Boston College opened the 2025 season with a 56-point rout of Fordham. A double-overtime loss at Michigan State served as the precursor for what turned into a season where wins didn’t come easily.
Boston College lost 10 straight games and finished with a 2-10 record for its worst season since Frank Spaziani’s final campaign in 2012.
Three of last season’s losses were by one score (Michigan State, California and Georgia Tech), and a 34-12 win at Syracuse to close the campaign provided some semblance of momentum heading into the offseason.
The Eagles are heading into their third season under Bill O’Brien. They went 7-6 in his first campaign.
Boston College is one of five ACC teams that are playing an eight-game league schedule this season. The Eagles are playing 11 Power Four opponents thanks to nonconference clashes against Cincinnati and Rutgers to open the season, and then a matchup at Notre Dame in the middle of November.
Boston College’s nonconference schedule is rounded out with a Week 3 home game against FCS program Maine.
The series
Virginia Tech and Boston College met for 20 straight seasons (2005-24) before not playing last season. The Hokies went 14-8 against the Eagles in that stretch, which included two victories in the ACC championship game in 2007 and 2008. In both those seasons, Boston College won the regular-season matchup. (Who can forget the 2007 game when the Hokies dominated on defense before Matt Ryan engineered two fourth-quarter touchdown drives in the final 2 1/2 minutes?)
The Hokies are 22-11 all-time against Boston College. They have won the last three contests by a combined score of 117-53.
The most recent matchup in 2024 saw Bhayshul Tuten set the program single-game rushing record with 266 yards in the Hokies’ 42-21 triumph.
What’s new with the Eagles?
O’Brien’s staff has a new look after last season’s two-win campaign.
First, he will serve as the offensive coordinator and primary play caller after Will Lawing left the program to join the Chicago Bears’ staff. He made three changes on the offensive staff by bringing back former Liberty offensive coordinator Joe Dailey as the wide receivers coach and adding running backs coach Mike Hart and offensive line coach Kurt Anderson.
The defensive side of the ball also received an overhaul with a third defensive coordinator in the last four years.
Ted Roof previously served as a defensive coordinator for O’Brien at Penn State in 2012, and the two are reunited at Boston College. Roof’s resume as defensive coordinator includes stops at UCF (2011 and ’24), Oklahoma (2022-23), Vanderbilt (2020), Appalachian State (2019), North Carolina State (2018), Georgia Tech (1999-2001 and 2013-17), Auburn (2009-10), Minnesota (2008), Duke (2002-03), Western Carolina (1997) and UMass (1995-96).
Roof’s defensive schemes primarily focus on nickel coverage and creating pressure in the backfield, and the Eagles brought in two position coaches to help with development in Jules Montinar (defensive backs) and Ben Albert (defensive line).
The offense
O’Brien literally has a clean slate to work with on offense.
None of the quarterbacks who played last season are back. The returning player with most rushing yards is Bo MacCormack III who totaled 43 yards and a touchdown on 15 carries. Tight end Kaelan Chudzinski tops the list of returning pass catchers with 313 yards and four scores on 24 receptions.
O’Brien went to the transfer portal to fill the needs. Nolan Ray (Maryland) and Evan Dickens (Liberty) are the frontrunners at running back. Jackson Wade (Florida), Bryce Dopson (Kennesaw State), VJ Wilkins (Campbell), Landon Wright (Washington State) and Javarius Green (North Carolina) are projected to contend to be in the wide receiver rotation.
The most intriguing addition is quarterback Mason McKenzie from Saginaw Valley State. McKenzie was electric at the Division II program last season by throwing for 2,086 yards, 17 touchdowns and 11 interceptions, while adding 942 yards and 10 scores on the ground.
Boston College returns one starting offensive lineman in center Michael Crounse.
The defense
The Eagles went to the transfer portal in an effort to improve a defense that allowed 32.8 points and 433.3 yards per game last season.
Roof’s scheme needs a defensive line that create pressure in the backfield, and that’s what the Eagles hope defensive end Kris Jones (Georgia), and tackles Chris Marable Jr. (Wake Forest) and Makai Byerson (West Virginia) bring to the table.
Linebacker was loaded up with Brodie Kahoun (Notre Dame/Patrick Henry High), Anthony Palano (Washington State) and Justin Medlock (SMU). Defensive backs Kameron Howard (Alabama) and Cameron Martinez (Ohio State) are expected to contend for significant roles.
Most of the returners are at the second and third levels in linebackers Kemori Dixon and Zacari Thomas and defensive backs Ashton Cunningham, Carter Davis, KP Price, Isaiah Farris, Max Tucker and T.J. Green.