By Andy Brown on Mar 12, 2008 | In Basketball, Big East, Featured, Preview | No Comments »
The 5th seeded West Virginia Mountaineers will face a familiar Big East Tournament foe this afternoon. The 12th seeded Providence Friars and the Mountaineers are no strangers to each other in the world’s most famous arena Madison Square Garden. They’ve played each other in 4 of the past 6 seasons the Big East Tournament was played. That includes last year’s Mountaineer 1st round win where they set a Big East Tournament record for making the most threes in one game (17).
The Mountaineers will attempt to accomplish an unusual task, beat a Big East opponent three times in a year. Ironically enough that happened in 2005 with Providence. While it’s safe to say the Eers have locked up an NCAA Tournament spot being 33rd in the RPI there’s some haters out there who think that’s not good enough. The one making the loudest point is ESPN self-proclaimed college basketball analyst Doug Gottlieb. Gottlieb when asked about the Eers chances for a tournament berth did not speak to kindly about us. He stated that our resume and our team are nothing but a joke and a farce. Well move aside Corso we got a true Mountie hater in the house. Let’s make Gottlieb eat some crow and make him look like the punk hypocrite that he is. The tipoff is set for around 2:30 on ESPN. Good luck and GOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO Mountaineers!
By Andy Brown on Mar 12, 2008 | In Basketball, Big East, Featured | 3 Comments
Congrats Joe Alexander!
We here at wvmountaineersports.com would like to congratulate Joe Alexander on making the All Big East first team. Alexander’s 93 point barrage in the final three regular season games was just enough for the voters to catch up what we already know. For the season Alexander averaged 16.2 points per game to go along with 6 rebounds not to mention 46 blocks for the season. He also shot almost 48 percent from the field while shooting 81 percent from the foul line.
Joe has come a long way since he got relegated to the bench during WVU’s classic NIT title run. Thanks to Coach Huggs Mountaineer Nation will see something that hasn’t been seen in the past soon-to-be 29 years…..an NBA player that hails from West Virginia. Not only is Alexander a leading candidate for next season’s Big East Player of the Year but also, dare I say, one of the top candidates for the John Wooden Award. Once again, congrats to Alexander and let the hype machine for his senior season begin.
Also, our two favorite seniors, Darris Nichols and Ted Talkington, found out Tuesday that they have received Big East Conference Awards.
Darris Nichols will share the Big East Scholarship Award with our much hated Pitt foe Ronald Ramon.
Ted Talkington was named 2007-08 Big East/Aeropostale Men’s Basketball Scholar-Athlete of the Year. He will recieve a $2,000 scholarship that can be used for graduate studies or professional studies… in other words, he can blow it in Vegas!
By Andy Brown on Mar 10, 2008 | In Big East, Reviews, Women BBall | No Comments »
West Virginia from the very start forgot how to play good basketball as the 7th seeded Louisville Cardinals jumped out to a 20-3 lead and never look back as they upset 3rd seeded and 18th ranked WVU Mountaineers by the score of 67-60. After the Cards had a 20 point halftime lead and where up as much as 22 the Eers tried all second half to mount a comeback. But fouls and the Cards offensive rebounding (16 in all) prevented the Eers from accomplishing that task as they could get no closer to five. Senior LaQuita Owens lead the Eers with 23 points while Louisville star Angel McCoughtry scored 24 points. The Cards will have the dubious task to upset top-seed UCONN in the Big East Tournament final tomorrow night while the Mountaineers will eagerly await to find out who they’ll play in the NCAA Tournament on Selection Sunday.
By Andy Brown on Mar 10, 2008 | In Big East, Preview, Women BBall | No Comments »
Before the WVU men play their 1st round game Wednesday afternoon against Providence let’s not forget that the women are involved in a potential Big East Tournament run of their own. After last night’s crusin’ over South Florida they now advance to play the Louisville Cardinals who upset the 2nd seeded Rutgers Scarlet Knights last night. The tipoff is roughly at 8:30 and will be televised on ESPNU (which sucks for you in Motown unless you want to go to Damon’s or Kegler’s to watch it). The winner of this game will play in the Big East Tournament Final tomorrow night to likely face the 1st seeded floor host UCONN Huskies. Should be a great game to watch. GOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO MOUNTAINEERS!
By MountaineerBob on Mar 9, 2008 | In Basketball, Big East, Featured | 1 Comment »
The Big East Bracket is set!
By MountaineerBob on Mar 9, 2008 | In Featured, News | 2 Comments
I hate the show but this is a good one and it’s a public relations dream for WVU. This episode is for the Turner Family in Fairmont, WV. They had a 600sq. ft. house that held 5 kids and 2 adults. Trust me, they needed a new house. I missed the first few minutes, but I think the dad is a football coach for a local school (high school??). Also, I don’t know what position their son Desmond Turner plays, but for a 16 year old he looks big and has 2 more years to get bigger and is dying to go to WVU, Doc, get on the phone and keep ‘em in WV baby!
The bad thing about this is Ty Penington was at the Pitt/WVU disaster and they were showing some clips of Ty talking at the game. I was there and I don’t remember this, but then again, I don’t remember much from that game. Anyway, if you get to see this show, it will give you a good fuzzy feeling cause they are helping out a deserving WV family and it is chuck full of WVU lovin! I’m so jealous of the 16 year old’s bedroom.. all decked out in Gold and Blue!!!
By MountaineerBob on Mar 9, 2008 | In Basketball, Featured | 3 Comments
UPDATE: Let’s make the prizes even sweeter. I would like to be able to make the First Place, Runner-Up prizes better and I would like to have enough prizes for a Third Place and a Dead Last Sucker prize. So I was thinking, if you own a business, have something you have two of, or know someone who would donate a prize for this contest please get in touch with me. I would be willing to work out a deal with any businesses, restaurant, bar, shop.. anyone who has something a WV fan would be interested in. A donation to the prize pool gets you free ad space, the better the gift, the better the ad space. Let’s make this big people! Contact me at mountaineerbob@gmail.com
It’s that time of the year…finally. The NCAA Tournament is just around the corner and we here at WVMountaineerSports.com want to give back to our loyal readers and resident know-it-alls.
Unlike most “free” online brackets out there, with ours you can actually win something… legally. We are psyched to be able to pay you guys and gals back for being such loyal readers and making WVMountaineerSports.com the #1 WVU fan site out there!
So here’s the deal. I’ve set up a bracket group over at Yahoo! Fantasy Sports. Signing up is free. Since we are giving away prizes we have decided to make the group password protected to make sure only fans of the site and WVU join and play. The password is ‘pittsucks‘. Everything else is pretty self explanatory. Enjoy and have fun.
So you think you know College Basketball?
By Andy Brown on Mar 8, 2008 | In Basketball, Big East, Featured, Reviews | 1 Comment »
Knowing that St. John was not going to go to the Big East Tournament next week not to mention they were playing in front of a sparse crowd at the world’s most famous arena you would think the West Virginia Mountaineers would stomp them all day. When WVU was up 23-12 with about 10 minutes left you’d think they could but leave it to the Johnnies to play with pride which is important in the playgrounds of NYC. It was that pride, led by coach Norm Roberts, that almost gave St. John’s an upset win and potentially spoiling WVU’s NCAA hopes which appeared locked after Monday’s win over Pittsburgh.
Enter Joe Mazzulla. Playing for most of the second half in place of the injured Darris Nichols he was outplayed defensively leading the Johnnies to make some important buckets near the end of the game. It was Mazz who fouled Malik Boothe with 5.5 seconds left with the score tied at 66. Boothe calmly drained both and with a St. John’s timeout someone to take charge. It was Mazzulla who dribbled through the full court press (even dribbling off his knee to cut through a double-team) to score a lay-up with .3 seconds left to tie the game at 68 and send the game to Overtime. Read the rest »
By Jeremy Curtis on Mar 7, 2008 | In Basketball, Big East, Featured | 2 Comments
Joe Alexander Last Year at MSG
Saturday, West Virginia (21-9, 10-7) heads to the world’s most famous arena, Madison Square Garden, for its final regular season game against St. John’s (11-18, 5-12).
The Mountaineers have found a home away from home in New York City in recent years, especially in March.
Rewind back to the 2004-2005 season under former head coach John Beilein. WVU defeated Providence, then-No. 19 Boston College and then-No. 13 Villanova, in Madison Square Garden, before falling to Syracuse, in the Big East Tournament championship game.
The Mountaineers performance in the conference tournament helped them secure a NCAA Tournament bid. Kevin Pittsnogle, Mike Gansey and company shocked the college basketball world and took WVU all the way to the Elite Eight. WVU came up just short against Louisville, in a thrilling overtime loss that would have sent the Mountaineers to the Final Four.
Fast forward to 2006-2007. WVU advanced to the semifinals of the NIT, again in Madison Square Garden. Darris Nichols hit a game-winning, buzzer-beating 3-point basket from the corner against Mississippi State.
The 63-62 victory over MSU propelled WVU to the NIT championship game against Clemson. Frank Young lead all scorers with 24 points in his final game in a West Virginia uniform. WVU claimed its first NIT championship since 1942.
Playing in ‘The Big Apple’ has proven kind to the Mountaineers of late. Tournament games in the Garden have launched WVU’s premier postseason play and exhibited a prestigious basketball program’s history, in a football-first state.
Those Mountaineer moments and players will live in the hearts of WVU fans forever. Read the rest »