MORGANTOWN —
It was a half hour or so before West Virginia’s final practice before tonight’s exhibition game against Glenville State at the Coliseum and Juwan Staten was sitting in the seats behind the basket at the WVU end of the court filling out a profile form for an upcoming game program.
Even though he’s been at West Virginia for more than a year now, the new point guard who will serve as the nerve center of the Mountaineers isn’t yet very well known, having sat out last season after transferring from Dayton, where he led the Atlantic 10 in assists as a freshman.
Staten is a quiet kid for the most part, a nice kid whose face on the social media is that of a religious kid who wants to do well, not the kind of in-your-face young athlete we see far too much of and not the kind of kid you expect to find in the police report as often as he is on the sports page.
“That comes from my parents. They raised me right,” he said when the subject was brought up. “I know right from wrong. I know I’m representing them and I’m representing something bigger than myself. I don’t want to make them look bad and I don’t want to make myself look bad. I want to go out there and be the best person I can be.”
It is a refreshing approach from a college athlete, many of whom over the years have strayed into anything from drug use to armed robbery. After all, many come from bad areas, often from broken homes, and they are turned loose in a college atmosphere as a pampered, spoiled athlete.
Staten does not seem to qualify there.
“There’s always going to be some distractions, but as long as you know why you are here and what you are supposed to be doing, it’s easier to stay on track,” Staten said.
It was brought up to Bob Huggins, who has been with him now for the year he sat out and this practice session, and Huggins was surprising in his assessment not only of him but the entire group.
“In all honesty, I have very, very few I worry about getting in trouble,” he said. “We have good kids.
“It’s like when we got Jabarie (Hinds) from Mount Vernon. It’s like Bob Simino said, ‘You may have gotten the three best players/people to come out of here — Lowes Moore, Kevin Jones and Jabarie.’
“For us, being bad is being 15 minutes late for study hall. It hasn’t always been that way.”
When you think about it, knowing the history of Bob Huggins’ teams in Cincinnati, where he was often called “Thuggins” in the media because of the way his players played and behaved, it shows just how different things have become here.
Staten is the new breed of Huggins player, much the same as Da’Sean Butler or Kevin Jones was, and he may have as much talent.
He comes in as a redshirt sophomore, with three more years to play at the point with a couple of other sophomores, Jabarie Hinds and Gary Browne.
And what does he want to accomplish in those three years?
“I just want to get better. I want to continue to get better every day,” he said. “I want to become a great leader, someone the team can depend on. And I want to win. That’s the biggest thing. I know if we win as a team, everything else will take care of itself.”
It wasn’t easy for him to sit out the season, especially as the Mountaineers struggled to just 19 victories.
“It was kind of hard early because I never had to sit out a long period of time or miss a season. It was hard to practice and then sit there on game days and not be able to go out and help the team,” Staten said.
“But I kind of got used to it. I tried to do things in practice and mention things in the game to help the team.”
He didn’t waste the year.
“I was able to grow. I wasn’t able to play so I had to eat my words a lot. I had a lot of extra workouts and energy so I could work on things I needed to work on.”
Now he feels he’s ready to step in and run the team.
“I know what Coach Huggs likes and what he doesn’t like,” he said. “I just want to be a player that does what he can to help the team.”
And that will be to handle the ball in the open court, run the fast break and set up teammates while giving all he has on the defensive end, which is what Bob Huggins basketball is all about.
Email Bob Hertzel at bhertzel@hotmail.com or follow him on Twitter @bhertzel.
Sports
Staten ready to fill void for WVU
- Sports
-
-
Gallagher making a name for himself in racing world
Thornville, Ohio, native Patrick Gallagher has been putting the pedal to the metal since he was a child.
-
HERTZEL COLUMN- Bailey, Austin turning heads in St. Louis
This will not surprise you if you’ve been in this neck of the woods the past three years, but it sure got those good folks in St. Louis fired up.
-
Pirates end Latos’ streak, beat Reds, 4-0
Pedro Alvarez singled home a pair of runs in the first inning, and the Pittsburgh Pirates ended Mat Latos’ streak of 21 regular-season starts without a loss, beating the Cincinnati Reds 4-0 on Tuesday night.
-
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.
-
‘Heisman curse’ may come to an end
When you hear the term “Heisman Trophy,” you think of Desmond Howard striking the pose in the end zone against Ohio State in the 1991 football season. You think of Tim Tebow’s speech following the loss to Ole Miss. You think of the hail mary from Doug Flutie to Gerard Phelan that gave Boston College the win over the Miami Hurricanes.
-
Pirates give up 4 solo homers, lose to Reds, 4-1
A hanging a slider, a fastball that strayed right down the middle. With no margin for error, left-hander Francisco Liriano made two of them that went a long way and decided a close game.
-
Local lineman commits to WVU
Morgantown High offensive lineman Amanii Brown has committed to West Virginia’s 2014 recruiting class.
Brown grew up in Clarksburg before moving to Morgantown during his sophomore year of high school. -
EFHS’s Ronnie Mills battles back from season-ending shoulder injury
All Ronnie Mills felt was numb.
The quarterback of East Fairmont’s football team, Mills was playing at Preston County on a freezing Friday night last season. -
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.
-
Underclassmen Richardson, Ferrell and Latocha captains of All-Mon Valley team
Every year, the Times West Virginian evaluates stats and performances of softball players in the area in order to select its All-Mon Valley team.
- More Sports Headlines
-



