Mizzou’s 2026 season ends with an 8-5 record after losing the TaxSlayer Gator Bowl to Virginia. Missing a host of offensive players to transfers and injury, Mizzou’s offense failed to put up any points after the opening drive, making Virginia’s lone touchdown and two field goals enough to come out on top.
Virginia
War Paint: Lawsuit over West Virginia Capitol mural project possible
An employee of John Canning and Co. installs the Seneca Rocks mural that includes Babydog, Gov. Jim Justice’s pet English bulldog, on June 12. (Photo courtesy of WV Legislative Photography)
CHARLESTON — The West Virginia agency that approves improvements to the State Capitol Building and other properties on the Capitol grounds signed off on renovations to the historic Holly Grove mansion and upgrades to Capitol bathrooms and conference rooms.
However, there was no talk at Wednesday’s meeting of the Capitol Building Commission regarding the historic and allegorical mural project in the upper rotunda of the State Capitol Building after it was revealed that the commission had no role in the project since a 2010 vote.
The commission was also not involved in the inclusion at the 11th hour of Babydog, Gov. Jim Justice’s English bulldog companion, in one of the first four murals that were dedicated on West Virginia Day last month. But a Kanawha County attorney and his client were in attendance at Wednesday morning’s meeting as they consider bringing a lawsuit over the project.
Attorney Harvey Peyton of the Nitro-based Peyton Law Firm is representing Gregory S. Morris of Huntington. Peyton said his client is considering a lawsuit against the state Department of Arts, Culture and History, the Capitol Building Commission, and other state agencies involved in the mural project and the lack of followed processes under state law.
Peyton said he has filed a 30-day notice to WVDACH and other state agencies of his intentions to sue. State law requires a 30-day notice before filing suit against the state, with all state agency lawsuits filed in the Kanawha County Circuit Court. However, Peyton said he is still gathering information and documents to determine if a lawsuit is worth pursuing.
“In order to have any jurisdiction to bring an action, you have to send a written notice to department heads. Otherwise, there’s no jurisdiction to bring a claim,” Peyton said. “It doesn’t mean you’re going to bring a lawsuit. It just means you’ve satisfied the jurisdictional requirement to bring a claim…So, we’ll see. I don’t know. I’ve got a client to represent. It depends on what he wants to do.”
A request for comment from WVDACH was not returned Wednesday. WVDACH Cabinet Secretary Randall Reid-Smith, the chairman of the Capitol Building Commission, quickly left the meeting upon adjournment.
The four murals depict historic Harper’s Ferry and the John Brown fort; the battle of Philippi during the Civil War; an allegorical scene based on the State Seal; and artists, musicians, and wildlife at the base of Seneca Rocks. The murals are supposed to be based on ideas and concepts that famed Capitol architect Cass Gilbert had wanted to include in the building but was unable to due to costs during the start of the Great Depression.
The Governor’s Office released the artist renderings of the murals in April, but an ad hoc committee made up of two cabinet secretaries, two officials in the Governor’s Office, and the director of the State Museum recommended changes to the murals by Connecticut-based John Canning and Co. Those changes involved adding Babydog to the Seneca Rocks mural.
According to past statements by Reid-Smith, the artist selection process for the murals was first approved on April 14, 2010, by the Capitol Building Commission, which is required by State Code to review, approve, or reject any changes to the State Capitol Building, other buildings on the State Capitol Complex, and changes to the grounds. Multiple companies participated in the pre-bid process at the time, including John Canning and Co., but the project was scrapped due to lack of funding.
The project was revived by Reid-Smith in 2021, using the 2010 vote by the Capitol Building Commission to move forward. Yet, at no time did the Capitol Building Commission vote between 2021 and 2024 to re-start the project and the commission was not consulted on the look of the murals. According to the state Purchasing Division, the project was not put out for competitive bid, citing Section 9 of the Purchasing Division Procedures Handbook’s “impossible-to-bid list,” which includes items such as artwork and historical items.
The project, which includes four more murals, is slated to cost more than $509,000 according to the purchase order agreement between WVDACH and John Canning and Co. To date, more than $348,000 has been paid to John Canning and Co. for the mural project.
“The state’s going to spend over a half million dollars on this deal, at least the way I read the documents I’ve already seen,” Peyton said. “There’s a purchasing handbook that you have to comply with, there’s a statute about changes to the Capitol you have to comply with, and there’s a specific provision in the purchasing handbook about changes to the capitol, but nobody seems to be paying any attention to it.”
In other news, the Capitol Building Commission approved of renovations to bathrooms on the third floor of the State Capitol Building’s west wing. The two bathrooms will be renovated to match bathroom renovations made by the state Senate to bathrooms on the second floor of the west wing a few years ago.
The commission approved of renovation plans for Holly Grove, a historic mansion located beside the Governor’s Mansion on the corner of Kanawha Blvd. East and Greenbrier Street. According to the West Virginia Encyclopedia, Holly Grove was first built in 1815 by Daniel Ruffner, one of the area’s many saltmakers. Holly Grove has been on the National Register of Historic Places since 1974. Once renovated, Holly Grove will become the headquarters of the State Historic Preservation Office.
Finally, the commission approved alterations to a conference room that will be used by the House of Delegates for meetings of the House Rules Committee and other functions. Last year, the House of Delegates chamber underwent an extensive renovation project. Other House offices and conference rooms are being painted and renovated.
Steven Allen Adams can be reached at sadams@newsandsentinel.com
Virginia
This Virginia mom ‘had to do something’ after her teen son’s sudden death: ‘There are no do-overs’
NEW KENT COUNTY, Va. — A Virginia mother who lost her 16-year-old son in a car crash six years ago is using her tragedy to advocate for safer roads during what experts say is one of the most dangerous driving periods of the year.
Tammy Gweedo McGee will never forget the phone call she received when her son, Connor, was killed by an unlicensed underage driver leaving a homecoming dance.
“I don’t want another mother to be me,” McGee said. “It’s heartbreaking every day to relive the death of your son.”
According to the National Road Safety Foundation, the end of the year leading up to New Year’s is one of the most dangerous times on roadways and highways, with a spike in crashes. While crash statistics are on the rise in Virginia, McGee has made it her mission to fight for change in honor of her son to make roadways safer.
“For me, it was lay down and die or stand up and fight. For me, I only had two choices: I had to do something,” McGee said.
WTVR
I’ve been following McGee’s story for years, but she recently showed me her safe haven — a corner tucked away in her home filled with pictures of Connor, his soccer jerseys and high school memories. Memories McGee says will forever live on.
“He was just so full of life,” McGee said.
A life taken too soon led McGee to start the Gweedo Memorial Foundation, where she travels to speak to teens and adults about staying safe behind the wheel. She’s successfully lobbied for legislative changes in this year’s General Assembly session, inspired by Connor. She says she plans to advocate for more changes so this doesn’t happen to someone else’s child.
“One of the most important things to realize is there are no do-overs in driving,” McGee said. “You don’t get to say, ‘Sorry, I killed your son.’ You don’t get to say, ‘I was just picking up the phone to check my texts, I didn’t mean to.’”
It’s a reminder this holiday season to have fun, but most importantly, be responsible.
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Virginia
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Virginia
Five Takeaways from Mizzou’s 13-7 Gator Bowl loss to Virginia
Here are your five takeaways.
Bowl games may not matter in the grand scheme of things. But despite what you may be told, they do have an impact on fan perception of a program. And Mizzou’s performance against Virginia will certainly leave a sour taste in mouths for the next few months.
Mizzou, a team that prides itself on a dominant run game and time of possession, was out-possessed by almost 17 minutes of game clock. A defense that made its bones on third-down conversion allowed the Cavaliers to convert 13 third downs for a 56.5 percent rate. The First Team All-American running back? Held to just 15 carries on the night, including conspicuous absences in critical, late-game moments (despite averaging 5.9 yards per carry.)
Don’t let the one-score outcome, or the fact that Mizzou nearly came back to win it late, fool you. The Tigers were flattened by Virginia in Jacksonville. Eli Drinkwitz and his staff will have plenty of bulletin board material to use for next season just based on this game alone.
2. So those final two plays…
I had written out a whole takeaway about how bad Matt Zollers was tonight. And by no means was he good. But the final drive, which saw him uncork a few mouth-watering throws, redeemed his performance somewhat. Unfortunately, an ultimate redemption was taken out of his hands by the referees.
With Mizzou sitting at the edge of the red zone on third-and-10, Matt Zollers scrambled to his right and threw a ball away under pressure from a Virginia defender. Then, after the ball had been out of his hand for a good second, another Cavalier came barreling in to lay a blind side hit on the freshman, whipping his head onto the turf and causing Zollers to grasp his helmet. After a few seconds of lying on the ground, Zollers bounced up for his final shot at the end zone.
Except it never came. The referees, using their discretion, removed Zollers from the game under the auspices of a possible head injury. Zollers, looking disconsolate at the decision, could only watch as walk-on Brett Brown put a lob into the corner of the end zone that was broken up by Virginia’s defense.
Perhaps it’s the right call by the officials given the game’s lack of importance and Zollers’ obvious discomfort after the hit. But allowing the hit to go unpunished in the first place will add to the grievance Mizzou fans will feel given the referees then put the Tigers at further disadvantage by removing their best passer from the game.
3. All chalk, all the time
With Mizzou’s loss to Virginia, the Tigers end their season perfect against teams with losing records… and winless against teams with winning records.
A team’s record isn’t everything, and it shouldn’t be the only factor in how we evaluate the program moving forward. The advanced numbers say that Mizzou was one of the country’s top 25-30 teams this year, and that’s meaningful when you play in the SEC. But it’s kind of poetic that this Mizzou team was exactly what it ended up on the scoreboard: Good enough to beat the bad teams, but not good enough to beat the good ones. It’s a tag that is starting to follow Eli Drinkwitz’s teams around, one that will be especially noteworthy given his new, eye-popping salary.
It’s a downer note for his season to end on, but we’d be remiss if we didn’t call out Mizzou’s new all-time single season rushing champion. Ahmad Hardy started the game with a bang, rushing 42 yards to set up Mizzou’s only scoring drive of the night. And while he was inexplicably sat for much of the game, he was able to bust enough trademark YAC runs to brake Cody Schrader’s record of 1,624 yards on the ground.
All eyes will be on the First Team All-American when Mizzou takes the field next season, and it’ll be difficult for him to top what he’s already done in black-and-gold. But he’s earned those distinctions, as well as the right to have an offense built around him. Get to work, Mr. Lindsey.
5. All eyes on the transfer portal and draft
Mizzou’s season on the field is over. But off-the-field, things are getting hairy.
Will the Tigers bring in QB competition for Zollers? Can they rebuild their WR corps and secondary? Will there be any upgrades in the trenches? How many more players will they lose? Which eligible players will declare for the draft?
A lot of questions hang in the air, and we won’t have to wait too long for answers.
Thanks to everyone who reads these pieces each week. Sometimes they’re a lot of fun to write. Sometimes they kind of suck. They’re always a challenge, and the engagement they get makes a writer feel good.
Happy New Year, all! M-I-Z!
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