GREENVILLE, N.C. -- Virginia Tech answered some major questions about
its young football team Thursday night, all while reiterating its strength --
special teams.
The 10th-ranked Hokies (2-0) blocked two kicks, disrupted another one deep
in East Carolina territory and had an 87-yard punt return in the first half en
route to a 45-28 victory.
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| Michael Vick had a lot to smile about as Virginia Tech rolled to victory.(AP) | |
"It's not just coming out and blocking a kick, it's making the opponent
nervous for a bad snap or a bobble," said Cory Bird, who emerged from the
locker room and grabbed a piece of turf to take back to Blacksburg, Va., in a
lunch bucket. "We come out and intimidated."
Michael Vick barely broke a sweat in the opening 30 minutes, completing five
passes for 56 yards. But Virginia Tech still managed a 31-0 lead in beating the
Pirates (1-1) for the fifth straight time since 1993.
"At halftime I told them we probably had lost the football game," East
Carolina coach Steve Logan said he told his club. "I asked them, `How do you
want to finish this game?"'
Vick closed with 106 yards passing and 13 yards rushing, but the Hokies
didn't need a big game from their star quarterback.
"It was those other 21 cats out there," Logan said. "I tell you, they're
all good."
Virginia Tech blocked 63 kicks in the '90s under coach Frank Beamer and
added a punt and a field goal against a reeling East Carolina team that had
practiced hard all week in an attempt to protect punter Wes Herlocker.
But Herlocker wasn't to blame for two disastrous punt attempts three minutes
apart that gave the Hokies a quick 10-0 lead in the first quarter and helped
turn the game around.
Herlocker was dropped at the East Carolina 35 after the ball came skidding
back to him from snapper Ryan Luckadoo. That miscue resulted in a 46-yard field
goal by Carter Warley.
The next snap from Luckadoo was high, and Wayne Ward burst through to block
the kick. Bird scooped up the ball and raced into the end zone untouched from 9
yards out.
"We were way too high to play this game," Logan said. "It was very
uncharacteristic play for this football program."
Things didn't get much better for East Carolina's offense. Late in the
opening quarter, David Garrard was intercepted as he was being hit at his 17.
Thirty-five seconds later, Andre' Kendrick bolted in from 14 yards and the rout
was on.
Despite leading 17-0, Kendrick's run was Virginia Tech's first offensive
first down.
The Hokies added a 7-yard scoring run from Jarrett Ferguson before the
special teams took over again.
The Pirates finally got off a decent punt, but Andre Davis returned it 87
yards, faking out Herlocker on his final move, for a 31-0 lead. The return was
the second longest in school history.
East Carolina crossed midfield late in the second quarter, but a 25-yard
field goal attempt was -- you guessed it -- blocked. The block was the 78th in
152 games under Beamer.
Virginia Tech's defense, criticized for giving up more than 400 yards to
Akron in Saturday's season-opening 52-23 win, limited the Pirates to 132 yards
in the opening half.
"I thought we took a big step," Beamer said. "For us to have as many
young guys as we do and to play as well as we did I am very pleased. It shows
you that if you get some big plays in the kicking game, get a turnover, you can
get control of the game very quickly."
East Carolina closed to 31-14 with 4:08 left in the third quarter, but Lee
Suggs raced 56 yards untouched less than a minute later to halt the Pirates'
momentum.
"I think they were taken back (by the blocked kicks), but East Carolina is
not going to quit on you," Beamer said. "They showed you that last year
against Miami."
The Pirates were nearly perfect in a 38-0 opening victory over Duke on
Saturday, but started the game with a pass-interference penalty as Vick went
deep on the first play.
East Carolina held, but made a major mistake on offense as a 52-yard pass
play to the Virginia Tech 5 was called back because of an illegal formation.
Then the kicking woes began and things unraveled for the Pirates in front of
45,123 -- the second largest crowd in Dowdy-Ficklen Stadium history.
"It calmed things down a little bit and it needed to," Beamer said of the
loud crowd.
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