The Sock 'Em, Bust 'Em Board Because that's our custom

Big 12 officiating: You make the call

So, what do we think so far of the whistles in the new conference? I’ve settled in now and come to realize the officials, who I thought were inconsistent and sometimes uneven early on, are actually acceptable. Odd adjective, I know, but it’s either that or unacceptable and I don’t think it’s been the latter.

What I do find is that officials will let a plenty slide under the basket and even let some things go at the rim. Move away from the basket and things change.

Screens and picks happen in many different manners and it seems the offensive players can do more than the defensive players. Out on the perimeter, it’s much more strict, likely because the Big 12 would like to enable and even enhance its identity, which is its guards and off-the-bounce tactics.

And how does this work for WVU? Depends on who you ask.

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Some insight on Tier 3 inner-workings

So we did some back-and-forth last week about the WVU-IMG College partnership that I think and hope was useful for all of us. I know I went back to satisfy my own curiosity after encountering some things I didn’t know and discovering other things I wanted to understand a little better … so, thanks.

Anyhow, this was big news last week — the Tier 3 deal, not the FAQ — and there was a lot of information out there, but nothing presented in an official capacity. Conjecture and speculation tend to rub some people the wrong way and one item in particular had some people running warm in in late January.

However, an IMG spokesman said the claim that the company was trying to shore up Marshall advertising was not true.

“IMG College has a longstanding and highly productive 15-year relationship with Marshall, which continues to perform well,” said Andrew Giangola, vice president for strategic communications.

“Any assertion of any school subsidizing Marshall is completely incorrect and unfair to the school,” Giangola said.

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Interesting idea out of the A.D. meetings in Dallas Irving this week, where the talk was focused on the topics you might expect, namely expansion, preservation and preparation. The biggest and obvious topic is whether the Big 12 is stable with 10 teams or if the league can, or should, grow to at least 12.

And the Big 12 set the bar pretty high where it concerns potential future members.

Forbes estimated that current Big 12 members will average $26.2 million from TV revenue, bowl games and the NCAA basketball tournament. When asked, Bowlsby confirmed any new member would have to bring the same value.

“Anybody we would look at would have to bring pro rata or a very high likelihood of sustained growth that would bring benefits to the league,” Bowlsby said. “We are never going to get bigger just for the sake of getting bigger.”

Money talks and for now, everything you read and hear was everything you read and heard before. Ten is good, the division of the money is right and at present there isn’t a strong enough urge to move beyond 10.

There are unresolved and undefined variables out there now that pertain to the upcoming playoff, namely how the rankings will work. Shouldn’t teams have to play the same amount of conference games as a way to control the value of non-conference scheduling? How important are non-conference games? Do all leagues have to play a conference title game?

In short, there’s no need to go to 12 teams if a Big 12 championship game isn’t mandated. The 10 teams don’t want to split their share with another two teams — re-read that Bowlsby quote again — for what amounts to less than $1 million for a conference championship. That game also invites the risk of costing a worthy team a spot in the really lucrative college playoff because it was upset in the 13th game.

So why go to 12 now, which is what the NCAA demands if you’re going to have a conference championship game, if the playoff won’t ask for a conference championship game?

If it turns out teams have to play nine conference games, a 10-team league fits nicely because schools like the single round robin. No one else crows a true champion like the Big 12. If the playoff only asks for eight league games, I guess a 10-team league is OK, but you don’t have quite the same push back against expanding. You then have to play four non-conference games and that part of the schedule is going to take on a greater importance.

If only there were a way arrange some sort of a deal with other conference to align quality non-conference games. Something like, I don’t know, a mutually beneficial alliance?

Big 12 commissioner Bob Bowlsby said the league is actively exploring a possible alliance with the Atlantic Coast Conference and two other unspecified leagues for the purposes of scheduling, marketing and possibly even television partnerships, an arrangement that might prevent further expansion.

“We’ve had conversations with three other leagues,” Bowlsby told the American-Statesman on Friday afternoon. “The ACC is one of them. It’s a process of discovery that would provide some of the benefits of larger membership without actually adding members.”

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Jan. 29 Big 12 Minute

Courtesy of the Big 12 Conference

This is probably essentially obvious by now. Nevertheless, these are the words from Bob Huggins, yanked from a Cleveland Plain Dealer profile this week about the coach who hungers for a national title.

“We already had our team set,” Huggins said, the day after last week’s win over Texas Christian. “In the Big East, we played with two bigs on the block, and that’s what we recruited this team to do. Now we’re in a league that mostly has four perimeter guys and one post player. That leaves me with a post player running all over the floor chasing guys that shoot 3s and play off the bounce. We have to catch up a little [recruiting].”

He will get up to speed, because there is not much Huggins has not seen, coaching in six Division I conferences, winning championships in four. “When I first started, we didn’t have the 3-pointer,” he said. “We didn’t have the shot clock.” Since his first season as a Division I head coach at Akron, Huggins has not suffered through a losing season.

“I do believe that’s what they pay us for,” Huggins deadpanned.

Interesting 11th hour tale about the recruitment of receiver Tyler Boyd, one of Pitt’s prized recruits for the upcoming signing day, yet still one of WVU’s top targets for next Wednesday.

Boyd has always liked the Mountaineers, but apparently Boyd’s closest company hasn’t always felt as liked as they would have preferred.

West Virginia was once thought to be the leader for Boyd, the 2012 Tribune-Review Player of the Year and a two-time pick as the state‘s top player in Class A.

But Payne said she is “uncomfortable” with how the Mountaineers have handled her son‘s recruitment, mostly because no one on their coaching staff ever spoke to her until Friday.

“I‘ve spoken to two coaches in the last two days, and that‘s the first time I spoke with anyone on the staff in at least a year-and-a-half?” she said. “If you‘re recruiting my son as heavily as you are, with all the other schools who have recruited him — I‘ve gotten something from somebody at some point; to not get anything, there‘s something wrong.

“They‘re apologizing. They‘re saying, ‘A mistake was made.‘ When did you recognize it? Just now, a week before Signing Day?”

The self-proclaimed “#1 Stunna” had it working last night and had the crowd living and dying on every flip of the bowl. A lot of the people in the Coliseum hadn’t seen @IamRedPanda — that’s OK, a lot of them didn’t know who Alex Ruoff was either when he was shown on the scoreboard during a timeout — but were fans by the end of her routine.

And dare I say, the same could probably be said of WVU, which actually played pretty well, including its own Seven Minutes of Wow, and might have either found or converted some fans in late January.

WVU v. Kansas: Magnum Opus

Tier IV sneaked a peak inside tonight, which means you are looking live at the Coliseum mere hours before No. 1/2 Kansas tries to extend the nation’s longest winning streak to 18 games against WVU, which hasn’t won back-to-back games since the end of 2012.

WVU marketing is going all out for this tonight and the seats are covered with reminders of the color you are to wear if the Mountaineers are to repeat their visual heroics from the football season.

Uh, easier said than done. This is a team that’s won 35 of its past 40 games, 9 of 11 on the road and  17 of 22 in road/neutral games. This foolish game, oh, it’s still the same …

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Kansas, ranked No. 1 today by the coaches, is also No. 1 in the NCAA in field-goal percentage defense. That’s just awful news for WVU, which is still among the words shooting teams in America.

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One reason the Mountaineers have been getting slimed as much as they have this season is because they have a severe and consistent case of the I-don’t-knows. It covers everyone and everything and WVU knows now what to do about it.

“I think if you look historically at my teams, we’ve scored at an extremely high rate after timeouts. But I can’t get these guys on the right side of the floor,” Huggins said. “It’s not like they don’t know the stuff. I don’t know what the explanation is. I don’t even know what they’re doing.

“When you say, ‘Triple stack on this side of the floor,’ and you draw it up, ‘You’re here, you’re here and you’re here,’ and two guys are stacked and one guy is standing out on the wing, I don’t know what to do with that.”