MikeyCanez
Sophomore
- Joined
- Dec 28, 2018
- Messages
- 551
The short answer is no, of course not. But, a November trip to Blacksburg with a lot of eyes on the following week against Pittsburgh is still enough circumstances to make me nervous.
The Hokies are a bad football team but they could have easily closed up shop in early October and been a walkover thereafter, but they have showed some fight and that is commendable, especially without a head coach. The good news for Miami is that Virginia Tech's best offensive strategy is to run you into submission, which, as we are all well aware, is not a strategy that is going to work against Miami's defense.
It is sort of a miracle that Kyron Drones has managed to play as much college football as he has without getting noticeably better even a LITTLE bit. The guy is a stud athlete who simply cannot throw the ball with any kind of consistency.
I like Marcellous Hawkins for what he is -- an undersized but tough and explosive runner. It is awfully surprising that VT can't find a way to get him the ball more in the receiving game. The days of Virginia Tech's underrated offensive line are long gone however and as long as Miami accounts for Drones in the running game, they shouldn't have to break a sweat bottling up the Hokies there.
The passing attack is barely worth talking about. Drones still can't complete 60% of his passes and Ayden Greene is a good enough talent, but certainly not good enough that Miami's secondary can't handle him. They have literally no one else that Miami needs to worry about there.
The Hokies' defense is below-average in every facet. Kemari Copeland is a useful defensive tackle but lacks size and Kaleb Spencer is a versatile linebacker who would probably have a role on Miami's defense if he was still here. But the rest of the defense is unremarkable.
In all, Virginia Tech is probably Stanford-level bad and I would expect them to start checking out, especially with nothing left to play for and a lame duck coach. Absolutely cannot overlook this game but I think Miami has the chance to win 41-3 if they bring the energy and stay creative offensively.
Unfortunately, Virginia Tech is bad enough that style points won't matter in this one, so I'll expend most of my energy rooting for Missouri and Pitt instead.
The Hokies are a bad football team but they could have easily closed up shop in early October and been a walkover thereafter, but they have showed some fight and that is commendable, especially without a head coach. The good news for Miami is that Virginia Tech's best offensive strategy is to run you into submission, which, as we are all well aware, is not a strategy that is going to work against Miami's defense.
It is sort of a miracle that Kyron Drones has managed to play as much college football as he has without getting noticeably better even a LITTLE bit. The guy is a stud athlete who simply cannot throw the ball with any kind of consistency.
I like Marcellous Hawkins for what he is -- an undersized but tough and explosive runner. It is awfully surprising that VT can't find a way to get him the ball more in the receiving game. The days of Virginia Tech's underrated offensive line are long gone however and as long as Miami accounts for Drones in the running game, they shouldn't have to break a sweat bottling up the Hokies there.
The passing attack is barely worth talking about. Drones still can't complete 60% of his passes and Ayden Greene is a good enough talent, but certainly not good enough that Miami's secondary can't handle him. They have literally no one else that Miami needs to worry about there.
The Hokies' defense is below-average in every facet. Kemari Copeland is a useful defensive tackle but lacks size and Kaleb Spencer is a versatile linebacker who would probably have a role on Miami's defense if he was still here. But the rest of the defense is unremarkable.
In all, Virginia Tech is probably Stanford-level bad and I would expect them to start checking out, especially with nothing left to play for and a lame duck coach. Absolutely cannot overlook this game but I think Miami has the chance to win 41-3 if they bring the energy and stay creative offensively.
Unfortunately, Virginia Tech is bad enough that style points won't matter in this one, so I'll expend most of my energy rooting for Missouri and Pitt instead.