West Virginia
Jayhawks drop third-straight game, lose to West Virginia
MORGANTOWN, WV — Garrett Greene threw a 15-yard touchdown pass to Rodney Gallagher with 26 seconds left to lift West Virginia to a 32-28 victory over Kansas in their Big 12 opener Saturday.
The Mountaineers (2-2) overcame an 11-point deficit and withstood a lightning delay of about two hours with two touchdown passes by Greene in the final 3:27. It came a week after the Mountaineers squandered a 10-point lead in the final three minutes of a heartbreaking loss at Pittsburgh.
“Offensively, we just found a way,” coach Neal Brown said. “It wasn’t our best day. We didn’t have our ‘A’ game, but we finished well.”
Saturday’s outcome wasn’t decided until West Virginia’s Tyrin Bradley stripped the ball from Jalon Daniels on a pass attempt and Bradley recovered it with 8 seconds left. Bradley also had the team’s first interception of the season in the first quarter.
Kansas appeared to be in control when wide receiver Luke Grimm went 32 yards down the left sideline for a touchdown with 5:39 left for a 28-17 lead.
“Sometimes it doesn’t roll your way,” Grimm said. “We just didn’t execute in the final stretch. They executed and we didn’t.”
Greene, who had been shaky up until that point, then took over. He hit Kole Taylor with an 8-yard TD toss, and Taylor caught the two-point conversion pass from Traylon Ray.
After Kansas was forced to punt, Greene ran for 25 yards on the winning drive. A pass interference call in the end zone on Mello Dotson of Kansas gave the Mountaineers first-and-goal at the 10. A false start pushed the ball back to the 15 before Greene hit Gallagher in the end zone for the final margin.
“I always want the ball in my hands at the end of the game,” Greene said.
West Virginia’s Hudson Clement caught seven passes for 150 yards.
Greene, who also had a 5-yard scoring run, completed 15 of 30 passes for 295 yards. He also led the Mountaineers with 87 rushing yards on on 17 carries.
“I may coach for a long time and may never have another guy that’s as competitive as he is,” Brown said.
Devin Neal rushed for 110 yards for Kansas (1-3). It was his fourth straight 100-yard game this season.
Burks hurt
Brown said defensive back Aubrey Burks was walking around and “in good spirits” and that medical tests on him were “clear” after Burks was removed from the sideline on a cart in the second quarter with what the coach described as an upper body injury. Burks initially was tended to while the West Virginia offense was on the field.
“It must have happened during a play but he didn’t have symptoms until he came out,” Brown said.
Last year Burks was injured making a tackle on a punt at TCU and had to have his neck immobilized. He missed one game with a concussion.
The takeaway
Kansas: KU has lost three straight. The Jayhawks are in a free fall after starting the season ranked.
“We’ve been in situations worse than this,” Grimm said. “We sucked when I was first here. We came from way worse than what we are right now. So we’re not worried at all.”
West Virginia: The Mountaineers showed some mettle in the comeback win, but the schedule doesn’t get any easier with the next three games against ranked opponents and three of the next five games on the road.
Up next
Kansas: Hosts TCU next Saturday.
West Virginia: Has a week off before playing at No. 14 Oklahoma State on Oct. 5.
West Virginia
“Naturally, West Virginia” program launched
MORGANTOWN, WV (WVNS) — The West Virginia Agritourism Initiative and West Virginia University Extension Agency are coming together to create “Naturally, West Virginia.”
Naturally West Virginia is an Agritourism Promotion and Support Program designed to help West Virginia’s agritourism business grow and improve.
Dr. Dee Singh-Knights, Professor of Agribusiness Economics and Management, says businesses under this brand demonstrate a commitment to providing a high quality visitor experience and implement the best in agritourism practices.
To be eligible for the program, a business owner must have 10 hours of Agritourism Education and Professional Development Training, be reviewed by the Naturally West Virginia team to explore current practices, areas for improvement, and technical assistance, a West Virginia Agritourism Association Membership, and a completed verification form filed with WVU Extension.
West Virginia
Why Losing Jahiem White Stings But Will Not Derail West Virginia’s 2026 Plans
During his two years and change in Morgantown, running back Jahiem White was one of the most, if not the most, dynamic players on the West Virginia football roster. Every time he touched the ball, you had the feeling that something special could happen, and oftentimes it did.
After not seeing the field through the first half of his true freshman campaign, he burst onto the scene in a road game against UCF, and from that point on, he became the electrifying back we all know him as. Injuries are a part of the game, but White is coming off a season-ending knee injury, marking the second straight offseason he’ll spend a good chunk of his time recovering. Last year, he suffered a lower-body injury in the Frisco Bowl against Memphis.
On Monday, news dropped that White plans to enter the transfer portal in January, which caught a lot of Mountaineer fans off guard because of the responses he had to fans earlier in the week on Instagram asking if he would be returning.
WVU has been holding exit interviews with players, discussing the report on them for the 2025 season, their future, and if they have a spot on next year’s roster. Pretty much every one of those talks will feature some time spent on money. Those figures are not generally made available to the media or public, but it’s within reason to assume West Virginia was a little weary of offering a decent-sized package to White, considering the injuries he’s had the past two years.
So, what now for West Virginia?
When a player of Jahiem’s caliber would depart in the past, everyone would panic and assume trouble lies ahead. Don’t get me wrong, losing White stings for WVU, but probably not as much as it would have in the past.
Rich Rodriguez signed five running backs during the early signing period, two of whom are going to have a chance to be significant contributors from day one in JUCO star Martavious Boswell and four-star recruit Amari Latimer, who flipped from Wisconsin. Those two, plus another incoming freshman, Christopher Talley, will be enrolling early. Big, physical back Lawrence Autry and the speedy SirPaul Cheeks will arrive in the summer
Goin’ shoppin’
Yes, WVU has to beefen up in the trenches and address other areas of the roster, but don’t think for a second that Rodriguez will ignore the running back position. After seeing the position decimated by injury in 2025, he’s going to do everything in his power to make sure that doesn’t happen again. West Virginia will add another running back to the mix once the portal opens next month, and likely one that has played meaningful football.
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West Virginia
West Virginia registers season-high point total in 109-40 victory over Texas Southern – WV MetroNews
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. — In its final game of the regular season against non-power conference competition, West Virginia put forth the second-highest scoring effort in Mark Kellogg’s three seasons as head coach.
Behind six double-figure scorers, the Mountaineers romped past Texas Southern 109-40 on Monday night at Hope Coliseum.
With contests on deck against Georgia Tech and Texas A&M before beginning Big 12 Conference play, WVU (8-2) dominated the final 31-plus minutes to have its way with the Tigers.
“After the first 6 or 7 minutes, we settled in,” said Kellogg, who celebrated his 50th birthday. “It’s not that we weren’t playing hard. We weren’t all on the same page. We can’t really be feast or famine with turnover or give up baskets. That’s not the way we want to play. It’s a work in progress.”
West Virginia made its last four field-goal attempts of the opening quarter, which it ended on an 8-0 spurt that featured two three-pointers from Sydney Shaw for a 26-16 lead.
“It looked better going up 10, but it wasn’t good those first 7 or 8 minutes for sure,” Kellogg said.
The Mountaineers made it 15 consecutive points altogether by building the advantage to 33-16 before the second quarter was 4 minutes old.
WVU forced 13 TSU turnovers in the second quarter and attempted 22 free throws, converting 18 in a 32-point frame that enabled the home team to hold a 58-26 halftime advantage.
“Offensively, we got what we wanted for the most of the night,” Kellogg said. “We’d like to see the threes to go in at a little bit higher clip [6 for 24 on Monday].
The Mountaineers enjoyed their highest-scoring quarter of the season in the third, amassing 34 points on 14-for-22 field-goal shooting to open up an even bigger lead. The catalyst was Kierra “MeMe” Wheeler, who made all six of her shots and poured in 14 points in the period, which WVU finished with a 92-37 lead.
“There were a few mismatches. We knew that going into the game,” Wheeler said. “I didn’t start off well. Coach sat me down and allowed me to readjust myself knowing my presence was needed.”
Texas Southern (3-5) made only one fourth-quarter field goal and finished with 35 turnovers, which the Mountaineers turned into 54 points.
Wheeler led six WVU double-figure scorers with a season-high 23 points.
Jordan Harrison added 17 points to surpass 1,000 in her time at WVU, with this season marking her third in a Mountaineer uniform.
“I knew in the beginning of the season that I was going to eventually get it,” Harrison said. “I had no idea it was going to happen this close or in this game.
“I’m glad to have my name in the book on that. It’s great.”
Gia Cooke scored 14, Sydney Woodley and Carter McCray added 12 apiece and Shaw contributed 11 in the victory.
Starting center Jordan Thomas was not in uniform and was with the team on the bench in street clothes.
“It’s day to day,” Kellogg said. “We anticipate her to be back soon.”
Daeja Holmes and Taliyah Logwood led the Tigers with 12 points apiece.
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