West Virginia
Dillon Gabriel’s school-record 8 TDs lead Oklahoma past West Virginia, 59-20

NORMAN, Okla. (AP) — Dillon Gabriel accounted for a school-record eight touchdowns to help No. 17 Oklahoma roll past West Virginia 59-20 on Saturday night.
Gabriel passed for 423 yards and five touchdowns and ran for 50 yards and three scores. He surpassed the previous touchdown record of seven set by Baker Mayfield in 2016 and matched by Kyler Murray in 2018.
Drake Stoops had career highs of 164 yards and three touchdowns receiving, Gavin Sawchuk had a career-best 135 yards rushing and Nic Anderson added four catches for 119 yards for Oklahoma (8-2, 5-2 Big 12, No. 17 CFP), which bounced back from a loss to rival Oklahoma State the previous Saturday.
West Virginia’s CJ Donaldson ran for 79 yards and a touchdown before going down with a left leg injury in the third quarter. Devin Carter added three catches for 67 yards and a score for the Mountaineers (6-4, 4-3).
This was a critical game for positioning in race to qualify for the Big 12 championship game. Both teams entered the day a game behind conference co-leaders Oklahoma State and Texas. Oklahoma State was blown out at UCF earlier Saturday, adding to this game’s significance.
Gabriel ran for a pair of 2-yard touchdowns in the first quarter to help the Sooners take a 14-7 lead. He threw touchdown passes of 3 yards to Austin Stogner and 32 yards to Jayden Gibson in the second quarter to help the Sooners go up 31-7.
West Virginia drove to the Oklahoma 1-yard line late in the second quarter, but the Sooners stopped Donaldson on a shovel pass on fourth and goal.
The Mountaineers got one more possession before halftime. With help from two pass interference penalties, they got into the end zone. Kole Taylor’s 3-yard touchdown catch from Garrett Greene with 7 seconds left in the first half trimmed Oklahoma’s lead to 31-14 at the break. Oklahoma outgained West Virginia 371 yards to 212 in the first half.
On Oklahoma’s opening possession of the second half, Gabriel connected with Stoops for a 60-yard catch and run for a touchdown to put the Sooners up 38-14. It was the longest reception of Stoops’ career.
POLL IMPLICATIONS
Lopsided losses by Oklahoma State and Tennessee, who were both ahead of the Sooners in the latest poll, are among the events that should help the Sooners move up several spots.
THE TAKEAWAY
West Virginia: The Mountaineers are having a better season than expected, but they weren’t quite ready to step up when the chance to be a championship contender arose. Greene completed just 10 of 27 passes for 154 yards, and he ran for just 24 yards on 10 carries.
Oklahoma: The Sooners appear to have found a clear No. 1 running back. Several players had been splitting carries for much of the season, but Sawchuk has taken the top role with back-to-back games with at least 100 yards rushing.
UP NEXT
West Virginia: Hosts Cincinnati on Saturday.
Oklahoma: Visits BYU on Saturday.
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AP college football: https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-football-poll and https://apnews.com/hub/college-football

West Virginia
Bullpen falters for Mountaineers in 11-4 loss to Arizona – WV MetroNews

GRANVILLE, W.Va. — While winning 19 of their first 21 games this season, the Mountaineers have either been on the good side of many lopsided scores or they found the key hit or the key shutdown inning from their bullpen to secure victories.
In the rubber game of their three-game series Sunday against Arizona, WVU could not get timely outs in relief as the Mountaineers fell to the Wildcats, 11-4. The Mountaineers (19-3, 2-2 Big 12) lost their first series of the year.
“I think it is the first time ever that maybe we have experienced a little bit of adversity or things hadn’t gone our way,” said WVU head coach Steve Sabins. “We had bases loaded multiple times and hit some balls really hard. We had a chance for a grand slam in the first, [Michael] Perazza line drive double play.”
“It is a long season. Just taking everything with a grain of salt, trying to win every pitch by pitch,” said WVU senior Kyle West. “Eventually win enough pitches and you will win innings and you’ll win games. That being said, the Big 12 is a tough conference. Anybody can beat anybody on any given day. It has been proven. Just stay present in each moment and you’ll give yourself a chance to win.”
West Virginia fell behind 3-0 in the third inning after starting pitcher Carson Estridge surrendered a solo home run to Adonys Garcia in the second inning and a two-run homer to Maddox Mihalakis in the third. After Garcia’s home run, both teams were warned by umpires after crosstalk between the two dugouts.
“I wasn’t a huge fan. I think something had gone on in the first or second inning where there was a little bit of back-and-forth. After Adonis Guzman hit the home run, he stood there for a little while and then I think talked on his way around the bases. So our guys kind of chirped back a little bit. I thought it was instigated by Arizona today,” Sabins said.
“But I think both teams were passionate in a rubber match and an opportunity to win the game. I wasn’t too worried about it. I just thought in that moment, I didn’t believe that we should probably have received a warning just because it was clearly one side. But I think early in the game, we had chirped at Arizona a little bit. So you can’t blame the umpires ever. They were doing basically their best job to make sure the game doesn’t get out of hand.”
The Mountaineers gained the lead in the bottom of the fourth. Sam White’s two-run home run in the third inning and Jace Rinehart’s two-run double in the fourth put the Mountaineers ahead 4-3.
“If I think about the moment and how big it is too much, I think it gets to me. So every time I go up to the plate, I do the same thing I do every time,” Rinehart said.
While White’s home run put the Mountaineers on the scoreboard, he did not return to the game in the fourth inning and was seen wearing a sling. Sabins did not have an immediate medical update on White following the game.
“He’s a huge part of our locker room and our morale,” West said. “Obviously, he plays a huge role at second base and hitting third every day. From a locker room standpoint, I think us as a team, we’ll do everything we can to make sure he stays up and he’s with us all the time.”
Catcher Logan Sauve did not play a day after he was injured in game two of the series.
“Yesterday he dove at home plate and landed on his shoulder. It was really tender this morning,” Sabins said. “We checked in it see if he could potentially play today and we didn’t think it was a good idea to put him in there today.”
Estridge left the game with the lead after pitching five innings. He allowed three runs and struck out six batters.
“It just was competitive the whole time,” Sabins said. “He gave us a chance to win the game.”
Leading 4-3 in the top of the eighth inning, Mason White’s two-run home run gave Arizona (18-5, 5-1 Big 12) a lead they would not relinquish. Arizona scored four more runs in the eighth and two in the ninth inning to close the game with eight unanswered runs.
WVU’s bullpen, shortened by a 16-inning game on Friday night, cycled through eight pitchers in the final four innings.
“Big impact, it changes what we do. But everyone we threw today is good enough to win the ball game. It just didn’t go our way,” Sabins said.
“I just felt like this whole weekend, it was right within our grasp. Friday, obviously we played 16 innings. We had a lot of opportunities, guys on third and less than two out. You had some men in scoring position Friday. A big win on Saturday and then we can’t quite close the deal on Sunday.”
Tyler Hutson fell to 1-1 on the season with the loss. He surrendered Mason White’s home run in the eighth inning.
Garcia went 3-for-5 with two home runs for Arizona.
West Virginia will host Marshall Tuesday at 6:30 p.m.
West Virginia
West Virginia takes care of business in round one win over Columbia
West Virginia came out fast and never looked back, picking up a win over Columbia to advance in the NCAA Tournament. The Mountaineers led wire to wire, and between a hot start, suffocating defense, and balanced scoring, they handled what was a dangerous matchup on paper.
Head coach Mark Kellogg said it best at the start: “Excited to advance, obviously. That’s the name of the game this time of year is just find ways. Whether it’s pretty, ugly, indifferent, but I thought for the most part we were pretty good and led, obviously, for the entire night.”
This was no walk-through. Kellogg made it clear Columbia was a challenge, pointing to last year’s experience against Princeton to prepare for Ivy League toughness. “That even means more when you get a win against such a quality program. But I thought our kids were ready.”
West Virginia hadn’t played in two weeks, but if there were concerns about rust, they were erased quickly. Kellogg wanted a strong start — and he got it.
Harrison Ignites Hot Start
Jordan Harrison scored eight of WVU’s first 12 points, setting the tone early. “Honestly, considering that we haven’t played for two weeks, I think we were super excited to come out and play. And I think I was just given, I mean, taking it with the defense was giving me and not overthinking, just having fun with my teammates.”
Harrison would finish with 23 points, matching her WVU career best, and said, “Obviously, I’m pretty proud of myself. I’m glad that I stayed aggressive… I feel like I didn’t force too many shots, and I just kind of played with some rhythm.”
Quinerly Hits 2,000 Points
JJ Quinerly hit a milestone, recording her 2,000th career point during the game. “I think it’s just an amazing accomplishment. I think I dreamed of scoring 2000 points, probably my whole life. So just seeing it happening and then being where I’m at with this group of girls and the coach I have right now, I love it.”
When asked about the moment it happened, Quinerly kept it simple. “I knew I needed 19, but I really wasn’t really thinking about it. I just shot it.”
The scoring is one thing, but Quinerly made her mark all over the stat sheet — rebounds, assists, steals — and made sure to stay aggressive. “Being for me, I love attacking the hoop, so that’s what I did most of the game. I did shoot a couple of threes that I may have didn’t like, but hey, I got to shoot them to get into a rhythm.”
Defense Still the Identity
Offense made headlines, but defense was once again West Virginia’s calling card. “I think for us, it’s just fun. Honestly, I think we love flying around. We love getting steals, getting easy points. So it’s just fun and we love it,” Quinerly said.
Kellogg called both Harrison and Quinerly “elite” defenders and said, “Everybody talks about our size or the lack of, but man, what’s inside you and your heart and how tough you are… their will to defend is what separates some of the elite.”
Freshman Impact
Freshman Jordan Thomas stepped up with 12 points and 22 minutes in her first NCAA Tournament game. “She’s gotten better all year long… Her first rotation, I thought she looked a little more freshman-like, and I thought she settled in and then really was good for us,” Kellogg said.
Harrison also gave Thomas credit: “She played hard. I think she thought she could have did a little bit better, but we just kept encouraging her to keep on rebounding, keep on going up to the paint, going to the basket, getting easy buckets. So yeah, I’m super proud of her, especially for her to be a freshman.”
Controlling the Run
Columbia cut the lead to 15 at one point in the second half, but West Virginia quickly regained control. “They got a little run going, but we stayed settled in and we figured it out,” Quinerly said. That control was key, especially late, when WVU committed just one turnover in the final three minutes.
“I think we had a couple times where we turned the ball over just kind of moving too fast a little bit, but we definitely still handled it pretty well, I thought, and we got through it,” Quinerly said.
Fan Support Felt Strongly
WVU fans showed up in a big way. “Honestly, we love our fans. We’re so glad that they made the time to come down here for us. We play really well off of energy, so having them there is very important and they’re very important to us,” Harrison said.
History in Reach
The Mountaineers are now one win away from the program’s second Sweet 16 appearance. Kellogg didn’t shy away from the moment. “If we can win two in the tournament, we would be the first team in our school’s history to win two NCAA tournament games.”
He added, “Certainly we’re going to go into that game with an expectation that we can do something really special.”
For now, the focus shifts to the next game, and a chance to do just that.
West Virginia
Arizona baseball drops middle game at West Virginia to snap 10-game win streak

Arizona will not be going unbeaten in its first season in the Big 12 Conference.
The Wildcats dropped their first league game on Saturday afternoon, falling 11-3 at West Virginia to snap a 10-game win streak.
A 7-run bottom of the 4th sealed the game for the Mountaineers (19-2, 2-1 Big 12), which chased UA starter Owen Kramkowski after 3.1 innings. The Wildcats (17-5, 4-1) were hoping he could go long after using seven pitchers in Friday night’s 16-inning win at West Virginia, a game that saw them record a school-record 29 strikeouts.
Kramkowski allowed eight runs, six earned, with the last three coming in after Raul Garayzar came on with the bases loaded and allowed a 3-run double. Garayzar gave up back-to-back run-scoring hits before retiring eight in a row, then Eric Orloff allowed two runs in the 7th.
West Virginia’s starter only lasted 3.2 innings but it only needed one reliever, as Reese Bassinger went the final 5.1 innings and allowed only one hit and one walk with eight strikeouts.
Arizona scored once each in the first two innings, on an RBI double by Mason White and a run-scoring single from Brendan Summerhill, who had two of the Wildcats’ seven hits. Tommy Splaine —who also had two hits—led off the top of the 4th with a solo home run to put the Wildcats up 3-2 but after that it was all West Virginia.
The rubber match of the series is set for 9 a.m. PT Sunday, with freshman RHP Smith Bailey set to start for Arizona.
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