Much like the Cavalier supporters who retreated to the exits of John Paul Jones Arena in the final moments of the Hokies’ overtime win over Virginia Thursday night, so did the plethora of questions surrounding Seth Greenberg’s team.
The Hokies’ resilient, persistent play Thursday night was the definition of scrappy. Every time the Cavaliers pinned the visitors, Tech was able to kick out.
Up until this season, the Greenberg era has been marred by last-minute comebacks and half-court buzzer-beaters. You have yet to see that this season.
There is a certain sense of composure that has not been felt or witnessed for years now. This team is able to exert self-control and get the job done in late-game situations.
The win at Virginia marked the second straight game in which the Hokies pulled a win out of the fire in the final minutes of the game.
But this is not a trend that commenced with one-point win over Boston College at home a week and a half ago. See Penn State. See Seton Hall. See Delaware (although many would choose to ignore that one). All three wins for the Hokies either went down to the wire in regulation or were decided in overtime.
Tech has yet to lose a game by less than five points and that defeat, which came at the hands of Florida State in Tallahassee two and a half weeks ago, saw the Hokies trail by double-digits for most of the contest.
But the win in Charlottesville was by far the most important of any of the Hokies’ nail-biting victories this season merely because it was a conference victory that came on the road, something that is never taken for granted by any coach of a power conference program.
If I had been told to guess the outcome of Thursday night’s game after watching the first 15 minutes of play, I would have bet my soul that Virginia would go to win comfortably.
Then, straight out of a Tech thirty-second timeout, freshman Erick Green hit a three-point shot on which he was heavily guarded.
It all seemed to come together for the Hokies during the final five minutes of the first half. Everything thrown up seemed to fall for the visiting team. After Green’s shot cut the Cavaliers lead to nine, the Hokies went on a 15-5 run with Dorenzo Hudson and garnered a one-point lead heading into halftime.
If I was then given a chance to redeem myself and predict the end result following Jeff Allen’s ejection over a flagrant foul, which came early in the second half amidst a Cavalier 7-0 run, I still wouldn’t have given Tech the benefit of the doubt.
Virginia knew exactly where to hit Tech the moment that Allen began to head for the locker room too — down low.
The Hokies had immense trouble defending the Cavaliers’ low-post threat Mike Scott before Allen’s departure. But following the ejection, the 6’8” Scott and senior center Jerome Meyinsse were fed continually and both ended up producing ACC career-high scoring efforts.
Despite exiting at the 13:41 mark in the second half, Allen still ended up leading the Hokies in rebounds with seven on the night.
Malcolm Delaney continued his periodic acting jobs and panhandling for foul calls. Victor Davila continued to bobble the basketball in the key at crucial points in the game. Hudson continued to take too many shots, many of which seemed almost completely unguided.
At times, the defense was less than stellar and Virginia was left with several chances for open threes, many of which, luckily for Tech, did not fall.
The Hokies still managed to stay in the game and found a way to prevail, thanks in large part to the 17-point, eight rebound performance by J.T. Thompson, who came off the bench and notched seven of Tech’s 11 overtime points.
“The more plays we make for each other, the more trust that develops,” Greenberg said following Thursday night’s game. “It’s a process. We haven’t gotten it fixed. We were very, very fortunate.”
Don’t let the loss to Miami deter you from believing this Tech team is anything less than above-average in the ACC.
Every result must be perceived in terms of ability. The Hokies never had a chance to win Sunday’s game.
A version of this article appeared in the Feb 2 issue of the Collegiate Times.

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Now, this is the story all about how
My life got flipped-turned upside down
And I'd like to take a minute
Just sit right there
I'll tell you how I became the prince of a town called Bel Air
In west Philadelphia born and raised
On the playground was where I spent most of my days
Chillin' out maxin' relaxin' all cool
And all shootin some b-ball outside of school
When a couple of guys
Who were up to no good
Startin making trouble in my neighborhood
I got in one little fight and my mom got scared
She said 'You're movin' with your auntie and uncle in Bel Air'
I whistled for a cab and when it came near
The license plate said fresh and it had dice in the mirror
If anything I can say is that this cab was rare
But I thought 'Man forget it' - 'Yo home to Bel Air'
I pulled up to the house about seven or eight
And I yelled to the cabbie 'Yo homes smell ya later'
I looked to my kingdom
I was finally there
To sit on my throne as the Prince of Bel Air
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Last time I looked, 8 rebounds are more than 7 rebounds. According to the hokiesports.com boxscore, Thompson had 7, not 8. TEAM had 8 rebounds.
"Despite exiting at the 13:41 mark in the second half, Allen still ended up leading the Hokies in rebounds with seven on the night."
"The Hokies still managed to stay in the game and found a way to prevail, thanks in large part to the 17-point, eight rebound performance by J.T. Thompson, who came off the bench and notched seven of Techs 11 overtime points."
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A 20 win season is really not going to amount to anything, considering Tech has an incredibly weak SOS. It's absolutely pivitol for you to get at least 3/4 wins over Wake, Duke, GT, Clemson, and Maryland to get you guys into the tournament, otherwise your resume isn't looking so hot.
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