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

Offense and defense continue to dislike one another

Understand that this happened first Thursday.

That’s K.J. Dillon in the blue. For the record, I think it’s a disservice he’s not going with Kimlon, but I won’t dare tell him such a thing. And for the record, he’s playing this season. I don’t know how he doesn’t. He’s one guy players and coaches on both sides of the ball have mentioned, a few voluntarily, and freshmen can play at safety.

Anyhow, he takes out Travares Copeland’s block — and Copeland didn’t really do anything wrong … he went low and popped up — and then takes down Terrence Gourdine, who had no chance. It really looked like Gourdine was either surprised or impressed by what happened to Copeland and the next thing he knew, Dillon was unhinging his jaw and readying to strike.

Then Dillon he celebrates and the guys in blue were swole. In the back-and-forth we’ve thus far seen, both physically and, more memorably, verbally, the defense took a lead.

That did not last long.

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Do NOT be alarmed, OK, guys?

Tavon Austin is teaching Jordan Thompson many things, including the value in running the hell out of bounds.

“Even when we were doing 7-on-7 in the summer, I’d practice stepping out of bounds, even though it was just touch football, because I wanted to get in that habit,” he said.

Austin and Thompson get off the field and stay clear of danger, but they’ll still be abused. This is college football, after all, and the boys are men and many men think they ought to grow up and not shrink toward the sideline.

“Guys say a lot of crazy things – I can’t repeat them now, but they say what they say,” Austin said. “I laugh at them because I live to play the next play.”

This drives Austin’s opponents and fans berserk, but it’s probably a pretty smart thing. You do need to see Thompson in person to see how smallish he is, even beside Austin, who despite not being very big is nevertheless bigger.

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The thinking here takes place a few steps outside of the box that ordinarily contains thoughts on this matter, but you probably know this is nothing new. Nevertheless, there was one prevailing thought yesterday, and even in the weeks before Dana Holgorsen and Oliver Luck signed Holgorsen’s contract.

WVU President Jim Clements needs to draw up a new contract for his athletic director and include a buyout. If WVU is to ask Holgorsen to commit time to the program and finances if he leaves, it’s only right to ask the same of the gentleman who runs the entire operation and who WVU cannot afford to lose without compensation.

Salary is just one part and it doesn’t always cancel out ambition. People have left good jobs with big salaries many times before. Suppose one day Luck does that. Suppose he had just done it and left for Stanford.

Remember, too, that Clements himself offered up the University of Texas, which has an athletic director with a salary in excess of $1 million, as one school that will likely need an athletic director in the next few years and might look at Luck.

Clements can’t allow Luck to go without money coming back to the Mountaineers. Not with the enormous raise to $775,000 he just accepted, not with the money and philosophy WVU has already sunk into the move into the Big 12.

A buyout doesn’t staple Luck to WVU, but it makes sure WVU has some money to use to replace Luck – and WVU would have to spend to hire a new Luck just like it would have to spend to hire a new Holgorsen.

Kickin’ ain’t easy

Tyler Bitancurt kicked a football 101 times in games last season — 22 field goal attempts, 63 point-after attempts and 16 kickoff — and not once did he go light on a swing.

Remember, too, that he’ll fire off another 100 or so kicks before a game and then adds around the same amount when he’s kicking into a net on the sideline or warming up before the second half starts.

Sometimes a game itself can wear you out, and believe the Orange Bowl required extra ice.

But that’s just the physical part. Playing for WVU and being the back end of Dana Holgorsen’s scoring attack highlights the mental component. Bitancurt must maintain constant preparedness and that, too, can take it out of you.

The new document, signed and celebrated this morning, is for six years through 2017, with a starting salary of $2.3 million. Thanks to four annual raises, he’ll make $2.9 million annually at the end of the deal. In full, he can make at most $20.5 million in salary, bonuses and incentives. See for yourself here.

A few highlights:

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Andrew Buie hits big point

We’ve been over this before, and actually quite frequently, but Andrew Buie gets hit really hard really often. He’s (still) healthy today, and probably because he is noticeably bigger, especially in the upper body. Yet he’s also much more aware of the difference between then and now.

Not for his own gain, though. The guy won’t even field a question about the Stiff Arm if it relates to his candidacy. He’d rather throw an out to the far sideline against Cover 2 than pump his own fist, but he is ready to throw his support behind a candidate.

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Among other matters addressed after practice yesterday, the head coach glowed about the freshman class. That might not be unusual, except we’re four practices and one day in pads into this thing and already it seems like first-year players won’t be denied playing time. That could very well include offensive linemen, too, which would blur a line Holgorsen drew just last week.

Today’s lesson: Don’t get smacked in the face

Fun little part of practice today. Receiver Isaiah Hayes catches a pass in a screen drill and fights his way around cornerback Brandon Napoleon, apparently by making use of a slap to the head at the end of the play.

Cornerback Pat Miller did not like that … not because Hayes did it, but because Napoleon allowed it to happen without recompense. Receiver Stedman Bailey couldn’t have been happier, though.

The action begins 16 seconds in, with Miller audibly scolding Napoleon and Bailey teasing Miller from the opposite end of the drill. I laughed hard about this and, even if not the result of this particular instance, Dana Holgorsen seemed impressed by such verve.

“I like their mentality right now. We’re trying to develop some leaders just like everybody across the country. We probably have a few more on offense than we do on defense, but the defense is playing like they have a chip on their shoulder and to me they’re flying around and playing hard.”

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It’s been a long December

This is fun: Suppose WVU wins its season-opener against Marshall and avoids an upset against the open week the following Saturday. The early season schedule is filled with tough games for top-1o teams in the first two weeks.

Quite likely, the currently 11th-ranked Mountaineers saunter into the party at FedEx Field Sept. 15 as a top-10 team. WVU hasn’t been a top-10 team in exactly 47 months.

So, how has this happened?

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