A leader on and off the court: Salt caps off a memorable five years
By Akhil Rekulapelli | May 10, 2019Throughout his five years at Virginia, Salt has embodied the five pillars — humility, passion, unity, servanthood and thankfulness.
Throughout his five years at Virginia, Salt has embodied the five pillars — humility, passion, unity, servanthood and thankfulness.
After a magical run in the 2019 NCAA Tournament that ended with the program’s first national championship, the Virginia men’s basketball team has seen several players declare for the 2019 NBA Draft.
Bennett, Williford and the rest of the coaching staff and players appreciate the help from the student managers, and the way the managers are woven into the fabric of the team demonstrates the unity pillar.
Bennett earned recognition in a larger context as he was named to Fortune Magazine's list of World's Greatest Leaders April 18.
Junior forward Mamadi Diakite announced Wednesday afternoon that he is declaring for the NBA Draft, joining junior guard Ty Jerome and sophomore guard De’Andre Hunter and junior guard Kyle Guy.
This past year has undoubtedly been the best in Virginia basketball history. After years of disappointing early-round exits, untimely injuries and relentless critics, Virginia fans will enjoy and cherish this season for years to come.
In a follow-up tweet, Guy officially announced that he would no longer consider playing another year at Virginia.
On a day in which two of its best players declared their intentions to play professionally, the Virginia basketball program wasted no time reloading, securing a commitment from forward Justin McKoy.
Sophomore guard De’Andre Hunter declared Monday that he is headed for the NBA draft, foregoing two years of eligibility in college basketball.
Junior guard Ty Jerome announced that he plans to enter the NBA draft and sign with an agent rather than return to Virginia for his final year of eligibility Monday morning.
Over 20,000 Cavaliers fans gathered at Scott Stadium Saturday afternoon to witness the championship celebration for the 2018-19 NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball National Champion Virginia.
A year after losing to a No. 16 seed, the Cavaliers came back to win the national championship. The worst loss in program history turned into the best win in program history.
For the players and Bennett, this means overcoming demons and making their dreams come true.
Though this past season just ended Monday night, it’s never too early to make some predictions about the state of Virginia basketball next year.
Coach Tony Bennett has the Cavaliers on top. A year after a historic defeat, Virginia came up with a historic victory Monday night.
A wild three weeks of basketball and an unforgettable season come to an end for Virginia Monday night. For the first time in school history, the Cavaliers get the chance to finish on top.
Late-game magic from Guy got them there today, but it has taken a team effort to make this tournament run happen for the Cavaliers.
In Virginia’s first Final Four since 1984 and Auburn’s first appearance in the national semi-final ever, the Cavaliers (34-3, 16-2 ACC) came out on top in a thriller.
A dive into what Virginia should both change and keep doing to win its final stretch
No. 1 seed Virginia is in the Final Four this weekend in Minneapolis, Minn., for the first time since 1984.