West Virginia
DeVries hopeful timing of Italy trip works in Mountaineers' favor – WV MetroNews
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. — One week from today, West Virginia’s men’s basketball program will face outside competition for the first time under head coach Darian DeVries.
The Mountaineers head to Italy on Wednesday and play their first of three games overseas August 3 at 12:30 p.m. ET against BC Zaligiris Kaunas-2 in Genoa.
“We’ll throw out different lineups to get a look at different things. Some guys will play more or less,” DeVries said. “We’ll try to play the younger guys a little more just to get some post high school experience. You never know what you’re going to get over there. Sometimes you get a great game and really challenged, and sometimes you don’t.
“I just want us to play together and play the way we want them to play every night. I don’t expect it to be great. You travel, we’re not doing a shoot-around, no walkthrough, just go play. It’s the way they like it.”
The Mountaineers are also slated to face Orange1 Bassano on August 6 in Florence before playing their final game of the trip August 8 against Stella#EBK in Rome.
The contests will allow DeVries and the staff he’s assembled to get their first look at a roster with only one scholarship holdover from last season’s WVU team, but they won’t receiver near the same attention as a regular season game.
“They’re going to have five, we’re going to have five and toss ‘er up,” DeVries said. “We’ll figure out who can shoot it by halftime.”
Still, with 12 new players and an entirely new coaching staff, the trip appears to come at an ideal time for West Virginia.
“That’s what I love about the timing of this trip for us,” DeVries said. “We have a whole new group and whole new staff, so to get to go spend ten or eleven days on a trip is certainly good timing for us to get to know each other on a more personal level outside of basketball.”
Only forward Tucker DeVries and guard Joseph Yesufu have previously played for the first-year WVU head coach. It’s been since the 2020-21 campaign for Yesufu, who remains sidelined with a hip injury that sidelined him most of last season at Washington State, though he’s expected to be back not long after the Mountaineers return home.
DeVries is more concerned with his team applying what’s consistently being worked on throughout summer practices in favor of specific results on the foreign trip, though he admits an eagerness to seeing how players respond to certain situations.
“I don’t try to put a lot into it,” he said. “I’ve been on several of these, and some head coaches sit in the stands and watch during these games. I always felt like, especially with a new group, I need to be out there and coach them. But for the most part, try to get them a little bit of a rhythm together and an identity of how we want to play. You also take into account all the travel and all the stuff that goes with it. I don’t have unrealistic expectations of what it’s going to look like. I’d love for it to be a great game.
“Last year, we took our team to Spain at Drake and we got beat in our first game. We were up like 15 with 10 minutes to go and we played the young guys. It was the greatest thing ever, because they had to finish out a game and whether we won or lost wasn’t the point. The point was they were in a situation we were going to see and we got an opportunity to watch how they responded. Hoping we get something like that again on this trip.”
DeVries says there’s also a high likelihood the Mountaineers’ roster increases following the trip from its current 14 players, 12 of which are program newcomers.
“We’re still very much actively recruiting,” he said. “There’s multiple players we’re still trying to recruit and get them here by the start of school.”
West Virginia
West Virginia Lottery results: See winning numbers for Daily 3, Daily 4 on Jan. 8, 2026
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Feeling lucky? Explore the latest lottery news & results
When are the West Virginia Lottery drawings held?
- Powerball: 11 p.m. ET on Monday, Wednesday and Saturday.
- Mega Millions: 10:59 p.m. ET Tuesday and Friday.
- Lotto America: 10:15 p.m. ET on Monday, Wednesday and Saturday.
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Tickets can be purchased in person at gas stations, convenience stores and grocery stores. Some airport terminals may also sell lottery tickets.
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West Virginia
BREAKING: West Virginia Transfer DL Hammond Russell Commits to Wisconsin
Wisconsin has added a transfer portal commitment from former West Virginia defensive lineman Hammond Russell.
Russell played in 36 games for the Mountaineers during his career. As a senior, the 6-foot-3, 315-pound lineman posted 13.0 tackles and 2.0 sacks. For his career, Hammond has 40.0 tackles and 5.5 sacks. Russell is expected to get a redshirt for his 2022 season, in which he missed the entirety of due to a broken foot and a concussion.
A three-star recruit coming out of Dublin, Ohio, Russell chose WVU over Indiana, Iowa State, Michigan State, Pittsburgh, Minnesota, Illinois, Cincinnati, Kentucky, Purdue, and more.
During his transfer portal recruitment, Russell also visited Kansas.
Russell joins a Wisconsin defensive line that’s set to return junior Charles Perkins and sophomore Dillan Johnson, among others. The Badgers also signed Junior Poyser out of Buffalo this week.
Russell is currently unranked as a transfer prospect, according to On3. He will have one year of eligibility remaining.
West Virginia
West Virginia falters late in 71-66 loss to 17th-ranked Texas Tech – WV MetroNews
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. — The third quarter of Wednesday’s contest against 17th-ranked Texas Tech was among West Virginia’s best this season from an offensive standpoint.
What followed in the fourth, however, was perhaps the worst 10-minute stretch on that end through 16 contests. The Mountaineers missed numerous decent looks and shot 3 for 19 from the field and 6 for 12 on free throws in the final frame, while squandering a six-point advantage with inside 8 minutes remaining and falling to the unbeaten Red Raiders, 71-66.
“We took one bad shot that I didn’t like at all and had a bad turnover late, but we got 19 shots off in the fourth quarter and most were pretty good looks,” WVU head coach Mark Kellogg said. “We just didn’t convert. The defensive end concerns me as much as the offensive end. Giving up 40 points in the second half is way too many.”
Of WVU’s three fourth-quarter buckets, only one within the first 9:34 — a layup from Kierra ‘MeMe’ Wheeler with 7:10 remaining that left the home team with a 58-53 lead and came directly after Texas Tech’s Bailey Maupin had made a three-pointer.
Despite the offensive struggles, WVU dug in enough defensively to maintain a 61-57 advantage with inside 2 minutes remaining before the game turned in the visitors’ favor over a 7-second stretch.
Snudda Collins scored on a drive to the basket, while being fouled by Carter McCray in the process. With 1:59 left, Collins stepped to the free-throw line but was unable to convert the three-point play. Tech’s Jalynn Bristow came up with a pivotal offensive rebound, and found Maupin on the perimeter, who drained her fourth and final triple to give the Red Raiders (17-0, 4-0) a 62-61 lead at the 1:52 mark.
“They’re really good in the third quarter and I would venture to say we’re really good in the fourth quarter from previous games,” Red Raiders’ head coach Krista Gerlich said. “I’m not real sure fatigue played a factor in it as much as our kids just kind of locked down, really tried to defend and we got better on the glass. They missed a lot of easy shots early in the fourth quarter and that maybe played toward fatigue, but our kids did a good job on the glass and limiting second-chance opportunities, and we quit fouling a bit.”
Jordan Harrison missed a pair of threes on WVU’s ensuing trip, before Maupin made two free throws for a three-point advantage with 38 seconds left.
“What a basketball game. We knew coming in this was going to be a huge challenge and I’m super proud of our kids for being resilient for four quarters,” Gerlich said.
Harrison scored from close range 13 seconds later, but the Red Raiders continued to excel from the free-throw line and Collins made a pair for a 66-63 lead with 20 seconds to play.
Maupin then stole a Gia Cooke pass and made 1-of-2 free throws to make it a two-possession game, before another Mountaineer turnover all but ended any hope of late heroics for the home team.
“We made a lot of mistakes. They sped us up a little bit, but the mistakes we made were on us,” Harrison said. “When we go back and watch the film, we’ll see there was an easier way to score — slow down and read the defense.”
The third period was a far different story as WVU (13-3, 3-1) overcame a 31-28 halftime deficit by making 10-of-13 shots in what amounted to a 25-point frame. Harrison was the catalyst for the success, scoring 11 points on 4-for-4 shooting and dishing out three assists, while McCray continued to be a presence inside and scored seven points on 3-for-3 shooting.
But Texas Tech managed 19 points in the third to stay well within striking distance, with the Red Raiders making half of their six three-point attempts in that quarter, including both from Denae Fritz.
“You’re up six in the fourth, you’re supposed to find a way to win that game,” Kellogg said.
The entirety of the game was played within six points, with Tech’s largest lead coming at 29-23 after a Collins triple.
McCray and Harrison combined for the next five points, before Maupin capped the first-half scoring with a pair of free throws. She scored 11 of her game-high 27 points through two quarters and 13 more in the fourth.
“No basketball game is all ups and no basketball game is all downs,” Maupin said. “It’s finding a balance between your highs and lows and managing that to be able to come out with a win.”
Collins scored 19 points to help her team finish with a 25-2 advantage in bench points.
Tech finished with a 37-33 rebounding edge, and despite having 16 offensive boards to WVU’s 18, the Red Raiders accounted for 20 of the game’s 28 second-chance points.
“We got a lot of offensive rebounds and didn’t convert very many of them,” Kellogg said.
Harrison led four WVU double-figure scorers with 22 points and added five rebounds and five assists.
McCray added 15 points and Wheeler scored 11 to go with a team-best nine boards. Sydney Shaw scored 10 but shot 4 for 14, while Cooke was held to six points on 2-for-9 shooting.
The Mountaineers forced 20 turnovers, but managed only four steals.
“We had too many things go wrong that we had control of,” McCray said, “and that led to our detriment in the end.”
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