Current:Home > NewsEmotions will run high for Virginia as the Cavaliers honor slain teammate ahead of 1st home game -TrueNorth Finance Path
Emotions will run high for Virginia as the Cavaliers honor slain teammate ahead of 1st home game
Benjamin Ashford View
Date:2025-04-09 16:30:05
CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. (AP) — Virginia will play its first home football game in 10 months on Saturday and the Cavaliers hope it is the high point of a long, emotional journey that started in an horrific way.
Tributes and dedications for three players slain last Nov. 13 began Friday with a tree planting and placement of a plaque to honor them as well as another player and a female student who were wounded. The victims will be remembered in an on-field ceremony a half-hour before the noon kickoff against James Madison.
“At UVA, we have a tradition of planting trees to mark the tradition and the moments that have shaped our history,” school President Jim Ryan said before those in attendance, including family members of the players killed, were allowed to help encase the roots in soil.
The tree, an oak, can grow to as tall as 60 feet and live for hundreds of years. The plaque will serve as a reminder of the lives of Devin Chandler, Lavel Davis Jr. and D’Sean Perry. Authorities just this week upgraded the murder charges against the former teammate accused in the attack.
The tragedy caused the cancellation of Virginia’s final two games last year. Instead, there were three funerals to attend, as a team, vigils and a moving memorial service.
The Cavaliers admitted to being emotional when they reconvened in the spring for 15 days of practice, especially when shooting survivor Mike Hollins was in uniform. Their first game back came last Saturday in Nashville, Tennessee, where they lost 49-13 to No. 9 Tennessee.
This game, though, will be different. When the Cavaliers run out of the stadium tunnel before kickoff, it will be toward an end zone painted with the words “UVA Strong” and the names and numbers of the three slain.
The end zone will remain painted to honor them throughout the season. The Cavaliers will wear helmet decals and those wearing jerseys Nos. 1, 15 and 41 — the numbers of the three killed — will have legacy patches on them. The visiting Dukes also will wear helmet decals.
As second-year Virginia coach Tony Elliott has said numerous times since the killings, there is no playbook, no formula for how a program recovers, or how individual players do.
“You’ve got to compartmentalize and be strategic with the hours in the day and know when you need to focus on football,” Elliott said this week. “They’ve also got academics they’ve got to continue to focus on and then also spending the appropriate amount of time mentally preparing themselves for the emotional rollercoaster that they’re going to have late in the week and then also on game day. And so it’s a delicate balance.”
In a statement she read at a news conference without taking questions, athletic director Carla Williams said, “We promised the family members that we would never forget their loved ones and we will keep that promise.”
Williams praised the Virginia players, several of whom considered transferring but chose to return for the opportunity to play in honor of their teammates: “We love you because despite the adversity, you refuse to quit,” Williams said. “The life lessons you’re learning in these moments will carry you further than you could have ever imagined.”
The players have said their way to honor the memories of the players will be by showing up every day, giving their all and remembering that everything can be taken away in an instant. Results would be nice, too, but as Elliott builds his program, that’s a tall order. The Cavaliers were 3-8 last season, his first as a head coach.
The Cavaliers and their fans won’t be the only ones familiar with the emotional aspects of the weekend. James Madison had a star softball player take her own life last year.
“We enter a community still grieving and still healing, and we will be grieving alongside them on Saturday,” athletic director Jeff Bourne said, noting that he, JMU president Jonathan Alger and Sun Belt Commissioner Keith Gill will be among those on the field for the pregame ceremony.
Between the lines, Bourne said, he wants Dukes fans to be fierce and supportive of their team, while at the same time, “we must find the appropriate balance between competition and compassion by standing strong with UVA to offer our support for healing.”
___
AP college football: https://apnews.com/hub/college-football and https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-football-poll
veryGood! (376)
Related
- See you latte: Starbucks plans to cut 30% of its menu
- Residents are ready to appeal after a Georgia railroad company got approval to forcibly buy land
- Delinquent student loan borrowers face credit score risks as ‘on-ramp’ ends September 30
- 'A great day for Red Lobster': Company exiting bankruptcy, will operate 544 locations
- Current, future North Carolina governor’s challenge of power
- Why Lady Gaga Hasn't Smoked Weed in Years
- Hawaii can ban guns on beaches, an appeals court says
- A Maryland high school fight involving a weapon was ‘isolated incident,’ police say
- Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
- North Carolina GOP leaders reach spending deal to clear private school voucher waitlist
Ranking
- From family road trips to travel woes: Americans are navigating skyrocketing holiday costs
- 'Sopranos' creator talks new documentary, why prequel movie wasn't a 'cash grab'
- Family of Holocaust survivor killed in listeria outbreak files wrongful death lawsuit
- Hey, politicians, stop texting me: How to get the candidate messages to end
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- Texas Republican attorney general sues over voter registration efforts in Democrat strongholds
- Lee Daniels: Working on Fox hit 'Empire' was 'absolutely the worst experience'
- Amazon says in a federal lawsuit that the NLRB’s structure is unconstitutional
Recommendation
Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
Kate Middleton Shares Rare Statement Amid Cancer Diagnosis
You’ll Want to Add These 2024 Fall Book Releases to Your TBR Pile
'Wrong from start to finish': PlayStation pulling Concord game 2 weeks after launch
Former longtime South Carolina congressman John Spratt dies at 82
150 cats rescued from hoarding home in Missouri after authorities conduct welfare check
Sicily Yacht Victims Died of Dry Drowning After Running Out of Oxygen in the Cabin
Sting talks upcoming tour, friendship with Billy Joel and loving Austin Butler in 'Dune'