missouri who won the job in mid-August, passed for 308 yards and four TDs against the Spartans. Ten players caught passes from Garcia last week.

The Monarchs: ODU surprised many around the nation last week when, as a 21-point underdog, it took South Carolina down to the wire in a 23-19 road loss. But the Monarchs, with nearly half their roster comprised of new faces, didn’t surprise themselves. They thought the Gamecocks were beatable, and they nearly pulled it off. QB Grant Wilson, ODU’s first returning starter at the position in a decade, showed his experience by generally managing the game well in a hostile environment. He showed some aggressiveness when he tried to force a couple of passes that ended up in the wrong hands.

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7352697 2024-09-06T11:21:44+00:00 2024-09-06T12:42:02+00:00
From Ireland to Indy and the SEC: ODU football coach Ricky Rahne has a stadium turf collection https://www.pilotonline.com/2024/09/05/from-ireland-to-indy-and-the-sec-odu-football-coach-ricky-rahne-has-a-stadium-turf-collection/ Thu, 05 Sep 2024 18:36:44 +0000 https://www.pilotonline.com/?p=7352490 NORFOLK — Standing on the field at Williams-Brice Stadium in Columbia, South Carolina, last week, Ricky Rahne faced a dilemma.

It had nothing to do with what play to call, when to punt or whether to call a timeout.

It was a grass decision.

For nearly 20 years, the Old Dominion coach has made a habit of collecting turf of various painted colors from each stadium he’s visited.

On Saturday at South Carolina’s cavernous venue, Rahne pondered whether to take black grass from the Gamecocks’ logo or to grab it from the field’s SEC identifier.

He chose the latter, which came with an apology to conference boss Greg Sankey.

“I know how much pride people take in their logo, and I don’t ever want it to be like I’m disrespecting things,” Rahne said.

“I didn’t know which one was more disrespectful, so I went with the (SEC) logo. So Commissioner Sankey, sorry about that. It’s just something I’ve done.”

Rahne puts the turf into a plastic bag before each game with plans for its destination.

Years ago, Rahne’s late father-in-law built him a wooden display case to show off the turf and identify from which stadium each sample was harvested.

The display case is currently in storage, Rahne said, but he has plans for that, too.

“Everyone knows I don’t do anything else,” said Rahne, a 44-year-old father of two school-age sons. “I coach football and raise my family, so I figured (it’s) something cool to tell my grandkids. It will be, ‘Hey, look at this.’ They’ll hate it, but they’ll have to sit there and do it. I’ll give them, like, five bucks after, some chocolate or whatever. I don’t know what grandparents do.”

Rahne, a former quarterback for Cornell, admits he wishes he’d started the practice as a player. That way, he’d have some grass from, say, Harvard Stadium and other Ivy League locales.

A former offensive coordinator at Penn State, Rahne has turf and confetti from landmark wins in Indianapolis and Dublin, Ireland.

When the Nittany Lions played a bowl game at Yankee Stadium in 2014, Rahne chipped some yellow paint off a foul pole for his collection.

He acknowledges that some might find the hobby unusual.

“If you’re rich, you’re eccentric,” Rahne said. “If you’re not, you’re weird. When I’m not the head coach, it’ll go back to being weird. Now, it’s interesting.”

Senior receiver Isiah Paige, whose triple-juke move on a 72-yard touchdown catch at South Carolina drew national attention, shared his opinion on Rahne’s collection.

“I would say eccentric, man,” Paige said. “That’s my guy. Coach Rahne is eccentric. He’s not weird.”

Rahne collected a sample from ODU’s S.B. Ballard Stadium before his first game there in 2021. For artificial fields like The Steve’s, Rahne finds natural grass that has seeped through the turf.

An entire stadium, he figures, won’t miss a few blades of grass.

“It’s already out there,” Rahne said. “It’s already dead, so I just grab it. So it’s not a big deal.”

David Hall, david.hall@pilotonline.com.

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7352490 2024-09-05T14:36:44+00:00 2024-09-05T16:18:04+00:00
Norfolk Tides welcome latest ‘big’ prospect in catcher Samuel Basallo. ‘He’s a monster.’ https://www.pilotonline.com/2024/09/04/norfolk-tides-welcome-latest-big-prospect-in-catcher-samuel-basallo-hes-a-monster/ Wed, 04 Sep 2024 19:26:27 +0000 https://www.pilotonline.com/?p=7350978 NORFOLK — He’s a beastly kid with bear paws for hands who swings like a grown man.

Those are the initial impressions of Samuel Basallo, a mountainous catching prospect with a violent swing that belies his youth.

The Norfolk Tides have ushered several elite prospects to the major leagues in recent years. Basallo, the second-ranked prospect in the Baltimore Orioles organization according to MLB.com, appears to be the next big thing in more ways than one.

At 6-feet-4 and 180 pounds, Basallo strikes an imposing figure. During his first batting practice at Harbor Park this week after joining the Tides on the road from Double-A Bowie, the lefty-swinging Basallo hit several balls that endangered the Tides’ $1.7 million video board in right-center field.

One ball landed with a thud about halfway up, prompting oohs and ahs from Basallo’s teammates.

“He’s a monster,” manager Buck Britton said. “The power is off the charts. When he gets ahold of it, my God. When he gets it, it’s incredible.”

It only seems like Basallo, whose name is pronounced SOM-well bah-SIGH-yo, reached Triple-A in a hurry. Signed at 16 out of the Dominican Republic for what was then a club-record $1.2 million, he’s in his fourth season and sixth level of pro ball.

Before joining Norfolk, Basallo hit .289 with 16 home runs and 55 RBIs in 106 games this season at Double-A Bowie, putting up an .820 OPS.

His journey to the doorstep of the major leagues has not seemed like a whirlwind.

“It feels like normal time for me,” Basallo said through a translator. “It doesn’t feel like it’s been long. It feels right.”

Basallo’s impending arrival in Baltimore, which is highly unlikely to happen this season, brings up a potentially inevitable conundrum: The Orioles already have an All-Star catcher in Adley Rutschman, the former Tides star who was once the top prospect in all of baseball.

Britton, though, sees it as a good problem to have. Basallo, he said, plays a strong first base. Britton envisions Rutschman and Basallo someday splitting time behind the plate, with Basallo peeling off to play first or DH as needed.

Many major league catchers in recent years, including All-Star Carlos Santana and Hall of Famer Joe Mauer, have ended up at first base as catching has worn them down.

“I think there’s ways you could get them both in the lineup and a way to protect each other, not having to just carry the full load behind the plate,” Britton said. “You see what happens to these guys that catch. It’s changed. That spot gets you beat up.”

Few know that better than Maverick Handley, one of three catchers on Norfolk’s roster. Handley, a 26-year-old former Stanford star, is in his second season with the Tides.

He was drafted the same year, 2019, as Rutschman and Orioles All-Star shortstop Gunnar Henderson. Handley has played alongside younger players like Coby Mayo and Jackson Holliday, both now in the big leagues.

Handley is used to youth.

“You know, I feel like I’ve been playing with so many 20-year-olds up here that I can’t really tell what a 20-year-old is anymore,” Handley said. “(Basallo) is definitely more mature than his age says.

“He swings like a grown man.”

Talking with Basallo isn’t as intimidating as facing him from a mound. He’s soft-spoken, perhaps even a bit shy.

He was initially spotted by one of the Dominican’s many buscones, essentially freelance scouts who bring young players to the attention of major league organizations for a fee.

Basallo tried out for several teams before the Orioles offered.

“It was huge,” Basallo said when asked about his bonus. “It helped my family. It’s also easier to keep working and be where I need to be.

“The organization is moving me up the way they feel that I’m going to be good. I feel good about it.”

Handley has admired the way Basallo has handled himself behind the plate. Because he’s so big, Basallo often has to catch on one knee, but his length helps him move laterally.

The size was apparent right away.

“You shake his hand and you’re like, ‘This guy’s got some bear paws,’ ” Handley said. “He’s about as uber-talented as you’re going to get in terms of build.

“I think the O’s are confident that he’s going to be able to handle what’s asked of him up here.”

At 6-feet-4 and 180 pounds, catcher Samuel Basallo strikes an imposing figure.
Norfolk Tides
At 6-feet-4 and 180 pounds, catcher Samuel Basallo strikes an imposing figure.

Joining Holliday, Basallo is the second 20-year-old the Tides have had on their roster this season. Basallo became one of the International League’s youngest active players.

As such, there are adjustments to be made. Britton described Basallo as “super-aggressive” at the plate, something he’ll have to tone down against experienced Triple-A pitchers moving forward.

“At this level, pitchers start to be able to command the baseball a little bit,” Britton said. “You can get yourself into some trouble. But he’s done a nice job. His at-bats are super-competitive.

“It’s a fast swing, it’s a big swing and it’s a big man. But he’s been good. They did a nice job in Double-A and A-ball getting him ready for this.”

David Hall, david.hall@pilotonline.com.

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7350978 2024-09-04T15:26:27+00:00 2024-09-04T15:28:21+00:00
Isiah Paige’s memorable move impresses Old Dominion football teammates https://www.pilotonline.com/2024/09/02/isiah-paiges-memorable-move-impresses-old-dominion-football-teammates/ Mon, 02 Sep 2024 20:27:27 +0000 https://www.pilotonline.com/?p=7348382 NORFOLK — What stunned many in the football-watching world in real time was a rerun for Patrick Smith-Young.

The move Old Dominion wide receiver Isiah Paige put on a defender during the first quarter of Saturday’s 23-19 season-opening loss at South Carolina was, outside of the thin final margin, the talk of the game.

Just 31 seconds after the Gamecocks capitalized on an early turnover for a gifted touchdown, ODU quarterback Grant Wilson hit Paige with a bomb he hauled in at the 30-yard line.

With South Carolina defensive back DQ Smith closing in from behind, Paige paused at the 8 to let Smith pass him before turning it into a one-on-one basketball play.

Paige juked left, right and left again, the last move causing Smith to tumble to his side as Paige crossed the goal line and the crowd of nearly 80,000 went into stunned silence.

Smith-Young, a sophomore safety, didn’t see the play from the sideline. But he watched it that night on the flight home.

“I was like, ‘Goodness gracious, man,’ ” Smith-Young said. “Finally, he’s doing it to somebody that’s not us. We’ve been handling that all camp.”

The touchdown, which went for 72 yards, served a few purposes. In addition to answering the Gamecocks quickly, it showed that after a dreadful start to the game, the Monarchs (0-1) weren’t going to just roll over.

It also showed that the Southeastern Conference, despite its many clear advantages, doesn’t hold a monopoly on athleticism.

Paige’s football version of the crossover dribble has received millions of views on social media. It was No. 6 on Sunday’s “SportsCenter” Top 10 plays.

But it’s not anything the senior from Richmond’s Varina High drew up.

“Just instinct,” Paige said. “Just trying to make a play, provide a spark for the team. I didn’t really put much thought into it. My body just reacted. It’s a nice move, though.”

The Monarchs led 19-16 with just more than six minutes to play before South Carolina took advantage of another untimely fumble to pull ahead.

ODU’s final possession, which began with 2:50 remaining, ended when a Wilson pass was tipped into the arms of the defense with 1:29 to go.

“I know I expected to win that game,” Monarchs coach Ricky Rahne said Monday. “I know our players expected to win that game. We gave ourselves an opportunity to do that, but in the end, we didn’t make enough plays. And probably, we just made too many mistakes in order to win that game.”

In one moment, at least, Paige reignited the team’s high hopes at a critical time.

His teammates were left impressed, even if they’d seen it before.

“That was a great move,” Smith-Young said. “Isiah’s a pretty good player, a great player. So that was fun to see.”

David Hall, david.hall@pilotonline.com.

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7348382 2024-09-02T16:27:27+00:00 2024-09-02T20:45:06+00:00