Virginias Special Teams Edge Suddenly Comes With A 2026 Catch

As Virginia's special teams prepare for the 2026 season, the Cavaliers must tackle key challenges to sustain their kicking prowess and find a dynamic new returner.

Virginia’s special teams quietly did a lot of heavy lifting in 2025, and the Cavaliers are heading into 2026 with one big piece missing and two proven legs still in place.

Will Bettridge and Daniel Sparks are back for their final college seasons after helping turn field position into an advantage for Virginia. Bettridge set a school single-season record by making 24 field goals in 30 tries, while Sparks rewrote the punting mark by averaging 47.2 yards per boot. Cam Ross also gave the unit a spark, taking a kickoff back for a touchdown and averaging 7.8 yards per punt return.

That kind of production mattered. It helped Virginia control the field in several games and made things easier on both sides of the ball. If the Cavaliers are going to make another run at the ACC championship game this fall, special teams could once again be part of the formula.

The biggest question is who replaces Ross. He ran back a 100-yard kickoff for a touchdown against Coastal Carolina and finished with 33.3 yards on eight kickoff returns. He also handled most of the punt return work, but he’s now getting ready for training camp with the Denver Broncos.

That leaves Virginia with a vacancy and not a ton of proven options. Transfer receiver Jaquon Gibson returned three kickoffs for 71 yards last season at UMass, while Jekail Middlebrook brought back eight punts for an 8.0 average at Middle Tennessee State.

Kam Courtney also showed some promise for the Cavaliers in 2025, returning three punts and a kickoff 38 yards, and he could see a bigger role this season. Special teams coordinator Keith Gaither has plenty of depth at running back and receiver, but he still needs one reliable returner who can make people miss and hold onto the ball.

Bettridge’s job is less about replacing production and more about extending it. He has been steady since becoming Virginia’s starter, hitting 67 of 82 field goals, an 81.7% clip, and 116 of 118 extra points, which comes out to 98.3%. He’s also 18 points away from Connor Hughes’ school scoring record of 335, and that mark should fall before September ends.

The one lingering question with Bettridge is range. He has matched his career long of 47 yards in three different seasons - 2022, 2024 and 2025 - but he has not connected from beyond that distance. Virginia may not need him to push that number much higher this year, but with seven games decided by one score last season, having a kicker you can trust from 50 would be no small thing.

Sparks, meanwhile, gives Virginia a weapon every time he steps on the field. If he had enough punts to qualify, his average would have ranked fourth nationally last season.

He sent 17 of his 37 punts at least 50 yards, including a 65-yarder in the ACC title game against Duke. Back in 2022, as a sophomore, he even had three 60-yard punts in one game.

The issue is what happens after the kick. Virginia gave up 13 yards per punt return last season, and one of those returns was a crushing 88-yard touchdown by Carlos Hernandez in a 16-9 loss to Wake Forest. If the Cavaliers want those booming punts to keep paying off, tightening up the coverage could matter just as much as the leg itself.

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