The Virginian-Pilot
                             THE VIRGINIAN-PILOT 
              Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc.

DATE: Sunday, October 1, 1995                TAG: 9510010169
SECTION: SPORTS                   PAGE: C6   EDITION: FINAL 
SOURCE: BY STEVE CARLSON, STAFF WRITER 
DATELINE: PITTSBURGH                         LENGTH: Medium:   56 lines

RATTLED NO MORE, LARSON KICKS 4 FIELD GOALS

Atle Larsen could have been dubbed ``Rattled'' Larsen.

The Hokies kicker was 2 for 8 on the season on field goal tries, missing chippies as well as lengthy kicks. There were questions about his job security, but this week Tech coach Frank Beamer insisted, ``Atle Larsen is my kicker.''

Beamer couldn't contain his pride Saturday after Larsen went 4 for 4, making kicks of 34, 33, 26 and 36 yards in the Hokies' 26-16 victory over Pittsburgh. When Beamer was asked in his postgame press conference to talk about Angelo Harrison, who blocked two punts, the coach blurted out, ``I want to talk about Larsen - Atle Larsen.''

Larsen, a Norwegian, admitted he needed some success.

``It boosts my confidence a lot,'' Larsen said. ``It tells me I really know what I'm doing, and we're better than what we had been the last couple games. When you're 2 for 8, you start to have doubts in your mind.''

If he had any doubts, Beamer wasn't owning up.

``I told you guys this is a guy made of good stuff,'' Beamer said.

BLOCK PARTY: Harrison, a true freshman from Spotsylvania, Va., had never blocked a kick in his life before he came to college. He was a return man in high school and at Hargrave Military Academy.

In the past two weeks, he's blocked three punts.

What's the secret?

``Practice, lots of practice,'' Harrison said.

Beamer said the 6-foot-1 Harrison has a long body, long arms, great speed and no fear of sticking his hand or body in front of a kicker. All are requirements of a quality kick blocker.

``He's well on his way to being a pretty good one,'' Beamer said.

Harrison said he got booted in the gut on his second punt block Saturday.

``It doesn't hurt as bad when it's blocked,'' Harrison said.

GOOD COMPARISON: Asked if Tech's anemic offense in the first half was as weak as he could imagine, Tech offensive tackle Mike Bianchin remembered a recent similar Hokie performance: ``I thought (against) Cincinnati was pretty damn bad,'' he said. Tech lost to the Bearcats 16-0 two weeks ago.

BOOB TUBE: ESPN's Chris Fowler picked Pitt as his ``Mighty Dog'' underdog in college football this week.

``They haven't been picking too well lately,'' Tech defensive tackle J.C. Price said. ``They were 0-4, I'm glad to make them 0-5. I like those guys on ESPN, though.''

QUICK HITS: Tech defensive tackle Jim Baron reinjured a sprained left ankle early Saturday and did not return. Trainer Eddie Ferrell said he is not sure if Baron will be available for next week's Navy game. . . . The victory was Tech's first in the last three seasons when it trailed at halftime. During that span, Tech is 17-1 when leading at half, 1-0 when the score is tied and 1-8 when trailing. by CNB