For two hours in Charlotte’s Spectrum Center, Owen Odom held his handmade lucky sign and all but shouted himself hoarse. Now it was time for the 11-year-old to go celebrate the biggest win in his father’s coaching career.
After initial denial – “They wouldn’t let me hop the fence,” he said – Odom finally slipped past the security guards and sprinted to the University of Maryland, Baltimore County men’s basketball team’s jubilant locker room, where the 16th-seeded Retrievers were dousing each other with water in recognition of their stunning NCAA Tournament victory over the top-seeded University of Virginia.
Seven years later, and as a freshman walk-on player for UVA, he recalls the night with a smile – while recognizing the irony.
Ryan Odom, left, shouts instructions during UMBC’s win over UVA in 2018, while Owen Odom, right, holds his lucky sign in support of his father. (UMBC photo; contributed photo)
“I was cheering my heart out against this team,” Odom said, “and now, I’m a part of this team. It’s crazy. We’ve definitely come full circle.”
A new chapter in the UVA-UMBC story begins Monday when Owen’s dad, Ryan, coaches his first game – a 7 p.m. matchup against Rider University at John Paul Jones Arena – for the Cavaliers.
You’ve likely consumed all that’s been documented about the Wahoos and Retrievers to this point. On March 16, 2018, with Owen sitting across from the team’s bench and waving a “UMBC – Ultimate Men’s Basketball Champs” sign, Ryan Odom led the historic upset. A season later, the Hoos used the epic loss as their motivation in a thrilling run to a national championship.
What an incredible season for UVA. That was truly a turnaround for the ages! Congratulations, champs! 🏆
— UMBC Men's Basketball (@UMBC_MBB) April 9, 2019
Which brings us to now: Odom, after subsequent stops at Utah State and Virginia Commonwealth University, calls Charlottesville home and is tasked with continuing a winning tradition last ushered by Tony Bennett, the man to whom he once delivered a notable defeat.
Full circle, indeed.
“It’s not something I would have ever imagined would happen,” Odom said. “It’s a crazy story.”
𝘼 𝙨𝙥𝙚𝙘𝙞𝙖𝙡 𝙥𝙡𝙖𝙘𝙚.
🔶⚔️🔷#GoHoos pic.twitter.com/MEd6eKv8O6— Virginia Men's Basketball (@UVAMensHoops) March 26, 2025
Consider Joe Sherburne among those with an informed sense of what could be written next. The former UMBC basketball player – he started and scored 14 points against UVA – has long closely followed two men’s college basketball teams: his alma mater and wherever Odom’s coaching.
“Two days ago,” Sherburne said in mid-October, “I was on my ESPN app, and I saw that VCU was still marked as a ‘favorite,’ and I removed them and added Virginia.”
While it’s not lost on Sherburne that a former Retriever might now root for the Hoos – the Milwaukee resident still relishes his random run-ins with UVA fans, including an alumnus who was part of his local men’s league team last winter – he’s comfortable acknowledging the Cavaliers are on the brink of another great era.

