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

Day two

* Health seems to be a quiet concern. Sidney Glover said last week he could have played had WVU had a game the Saturday following the South Florida game in which he hurt his knee, but he’s at least still bothered and was replaced Tuesday by Nate Sowers. Cornerback Brandon Hogan, who Bill Stewart said last week may be good enough to go pro next year, is sick and limited. Center Mike Dent needs a medical miracle to play. Jim Lewis is bothered again by that stressfracture in his foot and didn’t practice Tuesday. Ovid Goulbourne and Pat Liebig, backups at linebacker and defensive line, were in green jerseys as they deal with lingering issues. Stewart is being understandably tight-lipped, but that’s quite a list of players who might not play or might play with compromised health.

* To say Stewart is not pleased with the buzz about Noel Devine’s supposed academic trouble would be like saying Clark W. Griswold was not pleased about his membership to the jelly of the month club. I won’t say anything more about this, but it’s worth pointing out that a number of players and coaches are fired up about this and WVU has in the past done well when motivated.

* That said, let’s get this out of the way now: The extracurriculars behind last year’s preparation were nothing like this year’s. It’s entirely different. Not only that, but a ton of those players are gone and not here this year. The preparation may be structured similarly, but it’s really a lot different beneath the surface. Yes, it’s light and spirited again and WVU isn’t exactly in the favorite’s position again, but let’s not devalue what that team did by trying to apply it to this season. This team is trying to win a game. That team was trying to prove a point, validate a man and preserve a program. Oh, WVU’s an underdog? In Charlotte? Is that really surprising? And is that anything — anything — like the circumstances surrounding last year? It’s not a fair or accurate comparison. Just expext WVU to be ready to play.

* Pat White defined irony after taking his laps around Lowes Motor Speedway Tuesday: “I was afraid. I have no need for speed.”

* Bowl swag? Pure Digital Flip mini-camcorder, Fossil watch, Fossil sunglasses, Armor Gear backpack.

* Redshirting players are not allower to speak to the media this week — ie, Ryan Clarke, Terrence Kerns, etc. — but they get some valuable practice time. Stewart likened it to spring practice. When practice goes to “good on good” the redshirts go off to their own area and get a pretty good workout. Stewart also uses the time to try players at different positions and revealed Joe Rhein, who was the scout team defensive player of the year, is getting a look at center and Josh Jenkins is getting a shot at tackle rather than guard.

* Speaking of Jenkins, no one knows for certain if he can take a medical redshirt. WVU’s stats have him playing in four of the first five games. To qualify for the redshirt, a player can’t go beyond four of the first six. Oll Stewart was told by a team representative Jenkins had played in all five games, which would disqualify the true freshman from Parkersburg from redshirt status. Stewart said he’d figure things out before the game. If Jenkins plays, he’s obviously not a redshirt candidate.  

* In a casual moment, Stewart was raving about recruiting and said the incoming class could be the “best ever” when signing day comes. There seem to be good vibes about a number of notable players and whatever concerns may exist could be alleviated by January 10. I know, serious read-between-the-lines stuff.

* Chuck Finder alert! Pretty funny look at “Too Live Stew.” (Is that how we’re going to have to introduce Chuck’s stuff? If so, I think he’d be honored.)

* That’s probably all for today. Perhaps something much, much later. Tomorrow will be blank unless something happens. Of course, you’ll never know if something happened unless you check. Hmmm. ‘Tis the cross we bear. Enjoy the holidays.

Perhaps they missed him?

Alex Ruoff made nine 3-point baskets last night as WVU roughed up Radford and Ruoff shed a shooting slump.

Ruoff’s last three games had produced just 12 field goals, the same number of field goals he scored this game. And, over his last four games he had made just about one-third of his shots with 15 field goals in 44 attempts.

In fact, in those last four games he made but seven 3-point shots, two fewer than he made in this game.

Rather than wonder where his shooting eye went or blaming it on the injury or being rusty for missing a couple of games, Ruoff went to the coaches for help.

They made an adjustment, something with his thumb he would say, but as Huggins was to put it:

“I can’t fix it. They have to fix it. It’s a tribute to him.”

Ruoff didn’t play the two of the past three games and hasn’t been himself for quite some time. A few people I spoke with last night said he had a little snarl, a little swagger. Ruoff doesn’t allow himself to do that if it isn’t legit. If it is, he holds that hand in the air, spins crisply on his heels, claps his hands or says a little something to no one in particular — or all of the above.

Continue reading…

And so it begins…

Bowl practice No. 1 starts shortly at Country Day School, a private school just a few minutes from downtown. The Bucs provide a pretty nice facility and finished 8-3 this season, though it should be noted they lost at home on senior night to Charlotte Latin School, 30-10.

This matters because North Carolina is practicing at Charlotte Latin School and who knows how much karma is available.

Probably not much. Bowl games, with the various variables that inevitably come into play, like extra prep time and the relative unfamilarity among the opponents, typically come down to a few things: Mistakes, fundamentals, special teams and one or two big/trick plays.

The Tar Heels haven’t been in a bowl since 2004, when they lost the Continental Tire Bowl, which is now the Car Care Bowl, to Boston College. It’s the only time a Big East team has won the bowl, though the Eagles promptly took that with them to the ACC.

WVU, which is playing in a seventh straight bowl, has won three in a row because it’s been pretty good in the aforementioned areas, especially turnovers.

In 180 minutes over the Sugar, Gator and Fiesta bowl victories with Pat White at quarterback, West Virginia has not had a turnover.

It is a combined plus-6 in turnover margin in beating Georgia, Georgia Tech and Oklahoma in those games … and turnovers have told the tale in WVU regular seasons and bowls for years.

It’s a very reliable barometer.

When WVU was mired in a then-record eight consecutive bowl losses (1987-1998 ) under Coach Don Nehlen (Notre Dame takes nine defeats in a row into Wednesday’s Hawaii Bowl), the Mountaineers won the turnover differential only once.

Once more, with feeling

A win Saturday gives this senior class the most wins in school history. It’s a tad overrated for historical purposes — the past two senior classes set the record and next year’s class has a good shot at doing it again — but in the here and now sense, it’s very significant. It means, quite simply, the players did what they were recruited to do and it cannot be taken away from them. That they remained and delivered matters most.

In 2004, Stanchek and White matriculated to Morgantown with a litany of players no longer around, such as Brandon Barrett, Tyler Benoit, T.J. Mitchell, Darius Reynaud (a Minnesota Vikings member who used up his eligibility last season) and Pernell Williams. Stanchek looked over that signing day roster and met each absentee with a reaction: “Wow. … It’s pretty impressive. Wow.

“All great guys we came in with,” he added. “Just goes to show you how hard Division I football is, I guess. Not everybody [makes it]. I’ll never forget coach [Garrett] Ford [the associate athletic director for student services], when we first got here, we were sitting in a room, and he says, ‘Now look at the guy next to you, they probably aren’t going to be here in five years.’ We’re all like, ‘Yeah, right.’ He was not lying.”

McAfee perused the 2005 roll call and offered explanations for various names, such as Rashad Rousell (“never met him”), Steve Slaton (“one of the top running backs in the NFL”), Jason Gwaltney (“really good kid if you knew him, just made some dumb decisions”), J.R. House (“my man, I still talk to him” ) and Melvin Marquis, who quit to try a musical career and left a scholarship open for starting left guard Greg Isdaner. Concluded McAfee: “That’s crazy. Ridiculous. A lot of guys gone. Some guys ended up in the NFL. Some guys ended up incarcerated [Ed Collington of Penn Hills, James Ingram and Charles Pugh ran afoul of the law]. It’s all the same thing.”

Talking points

…from the weekend that was. For your use in elevator rides, trips to the water cooler and other awkward moments on a Monday.

– Pat McAfee had a swift kick for some fans. 

– The Big East has a new leader in total offense.  

– Andy Katz was not a popular man Saturday. (This is funny to me on a purely superficial level because there was a time when Katz’s word was gospel. Back in the day, John Beilein and N.C. State were flirting with one another and it was apparent something was imminent. I was reporting the story and getting pummeled on a daily basis and one person with a platform devalued things by saying it couldn’t be true because — and this is the truth — Mr. Katz had not yet reported it. Katz was out of the country on vacation.) 

– Oh, that tricky Bob Huggins!

– Surprised about the ease with which WVU won Saturday? One explanation jumps to the surface.

… off to Charlotte.

A call for clarity

Well, this is all for the week. Quasi-Christmas weekend awaits back home and then it’s off for Charlotte Monday morning. Dispatches will begin sometime that day, likely in the evening. Looking over last year’s work, I was reminded how the players were stunned by the weather — it was cold in Arizona. Seems as if more surprises are on tap this year.

Back to business. A number of people read yesterday’s column, but kind of missed the point — I can’t share the e-mails, but check the comments after the article. The intent was not to put Huggins up against Stewart or to set up some scenario in which people applaud the basketball coach while assailing the football coach.

Rather, it was to explore how play-calling is very different in football than it is in basketball.

It is the sports they coach and the emphasis each puts on calling plays. Football might have 70 snaps in a game and basketball might have 70 possessions. Yet in football, a play call is a regular occurrence. In basketball, it’s a rare one.

“They have a timeout after every play,” Huggins said. “We’ve got to go on the fly a lot more. And really, if you think of it, they can huddle after every play. We certainly can’t do that.”

Time is precious in basketball. Football has 40 seconds to get a play, gather at the line of scrimmage, share the play, shift, motion and snap the ball. Basketball has 35 seconds to transition from defense to offense, get the play, run the play and shoot.

Research, Tar Heels style

As best as I can tell from what I’ve read online, North Carolina’s players didn’t see much, if anything, of WVU during the season.

UNC played Rutgers and UConn before those two teams played WVU this season, meaning when the Tar Heels were studying tape of Rutgers and UConn, they didn’t see the Mountaineers at all. The chances are high not too many players watched WVU’s games on TV this season, either. Yet the Tar Heels are ready because they have video game consoles!

With names like Pat White and Noel Devine, it’s a team that has the potential for big plays time those dynamics playmakers touch the field. Deunta Williams said that he and Trimane Goddard use West Virginia on the NCAA Football video game because of the team speed.

The once an former Quizzical Comment has reached the far corners of the country. Cue The Oregonian’s 2009 bowl guide and its reason to watch West Virginia v. North Carolina.

Meineke Car Care Bowl (Dec. 27, 10 a.m.) ESPNWest Virginia vs. North CarolinaJustification: West Virginia coach Bill Stewart recently said his state has enough oil, coal, gas and brainpower to run the world. Get to know your soon-to-be new Supreme World Leader, Bill Stewart.

Also worth a glance for the chuckle: Hawaii, Independence, Liberty and Fiesta.

Oh, snap!

Perhaps you’ve heard by now, and if you haven’t you’ll likely be entertained to learn that at Saturday’s home men’s basketball game against UT-Arlington, Marshall’s pep band played “Country Roads.”

And was booed lustily. No wonder.

I admire the dedication of Marshall’s pep band under the direction of Ben Miller and love their presence at the basketball games. But the MU music powers-that-be need a serious reality check on this issue.

The only way “Country Roads” ever should be played at Marshall is if John Denver arises from the dead and makes a ghostly guest appearance at the Henderson Center.

Over the past few years as the sports on campus have jumped to elite levels and attracted elite athletes, WVU fans have become very aware and appreciative of 40-yard dash times, wingspans, bench press figures and vertical leap measurements. Yet never will they overlook or underestimate work ethic and the color of one’s color.

It’s what made an undersized Dan Mozes so successful and a moderately athletic 2004-05 basketball team so fun. It’s what made Owen Schmitt so cool and what’s making people think of Schmitt when they see someone else these days.

Thoroughman, the West Virginia sophomore forward from Portsmouth, Ohio, turns a basketball game into a demolition derby. He is to basketball what Owen Schmitt was to football, always a collision waiting to happen.

West Virginia’s colors may be blue and old gold but Thoroughman’s colors are black and blue and old gold. He wears bruises the way Gen. MacArthur used to wear medals.

It isn’t that he means it that way. He’d rather be as smooth as Devin Ebanks, as agile as Wellington Smith.

But that isn’t him.

He’d never win American Idol, but he might win a bar-room brawl.

Cam, who you must remember is a 6-foot-4 post player who essentially trusts one leg, did indeed make an impact against Duke in last season’s NCAA Tournament and afterward teammates were all too happy to say he was more of a “Bob Huggins player” than most realized. Why, he’d wanted to get surgery to fix his balky knee late in the season, but Huggins pretty much pleaded with Thoroughman to wait until the offseason because Huggins and the Mountaineers were going to need him. He’d become that valuable, which was a big change from where he’d started.