Caroline McGahren is a fourth-year political and social thought major from Charlottesville. On days of UVA men鈥檚 basketball games, her phone stays buzzing from a group text that includes her roommate, Caroline Anderson, and a dozen of their classmates.
Who鈥檚 going to the game tonight? Who can get there when? Who鈥檚 dressing up?
At some point over the last month and a half, a member of the group chat gave it a title: The Vander Gals.
鈥淲e coordinate pretty regularly,鈥 McGahren said.
The Vander Gals are a cluster of students who stand together near the band and behind a basket at JPJ. A magnet to both television and in-arena cameras, they are easily recognized by their matching white T-shirts 鈥 with, in black Sharpie, 鈥淰irginia 5鈥 on the front and 鈥淰ander Plas鈥 on the back 鈥 white headbands and penciled-on or glued-on mustaches.
This is all for a guy who only arrived on Grounds over the summer and, at 2 p.m. Saturday against the University of Louisville, will play his final home game at JPJ.
鈥淚鈥檝e only been here for one season, but it feels like I鈥檝e been here for a lot longer,鈥 said Vander Plas, a senior transfer from Ohio University averaging over seven points and four rebounds per game for the 13th-ranked Wahoos. 鈥淭he way the fans and the community have embraced me, it鈥檚 been so great. For people to grab on to the mustache and the headband and stuff, it鈥檚 been so much fun.鈥
There are at least two student groups that have made conscious efforts to look like 鈥淏VP鈥 this season. Beyond the Vander Gals, there鈥檚 a band of fourth-year housemates that, since creating them before 麻豆破解版 win over Virginia Tech on Jan. 18, have felt mustaches stuck to a large mirror by the front door.