MORGANTOWN —
I firmly believe that the NCAA has done an injustice to Pat White.
That organization has ruled that the former West Virginia University quarterback does not hold the all-time record for most rushing yards by a signal-caller.
Why? Because Denard Robinson of Michigan padded his rushing total from a running back position — not as a quarterback — in his final three games.
Robinson finished with 106 yards rushing for Michigan in last Tuesday’s Outback Bowl game. A teammate was the starting quarterback then.
The yards boosted the Wolverine’s career total to 4,495 rushing yards on 723 carries. So he wound up with 15 rushing yards more than White’s total and all-time record.
As WVU’s great quarterback from 2005-08, the Alabama native is one of only two college quarterback in history to win four consecutive bowl games. The other is Florida State’s EJ Manuel. He earned numerous honors while here.
White rushed for 4,480 yards as a Mountaineer on 604 carries.
Mike Montoro, WVU director of football communications, appealed the NCAA’s ruling. He strongly suggested that White should still hold the record.
In an email to NCAA officials, Montoro protested that Robinson did not play quarterback — but running back — in his last three games and that his rushing yards in those games shouldn’t count in the specific competition.
After Robinson suffered an injury in his right elbow, Robinson played running back in Michigan’s final three games. It clearly was a matter of record.
He gained a grand total of 320 rushing yards in those contests and threw just one pass.
In response to his email, Montoro received a phone call from Gary Johnson, the NCAA associate director of championships and alliances, on Friday.
He said Johnson told him that Robinson’s record stands because he remains listed as a QB on Michigan’s roster and is widely known as a quarterback.
Johnson did say, however, that it will be noted that White got all of his rushing yards as a quarterback.
But that doesn’t satisfy Montoro or White.
“I just don’t agree with the NCAA’s ruling,” Montoro said. “And he (Johnson) knew that when I hung up the phone.
“I just don’t think it is right. But we can’t do anything about it.”
The NCAA knowingly isn’t always right, or so it has seemed to a guy who’s in his 67th year on the WVU sports beat.
For example, the NCAA’s periodic practices, in the 1950s and ’60s, of legislating three-year varsity careers was ridiculous.
It was clearly unfair to collegiate athletics of those periods. They had to waste a year of varsity competition.
For years now they all enjoy four-year careers.
Mickey Furfari
FURFARI COLUMN: NCAA unfair in White ruling
- Mickey Furfari
-
-
FURFARI COLUMN- Are Clements and Luck fair to media and jobs?
This column is going to be strictly a “think piece” — mine! I feel it’s one none of the younger columnists could or would undertake.
-
FURFARI COLUMN- Huggins says transfers not isolated case
Coach Bob Huggins will tell you that losing four players to transfer mode from his West Virginia University men’s basketball squad was not an unusual or isolated case.
-
FURFARI COLUMN: Compton fifth of WVU’s 11 consensus All-Americans
Mike Compton, who was the fifth in West Virginia University’s line of 11 consensus All-America football players, starred on the teams of 1989-90-91-92.
A 6-foot-7, 280-to-295-pound center, he not only excelled on the offensive line, but he was a team captain as a senior. -
FURFARI COLUMN: Mon County prosecutor says FOIA handling OK
It wasn’t until about a week ago that I found for certain who is responsible to make sure that the Freedom of Information of Act law is enforced in West Virginia.
You may remember that in February 2013, The Dominion Post of Morgantown filed a grand total of 33 FOIA requests against West Virginia University. -
FURFARI COLUMN- Guidi was all-time great wrestler, coach
Lewis Guidi, who unexpectedly died last week in Jefferson (Va.) Hospital at the age of 78, was one of the greatest wrestlers in West Virginia’s athletic history.
-
FURFARI COLUMN- Whitmore was standout in football and baseball
Darrell Whitmore, a native of Front Royal, Va., was an outstanding two-sport standout for West Virginia University from 1988-91.
-
FURFARI COLUMN- Price was a man with many qualities
Curtis Price, who died last week at the age of 63, was a fine basketball player and good student at West Virginia University in 1970-71-72.
-
FURFARI COLUMN: Hill picked over Mazey for coach award
I thought Randy Mazey, West Virginia University’s new head baseball coach, deserved to be voted Big 12 Conference Coach of the Year.
But that award went to Brad Hill, who guided Kansas State to the league’s regular-season championship for the first time in its baseball history. -
FURFARI COLUMN- Stewart widely liked and respected as coach
Bill Stewart, who has been deceased since May 21, 2012, was one of the most widely liked and most highly respected football coaches West Virginia University ever had.
-
FURFARI COLUMN: Chuck Howley greatest all-around WVU athlete
Chuck Howley’s greatest fame came in football at West Virginia University and then with the NFL’s Dallas Cowboys.
However, making the Wheeling native even more distinguished is the fact he is the only five-sport letterman in WVU athletic history. - More Mickey Furfari Headlines
-
FURFARI COLUMN- Are Clements and Luck fair to media and jobs?



