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Virginia Tech tries to avoid late-season swoon

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Posted 6:22AM on Thursday 28th October 2004 ( 20 years ago )
Virginia Tech faces a tough set of games to close the season, and coach Frank Beamer is aware that his teams haven&#39;t finished well in recent years.<br> <br> ``How we perform during this stretch is really going to name our season,&#39;&#39; he said.<br> <br> The Hokies (5-2, 2-1 Atlantic Coast Conference) have won three straight games since a 17-16 loss to North Carolina State last month. On Thursday night, they travel to Georgia Tech, beginning a five-game stretch that includes Maryland, Virginia and Miami to close the season.<br> <br> If history is any indication, the Hokies could struggle.<br> <br> In the past two seasons, the Hokies have gone 3-6 in November. Go back one season earlier and there&#39;s a pattern of strong starts followed by lackluster finishes.<br> <br> In 2001, the Hokies started 6-0 only to lose four of their last six games, including a 30-17 loss to Florida State in the Gator Bowl.<br> <br> In 2002, the Hokies started 8-0, but lost four of five to close the regular season before beating Air Force in the San Francisco Bowl.<br> <br> Last year, Virginia Tech won its first six games and was 7-1 after beating Miami. The Hokies then lost four of five, ending with a 52-49 loss to California in the Insight Bowl.<br> <br> ``It is always important to finish the season because that is how you are defined as a team,&#39;&#39; Beamer said. ``We have finished seasons before and we have had trouble finishing some seasons. I think for any football team, it is how you play in October and November that defines how you are and how you feel about the offseason and the program. It&#39;s important every year.&#39;&#39;<br> <br> HALF-BAD &#39;CANES: Miami&#39;s last two opponents clearly were not awe-struck by the Hurricanes.<br> <br> Louisville rolled to 277 first-half yards and N.C. State had 299 last weekend. Miami won both games, rallying late to beat Louisville 41-38 and getting five touchdown passes from Brock Berlin to beat the Wolfpack 45-31.<br> <br> But Miami coach Larry Coker isn&#39;t pleased with the big-play susceptibility of his defense in those halves.<br> <br> ``That&#39;s something we&#39;ve got to get corrected,&#39;&#39; Coker said. ``We can&#39;t play tight. This is not a play-tight organization. This is a fly-around, aggressive, get-after-you type of defensive team. That&#39;s what we&#39;ve got to do.&#39;&#39;<br> <br> GOOD FORTUNE: Florida State came within minutes of beating Miami to start the season. They also came perilously close to losses against two underdogs.<br> <br> The Seminoles blew a 10-point fourth-quarter lead in a 16-10 overtime loss to the Hurricanes on Sept. 10. But Florida State has also had to rally for a 17-13 win at Syracuse on Oct. 9. And the Seminoles needed a late field goal from Xavier Beitia to beat Wake Forest 20-17 last weekend.<br> <br> Coach Bobby Bowden said the Seminoles (6-1, 4-1) could be 7-0 or 4-3.<br> <br> ``That&#39;s the way football is,&#39;&#39; Bowden said. ``I think we probably should feel very fortunate that our record is as good as it is under the circumstances because it could have been the other way.&#39;&#39;<br> <br> TOUGH SCHEDULE: North Carolina had just five wins in the past two seasons. Its schedule this year is making it tough to add to that total.<br> <br> The Tar Heels&#39; schedule is ranked the nation&#39;s most difficult, according to the Sagarin rankings. The Tar Heels (3-4, 2-2) have lost to No. 5 Florida State, No. 9 Utah, No. 13 Virginia and No. 14 Louisville, teams with a combined 24-3 record.<br> <br> When the Tar Heels face No. 4 Miami on Saturday, it will be North Carolina&#39;s fifth game against a team ranked in The Associated Press Top 25.<br> <br> ``The teams we have played are pretty good,&#39;&#39; coach John Bunting said. ``A lot of people probably didn&#39;t think we&#39;d have at least two of the three wins we do have.&#39;&#39;<br> <br> MORE DISAPPOINTMENT: Wake Forest&#39;s loss to the Seminoles was just the latest in a series of close losses this season.<br> <br> The Demon Deacons (3-4, 0-4) has lost overtime games to Clemson and N.C. State, and they fell 17-10 to Virginia Tech two weeks ago when their final drive stalled at the 5.<br> <br> ``When you watch the film, the best thing to see is our fight,&#39;&#39; freshman defensive end Matt Robinson said. ``We&#39;re never going to accept losses here. Everybody is patting on our backs saying that we&#39;re competing, but we&#39;re going into these games expecting to win.&#39;&#39;<br> <br> MARYLAND&#39;S WOES: Maryland is in the midst of its only three-game losing streak under fourth-year coach Ralph Friedgen.<br> <br> Last week Maryland&#39;s defense which had controlled the game to that point allowed the go-ahead touchdown with 23 seconds left in a 10-7 loss to Clemson. That came after losses to Georgia Tech and N.C. State in which the Terrapins combined for 172 yards and 10 points.<br> <br> ``We are going through a stretch of bad luck,&#39;&#39; Friedgen said. ``We&#39;ve had opportunities to make plays and we&#39;re not making them.&#39;&#39;

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