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WVU v. Texas: Something fuzzy

You are looking live at the best defensive player you’ve ever seen. You know who he is … but if you don’t, I’ll give you a few seconds to come up with a guess.

Stuck?

Well, don’t fixate upon a name. Lock on a position.

That’s Every Other Team’s Safety, and he’s been amazing all season. After nine games and somewhere around 400 solo tackles at or just before the second level, I could no longer resist the urge to get to know this guy a little better. Turns out the Mountaineers are quite familiar with his work. On some level, they even appreciate it.

“I’d be lying to say it isn’t something we think about,” running backs coach JaJuan Seider said. “It’s something we see when the coaches are watching film. And our guys know it, but you don’t want to keep beating a dead horse. You don’t want them to over-think it and try to second-guess how they run and change things up.”

The numbers are ridiculous. Just ridiculous.

In WVU’s nine games, an opponent’s safety has led the team in tackles six times, finished second (by one tackle) once and third (by two tackles) twice. Seven safeties have had at least 11 tackles. The Mountaineers have seen some monster performances, too.

TCU’s Derrick Kindred had 11 tackles Saturday and 10 were on his own. Oklahoma State’s Jordan Sterns made 14 solo tackles and 20 overall. Texas Tech’s Keenon Ward made 16 tackles and 11 without help. Towson’s Donnell Lewis had 14 solo tackles and 15 total and the other Tigers safety, Chris Carpenter, had 12 tackles.

That’s Sterns wiping out a big run … and maybe a touchdown run. And that’s fairly common, no?

Now, part of this is WVU’s offense. It creates space and isolation. One or two safeties have to keep an eye on the pass and react to the run, and often that happens in a do-or-die situation for everyone to see. But the safeties are doing and not dying. This sort of play happens across the field every game and WVU cannot figure out how to fix it, but the elixir is a combination of breaking a tackle, getting a big game again from Kevin White and getting something from Mario Alford, just so that the safeties have to be a little more honest than they have been.

This is not to say WVU’s run game is broken. It’s productive. It’s won games and performed admirably in wins. But it’s also been undone in some games and some losses. When you step back, the numbers are a mix of good and bad which settles up to be actually very ordinary.

The Mountaineers average 46.1 carries per game, the 22nd-highest total in the country. Only seven other teams in that top 50 average fewer than WVU’s 3.96 yards per carry. There have been only six runs of 25 yards or more. Four are between 25 and 28 yards and three came against Towson or Kansas. (Dreamius Smith, of course, has the other two. #Freemius)

And here comes Texas, with a safety that loiters around the line of scrimmage and one who’s charged with being the back stop in the secondary. Mykkele Thompson is a terrific athlete in the back and also a really interesting kid. Anyhow, he’s started every game at free safety and is fifth on a team loaded with tackling linebackers with 55 tackles.

In the past three games , he’s made 11, 9 and 5 tackles, and this is where things get fun. The senior was playing with a barrier the first 44 games of his career.

It’s an interesting story about Mykkele,” Longhorns coach Charlie Strong said. “He wears glasses, so he had not been wearing contacts. I said to him, ‘Let me ask you, in a game, do you have contacts in?’ He’s like, ‘No.’ I said, ‘How do you see the ball?’ I said, ‘How do you see? Look at your glasses?’ ”

The glasses are not flattering, it seems, and cornerback Quandre Diggs, who says he is Thompson’s best friend, said “he looks weird and kind of looks soft” when he wears them. Well, that’s not the look for football, but Thompson never followed up with contacts. Just squints. This bothered Strong on some level until it reached its apex against Baylor, when Thompson was cooked by a double move.

“I said, ‘How long you been wearing glasses?'” Strong said. “He said, ‘Since the ninth grade.’ I said, ‘Okay, so your eyes have been wearing them since the ninth grade, so you’re telling me you can see a ball when it’s thrown?’ He said, ‘Yeah, I can see it.’ I said, ‘Okay, did you see that double move out there against Baylor? ‘He’s said, ‘Kind of late.’ “

That was all that needed to be said. “He’s got his contacts in now,” Strong said.

Let’s fix our gaze upon Thompson today. And let’s hit hard ourselves, right now.

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Show Me the SEC East opponent!

It’s Missouri. I know you knew, but now you know. The Mountaineers and the Tigers will open the 2016 season in Morgantown and probably play in the second week of the 2019 season at Faurot Field.

Slight deviation from previous whispers (it made sense before to he on the road in 2016 with five Big 12 home games, but WVU wanted a good non-conference home game since it plays BYU at FedEx Field), but this is what we are now told (we didn’t have the return date before, but this makes sense now because two Power 5 home games in non-conference play in 2019 would have been weird). This should be done soon and WVU will have some formidable schedules in the coming seasons.

WVU’s future non-conference schedules now include Missouri, Tennessee, BYU, the Big Ten’s Maryland in 2015 and 2020-21 and Penn State in 2023-24, the ACC’s Virginia Tech in 2017 and 2021-22 and the Wolfpack in 2018-19 and the American’s East Carolina in 2017 and 2020.

This is all part of WVU’s scheduling model for the College Football Playoff, where the Mountaineers believe calculated risks are worthwhile and unbeaten seasons will be rare. (Whenever I link to that story, I think I’m obligated to take a moment and say Dana Holgorsen foreshadowed the hell out of that.) This then makes the remaining 2019 game somewhat interesting. WVU has five Big 12 road games that season, which means four Big 12 home games. The Mountaineers will also play host to N.C. State and play at Missouri. The 12th game will most likely be the opener and almost has to be at home … but against who? FCS? FBS? P5? G5?

That’s all for me. I’m on the way to Texas and I’ll have the live post up and running early tomorrow. I think you’ll enjoy it more than usual. Speaking of …

Vance Bedford is a character, no?

The Texas defensive coordinator, who has some pretty fun thoughts about WVU’s successes and struggles on offense, is not a clown. He just doesn’t have much time for the “clown suits” he’s beginning to see around college football.

On if he sees different jerseys coming: You’re asking the wrong person because that’s absolutely, 100 percent, no. It’s The University of Texas. A uniform is going to make you a player? I think that when we wear that white it’s as pretty as any uniform out there. You can put all of the clown suits on everybody else, all of the different color helmets – who are they? When The University of Texas walks out there with that helmet on and that uniform, you know who they are. The respect, in my opinion, is there. You look at USC’s uniform, you know who they are. You look at Notre Dame, you know who they are. It’s nothing personal, but I don’t need all of that stuff. You keep asking the old school guys. I’m not a young guy who needs all of that stuff to say here I am, this is who I am. Give me the nice, clean stuff, and let’s go out and play football.

 

The show goes on at 11 a.m. We’ll be here for about an hour to talk about WVU football, the game, the season, the bowl possibilities and whatever else you have on your mind. If you’re feeling eager, submit your questions now. The chat is open.

Live Blog You’ll Never Talk Alone: S3E10
 

Joe Manchin, if you need him

Tough couple of days for the once and future governor senator. His party lost control of the Senate in Tuesday night’s election and, well, it’s apparent he still follows WVU football closely, hence the seamless comparison between the two.

Using a sports metaphor, Manchin said Senate Democrats have been acting in recent years like the West Virginia University Mountaineers football team did last Saturday: “We had the lead the whole entire game up until the middle of the 4th quarter and they decided to sit on the ball. And guess what? We got beat 31 to 30.”

Wednesday Walkthrough: Texas

I’m fixing the previous post, though it’s sort of hysterical. The press conference was posted. It was. I used it so I could transcribe one part about Kevin White for a story I’m writing. I know it was there. Then it vanished (YouTube tells me the format didn’t convert, which is a new one, but there were a lot of new things Tuesday.) and … AND … was replaced by Red Panda.

But that’s totally fine. I think I might just randomly put that out there every so often now that she’s retired. Still, there’s no way I accidentally did that. The RP video is years old. I’d have to really try  to find it, copy the link and paste it where Holgorsen’s presser was posted. My best guess is someone at the home office saw the video of the presser was dead and had some fun with me.

Speaking of mistakes, I wrote about a few of the many from the TCU game.

Dana Holgorsen: Texas week

Interesting, to say the least.

drivechart

Probably should have warned you to avert your eyes, but if you did take a look at that horror story, you’re ably prepared for what follows in today’s episode.

True story: I had an idea for a column last week in which I’d ask and explore whether West Virginia is any “good,” understanding “good” is extremely relative and open to presentation and interpretation. Without giving away too much, because I think it could work still this week and might actually have more flavor now, the thought was that there were some things and some Things about the Mountaineers that left you wondering. These are all variables we’ve talked about to some extent and with some length in the past, but I thought (I think?) the collage makes for an interesting picture.

Anyhow, I got caught up in signs and towels and lips and the like and wrote about something else, which meant I was bitter in the fourth quarter because, honestly, things I had intended to write about or raise questions about were very much what the game was about Saturday. So there I was telling anyone who would listen, “This feels like a 31-30 game, am I wrong?” with nothing to show for it. Nothing!

Hey, I think WVU is good. How “good” is yet unknown, and the performance against TCU invited that sort of suspicion. This is not a lost season or a season headed nowhere, but this season is at the intersection of certain fates Saturday night in Austin.

How did we get here? Let’s find out by taking a look at the Good and the Bad of WVU v. TCU.

ricktrickett

Good: Health
Excellent.

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Texts from TCU Game Day

This is so good. I know you all look forward to TFGD — it’s far and away the most popular thing we do here — but more and more I find it gets me through the day Sunday, which is usually a long day spent writing stories and re-watching the game for me and G&B and also sometimes traveling back home.

And today’s entry is another reason why. What follows is tremendously tremendous

You saw the game. You have opinions on what went wrong and why. You know TCU weathered all of the swings and quick changes and WVU, which has done that quite well, did not. You know the Mountaineers both inadvertently and intentionally created a dangerously small margin and were made to pay that bill when the secondary tripped on one decisive play.

“Tempo got us,” WVU safety K.J. Dillon said.

Joseph didn’t play his deep third and Listenbee ran past cornerback Daryl Worley and caught the pass before safety Dravon Henry could cover for Joseph.

“We just didn’t get the communication from the sideline,” Dillon said. “That’s the first thing we preach when we get on the field: Communicate first and then get lined up. We didn’t do the first thing. How can we do the second thing? It cost us, which it shouldn’t have. It was our fault. We gave it to them.”

Gibson said he would have called a timeout if he saw the confusion before the snap, but he didn’t see it and he didn’t expect it, either.

“It was the same coverage stuff we’d been running the whole game,” Gibson said. “It’s not like we pulled out a magic play and tried to fool them.”

You know all of that, and we’ll get into all of that a little later. But for now, the thrill and the agony of TFGD. Lookouts on the corner, focused on the ave. Ladies in the window, focused on the kinfolk. Me under a lamp post, why I got my hand closed? Texts in my palm, watching the long arm of the law. My edits are in [brackets].

3:22:
Do the circle!

3:30:
Boykin scares me. Why do I feel like Chuck Knoblauch will factor prominently today?

3:34:
What’s up with entrance to the game today? I missed the band. Are we on high security alert?!

3:34:
Interested to see what’s going to be today’s game-plan-which-I-will-only-understand-in-hindsight.

3:35:
BTW, this was the first time I watched Gameday in a while. Still using that awful intro by Big & Rich, the Sugar Ray of country.

3:43:
GAM with the wrong-way first down chop!

3:43:
First camo sighting!

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Questions and attempts at answers

Things were as downtrodden and oddly managed after the game last night as you’d expect … and perhaps as you witnessed in the game, too.

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