Virginia Fans Got Spoiled By A Year Packed With Signature Wins

From national titles to thrilling upsets, Virginia's athletic programs have dominated across multiple original states, marking one of their most successful years yet.

Virginia spent the past academic year stacking signature wins, and the Cavaliers’ best moments came all over the map. From national titles to statement conference victories, 2025-26 gave Virginia plenty to celebrate.

The two biggest prizes landed in Georgia. Virginia’s women’s swimming and diving team won its national championship in Atlanta in late March, and the men’s tennis team followed with a title in Athens, Ga. in late May. Those were the crown jewels, but they were hardly the only stops on the Cavaliers’ victory tour.

In men’s basketball, Virginia rolled past Georgia Tech by nearly 30 points. In most places, that would be enough to headline a list like this. Not here.

The ACC Tournament run in Charlotte, N.C. may have been even more impressive. Virginia knocked off No.

1 Notre Dame and No. 5 North Carolina in a three-day stretch, beating the Fighting Irish by five goals and the Tar Heels by 10.

Sweeping Notre Dame was one thing; crushing North Carolina to win the ACC title was another level.

The Commonwealth Clash also delivered one of Virginia’s defining wins. The Cavaliers beat Virginia Tech in a game that pushed them to their 10th regular-season victory and sent them to the ACC Championship Game. Virginia Tech crossed midfield only once all game, and by the end, Virginia fans were on the field, a “State Champions” graphic was lit on the jumbotron and Coach Tony Elliott had another major win on the board in the most successful season the program has ever had.

Virginia’s men’s lacrosse team added another unforgettable finish in 2024. The Cavaliers had lost four straight to their northern rivals over the previous two seasons, but in Towson, Md., with a trip to Championship Weekend at stake, they finally broke through. It took two overtime periods, and then Connor Shellenberger ended it with an all-time goal to send Johns Hopkins home and send Virginia to Philadelphia.

Field hockey was steady all season, never falling below No. 4 in the national rankings. The Cavaliers beat seven ranked teams in the regular season, including No. 4 Syracuse, the highest-ranked opponent on that list.

Another late-game grinder came just two days after Virginia won at No. 13 Boston College.

With little rest, the Cavaliers went into another ACC battle and survived a tight defensive fight. Mia Abello scored with 54 seconds left in regulation, and Virginia held on.

That win came in Charlottesville, but it stands out as Virginia’s most notable recent victory over the Massachusetts school. In the ACC, Boston College is only a contender in women’s lacrosse and field hockey, and Virginia’s upset of the ranked Eagles came in one of those sports.

Women’s tennis also delivered when the pressure was highest. With a perfect ACC record on the line, Virginia went to Clemson, S.C. and took on a tough Tigers team. Melodie Collard scored points in both doubles and singles, then closed the door with the clinching singles point.

Clemson pulled within 3-2 and had a chance to tie, but Collard answered after dropping the first point against her. She took the next two sets 6-3 and 6-1 to seal the day for Virginia.

And before all of that, there was a road win in Pittsburgh that hinted at what Tony Elliott’s program might become. Virginia beat a ranked Pitt team to move to 5-4, picking up just the second ranked victory of the Elliott era at the time.

The Cavaliers would finish the year on a three-game skid against No. 8 Notre Dame, No.

13 SMU and Virginia Tech, but for a brief stretch, that win gave the program real momentum.

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