Brent Pry Fired By Virginia Tech Following Terrible 0-3 Start
Well, folks, it finally happened. The axe has fallen in Blacksburg. Virginia Tech decided it had seen enough of the Brent Pry era, giving him the boot after a disastrous 0-3 start to the 2025 season. You could almost hear the collective sigh of relief from the Hokie faithful, who’ve been wondering if their program fell into a time warp back to the pre-Beamer dark ages.
The final nail in the coffin was a truly soul-crushing 45-26 home loss to Old Dominion. Let that sink in. The game was so out of hand that the Hokies were booed off their own field at halftime, trailing 28-0. It was the kind of performance that makes you question everything, from the play calls to whether the team bus even showed up.
Pry Out, Hokies Down
This wasn’t just one bad game. A week earlier, they choked away a lead to Vanderbilt, giving up 34 unanswered points in a collapse of epic proportions. The offense looked lost, the defense looked confused, and Pry looked like a man searching for answers in a playbook written in another language. After four seasons and a less-than-stellar 16-24 record, the university President Tim Sands basically said, “Thanks, but no thanks,” calling the on-field results “not acceptable.” You think?
Pry was brought in from Penn State to recapture some of that Frank Beamer magic, recruiting in-state and building from the ground up. Instead, he leaves with a $6 million buyout and a legacy of close losses and blowout embarrassments. The team’s record in one-possession games under Pry was a comical 1-12. That’s not bad luck; that’s a trend.
What’s Next For Virginia Tech?
So, where do the Hokies go from here? Offensive Coordinator Philip Montgomery takes over as the interim coach, tasked with salvaging some dignity from this dumpster fire of a season. The school is talking big about making a “major move” to compete in the new landscape of college football. That’s fancy talk for “we’re about to open the checkbook.”
For a program that once tasted national championship glory with Michael Vick, these are tough times. They haven’t been ranked in four years and are still chasing the shadow of Beamer. Firing Pry was the easy part. Finding someone who can actually pry this program from the jaws of mediocrity? That’s the real challenge.
