MORGANTOWN —
It is Thanksgiving morning as this is being penned, which, come to think of it, is a word that no longer has much use in this computerized world in which we live and write.
While that is a detour from where we were expecting to head, it sums up precisely what our thoughts are on this morning of thanks.
Our world has changed dramatically, not just in replacing a quill with a laptop or a witch doctor with a neurosurgeon, but in the way we do our sports.
There, I knew we’d get back on track.
See, while there is so much to give thanks for this Thanksgiving day, having the football team travel to Iowa State rather than seeing the Pitt Panthers either in the friendly confines of Milan Puskar Stadium or the unfriendly confines of Heinz Field this holiday weekend is a difficult circumstance to accept.
Even WVU quarterback Geno Smith this past week was moved to comment on it when someone mentioned that this probably would have been the week the Mountaineers would be preparing for Pitt.
“That is kind of strange, isn’t it?’’ he said. “That was a good rivalry.’’
Iowa State is not WVU’s rival … never was, considering this is their first meeting today, never will be … and that’s a promise. It doesn’t matter if they schedule this game on Thanksgiving week every year, and BTW it is back there next year. This is not a rivalry.
What’s more, because it is not, it symbolizes much of what is wrong with WVU’s move to the Big 12, a move that suddenly leads to some questions about whether or not the Mountaineers pulled the trigger on jumping ship from the Big East too quickly.
Of course, Syracuse and Pitt, itself, have fled to the ACC, and just this week the Big Ten came along and grabbed Rutgers away from the Big East and Maryland from the ACC.
The face of college football was changed again. The Big East is bleeding to death as a football conference like a wounded wildebeest on the African plains. The ACC is now in expansion mood again and worrying that Clemson and Florida State will go off and elope elsewhere, and the SEC, it is smugly watching it all with the Nos. 2, 3 and 4 teams in the BCS standings.
But back to the home front, where WVU finds itself caught up in a league which begs the Mountaineers change their entire culture to belong, a league with far-off neighbors who live in oil-rich states and that apparently play football at a different level.
WVU’s Coach Dana Holgorsen made note of how reality differs from expectations when asked about the challenges that are presented in the Big 12.
“I don’t know what the fan base thinks, but I think we all understand the challenges that we have encountered,” he said. “Yes, it is pretty difficult, and this is the eighth team in a row that has either been ranked or close to ranked. I think it is eight in a row. You lose track. Every Big 12 team that we have played is going to go to a bowl game. That probably tells you something right there.”
Let us understand one thing right now, and it is that Oliver Luck, the athletic director, and WVU President Jim Clements were not wrong in making the move when and where they did. They had no choice.
The Big East was crumbling around them. The ACC would not so much as consider them as a member, and the SEC … well it took Texas A&M and Missouri and wasn’t looking to change anything further.
But what if … (We can dream, can’t we?)
What if they were stubborn; what if they had played in the Big East this year. Would they not have swept through that conference? Would they not be heading to a BCS bowl instead of fighting just to qualify for a bowl? And would not they be today targeted by the ACC, which would reunite them with Pitt and the Backyard Brawl, after Maryland left and with rumors of Florida State and Clemson’s departure getting stronger?
We know, they had no benefit of knowing what would happen and had to look out for No. 1, but it’s tough being a Mountaineer in the Big 12, where you don’t have a big alumni base in the member cities, where each game is road trip and not many of them to vacation sites like Florida, New York City or, even in basketball, Chicago.
OK, it is what it is, and this is Iowa State today, not Pitt, and it’s going to be the same the next year, but that isn’t the way it’s supposed to be in a perfect world, just the way it is.
Email Bob Hertzel at bhertzel@hotmail.com or follow him on Twitter @bhertzel.
WVU Sports
HERTZEL COLUMN: It’s far from perfect world
- WVU Sports
-
-
HERTZEL COLUMN: Bill Stewart is missed, remembered
It was Monday, the first anniversary of Bill Stewart’s sudden death while playing the 16th hole of a charity golf tournament with West Virginia University’s former athletic director and his former boss, Ed Pastilong.
-
Miles granted release from WVU
Junior forward Keaton Miles, who suffered through a disappointing sophomore season as West Virginia fell below .500, has been granted a release and will seek a transfer, according to published reports.
-
WVU baseball team helps those in tornado’s path
In so many ways it was a day that called for celebration.
Randy Mazey’s West Virginia baseball team, the team that was supposed to finish last in its first Big 12 season, was sitting in third place on what should have been the eve of the conference tournament. -
FURFARI COLUMN: WVU should reinstate men’s track — not golf
West Virginia University has not had a men’s golf team since 1982 in its sports program.
But Oliver Luck, who’s been the school’s athletic director going on three years, reportedly is talking about bringing back that sport “because it’s cheap.” -
HERTZEL COLUMN- Catastrophes make you stop and think
The scenes have been gruesome, devastation everywhere, words flowing from the mouths of reporters that are as difficult to comprehend as are the images on the eyes.
-
HERTZEL COLUMN- Major delivers message: ‘Roll with the punches’
On graduation day, four or five or who knows how many years into one’s college days, you expect to put on your cap and gown and listen to words of wisdom from a commencement speaker more along the lines of Henry Kissinger or Bill Clinton, but that is not to say it is only a day for an academic elitist.
-
WVU wins regular-season finale
The West Virginia University baseball team guaranteed itself a Top 4 finish in the Big 12 Conference standings with a 5-4 victory at No. 16 Oklahoma State on Saturday afternoon at Allie P. Reynolds Stadium.
-
HERTZEL COLUMN: Irvin’s dreads are gone now he must rebuild reputation
A couple of days back Bruce Irvin sat down in a barber’s chair — stylist’s chair, if you prefer — and made a dramatic and what had to be traumatic move.
He had his dreadlocks removed. -
FURFARI COLUMN: Harrick greatest WVU two-sport coach
The late Steve Harrick was the longest-serving, most-successful two-sport head coach in West Virginia University’s athletic history.
-
HERTZEL COLUMN: Flying WV logo draws attention outside country
Sometimes you hit a nerve, as we did a while back when we wrote about the wide reach of West Virginia University’s flying WV logo.
It has meant a lot to a lot of people. - More WVU Sports Headlines
-
HERTZEL COLUMN: Bill Stewart is missed, remembered



