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STEVE DeSHAZO: Groh sounds resigned to fate Date published: 11/29/2009 By Steve DeShazo CHARLOTTESVILLE --From a corner of an otherwise quiet Scott Stadium late yesterday afternoon came the mocking chant:"Keep Al Groh!" Unless you've spent the past two years in a cave, you can probably guess that that request didn't come from fans They, like Groh, probably won't get another chance. Yesterday's 42-13 second-half runaway by the Hokies didn't exactly seal Groh's fate; he's been a dead man walking for months now. But it served as a sour punctuation to a dreadful 3-9 season that's Virginia's worst since George Welsh's first season, 1982. "For a while, it looked like we could give [the Cavalier seniors] a positive send-off that they could be gratified by," Groh said, speaking of a 14-13 halftime deficit. "But we couldn't finish it off." Yesterday's game served as a de facto eulogy for a program that began with such promise in 2001, when Groh was hired to continue Welsh's rebuilding process. The Cavaliers enjoyed modest early success (as they did in yesterday's game), only to fall apart later, mostly because of insufficient talent. Afterward, as usual, Groh was a bit more eloquent than his detractors. Asked about his future, he unfolded a sheet of paper and read from Dale Wimbrow's 1934 poem "The Guy For it isn't your father, Who judgement The feller whose Is the guy staring back Defiant to the end, Groh--who often quotes his mentor, Bill Parcells--sounded very much like a man who recognized a fait accompli but wouldn't acknowledge it. "When I visited the guy
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