Va. Tech tinkers with its football schedule
College football
FILE - James Franklin, second from right, Virginia Tech's new head football coach, holds up a No. 25 jersey with, from left, Virginia Tech Board of Visitors memver John Rocovich, Virginia Tech President Timothy Sands and Athletic Director Whit Babcock, after Franklin was introduced during an NCAA college football news conference, Wednesday, Nov. 19, 2025, in Blacksburg, Va. (AP Photo/Robert Simmons, File)
BLACKSBURG, Va. — Virginia Tech canceled its football game against James Madison scheduled for September because of the Atlantic Coast Conference’s move from eight to nine conference games beginning in 2026.
The teams had been set to play Sept. 26 in Blacksburg. JMU confirmed Thursday it would receive $800,000 from Virginia Tech as a cancellation penalty. The schools said they would work to schedule a future game.
James Madison, which qualified for the College Football Playoff, would have been the Hokies’ premier nonconference opponent in coach James Franklin’s first season. The change leaves the Hokies playing VMI at home Sept. 5, Old Dominion at home Sept. 12 and at Maryland on Sept. 19.
JMU filled its Sept. 26 opening with a road game against San Diego State.
The ACC announced it would go to a nine-game conference schedule to align with power-conference peers in the Big 12, Big Ten and Southeastern conferences.
Virginia Tech is among 12 of the football-playing members who will play nine conference games next fall while the remaining five stay at eight. Next season will operate as a bridge to accommodate conference games already on the books, with the plan to have 16 of 17 teams playing nine football games regularly by 2027.
Asking for help
OXON HILL, Md. — The NCAA sent a letter asking federal regulators to suspend prediction markets for college sports.
The prediction markets are trading sites that allow users to essentially bet on outcomes of games. NCAA President Charlie Baker sent the letter to the chair of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission.
The platforms are legal because they’re classified as financial trading platforms, not gambling websites.
Pitt adds coach
PITTSBURGH — Pitt coach Pat Narduzzi has made the addition of Brent Davis to his coaching staff official as Davis joins the staff as the team’s tight ends coach.
He previously served as Virginia Tech’s tight ends coach (2025), co-offensive line coach (2024) and offensive analyst (2023). During that span, the Hokies consistently ranked among the ACC’s top rushing offenses, including a school-record 362 rushing yards in a Military Bowl win over Tulane.



