USA TODAY US Edition

Virginia football team counters hate with unity

- George Schroeder

When the Virginia football team gathered Thursday morning for a brief meeting, the expectatio­n was for another day in what, during preseason camp, becomes hot, fatiguing monotony. We’re talking about practice. But then Bronco Mendenhall announced a change of plans.

“Guys,” the coach said, “we’re going to the river!”

And that’s how 120-something inner tubes filled with football players, coaches and staff members came to be bobbing lazily down the James River. Mendenhall insists it was all about football, that the Cavaliers had been working hard, but after 17 practices he sensed they were tired and needed a break. But yeah, there was more.

“I felt like it was a way to relax our minds from everything that happened last weekend,” senior safety Quin Blanding says. “I think it was well needed.”

Last weekend, of course, saw controvers­y and carnage roil the idyllic town and its university’s campus (known to all here as “the Grounds”). White nationalis­ts and neo-Nazis demonstrat­ed Friday night and Saturday, protesting the planned removal of a statue of Robert E. Lee. Saturday, one person was killed and 19 injured when clashes with counter protesters turned violent.

From a distance, the scenes horrified the nation. But from down the street?

“I was just disgusted,” Blanding says. “I know (racism) is still a big problem in this world, but to actually see it and be living through it is something that’s a lot different than what most people can say. We know there’s still a big divide between certain people … but it opens people’s eyes.”

Last Friday night, the white nationalis­ts and neo-Nazis marched with torches through the Virginia campus, chanting racist slogans en route to the Rotunda. The building was designed by Thomas Jefferson and inspired by the Pantheon in Rome and is considered the university’s most hallowed ground.

“You felt an eeriness in the air,” senior linebacker Micah Kiser says.

Mendenhall grew concerned when he arrived at the office early Saturday morning and saw dozens of law enforcemen­t officers putting on riot gear in an adjacent parking lot. He knew the players would soon see the same scene.

And then a text clattered into his phone. Frank Wintrich, the Cavs’ director of football perfor- mance, forwarded a passionate text message from Kiser, one of the team’s leaders.

“I realized right then, this is volatile,” Mendenhall says. “There were a lot of different emotions. There’s anger. There’s fear. There’s anxiety. There’s compassion and other emotions, all mixed in at the same time. I realized how quickly one of our players could make a decision and act in a manner that might affect not only him individual­ly, but our team.”

In a team meeting a little later, when Mendenhall opened the floor to players, he was glad when Kiser stood. The senior’s essential message: Though they were of different races and background­s — no, because they were of different races and background­s — they had an opportunit­y to lead in unity.

“He said, ‘ Who better than us to show what appropriat­e, authentic, sincere and productive behavior looks like?’ ” Mendenhall says. “It was really powerful. I don’t think words from me would have had the same effect.”

Kiser’s message set the tone. When the situation in town disintegra­ted into violence later that day, the Cavaliers’ collective response was a stark contrast.

“No matter what color or race or religion you believe in, we’re all one together, no matter what,” Blanding says. “That’s as a country and how we should be as a whole. But as a team, we’re gonna be strong together.”

Monday, at Kiser’s suggestion, they took a team photograph, sitting on the steps, arms locked together, at the Rotunda.

“You see these white nationalis­ts and these racists walking through Grounds with these torches, kind of claiming that space, walking on the lawn, at the Rotunda — these really kind of iconic UVA places — and kind of claiming them as their own” Kiser says. “We just wanted to say, ‘This is our home, this is our community, this is our school. We’re not afraid of you. You can’t take away what’s ours.’ … It was us just reclaiming that space as ours, and a place of unity and a place of love, not hate.”

Similarly, the football players took part Wednesday night in a vigil. Along with thousands of others, they followed the same route taken by the demonstrat­ors through campus to the Rotunda. With candles rather than tiki torches, they sang songs of unity instead of chanting slogans of division.

“It felt peaceful,” Blanding says. “Walking the same path they walked and just cleaning up the streets and filling them with love. It was an honor to do it.”

And then Thursday, if only for a few hours, they got away from football — and everything else.

“Just having time to kind of release and just go have fun floating on the river, it was a great time,” Kiser says. “We’ve been having some really hard practices, trying to see who’s tough on the team, who’s accountabl­e — trying to really see what we’re made of.”

In the last few days, along with everyone else, we’ve gotten a glimpse of what they’re made of.

“Unity and love, man, that’s it,” Kiser says. “We see this football team has the opportunit­y to really represent all the good that Charlottes­ville and UVa has to offer. We want to become a rallying point for not only the city but the school, and for everyone to get behind us. Hopefully we can represent them well with how hard we play and how well we play.

“It’s a big responsibi­lity for us, but hopefully we can.”

 ?? MATT RILEY, UVA MEDIA RELATIONS ?? On Monday, the football players took a team photo at The Rotunda, with arms locked in unity.
MATT RILEY, UVA MEDIA RELATIONS On Monday, the football players took a team photo at The Rotunda, with arms locked in unity.

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