2004 Virginia Tech Hokies football team
The 2004 Virginia Tech Hokies football represented the Virginia Tech in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. Virginia Tech won the Atlantic Coast Conference championship in its inaugural year in the conference, running off a streak of eight straight wins to end the regular season after a 2–2 start. Tech finished 10th in the final Associated Press poll with a 10–3 record. The team's head coach was Frank Beamer, who was named ACC Coach of the Year. Tech was led by quarterback Bryan Randall during the season. Randall was named ACC player of the Year.
2004 Auburn Tigers football team2004 Duke Blue Devils football team2004 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football team2004 Maryland Terrapins football team2004 Miami Hurricanes football team2004 NCAA Division I-A football rankings2004 NCAA Division I-A football season2004 NC State Wolfpack football team2004 North Carolina Tar Heels football team2004 USC Trojans football team2004 Virginia Cavaliers football team2004 Virginia Tech Hokies football2004 Virginia Tech Hokies football season2004 Wake Forest Demon Deacons football team2004 West Virginia Mountaineers football team2004 Western Michigan Broncos football team2004–05_NCAA_football_bowl_games2005 ACC Championship Game2005 Sugar Bowl2005 Virginia Tech Hokies football teamAaron_RodgersAuburn_Tigers_footballBlack Coaches & AdministratorsBowl Championship SeriesBranden OreBryan RandallDick HonigDuane_BrownEric WicksFrank_BeamerHistory of Auburn Tigers footballJimmy Williams (cornerback, born 1984)Kevin Barnes (American football)List of Atlantic Coast Conference football championsList of Auburn Tigers football seasonsList of NCAA Division I-A/FBS football seasonsList of Virginia Tech Hokies bowl gamesList of Virginia Tech Hokies football seasonsList of Virginia Tech Hokies starting quarterbacks
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2004 Virginia Tech Hokies football team
The 2004 Virginia Tech Hokies football represented the Virginia Tech in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. Virginia Tech won the Atlantic Coast Conference championship in its inaugural year in the conference, running off a streak of eight straight wins to end the regular season after a 2–2 start. Tech finished 10th in the final Associated Press poll with a 10–3 record. The team's head coach was Frank Beamer, who was named ACC Coach of the Year. Tech was led by quarterback Bryan Randall during the season. Randall was named ACC player of the Year.
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The 2004 Virginia Tech Hokies ...... named ACC player of the Year.
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L 13–16 vs. Auburn
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ACC champion
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Atlantic Coast Conference
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Coastal Division
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ACC
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Virginia Tech Hokies
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The 2004 Virginia Tech Hokies ...... named ACC player of the Year.
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2004 Virginia Tech Hokies football team
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