|  The Cavalier daily Friday, October 2, 1970  | ||
Hugh Antrim
Home Opener
Colloquium
The big beautiful road from 
Richmond that was supposed 
to bring all those people to 
Scott Stadium for the home 
opener is ready, but there may 
be some question as to whether 
the people are. The Virginia 
coaching staff had figured to 
be maybe 3-0, or certainly 2-1 
with a conference win by now. 
Instead, the Wahoos come 
home with a 1-2 mark, 0-2 in 
the ACC.
That afternoon in 
Blacksburg several weeks ago 
was an incredibly invigorating 
experience for one who doesn't 
really like the place; and the 
Cavaliers played the Tigers of 
Hooty's Hollow a solid football 
game before the heat and 
second half doldrums 
penetrated. My afternoon the 
next Saturday in Duke's 
Wallace Wade Stadium was, 
however, frustrating, 
frustrating to the point of 
intolerance. If the Devils had a 
field goal kicker and a 
short-yardage gainer the margin 
of defeat could have been 
embarrassing for a team that is 
"competitive" in their 
conference.
Even for a Friday Morning QB 
it's not hard to realize that a team 
seldom wins unless it scores and 
seldom scores if it can not push the 
football across the fifty in the 
second half. (We were shut out too 
many times last season not to have 
learned that lesson.) Also, one 
would have to be blind not to see 
that Don Lawrence's defense has 
lived up to its reputation. Mr. 
Blackburn is obviously aware of 
this familiar diagnosis and has no 
doubt attempted to remedy the 
situation. What indeed remains to 
be seen is to what extent the 
Wahoos on the field can deploy 
that remedy to the discomfort of 
Wake Forest.
Poor Wake, week after week is 
cast as the David standing before 
Goliath. Stand-ins for Goliath have 
been and will be the likes of 
Nebraska, Florida State, Tennessee, 
and Houston. The Demon Deacs 
arrive in Charlottesville on the 
fourth leg of a month long road trip 
and are again underdogs. But many 
don't like Virginia as favorite.
At first it looked harmless on 
the schedule, but the Wake game 
tomorrow now looks to be a very, 
very big one. Wake Forest stands 
0-3 and would hate to go back to 
Winston-Salem with nothing to 
show for a month's work. The 
Deacs haven't come up with a 
winner since 1959 and unless they 
get a win here, they will probably 
have to wait until next season to 
break that syndrome.
For the Wahoos this game 
should be crucial, it has to be. The 
Cavs not only need a conference 
win, but also need desperately to 
put together a balanced attack - a 
dependable defense accompanied 
by a consistent offense. Saturday's 
contest is Homecoming and many 
will get their first look and 
impression of the Cavalier football 
team, another factor that should 
breed incentive. And if the favorite 
Virginia squad loses...that VMI 
game looms bigger and bigger.
Quarterback Larry Albert (left) and Tailback Jim Lacey (right)
See These Offensive Standouts In Tomorrow's Home Football Opener With Wake Forest
|  The Cavalier daily Friday, October 2, 1970  | ||