M
y response to this 6-foot-6, 230-pound specimen, with the old white arm pads and biceps bulging through the straps, was simply, “Son, I have no idea who you are, but we are very interested in talking with you about the University of Virginia.”
I came to find out that Patrick wrestled and played football and lacrosse at the Taft School in Connecticut.
It was always a bit of an oversimplification to say that I just looked for athletes in recruiting, but I was looking for guys who thought they could play football at Virginia. Some were close, like Mark Farnham, Brett Hughes, Steve Holmes and Chris LaPierre. Others were football players in lacrosse players’ bodies, like Darren Muller, Ryan Curtis and Walt Cataldo. A couple had the tools but not the temperament, like Rhamel and Shamel Bratton.
And only one was actually a much better college football player than he ever would have been a lacrosse player. Patrick Kerney was just too big for us and wound up better suited rushing the passer than covering some small, quick college middie.
Early in recruiting, Patrick asked for permission to walk on the football team at UVA. I had a number of these requests over the years and always said yes. You come to college, you need to make some of these decisions for yourself and in every prior case, the players would last 3-4 days at practice before realizing that a walk-on lacrosse player was not going to be handed the ball in a scrimmage nor be allowed to tackle one of the returning veterans.
With Patrick in mind, I went to the football coaches and told them, “I won’t pretend to tell you your business, but I may have one here.” They looked at me like I had two heads, with an expression of, “Yeah, right.” Film of Patrick’s senior year at Taft was very inconclusive because of the quality of play and he missed most of the year with an injured knee.
Recruited walk-ons in football are invited to the start of practice in early August. Others do not see the field until the start of school in September. I talked the coaches into giving Patrick a shot in August, but anticipated that he might have been in my office a week later having had enough of all that. Instead, it was the head football coach, George Welsh, who informed me shortly thereafter that Patrick might be “the best freshman in the class.”
A mere two weeks later, Patrick was one of the few true freshmen to participate in Virginia’s 1995 season opener at Michigan. He went from classes on a Saturday morning and a crowd of about 300 at the Taft homecoming to 108,000 and a game decided on the very last play in the Big House in less than a year.