West Virginia
Analysis: BYU gets taken to the woodshed nowhere close to home, falls hard at West Virginia
MORGANTOWN, West Virginia — The BYU Cougars knew there would be nights like this when they were given a seat at the grownups’ table a couple of years ago after that long-awaited invitation to play in the Big 12 finally came.
They just didn’t realize the first really horrible night would come against West Virginia, the team picked to finish dead last in the Power Five league.
“Unfortunately, hearing that song, I guess they only do it after wins? Well, I don’t want to hear it anymore.” — BYU football coach Kalani Sitake.
The Mountaineers played like men among boys Saturday night, blasting the overwhelmed and shorthanded Cougars — not that BYU’s multitude of injuries would have mattered — in every way imaginable to take a 37-7 win in front of 50,266 fans and a national television audience.
Who cares that BYU was playing a junior college transfer at quarterback, Jake Retzlaff, who was making his first major college start, or that the spunky junior was without some of BYU’s top offensive weapons?
Those are just excuses. The Cougars were dominated from the opening kickoff.
It was one of the most embarrassing losses in the Kalani Sitake era, right up there with the 27-0 loss to LSU in 2017 when the Cougars never crossed the goal line in the Super Dome and the 16-10 loss to lowly UMass two months later.
That loss to the Bayou Bengals, by the way, was the last time BYU was shut out. At least the Cougars got some points late to avoid that on Saturday, along with getting to hear the crowd belt out “Take Me Home, Country Roads,” which they only do after wins at Milan Puskar Stadium.
Prior to Aidan Robbins’ 10-yard touchdown run with 6:24 remaining that, for the Cougars, only served to slap lipstick on a pig of a showing for the offense, BYU had gone nine quarters without scoring a touchdown, having not reached paydirt since the first half against Texas Tech.
“Unfortunately, hearing that song, I guess they only do it after wins?” Sitake said, having noted Monday that he was looking forward to hearing it, unaware of that all-important little aspect of the cool tradition.
“Well, I don’t want to hear it anymore.”
He probably won’t want to look at the game film, but he should. He has to. Changes are needed, up and down the lineup.
The one big change made this week — Retzlaff for an ailing Kedon Slovis at QB — was made out of necessity. Sitake said Slovis has been dealing with injuries for several weeks and was outplayed by Retzlaff in practices this past week.
Yes, the Cougars say they practiced.
“The Texas game kinda put him in some danger and in competition, between him and Jake, Jake was 100 percent healthy and ready to go,” Sitake said. “The competition will still happen (again next week as BYU prepared for Iowa State).”
Retzlaff actually played reasonably well, completing 24 of 42 passes for 210 yards. He gained 48 yards on the ground, but was sacked three times for 22 yards, leaving him with a net of 26.
Retzlaff made some outstanding throws; Other times, he held the ball too long and was sacked. And the Cougars still throw short of the sticks on third down, be it Slovis or Retzlaff.
“Jake battled,” Sitake said. “I don’t know if you guys agree with that or not, but he battled, he played hard, he threw the ball with great velocity and accuracy. … I thought he made a couple mistakes, but the effort was there, and the energy. He never quit. I like what he did in the game.”
On the other hand, BYU’s offensive line continues to regress. Run blocking has been an issue all year. Now add poor pass protection to the equation, and the result was what we saw in Week 10.
LaVell Edwards is probably shaking his head in disgust in heaven.
“Too many whiffs by the O line,” Sitake said. “By that, I mean unblocked guys. Whether it is run game or pass pro, it wasn’t good enough.”
For the seventh time in nine games, BYU failed to get more than 300 yards, settling for just 277, including just 114 in the second half.
Along with blown blocks, there were dropped passes galore, and a costly fumble by redshirt freshman Parker Kingston late in the first half after a 23-yard reception seemingly had BYU in business inside the WVU 20.
“We just couldn’t piece momentum together and not converting the fourth downs hurt, and then turnovers, and penalties. … Ten penalties, that is not our kind of football. That is not us,” Sitake said.
“Disappointing. The fact that we had 10 penalties upsets me. It means we played undisciplined football. That usually happens when you are not executing the right way with the technique. We are playing undisciplined football. That’s not good.”
Also not good was a decision the coach made early in the game to go for it on 4th-and-2 near midfield on BYU’s opening possession.
Retzlaff misread an RPO play and handed the ball to Robbins, who was stuffed before he had a chance.
It took the Mountaineers five plays to go 52 yards for the 14-0 lead, essentially scoring the game-winning points with 6:17 remaining in the first quarter.
“We have always felt good about that, and for some reason we weren’t able to convert,” Sitake said, defending the decision.
“I think you have to give credit to (West Virginia) for making the play. … If we are not having a lot of success on that, then maybe don’t do it. Regret isn’t something I am going to live off of. I am just going to try to be better and make a better decision next time.”
After the fourth-down failure, whatever energy, emotion, positivity or mojo or whatever you want to call it was drained from the BYU sidelines, and the Cougars never really recovered.
Sitake said the Cougars were dominated in all three phases, but the defense was just as bad as the offense. Special teams was a wash.
West Virginia piled up 567 yards, including a whopping 336 on the ground. BYU made the Mountaineers look like Air Force — except for the fact that WVU QB Garrett Greene also threw for 205 yards and two TDs.
“It felt like they could do whatever they wanted, and we couldn’t create any momentum and get things going,” Sitake said.
“We gotta be better. It just shows you this conference isn’t easy. You can’t just show up and think because you have a great fanbase that is going to be there cheering for you that it is going to be easy.”
Sitake wondered aloud why the ‘Neers were picked to finish dead last in the 14-team Big 12. They are now 4-2 in league play and 6-3 overall, bowl eligible. BYU is 5-4 and suddenly looking like a huge underdog in its remaining games against Iowa State, Oklahoma and Oklahoma State.
Not that it would have changed the outcome, but BYU couldn’t even cash in when Keelan Marion returned the second half kickoff 91 yards for a touchdown.
Backup linebacker Isaiah Glasker was hit with a holding call on the return, the touchdown wiped off the board and the Cougars got the ball on their own 10.
It was that kind of night for the visitors.
Questions abound with this team, starting with the quarterback situation. Sitake said with Slovis, “it is a day to day, week to week type of deal” for the veteran.
“We will play the best guy,” Sitake said. “If someone is injured and they can play at a high level, then that is what we will go with. If not, we will play with the healthy guy that can go.”
Retzlaff said he didn’t want to assess how he played until he looks at the film.
“It was 37-7 at the end of the day,” he said. “I don’t know the numbers or anything. We just gotta play better as a unit and put some points on the board. We didn’t do that this week.”
Asked whether he did enough to get the starting job next week against ISU in Provo, Retzlaff also demurred.
“Maybe, maybe not. That’s not my decision. I will just go back to the tape and dissect what I did and learn from that,” he said.
“That’s (offensive coordinator Aaron Roderick’s) decision at the end of the day. I just know that I am going to go out there and play my hardest and play my heart out every week and whatever that comes to, I will live with that.”
West Virginia
West Virginia holds off Colorado 78-70 for important road victory – WV MetroNews
No. 21 West Virginia continues to rightfully battle fatigue throughout the second half of games as it regularly plays with what is in essence a seven-man rotation.
That was again the case Sunday at Colorado.
Fortunately for the Mountaineers, reserve guard Joseph Yesufu played a major part in ensuring the visitors didn’t squander a 14-point second-half lead.
Yesufu scored 13 of his 18 points after halftime, including eight over the final 4:44 to help West Virginia overcome the Buffaloes’ second-half comeback attempt in a 78-70 victory at CU Events Center.
“Joe Yesufu really gave us a good spark when we needed it the most,” first-year WVU head coach Darian DeVries said. “Our offense had gotten a little stagnant and we were settling for jumpers off of some of their switching and things. Joe was able to give us that spark we needed.”
By claiming a win in the first meeting between the two teams, WVU improved to 12-3 overall, 3-1 in Big 12 play and won a second conference road game this season to match the program’s Big 12 road win total of the previous three seasons combined. Colorado (9-6, 0-4) remains one of two winless teams in league play.
The Mountaineers never trailed outside of the game’s opening basket, and they put together a strong opening half to lead 40-29 through 20 minutes — West Virginia’s third double-figure halftime advantage in four Big 12 contests.
Center Eduardo Andre made all four of his field-goal attempts and scored 10 points in the opening half, while freshman wing Jonathan Powell added 10 on 4-of-7 shooting with a pair of three-pointers. Add in nine points from point guard Javon Small, and the Mountaineers’ top scoring trio combined to equal Colorado’s point total at halftime.
WVU went to halftime with five turnovers to Colorado’s 11, and the Mountaineers had all 12 points off turnovers in the game to that point.
“Creating some of those turnovers was huge for us to get a little separation in the first half,” DeVries said.
When Small hit three threes over a stretch of 1:15 early into the second half, it gave the visitors their largest lead of the contest at 49-35.
Yesufu added a triple moments later for a 52-39 advantage, but CU increased its aggressiveness offensively and was to within seven at 54-47 when Dangot Bak made two free throws with 13:22 remaining.
That was a theme throughout the second half as the Buffaloes made 24-of-28 foul shots after not producing a point from the free-throw line on two attempts in the first half.
Bak’s two free throws came early into a stretch of 12 straight Colorado points scored from the charity stripe. It ended with Trevor Baskin making the second of two attempts with 8:20 to play, at which point the Mountaineer lead was 57-55.
“Defensively, we put ourselves in some tough positions with some reaching fouls and not staying disciplined and allowed Colorado to get to the line and deservedly so,” DeVries said. “We have to learn how to still be able to be physical, but also be discipline in the way we’re doing that. That game shifted pretty quickly in the second half and Colorado did a nice job with some adjustments.”
Andre and Sencire Harris accounted for dunks on consecutive WVU possessions, and Harris scored from close range again with 5:41 left for a 63-59 advantage.
After Baskin scored on a second-chance opportunity with 2:28 left to bring the Buffaloes to within 66-63, Yesufu scored on a drive to the basket.
With WVU’s lead again back to three on its next possession, Yesufu produced the game’s most important basket, scoring with his left hand on a drive that amounted to a conventional three-point play and a 71-65 advantage with 1:23 remaining.
That was the end of eight straight WVU points produced by Yesufu, who entered averaging 4.1 and had scored more than seven once over his first appearances in a Mountaineer uniform.
“They were doing a nice job on Javon in the second half, so we wanted to put the ball in Joe’s hands a little bit more,” DeVries said. “He has great speed and at that point in the game, that’s what we needed was somebody that could get downhill and be able to get to the rim a little bit more.”
Small made 3-of-4 free throws to help the visitors up their lead to nine, and the Buffaloes never got the deficit inside of six over the final minute.
Yesufu made 6-of-9 shots in his season-high scoring output.
Small led all players with 26 points and seven assists.
Andre added 12 points and shot 5 for 5 before fouling out, while Powell finished with 10 after a scoreless second half.
WVU was without Tucker DeVries for a seventh straight game and freshman KJ Tenner for a second straight contest.
“We’re a little shorthanded, so we do get fatigued sometimes in the second half,” DeVries said. “[Colorado head coach Tad Boyle] did a really good job. He played a lot of guys and they had fresh bodies that kept coming at us. We just don’t have the amount of bodies we need to sub and we got in a little foul trouble on top of it. We got worn out a little bit, but we had just enough. Joe, being a little more fresh than the other guys, was able to kind of will us to the last finish line.”
Julian Hammond III led Colorado with 23 points and was 8 for 8 on free throws.
Assane Diop added 13 points and was 6 for 6 from the free-throw line.
Colorado out-rebounded the Mountaineers 35-30, but scored only two points off seven WVU turnovers. The Mountaineers also had a 32-26 edge in paint points.
The Buffaloes made only 8-of-23 field-goal attempts after halftime and finished 20 of 48 for the game.
“It was critical that we didn’t let them get a lot of space,” DeVries said. “They have multiple guys that when they get some room have the ability to get it off and they shoot it at a high percentage. We wanted to try to get into some of those ball screens and actions as much as we could to try to make it difficult. The counter to it is that’s where a lot of our fouls started coming. We have to figure out a way to be able to do both.”
West Virginia
No. 21 West Virginia vs. Colorado Computer Predictions
No. 21 West Virginia and Colorado face off in Boulder on Sunday at 3:0 p.m. EST. The Mountaineers are 2-1 in Big 12 play, while the Buffaloes are 0-3 in league play.
Computer models such as BartTorvik, BPI, and KenPom predict the matchup between both teams.
BPI — ESPN BPI gives West Virginia a 59.3 percent chance to win on Sunday. The Mountaineers are expected to win by 2.4 points. The Mountaineers are No. 44 in the BPI rankings while Colorado is No. 86.
BartTorvik — BartTorvik gives the Mountaineers a 65 percent chance to win the game. The projected final score is 67-63 in favor of West Virginia. WVU is No. 25 in the T-Rankings, and Colorado is No. 84.
KenPom — KenPom gives West Virginia a slight edge at a 51 percent chance to win the game. The projected final score is 67-66 in favor of the Mountaineers. WVU is ranked No. 47 by KenPom, while Colorado is ranked No. 81.
Tip-off is set for 3:00 p.m. on Sunday and the game will be televised on ESPN+.
West Virginia
West Virginia receives commitment from Wyoming defensive end Siders
West Virginia has added another commitment from Wyoming defensive end transfer Braden Siders.
Siders, 6-foot-3, 252-pounds, spent four years with the Cowboys although he redshirted in his first with the football program. Over the past three seasons Siders appeared in 33 games and started a total of 26 of those.
The Colorado native is coming off a season where he recorded 21 tackles, 5 tackles for loss and 3 sacks but appeared in only a total of eight games. In 2022, Siders had 44 tackles, 13.5 tackles for loss and 7 sacks.
Over the course of his three years on the field, Siders has 91 tackles, 23.5 tackles for loss and 14 sacks.
Siders entered the transfer portal Dec. 6 and reported offers from UAB, Louisiana-Monroe, Tulsa, James Madison and Bowling Green.
Siders becomes the first defensive lineman to commit to West Virginia from the transfer portal and has one year of eligibility remaining in his career.
WVSports.com will have more with Siders in the near future.
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