The Times West Virginian

Bob Herzel

December 4, 2009

HERTZEL COLUMN: A couple of missed effigies

MORGANTOWN — Sometimes, even the great are wrong, and so it is that I humbly admit to having a mistake in the recent column praising the Mountaineer nation of fans. In so doing, it was stated that there had been no effigies since Bobby Bowden was strung up by his straw-filled neck in 1974.

Former WVU student and super fan Harry Moore, it seems, was a serial effigy hanger in the later 1970s, as he proudly admitted in an e-mail that offered photographic evidence of my gaffe.

“Oh, Contrare!” wrote Moore. “I personally made the front page of the D.A. on at least two occasions in ’78 and ’79 for hanging (football coach Frank]) Cignetti and (athletic director) Leland Byrd in effigy near Woodburn Circle. Still feel bad about hanging Leland as he was a good fellow and I had several business classes with his daughter (she never knew it was me and I never told her).”

Moore then made an admission even more startling, for indeed, it involves a rather prominent moment in the legend of West Virginia fandom.

“We also hung B.B. Flenory in effigy before a Duquesne basketball home game, after he had thrown a tantrum and a chair at the game at Duquesne that year. It made the front page and when the Duquesne team got to Morgantown and someone showed B.B. the paper he called his dad to come pick him and left without playing,” Moore wrote.

At this point we must break away from Moore’s e-mail to explain just who B.B. Flenory was, for it has been 30 years and some have forgotten and others just are too young to know.

One person who does know is West Virginia basketball coach Bob Huggins, who went against Flenory and had the pleasure of bopping him upside his head in a moment of uncontrolled fury.

Ron Cook, the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette columnist, recalled the incident a few years back and described it this way:

“The Dukes’ B.B. Flenory nearly was killed after taking an elbow to the head from West Virginia’s Bob Huggins in a 1976 game in Morgantown. Two years later, Flenory was involved in a brawl against the Mountaineers at the Civic Arena, then refused to play at West Virginia after seeing a picture of himself hung in effigy in the West Virginia student newspaper.”

That, Harry Moore, says was his doing.

“We won the game but we were bummed. We were poor college kids and had gone out to Hills Department Store and bought $25 worth of pacifiers and baby rattles to throw at the game (BaBy Flenory), since he did not play we ate that expense. You can look all that up to verify that as a true story.”

You have to understand now, Flenory was a pretty good player in his day. As a ninth-grader he had made the “Faces in the Crowd” section of Sports Illustrated … yes the same Sports Illustrated that recently ran a poll ranking West Virginia fans as the rudest in the Big East, leading to the column that disagreed with that poll, leading to the e-mail that kind of backed the results of the poll.

Flenory scored 52 points in a high school game and 48 for Duquesne against Ohio U. in the West Virginia Classic and is a member of the Pennsylvania Basketball Hall of Fame, so in a way Moore’s actions that kept Flenory from playing at WVU helped the team as much as the actions of any fan ever did.

And Moore’s zeal hasn’t worn thin over the years. Prior to last week’s Pitt football game, he sensed that the fans were expecting to lose, which led him to send out another e-mail.

“Okay, people,” he wrote, “let’s see some Mountaineer pride out there. To quote Bluto in Animal House, ‘Was it over when the Germans bombed Pearl Harbor? Hell NO!’”

He then went on to give Mountaineer fans a more inspired pre-game speech than coach Bill Stewart gave his players.

“The WV DNR is offering a $1,000 reward on panther pelts this week. Are we gonna disappoint them?

“No!

“Are we gonna give up cause Pitt is ranked and we’re not? Oh we’re scared to go with ya Bluto, we might get in trouble. Well trouble is a friend of mine.”

Indeed it is, for he went on to tell the story of the stunt he had pulled off in 1984 after graduation, West Virginia about to play Penn State and beat them for the first time in his lifetime. Moore was working in Johnstown, Pa., then and over two weeks secretly ran off 500 leaflets that read:

GO WVU

BEAT PSU

He had just gotten his pilot’s license and, I suspect, you know what’s coming.

He flew up to Penn State, a 30-minute fly, circled the biggest courtyard he could find, and dropped the leaflets.

“Now I didn’t skedaddle like in the movies cause no one was shooting at me far as I could tell. I circled and circled and watched the paper blizzard slowly settle on the campus. People picked ’em up and read ’em, and more than a few saluted me with their middle digit. That’s all right; all’s fair in love and college rivalries.

“The point is I didn’t know we were gonna beat Penn State that year. I didn’t care cause win or lose I’m proud to be a Mountaineer!”

Oh, yeah, West Virginia plays B.B. Flenory’s old Duquesne school at home on Wednesday, Dec. 9.

E-mail 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