Latest West Virginia Stories
Posted: Nov 24th 2009 2:28 PM ET by Brett McMurphy (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Connecticut, Louisville, Pittsburgh, South Florida, Syracuse, West Virginia, Big East

For nearly a month, UConn coach Randy Edsall knew what he would do -- he just started to wonder when he would get the opportunity.
That chance finally came Saturday when the Huskies defeated
Notre Dame, 33-30, in double overtime. After three excruciating losses, the Huskies finally had a victory for murdered teammate
Jasper Howard.
"We've been working very, very hard to get a win for Jazz and his family after his death," Edsall said. "Each week that went by, it seemed like there was a little more burden to get that done. But when we got that taken care of at Notre Dame, I didn't tell the team what I was doing, but I knew what I was going to do once we got that victory."
After the game, Edsall said he talked to Howard's family. Edsall said he will send them the game ball.
Posted: Nov 23rd 2009 2:00 PM ET by Brett McMurphy (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Cincinnati, Connecticut, Louisville, Pittsburgh, Rutgers, South Florida, Syracuse, West Virginia, Big East
FanHouse Big East writer Brett McMurphy looks back at the week that was in the Big East Rewind.Two weeks ago, UConn coach Randy Edsall and senior running back
Andre Dixon both said how much the Huskies' really needed a bye week after a third consecutive last-minute loss at
Cincinnati.
If no other team needed a bye like UConn, no other team in the country needed a victory like UConn. And that's exactly what the Huskies' got. UConn went into South Bend, Ind., and defeated
Notre Dame 33-30 in double overtime Saturday.
It was the first victory since the murder of UConn cornerback
Jasper Howard. After the game, Edsall pointed skyward in honor of Howard, while the Huskies' players held aloft Howard's No. 6 jersey.
Did anyone else notice UConn's final score just happen to be 33 (3+3=6)?
Posted: Nov 14th 2009 1:03 AM ET by Brett McMurphy (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Cincinnati, West Virginia, Big East

CINCINNATI -- The talk all week in
Cincinnati -- no make that for the past few weeks -- was when would Cincinnati quarterback
Tony Pike return? And, if so, would he start?
Friday against
West Virginia, Pike finally saw his first action in 29 days and even threw two touchdowns, but he was merely a footnote. The real story for the Bearcats was running back
Isaiah Pead, who rushed for a career-high 175 yards as the fifth-ranked Bearcats did just enough to get past the Mountaineers 24-21.
With the victory, Cincinnati became the nation's first team to get to 10-0 this season, but it was anything but a perfect 10. Playing on Friday the 13th, there were a lot of strange occurrences for the Bearcats, including trailing in a game for the first time in 24 quarters and losing a fumble for the first time this season.
Posted: Nov 13th 2009 4:00 PM ET by Brett McMurphy (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Cincinnati, West Virginia, Big East

CINCINNATI -- Since the Big East Conference was reconfigured in 2005,
West Virginia has been the league's bell cow. The Mountaineers have won or shared two of the four league titles.
Entering this season, West Virginia's 22-6 record in Big East play was a whopping five games better than the next best league team. Nobody had done it better -- or even came close.
But times, they are a changin'.
It started last season with
Cincinnati winning its first league title and the Bearcats are on pace for a second consecutive title this season.
Friday, West Virginia visits Cincinnati and the national television audience can watch how these programs are heading in different directions.
Posted: Nov 10th 2009 2:30 PM ET by Brett McMurphy (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Cincinnati, Connecticut, Louisville, West Virginia, General CFB Insanity

A day after saying that Cincinnati senior Tony Pike would be his starting quarterback when "100 percent" healthy,
Bearcats coach
Brian Kelly told Cincinnati radio station WEBN-FM that back-up Zach Collaros would start Friday against West Virginia.
Collaros started for Pike the past three games, and has completed 80 percent of his passes. Saturday against UConn, Collaros set a Big East and school record with 555 yards of total offense, including 480 yards passing.
Despite Collaros' impressive showing the past 3 1/2 games, Kelly said Pike would regain his starting position when healthy. Kelly's announcement means that Pike still hasn't fully recovered from his left arm injury.
Posted: Nov 9th 2009 4:00 PM ET by Brett McMurphy (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Cincinnati, Connecticut, Louisville, Pittsburgh, Rutgers, South Florida, Syracuse, West Virginia, Big East

Cincinnati, Pittsburgh and West Virginia won as expected last week, but it wasn't quite as easy as the experts predicted.
All three clubs were heavy favorites between 17 and 21 points, yet only Pittsburgh won easily. PItt was the only one of the trio that didn't almost
lose. The
Panthers disposed of depleted Syracuse 37-10, but Cincinnati and West Virginia had a lot more difficulty.
The
Bearcats outlasted a resilient UConn club 47-45, while the
Mountaineers held off Louisville 17-9.
Last week's results shows that the league remains divided into three tiers: the best (Cincinnati, Pittsburgh), the worst (Louisville, Syracuse) and everyone else (South Florida, West Virginia, UConn and Rutgers).
While the top and the bottom of the league is pretty well set, it should be interesting to see how the middle four teams shake out in the next few weeks. It will start Thursday when USF visits Rutgers.
Unfortunately, we have to wait another four weeks for the Cincinnati-Pittsburgh contest.
Posted: Nov 4th 2009 3:30 PM ET by Brett McMurphy (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Cincinnati, Connecticut, Louisville, Pittsburgh, Rutgers, South Florida, Syracuse, West Virginia, Big East, FanHouse Exclusive

TAMPA, Fla. -- The demand for a college football playoff could break up the BCS after the 2013 season, but instead of adding a playoff, the Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) would likely just revert back to the old bowl system, Big East commissioner
John Marinatto told FanHouse.
"It [the BCS] is such an entity where there's so many diverse things that come together that make it work," Marinatto said. "I don't know if all that will continue to go on the way it is. If they're pressured to create a playoff, they would simply go back to what the system used to be like and have it as an at-large, free-for-all where people can go [to whichever bowl] they want.
Posted: Nov 2nd 2009 4:30 PM ET by Brett McMurphy (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Cincinnati, Connecticut, Louisville, Pittsburgh, Rutgers, South Florida, Syracuse, West Virginia, Big East

And then there were two.
Cincinnati and Pittsburgh are now the lone undefeated teams in Big East play after last weekend's action.
The No. 4 ranked
Bearcats and No. 14
Panthers continue on a collision course for the de facto Big East championship game on Dec. 5 in Pittsburgh. By the way, whatever Nick Carparelli, the Big East's senior associate commissioner for football, is making, he deserves a raise.
Carparelli is in charge of the league's schedule and his philosophy is having the league's top games played later in the year. That's easier said than done, but the Big East could have a pair of Top 10 teams playing for the league title if the Bearcats and Panthers don't stumble.
Stumble is exactly what West Virginia did -- again -- at South Florida. Playing in Tampa, Fla., on a Friday night for the second time in three years, the Mountaineers' league title hopes took a big hit with the 30-19 loss to the
Bulls, who had lost their previous two games to Cincinnati and Pittsburgh by a combined margin of 75-31.
Posted: Oct 27th 2009 11:14 AM ET by Brett McMurphy (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Pittsburgh, West Virginia, Heisman

Gentlemen, start your hype engines.
We're just past the halfway mark of the college football season and, forget the battle for who will play for the BCS title, the most intriguing campaign is for the Heisman Trophy.
The latest flavor of the month is Alabama running back Mark Ingram, who has been touted by several TV talking heads and is the top candidate at HeismanPundit.com.
That's understandable, but why has there been hardly no Heisman mention for West Virginia's Noel Devine and Pittsburgh's Dion Lewis, who are the nation's third and fourth leading rushers?
"Dion's been very consistent," Pittsburgh coach Dave Wannstedt said. "You expect a freshman running back like him to perform that way maybe like three or four games a year, not eight games in a row."
Ingram obviously deserves consideration for the award, but is it not so much for what he's done, but who he plays for? After all, he has the No. 1 requirement to win the Heisman – he plays on a team that's ranked in the top five
Posted: Oct 26th 2009 3:33 PM ET by Brett McMurphy (RSS feed)
Filed Under: Cincinnati, Connecticut, Louisville, Pittsburgh, Rutgers, South Florida, Syracuse, West Virginia, Big East

Just three weeks ago, we called Pittsburgh the Pitts-ophrenic
Panthers after their up-and-down performances earlier this season against Buffalo, N.C. State, Louisville and UConn.
Uh, is it too late to take that all back?
As impressive as Cincinnati has been all season, Pittsburgh might be playing the best overall of any Big East team. The offense is balanced and the defense gets more dominating each week. Saturday, the Panthers (7-1, 4-0 Big East) scorched South Florida 41-14.
Since allowing 505 yards at N.C. State, the Panthers have improved their defensive numbers in each of the past four games. Pitt allowed 305 yards to Louisville on Oct. 2, 303 to UConn on Oct. 10, 286 to Rutgers on Oct. 16 and 212 to USF on Saturday.