West Virginia
Albany falls to West Virginia 49-14
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (AP) — West Virginia quarterback Garrett Greene might never be completely satisfied with his offense’s performance as long as opportunities to get into the end zone are left unfulfilled.
“There’s two drives we didn’t score on,” Greene said. “We’ve got to clean those two things up. Other than that, I thought it was a productive day.”
Greene threw three touchdown passes and ran for another score, two West Virginia running backs rushed for over 100 yards and the Mountaineers beat Albany 49-14 on Saturday night.
CJ Donaldson ran for 125 yards and Jahiem White had 100 for the Mountaineers (1-1). Both had a rushing touchdown. The Mountaineers compiled 305 yards on the ground in shaking off some of the sting from a lethargic 34-12 loss in the opener to No. 8 Penn State.
A week ago, Greene was responsible for three fumbles and got West Virginia into the end zone just once on five trips inside the 30-yard line,
This time, the yards came much easier against an Albany defense with 11 new starters.
West Virginia coach Neal Brown said Greene “just did a better job of being in control” compared to a week earlier.
“You’ve got to be real careful because he does have high energy,” Brown said. “I don’t ever want to put out that flame. But at the same time, he can’t get overly hot. He’s got to continue to play within himself. And I thought he did a better job of that.”
Greene scored on a 40-yard run just before halftime and he engineered a 15-play, 99-yard drive to start the third quarter, capped by his 10-yard scoring toss to Hudson Clement for a 35-14 lead. Greene, who sat out the fourth quarter, completed 17 of 23 passes for 236 yards and added 68 rushing yards.
Seven different players scored a touchdown for West Virginia.
“We showed our inexperience on defense,” Albany coach Greg Gattuso said.
On defense, West Virginia had trouble corralling Albany quarterback Myles Burkett. He kept alive one touchdown drive with runs of 19 and 14 yards.
After White fumbled at the end of a 39-yard run on West Virginia’s next series, Burkett drove Albany 76 yards in seven plays, capped by his 33-yard TD toss to Jacari Carter to cut the deficit to 21-14. Burkett finished 18 of 39 for 306 yards.
“If you’re able to go up against a Big 12 team and beat them deep as much as we beat them, I feel pretty good about that,” Gattuso said.
THE TAKEAWAY
Albany: The Great Danes (1-1) fell to 1-9 all-time against Bowl Subdivision opponents. Seven McGee had four receptions for 90 yards, giving him 209 yards in two games. He had 287 receiving yards in three previous seasons combined.
West Virginia: The Mountaineers allowed eight completions of at least 19 yards. Cornerback Dontez Fagan was flagged for interference twice on the same Albany drive, including in the end zone.
“We’ve got to play the ball downfield better,” Brown said.
But after giving up pass plays of 41 and 49 yards on the opening drive of the second half, West Virginia’s defense forced a pair of incompletions and the Mountaineer took over on downs at their 1.
TWO-WAY GALLAGHER
West Virginia’s Rodney Gallagher caught three passes for 34 yards and had a solo tackle and a pass breakup on defense.
UP NEXT
Albany, ranked 13th in the FCS Coaches Poll, travels to play Idaho next Saturday.
West Virginia plays in the Backyard Brawl at archrival Pittsburgh on Saturday.
West Virginia
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West Virginia
West Virginia coach Rich Rodriguez wants to save college football. Here’s his pitch:
Trump says soaring college football costs are hitting sports
U.S. President Donald Trump on Friday (March 6) said the soaring cost of paying for football at colleges was harming school sports in general and the problem would need to be addressed by legislation, adding he might sign an executive order about it.
FRISCO, TX − West Virginia football coach Rich Rodriguez made a public plea for some reason and logic to return to major college football after decades of conference expansion, contraction and realignment from coast to coast.
He made his pitch at his news conference at the annual Big 12 Conference media days here Wednesday, July 8. Rodriguez proposes about 60 teams to come together, share their money and divide themselves into regional sections, sort of like how college football used to be with the former Big East, Pac-12, Big 12, Southeastern and Atlantic Coast Conferences.
“Can’t we all come together and shake hands and give each other a group hug and then have an Eastern regional and a South regional and a North regional, and then everybody share the money?” Rodriguez said. “And, you know, with this money for everybody, we all can get along, like 60 of us or so. I think that would be great. I don’t know. Did anybody else say that? Probably not. They might be afraid. Hell, I don’t care.”
PRESEASON COACHES RANKINGS: Big Ten | SEC | ACC
Rodriguez, 63, made his comments in the context of his team not playing rival Pittsburgh in the Backyard Brawl again until 2029. They used to play regularly as independents and then members of the Big East before Pitt left to join the ACC in 2013. Since then, realignment has ripped apart regional leagues such as the Pac-12, which saw four marquee West Coast teams depart in 2024 to pursue more money in the Big Ten while others left for the Big 12 and ACC.
Meanwhile, Congress is considering a bill, the Protect College Sports Act, that would allow the pooling of television rights between more than 100 schools. It aims to spread the wealth more beyond just two dominant leagues.
“I’m not speaking for anybody other than Coach Rod, that he would love for all the Power Four teams to come together, shake hands, and then, hey, let’s pick the biggest TV package in the history of TV packages,” Rodriguez said. “And then we could have Pitt, Virginia Tech and Penn State and Maryland and Cincinnati and maybe Virginia or North Carolina, one of those, all right there. And our fans could drive to it. You know, we have a rivalry every year, and everybody makes money. Nobody gets fired. Players did good.”
Rodriguez noted his pitch might not fly in today’s world but wanted to throw it out there before it’s too late. He previously served as head coach at Michigan and Arizona.
“Wouldn’t that be fun?” he asked. “Can we put that together? I got all the (athletic directors) out there shaking their head like I’m nuts. I’m just, I mean, this is, you know, I got more time, a lot more time behind me than ahead of me. I want to just get this thing right before I leave.”
Follow reporter Brent Schrotenboer @Schrotenboer. Email: bschrotenb@usatoday.com
West Virginia
West Virginia town’s entire police force fired after ex-sergeant claims evidence room was broken into
A tiny West Virginia town has been left without a police department after every officer was fired following a dispute over an apparent break-in at the department’s evidence room.
The Barrackville Police Department announced in a Facebook post Tuesday that, effective immediately, every member of the department had been relieved of duty by the Barrackville Town Council and Mayor Tom Straight.
A former sergeant, identified only as Sgt. Hunt, told 12 News he arrived at the department Tuesday morning and found the evidence room had been broken into.
Hunt said he immediately called a meeting with Straight and the town council.
According to Hunt, council members had previously said they wanted to inventory the department without any officers present.
He also claimed a council member admitted to taking a set of police keys.
After accusing members of the town government of breaking into the evidence room, Hunt said he and the department’s only other officer were immediately removed from active duty.
Hunt said the department’s police clerk also resigned, leaving the town with no police staff. He said he informed the mayor and council that he would be seeking whistleblower protection.
The mass firing came less than a week after Barrackville Police Chief Zachary Freeburn resigned. Hunt said the chief quit over what he described as repeated clashes with the town council over how much control it had over the department.

Marion County Sheriff Roger Cunningham told the station that deputies will continue responding to calls in Barrackville while the town of 1,288 people is without a police department.
Resident Isabella Pham said she hopes the turmoil comes to an end.
“I just think that the town right now is in a little bit of a mess,” Pham told the West Virginian Times.
“We’ve gone through a lot of different people, and I’m just hoping that at the end of this, we can get a little bit of stability, transparency and security, and get back to having a stronger community versus a town of pitchforks and torches.”
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