The Times West Virginian

WVU Sports

March 5, 2013

Sooners, Mountaineers set for tipoff

MORGANTOWN — There is little left for West Virginia to play for this year except to save face and maybe pull off a couple upsets in the two remaining games and the Big 12 Tournament to get themselves a spot in the NIT, but Coach Bob Huggins says that doesn’t change anything.

As the Mountaineers prepare for a rare third regular-season game against conference opponent Oklahoma, Huggins says the preparation will be as it always is.

“We will prepare the best we can possibly prepare,” he said on Monday’s Big 12 coaches conference call. “I think you saw we were prepared when the game starts. We started well lately. Our problems come when we have to adjust. We don’t adjust to other people. That part of it has been difficult for us.”

Indeed, the Mountaineers did jump off to a lead against Kansas and seemed to have things going their way, just as they did against Baylor, but it all came tumbling down in a shambles.

True, this young team has had a total inability to adjust as teams adjusted to them, a sign of inexperience and also seemingly signifying a lack of basketball instincts, yet as bad as this is the biggest deficiency has been an ability to put the ball in the basket.

If anything is why they enter this game with a 13-16 record and 6-10 conference mark and looking at becoming the first Bob Huggins team to lose five straight games, that is it. He lost four in a row previously in his first year as a Division I coach at Akron in 1984-85.

That’s right, before any player on this year’s team was born.

This team shoots just 40.1 percent for the season ... and it was not anticipated.

“I’m not trying to say this as a negative, but our sophomores have shot 10-12 percentage points lower than a year ago and we didn’t get the impact from the transfers,” he said.

There is little reason to think they should be able to go to Norman and beat Oklahoma. The Sooners already own two victories over WVU this year, winning 77-70 for third place in the Old Spice Classic in November and then in the Mountaineers’ first Big 12 Conference game on Jan. 5, taking a 67-57 decision at the Coliseum.

The Sooners were stunned by Texas two games back in a dismal performance but bounced back with a record-setting effort against Iowa State, taking and making 34 free throws in the game to tie the NCAA record for consecutive free throws made in a single game.

Only Samford in 1990 and UC-Irvine in 1981 had made 34 straight free throws in a game.

“This group shot free throws pretty well during the season,” Coach Lon Kruger said Monday. “I don’t think anyone realized there was a streak during the game. When you are making free throws it makes it easier to make them.”

Senior forward Romero Osby, who was a 63 percent free throw shooter during his days at Mississippi State before transferring to Oklahoma, went 10-for-10 and now is shooting 80.1 percent from the free throw line this year.

“You want to make them all, but I didn’t really realize that we hadn’t missed,” he said. “I just wanted to focus.”

It was Osby who held a team meeting after the unexpected loss to Texas and got the team straightened out, a move that impressed Coach Kruger.

“It’s a lot more effective when it comes from player to player than from coach to player,” Kruger said. “Players expect us to say certain things. It carries a lot more weight.”

Osby has come on strong as he has gotten more playing time due to injury lately for the Sooners.

“He’s a hard matchup for any 4-man to guard. He bounces it so well and he can make shots, obviously,” Huggins said.

What Huggins would like to do would be to get some inside production against Oklahoma. In the first game guard Juwan Staten had 15 points and guard Gary Browne 13, and in the second game Terry Henderson led with 21 points, while Jabarie Hinds scored 11 and Staten had 10.

Deniz Kilicli was the only big to score in double figures with 13 in the first game.

Eron Harris, who has proved himself to be a scorer as the season has worn on, has been dreadful against Oklahoma, hitting just one of 10 shots in two games.

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

Text Only
WVU Sports
  • 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.

    May 25, 2013

  • HERTZEL COLUMN: McCartney getting his second chance

    There is a familiar saying that carries much weight around the West Virginia University football program.
    “If at first you don’t succeed …”

    May 25, 2013

  • Musgrave, errors push WVU past TCU

    In its second game of pool play at the Phillips 66 Big 12 Baseball Championship at Chickasaw Bricktown Ballpark, the West Virginia University baseball team trumped TCU, 10-3, as the Horned Frogs committed a Big 12 Championship record nine errors in the contest.

    May 25, 2013

  • HERTZEL COLUMN: Jarrod West treasures time with his family

    It came along too late to do me any good, but today I want to offer a very warm thank you to Jarrod West, the one-time West Virginia University basketball hero.

    May 24, 2013

  • WVU in eight-team Cancun Challenge field

    West Virginia University’s basketball team will be in a field with seven other teams in the 2013 Men’s Cancun Challenge, played at the all-inclusive Aventura Palace resort near Playa del Carmen, Mexico.

    May 24, 2013

  • Kansas pitcher Taylor shuts down Mountaineers

    In its first game of pool play against Kansas at the Phillips 66 Big 12 Baseball Championship, the West Virginia University baseball team was defeated, 7-2.

    May 24, 2013

  • HERTZEL COLUMN: Big 12 baseball tournament is about America

    All of a sudden the Big 12’s annual baseball tournament is more about America and the American way than it is about baseball.
    And that makes it a wonderful thing.

    May 23, 2013

  • Musgrave to pitch WVU’s second game

    West Virginia University baseball coach Randy Mazey believes that the change in format of the Big 12 Tournament will benefit his Mountaineers because it allows him to hold conference Pitcher of the Year Harrison Musgrave until the key second game of the tournament.

    May 23, 2013

  • 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.

    May 22, 2013

  • 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.

    May 22, 2013

Featured Ads
WVU Sports Highlights
NDN Sports
House Ads