West Virginia
BYU wants to ’embrace the night’ in late kick at West Virginia
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PROVO — BYU head coach Kalani Sitake knows it, and so do his players: The Cougars’ offense is backpedaling, and he’d be wise to make a change.
After being held to a season-low 6 points in Saturday’s loss to No. 7 Texas, BYU (5-3, 2-3 Big 12) was held to two touchdowns or less for the third time in 2023 and the second time in three weeks — perhaps ironically, both losses.
What kind of changes could be in store for BYU as it travels to West Virginia for a rare late kickoff on the east coast (5 p.m. MDT, FS1)?
To paraphrase the eighth-year head coach, everything is on the table.
“I think the points and fixing it, that’s the emphasis,” he said. “We’ve got to get there. It doesn’t matter how it gets done. … It’s go-time now. It’s been go-time. The way that we’ve been doing it hasn’t been working the way I want it to. We have very smart coaches and capable players that we can find ways to get points on the board.”
While hovering around the middle of the Big 12 standings overall and just one game from bowl eligibility in the Cougars’ first year in a Power Five conference, the Cougars’ offense has been significantly sub-par since Big 12 play began, according to data from collegefootballdata.com.
BYU ranks in the bottom three in the league during conference play in offensive points per drive (1.75, 12th), touchdown rate (19.2%, 12th), scoring rate (32.7%, 12th), punt rate or punts per drives (46.2%, 14th), yards per drive (25.4, 14th) and yardage rate (34.9%, 14th). The teams most consistently surrounding the Cougars in such statistical offensive breakdowns are Baylor (3-5, 2-3), Cincinnati (2-6, 0-5), Houston (3-5, 1-4) and Texas Tech (3-5, 2-3).
Big 12 FB conference only drive/possession stats via data from @CFB_Data. (non-garbage data only)
Charts for offense, defense, and differential after 5 games for each team.
These numbers show a match up of the top 2 teams in Austin on Saturday. pic.twitter.com/DWUDRvvQb8
— ksu_FAN 🌻 🌻 🌻 (@ksu_FAN) October 29, 2023
The defensive numbers are significantly higher, including ninth with 2.50 defensive points per drive and 31.3% touchdown rate, second in turnover rate with 16.7% and first in turnover on downs rate at 16.7%.
FOX may have done BYU a solid this week by slotting the Cougars into a night kickoff on the road at West Virginia, BYU’s first-ever game in the state and first trip to Morgantown. After being picked to finish last in the 14-team Big 12, the Mountaineers are a somewhat surprising 5-3 with a 3-2 mark in Big 12 play and searching for a bowl game.
The night kickoff could be a saving grace for BYU, which famously trended across social media for its significant uptick in performance before sunset. The Cougars will travel to West Virginia a day earlier than usual, as is custom for games played on the east coast.
“I’ve always heard about how we’re not good in day games; now we have a night game and you guys don’t want to talk about that anymore?” Sitake quipped. “It’s time to go and embrace the night. I’m excited about the game. … We’ve lost three games this year, and they’ve all been on the road. It’s tough to play on the road in this conference.”
Likewise, linebacker Max Tooley doesn’t put much stock in the “Vampire Cougs” phenomenon — both teams have to kick at the same time, he says. But a night game on the east coast can’t hurt.
“I’m looking forward to going up to West Virginia and playing a night game a little later in the day,” he said. “It’s definitely been our bread and butter in the past, doing really well at night. Hopefully we can keep it going into this game.”
Sitake didn’t elaborate much on what offensive changes could be, but he did mention one key change likely won’t happen: at quarterback. Kedon Slovis has started every game since transferring to BYU for his fifth season following stops at USC and Pitt, and expects to be the quarterback going forward after throwing for 1,716 yards and 12 touchdowns with six interceptions.
But could backup Jake Retzlaff be in further contention for some time, especially if the offense doesn’t improve? That could be more of an option as the Cougars hit the final four games of the regular season. The former No. 1 junior college quarterback in the country by ESPN can play in every game down the stretch while still maintaining his redshirt and not sacrificing a full year of eligibility.
“We have a lot of really good, young players,” Sitake said. “This makes it a lot easier now that we can redshirt guys for four games and even the bowl game. Now that that’s an option, we have to look at that.”
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West Virginia
Sunday Morning Thoughts: Is Neal Brown Returning in 2025?
Although the sportsbooks didn’t have the West Virginia Mountaineers favored to beat UCF, everyone who has followed this team all year long saw Saturday’s result coming from a mile away.
I’m not trying to be smart here, but this team is the purest definition of average. They beat the teams they should and lose to the teams they should. There haven’t been any whacky results where they’ve lost to an inferior squad or taken down one above them in the Big 12 standings. They’re just average.
Beating UCF isn’t something to pound your chest about by any means, with all due respect to the Knights. They entered the weekend with a 4-6 record and had lost six of its last seven coming into the matchup.
For WVU head coach Neal Brown, this was more about not losing this game than it was about winning it. Now, if you ask him, that’s not the answer he’d provide, but it’s just the truth of the situation. Had the Mountaineers found a way to let this one slip through their fingers, the pressure on athletics director Wren Baker would have been turned up to extreme levels.
Just because WVU didn’t lose to UCF doesn’t necessarily mean that West Virginia is 100% moving forward with Neal Brown as head coach, but that’s the sense I get. With the early signing period set to begin on December 4th, just days after the final game of the season at Texas Tech, it leaves very little time for a change to be made at the end of the regular season.
Plus, if the Mountaineers win in Lubbock and then go on to win the bowl game, they’ll finish the year with an 8-5 record, bringing them just one game shy of what they accomplished a year ago. That doesn’t make it acceptable by any means; it just lessens the sting of what has been a very disappointing season.
If this does happen, WVU will have put together the best two-year stretch they’ve had since joining the Big 12 with consecutive 6-3 records. Now, when you look at who those 12 wins have come against, it’s not the most impressive thing in the world, but it’s still something for the administration to point to as a sign of hope. It also means the Mountaineers would finish somewhere in the top half of the league, which is on par with what they were picked to do in the preseason poll.
Again, don’t confuse this with what I believe I think should happen. WVU wants to do everything it possibly can to avoid having to pay Neal Brown’s buyout. If that means clinging on for another year, so be it. It’s not what I would do if I were Wren Baker, but that’s the feeling I get.
WVU sees the frustration from the fanbase. They share that disappointment, believe it or not.
But the one thing I keep wondering is if next year’s non-conference slate is part of what keeps him around. Not that a decision like this is being made based on that, but 2025 will be the first year in Brown’s tenure that WVU didn’t play two Power Four teams in non-conference play. Instead of challenging yourself, you can gift-wrap another win by substituting that game with a Group of Five opponent.
This is the way WVU wants to schedule moving forward, so seeing how Brown handles a supposedly lighter slate may be what they view as a fair assessment instead of going off the previous six years of falling short of expectations. Is that how it should be handled? No, but just throwing that out there as something that may be tossed around from within.
I haven’t heard a peep about West Virginia plans to do with Brown, but if I had to put my money on it, I expect that he’ll be back in 2025. Should they fail to meet expectations next year, they’ll cut ties. WVU has already given Neal Brown one of the longest leashes you’ll see, and sticking with him for another year will show the next head coach how patient the university is.
MORE STORIES FROM WEST VIRGINIA ON SI
Mountaineer Postgame Show: WVU 31, UCF 21
What Neal Brown Said Following the Win Over UCF
West Virginia Sends Seniors Out with a Win in the Home Finale
Initial Thoughts: WVU Becomes Bowl Eligible, Quiets the Noise Around Neal Brown
West Virginia
Mountaineers start strong, claim 31-21 victory over UCF in home finale – WV MetroNews
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. — West Virginia had received the opening kickoff in every game this season and 17 straight dating back to last year.
That run came to an end in Saturday’s home finale against Central Florida after the Knights won the toss and elected to take the ball first.
It could’ve hardly worked out better for West Virginia, which managed to jump out to a 14-point lead in the opening quarter that helped set the tone in a 31-21 victory in the home finale of the 2024 season.
“We generated momentum at the start of the game,” WVU head coach Neal Brown said. “We had a touchback on the very first kick. That’s huge. We come out and force a three-and-out, and score, so it’s 7-0, and then they turn it over, and it’s 14-0. The game wasn’t really in jeopardy. They continued to keep it close, but there was never a time where you were like, ‘oh I don’t know if we’re going to win this.’”
With the result, WVU (6-5, 5-3) gains bowl eligibility, while the Knights (4-7, 2-6) are assured of a losing season.
West Virginia’s defense forced a three-and-out on the game’s opening series, before the Mountaineers drove 68 yards in eight plays to lead 7-0 on the first of two CJ Donaldson 1-yard rushing touchdowns.
Donaldson had runs of 20 and 31 yards earlier on the possession, the latter of which came on third-and-12 one play before he reached the end zone.
“He got in a little different mode and the offensive line did a good job of getting him to the second level,” WVU quarterback Garrett Greene said. “I like the matchup when it’s CJ versus the safeties.”
UCF threatened to answer and was faced with second-and-6 from the WVU 21, but redshirt freshman quarterback Dylan Rizk fumbled just outside the red zone and Mountaineer cornerback Dontez Fagan came up with the recovery.
The Mountaineers then marched 66 yards in 14 plays and doubled their lead on Jahiem White’s 3-yard touchdown run. All 124 yards over the Mountaineers’ first two series came by way of rush.
“The whole week, the point of emphasis was to be able to run the ball and for our defense to be able to stop the run,” Greene said. “They didn’t have a lot of answers in the first half for our run game.”
Following an exchange of punts, the Knights cut their deficit in half when talented tailback RJ Harvey eluded several defenders in the backfield after fielding a direct snap from the WVU 2 to score his 20th rushing touchdown this year.
The teams traded punts again shortly after, before the Mountaineers put together perhaps the most important possession of the game, moving 71 yards in 12 plays and scoring their third touchdown on Greene’s 12-yard pass to Rodney Gallagher on a third-and-goal play 15 seconds before halftime.
Donaldson gained the necessary yard on a fourth-and-1 run three plays before the score, while wideout Hudson Clement hauled in three passes for 53 yards on what marked WVU’s fifth possession. Greene had completed 2-of-5 passes for 5 yards prior to that series.
West Virginia took a 21-7 lead into halftime and added to the advantage on the first possession of the second half, which covered 56 yards in five plays and ended with Donaldson’s second TD run. The possession was prolonged by a pass interference on UCF that negated what was an incomplete pass on third down. White broke off a 35-yard run on the next play, and the Mountaineers were in the end zone for the fourth time two plays later.
“The middle 8 [last 4 minutes of first half and first 4 minutes of second half], we dominated that, and it was 14-0, and I felt like that was where the game was won,” Brown said.
Rizk threw a 45-yard touchdown pass to wideout Kobe Hudson on UCF’s second second-half series, bringing the Knights to within 14 with 5:38 left in the third quarter.
WVU countered with a 57-yard drive over 14 plays and added to its lead with Michael Hayes’ 35-yard field goal that made it a three-score game with 12:15 remaining. Perhaps most importantly, the series took 8:23 off the clock.
After Rizk was stopped for a 5-yard gain on a fourth-and-10 run from midfield, the Knights regained possession trailing by 17 with 7:08 left.
UCF marched 82 yards in seven plays and produced its third touchdown on Harvey’s 9-yard run, allowing the visitors to trail y 10 with 5:20 to play.
The Knights chose to try and get the ball back immediately with an onside kick, but WVU recovered.
The Mountaineers then kept the ball for all 5:19 that remained, getting separate fourth down conversions on a 10-yard pass from Greene to Robinson and an 18-yard pass from Greene to Clement.
“It’s a two-possession game and a field goal really doesn’t do anything for you, because they can score two touchdowns and beat you,” Brown said. “If you keep the ball, you have an opportunity to end the game. Anytime you have an opportunity to do that, we’re going to. The risk is lower than the reward.”
WVU finishes its home slate 3-4, but has an opportunity to go unbeaten in Big 12 road play with a win next Saturday at Texas Tech. That would also allow the Mountaineers to finish 6-3 in the league for a second straight season.
“People kind of overlook that, but it’s important to us,” Brown said.
Donaldson rushed 19 times for 96 yards, White added 54 yards on 12 carries and Greene totaled 49 yards on 18 attempts as the Mountaineers piled up 200 rushing yards.
“Coach [Chad] Scott and coach Brown get on me about running too high and getting my pads down to be a tough tackle,” said Donaldson, a 238-pound junior.
Greene completed 13-of-21 passes for 118 yards in his final home game. Clement had five catches for 81 yards.
Harvey rushed for 130 yards on 16 attempts and Rizk was 11-for-21 with 172 yards.
The Knights lost for the seventh time in eight games and are winless in four tries against the Mountaineers.
“There’s been tough times throughout the season, but what’s most important is that we stick together and block out the negativity,” WVU safety Anthony Wilson said. “They don’t see what we do day to day, the late nights and early mornings. We’re all we have and we’re all we need.”
West Virginia
Watch: West Virginia Football 2024 Senior Day Ceremony
West Virginia football held their Senior Day Ceremony on Saturday ahead of their game against UCF.
The Mountaineers honored 29 seniors who walked and met head coach Neal Brown along with Athletic Director Wren Baker before running onto the field.
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