FBS-CFB Game Preview: Duke Blue Devils (7-5) vs. Virginia Cavaliers (10-2)

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The 2025 ACC Football Championship Game delivers a rematch with redemption on the line, as the unranked Duke Blue Devils (7-5, 6-2 ACC) seek to upend the No. 18 Virginia Cavaliers (10-2, 7-1 ACC) at Bank of America Stadium. Virginia clinched the Coastal Division with a dominant 27-7 win over Virginia Tech, marking their first ACC title game appearance since 2019 and positioning them for a potential College Football Playoff at-large berth. Duke, under Manny Diaz, snuck into the matchup via tiebreakers over Miami, Pitt, SMU, and Georgia Tech—despite a 3-3 finish in their last six—thanks to a high-octane offense led by transfer QB Darian Mensah. The Cavaliers dominated their regular-season meeting 34-17 on November 15, but Duke’s recent surge (49-32 over Wake Forest) and Virginia’s defensive injuries could make this a tighter affair. With the ACC’s automatic CFP bid at stake, Virginia enters as a modest favorite in a contest projected for offensive fireworks under the lights.

Venue and Game Details

Location: Bank of America Stadium, Charlotte, North Carolina (Capacity: 74,867; neutral-site host for ACC championships since 2010).

Kickoff: 8:00 p.m. ET.

Broadcast: ABC (with streaming on ESPN App, Fubo, and YouTube TV).

Tickets: Available via Ticketmaster or Vivid Seats (starting at $65); premium Gridiron Club options via theACC.com.

Weather Forecast

Cool December evening conditions are expected at kickoff in Charlotte, with temperatures around 37-40°F under cloudy skies and low humidity (around 60%). Light winds (2-5 mph from the north) won’t impact play significantly, but there’s a 25% chance of scattered showers—per AccuWeather models—potentially leading to a slick field that favors Virginia’s efficient ground game. No severe weather; Diaz noted Duke’s preparation for variable conditions after road tests in California and Connecticut.

Injury Report

Both teams enter with depth concerns, particularly Virginia’s backfield and secondary after late-season attrition. Duke’s receiving corps is thinned, impacting Mensah’s options. Updates from ACC availability reports (as of December 2) show limited practice for key pieces; no major changes expected.

TeamPlayerPositionStatusInjury Details
DukeJaivon SolomonWRQuestionableUndisclosed; uncertain vs. Virginia.
DukeAndrel AnthonyWRQuestionableUndisclosed; missed recent snaps.
DukeBrett ElliottTEOutUndisclosed; no timetable.
DukeL. CallahanCBQuestionableUndisclosed; limited this week.
DukeN. Morris Jr.LBQuestionableUndisclosed; day-to-day.
VirginiaK. RobinsonLBOutKnee (torn ACL); season-ending.
VirginiaX. BrownRBOutKnee; out for postseason.
VirginiaNoah VaughnRBQuestionableAnkle; limited, hopeful return.
VirginiaBen YorkOLQuestionableUndisclosed; missed Wake Forest.
VirginiaJayden ThomasWRQuestionableUndisclosed; targeting availability.

Duke’s O-line is stable; Virginia RB J’Mari Taylor (probable) carries the load.

Key Player Matchups

Virginia’s top-25 total offense (433.2 YPG) vs. Duke’s opportunistic secondary (1.6 turnovers forced/game) headlines this rematch, with QBs Mensah and Morris under pressure (combined 2.1 sacks/game allowed). Duke’s red-zone efficiency (88% TD rate) tests UVA’s 4th-ranked ACC scoring D (17.8 PPG allowed).

Duke QB Darian Mensah vs. Virginia DL Mitchell Melton: Mensah (3,450 pass yards, 28 TDs, 67.5% completion) ranks 2nd in ACC passing efficiency, torching defenses for 300+ yards in four wins. Melton (Ohio State transfer, 10 TFL, 5 sacks) leads UVA’s front (No. 18 nationally, 2.3 sacks/game), forcing 15% pressure—Mensah’s 2.3-sec release evaded in November (18/35, 51% completion), but Duke’s line yields just 1.9 sacks/game.

Virginia RB J’Mari Taylor vs. Duke LB Chandler Rivers: Taylor (1,200+ rush yards, 4.7 YPC, 12 TDs) powered 133 yards/2 TDs vs. Duke last month, fueling UVA’s No. 64 rush attack. Rivers (All-ACC, 98 tackles) anchors Duke’s stout front (141 rush YPG allowed, No. 41 nationally), but Taylor’s burst gashed them (5.5 YPC in losses)—expect 110+ if gaps open.

Duke WR Cooper Bargape vs. Virginia CB Dre Walker: Bargape (Harvard transfer, 950 rec yards, 8 TDs, 15.2 YPR) is Mensah’s deep threat (team-high 72.1 YAC/game). Walker (questionable undisclosed, 4 INTs) keys UVA’s ball-hawking secondary (11 picks), but Bargape’s YAC exploited zone for 100+ yards earlier—coverage lapses could yield chunk plays.

Virginia QB Chandler Morris vs. Duke DE Vincent Anthony Jr.: Morris (2,586 pass yards, 14 TDs, 65.9% completion) stabilized UVA post-injury (7.2 YPA), with mobility adding 4.2 YPC scrambles. Anthony (5 sacks) leads Duke’s pass rush (No. 35, 2.1 sacks/game), dropping QBs 12% efficiency under blitz—Morris’s quick decisions neutralize if O-line holds (1.3 sacks/game allowed).

Edge to Virginia’s balance in sims (56% win prob.), but Duke’s turnover creation (+0.7 margin) keeps it within one score.

Team Records and Season Overview

Virginia’s head-to-head win secured the title game over a crowded Coastal field; both finished strong, with UVA’s 7-1 ACC mark earning the No. 1 seed. Cavaliers rank top-20 in total defense (311.7 YPG allowed); Blue Devils top-20 in scoring offense (34.6 PPG) but middling on D (29.4 PPG allowed).

TeamOverall RecordACC RecordNational Rank (AP)Offensive PPGDefensive PPG Allowed
Duke7-56-2Unranked34.629.4
Virginia10-27-1No. 1833.217.8

Duke: Diaz’s squad notched non-con Ws (Elon 52-0) but stumbled vs. top foes (0-3 vs. AP-ranked).Virginia: Elliott’s group rebounded from NC State opener L with seven straight wins (longest since 2007), ranking No. 64 in rush (188.7 YPG).

Recent Team Forms

Duke closes with two straight wins after a midseason skid, outscoring foes 81-57 while forcing 5 turnovers. Virginia has won four of five, averaging 30.8 PPG but dipping offensively (23 PPG last three) amid injuries.

Duke Last 5 Games:

DateOpponentResultKey Stats
Nov 29Wake ForestW 49-32Mensah: 316 pass yds, 2 TDs
Nov 22at UNCW 32-25Bargape: 100+ rec yds
Nov 15VirginiaL 17-34Defense: 2 INTs, but 514 total yds allowed
Nov 8at UConnL 34-37Mensah: 222 pass yds
Nov 1at ClemsonW 46-45Rushing: 180 yds, late FG win

Virginia Last 5 Games:

DateOpponentResultKey Stats
Nov 29Virginia TechW 27-7Defense: Shutout, 2 INTs
Nov 22Wake ForestL 24-31Morris: 250 pass yds
Nov 15at DukeW 34-17Taylor: 133 rush yds, 2 TDs
Nov 8NC StateW 28-21Passing: 220 yds; Rivers: 12 tackles
Nov 1at CaliforniaW 35-14Ground: 200+ yds

Series History

Virginia leads 42-34 all-time, with a 9-1 streak since 2015 (outscoring Duke 312-178, avg. margin 13.4). Recent games average 51 points, all decided by 17 or less. No prior ACC title meetings; UVA’s home dominance (17-12) persists.

DateLocationResult (Duke Score – UVA Score)Notes
Nov 15, 2025Durham, NCL 17-34UVA rolls with 514 total yds
Nov 18, 2023Charlottesville, VAL 27-30Narrow UVA comeback
Oct 1, 2022Durham, NCW 38-17Duke’s last win
Nov 23, 2019Charlottesville, VAL 17-34UVA controls trenches
Nov 21, 2015Durham, NCL 13-20End of Duke’s mini-streak

Duke’s revamped O (up 15% efficiency) eyes upset, but history favors the Cavaliers.

Betting Trends

Duke: 4-5-0 ATS (44.4%), 3-2 ATS as dogs; 5-4 O/U, overs in 4 of 6 road/neutral. Public 48% on Duke +3.5.

Virginia: 7-5 ATS (58.3%), 4-2 ATS as favorites; 6-6 O/U, unders in 5 of 7 vs. top-20 offenses. Public 55% on UVA ML.

Head-to-Head: UVA 9-1 SU last 10, 6-4 ATS; over 6-4 last 10 (avg. 51 points).

Advanced: Virginia +1.3 turnover margin (public on defense); models project 58.2 expected points, 56% UVA cover.

Game Odds

Duke Blue Devils              57.5

Virginia Cavaliers             – 3.5

Odds Courtesy of Sports Odd Direct as of Friday, December 5, 2025

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