RIP Boring Basketball: Why Virginia’s High-Octane “Odom Ball” Is the New King of the ACC
The “Odom Ball” Revolution
For over a decade, Virginia basketball was synonymous with the Pack Line defense—effective, but often a slog to watch. Enter Ryan Odom. Since taking the reins, Odom has completely flipped the script. The Cavaliers are now averaging a blistering 81.4 points per game, a massive leap from the low-60s averages of previous seasons. This isn’t just a tweak; it’s a total philosophical overhaul. The pace is faster, the threes are flying, and the scoreboard is lighting up. The team has topped 80 points in 15 games this season, a feat that hasn’t been seen in Charlottesville since the turn of the millennium.
The “Portal God Squad”
What makes this run even more impressive is how quickly it came together. Odom didn’t just inherit a roster; he built a new machine through the transfer portal. The result is a team of experienced veterans who fit the new high-octane system perfectly.
Leading the charge is Thijs De Ridder, a revelation who is averaging 16.1 points per game and dominating the paint. He is joined by Dallin Hall, the BYU transfer who has become the engine of the offense, leading the ACC in assist-to-turnover ratio. Add in the scoring punch of Malik Thomas and Jacari White, and you have a lineup that can hurt opponents from anywhere on the floor. This group has proven they can win pretty—like the blowouts earlier in the season—and win gritty, as seen in their recent 70-66 victory over Ohio State in Nashville and a tough 61-58 road win at Florida State.
March Madness Implications
With the regular season winding down, the Cavaliers are positioning themselves as a legitimate threat for a deep NCAA Tournament run. They currently sit at 10-2 in the ACC, second only to Duke, and are riding a wave of momentum that could carry them to a high seed in March. The recent win streak has solidified their status not just as a fun story, but as a dangerous contender.
Fans who once braced themselves for low-scoring rock fights are now packing John Paul Jones Arena to watch an offensive fireworks show. The narrative has shifted. Virginia isn’t just a team you have to survive anymore; they are a team you have to outscore—and right now, very few teams in the country seem up to the task.









