West Virginia’s Mark Kellogg sent a direct warning to Caitlin Clark and that’s probably a terrible idea

File this under things you don’t do.

West Virginia head coach Mark Kellogg is totally amped about playing Caitlin Clark and Iowa in the NCAA tournament. Still, his most recent trash talk shows he’s learned absolutely nothing from the people who have leveled words at Clark before.

We really shouldn’t have to repeat this, but Caitlin Clark is not new to this. SHE’S TRUE TO THIS. (She eats trash talk for breakfast!) If you’re going to talk trash about someone, at least wait until the game is done and you’ve beaten them. Apparently, West Virginia Mountaineers head coach Mark Kellogg missed that memo.

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After the initial matchups for the Albany 2 region were revealed on Sunday, Kellogg — who actually has to beat Princeton before his team plays Iowa — told several people that he wants to send Caitlin Clark home.

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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.

RaeQuan Battle explains why the NCAA is wrong to deny his waiver request in new video

RaeQuan Battle is not backing down from challenging the NCAA.

RaeQuan Battle is calling out the NCAA for being a roadblock on his journey to play basketball again.

Battle previously completed stints at Montana State and Washington before transferring to West Virginia last year. His quest to continue his college basketball career has stalled because transferring a second time, without first earning a bachelor’s degree, requires a waiver and meeting certain criteria — criteria that the NCAA says Battle does not meet.

However, Battle is adamant he does meet the necessary requirements and playing basketball is critical to his mental health. In a recent video posted to his social media, he explains why his waiver should be granted.

Oklahoma in the field for 2024 ‘Battle 4 Atlantis’ tournament

Oklahoma looks set to join the 2024 ‘Battle 4 Atlantis’ in-season tournament.

Oklahoma basketball will take a trip to the Bahamas next season. College basketball insider Jon Rothstein name-dropped the Sooners as one of eight teams that will play in one of college basketball’s most coveted early-season tournaments, “Battle 4 Atlantis.”

This year’s tournament features a slew of talented programs, as Villanova, Texas Tech, Michigan, Memphis, Arkansas, Stanford, North Carolina, and Northern Iowa all are slated to participate.

Two of this year’s participants are already on Oklahoma’s schedule as Arkansas, and Oklahoma will lace up their sneaks and play at the BOK Center in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Towards the end of their non-conference slate, Oklahoma will travel to Charlotte, North Carolina, to take on the Tarheels for the Jumpman Invitational.

Oklahoma was previously supposed to participate in this year’s Battle 4 Atlantis. Oklahoma’s likely inclusion in the Rady Children’s Invitational probably was the difference in them not participating this year. The Sooners will take up that offer for the 2024 season, though.

Next year’s field will include Arizona, Indiana, Gonzaga, West Virginia, Lousiville, Creighton, and Davidson. It’s a field loaded with several big-time college basketball brands like Indiana, Gonzaga, Arizona, and Lousiville.

Creighton has been a formidable program for a while and should not be slept on. Davidson is the alma mater of NBA superstar Steph Curry and is a tough team from the A-10.

Oklahoma has quite a bit of familiarity with West Virginia from all their battles in the Big 12. However, Oklahoma’s move to the SEC will mark the first time the schools will meet as nonconference foes since West Virginia joined the Big 12 in 2012.

The tournament usually coincides with the Thanksgiving holiday. It gives family, friends, and fans of all the participating programs a unique high-level basketball experience in a tropical paradise every participant can be thankful for.

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Bob Huggins should have been fired, but West Virginia chose cowardice instead

The issue with Bob Huggins is just as much about what he said as *how* he said it.

With Bob Huggins, West Virginia had the chance to do the right thing. But when faced with an opportunity to stand up for the LGBTQ+ community and demonstrate zero tolerance for hate speech, it said, “Nah.”

The Mountaineers’ 69-year-old men’s basketball coach appeared on a Cincinnati radio show Monday and repeatedly used a homophobic slur while he and the host mocked solidarity for the transgender community.

Once the clip of Huggins’ interview hit the internet, the outraged reaction was swift, with many convinced there was no way the head coach could or should return to the sidelines. After all, Huggins casually employed an odious slur that should be extinct from everyone’s vocabulary.

But instead of firing Huggins — who’s been with the Mountaineers since 2007 — West Virginia spinelessly offered up a slap on the wrist that keeps him on the sidelines as one of the state’s highest paid public employees.

His penance for hate speech? A tiny suspension, sensitivity training, a million-dollar salary reduction and an amended year-to-year contract that went into effect Wednesday. Oh yeah, sure, making $3.15 million instead of $4.15 million while sitting out just three whole games — it’s laughable.

The issue with Huggins here is just as much about what he said as how he said it.

If a hateful slur is uttered with seemingly tremendous ease, and more than once, it’s reasonable to think that word is part of that person’s vocabulary, rather than a mistake. And if this is a word Huggins employs casually without hesitation, he has no business coaching young athletes and being arguably the face of West Virginia athletics.

But let’s back up to Monday’s radio appearance with Huggins and WLW-AM host Bill Cunningham.

While discussing the Xavier-Cincinnati basketball rivalry, Huggins — who coached the Bearcats from 1989 to 2005 — and Cunningham recalled an incident from the teams’ Crosstown Shootout matchup when “rubber penises” were tossed on the court. After Cunningham joked that it was transgender night, Huggins chimed in with his anti-gay slur — the same revolting language former Cincinnati Reds announcer Thom Brennaman was fired for using in 2020.

“What it was, was all those [expletive],” Huggins said. And then he momentarily stumbled over his words.

For a split second, it seemed like he knew he used a slur and was about to backtrack or, perhaps, apologize for his vile language. Clearly, that was giving him far too much credit because while he did correct himself, it was only to ensure the word “Catholic” preceded his slur.

Huggins continued: “Those, those Catholic [expletive] I think threw them.”

Despite the appearance of an awkward pause, Huggins’ bigoted garbage was followed by on-air laughs and praise for him as “the best.” Far from it for anyone with some semblance of humanity.

Not only is there a good chance he’s alienated himself from his players, as USA TODAY Sports’ Mike Freeman noted, but, despite a wanting apology, he’s also shown his true feelings about already marginalized folks, against whom hate crimes and suicide contemplation and rates, especially among LGBTQ+ youth, are on the rise.

Is he really a person West Virginia wants representing it? Recruiting for it? Speaking for it? It’s shameful for West Virginia that the answers appear to be yes — despite calling his language “insensitive, offensive” and not representative of the school’s values.

A statement from the athletics department noted the $1 million from Huggins’ salary “will be used to directly support WVU’s LGBTQ+ Center,” which is a good thing. It’s also requiring Huggins to meet with LGBTQ+ leaders around the state, and it plans to develop required annual trainings to “address all aspects of inequality including homophobia, transphobia, sexism, ableism and more.” Also good.

But the Mountaineers didn’t go far enough, and the requirements of Huggins are actions he should be taking anyway to be a decent human being, regardless of retaining his job or not.

In a statement on Twitter, Morgantown Pride, an organization promoted by the university, wrote in part:

We believe that this incident requires the termination of Bob Huggins as this type of rhetoric creates a space in which students, community members and most especially players are NOT SAFE. However, if WV Athletics chooses the wrong path and does not ask Bob Huggins to resign, the culture that he has obviously cultivated in which individuals feel so comfortable saying homophobic slurs that they would do so whilst being interviewed, requires significant investment of both time and labor to correct.

Firing Huggins would have been the correct first step in making amends after this incident. It would have sent a clear message of solidarity and shown the LGBTQ+ people and everyone else on campus, within the fan base and in the locker room that this kind of language is unacceptable no matter what. It also would have publicly demonstrated that West Virginia values the well-being and livelihoods of everyone, not just the cis straight folks.

Especially at a time when LGBTQ+ people are discriminated against with basic rights being stripped away, homophobic language is disgraceful. From anyone. And Huggins should have known, in 2023, that word is a slur — and why.

But rather than deal appropriate consequences, the Mountaineers opted for cowardice, allowing Huggins to still make millions with a measly three-game suspension and implying bigoted language is tolerated.

It doesn’t matter what year you were born in or if you’re from “another time.” Society is supposed to evolve, and treating people with respect and dignity is what we as a collective should strive for.

Keeping Huggins in Morgantown is a disservice to the LGBTQ+ community, as well as to Mountaineer athletes, students, employees and fans. Coaching is a privilege, and Huggins has made millions over the years with success in college hoops. But it’s a privilege he no longer deserves.

Ceiling and floor for each Big 12 team in the NCAA Tournament

The battle-tested programs of the Big 12 are ready to compete in March Madness.

March Madness is officially upon us as the 2023 NCAA Tournament bracket was revealed on Sunday afternoon.

Seven Big 12 Conference schools are featured in this season’s field, including four teams as top three seeds. The 70% mark of programs who qualified for the tournament is among the highest for any conference in the entire nation.

The last three national championship games have all featured a Big 12 program. Kansas (2022) and Baylor (2021) won it all, while Texas Tech (2019) finished second.

Kansas earned a No. 1 seed after winning the Big 12 regular season crown. The Jayhawks are in a great position to defend their national title led by a trio of excellent guards.

Texas sits as a No. 2 seed coming off a Big 12 tournament title run. Baylor and Kansas State both got slotted as a No. 3 seed, while TCU (No. 6), Iowa State (No. 6) and West Virginia (No. 9) round out the field.

The Big 12 has been the most competive league in college basketball this year. The battle-tested programs are ready to compete for a national title in the coming weeks.

Here is a look at each Big 12 school’s ceiling and floor entering March Madness.

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Bracketology: What to monitor as we approach Texas vs Baylor

Texas looks to lock down a Top 2 seed in Waco against Baylor.

The Road to the Final Four ramps up in the coming weeks as seeding solidifies in college basketball. The Texas Longhorns were ranked as the No. 5 overall team and top No. 2 seed in the bracket reveal ahead of last Saturday’s games.

Given the resume it already has and how the tournament committee views Texas, a win over Baylor could go a long way toward tournament seeding. The Longhorns face one of their top three road tests of the season in facing the Baylor Bears.

Scott Drew’s team has owned Texas in recent history. Earlier this season, Texas narrowly defeated Baylor at home to snap the Bears’ run of dominance. They will likely bring their best basketball to defeat the most well-known team in Texas.

Here are a few things to keep an eye on for Texas as the regular season closes.

Past its scheduled gauntlet, No. 5 Texas basketball can work on itself

The upcoming slate of games gives Texas the opportunity to improve fundamentals.

The Texas Longhorns are through their toughest stretch of the schedule. The last four games saw the team travel to Tennessee, Kansas State and Kansas with a home battle with Baylor in the middle of the gauntlet.

I viewed the Kansas game as a scheduled loss, with Texas facing the Jayhawks in Lawrence on a Monday night. And while the Longhorns made it interesting, the team faced difficult odds from the start.

Rodney Terry’s team finished the four-game stretch with a 2-2 split, earning impressive wins over then No. 7 Kansas State and No. 11 Baylor. Now, the ‘Horns can focus on improving fundamentals during an easier stretch.

The next three games match Texas with three unranked teams. The Longhorns play host to the West Virginia Mountaineers on Saturday after winning the first matchup in Morgantown, 69-61.

The next two games reunite Texas with two rivals, Texas Tech and Oklahoma. Albeit, neither opponent is playing well at the moment. Both the Sooners and Red Raiders endured blowout defeats on Saturday.

The next three games afford the Longhorns the ability to refine their game. If they can, Rodney Terry and company can finish the season equipped for the final stretch.

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Looking at the Big 12 basketball standings following Saturday’s results

Texas is getting closer to a Big 12 regular season title.

The Big 12 standings are taking shape in the early days of February. The Texas Longhorns are moving into strong positioning after wins over the Baylor Bears and Kansas State Wildcats.

It wasn’t such a great week for the Wildcats after dropping two games for the week and losing its first-place tie with the Longhorns. K-State lost to Kansas before falling to Texas.

The Kansas Jayhawks were in position to grasp a share of first place with a win and a Texas loss. Unfortunately for Bill Self’s team, the opposite happened. The Iowa State Cyclones swept the Jayhawks out of the gym with a resounding 68-53 victory.

Here’s a look at the conference standings more than halfway through the Big 12 conference slate.

WATCH: Texas F Christian Bishop drops the anvil with an alley-oop dunk

Christian Bishop puts the West Virginia defense on a poster with this dunk.

On Saturday, Texas basketball had the unenviable task of facing West Virginia in Morgantown. As you can imagine, it’s usually not a comfortable trip for Texas players.

Christian Bishop bucked trends and made himself at home with a highlight reel dunk. The play was the first of a series of back and forth offensive punches landed by each team.

Arterio Morris got the big play started with a transition steal as West Virginia attacked in the fast break. Morris sent an outlet pass ahead to Tyrese Hunter before Hunter lobbed a pass toward the basket. Bishop took care of the rest, sending the basketball home with authority.

Texas isn’t in the business of simply playing entertaining basketball. Albeit, its hard to argue that the team is not fun to watch since Rodney Terry took over.

There’s still plenty for the team to improve as the season progresses. Nevertheless, it’s encouraging to see Texas actively taking fast break points before opponents settle into half court defense.