The Times West Virginian

WVU Sports

February 7, 2013

HERTZEL COLUMN: Gibson back home with two recruits

MORGANTOWN — Tony Gibson remembers the last time he was in Mountaineer Field.

It was not a pleasant memory.

It was Nov. 25, 2011, and the game was the Backyard Brawl.

The last time before that he had taken part in a Backyard Brawl it was a disaster, West Virginia playing Pitt for the right to face Ohio State in a game for the national title in 2007.

You will recall the day.

Pitt stunned the four-touchdown favored Mountaineers, beat them on their home field in a game they could not win, a game that drove Rich Rodriguez out of town and out of favor, taking most of his staff with him to Michigan, including Tony Gibson.

He was villianized by association, a turncoat who would go to Michigan for three years, then spend a year with another former WVU assistant, Todd Graham, at Pitt.

That brought him back home to Mountaineer Field for the Brawl in 2011, a game he would lose again, this time wearing the Pitt colors and falling 21-20 as he watched the Mountaineers sack the Panther quarterbacks 10 times.

“It was hard,” Gibson admitted on Wednesday, now back with the Mountaineers as safeties coach under Dana Holgorsen. “It was hard to come out of the tunnel on the other side, and there were a few fans who had some choice words for me.”

One can only imagine, for there has not yet been a lot of forgiveness for Rodriguez on the part of many Mountaineer fans, but at least there was nothing physical, nothing thrown at Gibson that day.

“It was clean fun,” he said.

Following that season at Pitt, a year Rodriguez sat out of coaching, he rejoined his mentor at Arizona for one year, but there was something inside him telling him this wasn’t the right place or the right time.

He had followed the Mountaineers in his absence.

“When I left after the 2007 season, I always watched what West Virginia was doing, and I always wanted to be a part of it again. I never thought I’d get the opportunity,” he said.

But last year the Mountaineer defense came undone and they needed not only experienced help rebuilding it but also needed someone who was a master recruiter, and Gibson certainly qualified there, having had a hand in bringing quarterback Denard Robinson to Michigan and Russell Shell to Pitt, the nation’s top running back prospect in 2011.

He was floored when he heard from WVU defensive coordinator Keith Patterson, who was the defensive coordinator at Pitt when he was there, wanting to talk about a job.

“When Coach Holgorsen and Coach Patterson gave me the opportunity, I jumped all over it and accepted the job and the rest is history.”

“Just to get back home and be part of West Virginia football again, it was very exciting and an opportunity I could not pass up,” he said.

Leaving Rodriguez, however, could not be easy. They had a long and close relationship.

“When you work with a staff for so long, it’s tough,” he said. “I have to make decisions that affect me not only professionally, but personally. I felt this was a great opportunity.”

Tony Gibson, a native of Van, was coming home. He could be near his son, who is attending Wesleyan, and the rest of his family.

It hit just how nice it was the last Sunday of recruiting.

“After the recruits left, I drove up to Uniontown to my mom’s house She cooked spaghetti and washed my clothes. Everything was good,” he said.

He had himself a house on a Morgantown golf course, a job he wanted and, what’s more, he could contribute immediately through recruiting, grabbing off a pair of recruits whom he had worked long and hard to sell on Arizona.

One was linebacker Brandon Golson, a player from Georgia Military College who had missed most of this past year with an injury, but the key player well may be Mario Alford, a 5-9, 175-pound speedster who could become the dynamic slot WVU needs to replace Tavon Austin.

“I’ve coached teams with guys who could fly … Stevie Slaton, Pat White, Noel Devine. This guy is in that same mold. He can absolutely fly,” Gibson said.

He wasn’t yet ready to call him another Austin, but he didn’t say he couldn’t be.

“I coached against Austin in that Pitt game. To put that tag on Mario right now is unfair to that kid. I don’t know if there was a better player in the country than Tavon. If he gets that good, that will be great for everyone,” he said.

It’s tricky bringing a player or two with you from one school to another after you’ve spent so much time selling them on the good points of the school you left.

“That’s why you have to go with guys you have a relationship with. Mario and Brandon, I had a great relationship with those guys,” Gibson said. “All I had to do was sell them on West Virginia and get them in to meet the staff. When they came on the visit and walked in the front door, I knew we had them. They loved it here; they fit into our schemes; it was pretty easy with those guys.

“Any time you change schools, situations change. I told them that it was not the same as it was. The head coach is still there at Arizona. The coordinator is still there, but the relationship you build with a kid recruiting him over a year and a half, that’s hard to replace.

“Once the process is over and they get here, the position coach is who they are going to deal with. Mario and Coach (Lonnie) Galloway got along great. Brandon and Coach Patterson had a great weekend together.”

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

Text Only
WVU Sports
  • 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.

    June 18, 2013

  • 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

  • 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.

    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

  • 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.

    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

  • Kendrick donates to tornado relief in name of WVU baseball

    Arizona Diamondbacks Managing General Partner Ken Kendrick has made a donation of $200,000 to the Mountaineer Athletic Club in the name of the West Virginia University baseball program to the Oklahoma City tornado relief effort.

    June 12, 2013

  • 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.

    June 12, 2013

  • 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.

    June 11, 2013

Featured Ads
WVU Sports Highlights
NDN Sports
House Ads