Hokies

NCAAB Virginia Tech Hokies
General Information
Conference: Atlantic Coast Conference
NCAA Division: Division I
City: Blacksburg, VA
Stadium: Cassell Coliseum
Championships
- National Championships: None
- Conference Titles: 2
- NCAA Tournaments: 1967, 1976, 1979, 1980, 1985, 1986, 1996, 2007, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2021, 2022
Past Conferences:
- Big East
- Atlantic-10
- Metro
- Southern
- Independent
Virginia Tech Hokies Standings & Analysis
Check out all the updated Boston Virginia Tech Hokies standings, recent college football news and NCAAB betting tips, here at Point Spreads.
All-Time Virginia Tech Hokies Stats & Records
Points Scored
⦁ Bimbo Coles: 2,484
⦁ Dell Curry: 2,385
⦁ Malcolm Delaney: 2,255
Rebounds
⦁ Chris Smith: 1,508
⦁ Ace Custis: 1,177
⦁ Jeff Allen: 1,111
Assists
⦁ Justin Robinson: 562
⦁ Bimbo Coles: 547
⦁ Malcolm Delaney: 543
Wins
⦁ Charles Moir: 213
⦁ Seth Greenberg: 170
⦁ Chuck Noe: 109
Overview of the Virginia Tech Hokies Standings
Last-Season Standings
The Virginia Tech Hokies had a solid start to the 2021-2022 NCAAB season, winning their first four games of the year. Their early success was largely due to a strong defense that held opponents to just 60 points per game. As a result, the Hokies found themselves near the top of the ACC standings early in the season. However, as conference play heated up, Virginia Tech struggled to maintain their early success and found themselves slipping in the Virginia Tech Hokies Standings.
Despite their mid-season struggles, the Hokies continued to fight and were able to put together a strong finish to the regular season. Led by standout guard Tyrece Radford, Virginia Tech won four of their last five games and finished the year with a 16-10 record. While they didn’t finish at the top of the Virginia Tech Hokies Standings, the team’s strong finish earned them a spot in the ACC tournament.
In the first round of the tournament, the Hokies faced off against the Clemson Tigers, a team that had beaten them earlier in the season. However, Virginia Tech came out strong and was able to pull off the upset, winning the game 68-63. Their victory set up a showdown with the top-seeded Duke Blue Devils in the quarterfinals. Despite a valiant effort, the Hokies ultimately fell to the Blue Devils, ending their hopes of a deep tournament run.
While the Hokies’ season didn’t end the way they had hoped, there were still plenty of positives to take away from the year. The team’s strong start, led by their suffocating defense, showed that they were capable of competing with the best teams in the ACC. Additionally, the team’s strong finish to the regular season and upset victory in the conference tournament proved that they were a resilient and tough-minded group. As they look ahead to next season, the Hokies will undoubtedly be focused on building on these positives and making a run at the top of the Virginia Tech Hokies Standings.
Before Betting on Virginia Tech Hokies, Check Out These Tips:
Monitor the NCAAB team’s injury report
Injuries or absences of key players can greatly affect a team’s performance. Check the injury report and make sure you know who will be playing in the game.
Monitor latest Basketball trends and statistics
Line movements refer to changes in the point spread or odds leading up to a game. If the odds or point spread for a Virginia Tech game move significantly in one direction, it can indicate that the public is betting heavily on one side, or that there is insider information affecting the game.
Look at College Basketball betting trends and odds
Line movements refer to changes in the point spread or odds leading up to a game. If the odds or point spread for a Virginia Tech game move significantly in one direction, it can indicate that the public is betting heavily on one side, or that there is insider information affecting the game.
Consider the NCAA team’s overall talent level
Analyze the strengths and weaknesses of the opposing team. Look at their past performances and their style of play. This can help you make informed decisions when placing your bet.
Virginia Tech Hokies Basketball History
The Hokies spent 44 seasons in the old Southern Conference and won it just once, in 1960, before losing to Jerry West and West Virginia in the conference tournament. That denied the team an entry into the NCAA Tournament and it wouldn’t gain a spot in the event until 1967.
The 1972-73 team went 22-5 as an independent team, capping the nseason with a memorable NIT run in which it won four games in eight days at Madison Square Garden by a total of five points. A 92-91 overtime win against Notre Dame gave the Hokies the crown.
Virginia Tech joined the Metro in 1978-79, beginning a dizzying sequence of conference shifts that would put the team in four different leagues over 26 years. The first two Metro teams under head coach Charles Moir made it to the Big Dance.
Moir brought two more teams to the tournament in the mid-1980s, led by an outstanding shooting guard named Dell Curry. His son, Stephen, is now widely considered the greatest outside shooter the game has ever known.
Dell Curry was a star in his own right, averaging 24.1 points per game his senior year in 1985-86 before embarking on a 16-year NBA career.
Moir left after the 1986-87 campaign. Over the next 19 years, the program would endure 12 losing seasons under five different head coaches while moving from the Metro to the Atlantic-10 to the Big East (for just four seasons) and finally to the ACC. That last move was the culmination of decades of flirtation between the program and the ACC, most of which resulted in disappointment on the part of Hokies fans who coveted entry into the league with Duke, North Carolina and others.
Coach Seth Greenberg
Seth Greenberg was the coach to take the program into its next phase. He led the 2006-07 team – the third since the move to the ACC – to a third-place finish in the conference and a first-round win in the NCAA Tournament. Greenberg averaged over 20 wins over his next five seasons, winning his second ACC Coach of the Year Award in 2008, but the team never got back to the tourney under his leadership and he was fired after the 2011-12 season.
Buzz Williams led the Hokies back to the NCAA Tournament for three straight appearances between 2017 and 2019, the last of which saw his team reach the Sweet 16. That squad, led by future NBAers Nickeil Alexander-Walker and James Robinson, produced a program-record of 26 wins.
Mike Young took over when Williams left for Texas A&M before the 2019-20 season. Young, who made Wofford a power in the Southern Conference, led the Hokies to a third-place ACC finish in his first full season (2020-21) and then the program reached new heights last season.
His team won nine of its final 11 games in the regular season and then defied NCAAB odds by knocking off Notre Dame, Clemson, North Carolina, and Duke on successive days to steal the ACC tournament title.
It was the team’s first conference crown since the 1979 Metro. Alas, it was one and done in the NCAA Tournament.
Virginia Tech Hokies NCAAB FAQs
What is the highest win total in program history?
What was the worst season in program history?
Who is the greatest player in program history?
Bimbo Coles remains the all-time Hokies leader in points scored and he’s second in assists. The 1987-88 Metro Conference Player of the Year led that league in scoring three straight times, averaging at least 24.2 points per game each time.
Coles was taken in the second round of the 1990 NBA draft and lasted 14 years in the pros.