West Virginia basketball coach Bob Huggins has been talking for weeks about his team finding a way to make a run.
A solid 77-61 win on the road at Texas Tech Saturday was a great start, but if the Mountaineers (10-11, 3-5 Big 12) have any prayer of entertaining their coach’s big talk of getting back into the NCAA Tournament picture, they can’t afford another slip — especially against one of the league’s bottom teams.
That’s the situation WVU will face tonight when it takes on Texas (10-11, 2-6 Big 12) in a Big Monday clash at 9 p.m. at the WVU Coliseum. The game will be televised by ESPN.
“It’s not over yet,” said Huggins after Saturday’s victory. “They tell you to play a schedule, and we played a schedule. Obviously, we’re a long way away right now. But if we can get on a run, I think we have a chance.”
The first meeting between the Mountaineers and Longhorns this season was an instant classic.
Down 10 points with 3:35 to play, WVU rallied to force an overtime and then pulled off a 57-53 victory for their first-ever Big 12 win on the road in Austin, Texas.
The Mountaineers, though, lost four of their next five to put themselves in a huge hole and turn the talk from NCAA to NIT.
Texas hasn’t been much better. The WVU loss was the second in a string of five straight losses. The Longhorns’ only Big 12 wins came against Texas Tech and TCU.
Texas is led by sophomore guard Sheldon McClellan, who averages 14.8 points and 4.1 rebounds per game. He had nine points against the Mountaineers last time the teams played.
Aaric Murray scored 12 points for the Mountaineers in that first meeting, and the 6-foot-10 center has finally been living up to his potential, scoring 40 points and bringing down 20 rebounds in the last three games.
College Sports
Longhorns next up at Coliseum
- College Sports
-
-
Miners' roster has proven producers
While the entire West Virginia Miners roster will be new — except for pitcher Kolin Stanley, whose arrival will be later than expected because of a bout with tendinitis — the players are definitely no strangers to high-caliber baseball.
-
Howley considered best all-around WVU athlete
Chuck Howley’s greatest fame came in football at West Virginia University and then with the NFL’s Dallas Cowboys.
-
Mountaineers drop Big 12 Tournament opener
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.
-
Months of waiting ends: Weeks signs with Marshall
Adam Weeks probably could have helped usher in a historic first season for the Mountain East Conference at any member school he wanted. Instead, he waited — and waited — for the offer he really wanted.
-
WVU coaches looking for talent inside state’s borders
At the West Virginia University Coaches Caravan Thursday at The Resort at Glade Springs, both head football coach Dana Holgorsen and men’s basketball coach Bob Huggins spoke about the Mountain State’s love for the state’s flagship university and its athletic teams.
-
Six Concord baseball players selected for honors
Six Concord University baseballplayers were recently honored with All-Atlantic Region accolades by either the American Baseball Coaches Association (ABCA) or the National Collegiate Baseball Writers Association (NCBWA).
-
WVU baseball changes up pitching lineup for Big 12 Championship
Randy Mazey’s attention has been on everything but baseball in recent days, as the West Virginia University coach has been out in front of his team’s effort to help the tornado victims in Oklahoma, where his team has been this week preparing for the Big 12 Baseball Championships, which begin today at Chickasaw Bricktown Ballpark in Oklahoma City, Okla.
-
Musgrave, WVU teammates see tornado devastation up close
West Virginia University pitcher Harrison Musgrave has spent his entire life in the hills of West Virginia. He didn’t know what a tornado siren was — let alone the damage that can be done by swirling winds.
“I didn’t even know that they were going off,” Musgrave said. “I didn’t even know that they had sirens. I know I feel like a total idiot, but I heard them go off and I just thought it was an alarm going off.” -
WVU’s Musgrave wins Pitcher of the Year honors
Six months ago, West Virginia University sophomore left-hander Harrison Musgrave was questioning his future with the WVU baseball program and first-year head coach Randy Mazey.
-
Big 12 shifts tourney format
The Big 12 Conference will still play the 2013 Phillips 66 Big 12 Baseball Championship this week at Chickasaw Bricktown Ballpark in Oklahoma City, Okla., but in the wake of the devastating storm that blew through the Oklahoma City suburb of Moore on Monday, there will be some major changes to the format.
- More College Sports Headlines
-
Miners' roster has proven producers



