|
KRIS ON THE BLUE DEVILS
The always hard to figure out ACC continues with a battle of division front-runners this week. Yep, Duke and Virginia are currently tied for second in the Coastal Division with 2-1 records. As strange as that sounds, that makes this a big game to wrap up October.
When it comes to making the picks for this article every week, I always look at match-ups as my guide. Who has an edge somewhere? Well, this week provides an interesting 'game within the game' so to speak. Duke's passing offense is ranked No. 6 in the nation while UVa's passing defense is ranked No. 5 in the nation. 322.6 average passing yards gained vs. 151.3 average passing yards allowed. Something's gotta give!
So who do I think will win the mini-battle and, in turn, the game? I like Virginia's experienced corners within the 3-4 base defense and the DB depth in the dime defense package. Three guys - Chris Cook, Ras-I Dowling and Chase Minnifield - all have shown strong cover skills. Dom Joseph is talented and playing well for the sub defense. Plus, Al Groh is a great defensive coordinator when it comes to mixing up coverages and blitzes.
In other words, I think the defense slows down Duke enough for Virginia to win.
UVa 21, Duke 17 - Kris Wright, Sabre Editor
|
|
PAUL ON THE BLUE DEVILS
When Duke rolled UVa by four touchdowns last season, it broke a 25-game ACC losing streak for the Devils, dating back to the 2004 season. Now, Duke has the chance to beat Virginia for the second year in a row. The last time the Blue Devils defeated an ACC team twice in a row? The Devils downed Wake Forest in 1998 (19-16) and in '99 (48-35).
Turnovers are what killed the Hoos last year, and this year they will have to avoid them again - Duke has forced a turnover in five of its last seven games. The Virginia special teams will also have to show up, as the Blue Devils have recovered four fumbles on punts and blocked two kicks. Moreover, though, the Virginia offense - which netted fewer than 200 yards for the third time in 2008 against Georgia Tech - will have to wake up, while the defense will have to slow down a Duke passing game that is sixth in the country in passing yards.
Against a Georgia Tech offense that also focused on one dimension, though it was the run game, the Virginia defense struggled mightily at times, giving up 447 yards. The Cavalier run defense, though, has been suspect all season; UVa leads the ACC in pass defense, however, and it will slow down the Blue Devils this week. And, while the Virginia offense hasn't exactly been dynamite the last two weeks, it has taken care of the ball - one turnover in each of two rainy games is certainly excusable.
Offensively, Virginia doesn't turn the ball over and Mikell Simpson has a big day on some outside running, as Virginia renews its commitment to the run game after its tailbacks rushed just eight times last week. Defensively, the Cavalier front seven puts pressure on Thaddeus Lewis and their veteran secondary keeps him from making big plays downfield. Overall, Virginia plays with the emotion of a team that doesn't want to be labeled as the conference squad that lost to Duke two years in a row for the first time in a decade.
UVa 27, Duke 17 - Paul Montana, Sabre intern
|