Tar Heels stun No. 14 Hokies 20-17 with late rally

Tar Heels stun No. 14 Hokies 20-17 with late rally

DON PETERSEN/AP

Virginia Tech’s Stephan Virgil walks from the field as North Carolina’s Casey Barth and Trase Jones celebrate Barth’s winning field goal last night against the Hokies.

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BLACKSBURG—All Ryan Williams could do was sit and watch. One agonizing play at a time, the seconds ticking off the clock, North Carolina moved closer and closer to winning last night’s game at Lane Stadium. Williams, Virginia Tech’s star redshirt freshman tailback, just sat on the bench, his head in his hands.

Teammates walked over and patted him on the back, trying to encourage him. But Williams didn’t move. Every few plays, he looked up, saw Carolina moving, the clock ticking. Then he stared at the ground again, trying to digest the low point of what was, until this moment, a charmed season.

His fumble with 2:02 left had given the Tar Heels the ball at the Hokies’ 24-yard line. They ran six plays, then Casey Barth kicked a 21-yard field goal as the clock hit zeroes, giving Carolina a 20-17 victory that further damaged the Hokies’ chances of winning the ACC Coastal Division and playing for their third consecutive conference championship.

No. 14 Tech (3-2 ACC, 5-3) still needs Georgia Tech (5-1 ACC) to lose one of its two remaining league games. But now, that would tie the Hokies for the Coastal lead, rather than giving it to them outright.

When Barth’s field goal tumbled through the uprights and the fans began filing out, Williams remained on the bench, head bowed. Darren Evans, whose season-ending knee injury made Williams the Hokies’ top back, leaned over and appeared to whisper into Williams’ ear. Kenny Lewis Jr., another injured tailback, draped a towel over Williams’ head. Team chaplain Johnny Shelton sat down next to Williams and put his arm around his shoulders.

Williams eventually got up, walked to the locker room and sat behind a microphone in the media room, his usual toothy grin replaced by half-closed eyes, as though he just woke up from a terrible dream. Despite everyone telling him otherwise, he couldn’t stop blaming himself.

“As of right now, there probably isn’t really anything you can do to lift me up,“ he said. “Because regardless of what of anybody says, personally, I feel like I kind of took the game away from us today.“

Though Williams’ fumble led to the game-winning field goal, it alone didn’t lose the Hokies the game. Tech’s offense cracked Carolina’s 40 five times in the first half and came away scoreless. The defense allowed two touchdown drives of 84 yards, a field goal drive of 78 and a 44-yard run on the touchdown drive that gave Carolina a 14-7 lead. This against a team that entered last night ranked 114th nationally in yards per game.

“You go through that game, and all of us did something that wasn’t right,“ coach Frank Beamer said.

The most glaring miscue belonged to Williams, who established himself as one of the nation’s best backs in the first seven games, during which he ran for 834 yards, 10 touchdowns and never lost a fumble on his 140 carries—a memorable start to a career that still holds great promise.

His 163rd carry, though, was one he won’t soon forget. The game was tied at 17, after Barth’s 19-yard field goal with 2:52 left, when the Hokies lined up for third down and 6 at their 28. Williams ran right, hit a hole and gained 2 yards. But he never saw defensive tackle Tydreke Powell hit him from behind. The ball squirted free. Free safety Deunta Williams fell on it at the 24.

Williams’ recollections of the play are foggy. “From what I can remember, I got hit,“ he said. “I’m not sure if he hit the ball. I tried to spin off it and the ball came out.“

He will get plenty of tomorrows to put between himself and the play, more carries and games ahead for him and his team, chances to prove their resiliency and find a purpose in this season, which continues next Thursday at East Carolina. “After today, there’s no reason to really dwell on it,“ Williams said. “I can’t take it back. Next Thursday, I’ll be the same old guy out there on the field, ready to play.“

He and his teammates believe they can still play motivated, though their national-championship aspirations are gone and their conference-title hopes dwindling. “I think the motivation is come out here so we don’t feel like this again,“ said linebacker Cody Grimm.

“Took the words right out of my mouth,“ Williams said.


Contact Darryl Slater at (804) 649-6026 or .

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Reader Reactions

Flag Comment Posted by ramfan on October 30, 2009 at 4:00 pm

The Sandman has left the house and forgot to take his intimidating set of jingling keys.

Flag Comment Posted by Disgusted on October 30, 2009 at 2:14 pm

what is it with you Hokies?? Lose a couple of games and you want to get rid of the coaches that brought you from the darkness.
I have long felt, you are great winners; but, the worst losers.

Flag Comment Posted by Dave on October 30, 2009 at 1:41 pm

I wonder if the talent pool isn’t shrinking at VT. Both lines got handled by UNC last night. UNC’s skill people looked like someone running in the deep end of the pool, but it doesn’t matter when you are running OVER people. The UVA game is not going to be a ‘gimme’.

Flag Comment Posted by racer2 on October 30, 2009 at 1:36 pm

Fantastic and Proud American have got it just about right.
The hokies really are the Chokies and they need to get over Mike Vick’s running,scrambling style of play and get a quarterback that can lead a team. 
Vick was a great athlete but not so much a great quarterback.  His abilty to lead and his completion % have been exposed and I doubt he would ever be considered among the great NFL quarterbacks even if he hadn’t been forced out of the game for 2 years.
The successful NFL quarterbacks today have the ability to move around in the pocket and extend the play, but rarely run.  Consider Ben at Pittsburgh, Tom in New England, etc.
As for the Chokies, having a successful football team here in Va. is good for business so I’m all for it.  I just wish we had one.  VPI, UVA, Redskins (don’t they play in Md.?)  Our state doesn’t have a “big boy” football team. 
Oh well, maybe next year!

Flag Comment Posted by FanTastic on October 30, 2009 at 1:10 pm

lilvick…

The straight drop back passer is slowly fading? What are you basing that on? Tim Tebow, Vince Young (both good passers) are the only two running quarterbacks I can think of in the past decade to have any success in college. Before them… Charlie Ward and Tommy Frazier? In the NFL there is not one single “running quarterback” that has ever succeeded. Do you know who the NFL’s leading rusher at quarterback is? Steve Young. Quarterbacks throw the football, that’s their job, it does not work any other way.

Flag Comment Posted by lilvick on October 30, 2009 at 12:46 pm

Virginia Tech came in a little too confident and got beat by a team who wasnt suppose to win. HOWEVER to say Tyrod Taylor and the QBs before him (Including Mike Vick) are a joke is just plain dumb. I think with the talent Tyrod has at receiver he does a good job. You are right though about splitting time. He should have been starting over arguably the worst QB at tech (glennon). The game is evolving the times of a straight drop back passer is slowly fading Tyrod and Tech will continue to improve in due time.

Flag Comment Posted by TheDudeAbides on October 30, 2009 at 12:41 pm

Donk, with a statement like that I’m certain that you’re used to living up to your alternate description.

Last night was a tough loss, but don’t let it make you delusional, mmmmkay?

Flag Comment Posted by WRBallz on October 30, 2009 at 11:31 am

The Fightin’ Bow Ties don’t stand a chance against Tech.  Al Groh doesn’t have enough magic in his fanny pack to make that happen.

Flag Comment Posted by Donk on October 30, 2009 at 10:49 am

Va will squash VTech like a grape when they play them

Flag Comment Posted by savethebay on October 30, 2009 at 10:10 am

LETS GO PIRATES!

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