Don’t look now, but West Virginia basketball could be back in business

West Virginia basketball has had a rough calendar year, but the future looks bright with Kerr Kriisa and Raequan Battle back in the mix.

You’d be hard pressed to find a college program that was dealt a more difficult hand this past year than the West Virginia men’s basketball team.

The Mountaineers began the offseason landing a handful of highly regarded players in the transfer portal, including Syracuse big man Jesse Edwards, Arizona point guard Kerr Kriisa, and Montana State’s Raequan Battle.

That trio of newcomers, along with the expected return of Jose Perez after sitting out because of eligibility issues, put Bob Huggins’ team in a good spot to compete in the vaunted Big 12 conference in 2023-24.

However, Huggins was terminated from West Virginia after a pair of incidents, including his second DUI arrest, and the result was a significant chunk of talented players leaving the program and transferring elsewhere.

As if that wasn’t bad enough, the team was then dealt a tough hand with Kriisa getting hit with a 10-game suspension for an impermissible benefit from his time at Arizona, while Battle and fellow transfer Noah Farrakhan were deemed ineligible as two-time transfers.

Jose Perez then left the program just before the season began due to a dispute over academics, leaving the Mountaineers with a shell of a roster through the first 11 games of the season – where they went 4-7 including losses to Monmouth, UMass, and Radford.

Interim head coach Josh Eilert and this ragtag group of players looked destined to get crushed on a weekly basis in the Big 12, but the pendulum has finally started to swing back in West Virginia’s direction.

The return of Kriisa from his suspension kicked things off, and the recent ruling allowing all two-time transfers to immediately suit up gives the Mountaineers both Battle and Farrakhan for the rest of the season, and the trio combined to score 53 of WVU’s 91 points in a win over Toledo just before Christmas.

Sure Toledo isn’t a powerhouse opponent, and yes the team is without Edwards for a couple more weeks after he suffered a wrist injury, but it’s hard not to be cautiously optimistic about this team now that they are approaching full health.

Battle in particular is a huge piece to get back into the mix, as the 6’5 senior guard dropped 29 points with six rebounds against Radford on December 20 and then had exactly 29 again three days later in the win over Toledo.

Battle averaged nearly 18 per game last season at Montana State and his scoring ability will be a welcome addition to this team, along with Kriisa’s high-level facilitation skills, which has resulted in 23 assists in just three games – already the third most on the team.

The Mountaineers will play Ohio State on Saturday before getting into conference play the first weekend in January, and while they will certainly have their hands full with the Kansas, Houston, and Baylor’s of the world –  they are at least in a better position to compete with a trio of guards back in the fold.

Jesse Edwards out 4 weeks as West Virginia’s streak of bad luck continues

West Virginia center Jesse Edwards is out four weeks after suffering a fractured wrist, another huge blow to an unlucky Mountaineers program.

The West Virginia basketball program cannot catch a break.

A tumultuous offseason, thanks to the firing of longtime head coach Bob Huggins, resulted in the Mountaineers coming into the season with a new-look roster and a lot to prove.

However, before the season even began, expected starting point guard Kerr Kriisa was hit with a nine-game suspension for impermissible benefits received while at Arizona, combo guard Jose Perez left the program due to squabbles over academic issues, and newcomers Raequan Battle and Noah Farrakhan were not granted waivers as two-time transfers.

Now Kriisa is finally back, dropping 20 points with seven assists against UMass on Saturday, while Farrakhan returned and scored 15 off the bench, thanks to the temporary restraining order that granted all two-time transfers immediate eligibility.

Even though the Mountaineers lost to UMass, it finally looked like things were moving in the right direction – until the team announced on Monday that starting center Jesse Edwards suffered a fractured wrist and will be out for roughly four weeks.

Edwards has been one of the few bright spots for West Virginia this season, averaging 14.8 points, 8.7 rebounds, and 1.7 blocks in 10 games.

The former Syracuse grad transfer is among the most prolific shot blockers in the country and to not have him entering Big 12 conference play is a huge blow to a team that finally gained key pieces in the backcourt in Kriisa and Farrakhan, with Battle expected to return this week as well.

Interim head coach Josh Eilert will now have to find a solution to a thin frontcourt, with games against Radford (12/20) and Toledo (12/23) on deck before hosting Ohio State on 12/30 and then starting Big 12 play on the road at Houston on January 6.

West Virginia alumni Joe Mazzulla, Mike Gansey urge Mountaineers to stay together

Two West Virginia alumni are urging the Mountaineers to stay together through their recent adversity.

With the departure of Bob Huggins following a DUI arrest last Friday, the West Virginia Mountaineers men’s basketball team is at a crossroads.

Now with Huggins gone, players can freely enter the transfer portal right away with no penalty and transfer freely to a school of their choice and be eligible for next season without a waiver.

Through the uncertainty, two former Mountaineers currently with roles in the NBA are trying their best to help keep the program together.

According to a report from basketball insider Adam Zagoria, West Virginia alumni Joe Mazzulla, the head coach of the Boston Celtics and Cleveland Cavaliers general manager Mike Gansey reportedly met with the team via Zoom. In that Zoom call, the two urged the Mountaineers to keep the team together through this adversity.

West Virginia is currently in the midst of a national coaching search according to ESPN’s Pete Thamel. Thamel also called the job attractive due to the “NIL opportunities that helped lure one of the top transfer classes to Morgantown,” this offseason.

West Virginia is coming off a 19-15 season which included a 7-11 record in Big 12 play. The Mountaineers made the NCAA Tournament as a No. 9 seed, falling to the Maryland Terrapins in the first round. The program has made the NCAA Tournament nine times since the 2009-2010 season.

Best nonconference matchups of the 2023 college football season

The best 20 nonconference games of the 2023 season.

We are under 100 days to the college football season but who is counting anyway? Well, just about everyone is. Teams are gearing up to make a run at the College Football Playoffs and end Georgia’s run of dominance. The Bulldogs are 29-1 over the last two seasons where they won the title in both.

Can anyone step up and prevent them from joining the Minnesota Golden Gophers in college football immortality? Minnesota won three straight titles in the early to mid-1930s. A feat that has seems impossible to repeat, until now. Almost a century later, we could be witnessing history.

Before we get to the CFP, there is plenty more that needs to be addressed. Teams have fall camps, nonconference games, and the run to their respective conference championship games.

In their 100 storylines to follow, CBS Sports ranked the best 20 nonconference matchups of the 2023 college football season. Plenty of eyes will be on the likes of Alabama, Colorado, Texas, and Texas A&M, but who else should we be paying attention to ahead of conference play?

One notable matchup missing is the opening game of the season in Dublin, Ireland, where Notre Dame and Navy are set to meet on the gridiron. That game was among our must-see games in each week of the 2023 college football season.

Check out the list from CBS Sports:

Report: Bob Huggins to remain at WVU with a reduced contract

Per Pete Thamel, Bob Huggins will return to WVU under stipulations after using an anti-gay slur on Cincinnati radio.

On Wednesday morning it was reported by ESPN’s Pete Thamel that West Virginia men’s basketball head coach Bob Huggins would remain in Morgantown with a reduced contract and plenty of stipulations.

Huggins came under immense scrutiny after using a homophobic slur on Cincinnati radio to describe a former rival’s fanbase. Huggins was the head coach of the Cincinnati Bearcats from 1989 to 2005 before taking the job at Kansas State until 2007 when he returned to his alma mater.

Thamel’s report indicates that Huggins will receive a reduced salary and a suspension. The former West Virginia point guard will also have to attend sensitivity training.

Thamel also reports that these stipulations must be fulfilled in order for Huggins to return to West Virginia next basketball season.

Currently, Huggins and West Virginia have the No. 1 transfer portal class for the 2023-24 season according to 247Sports. The team is 345-203 under Huggins in his return to Morgantown.

An announcement of the salary reduction is expected as early as Wednesday afternoon.

West Virginia, Ohio State set to meet in late December neutral site game

The West Virginia Mountaineers and Ohio State Buckeyes are expected to meet for the first time since 2019 next season.

The West Virginia and Ohio State men’s basketball programs have agreed to a neutral-site matchup on December 30 in Cleveland. The news was first reported by CBS Sports reporter Jon Rothstein before both programs released a statement on the game later on Wednesday.

It will be the 18th all-time matchup between the Mountaineers and Buckeyes, the Buckeyes hold a slight advantage in the series all-time at 9-8. The two teams last met in Cleveland in 2019 at Rocket Mortgage Field House, a 67-59 win for West Virginia. The Mountaineers have won each of the last three meetings between the two programs and eight of the last nine dating back to 1981.

Ohio State’s last win over West Virginia came in 1995, a 77-68 win in Columbus.

This past year, West Virginia is coming off a quality 19-15 overall record but struggled in Big 12 play with a 7-11 record. Nonetheless, they were good enough to earn a No. 9 seed in the NCAA Tournament before losing to the Maryland Terrapins in the first round. The Mountaineers also recently added Syracuse transfer Jesse Edwards via the transfer portal, a major addition to the program. Last season, Edwards averaged 14.5 points, 10.3 rebounds, and 1.6 assists.

Ohio State, on the other hand, struggled going just 16-19 including 5-15 in conference play, finishing 13th in the Big Ten. Missing the NCAA Tournament for the first time since 2017. For a program that has missed the tournament just four times since 2005, the Buckeyes will be expected to reload and make a run at the tournament next season.

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WVU’s Neal Brown among seven coaches with most to prove

Brown will need to avoid a fourth season of seven or more losses if he wants to stick around in Morgantown.

Heading into the 2023 college football season, head coaches such as Jimbo Fisher (Texas A&M Aggies), Steve Sarkisian (Texas Longhorns), and Brent Venables (Oklahoma Sooners) will remain at the top of the list.

Out in Morgantown, West Virginia, another head coach is going to be facing the heat in the upcoming campaign. Neal Brown was rumored to be on the chopping block after finishing 5-7, which was good enough for a tie at No. 7 in the Big 12. In four seasons at the helm, the Mountaineers’ head coach has finished with seven losses three times.

The lone winning season came in the pandemic-shortened campaign of 2020. The team finished 6-4 with a win over the Army Black Knights, 24-21. Brown is 57-41 as a head coach in eight seasons but just 22-25 and 14-21 in Big 12 play at West Virginia.

When it comes to coaches needing a big season, CBS Sports’ Barrett Salee included Brown along with Jimbo, Sark, and Venables on his list of seven head coaches that have the most pressure in 2023.

Brown was in danger of being canned after last season, but the new administration decided to keep him on board for a sixth season at West Virginia. Back-to-back sub-.500 seasons have made Mountaineer fans restless, and the fact that Brown hasn’t been in the Big 12 title race in any of his five seasons has made things even worse. The Mountaineers have fallen behind in the NIL age, and Brown hasn’t taken advantage of the transfer portal in a way that will keep them relevant — even in the new era of Big 12 football. – Salee

Brown was at the top of our list in the way-too-early hot seat rankings. It is ‘put up or shut up’ time for Brown and the Mountaineers in the 2023 season. The schedule isn’t doing WVU any favors this year either as the team will kick off the season against Penn State at Beaver Stadium on Sept. 2. Two weeks later they will face Pitt in the ‘Back Yard Brawl’ before hosting Texas Tech to kick off conference play on Sept. 23.

West Virginia adds Arizona transfer Kerr Kriisa

WVU, Huggins add talented guard via the transfer portal.

The West Virginia Mountaineers and head coach Bob Huggins received some good news as former Arizona Wildcat Kerr Kriisa announced he would transfer to Morgantown.

The 6-foot-3 guard from Lithuania played three seasons with the Wildcats of the Pac-12 and appeared in 76 games. Kriisa only played in eight games as a freshman. Overall, he averaged 9.4 points and 4.7 assists per game in his collegiate career.

The addition of Kriisa helps soften the blow of losing shooting guard Erik Stevenson. The newest addition isn’t likely to be the No. 1 scoring option for the Mountaineers next season but he can help facilitate the offense for Huggins.

Nebraska and Xavier were among the teams trying to convince Kriisa to join their team before Huggins and the Mountaineers won out. The Big 12 will look a bit different in college basketball for the 2023-24 season with the BYU Cougars, Cincinnati Bearcats, Houston Cougars, and UCF Knights joining the fray.

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