The Times West Virginian

Bob Herzel

March 14, 2013

HERTZEL COLUMN: Game oozes away from WVU

MORGANTOWN — The smoke that rose from the chimney at the Vatican may have been pure white on Wednesday, but the smoke coming out of the chimneys here in Morgantown was coal black.

There would be no Mountaineer miracle in the Big 12 Tournament.

West Virginia University was beaten.

In a way it was a mercy killing, putting the Mountaineers and their fans out of their misery and saving them the embarrassment of having to have come back today and play No. 1 seed Kansas, a team that had beaten WVU 91-65 the last time they met.

Let Texas Tech enjoy the evening before being led to that slaughter.

The Red Raiders earned that enjoyment.

They beat WVU fair and square, just the way 19 teams had done in a season in which WVU could win but 13 times. It ended with seven straight defeats, something coach Bob Huggins had never experienced before, and it ended as it should have, with WVU losing a game it could have – no, no, no, should have – won.

In truth, it was over almost before it began, when they fell behind by 10 points in the first six minutes. During the year they had fallen behind 16 times previously and won just once.

Why would you believe this would be different?

Because it was Texas Tech, a team that had lost 11 of its last 12 games and was 10-19 and 3-15 in the conference?

Doesn’t matter when this WVU team is on the other side of the floor.

They got down 14, letting a guy named Ty Nurse hit three 3-point shots and score 10 points in the first half.

Unusual?

Nurse had hit 13 3s all year and was averaging 2.4 points a game.

   OK, WVU came back and actually battled into the lead. Give the Mountaineers credit for that, if you want, but how many times have you seen that happen only to have them lose?

 And they don’t just lose games. They let them ooze away.

 You drop a game by two points, fine, it happens. You lose a game by two points on a basket at the buzzer, as this game ended when Jaye Crockett’s off-balance 3 from the corner with 3 seconds left missed only to have Dejan Kravic be standing alone under the basket to rebound it and score with 0.4 seconds left.

You read that right. Oh-point-four seconds, about as long as it takes to blink your eye and the season was over. Deniz Kilicli’s WVU career was over.

“We didn’t block out, which I guess sometimes happens in situations like that,” said Huggins. “They got a very fortunate bounce – it bounced right back to him.”

Texas Tech got a lot of fortunate bounces … 14 offensive rebounds.

“Our credo for as long as I’ve coached is get to the ball. It’s hard to win when you can’t get to the ball,” Huggins said. “For whatever reason, this group is the worst we’ve ever had at getting to the ball.”

But that was only part of the oozing.

WVU was charged with two technical fouls, not from the excitable coach Bob Huggins, but from Aaric Murray and Matt Humphrey, both of whom had done some magnificent things during the evening.

But as they had all year, they had to put a smudge on their performance, find a way to leave a bad memory where there should be a good one.

Murray had done a little bit of everything. He led WVU in rebounding with eight while playing only eight minutes. He scored 11 points. He had a pair of assists, one a magnificent entry pass to Kevin Noreen. He had a steal and 3 blocks, yet …

And Humphrey had hit a breakaway dunk and then a long 3 to bring WVU back into the game before being hit with his technical for his on-court decorum, taunting maybe, but certainly not something you can have happen to you in a tight game where your very existence as a basketball team is at stake.

“I guess there was some talking going on and they told them to shut up and our guy said something after they were told to be quiet,” Huggins said. “The truth of the matter is it should never happen. You can go back and look. My guys don’t do that. They have never done that. It’s inexcusable.”

Those technical cost three points. Need you be reminded WVU lost by two.

But the intent here isn’t to put the onus on anyone, for indeed everyone in a game like this has moments where he can look back and say he hurt the team, especially the way WVU has played this year.

The season started in ashes with an embarrassing loss at Gonzaga, and it never recovered.

Huggins, blessed with the confidence that comes from more than 700 victories, promised he would fix what was wrong but they don’t sell what was needed to fix this team at Lowe’s.

This was a team that just never could grasp the attitude that Huggins was selling.

When out recruiting, Huggins has often heard high school coaches tell him they weren’t sure a player he was looking at competed hard enough to play for Huggins. He always responded one way.

“Don’t worry about that. We’ll teach him to play hard,” Huggins would say.

And he always had done it … until this year, when the edge just wasn’t there. It was a team that didn’t get the floor burns teams in other years had. A Huggins team might not lead the league in wins, although usually it did, but it would lead in stitches received … and given.

Not this year.

So now it’s over, over with what truly is an embarrassing defeat to a team it never should have lost to, a team that was shooting 28 percent from 3-point range coming into the game and shot 66.7 percent in this elimination game.

There’s only one thing you can say on a day like today – Holy smoke!

Email Bob Hertzel at bhertzel@hotmail.com or follow him on Twitter @bhertzel.

Text Only
Bob Herzel
  • HERTZEL COLUMN- Nehlen talks evolution of football

    In many ways, Don Nehlen spent the last football season feeling like a child from the ’50s who had been dropped into our modern society.

    June 18, 2013

  • HERTZEL COLUMN- Remembering my dad on a sports Sunday

    It was Sunday.
    Not just any Sunday. A special Sunday.
    Father’s Day.

    June 17, 2013

  • HERTZEL COLUMN: Independent study of WVU finances needed

    It is time someone gets to the bottom of what is going on financially within West Virginia University and its athletic department.

    June 16, 2013

  • HERTZEL COLUMN: The gamble of leaving college early

    One of the first lessons they try to get across to a student-athlete when he comes to school is the evils of gambling.
    In truth, college sports still echo with the basketball point-fixing scandal from 60 years ago and a few others that have surfaced over the years, both on a professional and collegiate level.

    June 14, 2013

  • HERTZEL COLUMN: WVU has its academic ship on course

    In the real world the initials APR stand for annual percentage rate, a term with which everyone who has a car loan or home mortgage is quite familiar, but in the world of college athletics it is a term that has a somewhat a different meaning.

    June 13, 2013

  • Cole makes highly anticipated debut

    Opening night. Nothing like it, be it a Broadway opening or a movie premier.
    Or the first day of the rest of a baseball player’s life.
    It’s an evening when glamor and nerves co-exist, when the past means nothing and the future dissipates into a meaningless mist.

    June 12, 2013

  • HERTZEL COLUMN: Nick Saban muscling way to Top 10 list

    A day ago ESPN declared that Vince Lombardi was the greatest NFL coach of all time, a selection that certainly is hard to dispute
    It was a list that followed Lombardi with Bill Walsh, Don Shula, George Halas, Chuck Noll, Paul Brown, Bill Belichick (the list was compiled before Belichick signed Tim Tebow),Tom Landry, Joe Gibbs and Curly Lambeau.

    June 12, 2013

  • HERTZEL COLUMN- MLB can wait for Musgrave

    It had been quite a couple of weeks for Harrison Musgrave, his head still spinning like the tornadoes that had roared through Oklahoma when his West Virginia University baseball team was there to compete in the Big 12 Tournament.

    June 10, 2013

  • HERTZEL COLUMN: Thoroughman: Mindset critical to WVU success

    Cam Thoroughman looked around the basketball facility at West Virginia University on the first day of Bob Huggins Fantasy Camp, thought for a moment about how much things had changed in the WVU basketball program since he first walked through the Coliseum doors and how glad he was he had stayed the course.

    June 9, 2013

  • HERTZEL COLUMN: Take these spreads for entertainment

    It was June, but fall was the air.
    Fall, you see, begins with F which stands for football.
    And what better day to start thinking of football, which is just 84 days away, than the day when the first point spreads of the year come out.

    June 8, 2013

Featured Ads
House Ads