| Virginia Tech Hokies | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| |||
| First season | 1892; 134 years ago | ||
| Athletic director | Whit Babcock | ||
| General manager | Andy Frank | ||
| Head coach | James Franklin 1st season, 0–0 (–) | ||
| Stadium | Lane Stadium (capacity: 65,632) | ||
| Field | Worsham Field | ||
| Location | Blacksburg, Virginia | ||
| NCAA division | Division I FBS | ||
| Conference | ACC | ||
| All-time record | 775–509–46 (.600) | ||
| Bowl record | 14–22 (.389) | ||
| National finalist | |||
| 1999 | |||
| Conference championships | |||
| SAIAA:1909,1916,1918 SoCon:1963 Big East:1995,1996,1999 ACC:2004,2007,2008,2010 | |||
| Conference division championships | |||
| ACC Coastal:2005,2007,2008,2010,2011,2016 | |||
| ConsensusAll-Americans | 8 | ||
| Rivalries | Virginia (rivalry) West Virginia (rivalry) Miami (rivalry) Georgia Tech (rivalry) Boston College (rivalry) VMI (rivalry) | ||
| Current uniform | |||
| Colors | Chicago maroon and burnt orange[1] | ||
| Fight song | Tech Triumph | ||
| Mascot | Hokie Bird, Gobbler | ||
| Marching band | The Marching Virginians | ||
| Outfitter | Nike | ||
| Website | hokiesports.com | ||
TheVirginia Tech Hokies football team representsVirginia Polytechnic Institute and State University in the sport ofAmerican football. The Hokies compete in theFootball Bowl Subdivision (FBS) of theNational Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) and theCoastal Division of theAtlantic Coast Conference. They previously competed in theBig East. Their home games are played atLane Stadium, located inBlacksburg, Virginia, with a seating capacity of over 65,000 fans. Lane Stadium is considered to be one of the loudest stadiums in the country, being voted number two inESPN's 2007 "Top 20 Scariest Places to Play".[2] It was also recognized in 2005 byRivals.com as having the best home-field advantage in the country.[3]
Since beginning football in 1892, the Hokies have won over 700 games and appeared in 33 bowl games, including the2000 BCS National Championship game. The Hokies rank 23rd among all Division I college football teams formost wins. The program had a streak of 27 consecutive bowl appearances, starting with the1993 Independence Bowl and lasting through the2019 Belk Bowl.[4] This was fourth-longest streak of consecutive bowl game appearances in college football history.[5] The program has also claimed eleven conference titles (3 South Atlantic, 1 Southern, 3 Big East, and 4ACC) and produced eight Consensus All-Americans.[6][7]

Virginia Agricultural and Mechanical College (nowVirginia Tech) first played football on October 21, 1892, against St. Albans Lutheran Boys School (Radford, Virginia). The game took place on a plowed off wheat field that was "about as level as a side of Brush Mountain".[8] The Hokies won their first game 14–10, but were defeated 10–0 eight days later on a return trip to Radford.[9] The first several VAMC teams wore cadet gray and black, but in1896 the colors were changed to Burnt Orange andChicago Maroon – a color combination that was unique among educational institutions at the time.
The1899,1901, and1903 teams lost only to rival Virginia. Star playerHunter Carpenter returned to Virginia Tech in1905, after a year at theUniversity of North Carolina, for a last shot at beating Virginia. Carpenter helped lead VPI to a 9–1 record, the best in school's history up to that time. He was never named to theAll-America team only becauseWalter Camp, who named the team at the time, said he would never name a player who he had not seen play.
The1909 team claim a southern championship. This is the first season the team was referred to in print as the "Gobblers,” which became the official nickname in 1912.[10]
At the end of the 1911 season, VPI joined theSouth Atlantic Intercollegiate Athletic Association (SAIAA). They won the conference in1916 and1918. After 1921, the SAIAA was dissolved and six of its schools became founding members of theSouthern Conference.
From 1925 to 1928, Tech was led byFrank Peake and the "Pony Express"backfield. He was joined by Scotty MacArthur, Herbert "Mac" McEver and Tommy Tomko.[11] In 1927, during a 6–0 upset of theColgate Red Raiders inNew York, Peake ran for nearly 200 yards and scored the game's only points. During one three-game stretch, he accumulated rushing and return yardage of 306, 314 and 353 yards. He was credited with gaining 1,761 yards in eight games. 930 were from scrimmage, and 831 on punts and kickoffs.[12] In 1928 the game againstVirginia he came off the sideline with an injured hip to return a punt for a touchdown.[11]
In 1932, Tech upsetGeorgia 7–6.[13]Bill Grinus blocked the tying extra point.[14]
Virginia Tech's first post-season bowl appearance was in the1947 Sun Bowl inEl Paso, Texas, against theUniversity of Cincinnati.[15] Tech had a 3–3–3 record that year, and was the third choice after Border Conference championsHardin–Simmons University and runner-upTexas Tech Red Raiders both declined the bowl invitation.[16] Tech lost that game 18–6.
Another first for the Gobblers came in 1954 when they had their first, and only, unbeaten season in school history. The team was 8–0–1 and finished ranked 16th in the Associated Press post-season football poll.[17] The team's lone blemish was a 7–7 tie against William & Mary in Blacksburg, Virginia. Despite the team's success, it did not appear in a post-season bowl game. The 1963 team captured Tech's only outright SoCon championship.[13]
In the 1970s, Tech briefly adopted an aggressive passing offense under head coachCharlie Coffey; quarterbackDon Strock set virtually every passing record in the Hokies' book and would hold many for 30 years or more. Success, though, remained elusive.
In the early 1980s, football coach and athletic director,Bill Dooley spearheaded a campaign for a new look and name for the mascot, which debuted at the 1981 football game against Wake Forest. The turkey-like figure was referred to as "the Hokie mascot", "the Hokie", and "the Hokie bird" (derived from the "Old Hokie" cheer), which resulted in changing the official designation of the Virginia Tech mascot to the Hokies. Dooley led the Hokies to the program's first-ever bowl win, in the1986 Peach Bowl overNC State, but he also earned the program NCAA sanctions that led to his resignation that very offseason (after which he promptly sued the school).
Though many hoped for recently departed Maryland coachBobby Ross, athletic director Dutch Baughman turned toFrank Beamer, a Hokie alumnus and defensive back from 1966 to 1968. Beamer had worked his way up the assistant coaching ladder since his 1969 graduation before spending six seasons in the head job atMurray State. Among the assistants Beamer brought with him from the Racers was linebackers coachBud Foster, who had joined Beamer's first Murray State staff as a graduate assistant immediately upon his own graduation there.

Virginia Tech joined the Big East Conference for football play in 1991 (later joined for all sports in 2000). The Hokies were competitive in the new league early on, but could never beat annual foe, the Miami Hurricanes, despite eventually having a 6–6 record vs. the Hurricanes during the Big East years.[18] In 1993, the Hokies earned a trip to theIndependence Bowl inShreveport, Louisiana, its first bowl game under Beamer. With a win in that game, the Hokies notched only the fourth nine-win season in school history at the time. It became the first of 23 straight bowl games under Beamer, until he retired in 2015.
After finally beating the Hurricanes during the 1995 regular season, the 13th ranked Hokies clinched a berth in theSugar Bowl inNew Orleans, Louisiana–the program's first appearance in a major bowl game. They beat the 9th ranked Texas Longhorns 28–10. This was a signature win for the Hokies, capping the most successful season to date; it became turning point for the program as a whole.
Virginia Tech's most successful football season was in1999 under the guidance of redshirt freshman quarterback,Michael Vick. Among other amazing moments, on November 3, the Hokies came from behind on the road, to win against theWest Virginia Mountaineers. Vick led a desperate last minute drive that culminated in a dramaticShayne Graham game-winning field goal. The 22–20 victory has since become known as the "Miracle in Morgantown."[19] The team completed the year with its first ever undefeated regular season, finishing with an (11–0) record. On January 4, 2000, the Hokies faced theFlorida State Seminoles in the2000 Sugar Bowl for the national championship. A back and forth game, the Hokies trailed 28–7 late in the second quarter but came back to take a 29–28 lead at the start of the fourth. However, they were not able to hold on and the Seminoles won 46–29. The Hokies finished third in the AP Poll and second in the Coaches Poll–in both cases, the highest final ranking in school history and the highest ever for a Division I team from the Commonwealth.
The following season, in 2000, the Hokies were again contenders for the national championship, but a loss to No. 3Miami in early November, in a game in which Michael Vick was limited because of an injury, cost them a trip to theOrange Bowl. The Hokies later went on to defeat theClemson Tigers 41–20 in the2001 Gator Bowl inJacksonville, Florida.
At the start of the2004 season, the Hokies faced the No. 1 and eventual national championUSC Trojans in theBCA Classic played atFedExField inLandover, Maryland. The Hokies kept the game close, but eventually lost 24–13. The regular season ended with the Hokies winning the ACC championship in their first year in the conference and a return to the Sugar Bowl and a match-up with theAuburn Tigers. Auburn, the SEC champion and one of three undefeated teams (USC and Oklahoma being the other two), took a 16–0 lead into the fourth quarter. Led by senior quarterbackBryan Randall, the Hokies scored 13 points but fell just short of the comeback when the Tigers recovered an onside kick and ran out the clock.
The2005 season saw many ups and downs, but would end in disappointment. Taking over for Bryan Randall wasMarcus Vick, younger brother of Hokies great Michael Vick. The Hokies started off the season 8–0, including victories overWest Virginia and ACC rivalsGeorgia Tech andBoston College. Going into the tenth week of the season, the Hokies were ranked 3rd in the country behind USC and Texas and would face the 5th rankedMiami Hurricanes at home. In anticipation of the match-up,ESPN'sCollege Gameday would broadcast the game nationally from Blacksburg onESPN. The Hurricanes controlled the game and limited Marcus Vick to only 90 yards passing to win 27–7.
Marcus Vick led the Hokies and went on to win the ACC Coastal Division title, but lost in theACC Championship Game toFlorida State. The Hokies again trailed the Seminoles by double digits at halftime, 27–3, but a Vick led comeback brought the score to 27–22 with 1:45 left in the fourth quarter. The Hokies were unable to recover the onside kick and lost their chance at a BCS Bowl berth.
The Hokies closed the season against the upstartLouisville Cardinals in the2006 Gator Bowl. Virginia Tech won 35–24, but the game would become infamous for a play that would contribute to Vick's expulsion from the team. Late in the first half, with the Hokies trailing 17–10, Vick was tackled by Cardinals defensive endElvis Dumervil. After the play, Vick stomped on Dumervil's leg, apparently out of anger. Four days after the game, Virginia Tech officials learned of two misdemeanor charges of speeding and driving on a suspended or revoked driver's license that Vick received on December 17, 2005. Vick, who was forced to sit out the2004 football season by the university due to previous legal incidents in his college career, was dismissed from the team on January 6, 2006, with the university citing "a cumulative effect of legal infractions and unsportsmanlike play.".[20]
Redshirt sophomore quarterbackSean Glennon was set to take over for Vick in the2006 season. Although consecutive losses to Georgia Tech and Boston College knocked the Hokies out of contention for theACC Championship Game, the Tech team finished the season strong, winning six in a row and being invited to the2006 Chick-fil-A Bowl inAtlanta. In the annual ACC vs SEC match-up, the Hokies played theGeorgia Bulldogs. At halftime the Hokies led 21–3, but four second half Glennon turnovers helped the Bulldogs in coming back and winning 31–24.
After the April 2007Virginia Tech shootings that stunned the campus and nation, the remainder of Tech's spring practice was canceled. The Hokies, led by running backBrandon Ore on offense and linebackersVince Hall andXavier Adibi looked to be in contention for a berth in the National Championship. The2007 home opener against theEast Carolina Pirates was the subject ofCollege GameDay, and the Hokies prevailed in an emotional, albeit shaky, game 17–7. They then traveled toBaton Rouge, Louisiana, to play theLSU Tigers. In a game that saw Glennon replaced by true freshman quarterbackTyrod Taylor, the Hokies were completely dominated, only managing 149 total yards against the Tigers' 598. Taylor scored the only touchdown of the night after an 8-play, 65-yard drive.
Taylor continued to start until an injury removed him from a 43–14 blowout ofDuke. In a Thursday night match-up withBoston College, Glennon reclaimed his starting position. In a game plagued by rain storms and wet conditions, the Hokies took a 10–0 lead late into the fourth quarter. However, Eagles quarterbackMatt Ryan spurred a late Boston College comeback, leading two TD drives in the final five minutes for a 14–10 win. Despite the devastating loss, Virginia Tech rebounded to win the remainder of its regular season games and claim the Coastal Division crown. A rematch with Boston College in theACC Championship Game saw Tech fall behind early, tie the game by halftime, and then grind out a tense 30–16 win to advance to theOrange Bowl inMiami.
After 29 seasons as head coach of Virginia Tech, legendary coachFrank Beamer retired following the conclusion of the2015 season. He coached the Hokies to 23 consecutive bowl games, including a national championship appearance, along with seven conference championship titles. Beamer signed an 8-year contract with Virginia Tech, serving as an ambassador for the Athletic Department.

During Beamer's tenure at Virginia Tech, putting points on the scoreboard became a full team effort with the offensive, defensive andspecial teams units. Often when the team scores one or more non-offensive touchdowns, the style of play is described as "Beamerball". Since Beamer's first season in 1987, a player at every position on the defensive unit has scored at least one touchdown, and 35 different players have scored touchdowns on Virginia Tech's special teams.[21]

Sometime before the 1995 season, defensive coordinatorBud Foster wanted to give his defense something to rally around, an identity. A battered metallunch pail was chosen as a symbol of a no-name, blue-collar defense. Each week a list of goals in put in the lunch pail and a player is chosen to have the honor of carrying the lunch pail onto the sidelines.[22][23][24] The Lunch Pail Defense Foundation was founded to fund academic scholarships for students from the area near Blacksburg, Virginia.[25]
On November 27, 2015, formerMemphis head coachJustin Fuente was named the new head coach of the Virginia Tech Hokies. Fuente took over the team from the retiring coachFrank Beamer following the 2015 Independence Bowl game.
The Hokies finished Fuente's first year in 2016 with a regular season record of 9–3 and an overall record of 10–4. The Hokies became Coastal Division Champions for the 6th time and the first time since 2011. The Hokies played Clemson in theACC Championship Game, losing 42–35. The team went to the2016 Belk Bowl, in Charlotte, NC, defeatingArkansas, 35–24. Fuente was named the 2016 ACC Coach of the Year and he received many other accolades for the 2016 season.
In 2017, the Hokies went 5–3 in ACC play, finishing second toMiami in the Coastal division, with an overall record of 9–4.[26] This result was good for a #22 ranking in the final 2017 CFB playoffs poll.[27] Earning a bowl game bid, Virginia Tech eventually lost to theOklahoma State Cowboys 30–21 in the2017 Camping World Bowl.
The Hokies' performance slid under Fuente in their 2018 season. This time they finished fifth in the Coastal Division, posting a 4–4 conference standing and 6–7 overall record, losing their sole game against a ranked team.[28] They then lost 35–31 to theCincincati Bearcats in the2018 Military Bowl.
Fuente steered Virginia Tech to better result in their 2019 campaign. The Hokies notched a 5–3 conference standing, ending up second to theVirginia Cavaliers in Coastal Conference play. In a dramatic game against theNorth Carolina Tarheels on October 19, 2019, the Hokies defeated their division rival 43–41 in 6 overtimes.[29] They went 1–1 against ranked opponents, with an overall record of 8–5.[30] Though the Hokies didn't have a final CFB playoff ranking, they did reprise their 2016 Belk Bowl appearance, this time facing theKentucky Wildcats in the2019 Belk Bowl, where they ended up losing 37–30.[31]
The Hokies started the 2020 season ranked #24 in the preseason poll, ranking as high as #18 in by week four, then hovering around the top 20 until they eventually fell out of the poll after ranking #19 in week seven.[32] Fuente guided the team to a middling result, tallying a 5–5 ACC record and 5–6 overall standing.[33] Virginia Tech then ended its 27-year bowl game appearance record – the nation's longest streak at the time – opting to forgo postseason play. The challenges presented by the pandemic, combined with concerns over Fuente's performance, prompted the surprise announcement a day after a virtual press conference on Tuesday, December 15, 2020, called by Athletic DirectorWhit Babcock.[34][35]
Virginia Tech kept Fuente at the helm as it began its 2021 season, producing a 4–4 ACC result and third-place finish in the Coastal Division, and a 6–7 overall record.[36] Fuente was fired with two regular season games remaining on November 16, 2021, after compiling an overall record of 43–31 in six seasons.[37]J. C. Price took over as interim coach to wrap-up the season. The Hokies then faced theMaryland Terrapins in the2021 Pinstripe Bowl, losing 54–10.
On November 30, 2021, the Hokies hiredPenn State defensive coordinator and linebackers coachBrent Pry as the new head coach.[38] In his first season, the Hokies had a 3–8 record, 1–6 in the ACC. In year two, Pry led the Hokies to their first winning season since 2019. Tech trounced UVA 55–17 in the regular season finale in Charlottesville, to earn a bowl bid.[39] Then Tech beat Tulane 41–20 in the Military Bowl in Annapolis to finish 7–6.
On November 17, 2025, formerPenn State head coachJames Franklin was named the new head coach of the Hokies.[40]
| Coach | Tenure |
|---|---|
| E. A. Smyth | 1892–1893 |
| Joseph Massie | 1894 |
| Arlie C. Jones | 1895–1896 |
| Charles Firth | 1897 |
| J. Lewis Ingles | 1898 |
| James Morrison | 1899 |
| Eugene Davis | 1900 |
| A. B. Morrison Jr. | 1901 |
| R. R. Brown | 1902 |
| Charles Augustus Lueder | 1903 |
| John C. O'Connor | 1904 |
| Sally Miles | 1905–1906 |
| Bob Williams | 1907 |
| R. M. Brown | 1908 |
| Branch Bocock | 1909–1910 |
| Lew Riess | 1911 |
| Branch Bocock | 1912–1915 |
| Jack E. Ingersoll | 1916 |
| Charles A. Bernier | 1917–1919 |
| Stanley Sutton | 1920 |
| B. C. Cubbage | 1921–1925 |
| Andy Gustafson | 1926–1929 |
| Orville Neale | 1930–1931 |
| Henry Redd | 1932–1940 |
| James Kitts | 1941 |
| Herbert McEver &Sumner D. Tilson | 1942 |
| No team | 1943–1944 |
| Herbert McEver | 1945 |
| James Kitts | 1946–1947 |
| Bob McNeish | 1948–1950 |
| Frank Moseley | 1951–1960 |
| Jerry Claiborne | 1961–1970 |
| Charlie Coffey | 1971–1973 |
| Jimmy Sharpe | 1974–1977 |
| Bill Dooley | 1978–1986 |
| Frank Beamer | 1987–2015 |
| Justin Fuente | 2016–2021 |
| J. C. Price(interim) | 2021 |
| Brent Pry | 2022–2025 |
| Philip Montgomery(interim) | 2025 |
| James Franklin | 2026–present |
Virginia Tech claims 11 conference championships, nine outright and two shared.[41]: 136–140
| Year | Conference | Coach | Overall record | Conference record |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1909 | SAIAA | Branch Bocock | 6–1 | |
| 1916 | Jack E. Ingersoll | 7–2 | 4–0 | |
| 1918 | Charles A. Bernier | 7–0 | 3–0 | |
| 1963 | Southern Conference | Jerry Claiborne | 8–2 | 5–0 |
| 1995† | Big East Conference | Frank Beamer | 10–2 | 6–1 |
| 1996† | 10–2 | 6–1 | ||
| 1999 | 11–1 | 7–0 | ||
| 2004 | Atlantic Coast Conference | 10–3 | 7–1 | |
| 2007 | 11–3 | 7–1 | ||
| 2008 | 10–4 | 5–3 | ||
| 2010 | 11–3 | 8–0 |
† Co-champions
Virginia Tech won the ACC Championship in its inaugural season in the league in 2004. In 2005, the ACC Conference created two divisions, theAtlantic andCoastal, and a championship game between the divisions was established. Virginia Tech has appeared in theACC Championship Game as the winner of the Coastal Division six times. Virginia Tech won the Coastal division in 2005 and playedFlorida State in the ACC Championship. Florida State won, 27–22. During the 2007 season, the Hokies once again took the Coastal division to set up a rematch of their earlier loss toBoston College. Virginia Tech prevailed 30–16. History repeated itself in 2008, when the Hokies defeatedBoston College by a score of 30–12 after having lost to the Eagles during the regular season. In 2010 Virginia Tech went undefeated in league play, defeating Atlantic Division winnerFlorida State in the league championship game in Charlotte, North Carolina, 44–33. In 2011 Virginia Tech lost to Clemson for a 2nd time that season, their only two season losses. In 2016, Virginia Tech would fall short to Clemson, making a 3rd loss.
| Year | Division championship | Coach | Opponent | ACC CG result |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2005 | ACC Coastal | Frank Beamer | Florida State | L 22–27 |
| 2007 | Boston College | W 30–16 | ||
| 2008† | Boston College | W 30–12 | ||
| 2010 | Florida State | W 44–33 | ||
| 2011 | Clemson | L 10–38 | ||
| 2016 | Justin Fuente | Clemson | L 35–42 |
† Co-champions
The ACC eliminated Divisions for the 2023 season. The two teams with the highest winning percentage against other ACC teams play for the conference championship.
Virginia Tech has played in 36 bowl games. The Hokies have appeared in severalGator,Peach,Sugar,Belk,Military andOrange bowls. Their overall record in bowl games is 14–22 through the 2024 season.[42]
Virginia Tech and Virginia first met in 1895 and have played annually since the year 1970. Since 1964, the game has always been played at eitherLane Stadium orScott Stadium on the campuses of the two universities. But the series has at times been played inRichmond (1903, 1904, and 1957);Norfolk (1940, 1941, and 1942); andRoanoke (in 17 of the 19 years between 1945 and 1963). At 105 games, it is the longest series for the Hokies and second-longest for the Cavaliers, after the 129-game series between Virginia andNorth Carolina known as theSouth's Oldest Rivalry. The game counts for 1 point in theCommonwealth Clash each year, and is part of the greater Virginia–Virginia Tech rivalry.
Virginia Tech leads in the Commonwealth Cup series 17–3[citation needed][when?] and the football series 62–38–5 as of 2024.[43] Three times this game has determined the Coastal Division champions with VT winning in 2007 and 2011, and UVA winning in 2019.
The Hokies and West Virginia Mountaineers met 51 times between 1912 and 2005. The two teams played as conference foes from 1991 to 2003 as members of theBig East Conference (1979–2013). They met every year from 1973 to 2005. TheBlack Diamond Trophy is thetrophy that goes to the winner of the game. It was introduced in 1997 and was meant to symbolize theAppalachian region's richcoal heritage (the phrase "black diamond" is often used as a term for coal.) Virginia Tech held the trophy in six of the nine years in which it was contested. The last two games played where on September 18, 2021, in Morgantown with West Virginia winning 27–21, and September 22, 2022, in Blacksburg with West Virginia winning 33–10. There are no further games scheduled in the series after the 2022 season.
West Virginia leads the series 30–23–1 as of 2022.[44]
TheHurricanes and Hokies first met on November 13, 1953, in Miami.Miami andVirginia Tech have met in two bowl games, the1966 Liberty Bowl and1981 Peach Bowl. The two teams have played annually since 1992, and the rivalry developed when the Hokies became a member of theBig East Conference for football in 1991. When theAtlantic Coast Conference (ACC) expanded in 2004, both Miami and Virginia Tech became members of the ACC. Both teams continue to compete annually as part of the ACC's Coastal Division.
Miami leads the series 26–15 as of 2024.[45] The last game between the two teams was September 27, 2024, in Blacksburg, and Miami won 38–34.
The two teams will next play November 22, 2025, at Miami's home stadium,Hard Rock Stadium inMiami Gardens.
One of the Hokies' younger rivals isGeorgia Tech. Prior to the Hokies joining the ACC in 2004,Virginia Tech and Georgia Tech had only met once previously (an additional scheduled meeting was canceled due to extreme weather). Since the ACC adopted divisional format for football, one of these two teams had represented the ACC Coastal Division in everyACC Championship Game except the 2013 season whenDuke won the Coastal and 2015 whenUNC won it. Over the years, the rivalry has become a significant annual matchup in the ACC, specifically when both teams are in both regularly in the AP Top 25 and the race for the Coastal Division championship.
Virginia Tech leads the series 12–9 as of 2025, with Georgia Tech winning the past meeting.[46]
The Boston College-Virginia Tech football rivalry began in 1993 with a 48–34 Boston College win in Chestnut Hill when the two teams beganBig East conference round-robin play. When the two schools moved to theAtlantic Coast Conference the rivalry continued as the two schools were chosen as permanent cross-divisional rivals. The teams played twice in both the 2007 and 2008 seasons, as both teams won their respective divisions of the ACC and played each other in the conference championship. Although the Eagles defeated the Hokies in both the regular seasons those two years, Virginia Tech won the2007 and2008 ACC Championship Game played between the two schools.
Virginia Tech leads the series 22–11 as of 2024, with Virginia Tech winning the past meeting.[47]
Virginia Tech and VMI first met in 1894 and played annually from 1913 to 1971, usually inRoanoke onThanksgiving Day. Like the current rivalry between VMI andThe Citadel, the match-up was referred to as theMilitary Classic of the South, due to the military heritage of both schools. Starting again in 1973, the teams would continue to play on a yearly basis, making multiple appearances together in theTobacco Bowl (1974, 1976) andOyster Bowl (1980, 1982, 1984). The 1984 Oyster Bowl is the last time they played each other. However, in 2017, Virginia Tech and VMI agreed to a one-time rivalry matchup on September 5, 2026, at Lane Stadium. At 79 games, it is the second-longest series for the Hokies and fourth-longest for the Keydets. Due to the long pause of the VMI-VPI series, theVirginia–Virginia Tech rivalry has emerged as the dominant one in the state. Virginia Tech leads the series 49–25–5 as of 2019, with Virginia Tech winning the past six meetings.
In 2002, the Virginia Tech athletics department developed a new policy on retiring jerseys. This special honor is bestowed to acknowledge an individual who has won an established national award in their sport.The Hokies has retired five numbers.[48]
| Virginia Tech Hokies retired numbers | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| No. | Player | Pos. | Tenure | No. ret. |
| 10 | Frank Loria | S | 1965–1967 | |
| 25 | Frank Beamer | CB | 1966–1968 | September 12, 2002 |
| 73 | Jim Pyne | C | 1990–1993 | January 27, 1994 |
| 78 | Bruce Smith | DT | 1981–1984 | |
| 84 | Carroll Dale | E | 1956–1959 | |
Additionally, Virginia Tech has four retired jerseys. These numbers can be worn normally by any player.[48]
| Virginia Tech Hokies retired jerseys | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| No. | Player | Pos. | Tenure | No. ret. |
| 7 | Michael Vick | QB | 1998–2000 | September 1, 2002 |
| 56 | Corey Moore | DE | 1997–1999 | October 23, 2010 |
| 58 | Cornell Brown | LB | 1993–1996 | November 20, 2002 |
| 64 | Jake Grove | C | 2000–2003 | September 23, 2006 |
For the 2023 season, the ACC implemented a 3–5–5 scheduling system, with Pittsburgh, Virginia, and Wake Forest serving as the three teams played every year in a home-and-home basis.[49] On September 1, 2023, the ACC voted to addUniversity of California, Berkeley,Southern Methodist University, andStanford University to the conference starting in the 2024–25 school year,[50] which made the 3–5–5 schedule obsolete. Due to the expansion in 2024, the ACC is now scheduling games without a specific algorithm, and the conference released a schedule for 2024–2030 in October 2023.[51]
Additionally, each season every ACC team schedules four non-conference games, including at least one against a "Power 5" team (which can include other ACC teams or FBS independent Notre Dame).[52]
On September 22, 2025, the ACC announced that it was moving to a nine-game conference schedule beginning in 2026. On December 16, 2025, league opponents were announced for 2026, in which 12 teams would play a nine-game schedule, and the other 5 teams would play an eight-game schedule. Virginia Tech will be playing a nine-game conference schedule. There is also a minimum of 10 games each year against Power Four opponents.[53]
Announced opponents as of January 29, 2026.[54][55]
| Year | Non-conference opponents | ACC Opponents | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2026 | VMI (9/5) | Old Dominion (9/12) | atMaryland (9/19) | Georgia Tech | Pittsburgh | Stanford | Virginia | atBoston College | atCalifornia | atClemson | atMiami | atSMU |
| 2027 | Liberty (9/4) | Maryland (9/18) | atNotre Dame (11/6) | atVirginia | ||||||||
| 2028 | Liberty (9/2) | atMaryland (9/16) | Notre Dame (11/4) | Virginia | ||||||||
| 2029 | Liberty (9/1) | atArizona (9/8) | Maryland (9/15) | atVirginia | ||||||||
| 2030 | Arizona (8/30) | atLiberty (9/7) | atBYU (9/14) | Old Dominion (9/21) | Virginia | |||||||
| 2031 | vsWisconsin2 (8/30) | North Alabama (9/6) | atVirginia | |||||||||
| 2032 | Ole Miss (9/4) | atWisconsin (9/18) | Virginia | |||||||||
| 2033 | BYU (9/10) | atNotre Dame (11/5) | atVirginia | |||||||||
| 2034 | Alabama (9/2) | Virginia | ||||||||||
| 2035 | atAlabama (9/1) | atVirginia | ||||||||||
| 2036 | Notre Dame (9/1) | Virginia | ||||||||||
| 2037 | atOle Miss (9/5) | atVirginia | ||||||||||
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