Harry Lyles Jr., ESPN Staff WriterMay 10, 2024, 07:00 AM ET
In an era of college football with roster turnover at an all-time high, Virginia Tech has worked to build a culture that stresses continuity. That continuity has led expectations to blossom in Blacksburg.
A big reason for those expectations was a strong finish to the 2023 season, which resulted in the school’s first bowl win since 2016 and its first season with a winning record since 2019. But a bigger reason is the returning production from that group.
Based on the most recent numbers compiled by ESPN’s Bill Connelly, the Hokies return 84% of their production from last season, fourth most in FBS, with 91% of their offensive production back and 77% of their defense returning.
Coach Brent Pry told ESPN that level of consistency has been, and will continue to be, a point of emphasis for Virginia Tech.
“We know a lot more about our players on our team right now than what we did last year at this time,” Pry said. “For years, even as a defensive coordinator, you go down your depth chart, and you want to know what you’re going to get from a guy when you put him out there. … And so we have a lot more guys that have proven and have the experience, have the consistency, the work ethic, the attitude. You kind of know what you’re going to get.”
The continuity of the roster makes the job of piecing together a winning team easier for Pry, entering his third season in Blacksburg, and his coaching staff.
Of course, a team with high expectations needs a star quarterback, and the Hokies have one in Kyron Drones.
Drones took over at quarterback for the Hokies last season after Grant Wells went down with a leg injury, and he elevated the Virginia Tech offense. Drones was 19th in total QBR from Week 5 on and finished the season with 2,085 yards passing with 17 touchdowns and just three interceptions, along with 818 rushing yards and five touchdowns.
“He just gets better all the time,” Pry said. “He’s a guy that really learns with reps. I mean, he hadn’t started a college football game when he got here.”
Drones, Sanders and Ward worked out together in Miami during spring break in March, but Drones said that’s nothing new, as he’s been working out with Ward, his cousin, and Sanders since high school. Drones began training with Darrell Colbert of Select QB Athletics, based out of Houston, and once Sanders and Ward began to train with Colbert, working out together became a thing.
One of Drones’ focuses this offseason is trying to be an extension of offensive coordinator Tyler Bowen.
“That can help a long way with just me being able to tell a receiver or a lineman, everybody, their job,” Drones said. “I could do that last year, but this year is going to be different where the coaches don’t really have to make as many calls for me to know that I can make those calls on my own, and then just really run the offense and facilitate the offense as a quarterback.”
Pry is confident teammates will take to Drones as an emerging leader.
“The guys have a ton of faith in him,” Pry said. “I remember the play down at Florida State, we’re getting our butts kicked pretty good. And all of a sudden he takes off and runs for 50-some yards, makes guys miss, runs over a guy and our sideline kind of went, ‘Wow, look at Kyron!’ He’s just got that kind of gravity with the team.”
Drones said he’s called on teammates for individual workouts and taken it upon himself to try to bond with them off the field as well, especially transfers who are new to the program.
But he recognizes being a leader can require some tough conversations as well. “When things are not going good, somebody’s got to say something. That should be me,” he said.
“People say I cemented myself, but I know it’s people still coming from my spot. So I just have to keep competing each and every day and just keep working.”
The elements are in place for Virginia Tech to take another step up in 2024, but Pry notes it hasn’t been a fast process. And that’s fine with him, because the slow burn has brought the consistency that he and the program desire.
Pry cited three things that have helped Virginia Tech return to this place of high expectations.
“Culturally, to be transparent and genuine with our team and our coaches,” Pry said. “Along with that, embracing hard conversations that come with the transparency and being genuine. I think we’ve gained a lot from that.
“Second, the ability to recruit our footprint and sign a ton of high school players that we’re developing, which is right for Virginia Tech, and is part of the consistency and continuity that you hope for. You’re bringing guys in that are right for Tech that want to be here, and you can grow them in your program.
“Third, the ability to go to the transfer portal and fill true needs with the right type of guys. … This year, we’ll see still, but we took five [transfers] at the right positions. So far, they’ve been great in the locker room, they’re workers, are selfless, and they’re at spots where we had to help ourselves.
“That’s the difference between shortcutting and trying to do things quickly,” Pry said. “I’m not faulting somebody else’s process, but for us, it’s just going to take time to get it where we want, where you can sustain it. The process is the process, and the freshmen come in, and they see it and they grow in it, and coaches included. Being able to retain so many guys, and retain our coaching staff, really helps continue to move that forward.”
Despite this iteration of Virginia Tech football riding through the offseason with increased anticipation, Pry has tried to keep his team in a level frame of mind.
“We had a ton of noise when we’re 1-3, right? Everybody bitching, you know. And we talked about ignoring any noise and what mattered,” he said. “And they did a great job with that. And what we can learn from that, because now there’s a lot of noise — top 25, top 10 quarterback — it’s still noise, guys. It didn’t mean anything when it was [negative], it doesn’t really mean anything now.
“I love the pats on the back. But if we don’t stay humble and hungry, and win each phase, we can go win four games. So reminding them of how we improved and what that looked like, and just trust the process.”
Part of that process is focusing on the task at hand and not getting ahead of themselves by worrying about the summer or training camp, let alone the start of the season.
“I don’t even know who we play in Week 3 or 4,” Pry said. “That’s the message, and they’re bought into that.”
Setting the outside noise aside, there is belief within the program that this could be the year Virginia Tech football makes its way back to the national spotlight.
“Everybody’s working really hard to try to get Virginia Tech back where it used to be,” Drones said. “We already know where it used to be and we already know Virginia Tech had down years. Last year was just a step up toward where we want to be.
“This year, we’re going to work our hardest to just try to get to where we want to be — win the ACC and get in that playoff.”
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DENVER — The Colorado Rockies fired manager Bud Black on Sunday, one day after losing by 21 runs to the San Diego Padres at Coors Field.
The Rockies are off to a major-league-worst 7-33 start even after defeating the Padres 9-3 on Sunday to salvage one game in the home series and snap an eight-game skid. Third-base coach Warren Schaeffer will serve as interim manager for the rest of the season, and hitting coach Clint Hurdle will be the interim bench coach.
The Rockies, who also fired bench coach Mike Redmond, will open a road trip Monday night against the Texas Rangers and try to turn a corner. Even with Sunday’s victory, Colorado has the worst 40-game start since the 1988 Baltimore Orioles, who were 6-34.
“Our play so far this season, especially coming off the last two seasons, has been unacceptable. Our fans deserve better, and we are capable of better,” Rockies owner, chairman and CEO Dick Monfort said in a statement. “While we all share responsibility in how this season has played out, these changes are necessary. We will use the remainder of 2025 to improve where we can on the field and to evaluate all areas of our operation so we can properly turn the page into the next chapter of Rockies Baseball.”
Black was in his ninth year as Rockies manager and had a career record with Colorado of 544-690. He is the winningest manager in franchise history.
Before Saturday night’s 21-0 drubbing, Rockies general manager Bill Schmidt backed Black, telling The Denver Post that he believed the season still could be turned around.
“I think our guys are still playing hard, and that’s what I look at,” Schmidt told the Post. “Guys are working hard every day; they come with energy, for the most part. I don’t think we are [at that point of firing Black]. Guys still believe in what we are doing and where we are headed. We are all frustrated.”
Schmidt said he was looking for “growth” as the season goes along.
“I feel for the fans; I feel for the people around here,” he said. “I know we are better than we have played, but we are not good right now. We have to battle through it and get to the other side. There are still a lot of games left. I think we can turn it around, but it’s going to take a whole group to do it. The guys are working to get better.”
Colorado was 19½ games out of first place in the NL West before Sunday’s win. The Rockies have been outscored by 128 runs this season. The only team since 1900 with a worse run differential through 40 games was the 2023 Oakland Athletics (-144).
The seventh manager in team history, Black initially found success with Colorado when he led the Rockies to back-to-back playoff appearances in 2017 and 2018. They haven’t finished with a winning record since and are coming off two straight 100-loss seasons. Colorado has a .353 winning percentage since 2023.
Black’s contract was set to expire after the season. He signed a one-year extension in October.