The Times West Virginian

Bob Herzel

October 22, 2009

Smith getting more than his 15 minutes

MORGANTOWN — Andy Warhol once told us that everyone has 15 minutes of fame, which would have a whole lot more meaning if he hadn’t also told us a couple of years later that he was bored with that line and was changing it to “in 15 minutes everybody will famous.”

See there was a lot of truth in that original 15 minutes of fame line, but it might be best to put it aside when talking about Geno Smith, the backup West Virginia University quarterback who last weekend came off the bench when Jarrett Brown was injured to lead the Mountaineers to victory over Marshall.

Even if Brown progresses this week to the point where he can take back his starting job when a grieving Connecticut comes to town Saturday, one suspects that Smith will have more than just that Marshall game to lay his claim to fame on at West Virginia.

He has shown himself to be a star waiting to happen.

“We rolled 7s on Geno Smith,” is the way offensive coordinator Jeff Mullen put it.

What he does on the football field was obvious. He was cool. He was calm.

He was clutch.

Fourth and 10, this inexperienced rookie made three reads to find Jock Sanders to complete a 13-yard pass to set up a Noel Devine touchdown run on the next play.

And when West Virginia needed to put the game out of reach, he made an absolutely perfect throw to the deepest part of the end zone to hit Alric Arnett with a 33-yard touchdown.

He wasn’t perfect.

“He made a lot freshman mistakes that you really couldn’t see, “Mullen said. “He has to improve.”

But that he isn’t strutting around campus after being that football hero they talk about in song shows that he understands he has work to do that if indeed all he gets is 15 minutes of fame, that one game represented only a tick or two of the second hand.

You have to understand how difficult it is to do what he did, first of all. As a backup quarterback, you get only about a third of the reps in practice. Therefore, you are only about a third ready come game day.

“That is why backup quarterback is the hardest job there is,” Mullen said. “You can’t go into the batting cage and take some pitches. You just have to go out there and do it.”

And the opposition is ready and willing to test you.

“They blitzed the first couple of plays, like an opponent will do when a new quarterback comes in,” Smith recalled.

They got to him, too. Knocked him around, made him throw incomplete. What they didn’t do was shake him up.

“They tested my toughness,” he said.

They found out he was tough enough.

“You can’t play scared or you won’t be able to play at all,” he said.

To do what Smith has done, come in and put himself in position to win a major college football game within a few months of entering college, you have to be a special kind of person.

Smith is.

“We could not get Geno here in the spring because of his transcript. They wouldn’t put a graduation date on it by the time our school started. He is a good student, very sharp, and had he been here I the spring, he would have been even sharper,” coach Bill Stewart said. “He is a film guy and a gym rat, and that is very good.”

He watches film of himself, of Brown and of other quarterbacks, NFL quarterbacks.

“I don’t emulate them. I don’t have an idol. But I try to take part of each guy. I see how Peyton Manning works on play-action passes and how calm Tom Brady is.”

He certainly seems to have the calmness down, and he says he gets that from his mother, Tracey Sellers.

They have a warm relationship, with her leading him in the right direction.

“When I recruited Geno, his mother or one of his teammate’s mothers picked the two up every day. They did their homework and played football on Play Station,” Stewart said. “Then they ate and went home. Geno has always been a homebody. I don’t like dancers. Those are the kind guys I like to recruit.”

Why would Geno Smith have his mother take him to and from school, especially since he had a car?

“You know, in high school you don’t want to go to school,” he said.

With Mom taking him, he didn’t really have any choice.

Email Bob Hertzel at bhertzel@hotmail.com.

Text Only
Bob Herzel
  • Jones nears milestone as Notre Dame visits WVU

    That it is a crucial game in a season that seems to have nothing but, today’s 9 p.m. visit to the Coliseum by a streaking Notre Dame team comes with a historical footnote in the history of West Virginia University basketball.
    Kevin Jones enters the game having scored 20 or more points in nine consecutive games.

    February 8, 2012

  • WVU source: Battle to join Big 12 nearing conclusion

    Indications were growing that West Virginia University’s battle to leave the Big East and join the Big 12 in time for the 2012 season was about to be won, possibly as early as today.
    A source within the Mountaineer athletic department said on Tuesday that the matter was nearing a conclusion and also told the Times West Virginian that West Virginia would be reinstating a golf team to compete in the Big 12.

    February 8, 2012

  • HERTZEL COLUMN: WVU, Irish strikingly similar

    Consider, if you will, that it is Nov. 25 past, that the West Virginia University basketball team is running a routine drill four games into its season, getting ready for the Akron game when Kevin Jones goes down in a heap on the floor, his ACL torn, his season over.

    February 8, 2012

  • WVU source: Battle to join Big 12 nearing conclusion

    Indications were growing that West Virginia University’s battle to leave the Big East and join the Big 12 in time for the 2012 season was about to be won, possibly as early as today.

    February 7, 2012

  • HERTZEL COLUMN - Truck drives Mountaineers to needed win

    Perhaps it is what has kept him going through a West Virginia basketball career with as many turns as a trip to Pineville down in Wyoming County, but Truck Bryant enjoys being Truck Bryant.

    February 6, 2012

  • WVU finds a way, wins in overtime

    Truck Bryant made the headline plays, including a 3-point shot with 3.3 seconds left to play, as West Virginia saved its season with an 87-84 overtime victory at Providence, but the subheads had to be reserved for Deniz Kilicli and a pair of freshman guards.

    February 6, 2012

  • Mountaineers face critical test today at Providence

    The schedule tells you it’s another game in the marathon run that is the Big East season, a trip to Providence to play a team with only two conference victories, but somehow everyone connected with the West Virginia University program knows today’s noon meeting with the Friars is much more than that.

    February 5, 2012

  • HERTZEL COLUMN: Jones on the brink of WVU history

    On the one hand there is yesterday’s Warren Baker, who entered the WVU Athletic Hall of Fame in the latest class for the work he did from 1973 to 1976, and on the other hand there is today’s star Kevin Jones, who has emerged from the shadows of the likes of Joe Alexander and Da’Sean Butler this year to carve his own niche in Mountaineer basketball history.

    February 5, 2012

  • WVU backs out of Florida State game

    West Virginia University has canceled its Sept. 8 football game at Florida State.
    Once again, as they have done with virtually everything since announcing they planned to move from the Big East to the Big 12, they did it behind closed doors, without any announcement or statement.

    February 5, 2012

  • WVU women upset Louisville

    It is foolhardy to put it up there with the Baylors and Notre Dames of the women’s world just yet, but really if you look closely and see potential, much of which came out Saturday afternoon when the Mountaineers upset No. 12/14 Louisville, 66-50, you realize that this team is closer to greatness than it is to mediocrity.

    February 5, 2012

Featured Ads
Special Editions