2024–25 Virginia Cavaliers men's basketball team

2024–25 Virginia Cavaliers men's basketball
ConferenceAtlantic Coast Conference
Record15–17 (8–12 ACC)
Head coach
Associate head coachJason Williford (16th season)
Assistant coaches
Home arenaJohn Paul Jones Arena
2024–25 ACC men's basketball standings
Conf. Overall
Team W   L   PCT W   L   PCT
No. 3 Duke 19 1   .950 35 4   .897
No. 21 Louisville 18 2   .900 27 8   .771
No. 22 Clemson 18 2   .900 27 7   .794
Wake Forest 13 7   .650 21 11   .656
North Carolina 13 7   .650 23 14   .622
SMU 13 7   .650 24 11   .686
Stanford 11 9   .550 21 14   .600
Georgia Tech 10 10   .500 17 17   .500
Virginia 8 12   .400 15 17   .469
Virginia Tech 8 12   .400 13 19   .406
Florida State 8 12   .400 17 15   .531
Notre Dame 8 12   .400 15 18   .455
Pittsburgh 8 12   .400 17 15   .531
Syracuse 7 13   .350 14 19   .424
California 6 14   .300 14 19   .424
NC State 5 15   .250 12 19   .387
Boston College 4 16   .200 12 19   .387
Miami (FL) 3 17   .150 7 24   .226
2025 ACC tournament winner
Rankings from AP poll

The 2024–25 Virginia Cavaliers men's basketball team represented the University of Virginia during the 2024–25 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They were led by interim head coach Ron Sanchez after former head coach Tony Bennett announced his retirement before the start of the season on October 17, 2024. They played their home games at John Paul Jones Arena in Charlottesville, Virginia, as members of the Atlantic Coast Conference.

Despite the last-minute coaching change, the Cavailers started the season 3–0, including a ten-point victory over Villanova in the Hall of Fame Series. They then traveled to the Bahamas to participate in the Baha Mar Hoops Championship where their fortunes changed. They lost in the semifinals to eleventh-ranked Tennessee 64–42 and in the third place game against twenty second-ranked St. John's 80–55. They won two games against non-Power 4 opponents before losing their ACC–SEC Challenge game against thirteenth-ranked Florida 87–69. They followed that with a loss in their ACC opener against SMU. They finished their non-conference slate 2–1, with a loss against twenty first-ranked Memphis. They closed the 2024 portion of their schedule with an ACC win over NC State.

The Cavailers had a rough start to the 2025 portion of the schedule, as they went on a five-game losing streak. The streak included two losses to Louisville, and losses in California to Stanford and California, and a loss in a rematch with SMU. They broke the streak by going 2–2 in their next four games. This streak included a loss in their rivalry game against Virginia Tech. The team went 4–2 over their next six games, which included a three game winning streak. They defeated Pittsburgh, Georgia Tech, Wake Forest, and won the rivaly rematch with Virginia Tech. However, they lost to third-ranked Duke and at North Carolina. They lost to thirteenth-ranked Clemson and defeated Florida State by three points in their next two games. The Cavaliers lost the regular season finale to Syracuse 84–70.

The Cavaliers finished the season 15–16 and 8–12 in ACC play to finish in a five-way tie for ninth place. The team finished atop the five-way tiebreaker and were the ninth seed in the 2025 ACC tournament. They faced eighth-seed Georgia Tech in the First Round. Despite defeating the Yellow Jackets during the regular season, they were defeated 66–60 in the tournament. They were not invited to the NCAA tournament or the NIT. Interim coach Ron Sanchez was not retained at the end of the season.

The Virginia Cavaliers drew an average home attendance of 13,478, the highest of all basketball teams from Virginia.