Posts from the West Virginia Basketball Category at FanHouse - AOL Sports Blog

The Word:

No More Flirting for the NBA Draft

Today's the day. No more maintaining eligibility and torturing angst-ridden college basketball fans. Today's the drop dead date for either pulling out of the NBA Draft or staying and committing.

So, since last night three more names have unsurprisingly decided to stay in the NBA Draft.

West Virginia's Joe Alexander finally made it official. This was no shock, as Alexander's draft stock soared to the point where the junior is expected to go anywhere from 8th to 13th in the draft. It's unlikely he would move that much further up the draft board if he stayed for his final season. He's only the second Mountaineer player to declare early for the draft. The unforgettable Gordon Malone was the first.

J.J. Hickson from NC State is staying in the draft. He gets to add his name to the list of one-and-dones. Not a surprise, but a bit of a comedown for Hickson. He came to the Wolfpack expecting to win and then go in the first round. He didn't win at NC State and is a likely pick in the second round (end of the first, at best).

Mario Chalmers becomes the 3d Jayhawk to stay in the NBA Draft. There is a chance that all 3 players could go in the first round. The only mystery surrounding whether Chalmers would stay was because his father is Director of Basketball Operations at Kansas.

Huggins Gets Alexander's Replacement for West Virginia

He was once a jewel in a top recruiting class at Indiana. Then the Kelvin Sampson stuff started hitting the fan. Devin Ebanks became one of the hottest late signees out there after being released from his scholarship. Memphis, Texas, UConn and other top schools came calling for the 6-8 forward out of New York City. A consensus 5-star, top-15 player nationally available in the late signing period. Ebanks narrowed his choices to Memphis, Texas, a local choice in Rutgers and West Virginia.

After Tyreke Evans signed with Memphis, many expected Ebanks to join John Calipari's crew. Instead, he chose Bob Huggins and West Virginia.
The Mountaineers were the last team to jump into the Ebanks second-chance sweepstakes, but Huggins quickly impressed the youngster.

"He visited me, and he was in the right places," Ebanks said. "(Saturday night) he told me he'll really take care of me."

Huggins has the perfect role for Ebanks. After leading the Mountaineers to a surprise Elite Eight spot in the 2008 NCAA Tournament, [Joe] Alexander declared for the NBA draft, although he hasn't hired an agent and could potentially return.
Joe Alexander increasingly looks to be a top15 pick in the NBA Draft and most don't see him coming back at this point. Getting Ebanks now is a huge coup for Huggins and fills a big void in the middle. It also rekindles old recruiting battles between Huggins and Calipari that go back to the days when Calipari was at UMass and Huggins was in Cinci.

West Virginia's Bob Huggins Hospitalized After Bumping His Head

West Virginia head basketball coach Bob Huggins was in a Charlotte, NC hospital after bumping his head. Huggs was talking on his cell phone as he was deboarding a plane when he tripped over a cone.
Haley Gentry, public affairs manager at Charlotte Douglas International Airport, said, "Upon exiting the plane, apparently he became dizzy and required medical attention." Gentry said a report of the incident did not say Huggins fainted.

Huggins was in Charlotte to meet with an alumni group.

Though the story sounds somewhat funny now, hearing that he was in the hospital is no joke. In 2002, Huggins suffered a massive heart attack while in an airport in Pittsburgh. He had to be shocked back to life three times. Since then, his health has been a topic of discussion -- including during West Virginia's recent Sweet 16 run.

Though it doesn't seem serious, here's wishing for a speedy recovery for Huggins.

House Cleaning at West Virginia

Rodriguez might not be such a jerk after all! I'm just kidding. Nothing will ever justify the way things have gone down between Rodriguez and West Virginia. It's been one stinking mud slinging mess that hasn't benefited either party. Suggestions of racism that probably aren't true. West Virginia fans shredding Rodriguez along with a slew of youtube's taunting Rodriguez. And of course, the WVU administration enslaving Rodriguez. Hell, I just want the season to start just so we can get out of this silly off season.

But it's hard not to look at the new contract signed by West Virginia basketball coach Bob Huggins, and not wonder how screwed up the lines of communication are at West Virginia.

Yet, the deal was a surprise even to some who shouldn't have been stunned. That's because WVU's administration -- continuing to be battered by the Heather Bresch bogus degree scandal -- did this deal behind the backs of its athletic leaders. It was a spin move right out of a Joe Alexander post-up. The WVU athletic staff had no knowledge of the "lifetime" contract talks until WVU Athletic Director Ed Pastilong finally was informed about it 24 hours before the dog-and-pony show to announce it.

The Bresch thing, if you don't know, is about Governor Manchin's daughter receiving a masters degree from West Virginia without earning it. The whole story is best read here (language warning). Back to my point though, who's in charge of the athletic department if the athletic director doesn't know a coach is getting a raise?

West Virginia's president, Mike Garrison, probably wanted to make a splash in his first year. But I doubt this is what he was looking for. He's single handedly ushered out the most successful football coach in Mountaineer history and has 80% of the faculty calling for his resignation over the Bresch scandal. Not bad for just over seven months on the job! And now leaving the athletic department in the dark about contract negotiations. It's been a bad year off the field for West Virginia. A little house cleaning might be in order before it works it's way onto the field. My suggestion would be to start at the top.

West Virginia Gets Its First Installment From a Michigan Coach

No, not Rich Rodriguez. It's John Beilein making the first of his 5 annual payments to West Virginia on his contract buyout. Beilein and WVU agreed to reduce the buyout from $2.5 million to $1.5 million over 5 years.

You would think Beilein would make the payment quietly and with at least some satisfaction that he got it brought down and spread over time. No, he's still not happy.
Beilein wrote that he made the first payment under protest, calling the buyout clause "unenforceable" and "grossly disproportional" to actual damages incurred by the university. WVU hired Bob Huggins away from Kansas State two days after Beilein's departure.

In the letter, Beilein left open the chance he might contest the settlement later.

"I urge the University to stop using the liquidated damages provision in its employment contracts because such provisions are illegal, onerous, and violate public policy," Beilein wrote.
Um, no it isn't. Liquidated damages are perfectly valid. If they were any of what Beilein claimed, the clause would be void and illegal under present contract law.

This seems more like Beilein is waiting to see what happens with the Rich Rodriguez lawsuit. If Rodriguez somehow wriggles out of his buyout, you can bet Beilein won't be far behind to file his own suit to avoid paying his buyout.

Joe Alexander's Missed Free Throw Will Haunt Him For a Long Time

With all due respect to my fellow FanHouser Charles Rich, I think that Joe Alexander's missed free throw towards the end of regulation is the biggest un-clutch play of the tournament.

I hesitate to use the word choke because he made a sensational shot just to get the "and-one" play and tie the game 64-64 in the first place. He isn't a goat so much because his production was there in the second half and led to West Virginia's comeback effort.

But, let's get real: his missed free throw cost them the game and a chance to play UCLA in the West Regional Finals. He will be haunted by this for a long, long time.

And it was something that maybe Xavier's Stanley Burrell had to do with, as he tells SI.com:

The most glaring example of West Virginia's bungling came at the end of regulation. Star forward Joe Alexander was at the free-throw line with 14 seconds left, looking to convert a three-point play after his quick turnaround tied the score at 64.

Burrell jarred at him, "Come on, you are going to miss this one," and Alexander responded with a comment that, as Burrell put it, "You don't want to put in any [article]." After a longer-than-usual approach, Alexander's free throw rimmed out, and the game went to overtime.

West Virginia Leaves the Shooter Open for 3... Again

It's not fair to tag Joe Alexander with goat horns because he missed that free throw on the "and 1" with 15 seconds left. Yes, it would have given WVU a 1 point lead, but there is no guarantee that the refs would have still swallowed their whistles on the contact when Lavender pulled up for his shot. Alexander also had 14 points in the second half and had 10 rebounds in the game. Without Alexander, there is no comeback and chance for WVU to win.

The killer for WVU was something that might be vaguely familiar to Mountaineer fans. Giving up a wide open look to a solid 3-point shooter in a corner at a key moment, because the defense collapsed too much. In this instance, the Mountaineers were defending the inbounds play and two players chased Josh Duncan, leaving B.J. Raymond all alone in the corner on the other side. The inbound pass went to him on one bounce and he drilled it to put Xavier up by 4 with 29 seconds left. Xavier came away with the win in OT, 79-75

WVU lost to Pitt back in February. In the final seconds of regulation, WVU up by 2 and Pitt's Ronald Ramon took the inbounds pass. He couldn't find an open shot and passed to Keith Benjamin who began a drive to the basket. Ramon ran to the corner and his man left him to help on the drive. The ball was tossed out to Ramon who drained the open 3 at the buzzer.

It should be worth mentioning at this point that Xavier Coach Sean Miller was a star point guard in the 80s at... Pitt.

West Virginia Following a Familiar Script in Trailing Xavier at the Half

At halftime Xavier has a 32-25 lead over West Virginia. Surprisingly, West Virginia should feel pretty good considering they fell behind by 18 with 9 minutes to go. They clamped on defense, holding Xavier to only 4 points the rest of the way.

West Virginia has done this, despite 0-6 on 3s, Joe Alexander saddled with foul troubles and only 3 points. To say nothing of Xavier shooting 6-12 on 3s.

If this seems familiar, it's because West Virginia started similarly against Duke in the previous round. The Mountaineers were down against Duke and shot poorly in the first half, but got within 5 by the half. In the second half, they turned on the offense and after not hitting 3s, began connecting.

West Virginia can't be expected to continue shooting that poorly from outside, and it is hard to believe the Musketeers can continue to be that hot from outside.

Cam Thoroughman Decks Gerald Henderson: Duke Haters' Favorite Video

If you're a Duke hater, it doesn't get much better than this simple video:

(Via Mr. Irrelevant) Late in Duke's loss to West Virginia, the Mountaineers' Cam Thoroughman ran right through the Blue Devils' Gerald Henderson, leaving Henderson flat on his back -- and no foul was called.

Some will wonder why Thoroughman didn't get whistled, but considering that Henderson shoved Thoroughman first -- and considering that Duke players have been known to to a wee bit of flopping -- it somehow seems just.

Who Will Cincinnati Root For in Sweet 16: Xavier or Bob Huggins?

A very interesting occurance has come to Cincinnati fans: the Xavier Musketeers will meet the West Virginia Mountaineers in the Sweet 16. Normally, that doesn't mean much ... but WVU is now coached by Bob Huggins, the former coach at the U of Cincinnati.

You listen to people around town and the buzz is more about Huggins that the Muskies.

Huggins is a god in the Nati. He took a Bearcat program that was lying in the gutter and vaulted them into a Final Four appearance in 1992. Since then, he made Cincy basketball matter as they transitioned from the Metro Conference to the Great Midwest to Conference USA to, ultimately, the Big East.

Huggs never got to coach his team in the Big East as he was run out of town by Cincinnati's president Nancy Zimpher in 2005. You know how some Indiana fans won't come back after Bobby Knight was run off, the same thing has happened to the Bearcats. There are people that have abandoned the Bearcats program and who are elated at Huggins' ability to take West Virginia to the Sweet 16. Even after he left, he still has endorsement deals in the city.