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2009 Orange Bowl Recap

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2009 Orange Bowl Champions

The opening moments were filled with just about every problem Virginia Tech coach

Frank Beamer feared his team would have against Cincinnati.



It was merely a blip.



Nearly everything else went according to Beamer's plan -- and the Hokies ended a

yearlong Orange Bowl hangover.

Darren Evans had 28 carries for 153 yards and a touchdown, quarterback Tyrod

Taylor rushed for another score and No. 19 Virginia Tech beat No. 12 Cincinnati 20-7

in the Orange Bowl Thursday night, joining Southern California and Texas as the only

schools to win 10 games in each of the past five seasons.



The Hokies (10-4) forced Cincinnati quarterback Tony Pike into a season-high four

interceptions. Pike -- who wasn't even on Cincinnati's depth chart at the start of the

season before blossoming into an all-Big East quarterback -- threw for 239 yards and

a touchdown, but had his night marred mightily by the picks and getting stopped on

a fourth-and-goal in the fourth quarter.



Mardy Gilyard had 255 all-purpose yards (158 receiving , 97 returning) and a

touchdown catch for Cincinnati, which saw its six-game winning streak snapped. The

Bearcats (11-3) came in as slight favorites over the Hokies, who lost this game to

Kansas a year ago.



"All year, all year, all year we've been the underdogs," said Hokies' cornerback Victor

'Macho' Harris -- who didn't jump to the NFL last year, in part, because he didn't

want to leave school with an Orange Bowl loss. "All year. We had to scratch and claw

our way to a victory. We had to scratch our way up to a victory. It says a lot about

the character on our team."



So this one was especially sweet for Virginia Tech.



Really, for the entire Atlantic Coast Conference, too.



The Hokies became the first ACC team to win a BCS game since Florida State --

ironically, perhaps -- beat Virginia Tech, then a Big East member, for the national

championship to close the 1999 season.



It was eight BCS chances, eight BCS losses for the ACC since.



And the oft-maligned league was just 5-12 over the past two seasons in all

postseason games before the Hokies broke through, befuddling the Bearcats' spread

offense with an array of different blitzes and, at times anyway, simply winning the

battle up front.



"We did a good job mixing it up," Beamer said. "Overall, I'm really proud of this

football team. We hung in there."



Evans, the game's MVP, got the clinching score early in the fourth, after Pike threw

his third interception -- albeit on a highlight-quality play by Virginia Tech defensive

end Orion Martin.

Deep in his own territory, Pike rolled right and threw back to the left, hoping the

misdirection would pay off. Martin never bit, made a diving interception at the

Cincinnati 10, and Evans rumbled in from 6 yards out for a 20-7 lead with 11:29 left.



Pike got the Bearcats to the Virginia Tech 1 on the next drive, rolled out to his right

and tried to run in on fourth-and-goal, and was stuffed by Barquell Rivers with 7:25

left to end Cincinnati's last realistic comeback chance.



"You work out in the summer and in preseason camp because you want to get to this

point," said Cincinnati coach Brian Kelly, whose team was picked fifth in the Big

East's preseason poll before taking that league title. "But you want to finish it off, so

there's a lot of disappointment."



Gilyard walked off the field with tears in his eyes.



"I'm really hurt," Gilyard said. "I really wanted this game for the seniors, the guys I

came in with. I'm really, really hurt."



The Hokies' best defense was their ball-control offense. Virginia Tech held the ball for

nearly 40 minutes.



"It doesn't get any better than this. BCS, Orange Bowl champs," Harris said. "Being

mentioned with teams like Texas and USC, it says a lot about our players, says a lot

about Coach Beamer. BCS -- finally, we got one!"



Virginia Tech entered the stadium to the familiar sounds of Metallica's "Enter

Sandman" -- the song that usually blares when the Hokies enter Lane Stadium in

Blacksburg.



Nonetheless, it was Cincinnati that looked very much at home in the beginning of its

BCS debut.



The Bearcats took the opening kickoff, sent their spread offense onto the field and

made the Hokies look very confused. Pike found Gilyard for a 38-yard pickup on the

third play from scrimmage, and they hooked up for a spectacular 15-yard touchdown

three plays later to open the scoring.



Facing a third-and-9 from the right hash, Pike waited ... waited ... waited ... before

lofting a fade to the far left of the end zone. Gilyard took off on a sprint, made a

diving catch as he sailed out of bounds and managed to just barely drag his right toe

on the turf painted in Virginia Tech's colors for a 7-0 Cincinnati lead.



It looked easy.



Ah, but the nation's seventh-ranked defense would eventually get its bearings.



"We don't always play well but we always play hard," Beamer said. "That's what we

did tonight."



The Hokies held Cincinnati to 137 yards, rendered the Bearcats' running game

nonexistent (eight carries, 11 yards) over the remainder of the half, and battled their

way to a 10-7 lead by intermission.

Taylor tied the game with a zig-zig-zag rushing effort from 17 yards early in the

second quarter. Out of the shotgun on third-and-9, he started straight ahead, darted

right, cut back left and then made a sharper move to run just past the pylon -- the

quarterback's seventh rushing score of the season.



Cincinnati had a great chance to reclaim the lead later in the second, until Pike made

the sort of error he avoided all season, throwing into what essentially was triple-

coverage while trying to force the ball to Dominick Goodman in the back of the end

zone.



He came into Thursday with seven interceptions on the year.



"We just did not play our very best," Kelly said.



Stephan Virgil made the interception, the Hokies went 54 yards in 11 plays and

Dustin Keys' 43-yard field goal ended the half.



Keys made a 35-yarder to open the third for a 13-7 lead. Pike then threw another

interception on the ensuing Cincinnati possession, Kam Chancellor getting the

takeaway for the Hokies, sparking plenty of fist-shaking and helmet-slapping on an

excited Virginia Tech sideline.



It wasn't exactly a delirious crowd, though.



There were large patches of empty seats in Dolphin Stadium, which wasn't

altogether unexpected. Some tickets were available through online resale outlets in

recent days -- even Thursday morning -- for $1. Plenty more were offered for well

below face value, and the building looked a bit emptier after the Doobie Brothers

finished their halftime set.



Event officials said 15,781 sold tickets were unused.



And by the end, it seemed like only the heartiest Hokies fans remained to regale the

back-to-back ACC champs one final time.



"In the past we haven't been the top dog at the end," Harris said, "but tonight, that

all changed."



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