The Times West Virginian

WVU Sports

March 8, 2010

WVU’s Butler named first team All-Big East

Ebanks earns spot on third team

MORGANTOWN — Through four years and nearly 2,000 points, Da’Sean Butler’s game has been dissected and analyzed until there is almost nothing left to say about it.

Yet, it seems, with each passing day it begs for more for there is always something new, something different.

He is Superman, yet so human, a basketball player so good that was named to the All-Big East first team on Sunday, a day after he hit his fourth game-winning shot of the year to beat Villanova.

It’s the kind of stuff that can inflate an ego, maybe even draw comparisons to one Jerry West, who simply was the greatest man ever to put his WVU pants on one leg at a time.

But it’s when you so much as try to make any comparison it is when you see why Butler has been able to do what he has done.

“I’m not trying to be Jerry,” he says.

And that explains it all.

No pretenses. No warped self adulation. Jerry West is Jerry West and Da’Sean Butler is Da’Sean Butler.

He accepts what he is and tries to lift it to its highest level, but isn’t chasing ghosts of basketball past, only his own future.

When Bob Huggins talks about Butler you sense something far more than a coach and player relationship. You sense that Huggins likes Butler as he would like his own son, that he respects and appreciates not only Butler’s acceptance of him as a coach but how that made it so much easier for Huggins to come into the job without any resistance.

You may recall when John Beilein arrived, he having a far different reputation than Huggins, he wound up running quite a few players off, including his best player, Drew Schifino, so that he could build what he wanted to build.

Huggins, on the other hand, did not have to do that because he had in Butler a person to lead everyone into coming together rather than falling apart.

Huggins, too, appreciates that Butler hits the books as he hits the boards and that he is priorities than range far beyond the basketball court.

“He’s a guy who will ride 45 minutes to read books to grade school kids,” Huggins noted.

What it all says, what it all means is that Butler is not only a first-team All-Big East performer, but he is a Big East Hall of Fame person, someone with an easy laugh yet a fire within him that seldom lets him fail.

He’s not necessarily a great athlete, if you were to compare him to, say, Joe Alexander.

But he succeeds far better than many who are looked at with more hops and more speed and more physical strength. Butler succeeds because he has a different kind of strength, as his 17.2 scoring average and 6.2 rebounding average attest.

“If they don’t see me as the best athlete, I can’t do anything about it except go out and play my game for myself, my school and the state,” he said.

“He’s probably as complete a player as there has been at this school, other than Jerry,” Huggins said.

A year ago he was a second team All-Big East performer. This year it’s first team, joining Notre Dame’s Luke Harangody, Georgetown’s Greg Monroe, South Florida’s Dominique Jones, Syracuse’s Wes Johnson and Villanova’s Scottie Reynolds.

Butler’s teammate, Devin Ebanks, was a third team choice for all league with Connecticut’s Jerome Dyson and Kemba Walker, Louisville’s Samardo Samuels and Villanova’s Corey Fisher.

The second team was made up of Georgetown’s Austin Freeman, Marquette’s Lazar Hayward, Pitt’s Ashton Gibbs, Seton Hall’s Jeremy Hazell and Syracuse’s Andy Rautins.

The All-Rookie team included no Mountaineers. It is led by Cincinnati’s Lance Stephenson, Connecticut’s Alex Oriakhi, Syracuse’s Brandon Triche, Providence’s Vincent Coucil, Rutgers’ Dane Miller and Villanova’s Maalik Wayns.

E-mail Bob Hertzel at bhertzel@hotmail.com.

 

Text Only
WVU Sports
  • HERTZEL COLUMN - God bless America

    Perhaps the most welcome innovation in major league baseball in recent memory has been the introduction of a seventh-inning rendition of “God Bless America” while honoring an active member of the U.S. military.

    May 28, 2012

  • Orlando, Pastilong highlight ’12 WVU Hall of Famers

    Retired athletic director Ed Pastilong and safety Bo Orlando of the 1988 football team that played Notre Dame for the national championship lead a class of seven into the West Virginia University Sports Hall of Fame.

    May 27, 2012

  • HERTZEL COLUMN: Patrone finally gets his due

    Lee Patrone says he remembers it vividly, even though more than 50 years have passed, and while it was the greatest accomplishment in his life it has nothing to do with the West Virginia University basketball career that has lifted him into the Class of 2012 that will be inducted into the Mountaineer Sports Hall of Fame in September.

    May 27, 2012

  • HERTZEL COLUMN: No doubt WVU made out well

    There was a cold, ill wind blowing in from the north on Friday.
    It was the kind of wind that blows whenever a Pitt man opens his mouth, as the Pittsburgh athletic director Steve Pederson did.

    May 26, 2012

  • Stewart-Quincy-DS.jpg Tears and memories: VIDEO

    It was mid-Thursday afternoon at the Morgantown Event Center and the crowd stood mostly silently in line that wound out of the Events Hall and into the hallway toward the staircase.
    A young lady was there holding a singular golden rose
    “I wish,” Rebecca Durst said, “it could be gold and blue.”

    May 25, 2012 1 Photo

  • HERTZEL COLUMN: Stew fondly remembered by players

    The tributes have poured in all week for Bill Stewart, the former West Virginia University football coach whose sudden and unexpected death from a heart attack at age 59 on Monday stunned the state, but it wasn’t the administrators or executives or politicians who really knew him.

    May 25, 2012

  • Friends, fans mourn loss of Stewart

    Condolences streamed in from as far as Texas and Massachusetts as fans and friends gathered Thursday in Morgantown to pay tribute to former West Virginia University football coach Bill Stewart.
    Stewart died Monday of an apparent heart attack at age 59 while on a golf outing with former athletic director Ed Pastilong.

    May 25, 2012

  • HERTZEL COLUMN: White right there with Hall of Famers

    Back on New Year’s Eve, 2008, shortly after West Virginia University had edged North Carolina, 31-30, to win the Meineke Car Care Bowl, an attempt was made to put Mountaineer quarterback Patrick White into his proper historical perspective.

    May 24, 2012

  • HERTZEL COLUMN: Pat Beilein follows in father’s path

    In a day filled with the sorrow of former West Virginia University football coach Bill Stewart’s sudden and unexpected death, there was a ray of sunshine that managed to slip through, a happening that shows us all that even in death there is life and as one son grieves, as does Stewart’s son, Blaine, somewhere else a father basks in pride over his son.

    May 23, 2012

  • Bill Stewart services scheduled

    Visitation and funeral arrangements for former West Virginia University football coach Bill Stewart have been announced.
    There will be public viewing from 2-9 p.m. Thursday, at the Morgantown Event Center, 2 Waterfront Place.

    May 23, 2012

Featured Ads
WVU Sports Highlights
NDN Sports
House Ads