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White: Snyder's Dream About To Become Reality
Courtesy: VirginiaSports.com Release: 09/02/2009




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Courtesy: Jim Daves/UVa Media Relations

Matt Snyder
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By Jeff White
jwhite@virginia.edu
CHARLOTTESVILLE -- On the depth chart that was released Monday, he's listed as a starting wide receiver. Whether Matt Snyder actually will be on the field for UVa's first play from scrimmage Saturday night at Scott Stadium, it's too early to say. The Cavaliers' other options at wideout include Jared Green, Kris Burd, Javaris Brown and Tim Smith.
Either way, though, Snyder has made himself a great story. The 6-4, 205-pound redshirt sophomore is a walk-on in a football program that doesn't hesitate to put non-scholarship players in prominent roles. Jon Copper, Josh Zidenberg, Staton Jobe and Byron Glaspy, among others, will attest to that.
"Virginia gave me a chance when no one else would," Snyder said on a teleconference this morning. "I was very [grateful] for that chance, and to this day they've treated walk-ons and myself phenomenally. If you work hard as a walk-on, you can do things, and it's an equal-opportunity team. Virginia treats walk-ons just like scholarship players, and it's great."
As a senior at Deep Run High in western Henrico County, Snyder caught 65 passes for 1,009 yards and was named to the all-Central Region team. Division I-A schools weren't impressed.
Nor, for that matter, were Division I-AA schools, including the University of Richmond, whose assistants then included Latrell Scott, now Snyder's position coach at UVa.
"It feels good to say it now," Snyder said. "It didn't feel so good back then, but no, I had no scholarship offers. D-I-AA wouldn't even let me walk on. Like I said, I'm so [grateful] to Virginia for giving me this opportunity. Like any walk-on, I came here with a little bit of a chip on my shoulder, trying to prove to people that I could actually play. That's been a little bit of motivation."
Consider Al Groh convinced.
"He's done an excellent job in every area," Groh said this afternoon. "He really epitomizes the attitude that real football players have."
Snyder, 20, has good size and good hands, and that was true when he played at Deep Run, too. But he wasn't a burner on the field, and that scared away college coaches.
"People were recruiting speed, and they didn't think I had that," he said. "I'm still not sure I do, but again I'm so just happy Virginia gave me the opportunity."
Until a reporter informed him this morning, Snyder didn't realize he'd been listed as a starter on the depth chart for the William and Mary game. He's taking nothing for granted.
"Like I said, until Saturday, nothing's certain," Snyder said. "If I get in the game Saturday I'll be very pleased and feel very blessed. If not, I'll keep working and go from there."
Look for him on special teams, as well as receiver. Snyder raves about the job that new special-teams coordinator Ron Prince has done since returning to UVa this year.
"We're all very excited to get out there and show kind of a new side of the Cavaliers," Snyder said. "No one really knows us for special teams, but we're really excited to get out there and kind of flip the script."
UVa's roster includes two Snyders. The brother most likely to contribute this season is the one who's not on scholarship. Jake Snyder is a first-year defensive end who's expected to redshirt.
That's what Matt did in 2007, and he didn't get into any games last season, either. Nearly three years have passed, then, since he last played in front of fans at something other than a spring game. Saturday night figures to be an emotional time for him.
"I grew up going to Virginia games with my parents and with my brothers," Snyder said. "I was in the stands like, 'Wow,' and looking at those guys running out the tunnel. I didn't really dream about it then, but it was always like a dream of mine, I guess.
"Not even really a goal, but a dream. Through the whole recruiting process, I wasn't getting recruited by anybody, I was just confused a little bit. And [then-UVa assistant] Mike Groh really came in and gave me that opportunity. He reached out when no one else really was.
"I had to think about it for a minute. But you read all these stories about walk-ons becoming starters, whether it's at Virginia or any school, and that's motivation for any kid that doesn't really get any scholarships offers or get many looks at the collegiate level. I did think about those guys: Copper, Josh Zidenberg, Byron. I owe a lot to those guys, and I owe a lot to Virginia."
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Groh Has Several Pieces For Successful Season
Jerry Ratcliffe September 2, 2009 Marc Verica is one of three experienced quarterbacks that Al Groh can choose from this season.

(Associated Press)
CHARLOTTESVILLE — A quick examination of Al Groh’s best football teams at Virginia reveals three common strengths: good quarterbacking, solid defense and reliable placekicking.

In the seasons in which those particulars came together during Groh’s first eight years in Charlottesville, the Cavaliers produced five bowl teams, highlighted by two nine-win campaigns. By contrast, the three seasons where UVa was shaky at quarterback, played so-so defense and struggled with the kicking game put the veteran coach on the hot seat.

Unfortunately for Groh, two of the poor seasons have come in the past three years. Those shortcomings have left Wahoo Nation split on whether the veteran coach deserves a 10th season in 2010, which would give him the second-longest tenure by a head football coach in Virginia history, behind only College Football Hall of Famer George Welsh’s 19 seasons.

Before rushing to judgment, Groh supporters believe this edition of the Cavaliers will boast all of the aforementioned strengths that have led to success and that, in spite of a challenging schedule that includes nine teams that made the postseason last year, Virginia could be one of the ACC’s surprise teams in 2009.

Groh felt the heat during last season’s 5-7 campaign, when both the quarterbacking and kicking were unreliable.

“The 2008 team had to endure more than any team I’ve ever been associated with,” Groh said recently.

That’s a lot of football, considering that he’s been in the business for 40 years and on every level of the game, from high school to NFL head coach.

Still, that UVa squad had chances to beat Miami (24-17 in overtime), Clemson (13-3) and Virginia Tech (17-14) down the stretch. Each of those efforts was plagued by turnovers from a rookie quarterback who previously had put together one of the most impressive strings of performances in the league.

This year’s defense, led by what should be one of the ACC’s strongest secondaries, should be solid even though there will be some relatively new faces at linebacker. Both kickers return from last season and should be more dependable.

What may seal Groh’s fate — for better or worse — will be a new, no-huddle, spread offense directed by former Bowling Green head coach Gregg Brandon. Most critics agree that should Virginia fail to reach a bowl this year, it will be Groh’s last at his alma mater.

However, many of those observers also concur that should the Cavaliers post a successful season and return to a bowl game, Groh’s future could be firmly cemented, because he has surrounded himself with arguably his best staff during his UVa era.

Brandon brought the wide-open spread with him from Bowling Green, where he and Urban Meyer developed their version of the offense nine years ago, when Meyer was named head coach and he immediately hired Brandon as his offensive coordinator. When Meyer left for Utah, Brandon was elevated to head coach and watched his squads put up some mind-blowing numbers.

The fact that Brandon replaced Groh’s embattled son, Mike (now a graduate assistant at Alabama), cooled a major portion of the criticism directed at the program. Mike Groh’s offenses were anemic throughout his three seasons as coordinator, seldom finishing among the top 100 in Division I-A, which magnified the discontent from Wahoo fans.

With Brandon on board to run the offense — Groh has promised to give him total autonomy — there’s more faith that explosiveness could return to that side of the ball. Four starters return on the line, so with some experienced backs and a few speedy true or redshirt freshman wide receivers in the mix, this offense has the potential to keep opposing defensive coordinators up at night.

The true indicator of Groh football has been the quarterback. His program thrived under Matt Schaub, who re-wrote the school’s passing records, and was well-respected when undersized Marques Hagans and left-handed Jameel Sewell served their second terms as starters.

This time a year ago, the Cavaliers’ offense really didn’t have a veteran quarterback to rely on, as Peter Lalich was entering his sophomore season and Marc Verica was a redshirt freshman. When Lalich got the boot in a controversial decision by school administrators for some off-the-field issues, Verica was thrust into action before he was ready.

Thus, with an inexperienced quarterback, a relatively new offensive line and new kickers, the majority of the equation for what makes Groh football tick was missing.

Not this time around.

Virginia has three — count ’em, three — experienced quarterbacks, at least two well-suited to run Brandon’s spread.

Sewell, who sat out last season because of academic suspension, ranks ninth on the Cavaliers’ all-time passing list in less than two full seasons as the team’s starter, although he isn’t considered the most accurate thrower or the most snappy decision-maker. He’s also a nifty runner when the pocket collapses or when he feels pressure. Verica also is back, as well, but he appears to be the third option in this three-man chase.

That leads us to senior Vic Hall. For years, Wahoo fans have clamored for Groh to “Give Vic A Chance.”

A state record-setting quarterback at Gretna High School, which is located an hour-and-a-half south of Charlottesville, Hall was considered the ultimate schoolboy playmaker. Some questioned whether he, undersized at 5-9, could play the position on the major college level.

Hall never questioned his ability, but when he arrived at UVa and found the quarterback position well-stocked, he was shifted over to defense. He toiled somewhat uncomfortably at cornerback for three years.

Fans became vocal over the past two seasons, as the Cavaliers’ offense failed to impress, even though Sewell performed well enough at times to lead the team to the brink of what would have been the second 10-win season in school history in 2007, when UVa nearly upset high-powered Texas Tech in the Gator Bowl.

Most figured if Hall wasn’t the answer, then at least he deserved a shot. Groh was on that wavelength, too, after the 2006 season. There was a plan to use Hall at quarterback, particularly in a “wildcat” package for 2007, but the coaches shelved that idea when one cornerback flunked out and another was booted from the program because of legal issues.

When Groh wanted to restore hope during a three-game losing slide at the end of last season, he decided to give Hall that chance. On only three real days of practice at quarterback, Hall opened UVa’s game at rival Virginia Tech as a quarterback — in what Hall later would label the “Hoocat” formation — and threw a real scare into the Hokies in Blacksburg before the Cavs bowed 17-14.

The smart money is on Hall to eventually lead this year’s attack because of his heart and leadership. “Vic Hall is a kung-fu fighter,” Groh said with all the grittiness in the world. His statement spoke volumes.

All things considered, UVa fans are holding their collective breath that the offseason changes and a diehard at quarterback will lead them back to the Promised Land.

 

 

 

 

 

William & Mary Coach in It for the Long Run
Laycock Has Built Himself a Legacy

By Zach Berman
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, September 2, 2009



WILLIAMSBURG -- When Jimmye Laycock accepted the job as football coach at William & Mary in 1980, he received some advice from Pat Dye, who was soon to take over the head coaching job at Auburn:

"Go there like you'll be there forever," Dye told him, "but get out of there the first chance you get."

At the time, it seemed like sage advice. William & Mary, Laycock's alma mater, had won six or more games just four times in the previous 25 years, and he inherited facilities so poor that the team shuttled to a nearby mental institution to practice on its grounds. Zable Stadium's locker rooms were so small, freshmen changed in a separate annex. The building lacked air conditioning, and positional meetings were conducted in the same room at the same time in the thick Virginia heat.

Laycock now has an air-conditioned corner office in an $11 million, 30,000-square-foot facility that was privately funded and bears his name. Looking back recently on Dye's advice, and with the disdain of a modest man forced to speak about himself, Laycock deadpanned: "Maybe I ain't smart enough to figure the second part out."

On Saturday, Laycock, 61, will begin his 30th season at William & Mary with a game at Virginia. Among division I or I-AA coaches, he trails only Penn State's Joe Paterno, Albany's Bob Ford and Florida State's Bobby Bowden in terms of tenure at one school.

Laycock never climbed the coaching ladder. Instead, he built his own legacy at a program he loves nestled in a community he appreciates. And those who know him identify the same reason: He fits. At the nation's second-oldest university in a town dedicated to preserving the past, the football coach has never left.

"Jimmye Laycock is synonymous with William & Mary," said Troy Keen, a former running back who is a vice president with Wells Fargo Securities. "It's hard to imagine one without the other."

He could have ascended to programs with more prestige, better facilities and larger budgets. Boston College offered Laycock its head coaching job in 1990, and Laycock even accepted the post before phoning the athletic director at 5:20 the following morning to turn it down. He wasn't prepared to leave home. The job instead went to Tom Coughlin, who later coached the New York Giants to a Super Bowl title.

Laycock interviewed for Maryland's head coaching vacancy in 1991 and declined offers from Duke and Southern Methodist, among others. He once even passed on an overture from Maryland Coach Ralph Friedgen, then the San Diego Chargers' offensive coordinator, to coach quarterbacks in the NFL.

He emphasizes he has no regrets, although he has wondered what might have been had he followed a traditional coaching path and moved up that ladder. But Laycock abruptly banishes the thought, because who knows what would happen, he says. He could have been fired from the next job, or left on his own.

So he stayed and guided his acclaimed offenses in small-conference games that were often relegated to regional radio. As a result, Laycock is seldom discussed among the game's legendary coaches.

"He should be. He really should be," Friedgen said.

Laycock squirms at the questions about his legacy. Even though he has won 189 games, he is known as much for what his players have done after leaving the program as what they did while they played.

Mike Tomlin, who played at William & Mary from 1990 to 1994, became the youngest head coach to win a Super Bowl when he led the Pittsburgh Steelers to the NFL title last season. Tom Dexter, who played from 1987 to 1991, is a senior vice president at Merrill Lynch. J.D. Gibbs, who graduated in 1992, is the team president of Joe Gibbs Racing.

"We have other ones who've gone into other fields who aren't as recognizable as a Mike Tomlin, but they've been extremely successful in other fields," Laycock said. "Number one is bringing in good, solid guys, and then it's working like crazy to get them to reach their potential."

Although Laycock is quick to mention the successful alumni outside of football, there is a growing fraternity of men who coached or played under Laycock. Laycock's original staff included Friedgen, Washington Redskins special teams coordinator Danny Smith and Minnesota Vikings quarterbacks coach Kevin Rogers.

Philadelphia Eagles defensive coordinator Sean McDermott played for Laycock, thriving as a walk-on. On Aug. 20, McDermott coached on the opposite sideline from Indianapolis Colts defensive backs coach Alan Williams, who played at William & Mary from 1988 to 1991 and coached from 1996 to 2000.

They remain loyal to Laycock and the William & Mary program, insisting it's impossible to understand what the coach has done by simply looking at his record. Before the Jimmye Laycock Football Center was completed in 2008, the combination of inadequate facilities, sub-par funding and uncompromised academic regulations made William & Mary a challenging place to win.

"The joke in recruiting here is, 'What's your name and what's your SAT scores?' " Athletic Director Terry Driscoll said. "Because that could end a conversation."

Said Laycock: "Before we had [the new facility], there's a whole lot more reasons not to win than there were why to win. No question. You say you're going to win in football, you got to get kids in school, you got to have great facilities, all that kind of stuff. You go around the country, they'll say you got to have it. You got to spend a lot of money on coaches. We didn't do that. You got to spend a lot of money on recruiting. We didn't do that."

Laycock was sensitive about keeping football within moderation of other sports in the athletic department -- a rarity in college sports -- and only started pushing for a building a decade ago, when his son asked why the tennis team had received a new facility.

Then his 2004 team advanced to the division I-AA semifinals, kick-starting the fundraising for the Jimmye Laycock Football Center. It could have been completed earlier than 2008, but Laycock waited until there was enough money to build it right.

Friedgen and Virginia Tech Coach Frank Beamer attended the football facility's unveiling in June 2008. They were all on the same staff at The Citadel in the early 1970s, young assistants working for little and dreaming big.

"Who would have thought that two out of three would be millionaires?" Laycock said. "But I got my name on the building!"

Friedgen and Beamer are ACC coaches with recognizable names and programs that command attention. Laycock has stayed in Williamsburg, living in comparative obscurity in the same house since 1991. But his sizable legacy could be seen at the building's dedication, when the lawyers and businessmen and Super Bowl-winning coach all returned to pay homage to the man who set the foundation.

"I'm into players practicing the right way, doing things the right way, coaches handling things the right way," Laycock said. "Next thing you know, you're into it for 30 years."


 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

White: Talent Level Rising In Baseball Program
Courtesy: VirginiaSports.com Release: 09/02/2009




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Courtesy: VirginiaSports.com

Brian O'Connor

By Jeff White
jwhite@virginia.edu
CHARLOTTESVILLE -- When the Major League Baseball draft ended in early June, the uncertainty began for UVa coach Brian O'Connor.
Five of his 12 recruits for the 2009-10 academic year had been drafted, including heralded pitcher Branden Kline, a sixth-round pick of the Boston Red Sox, and O'Connor didn't know how of those five would actually enroll at Virginia in August.
"Every summer is a long summer as a college baseball coach," O'Connor said the other day in his University Hall office. "If you're going to recruit talented players, professional baseball is equally as interested in them. After the draft happens, it makes it a long summer, because you truly don't know until that deadline what the group's going to look like."
This has been an unforgettable year for O'Connor, whose team won the ACC title and advanced to the College World Series for the first time in school history, and his good fortune seems to be continuing.
The fall semester started at UVa last week, and O'Connor has a dozen new players.
"I thought it was a long shot that all 12 were going to end up here, but they were all very committed to coming," O'Connor said. "They're coming here not just for the baseball, but also for the education. But it's rare [at this level] to get your entire recruiting class to come."
Ten of the 12 -- see the entire list below -- are first-years at UVa. The exceptions are juniors Kenny Swab and Cody Winiarski, each of whom transferred to Virginia from a junior college.
In addition to Kline, UVa recruits drafted in June were Stephen Bruno, a 26th-round pick of the Yankees; infielder Reed Gragnani, a 27th-round pick of the Red Sox; first baseman/third baseman Robert Amaro, a 40th-round pick of the Phillies; and Swab, a 48th-round pick of the Reds who plays catcher, first base and in the outfield.
Overall, O'Connor said, "I think it's possibly the most talented class that we've ever brought in here, and we've brought in some pretty good recruiting classes. It's a real athletic class, from a position-player standpoint. There's a lot of guys with versatility. There's some physical kids in the class, and I think that there's five good arms on the mound."
He added: "This group also academically is a terrific group. I feel like this group of players really fits into what type of player, person and student we're looking for. There's some really tremendous students in this group, some who have gained admission to UVa on their own."
The class includes four full-time pitchers -- right-handers Kline, Winiarski and Whit Mayberry and lefty Aaron Stull -- as well as Ryan Briggs. A right-hander from Omaha, Neb., a city the Cavaliers hope to visit again in 2010, Briggs can play the outfield but for now is concentrating on his pitching.
In 2009, the Wahoos hit 59 home runs, far and away their highest total in O'Connor's six seasons. At least three of the newcomers -- Swab (6-1, 190), Amaro (6-3, 205) and catcher/first baseman Ryan Levine (6-0, 215) -- project "to be players that can hit the ball out of the ballpark, just because of their size and how physical they are," O'Connor said.
He singled out Bruno, Gragnani, Chris Taylor and Colin Harrington as "middle infielders that are really athletic ... I think any time you can get guys that can legitimately play shortstop or the middle of the diamond, you've got a good class. But they also have versatility. Somebody could move to third base, some of them can play the outfield."
Virginia's starting position players from last season are back. Even so, O'Connor stressed, is guaranteed a job.
"These new players will jump right in there and compete with those returning veterans," he said. "Time will tell. We'll find out through the course of this year how many of these guys are truly going to make an impact right away."
Freshmen who did so last season included Steven Proscia, John Hicks, Keith Werman and Danny Hultzen, who became U.Va.'s first ACC freshman of the year.
When that class signed, O'Connor believed it would be a talented group, but he didn't know how much it would contribute until the team started fall ball in 2008.
"When you get a chance to see a player play every day against this level of competition, you start to get an understanding of what a player is truly capable of doing at this level, day in and day out," O'Connor said.
"When you go out and recruit players and you see them, you get brief glimpses of them, and you see their athletic ability. But what you don't know is how a player handles adversity. How does he handle having a bad day and having to come back the next day and be better? And that's what a lot of it is at this level, being able to make adjustments, and you don't see whether the player has that ability to make adjustments until you're around him every day."
The full effect of the run to Omaha may not be felt for a while, but O'Connor, not surprisingly, expects the CWS experience to make UVa more attractive to prospects.
"Players want to go to a program where they can develop and move on to professional baseball, but they also want know that they're going to be in a winning program," he said. "And we've shown for six years here that this is a very consistent and winning program, and that players are going to develop and move along to professional baseball and have success in pro ball.
"Also with that, players want to play in the College World Series, and now we've knocked that door down and proved to recruits that the University of Virginia can play in Omaha."
It doesn't hurt, either, to have former UVa stars Ryan Zimmerman and Mark Reynolds distinguishing themselves at the sport's highest level.
"Obviously the success we've had, going to Omaha and all that, helps," O'Connor said. "But then when you have players that have success at the major leagues, like a Zimmerman and Reynolds, it proves to recruits out there that you can come to the University of Virginia and have a great winning experience, get your education and, if it's in the cards, potentially play in the major leagues one day."

MEET THE NEW 'HOOS
To a baseball team that last season went 49-15-1, won the ACC baseball title and advanced to the College World Series, UVa coach Brian O'Connor has added 12 recruits. In alphabetical order, they are:
* IB/3B Robert Amaro, freshman, 6-3, 205, Bensalem, Pa.
* RHP/OF Ryan Briggs, freshman, 6-1, 190, Omaha, Neb.
* IF Stephen Bruno, freshman, 5-9, 165, Audobon, N.J.
* IF Reed Gragnani, freshman, 6-0, 175, Richmond, Va.
* IF/OF Colin Harrington, freshman, 5-9, 170, Johnstown, Pa.
* RHP Branden Kline, freshman, 6-3, 190, Frederick, Md.
* C/1B Ryan Levine, freshman, 6-0, 215, Hackensack, N.J.
* RHP Whit Mayberry, freshman, 6-0, 180, Alexandria, Va.
* LHP Aaron Stull, freshman, 6-5, 180, Newport, N.C.
* C/1B/OF Kenny Swab, junior, 6-1, 190, Kernersville, N.C.
* IF Chris Taylor, freshman, 5-11, 160, Virginia Beach, Va.
* RHP Cody Winiarski, junior, 6-3, 195, Franksville, Wis.
 

 

 

 

 

Virginia Baseball Announces Fall Schedule
Courtesy: VirginiaSports.com Release: 09/02/2009









Courtesy: Minorwhite Studios

Danny Hultzen and the Cavaliers return to official practice on Monday, Sept. 7.

CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. - Virginia head baseball coach Brian O'Connor has announced his team's upcoming fall schedule, which includes several open practices as well as the program's annual Orange and Blue World Series. Fall practice kicks off on Monday (Sept. 7) at 2:15 p.m. at Davenport Field. That practice, as well as five others, is open to the public.
Included in the open practices is an alumni game, set for Saturday, Sept. 12 at 10 a.m.
Virginia begins the Orange and Blue World Series on Monday, Oct. 5 at Davenport Field. All seven games of the series are free of charge and will begin at 6 p.m.
UVa returns 23 letterwinners, including its entire starting lineup, from the 2009 team, which reached the College World Series for the first time in program history and posted a school-record 49 wins. The Cavaliers also welcome a dozen newcomers into the fold.
Open Practices
Sept. 7 - 2:15-4:15 p.m.
Sept. 11 - 2:15-4:15 p.m.
Sept. 12 - 10 a.m.-Noon (Alumni Game)
Sept. 13 - 1-4:30 p.m.
Sept. 20 - 6-9 p.m.
Sept. 26 - 8:30-11 a.m.
Orange & Blue World Series
*Free to public
*All games are at 6 p.m.
Game 1: Monday, October 5
Game 2: Tuesday, October 6
Game 3: Thursday, October 8
Game 4: Tuesday, October 13
Game 5: Thursday, October 15
Game 6: Friday, October 16
Game 7: Tuesday, October 20
Potential Rain Dates:
Wednesday, October 7
Wednesday, October 14
Wednesday, October 21
 

 

 

 

 

 

Shabaz Falls in US Open Doubles First Round
Courtesy: VirginiaSports.com Release: 09/02/2009









Courtesy: Gabriel Chmielewski

Michael Shabaz

FLUSHING MEADOWS, N.Y. – Virginia junior tennis player Michael Shabaz (Fairfax, Va.) made his debut at the US Open Wednesday on the third day of play at the Billie Jean King National Tennis Center. Shabaz and partner Wayne Odesnik fell in the first round of doubles to John Isner and Sam Querrey 6-3, 6-4.

“It was definitely a little nerve wracking,” said Shabaz of his first US Open main draw experience. “We had a good crowd on our court and it took a little while to adjust to being in that spotlight. I haven’t played here since 2005 (in the juniors), but playing in a Grand Slam is a lot different than any other tournament or college match you play.”

Shabaz, the NCAA Doubles Champion last season with Dominic Inglot, received a wild card to play in the Open with Odesnik, the No. 86 ranked player in the world. The duo was broken once in each set and couldn’t take advantage of two break point chances against the big-serving rising American stars.

“All four of us know each other well and grew up playing against each other in the juniors,” said Shabaz. “To be on the court with three guys ranked in the top 100 in the world was a great learning experience for me. Today, John and Sam showed why they are top 60 players.”

Shabaz became the first active Cavalier player to ever appear in the main draw of a Grand Slam tournament. He also became the first player from UVa (active or former) to play in the US Open doubles main draw since Geoff Macdonald in 1982.

Former Cavalier Somdev Devvarman, who made his Grand Slam singles main draw debut Monday with a straight set win over Frederico Gil of Portugal will return to action on Thursday as he meets No. 23 seed Philipp Kohlschreiber of Germany in the second round. That match is the fourth and final match scheduled for Court 4.

 

 

 

 

 


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No, Not Just Cavs Posted 2009-09-02

By Matthew Stoss





HARRISONBURG - For nearly 20 years, Mac McDonald was the radio voice of University of Virginia sports.

He broadcast the Cavaliers' first bowl game in 1984. He called U.Va.'s Ralph Sampson-led run to the 1981 Final Four. He was there for Herman Moore, Tiki Barber and Thomas Jones.

Now, McDonald is trying to distance himself from being just a Virginia guy in an effort to make his new daily radio show, "Inbounds," a success.

"Maybe that stigma will be here today. Maybe it's here tomorrow, but I think after a couple of weeks of the show, I think people will forget that," McDonald said this week from Charlottesville.

"Inbounds," which debuted this week, is a regionally focused sports talk show hosted by McDonald on three Virginia radio stations, including WHBG-AM 1360 in Harrisonburg. It airs from 3-6 p.m. Monday through Friday, preempting the last hour of "The Scott Van Pelt Show" and other ESPN Radio programming locally.

The other two stations carrying McDonald's show are WKAV in Charlottesville, where McDonald broadcasts live from The Boathouse restaurant, and WREL in Lexington.

McDonald is conscious of not making "Inbounds" a U.Va.-centric show. To that end, he plans to do on-location broadcasts tied to key sporting events: perhaps coming to Harrisonburg, for example, the week of the James Madison football team's home opener against Virginia Military Institute on Sept. 19.

"I want the show to be mobile," McDonald said. "We want to bring the event to the listeners."

McDonald also wants to expand the show beyond the three stations currently carrying it. He hopes to turn "Inbounds" into a widely syndicated show, starting with the state and eventually moving into the entire Atlantic Coast Conference region. So even though U.Va., Virginia Tech and other state schools will get the bulk of the attention for now, McDonald won't shy away from discussing big regional games like Florida State-Miami in football or Duke-North Carolina in basketball.

"A year from now, it's lofty, but I would like to have 100 stations," said McDonald, a Des Moines, Iowa, native who graduated from Northwest Missouri State. "I would like to have the majority of the ACC and be in the majority of the ACC markets."

That makes sense considering the ACC is McDonald's area of expertise. He had two stints doing play-by-play for U.Va. The first was from 1980-85, which ended when he left to pursue television opportunities with Jefferson Pilot. He returned to Virginia in 1996 before resigning in the spring of 2008, telling the Roanoke Times that he wanted to "become more of my own boss." Beyond U.Va., he also has done play-by-play for Wake Forest.

Since leaving the Cavaliers a second time, the 56-year-old McDonald said, he has been working on a biography of former U.Va. and Notre Dame athletic director Gene Corrigan. McDonald said the book is "90 percent" complete.

Given his strong ties to the Cavaliers, the question is: Will McDonald's show be diverse enough to take it where he wants it to go?

McDonald is certainly making an effort: His first-ever guest was Virginia Tech radio color commentator Mike Burnop on Monday.

But that doesn't mean he's denying his U.Va. roots, a smart move in a state dominated by the Cavaliers, along with the Hokies and Redskins. Ex-Cavs basketball coach Pete Gillen appeared on the air Monday, and McDonald said in an interview with the News-Record that he considers himself "very good friends" with Al Groh and Virginia's football coaching staff.

Being friends with sports figures, of course, has its pluses and minuses. On the one hand, you can get people to come on your show. On the other, it makes it more difficult to ask tough questions.

McDonald said he doesn't plan to be an "attack" style host, driven by criticism. He said he will focus on analysis and believes his inside information gives him the appropriate perspective to do that.

"When you've been associated with a school, naturally people are going to think that right away," McDonald said. "But I am going to be very conscious of the other schools. I had Mike Burnop as my very first guest. As far as the history of the radio show, a Virginia Tech guy was my very first guest. I am going to make a very concerted effort."

The important people believe McDonald will appeal to more than just U.Va. homers.

"Go listen to the show," said Roger Aldhizer, vice president of sales and a partner at Harrisonburg's MLC Advertising, which helps produce and distribute "Inbounds" on its MLC Radio Network. "It's not just U.Va. or Charlottesville. It reaches farther than U.Va. The reason people have U.Va. on their minds is because he's only been away for a year. What he's done over the past 35 years outweighs U.Va."

Oddly, perhaps, this is the first time in those 35 years that McDonald has had his own show - not that that's a deterrent.

"He's got a ton of contacts and people willing to go on the air with him," said Dennis Mockler, vice president and general manager of Monticello Media, which operates WKAV and five other Charlottesville stations. "His primary focus is on areas of interest to the people listening, and he knows the ACC very well. ...

"Mac has a good presence on the air. He's not easily flustered. He's got a good personality. He can roll with the punches and think quickly, which is really important when you don't have a song to bail you out."

McDonald said the genesis of the show was around June 1, when he sent a letter to MLC looking for freelance work. MLC (which also produces and distributes Andr? Viette's "In the Garden" show) and McDonald had a meeting, and "Inbounds" was the result of the meeting.

McDonald also said he saw a void in national and regional radio that he thought he could fill.

"The more I was listening to sports radio nationally and in the state, the more I thought a lot of people were missing the point," McDonald said. "I don't want to badmouth anybody, but I think I have a lot of stuff I could add."

So far, the show has stable backers. It secured Pepsi as its frontline sponsor for the next year, and Aldhizer said they are in negotiations to bring in Comcast, as well. He also said the show is in talks with ESPN affiliates in Norfolk, Richmond, Lynchburg, Danville and Bedford.

It is unclear why WHBG decided to preempt ESPN Radio's national programming. Susanne Myers - who oversees WHBG as the general manager of sister station WSVA - could not be reached for comment.

This is the second time in recent years that WHBG has chosen to carry local programming in a prime spot. "The Sportsline," which aired from 6-8 p.m., lasted seven months before the station reverted to ESPN Radio.