
For about 350 days a year, Anthony Poindexter doesn’t miss playing
football. All of the practices, the weightlifting, the running, the physical
punishment — good riddance. It’s only on fall Saturdays that an old, familiar
feeling arises.
“Game days, something starts surging through my body,” he said. “That’s the
only time I miss it.”
During Virginia football games, Poindexter would love to strap on a helmet and
pop some people, much as he did as an All-American safety for the Cavaliers
not so long ago.
Now, however, he is a 27-year-old graduate assistant coach at Virginia,
holding down a job he insists he enjoys every day. In his second year on Al
Groh’s staff, Poindexter says the transition from player to coach has been
easier than one might expect, especially considering the cruel way his playing
career ended.
“It’s different, sure, but I think things happen for a reason,” he said. “You
know, if I had played till I was 35 or 36, maybe I would have had enough of
football. But now I’m still just 27. I’m a young guy getting a fresh start on
a new career. I have a lot of energy. I can still relate to the kids. I think
things work out for the best.”
Poindexter, one of the greatest and most beloved players in UVa history, never
fully recovered from the major knee injury he suffered in the seventh game of
his senior season in 1998. He saw little action in two NFL seasons before Groh
offered him a position as a graduate assistant last year.
Poindexter worked primarily in the weight room a year ago, overseeing the
players’ workouts. This year he is involved on the practice field with the
offense, often working with the receivers while assistant Mike Groh, who is
the quarterbacks and receivers coach, is busy with the QBs.
Al Groh says Poindexter’s infectious enthusiasm and football knowledge have
been welcome additions to the practice environment. “Anthony is a very
competitive, highly energetic person and is also equally demanding, which is
what coaches need to be,” Groh said.
The players also like his presence. Anyone with the slightest understanding of
Virginia football knows Poindexter’s special place in the program’s history.
“He’s like a legend here. It’s neat to have him as a coach. It’s really an
honor,” said sophomore receiver Marques Hagans. “He makes you work hard, too.
It’s pedal to the metal every practice. You don’t want to let Dex down.”
Poindexter probably would be in the prime of his playing career had he not
torn three ligaments in his right knee against N.C. State on Oct. 24, 1998.
Following surgery, he attempted to give the NFL a try. Drafted by the
Baltimore Ravens in the seventh round, he sat out the 1999 season, then
returned to play special teams in 2000. He earned a Super Bowl ring that year,
which turned out to be his final one as a player.
The Ravens cut Poindexter in their next training camp. The Cleveland Browns
picked him up but waived him when his knee acted up. Even so, he says he
retired as a player without regrets or bitterness.
“I was in so much pain, it really wasn’t hard to give up playing,” he said.
“Hey, there are a lot of things I don’t miss. Lifting weights, having to run
early in the morning, practicing all the time. I think to myself: How in the
world did I do this for so many years?”
Nevertheless, Poindexter says he still loves the game. That’s why he doesn’t
mind the long hours and hard work involved in being a coach.
“This is what I want to be doing. I’m learning how to be a coach. I want to be
a real good coach,” Poindexter said. “It’s fun for me, being around the guys
and trying to win a championship together. Football is a true team sport.
That’s what I love about it. That’s what makes me excited to come to work
every day."
U.VA. NOTES
Aug 18, 2003
THE INCUMBENTS: Freshmen Ahmad Brooks and Kai Parham want to start at inside
linebacker in Virginia's 3-4 defense, but so do Rich Bedesem and Bryant White.
For now, at least, the jobs belong to those juniors.
Bedesem, who missed most of the 2001 season with a knee injury, started the
final four games last season at one inside spot. With the 6-2, 232-pound
Bedesem in the lineup, U.Va.'s defense showed significant improvement late in
the year, and he's excelled in training camp, third-year coach Al Groh said.
"This is a player who knows how to make the most out of what he is," Groh
said. "And I would say that every day, based on what occurred the previous
practice, every day he's a little bit better than he was the day before."
Bedesem, the son of a former U.Va. assistant coach, is from Holland, Pa.
White's home is in Knoxville, Tenn. After Raymond Mann injured his knee early
last season, White started five games at outside linebacker. But the 6-2,
227-pounder White says he's more comfortable inside. "I love it," he said.
White knows that Brooks and Parham, both former Parade All-Americans, are
fighting for starting jobs. That hasn't stopped him from helping them adjust
to college football.
"You've got to put team first," White said. "You're always trying to make
yourself better, but you've got to help these guys, too. Because when I was in
the same situation, I had older guys helping me."
BACK ON TOP: Safety Willie Davis has reclaimed his starting job, Groh said
Saturday. Davis started five games as a true freshman last season, including
the Continental Tire Bowl, but fell behind junior Jay Dorsey in spring
practice. About 10 days into training camp this summer, Davis finally overtook
Dorsey.
"This is a kid who looks like the light's coming on," Groh said. "He's
starting to get it."
The 6-2, 185-pound Davis is one of the fastest Cavaliers and might have as
much NFL potential as anyone on the roster.
"We've got a guy on our staff who played [eight] years of safety in the NFL,"
Groh said, referring to special teams coach Corwin Brown, "and this is not to
demean his accomplishments, but he could only fantasize about having the
package [of skills that Davis] has."
Davis made 33 tackles in 11 games last season and intercepted one pass, which
he returned 22 yards. He averaged 23.4 yards on eight kickoff returns.
TEAM FIRST: At Virginia's Media Day in 2002, linebacker Darryl Blackstock
didn't mince words. He said his goal was to break former U.Va. great Chris
Slade's ACC record of 40 career sacks.
Blackstock, who had 10 sacks as a true freshman last season, is on track to
achieve that goal. But the 6-4, 242-pound sophomore stressed Thursday that
he's not all about stats.
"Now I don't just want to break records, I want to help the team reach its
goals," Blackstock said.
DEEP THREATS?: In senior Art Thomas and redshirt freshman Ronald Morton, U.Va.
may have something it lacked in Groh's first two seasons: receivers whose
speed scares opponents.
The 6-2, 205-pound Thomas, a converted cornerback, is "the first real
size-speed receiver that we've had, so that's a potential step up," Groh said.
Thomas set school records at Cumberland Valley (Pa.) High in the 100-yard
dash, triple jump and 4x100 and 4x400 relays. At U.Va., he ran back a fumble
92 yards for a touchdowns in 2001 and returned an interception 42 yards for a
TD last season.
The 6-1, 176-pound Morton, a track star at Hamilton West (N.J.) High, has
"more speed than anybody that we've played with [at wideout]," Groh said. "Now
if he can become a receiver . . . to go along with his speed, then we'll have
something."
Morton "can stretch the field vertically," receivers coach Mike Groh said. -
Jeff White
Schaub, Virginia aiming for encore
By Erik Brady, USA TODAY
CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. — Matt Schaub performed a magic act at the University of
Virginia last season: Now you see him, now you don't, now you see him all the
time. He went from starting quarterback to the bench and back to starter,
where he emerged as the Atlantic Coast Conference's surprise player of the
year. He won a slew of other awards in his star-making season, but this month
he packed the trophies into a tote bag and handed them to his mother.
Matt Schaub runs out of the pocket during the Virginia's spring game in April.
By Andrew Shurtleff, The Daily Progress via AP
"Take 'em home," he told her. "Last season is over. We've got another season
to work on now."
That leaves room on his shelves for more hardware — and for big dreams.
Virginia is touting Schaub as a candidate for the Heisman Trophy, that
much-hyped award given annually to the most outstanding player in college
football.
No one in Virginia history has finished higher than fourth in Heisman voting.
Schaub, 22, is probably a long shot. But Virginia coach Al Groh is
unapologetic about pushing his quarterback for the award.
"Matt is a returning conference player of the year," Groh says. "You have very
few of those every year in college football. That makes Matt a candidate. It's
like winning a primary in politics."
Schaub (rhymes with lob) enters this season as Virginia's favorite son, but it
wasn't always so. As he prepares for the Cavaliers' opening game against Duke
on Aug. 30, Schaub is often reminded of last season's opener against Colorado
State: He played poorly (73 yards passing), the Cavs lost — and he got booed,
then benched.
"I probably would have done the same thing to myself," Schaub says with a
shrug.
His family still feels the sting of some of the barbs hurled his way from the
home stands.
"He didn't have to hear those things. We did," says Lindsay Fitch, 25,
Schaub's older sister. "A lot of it was coming from football parents in our
section. It was very hard. I didn't want to go to a game ever again."
Debbie Schaub, Matt's mother, says the experience reminded her of a child who
has a bad day in middle school. "A mother still lies awake at night a week
later when the child is long since over it," she says. "But looking back, hard
as it was, I realize now that kind of thing is a rite of passage for any
football player, especially a quarterback."
Schaub won back his job in relief the next week in a loss to Florida State and
led the Cavs to a 9-3 record the rest of the way, including a win against West
Virginia in the Continental Tire Bowl. He finished second in the country in
passing percentage (68.9%) and led the ACC in touchdowns (28) and completions
(288).
How did he manage this reversal of misfortune? Schaub doesn't seem to have a
clue. "I just knew I had to remain focused," he says. "I knew I'd get another
chance and I had to be ready when I did."
Schaub threw a lot of short and medium passes in Virginia's pro-style West
Coast offense. Backs caught 44.1% of his completions, wide receivers 41.3% and
tight ends 14.6%. The Cavalier Daily, Virginia's student paper, had fun with
this in an April Fool's Day spoof that said the you-know-what trophy would be
renamed "the Scheisman" in honor of Schaub's "uncanny ability to repeatedly
throw screen passes to running backs."
Schaub hopes to throw long more often this season. But deep threat Michael
McGrew, his top returning receiver, broke a leg last week and will miss the
season; Billy McMullen, last season's big-play receiver, has moved on to the
Philadelphia Eagles.
"Obviously, I want to take more chances down the field," Schaub says. "I'm all
for going deep, but, hey, whatever it takes to win, that's what we'll do."
Leading by example
It is hard to find anyone who has a bad word to say about the 6-5 quarterback
with the easy smile and easygoing manner. Well, his sister says he's stubborn.
And his father says he sometimes leaves his socks on the floor. But otherwise
his family and friends rate him something this side of St. Francis of Assisi:
• "He's the nicest guy I have ever met in my whole life," girlfriend Emily
Mollick says. "He puts himself out there for you every day."
• "He's purposeful and unflappable," Groh says. "He's not a fur-flies type of
personality. He's the same guy every day in terms of his approach and his
demeanor."
• "He's the most hard-working person I've ever known," wide receiver and
roommate Ryan Sawyer says. "And he's too level-headed to let all the hype get
into his head."
The hype includes a school-operated Web site, schaub4heisman.com. This is new
territory for Virginia: The last time it ran a full-scale Heisman campaign,
for quarterback Shawn Moore in 1990, Web sites had not yet sprouted like
mushrooms. Moore finished fourth behind winner Ty Detmer of Brigham Young.
Assistant media relations director Cathy Bongiovi Stewart is chairwoman of an
eight-person committee that is directing what Virginia envisions as an
understated Heisman campaign. "No billboards, no bobble-heads," she says.
"We're taking a softer approach. We want to get his name out there, but we'll
wait to see how he's doing and then make our big push in October."
The Web site has a dozen family photos provided by Schaub's mother. Schaub
vetoed a few others, including shots of him as a youngster suited up for
basketball in "knee-high socks with short shorts. I'd rather keep those in a
shoe box in the back of the closet."
The shy boy in the pictures used a succession of youth teams to make new
friends as his family moved from Pittsburgh, where he was born, to Albany,
N.Y., and on to Chicago, Detroit and Philadelphia. He was a three-sport star
at West Chester East High in suburban Philadelphia.
Schaub still loves basketball: His intramural team at Virginia finished second
among 80-some teams last spring. And he is still a little like the quiet,
driven boy in the photos: Coaches want more swagger.
"They tell me to be more outspoken and vocal now that I'm a captain" with
fiery cornerback Almondo Curry, Schaub says. "He's more of an in-your-face
guy. I'm more of a lead-by-example guy."
Schaub's father, Dale, works for a rail transport company; Dale and Debbie now
live in Atlanta and attend almost every Virginia game. "Matt was always a good
athlete and a good student," his father says. "And he was good at budgeting
his time, which was a blessing."
Schaub counts it as a blessing that he chose Virginia over the 15 or so other
schools that recruited him. "Virginia is a magical place," he says. "You find
out about it the first day you step on The Grounds — the history, the
tradition, Thomas Jefferson, The Lawn."
No shortage of ACC contenders
Schaub wears a tuxedo on the cover of the new Cavaliers' media guide, a formal
declaration of his Heisman candidacy. He wore considerably less on one jaunt
around The Lawn four years ago.
According to unofficial Virginia tradition, a student should run naked around
the sacred centerpiece of the school at some point before he or she graduates.
The strait-laced quarterback has done both — streaked The Lawn and graduated.
Schaub is a fifth-year player who earned his degree in economics in May; he'll
take graduate courses this semester.
When he was a freshman — or first-year, as they say at Virginia — he and some
buddies streaked from the steps of the Rotunda around the terraced lawn and
back. "You try to get back fast," Schaub says. "That's where your clothes
are."
Sawyer, Schaub's roommate then as now, was along for the excursion. "It's just
something every student does," Sawyer says. Like most, they ran late at night.
"That way there aren't so many people around. And it's pitch dark."
Sawyer graduated in May, too, with a degree in religious studies. He figures
to be among Schaub's favorite receiving targets this season. "If I beat him in
a video game," Sawyer says, "Matt will always keep playing until he beats me."
That competitive fire was evident on the field last season, when Schaub led
the Cavs to four come-from-behind wins in the second half.
This season, "our goal is to win the ACC," Schaub says. "That's it. Anything
else is icing on the cake."
That won't be easy. Virginia is ranked No. 17 in the USA TODAY/ESPN coaches
poll, but three other conference teams are ranked ahead: No. 12 Florida State,
No. 13 Maryland and No. 14 North Carolina State. Eight of the nine ACC schools
have returning quarterbacks, including North Carolina State's Philip Rivers, a
four-year starter and strong Heisman candidate.
The Cavs last won a share of the ACC title in 1995. Mike Groh, Al's son,
quarterbacked that team. Now he is Virginia's quarterbacks coach.
"Mike's advice is paramount," Schaub says. "He knows what it takes to win
here."
Mike Groh is the only quarterback in Virginia history to lead the Cavs to nine
wins and bowl victories in back-to-back seasons. Schaub can be the second.
"Matt is really a coach's dream," Mike Groh says. "Nobody works harder."
ACC defenses, take note: Watch out for an accurate, resilient, unflappable
coach's dream in a tuxedo — or, more likely, a baseball cap worn backward.
Oh, and just in case, watch out for the naked reverse, too.
Examining the ACC - in a board-game style
MIKE HUGUENIN
The Orlando Sentinel
CLEMSON
TRIVIAL PURSUIT: The Tigers play just one game in a state non-contiguous to
South Carolina - Oct. 4 at Maryland.
MYSTERY DATE: Sept. 20, at Georgia Tech. A loss for either doesn't bode well if
an upper-division finish in the ACC is the goal.
AGGRAVATION: The back seven on defense has just two starters back. The toughest
ACC games come in the first half of the league season. The rushing game was
mediocre last season, and there's not an elite TB on the roster. Clemson has a
solid group of WRs, but the Tigers don't get as much out of those guys as they
should. Coach Tommy Bowden will hear all season about the pressure he faces.
CANDY LAND: The offensive line has four starters back, and the defensive line
returns three starters. CB Justin Miller and LB John Leake are among the best in
the league at their positions. QB Charlie Whitehurst struggled at times in his
first season as a starter last year, but he has the best group of WRs in the
league.
DUKE
TRIVIAL PURSUIT: The Blue Devils have lost an ACC-record 25 consecutive league
games.
MYSTERY DATE: Oct. 18, vs. Wake Forest. This appears to be the best chance for
the Blue Devils to snap that conference losing streak.
AGGRAVATION: The roster is filled with players used to losing. The first three
ACC games are against three of the league's four best teams. The secondary was
horrendous last season (254.7 passing ypg). The passing offense is mediocre.
CANDY LAND: The offense has all 11 starters back and the defense returns nine
starters, so there's experience on both sides of the ball. TB Chris Douglas and
FB Alex Wade are a nice 1-2 punch. Duke led the ACC in rushing defense last
season, when the Devils lost five games by five points or less. Three of the
four non-conference games are eminently winnable. If QB Adam Smith finds a go-to
WR, this team_don't laugh_could go to a bowl.
FLORIDA STATE
TRIVIAL PURSUIT: FSU had won at least 10 games in a row for 14 consecutive
seasons until winning eight in 2001 and nine last season.
MYSTERY DATE: Oct. 18, at Virginia. This is the only time FSU goes on the road
to play a conference contender this season.
AGGRAVATION: The Seminoles face arguably the nation's toughest non-conference
schedule. QB Chris Rix hasn't shown he can do the job. The offensive line has
four new starters. No WR on the roster has done anything of note. The pass rush
again could be a problem. There is no playmaking DB on the roster. Will the off
season turmoil carryover into the season?
CANDY LAND: Greg Jones heads a deep group of TBs, which will take some pressure
off Rix. The front seven on defense, led by LBs Michael Boulware and Kendyll
Pope, should be a big-time strength. Team speed remains good. The secondary
returns intact. The ACC schedule is favorable in that three contenders must
visit Tallahassee.
GEORGIA TECH
TRIVIAL PURSUIT: Tech has made a school-record six consecutive bowl appearances.
MYSTERY DATE: Sept. 20, vs. Clemson. A win here could be the difference between
going bowling and staying home for the holidays.
AGGRAVATION: Academic ineligibility cost the Yellow Jackets 10 players,
including some key starters and important reserves. A consistent QB must emerge.
The defensive line must be rebuilt. Who's the starting TB? And who's the go-to
WR? There will be three new starters in the secondary. The non-conference
schedule is challenging.
CANDY LAND: The offensive line returns four starters, so the new TB should have
room to run. The LB corps should be a strength. The QBs have some skills; it's
up to Coach Chan Gailey to pick one and stick with him. There are some speedy
WRs on the roster; they just haven't done much.
MARYLAND
TRIVIAL PURSUIT: The Terps have won at least 10 games in back-to-back seasons
for the first time in school history.
MYSTERY DATE: Sept. 6, at Florida State. If the Terps want to win the ACC, they
must win in Tallahassee.
AGGRAVATION: The passing attack is mediocre, and the WR don't really scare
anybody. The defense lost its best player, LB E.J. Henderson. The offensive line
returns three starters, but the two who left were the best linemen. Depth is a
problem on the defensive line.
CANDY LAND: QB Scott McBrien is steady, and if TB Bruce Perry is healthy, he
should rush for at least 1,200 yards. The secondary returns intact. The LB corps
should be strong. Nick Novak may be the best in the ACC. The coaching staff is
the best in the ACC and has the players believing they can win every time out.
NORTH CAROLINA
TRIVIAL PURSUIT: The Tar Heels led the ACC in passing last season, the first
time they had done so since 1963.
MYSTERY DATE: Sept. 20, at Wisconsin. This is the Heels' only game outside the
state of North Carolina until Nov. 1.
AGGRAVATION: The running game has been brutal for the past couple of seasons,
and there's no TB on the roster who worries any opponent. Who's the go-to WR?
Eight starters are back on what was the worst defense in the ACC last season;
the Heels were especially awful against the run (221.2 ypg). The non-conference
schedule is tough.
CANDY LAND: QB Darian Durant is shifty and has a strong arm; he'd be even more
effective if the Heels could run at all. At least all five starters return on
the offensive line. Injuries big a big hurt on the Heels last season (there was
a different starting defense every game), and it can't be that bad again, can
it?
N.C. STATE
TRIVIAL PURSUIT: The Wolfpack won 11 games last season, the first time in school
history they'd won more than nine.
MYSTERY DATE: Nov. 1, vs. Virginia. This is the first in a three-game
season-ending gauntlet against the league's top contenders.
AGGRAVATION: The front four on defense will be all new, and there are only three
upperclassmen in the eight-man two-deep roster. In a league with teams who like
to run the ball, that's a huge concern. As well as freshman TB T.A. McLendon
played last season, NCSU was just sixth in the league in rushing. The secondary
is in flux and could have two new starters. The coaching staff went through an
overhaul.
CANDY LAND: QB Philip Rivers is a four-year starter and a legit Heisman
contender. WR Jerico Cotchery may be the best at his position in the league.
McLendon is a stud; he's tough, has good speed and is a receiving threat. The
offensive line should be OK. The LBs are solid and fast. Team speed is superb.
Coach Chuck Amato has his guys thinking they can win every time out.
VIRGINIA
TRIVIAL PURSUIT: Despite winning nine games last season, the Cavs were just 80th
in the nation in total offense and 100th in total defense.
MYSTERY DATE: Oct. 18, vs. Florida State. If everything goes as planned, the
Cavs will be 6-0 when the Seminoles come calling.
AGGRAVATION: While FSU must travel to Charlottesville, the other tough league
games are on the road. Who's the go-to WR? Can QB Matt Schaub possibly repeat as
the ACC's player of the year? The Cavs were horrible against the run last season
(208.9 ypg). There is just one senior among the projected starters on the
defensive front seven.
CANDY LAND: The Cavs return four starters on the offensive line, and have a deep
stable of TBs headed by Wali Lundy. Sophomore TE Heath Miller is a future
All-American. There is good speed on defense. If Schaub plays well again (68.9
completion percentage, 28 TDs and seven picks last season), the Cavs will
average at least 35 ppg.
WAKE FOREST
TRIVIAL PURSUIT: There are six ACC grads coaching in the league, and Wake Coach
Jim Grobe is the only one not at his alma mater (Grobe is a Virginia alum).
MYSTERY DATE: Oct. 18, at Duke. The loser easily could finish last in the ACC.
AGGRAVATION: Only three starters return on offense. The starting defensive line
will be all new, and there also will be two new starting LBs. The passing
offense has a long way to go. There's a new QB, a new TB and a new FB, which
could cause problems for the option offense. The early-season schedule is tough.
CANDY LAND: Three starting offensive linemen return, which means there should be
some holes for the new backfield. The secondary returns intact in the Deacons'
3-3-5 scheme. Special teams should be OK. Three of the first four and four of
the first six are at home.