Yep, not a good effort by the entire Hokie players and coaches. The problem is the difficulty getting kids up every week to play. It's tough to do and this is where talent is key. Alabama can have 3 out of 12 games where they are emotionally just going through the motions, but their talent overcomes and compensates and they get the Ws. We don't have that luxury anymore.
Believe it or not, Louisville and VT are equal in recruiting the last four years on average. The difference is a guy like MV in Louisville's QB that can be a game changer. We watched it today with Clemson and NC St. Clemson did not seem to be fully engaged emotionally, but their talent was just to much in the end for NC State. Add this talent to a boneheaded move by NC States Coach late in regulation that helped the cause.
At UNC last week, they came unprepared emotionally and even though they are more talented than us, it is not a gigantic gap. It's kind of like us and Cuse. In Spurrier book, he said the hardest thing to do in college football as a coach is getting your kids emotionally invested each week. Lou Holtz often said the same. Having some weeks in which kids are just not emotionally invested is nearly a given each year for all teams. The key is having the talent or a special elite player to overcome it, or....if you have that team that is not the most talented, but is the rare team that for that given year is emotionally invested each game, you get some of those Boise St teams of the past, or Utah on that given year, or Georgia Tech in 1990, or Washington in 1991 or West Va in 1987-88, or BYU in 1984, but these are few and far between, and even in some cases, the talent is still to much like it was for WVU against Notre Dame in that national title game.