West Virginia is a team that Kentucky was designed to beat, but that doesn’t always happen.
West Virginia
West Virginia hiring Noel Devine, former RB and program great, to staff as offensive analyst
West Virginia great Noel Devine is returning to Morgantown to join Rich Rodriguez’s staff as an offensive analyst, where the former star running back will reunite with the head coach who first recruited him to play for the Mountaineers. Devine, 36, announced the news Friday morning.
Devine, a former five-star recruit and one of the most exciting players of his generation, scored 31 touchdowns and amassed over 5,000 yards of total offense in his four-year career at West Virginia. Last summer his son Andre Devine signed with Rodriguez when he was the head coach at Jacksonville State.
Proud moment yesterday seeing my son Andre sign to JSU! Thank you Coach Rod and your coaching staff for welcoming my son with open arms. This means a lot to me and my family my son found a home. The Devine legacy continues with the same culture and traditions Rich Rod taught me pic.twitter.com/1JSVIKjV70
— Noel Devine (@noel_devine7) February 9, 2024
Devine was signed by the Philadelphia Eagles in 2011 after going undrafted but was only with the team briefly in the summer before spending time in the CFL. He has been working in Florida running his own speed training company and helping mentor local kids in the area where he grew up.
Devine was one of the first high school football recruits to go viral. His dazzling highlights took off on the internet starting in 2004 after Tampa-based Sunshine Preps, an independent recruiting service, posted footage of the 5-foot-7, 170-pound freshman’s varsity debut for North Fort Myers High the previous fall.
(Photo: Andy Lyons / Getty Images)
West Virginia
Food Guy: WV Coffee Festival; In search of Humphrey's Pine Room, Ray's Deli recipes
West Virginia
Four Wheeling residents sentenced for selling fentanyl, heroin and meth in West Virginia
WHEELING, W.Va. — Four Wheeling residents were sentenced in federal court today for selling fentanyl and other drugs in West Virginia’s Northern Panhandle.
Tyshaun Johnson, 30, was sentenced to 115 months in prison. Johnson sold fentanyl near Jensen Playground in Wheeling, and investigators also determined he was selling cocaine base in the area. Johnson has prior convictions for fraud, assault, domestic battery, malicious assault and theft.
Harold Wayne Nice, 42, was sentenced to 60 months in prison today. Nice was responsible for selling more than 30 grams of methamphetamine, along with nearly 2 grams of fentanyl and one gram of cocaine base. Nice has previously been convicted for domestic battery, destruction of property, assault, breaking and entering and drug crimes.
Cephus Andrews, 33, was sentenced to 18 months in prison for conspiring with others to sell fentanyl, heroin and cocaine in Ohio County. Andrews, one of nine defendants in a drug conspiracy, allowed his residence to serve as a stash house for the drugs. Investigators seized 7.5 grams of a fentanyl/heroin mixture and 3.35 grams of cocaine, along with drug paraphernalia and $1,095. The other eight defendants are awaiting trial currently scheduled to occur in April 2026.
Alyssa Marie Abrigg, 34, was sentenced to 30 months in federal prison. Abrigg sold nearly a gram of fentanyl and half a gram of methamphetamine in the Warwood section of Wheeling. She has prior drug convictions.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Clayton Reid is prosecuting the cases on behalf of the government. Investigative agencies include the Ohio Valley Drug Task Force, a HIDTA-funded initiative; the Drug Enforcement Administration; and the Wheeling Police Department.
West Virginia
Kentucky takes down West Virginia, will face Texas in Sweet 16
The Mountaineers are small, ferocious, and force turnovers at an elite rate. Kentucky needed to counter that with the size West Virginia just doesn’t have.
Early on, they did just that.
1st half showcases the size difference
West Virginia’s average height is 5’9, and they love to press. Kentucky should be able to just find Strack or Key and allow runners to come off them. The Cats opened up handling the pressure pretty well. Amelia Hassett hit two first-quarter 3’s, and Clara Strack had 4 and 4. But West Virginia was also handling the Cats’ size pretty well.
6’1 Kierra Wheeler had 4 points and 4 rebounds herself as she battled down low in the opening frame. Teonni Key was a monster in the opening half. The senior had 11 points and 5 rebounds, but as the half wore on, the pressure started to get to Kentucky.
After the Cats stretched the lead to double figures, West Virginia would force a 10-second violation as Kentucky struggled to find Clara Strack in the middle of the press. When they did a couple of possessions later, it was a double dribble, and those are the simple kind of unforced turnovers that Kentucky can not have in a game like this.
A 13-2 run from West Virginia sent the two teams to halftime tied at 36. Kentucky shot 48% percent from the floor but had 7 turnovers, 3 from Key and 1 from Strack. West Virginia was led by 13 from Gia Cooke and 10 from Wheeler.
If Kentucky was going to get to its first Sweet 16 in a decade, it would come from Strack and Key.
2nd half started with a Kentucky streak
The Cats started the 3rd with a big flurry, a 13-2 run saw Kentucky extend back to an 11-point lead. It was kind of identical to how the 2nd quarter played out, with Kentucky handling the pressure and using its height to convert easy baskets.
West Virginia really struggled down low against Kentucky’s size. They converted just 13-of-32 from 2-point range.
Kentucky would have a 12-point lead heading to the 4th, just 10 minutes away from a first Sweet 16 appearance since 2015-16.
It started with a bang as West Virginia would throw a haymaker. The Mountaineers would go on a 12-2 run to start the 4th, and Kentucky did look rattled. But to their credit, they slowed it back down and went down low to Key and Strack. The two stars on the day for Kentucky would answer and get back up 8 behind a beautiful post move from Strack.
Gia Cooke, as she did all day, answered. She hit a huge 3 to stem the Cats’ momentum and bring West Virginia back to within 5. The guard would finish with 23.
Tonie Morgan would rise up with 2 minutes to go; she missed the jumper, but a huge hustle play from Clara Strack would give Kentucky another chance to build on its 4-point lead.
Strack would then convert, but like she did all afternoon, Sydney Shaw hit a clutch 3 from the corner, her 6th, to bring West Virginia to within 3 with just 90 seconds to play.
Clara Strack’s turnover issues would play big as she tried to back down, and Jordan Harrison would swipe her 4th steal of the night. Two free throws later, and it was just a 1-point game.
Tonie Morgan hadn’t hit a lot of shots, just 2-for-8. But the point guard hit a massive free-throw line jumper to get Kentucky back up 3 with 55 seconds to go.
West Virginia would hit 2 more clutch free throws, and with 8 seconds to go, Hassett had a wide-open 3. It clanged off the rim, and the Mountaineers would have the last shot.
The Mountaineers had not led since early in the 4th quarter. Gia Cooke shook Teonni Key and had an open jumper that rimmed out. Key would secure the rebound, and Kentucky called a timeout.
On the inbound play, the ball would be hit off Morgan’s shoe. West Virginia would get a chance for a tip-in with .2 left.
West Virginia couldn’t get a shot off, and the Cats will be heading to the Sweet 16 for the first time since 2016. And they did it on the road.
Up next is (1) Texas, which the Cats lost to by 11 earlier this year. That game was a lot closer than the final score, as the Cats were actually within 1 with just over 5 to go.
The game will be in Fort Worth, so it will be another road game. But we should all enjoy this Sweet victory.
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