Maryland’s week three trip into rivalry territory brings a Virginia Tech team that looks very different from the one the Terps have seen in recent years.
The matchup comes after Maryland beat the Hokies 54-10 in the 2021 Pinstripe Bowl and before that last handled them in Blacksburg, 27-24, in 2013. This time, the Terps will host Virginia Tech on a Saturday night in College Park as the former ACC foes renew the series.
Virginia Tech is trying to bounce back from a rough 3-9 season that led to the firing of Brent Pry after an 0-3 start. The Hokies then turned to a name Maryland fans know well, hiring former Penn State coach James Franklin to steer the program in a new direction. Franklin brings a 128-60 career record over 15 years as a head coach, including a 104-45 mark in 12 seasons at Penn State.
The offense is where the biggest overhaul begins. Virginia Tech averaged 21.4 points per game last season, along with 166.3 passing yards and 182.4 rushing yards per game, while turning it over 1.2 times per game.
The Hokies have been searching for consistency on that side of the ball for several years, and the last time they reached 30 points per game and 400 total yards per game was in 2020. With Franklin’s background as an offensive coordinator before becoming a head coach, the hope is that the unit starts to find its footing again in 2026.
At quarterback, the Hokies are expected to lean on Ethan Grunkemeyer, another player who followed Franklin from Penn State. Grunkemeyer arrived out of high school as a four-star recruit and has thrown for 1,348 yards and eight touchdowns in his career, with a 68.9% completion rate and five interceptions. With Drew Allar no longer ahead of him, the job is Grunkemeyer’s to lose.
Virginia Tech also added Luke Reynolds, its other four-star transfer. The 6-foot-4, 250-pound tight end also came over from Penn State and has 35 catches for 368 yards and a touchdown across two seasons. He has not been the featured option before, but the Hokies will look at him as an important target in the middle of the field.
One of the few major returnees is running back Marcellous Hawkins, who gives the offense some continuity after Virginia Tech lost 40 players to the portal. Hawkins ran for 749 yards and a touchdown in 2025 and added 12 catches for 74 yards and another score. If the Hokies are going to settle this offense down, a productive ground game from Hawkins would go a long way toward easing Grunkemeyer into the season.
The defense has its own questions, even though it returns several pieces. Virginia Tech allowed 30.2 points per game last season, plus 224.8 passing yards and 153.3 rushing yards, while forcing just .5 turnovers per game.
The Hokies had not been giving up more than 30 points a game before Pry’s tenure, and one of the biggest issues was the lack of pass rush. The entire defense managed only 19 sacks last season.
Linebacker Kaleb Spencer is one of the main returners. He led the team with 67 tackles last season and added nine tackles for loss and a pass deflection.
Over three years, Spencer has totaled 100 tackles, 14 tackles for loss, 1.5 sacks and three pass deflections. Virginia Tech will need that kind of production again as it tries to stabilize the front seven.
Defensive lineman Kemari Copeland is another important holdover. In his first season as a starter in 2025, he led the Hokies with 4.5 sacks and also posted 47 tackles and 7.5 tackles for loss. With Virginia Tech needing more heat on opposing quarterbacks, Copeland is a key interior piece.
In the secondary, Jaquez White stands out as the most intriguing addition. White earned second-team All-SBC honors in 2025 at Troy, finishing with 67 tackles, 11 pass deflections, three interceptions, a sack and a touchdown. None of Virginia Tech’s returning defensive backs last season had more than one interception or more than six pass deflections, so White should be in position to make an immediate impact.
For Maryland, the most interesting part of this game may be the contrast in experience. The Terps will bring back Sidney Stewart, Zahir Mathis, Daniel Wingate, Trey Reddick and Messiah Delhomme on defense, along with new transfers and freshmen, while Virginia Tech is trying to build an offense around a new quarterback, a new tight end and a new coach. That makes the week three meeting with Ted Monachino’s defense and Franklin’s revamped attack one to watch in College Park.
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