MORGANTOWN —
It has not been a banner year for the West Virginia University athletic department.
The football team barely squeezed past .500 and wound up in something called The Pinstripe Bowl, the men’s basketball team has flirted with .500 all year and seems destined to spent its off-season either in a minor tournament or none at all.
The latest financial statement showed record losses, thanks to a $20 million fee to exit the Big East.
Only the women’s soccer team could win a Big 12 championship in the ashes of all the other disappointments, but the university’s most reliable sport is about to move into its national championship phase, and WVU seems to be standing on the verge of its first national title since 2009.
If it can pull it off, it would be the 17th national championship the school’s shooters have won, and this one would assuredly be won on the shoulders of Petra Zublasing, a rather incredible athlete having an incredible senior season.
A year ago she was in the background as her boyfriend and then teammate, Nicco Campriani, moved front and center as the team’s featured shooter in the winter and winner of a gold and silver medal at the London Olympics.
She competed in the Games, but found her greatest contribution to be to his cause.
“For these,” he said, displaying his medals during a press conference upon his return to Morgantown, “I really have to thank Petra. We shared the Olympic experience together and a lot of days she really saved me. She helped me recharge the battery.”
She acknowledged her role and understood that it somewhat detracted from hers.
“He says I saved him simply because when he said he was freaking out, I was not. It’s hard to be at the Olympics as a couple because you try not to be in two Olympics. You have your own Olympics and you don’t want to be in your boyfriend’s,” she said.
“It’s a hard thing to do, but we did a great job of it. When he was stressed out, I tried to assure him. I wanted him to know whatever happened I would be there. Like, if you lose tomorrow, it’s not going to matter to me. I’ll still like you. I liked you before and I like you now.”
Zublasing did not come home with a medal, but she realizes that she played a huge role in his and was not in any way disappointed in her own performance.
“In my competitions, I did everything could. I left time for myself to prepare as best I could. I shot a great match. I learned lots of stuff. It was hard for me at the beginning to understand that since I didn’t win a medal I didn’t do bad … but I really didn’t do bad.”
Now, though, she is on her own mission in these NCAA’s, well prepared not only from the Olympic experience but from a lifetime of preparation for far more than just a competition.
She is as different a type of athlete as her sport is different from those most Americans have come to know as she explained recently in an interview on the WVU athletic website.
“It’s hard for someone who doesn’t do any shooting to understand shooting because the variables are different. You have a sport like football that is really active. You have to go, you have to get that person on the ground or get the ball across the goal,” she said. “We don’t. We don’t move.”
Think of that for a moment, of a sport in which you go nowhere.
“Take a 100-meter runner, a sprinter. He starts, 3-2-1. His body comes forward. The adrenalin flows and he runs,” she said.
A shooter?
“It’s kind of the same thing. The only thing different for us, is you go to the starting point. It’s 3-2-1 start and you have all this adrenalin pumping in your system but you go ‘I don’t know what’s happening. I don’t know how to deal with this.’
“You start breathing, you start pulling out tricks you learned in the office. You start talking to yourself, you start imaging things. That’s the difference between most sports and our sport. There is no movement. You can‘t let it out. You can’t be screaming or throwing things on the ground.”
You stay within yourself.
“There’s like a general concept. First to build a house, you put up the walls. Then you need to paint the walls, whatever colors you like, say pink and red. But let’s say in a week your wife tells you red is not a good color so you pain them green,” the native Italian said.
“I haven’t found a color for my walls yet. That’s like shooting. It’s changing little things, even little sensations in your body. Shooting is all about feeling things, feeling how your arm feels or how your body feels.
“It is weird things like feeling heavy or feeling light, push or pull on stuff that you are not necessarily going to need outside the (shooting) range.”
It is learning about yourself, controlling yourself, and then finding success.
“I want to get the point in two years where I can say I’m exceptional,” she said. “I’m really looking forward to it. This is my last nationals. I’m really sad, because I really like being here. Also, just to try again to do my best for the team as it strives for what it wants.”
Email Bob Hertzel at bhertzel@hotmail.com or follow him on Twitter @bhertzel.
Bob Herzel
HERTZEL COLUMN-WVU rifle star shoots toward goals
- Bob Herzel
-
-
HERTZEL COLUMN: Flying WV logo draws attention outside country
Sometimes you hit a nerve, as we did a while back when we wrote about the wide reach of West Virginia University’s flying WV logo.
It has meant a lot to a lot of people. -
Seahawks’ Bruce Irvin suspended four games
Bruce Irvin, one of only two West Virginia University defensive linemen ever to be selected in the first round of the NFL draft, will miss the first four games of the 2014 National Football League season because of a failed test for performance-enhancing drugs.
-
HERTZEL COLUMN: Opportunity to see birth of greatness
Sometimes things happen and the significance of them isn’t fully grasped immediately. So it is with the approval of the TIFF financing for a baseball stadium just off I-79 here in Morgantown.
Obviously, this a boon for the West Virginia University baseball program of Randy Mazey, which gains instant creditability. -
Musgrave ranks among top pitchers in college baseball
West Virginia University’s redshirt sophomore left-hander Harrison Musgrave’s spectacular season has reached the pinnacle of the heights a collegiate pitcher can attain as he has been named a finalist for the College Baseball Hall of Fame Pitcher of the Year Award.
-
Musgrave may be rested against OSU
It’s been a fun ride for West Virginia University baseball this season, coming out of nowhere to reach the final weekend with a chance to win the regular-season Big 12 championship.
But coach Randy Mazey is not allowing the Mountaineers to get carried away with that thought. -
HERTZEL COLUMN: WVU Tier 3 bidding goals are ambitious
They are re-opening the bidding at West Virginia University’s athletic department for Tier 3 media rights, but judging by the vision they have shown in putting it together, this is becoming something as ambitious, if not profitable, as the national television deals in which they have a stake.
-
NFL draft signals new era for WVU
This year’s NFL draft signified that West Virginia University is beginning a new era of football, one that is very different from the time that passed in the previous 100 years.
-
HERTZEL COLUMN- Can money buy WVU happiness as Big 12 member?
=Let me put the dummies to rest right away.
Financially, moving to the Big 12 was the right move for West Virginia University. -
WVU’s basketball team to play at Missouri
West Virginia University’s basketball team did nothing to merit it Tuesday, but its life in the Big 12 was just made a whole lot tougher on two levels.
-
HERTZEL COLUMN: Mountaineers learning NFL facts of life
Day one of the rest of their lives as NFL players is over, and quarterback Geno Smith and wide receivers Tavon Austin and Stedman Bailey have begun what they hope is a decades-long journey to the same kind of stardom that they found in college.
- More Bob Herzel Headlines
-
HERTZEL COLUMN: Flying WV logo draws attention outside country


