The 1961 Virginia Cavaliers football team was an American football team that represented the University of Virginia as a member of the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) during the 1961 college football season. In their first year under head coach Bill Elias, the Cavaliers compiled a 4–6 record (2–4 in conference games), were outscored by a total of 190 to 123, and finished in eighth place out of eight teams in the ACC. Despite the last place finish, Elias was named ACC Coach of the Year, becoming the second in conference history to win the award in a coach's first year at the school.[2] Elias, who had been the Southern Conference Coach of the Year the previous season at George Washington, snapped Virginia's 28-game losing streak by beating William & Mary in the first game of the season.[3] Their win against South Carolina snapped an 18-game losing streak against ACC foes.
The team's statistical leaders included junior quarterback Gary Cuozzo (382 passing yards) and sophomore halfback Doug Thomson (294 rushing yards).
Gary Cuozzo and Stanford Fischer both saw significant action at quarterback. Cuozzo completed 42 of 93 passes (45.2%) for 382 yards with five touchdowns, three interceptions, and a 91.0 quarterback rating. Fischer completed 27 of 69 passes (39.1%) for 361 yards with one touchdown, eight interceptions, and a 64.7 quarterback rating.[17]
The Cavaliers had six players who rushed for over 100 yards, led by Doug Thomson (294 yards, 70 carries, 4.2-yard average); Tony Ulehla (190 yards, 54 carries, 3.5-yard average); Bobby Freeman (187 yards, 62 carries, 3.0-yard average); and Ted Rzempoluch (162 yards, 48 carries, 3.4-yard average).[17]
The leading receivers were Carl Kuhn (six receptions, 87 yards) and Tony Ulehla (nine receptions, 85 yards).[17]
Awards and honors
Though Virginia finished in last place in the ACC, Bill Elias was selected by the ACC Sportswriters Association as the ACC Coach of the Year. He was credited with turning the Virginia football program around after a 28-game losing streak dating back to 1958.[18]