MORGANTOWN — Sometimes even the most objective of us get blinded by the light, and so it has been at West Virginia University with its basketball team.
For the most part, since entering the Big East, the WVU program has been more a middle of the road program within the conference than a premier program. It has been a school that has been competitive and fit well, but other than a few sparkling moments, it has not reached the elite level.
Next year will be WVU’s 15th since joining the conference and it holds no conference basketball championship — be it regular season or tournament. During that same period of time the WVU football team won or shared four Big East championships.
There are signs, however, that this is about to change as Coach Bob Huggins is bringing in a completely different kind of basketball player than Gale Catlett or John Beilein brought in before him and is preparing them differently.
While it probably shouldn’t have a true correlation, the games being terribly different, teams that produce NBA players seem to have a huge advantage over teams that don’t.
Huggins, it would appear, is going to produce those NBA players.
The numbers show the correlation between having NBA-style players and success.
Let us first look at the regular season won-lost records in the Big East since WVU came into the league. The number of players selected in the NBA draft since WVU joined the Big East is in parentheses:
Connecticut (15) 169-67; Syracuse (8) 147-89; Villanova (8) 137-99; Pitt (4) 134-102; Georgetown (9) 124-112; Notre Dame (3) 123-113; West Virginia (2) 109-127; Providence (5) 108-128; St. John’s (5) 103-133; Seton Hall (2) 100-136; Rutgers (1) 69-149; Louisville (0) 48-20; Marquette (1) 43-25; Cincinnati (1) 26-42; DePaul (2) 20-48; South Florida (1) 11-57.
What conclusions can you reach from these numbers?
Certainly it’s no surprise that Connecticut, Syracuse, Villanova and Georgetown have produced the most professional draft choices, nor is it a surprise that UConn, Syracuse and Villanova have the best 14-year records.
If any team has overachieved it’s been Pitt, which has the fourth most victories over the time span but is sixth in number of NBA draft choices while Georgetown, which ranks second in draft choices, has underachieved with the fifth best record, just 12 games better than .500.
As for West Virginia, despite two Sweet 16 teams and one Elite Eight team, it has played less than .500 basketball over its stay in the conference and has had only Gordon Malone, who didn’t make it, and Joe Alexander, recruited by Beilein but created by Huggins, go in the NBA draft over 14 years.
That the Mountaineers have been mostly a mid-level program in the Big East is verified by the fact that they never have finished better than third in the conference while finishing seventh or lower on six occasions.
With the draft coming up next week, West Virginia’s number of NBA draftees is not expected to grow, Alex Ruoff appearing to be a free agent choice at best.
It could well be, however, that this is the last year that the Mountaineers fail to land players in the draft.
There is almost no one who believes that sophomore forward Devin Ebanks isn’t playing his final collegiate season this year, already having been projected as high as a No. 13 pick next season in some of those absurd mock drafts.
Huggins, rest assured, did not come home to West Virginia to finish in the middle of the pack in the Big East and he is aware that the way to win against the best is to bring in the best players. His approach is much different than both Catlett and Beilein, who believed they could win with their systems.
Catlett’s system obviously clashed with what the NBA sought as he never had a player he recruited make it to the big show during his 24 seasons while Beilein’s system de-emphasized athleticism at the expense of winning off its unique approach to both offense and defense.
Huggins has his own theories about offense and defense, but they are hardly unique. He is going to be big and tough and play you head up. He wants players who are bigger, stronger, faster and tougher than the other team has, which is exactly what the NBA does.
With his third season coming up, Huggins’ WVU team is already being looked upon as being among the top three in the Big East for next season and as a budding national power, one that will produce championships where once simply victories were acceptable.
E-mail Bob Hertzel at bhertzel@hotmail.com or through Facebook.
Bob Herzel
HERTZEL COLUMN: Producing pros key to Big East hoops success
- Bob Herzel
-
-
Streaking Louisville visits WVU
Everyone has focused on West Virginia University’s rivalry with Pittsburgh as a potential victim of the move to the Big 12 by the Mountaineers, but there is another rivalry that almost certainly will be coming to an end, and while the feelings are not as bitter, the games often are as hard-fought and tense.
-
Verbal agreement: $20 million to Big East
West Virginia University and the Big East have reached a verbal agreement that will allow the Mountaineers to join the Big 12 on July 1 and play all sports in that conference this year, according to a source and published reports.
A total of $20 million will go to the Big East to allow WVU to skip the 27-month waiting period stipulated in conference bylaws and to cover the damages caused by possibly playing with just seven members this season. -
HERTZEL COLUMN: Mountaineers of past won’t forget Brawl
It is difficult to write about a story that is just beginning but that will never end, that being, of course, West Virginia University’s move to the Big 12 from the Big East, a move that may well signal the end of the Backyard Brawl.
-
WVU, Big East reach agreement
West Virginia University and the Big East have reached a conditional agreement that will allow the Mountaineers to join the Big 12 on July 1 and play football there next season, the Charleston Daily Mail reported Thursday night, citing an unidentified source.
-
HERTZEL COLUMN: This WVU team different from previous squads
Games may be won or lost under glaring lights of a college arena, filled with faithful fans and the prying eye of the ever-present, unblinking television camera, but teams are built in a far different way.
They come together in a gym that smells of sweat and yesterday’s hotdogs. -
Notre Dame stops WVU, 55-51
If Kevin Jones could have scored 20 points against Notre Dame on Wednesday night before a disappointing crowd of 9,258 in the Coliseum he would have joined Jerry West and Hot Rod Hundley in the West Virginia record books.
-
HERTZEL COLUMN: It’s unfair to consider Truck villain
The zero next to Truck Bryant’s name stood out like an obscene gesture during a Super Bowl halftime show.
Some even said he was M.I.A. as West Virginia University lost a heartbreaker, if not a season-breaker, to Notre Dame, 55-51. -
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. -
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. -
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.
- More Bob Herzel Headlines
-
Streaking Louisville visits WVU





