In the end, West Virginia got exactly what it deserves. A Jan. 1 bowl, as Bill Stewart and his team accepted a bid to the Gator Bowl after Saturday’s 24-21 win at Rutgers.
Coupled with Cincinnati’s 45-44 win over Pitt, the Mountaineers finished second in the Big East.
And it took an unbeaten Cincinnati squad — which pulled off its own 24-21 win over West Virginia, which included a very questionable call that turned a potential Mountaineer takeaway into a Bearcats’ touchdown — to do it.
All things considered, Stewart should probably earn mention on the numerous coach of the year awards that are out there.
A possible 10-win season?
A New Year’s Day bowl?
A Top 20 team?
Even the most ardent Stewbirds, in a moment of clarity, would have to admit that what Stewart and company have done with this team is remarkable, just this side of magical.
Oh, there will always be detractors.
Have you seen the offensive line this season?
At times workable, but at other times, well, offensive.
Have you seen the kickoff portion of special teams?
Nothing special there.
Running back Noel Devine has been dinged up. Ditto QB Jarrett Brown. Linebacker Reed Williams. The entire defensive line save standout Julian Miller. All have spent time on the injury report.
Yet the team held it together.
Sure, they should, most of the players are on scholarship.
But the team suffered only one questionable loss, and that was at South Florida. Fluke? Off night?
Remember, Rutgers clobbered USF 31-0 after WVU fell to the Bulls.
Auburn? What team could overcome six turnovers and still be in the game until a late pick-six made it 41-30.
And Cincinnati? A couple questionable calls will be long remembered. And hey, the Bearcats are undefeated.
What WVU did down the stretch — with three straight games decided by a field goal, two of them wins — shows just what kind of moxie this team has.
And if the losses start at the top, then so did the nine wins.
West Virginia got the Gator offer not 10 minutes after the Mountaineers held on to beat Rutgers.
“The Gator Bowl has a great tradition and relationship with West Virginia University,” said Gator Bowl Selection Chairman Brian Goin, a WVU alum. “It’s just been a super year for West Virginia.”
The timing leads you to believe that West Virginia had the deal sealed regardless of how Saturday played out.
And you know Goin and the Gator Bowl folks would love to have Bobby Bowden and Florida State in the game. It will be Bowden’s final game, having announced his retirement last week in the face of pressure from the FSU administration.
It would also be a rematch of the 1982 and 2005 Gator Bowls, both won by FSU.
It would give the former Mountaineer coach a chance to coach against his old team in his last game at his last coaching stop.
That is one of many storylines.
West Virginia will be playing in its fourth Gator Bowl in the last seven seasons. It lost to Maryland 41-7 in 2004 but beat Georgia Tech 38-35 in 2007.
A great Gator tradition.
And a great job by the West Virginia team of getting exactly what it deserves.
Sports
Mountaineers getting exactly what they deserve
- Sports
-
-
Luck named WVU athletic director
Oliver Luck, former West Virginia University and NFL quarterback and Academic All-American, this morning was named the school's new director of intercollegiate athletics, effective July 1.
-
Reports: Marshall’s Jones heading to UCF
HUNTINGTON - Marshall men’s basketball coach Donnie Jones has accepted Central Florida’s offer to become its new head coach, multiple national media outlets are reporting.
-
Flying Eagles rebound
Coaches often remark that they don’t want a tough loss to beat their teams twice.
-
Hounds do enough to eliminate Fayetteville
SMITHERS — It wasn’t quite a gold-medal performance, but Valley coach Marshall Murray will settle for it. For now.
-
Huggs ejected late in WVU loss to UConn
HARTFORD, Conn. — Connecticut coach Jim Calhoun opened the game with a technical foul and West Virginia’s Bob Huggins ended it with two.
-
No. 2 Red Devils rout Bluefield
OAK HILL — A little high-low was a little too much for Bluefield.
-
Local Roundup: MSU loses for first time
Lee 92, Mountain State 89
-
Locals set to compete in Class AAA states
This area will be well represented in the Class AAA portion of this week’s state wrestling tournament.
-
Season ticket success could lead to more seats
Prospective fans of the West Virginia Miners have a say in the growth of Linda K. Epling Stadium.
-
Shuffle on down to the state tournament this weekend
With the 63rd annual West Virginia state wrestling tournament beginning Thursday, there are a lot of reasons to liken this competition to a poker match.
- More Sports Headlines
-
Luck named WVU athletic director





