West Virginia
Gavin Kash wields hot bat in win over WVU | Texas Tech baseball takeaways
Texas Tech coach Tim Tadlock on WVU innings eater Derek Clark
The Mountaineers’ lefthander came into Texas Tech series with four consecutive nine-inning outings and the Big 12’s lowest earned-run average at 2.15.
Gavin Kash doubled three times and drove in three runs as the Texas Tech baseball team beat No. 24 West Virginia 6-4 in the first game of a Big 12 home doubleheader Sunday, clinching a key series victory.
Kash finished with four hits for Tech (28-13, 11-9), which walloped the Mountaineers’ 15-2 on Friday. West Virginia (23-15, 11-6) entered the series tied for the Big 12 lead and on a seven-game win streak in conference play.
WVU’s J.J. Wetherholt narrowed the gap to 5-4 with a two-run double in the eighth, and Tech’s Austin Green drew a bases-loaded walk in the ninth.
Tech relief pitcher Josh Sanders pitched a scoreless ninth for his second save, getting the last two outs after loading the bases.
Tech jumped ahead in the second inning with an RBI single from Dylan Maxcey and a two-run double from Kash.
After WVU scored single runs in the fourth and fifth innings off Mac Heuer (4-3), Tech answered in the sixth with a Cade McGee home run and a Kash RBI double.
Here are three key developments.
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Texas Tech helps its chances of making the NCAA postseason
West Virginia went into the series No. 26 and Texas Tech No. 33 in the RPI rankings, a factor in NCAA tournament consideration. The series victory against a strong team will help the Red Raiders’ positioning.
The Red Raiders deal Derek Clark an uncommonly short day
Getting into the sixth inning is acceptable for many pitchers in this baseball era. Not so for West Virginia starter Derek Clark (4-1), who pitched nine innings in each of his previous four appearances.
The Red Raiders chased Clark in the sixth after five of the inning’s first six batters reached against him. After McGee’s leadoff homer and Maxcey’s one-out single, Clark picked off Maxcey, leaving the bases empty.
But Tracer Lopez singled, Kash doubled him home and T.J. Pompey walked, ending Clark’s day.
Texas Tech pitchers live dangerously
West Virginia failed to make much of multiple opportunities. The Mountaineers had the bases loaded in the fourth and fifth and scored only one run in each inning.
Heuer got Brodie Kresser to fly out, leaving the bases loaded in the fourth and coaxed an inning-ending double-play ball from Reed Chumley in the fifth.
In the sixth, Brendan Lysik hit back-to-back batters with one out, then struck out the next two. Parker Hutyra struck out Kyle West with two on to end a scoreless seventh.
West Virginia
West Virginia First Foundation lauds Wheeling police for crisis intervention success
WHEELING, W.Va. — The West Virginia First Foundation visited the Wheeling Police Department to commend its efforts in addressing the area’s mental health and opioid crisis.
Wheeling Police Chief Shawn Schwertfeger presented to the WVFF board, highlighting the department’s progress.
Schwertfeger attributed a 14% decrease in Group A crimes from 2024 to 2025 to the department’s crisis intervention program.
“Just another great partnership,” he said. “More collaboration in this area that we are very proud of and we want to keep the momentum going,.”
WVFF Executive Director Jonathan Board praised the program’s success.
“This in particular, the CIT program, that isn’t just in the ether, but is showing success – actual scientific success about de-escalation, about bringing together services providers and to boots on the ground and first responders, this is vitally important to not only this region but the entire state,” Board said.
The visit was part of WVFF’s ‘Hold the Line’ tour across the state.
West Virginia
Where West Virginia’s Decommits in the 2026 Recruiting Class Signed & What Happened
Now that you know about West Virginia’s 2026 recruiting class, I figured it’d be a good time to give a little insight into those who were once committed to the Mountaineers and landed elsewhere.
What happened, and where did they go?
QB Brodie McWhorter (Mississippi State)
McWhorter committed to Neal Brown and his coaching staff, but reopened his recruitment when the coaching change was made. Rich Rodriguez did recruit him at the beginning, holding several conversations with him before backing off and pursuing Jyron Hughley and Legend Bey. Hughley committed, Bey committed to Ohio State (signed with Tennessee), while WVU added two more quarterbacks in Wyatt Brown and John Johnson III.
RB Jett Walker (Texas)
Walker fit the bill for what Rodriguez wanted in the backfield. A big, physical presence who could absorb contact and hammer it in between the tackles. With multiple backs committed and feeling good about a few others, WVU didn’t feel pressed to hold onto him. Walker flipped to Minnesota and then flipped to Texas just three weeks later
WR Jeffar Jean-Noel (Georgia Tech)
Jean-Noel was the second recruit to commit to Rodriguez in the 2026 class, but reopened his recruitment in mid-April. He then considered Purdue, Pitt, Kentucky, UCF, and Florida State before landing at Georgia Tech.
OL Justyn Lyles (Marshall)
The Mountaineers had a number of offensive line commits, and with the late additions of Kevin Brown and Aidan Woods, and their chances of securing Jonas Muya, Lyles took a visit to Marshall and flipped his commitment.
LB Caleb Gordon (North Carolina)
Gordon’s commitment to WVU was very brief. As a matter of fact, it was the shortest of the bunch, announcing his pledge on November 24th and then flipping to NC State on the first day of the early signing period (December 3rd).
LB Daiveon Taylor (Kent State)
Taylor was the first commit in the class; however, it was so early that he was committed to Neal Brown’s staff, announcing his decision in April of 2024. He backed off that pledge the very day Brown was fired (December 1st) and eventually signed with Kent State.
CB Emari Peterson (unsigned)
Peterson decommitted from WVU just days before signing day, likely due to the Mountaineers zeroing in on a pair of JUCO corners in Rayshawn Reynolds and Da’Mun Allen. He will sign in February and currently has offers from Appalachian State, Arkansas State, Bowling Green, Charlotte, Cincinnati, East Carolina, Florida Atlantic, FIU, Georgia State, Georgia Tech, Illinois, Kentucky, Liberty, LSU, South Florida, Southern Miss, Texas A&M, Toledo, Wake Forest, and a few others.
S Aaron Edwards (committed to Tulsa)
West Virginia chose to part ways with Edwards and ultimately replaced his spot with fellow JUCO safety Da’Mare Williams.
S Jaylon Jones (undecided)
Jones decommitted in late October and did not sign during the early signing period. He will likely choose between Central Michigan, Hawai’i, Sam Houston, Stephen F. Austin, and Texas State.
S Taj Powell (Louisville)
Taj is the brother of former Mountaineer basketball guard Jonathan Powell, who is now at North Carolina. He decommitted the day after West Virginia lost to Ohio and flipped to Louisville that same day.
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West Virginia
West Virginia National Guard member killed in DC laid to rest
A West Virginia National Guard member who was fatally shot last month in the nation’s capital was laid to rest with full military honors in a private ceremony.
Spc. Sarah Beckstrom’s funeral took place Tuesday at the West Virginia National Cemetery in Grafton, Gov. Patrick Morrisey said in a statement.
“The ceremony was deeply moving and reflected the strength, grace, and love of a remarkable young woman and the family and friends who surrounded her,” Morrisey said.
Beckstrom graduated with honors from Webster County High School in 2023 and joined the National Guard several weeks later. She served in the 863rd Military Police Company.
Beckstrom and Staff Sgt. Andrew Wolfe were ambushed as they patrolled a subway station three blocks from the White House on Nov. 26. She died the next day.
Rahmanullah Lakanwal, a 29-year-old Afghan national who was also shot during the confrontation, has been charged with murder. He pleaded not guilty.
Morrisey has said Wolfe, who remains in a hospital in Washington, is slowly healing and his family expects he will be in acute care for another few weeks.
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