Recent Comments

HOKIES win first game of DH against Longwood 12-0 in five innings. Game two in about 20 minutes on E$PN+.
Go HOKIES!!!

Seriously, this becomes such a cool thing to follow and cheer for. I kept the tracker up on my browser the last week and think it's great that Frosty shares their passion with us but has done it in such a great way that gets so many people also excited about it.

All of TKP during every Iditarod:

Frosty's Dad: You do us a great service following and sharing this with us all every year and we love this! Thanks a bunch!
Paige did an absolutely fantastic job this year - especially under the circumstances. We all wish her the best in her continued recovery.
Let's! Go! Hokies!!

this is why I don't start threads, guys. Something always goes wrong, haha

BLUF: You're not alone!

I feel this in my soul, Beard. I've had one too many threads be incorrect or outside of CGs even after agonizing over if I should post or not. I just avoid it altogether now 😅

I think even UVA fans will even admit that they must have sold their souls for that ridiculous 2019 tournament run (which had so many lucky breaks it is hard to keep track although the big one is they didnt have to play a single 1 or 2 seed along the way)

So i can only hope they keep paying for it. I do find it funny that they havent won a game since then but that is not likely to continue this year.
Also still crazy to think that a tony Bennett team missed the dance entirely in 2022

Also, not the big dance, but very much worth mentioning and relevant, the #1 ranked uva team that lost to the mid-level NAIA Chaminade College in 1982.

Per Wiki:

The 1982 Virginia vs. Chaminade men's basketball game was a college basketball game between the Virginia Cavaliers of the University of Virginia and the Chaminade Silverswords of Chaminade University of Honolulu. The contest was held on December 23, 1982, at the Honolulu International Center in Honolulu, Hawaii. The Silverswords, then a National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) member, defeated the Cavaliers, who were the National Collegiate Athletic Association's (NCAA) top-ranked team, 77–72. Chaminade's victory over a Virginia team that included three-time national player of the year Ralph Sampson was called college basketball's "biggest upset" of all time by multiple publications.

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