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

There are a NFL scouts who come to WVU to watch Robert Sands and to talk to his coaches because, in a way, the reports seem a little too good to be true.

Is Sands, for example, 6-foot-5? His height wouldn’t be the first to be embellished, especially in the defensive backfield.

Can he really play fast and fluid at that height? The last thing a team wants is a statuesque safety in the back of the defense.

Oh, and is he as sharp, teachable and aware as everyone is told? The learning rate in the NFL is very rapid and a safety is charged with knowing a whole lot more than his job.

So there are a lot of variables to go with a lot of attention. One day during preseason camp, when it became obvious Sands could leave after this season, it was asked among a few reporters, “Would Sands be so popular if he was four inches shorter?” Really, if he was the same player and person, but 6-1, would he have all this hype around him?

The question had to be asked. Hardly surprising, everyone thought Sands would still be a special player. Sands thought size was a little overrated

Sands can’t hypothesize on being shorter because he’s always been taller. He can relate to being 6-1, but only because he was that size as a high school freshman, when he was already taller than everyone at his position.

And height as it relates to the composition of a football player doesn’t much matter to Sands.

“A football player is a football player, no matter how tall or how short he is,” Sands said. “If he can make plays, he can make plays. If you can’t, you won’t. I don’t think it matters as much as heart and determination and will power. You just have to want to make plays.”

As an example, Sands highlights senior safety Sidney Glover, who’s regarded as one of the team’s toughest players, but who plays at 5-11 and 205 pounds.

“Sid’s not 6-5, but Sid makes plays,” Sands said. “He returned an interception for a touchdown. I didn’t do that.”

Mr. Wallace heads south

(Update: Story up by the tag team champs. I was the Marty Janetty here, to be honest.)

Went away for 48 hours and, of course, true freshman offensive lineman Marquis Wallace leaves the football team. WVU confirmed the news. It appears the 6-foot-5, 290-pound product of Richmond’s Varina High will enroll at — wait for it — Marshall.

The Tower of Brandon Hogan’s Power

Friday Feedback

Welcome to the Friday Feedback, one of the best 11 and 11 best weekly features in a West Virginia newspaper blog devoted to WVU sports. It’s a high honor. One arrest-free weekend and WVU can stop messing with all the prerequisites and simply devote itself to football and maneuvering through what should — or is it could? — be a 3-0 start and maybe a matchup of top-15 teams in Baton Rouge. I can’t predict losses to Maryland or Marshall, unless WVU is just awful. And I don’t know if that’s going to happen on an early, healthy Saturday.

It occurred to me as I reviewed the depth chart earlier this week WVU has a number of seniors and a wealth of returning starters/regulars. That’s probably the most reasonable and readily attainable request a coach/player/booster/fan of a major college program can have — and I mean having 11 eligible Reggie Bushes on offense or 22 5-star senior starters are not reasonable requests. You’d like to have able veterans, preferably in reserve, too. The Mountaineers have that and look to make the most of it.

Then again, if you’d ask people where they absolutely don’t want to have concerns, they’d probably mention quarterback and offensive line early in their replies. Obviously, that’s two of WVU’s most worrisome areas … and it may all be unfounded concern. Yet it’s what’s written and talked about, and with reason. Until that reason is eliminated, it’s a valid point to consider when considering where the Mountaineers go this season.

But hey, just eight more days until the answers appear in some form on the field. Fun times, yes?

Onto the Feedback. As always, comments appear as posted. In other words, keep your head in the game.

BillyBall said:

D-mn you Casazza. I just returned from a european vacay with my bride and what do I see? The words “noooooo” and “Eu Smith” in the same paragraph!!! Nearly soiled myself.

Nearly? Nooooo!

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Oliver Luck is thinking about the future and has a few ideas. How about some rennovations at Milan Puskar Stadium and the Coliseum?

” … The university and the state have made a significant investment in the program and I think in order to keep the momentum going, you have to bring new things to the table.”

Luck said keeping facilities up to date and on the same level as competitors in the conference, the region and the country is a top priority and “you’re almost never there.” Enhancing a football stadium is a logical fix.

“It’s a revenue generator,” he said. “It’s like the possibility of putting suites in here. It’s a very simple calculation. What do they cost? What can we sell them for? At what point to they start to kick off cash flow? I’m convinced we’ll need suites for the football stadium – additional suites – as well as suites (at the Coliseum) because I think the demand is there.”

Bowling (Green), anyone?

The orange-and-brown MAC squad fills the last vacancy on WVU’s 2011 football schedule.

A website devoted to college football, nationalchamps.net, has the game listed on the WVU and BG schedules for Oct. 1, 2011. Parsons confirmed that date was accurate.

The Falcons will receive what Parsons called “an above-average guarantee” for their visit to Morgantown, with no return game in Ohio.

Asked how the guarantee to the Mid-American Conference school might compare to the $740,000 that UNLV will get from West Virginia this season, Parsons said, “I don’t want to get into that until we have a signed agreement.”

Friday Feedback is coming later. It’s already done, but I’m just working a few other things in here today because, like this item, they deserve the space.

Chris Beatty would like to avoid another Cincinnati

You’ll remember the confounding way the WVU-Cincinnati game ended last season. If you look at the box score, you’d say Noel Devine had an OK evening … and you’d probably have to wonder why the key carries went to Jock Sanders.

Well, Noel was nicked and an ankle tugged him to the sideline. Enter Sanders, which not only meant a slight slip at the running back positon, but a deeper dip at receiver. And so it was on third-and-9 at the Cincinnati 26, the Mountaineers chose  not to pass to a group down one receiver and instead said they’d hand to a backup running back. One-yard gain, incomplete pass on fourth down and you know how the rest of the story goes.

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‘I get the mic last’

That is the warning from sore-but-better WVU basketball coach Bob Huggins, who is preparing to be roasted next Friday. And for a wonderful cause.

As long as the menu doesn’t include rib roast, the WVU coach will probably make it through the night – although laughter may be a bit painful to his still healing sides.

“Whatever they say,” Huggins said, “I’ve heard it all before.”

The WVU Alumni Association’s University Chapter conducts its annual “Countdown to Kickoff” at 5 p.m. Sunday at the new alumni center. Come for the festivities, stay for the unusual statue out front! Oh, and Steve Dunlap will speak and if you ask politely he might talk about Robert Sands. Maybe. He isn’t asked about him often.

The registration form is after the jump …

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Alarming disappointment for Furyk

Pro golfer Jim Furyk overslept this morning — Aside: Can one oversleep at 7 a.m.? — and missed a tee time for a pro-am, which thus disqualifies him for the first event in the Fed Ex Cup playoff.

Bummer for one of the more famous WVU fans, but I really have to wonder if he’s been paying close attention through the years.