West Virginia
Bilby closes with 65, becomes first amateur to win West Virginia Open in 19 years – WV MetroNews
CHARLESTON, W.Va. — Ryan Bilby was in complete control of the West Virginia Open with six holes to play.
A junior at Marshall, Bilby stepped to the 4th hole at Berry Hills Country Club 9-under par and with a four-shot lead on playing partner Mason Williams, the only person within realistic striking distance at that point.
A par 5 that measures approximately 500 yards, No. 4 presents a quality eagle opportunity for players of Bilby’s caliber, and he’d carded one during Wednesday’s opening round on that hole.
However, missing right off the tee spells trouble, and on this instance, that’s exactly what Bilby did. Unsure of if his ball was in play, Bilby blasted a provisional tee shot that split the fairway.
Bilby was ultimately unable to find his first tee shot and forced to play off the provisional, leaving him about 185 yards in for his fourth shot. The former Brooke High School standout hit that approach to about 15 feet, then knocked in the par putt to stay at 9-under par.
“Essentially I was just trying to make 6 by hitting the green and then two putt to limit the damage,” Bilby said. “I hit a great 7 iron after my second tee shot and had a fast, downhill putt. I was hoping the hole got in the way and it did. That was huge.”
Although Williams made birdie on that hole to pull within three, the save gave Bilby plenty of wiggle room down the stretch and prolonged the momentum he had throughout much of a final round 65.
That enabled Bilby to double his two-round total of 5-under par to 10-under, while holding off Williams for a two-shot victory, and in the process, becoming the first amateur to win the state open in 19 years.
“It’s just amazing. It still doesn’t feel real. I don’t know if it will ever or when, but I’ve been playing great all summer,” Bilby said. “I had high expectations coming in and it ended up working out really well.”
Ryan Bilby closes with a birdie and a final round 65 to finish 10-under par and win the West Virginia Open. Mason Williams closes with a 67 and finishes solo second by 6 shots. pic.twitter.com/Lhfnjp8FOb
— Greg Carey (@gcarey938) July 28, 2023
David Bradshaw was the most recent amateur to win the West Virginia Open for his first of 12 titles in the event to this point.
Save for his first shot and hole of the day, Bilby could hardly have scripted a better round.
“Sometimes you just get beat. Hats off to him,” Williams said. “He played an unbelievable golf and was very gritty out there. He made a lot of clutch par putts down the stretch. I did my part and he just did his part a little bit better.”
FINAL SCORES FROM 90TH WEST VIRGINIA OPEN
After making a bogey on No. 10, Bilby settled in with a par and then rolled in a putt from about 15 feet on the par-3 12th hole for his first birdie. He followed that with an eagle putt from a near equal distance on the par-5 13th right after Williams’ eagle putt from a similar spot just missed.
“It kind of woke me up,” Bilby said of the lone bogey. “I hit a bad tee shot and kind of woke up and realized where I was and what I had a chance to do today. It worked and I woke up.”
Bilby added a birdie on No. 17 to go with four pars for the remainder of the back nine and made the turn in 31 and with a three-shot lead.
“After the front, it was kind of he and I going at it and we knew where each other were at,” Bilby said. “There was never really a number in mind.”
Former Marshall golfer Will Evans, who was in the final group with Bilby and Williams and started two shots back of the lead, turned in 36 with one birdie, one bogey and one double bogey.
Bilby extended his lead with another birdie on the par-4 second hole. He and Williams both hit high quality shots into the par-3 third hole, though both players missed their birdie putt.
Bilby made quality par saves on the fifth and six holes to stay in front by three, and after each player in the final group hit their tee shot on the par-3 seventh, the horn blew for a weather delay.
Within 10 minutes of the stoppage of play, heavy rain swept through Charleston and play was ultimately halted for just over 70 minutes.
“It’s like a mental reset. I went in there and sat down, hung out with my parents and a couple buddies,” Bilby said. “I went out and hit a couple balls and putts and got right back to it.”
Upon the resumption, Bilby lagged a long putt from just off the green to inside 5 feet, while Williams couldn’t get a putt from just inside 20 feet to drop from the fringe. Each player made par on that hole, leaving Bilby with a three-shot lead and only two holes to play.
“At that point, I’m still three down and you just have to do as well as you can,” Williams said.
On the par-4 eighth, Williams got up and down from a greenside bunker for birdie after attempting to drive the green, while Bilby’s birdie putt from about 7 feet lipped out, leaving the margin at two shots heading to the par-5 ninth.
Williams had played the ninth hole in 3-under over the first two rounds, and he blasted his drive down the heart of the fairway, while Bilby’s went into the right rough.
But just as he was throughout an afternoon in which he played 15 holes in scorching temperatures, Bilby remained unfazed. He hit his second shot into the rough just off the green, and then chipped to 7 feet.
Williams reached the green in two shots and had an uphill putt from about 30 feet to reach 9-under par. However, the Bridgeport native left it short, and Bilby made his birdie putt anyhow to give each of the top two finishers a 4 on the closing hole and final scores of 10-under par and 8-under par, respectively.
“I’ve known him for a long time, so it was cool to see us kind of battle it out together,” Williams said. “Berry Hills had a crazy crowd out here. The last couple holes after the rain delay, everyone kind of conglomerated on the last two and it was a really cool finish to see everybody out here.”
Defending champion Christian Brand was the only other player to break par at 2-under following a 68 in the third and final round.
Pat Carter, the low senior, tied Evans for fourth place at even par.
Cory Hoshor, Cam Roam, Jess Ferrell and Bradshaw each finished 1-over par, while Jonathan Clark and Kenny Hess were at 2-over and tied for 10th.
Cabell Midland junior Jack Michael was low junior at 7-over par.
Bilby had 24 official putts in his final round.
“I was seeing my lines really well and when you hit the lines and you’re seeing them well, they go in,” Bilby said. “A lot of them went in today and it was good day to do it, too.”
This was the sixth West Virginia Open at Berry Hills and first since 2015, one of three occasions in which Brand won the event.
“You don’t really know what to expect going into a final round, especially out here,” Williams said. “There are a lot of gettable holes, but with the pins, it’s kind of hard to make a bunch of putts, so you kind of have to play the course as it is. When the delay came, I thought it was going to take at least a couple of birdies on my part and then you need some help. It was fun to play. I did as well as I could and he just did his part a little bit better.”
West Virginia
West Virginia falls at 10th-ranked Houston, 70-54 – WV MetroNews
West Virginia hung tough for large stretches of Wednesday’s clash against 10th-ranked Houston at Fertitta Center.
Ultimately, the Cougars’ offensive efficiency and ability to generate stops — particularly in the latter stages of the contest — ruled out in helping the home team claim a 70-54 victory.
“It seemed like every mistake we made defensively, they burned us on them,” first-year WVU head coach Darian DeVries said. “That was a credit to them. They’re a really good team with really good players. We got it down there several times and weren’t able to get us that next big play to get us back to even.”
The Mountaineers (12-4, 3-2) got off to a solid start thanks in large part to Javon Small’s trio of three-pointers within a span of four possessions. The last one gave WVU a 15-12 lead, and the advantage grew to 18-13 moments later when freshman Jonathan Powell made a challenged triple.
But Houston (13-3, 5-0) countered with 11 unanswered points, tying the game at 18 on an L.J. Cryer triple and going in front for good when Emanuel Sharp connected from long range.
J’Wan Roberts gave the Mountaineers problems in and around the paint throughout the night, and his short jumper 6:10 before halftime made it a double-digit margin for the first time as the Cougars led, 31-21.
WVU’s deficit was 36-27 following a Sencire Harris bucket, but Roberts accounted for the final four points of the half to send Houston to the intermission with a 13-point advantage.
“We came into the game playing 1-on-1 on the interior and he made us pay for that,” DeVries said. “We doubled a couple times and he made us pay for that, too. He’s a really good player and he puts you in some tough positions and surrounded with really good pieces on top of that. We were hanging around and had a really good rhythm to the game. Those costly turnovers were a big key.”
Toby Okani and Powell opened the second half with threes on WVU’s first two possessions, and when Harris converted a fast break opportunity on the next one, the Mountaineers were to within five at 40-35.
Although Houston built its advantage back up to 49-36, West Virginia got three threes and 12 points from Amani Hansberry over a matter of 2:38 to pull to within 51-48.
Houston countered with 14 unanswered points to put the game out of reach, starting with a Ja’Vier Francis dunk and later getting a conventional three-point play from Milos Uzan and a Terrance Arceneaux three.
Hansberry accounted for six of WVU’s nine second-half field goals, and nobody else on the Mountaineers made a basket over the final 18 minutes.
“Javon got off to a great start and in the second half, we weren’t able to get him loose quite as much. A couple times, maybe he came off some staggers and things that he had a little bit of a look, but they close so quickly that we couldn’t get him free as much,” DeVries said. “We were able to get Amani a little separated because they were putting two to the ball and Javon. We got some looks there that he was able to knock down to get us back in that game.”
Houston shot 25 for 51 and 11 of 26 on threes.
The Cougars scored 25 points off WVU 12 turnovers, while the Mountaineers managed nine points off seven Cougar turnovers.
“They did a great job capitalizing on our turnovers,” DeVries said. “We didn’t have a lot of them. Twelve is a higher number than we’d like, and the ones we did turnover were a lot of live ball turnovers that they were able to get down in transition. We made some mistakes on some ball screens and went under a few and gave some pretty clean looks there and they capitalized on them and really made us pay.”
Roberts made 10-of-13 shots and led all players with 22 points. Cryer added five of his team’s 11 threes and scored 18, while Sharp added 14.
Hansberry led WVU with 16 points on 6-for-8 shooting. Small scored 13 to go with a game-high eight assists.
Houston has yet to allow more than 57 points in a Big 12 game this season.
West Virginia
Democrats want WV Supreme Court to clarify House seat vacated over man's house arrest – WV MetroNews
West Virginia’s Democratic Party wants the state Supreme Court to weigh in over a House of Delegates move to vacate a seat won by a Berkeley County man who is now confined at his home on charges that he threatened people who would have been his legislative colleagues.
The filing by Democrats contends the House of Delegates acted inconsistently by vacating the seat won by Joseph de Soto since he was among seven elected delegates who were not present to take the oath of office on an organizational day last week — but he was the only one knocked out in perpetuity.
De Soto was elected as a Republican but changed his political affiliation to Democrat the day before he was arrested. Democrats say West Virginia precedent means a Democrat should be named to fill the seat.
“This is not just about one seat,” said Mike Pushkin, chairman of the West Virginia Democratic Party. “This is about defending the rule of law and ensuring that the people of District 91 have their rightful representation in the House of Delegates. The actions taken by the House of Delegates undermine the integrity of our democratic process.”
The writ of mandamus filed with the West Virginia Supreme Court names House Speaker Roger Hanshaw, R-Clay, and Gov. Patrick Morrisey, each in their official capacity.
Debate broke out on the House floor a week ago, Jan. 8, over whether the proper, constitutional procedure was being followed as the seat won by de Soto was vacated.
De Soto was arrested in December and charged with making threats of terrorist acts, referring to statements he is accused of making to several delegates. He is listed as a pre-trial felon.
Because de Soto was not present with most other delegates to take the oath of office last week, he was not seated.
Members of the House of Delegates then went a step farther by introducing a resolution to declare the seat vacant. Conceivably, that would allow a new representative to be selected prior to the start of the 60-day regular session on Feb. 12.
The vacancy was declared on the grounds of Article XI, Section 16 of the West Virginia Constitution. A key portion of that section says: “Any member who shall refuse to take the oath herein prescribed, shall forfeit his seat.”
Debate among some delegates then focused on whether de Soto’s failure to take the oath of office because of the arrest and home confinement constitutes refusal to do so.
That’s a point that the Democratic Party has asked the state Supreme Court to resolve.
A question being directed to the justices is “Whether the House of Delegates can declare vacant the seat of a duly elected,
qualified, and ready-to-serve delegate for reasons related to misconduct.”
Another question has focused on the party of the delegate to be appointed to replace de Soto. The final line of the resolution designates the Republican Executive Committee of Berkeley County to begin action on the vacancy.
The rational of the Republican supermajority in the House is that because de Soto was never officially seated, the fact that he had registered as a Democrat weeks prior to this would have no bearing on the situation.
The Democrats are seeking clarity from the Supreme Court.
They are asking justices if a person holding the office immediately preceding a declared vacancy in a House of Delegate seat would include a person who was duly elected, assumed office on Dec. 1 following the election, as provided in West Virginia state code, but who had not yet taken the oath of office.
The Berkeley County Democratic Executive Committee says it has gone ahead and submitted this list of qualified nominees for Governor Morrisey’s consideration:
- David Michaels – Hedgesville, WV
- Stephen Willingham – Hedgesville, WV
- Timothy Lee – Inwood, WV
“It’s imperative that the law and the constitution be followed in this matter,” said Tammy Offutt, chair of the Berkeley County Democratic Executive Committee.
“We expect the Governor to respect the clear requirements of West Virginia law by appointing one of the three above-named individuals to fill the 91st Delegate District seat.”
State Republican Party Chairman Matthew Herridge responded by saying, “The West Virginia Republican Party is concluding its legislative vacancy nomination process for the 91st District this week, and that will be submitted to Governor Morrisey for his appointment.”
West Virginia
Community Care of West Virginia receives $500,000 from Biden-Harris Administration to expand hours of operation
The Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA), an agency within the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), recently announced a $60 million investment in 125 HRSA-funded community health centers that serve nearly 4.2 million people to expand their hours of operation to improve access to health care services.
Community Care of West Virginia received $500,000 in funding.
Health centers receiving this new funding will add an additional 20 hours of operation a week on average to support the critical clinical and administrative staff necessary to add early morning (before work), night and weekend hours.
Since health centers see patients regardless of their ability to pay, this expansion of operating hours will be particularly critical for people who are uninsured, underinsured, or have Medicaid coverage and struggle to find affordable care outside of traditional business hours and cannot afford expensive visits to urgent care, retail clinics or emergency departments. This funding will also help health center patients with common challenges in accessing health care such as taking a child to the doctor after work or getting a timely appointment when not feeling well on the weekend. It will help connect patients to preventive services and resources for health-related social needs to improve health outcomes. Many patients currently forgo care altogether in these circumstances, putting their health at greater risk and leading to more expensive visits to emergency departments when conditions get more serious.
“No one should have to delay or skip a trip to the doctor because of work or school. The millions of Americans who can’t miss their daytime work shift, whose kids are in school, who have limited child care, or who face transportation challenges deserve the same access to quality care,” said HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra. “These investments will help to extend operating hours, especially for patients in rural or underserved communities nationwide. I’m proud to be part of an Administration that leaves nobody behind.”
“Today’s action is another example of the Biden-Harris Administration taking action to address the challenges families face in getting health care services,” said HRSA Administrator Carole Johnson. “Having the option to get to the doctor before or after work or on the weekend not only helps families get the care they need, but it also helps relieve some of the stress and burden on families trying to arrange care. HRSA’s investment is expanding access to care in a way that recognizes the day-to-day realities of working families across the country.”
HRSA-supported health centers provide access to primary care services — regardless of an individual’s ability to pay — for over 31 million patients at more than 15,000 service sites in high need communities. More than 90 percent of health center patients have incomes below 200 percent of the Federal Poverty Level.
For a list of the awardees, visit: https://bphc.hrsa.gov/funding/funding-opportunities/expanded-hours/fy-25-awards
To find a health center, visit: https://findahealthcenter.hrsa.gov
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