
"I want this to be the toughest football team we've had here at Virginia Tech" — Frank Beamer
"What I'm worried about is developing the toughest line in the ACC" — Jeff Grimes
Before writing this column, I frequently lamented how Virginia Tech football lost the identity that lead the program's rise to prominence. Hokie football in the Frank Beamer era meant one thing: win or lose Tech's opponent left Lane Stadium bruised and battered. The program revolved around the Lunchpail ethos of outworking other teams on the field and in the weight room while being as physical as possible. Offensively, the scheme was antiquated, but the men who executed it left an impression in the chewed up turf, the sore chests, and backsides of their opponents. On a 3rd-and-3, you had confidence that your offense could get four yards. That is how you win football games.
2012 sucked. I am tired of talking about it. You are tired of reading about it. If Coach Beamer wants this to be the toughest football team he ever has had, it starts with a commitment to successfully running the football. And that starts with putting together an offensive line that has the athleticism, strength, and most importantly attitude to get 4 yards on a 3rd-and-3 late in a football game.
The process for developing that groups starts with spring football. From the best of the best (Duane Brown, Blake DeChristopher) to the best of the worst (Nick Marshman), there is one theme that is consistent during spring football: the defense kicks the offense's ass, especially up front. As Bud Foster starts to incorporate new players into his defensive system, he utilizes every make and model of designer blitz and demands that his players win every down. The offensive line gets shredded, and we don't get a true look at the ability of the skill position players who will be contributors next season.
On the first day of spring practice, I expect that Jeff Grimes will start the following lineup: Laurence Gibson at right tackle, Brent Benedict at right guard, Andrew Miller at center, David Wang at left guard, and Mark Shuman at left tackle. Given their past experience, Matt Arkema and Caleb Farris will have an opportunity to compete for snaps, and based on high praise from the coaching staff, Augie Conte, Nick Acree, and Adam Taraschke will get a long look.
"Those are two promising young guys, I think," Beamer said of Conte and Taraschke. "Let them battle." Junior Nick Acree, who is coming off ACL surgery, will slide inside from tackle to guard and compete for playing time there.
I have written at great length about my expectations that no starter is safe, and that we will see a new style of offensive line play. The group is a mix of experience and unrealized potential, but nobody should expect this group to come out and look like a coordinated 1960's Green Bay Packers machine in the face of Bud Foster's defense.
Here is a pro-tip to all the offensive linemen who want an opportunity to earn snaps in the Georgia Dome on August 31st: treat every live situation like you are in a championship fight. Play on the edge. If you make a mistake, get a helmet on a helmet and drive the defense backwards until you hear the whistle blow. If you have to fight, fight. Any offensive lineman who is content with learning the system, any lineman who stops and watches the play after they are beaten, and any guy who isn't going to stand up for himself and his running backs has no business getting snaps on this unit. My measuring stick for success is to take out my notebook on April 20th and write down that the Virginia Tech Hokies have five offensive linemen who may get out-executed, but will never be outfought.
My preference is no secret. I believe that Laurence Gibson has the ability to be a perfect fit as an athletic, run blocking right tackle in Grimes' system. Despite his lack of experience, he is the surest bet from this group of linemen. His footwork, pad level, and drive blocking allows him to seal the edge or drive a 3-4 end into the inside backer's lap. I think Brent Benedict demonstrated glimpses of elite physical ability at guard, and is the only returning interior lineman with experience that has the measurable to push around big defensive tackles. However, Grimes' system requires lateral movement, and Benedict sometimes struggled in space. Andrew Miller will be the starting center if healthy, but he faces the responsibility of recovering fully from a brutal injury, learning a new system, all the corresponding line call terminology versus various fronts, and being the leader of a young group. That is a tough ticket, especially for a player who has struggled when facing big nose tackles and one-techniques. However, Miller is the consummate Jeff Grimes effort player, and we know he will lead by example.
I believe David Wang will fit as a utility guard or perhaps a center for the Hokies over the next two seasons, not a starter. He doesn't have the lateral movement to be serviceable in a zone blocking run game. If Nick Acree, Caleb Farris, or Matt Arkema can't win the job, don't be shocked if the loser of the left tackle starting job doesn't slide inside. Mark Shuman and Augie Conte are going to have one hell of a battle at left tackle. Shuman is a long, rangy left tackle who has prototype measurables, but he wasn't particularly impressive as a run blocker. If Conte can seal the edge and play nasty, the pass protection will come.
Discussing athleticism and talent is all well and good, but I believe that Jeff Grimes is looking at this spring as an open competition at each position. Attitude and effort will win the day. Success is seeing five guys who will mash as the starting unit. Kicking ass will earn playing time. Watching the tailback get nailed for a two yard loss will ensure a seat on the bench.
Game on.

Comments
Snot bubbles!
+1 But I don't know why!
AMEN!!!!!
I can't wait for the Spring game.
I found myself wondering when--or if--the coaches began to ease off on showing players how to be tough. When I read Beamer's quote above it reminded me of the Rock in 1991 claiming that he chose the University of Miami because when he walked into their gym he saw an ugly, dilapitated concrete hole in the wall with old weights---just what he was looking for. Its time to return to that mentality. If we get outplayed by many of our opponents or outsmarted then I can live with that. By by God I cannot tolerate the softness again. Teach the players to grind and claw and spit and cuss like real wild men again. Scare the other side. Get in their head and if we still lose at the end of the day, you made us proud.
I agree to a certain extent, you can be great lineman without cussing and and acting like we have no control on the field. Being tough is more mental in my opinion than attempting to be tough, you can spit and cuss and poke guys in the eye and be as nasty as anyone, but it isn't going to make anyone more tougher. It starts with coaching and getting the players to buy into Grimes style and way of coaching. If they can do that then they will do just fine this season in my opinion.
Yes. I want us to be two things:
1. The toughest team in the ACC, and
2. The least penalized team in the ACC.
That's not too much to ask. That's how I raise my kids, you don't let anyone outwork you at anything, but you appreciate your competitors skills and complement them on their successes.
That's huge. I think penalties really hurt a team more than almost anything else, possibly more than turnovers. I don't know, I'm sure that turnovers probably have more direct evidence of points lost/gained, but I think penalties really hurt.
It's really 1 thing. Being the toughest also means being the toughest mentally and not committing stupid penalties. Smarts And Toughness.
Of all of them, Lil' Wang has the most to prove in my eyes and probably many others here. I hope Miller is healthy again because he was part of a solid line in 2011.
If only this line had the physicality and experience of our d-line...
I think that this can be accomplished through 2 things:
1. Tough Nosed coaching
2. Recruiting smart, hard working kids
From everything that we've seen of Grimes so far it seems that he will be good at doing both. I totally agree with the comment that toughness is mental. To quote a great philosopher:"Football is 80% mental and 40% physical."
I can't wait to see how our O-line turns out this spring its going to be very interesting.
#BEATALABAMA
Agreed!
Love this line:
Not sure if that is a typo ("mesh" intended) or not, but I think it works brilliantly either way!
I noticed that as well and I agree it is good either way!
I sure hope it's not a typo. The next time I hear someone whine about the OLine needing time to mesh while each man is getting soundly beat by the man across from him, I'm gonna smack somebody.
I want smart toughness....the kind of linemen that break the huddle get into position, look across the line at the defense and then start to crack a little smile, because they know deep down inside, that they are going to knock them into Tuesday of next week. No jumping at the line, no stupid holds on third and 5 when you have the perfect play call, no stupid dives into the pile after the whistle. Just simply line up, blow off the line, and move the guy in front of you back five yards. Or pancake them. Or pull off the line and move the linebacker blowing through the hole to the sideline. I want linemen that know in the fourth quarter that they are going to win every battle because they see the defensive tackle across the line with his hands on his hips gasping for air.
Tough for sure. Game on indeed.
And I want us to go undefeated for the rest of my life. I want our quarterback to never throw another interception. I want our running backs to average 4.5 ypc and never fumble again for as long as I live. I want our defense to intercept every pass thrown.
Mistakes happen. Things don't always mesh. There are two teams on the field and too often we discount the man on the other side of the ball doing their job.
But, attitude is about going out and if you make a mistake, getting a helmet on helmet and staying there until the whistle blows. Attitude is about practicing the right way and letting that muscle memory go wild on Saturday. Attitude is about improving every day. 2012 was a fail on all these fronts for the OL. That has to change, or I promise you, Grimes will find guys who have the right attitude and some vaunted upper classmen will be picking splinters out of their behinds.
I would really like to see some of the younger weight room beasts get coached into starting roles on the line. I want to see Conte and Acree tossing the Dline around like rag dolls.
They should throw me in there. I can probably bench a solid 1 rep with just the bar.
The other teams will soon have this reaction when facing our tougher line:

All I want to yell is,
"CHARGE!"
Nope, MASH was intended. I want every running play to look like a large bulldozer is driving through a crowded sheep pen.
Andy Bitter interviewed Jeff Grimes today (I strongly encourage everyone to follow Andy at https://twitter.com/AndyBitterVT) and read the full interview as soon as it is published to his blog.
Some comments reflect exactly what we have predicted here:
From @AndyBitterVT I asked Grimes if he felt better about interior line. "They do have more experience, but that doesn’t mean they’re better players," he said. "There’s no reason we couldn’t come out of spring and say our 2 tackles are strength of our o-line. I know that’s counterintuitive but again, I don’t think that enough has been proven with this line to say that there’s a strength anywhere right now."
Kudos to Andy for a great story on Loeffler this morning as well. http://blogs.roanoke.com/andybittervirginiatechfootball/2013/03/26/catch...
"I don’t think that enough has been proven with this line to say that there’s a strength anywhere right now."
Thank god for a freaking meritocracy and guys not just ending up in Newsome's doghouse
Tip of the spear!
Hope tight ends and full backs are ready to get nasty in the running game as well! Beiro sure looked tough before his injury and I think malleck and McCray will mash!
Parker Osterloh- 6'8", 330 lbs. True Freshman who really should be finishing up as asenior in high school right now. If he has the mentality to match what Grimes wants.. MAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAASSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSHHHHHHHHHHHHH!!!!!!!!!!!!
Osterloh has played tight end his entire career. It will take some time before he is ready to make an impact inside, and that is fine given that the staff seems to be so high on Taraschke and Conte. Long term, tackle looks to be in good shape. Pfaff and McLaughlin are the only developmental projects at guard (and McLaughlin could easily play right tackle) so getting a big nasty OL like Stephen Moss or Damien Prince who gets recruited at tackle but can move inside to guard is critical.
Or, they could just move Teller to tackle...
Hey now, we need Teller at DE... We only have like 11 on the current roster
(*Sarcasm*)
Too bad Moss already committed to the Hoos :(
Stephen Moss committed to UVA? I need to listen to the news.
Yeah. But I took your comment as more of an 'it's not signing day yet...'' kind of thing. Moss still has time to come to his senses.
After attending an open practice with around 20 people no less: http://www.streakingthelawn.com/2013/3/23/4138954/4-star-offensive-linem....
For as terrible of a game day coach London is, he's a stellar recruiter.
I apologize for not being on top of that guys. I really had no idea. Damnit, I don't like seeing talented in state OL guys going somewhere else.
If they move Wyatt Teller to O-tackle I think I might cry.
He belongs on the d-line... But if he would prove to be the best blindside Tackle or Guard VT has ever seen, all would be forgiven.
i think being able to get that 4 yards on just a run using just brutal strength would be a huge step for our team. i felt like we got so far away from just smash mouth football we need that new mentality. i cant wait to see who the starting line will be come aug 31
Here's a promising note, courtesy of Bitter, re: Loeffler....he's catching up with Grimes & Foster
"He’s hit the road recruiting, watched hours of game film from last year, had his appendix removed and grown a goatee."
TEAM GOATEE!!!!! #BEATBAMA
Studies prove that assistant coaches with beards, are more effective than assistant coaches without beards.
Nick Marshman was "The Man", so he failed bug in a cup and couldnt play in the Orange bowl. He was still a beast on the O-line. Especially at recovering fumbles after the whistle blew.