logo
COLUMN: WVU's steady baseball focus keeps it ready for whatever story is told

COLUMN: WVU's steady baseball focus keeps it ready for whatever story is told

Dominion Post05-05-2025
GRANVILLE — Reese Bassinger simply pulled up a corner of the box score Saturday night, as he began what seemed like a rather simple explanation.
The WVU relief pitcher, who had just come off the bench cold to throw seven innings to hand the 13th-ranked Mountaineers a crucial 3-2 win against Texas Tech in the second game of a doubleheader, took a quick glance at the number 38, which signified the number of wins accumulated by WVU to that point.
'Right next to the 38, it doesn't say anywhere how we won. It says we won,' Bassinger said. 'It's kind of like I could give up six line drives in a row, if they're caught, they're outs.'
Rather, it was Bassinger's intention to do so or not, the words stretched well beyond the obvious.
Any one person could take that 38 — now 39 following WVU's 5-0 win against the Red Raiders on Sunday, at Frederick Family Ballpark — and analyze it 100 different ways.
There's the feel-good angle, in that this regular season will soon become unlike any other in school history.
With a win at Pitt on Tuesday, the Mountaineers would match the program record of 40 wins in a season … with six games remaining, then a Big 12 tournament and then a NCAA tournament.
It's quite possible WVU could get to 50 wins before it's all said and done, not to mention win an outright Big 12 title and then who knows after that.
In short, one way or another, this season will create history.
There's also the overly worrisome angle, which is the one taken by those who bury themselves deep into the numbers provided by the RPI, strength of schedules and NCAA-tournament projections.
That is a journey that tells a slightly different story. WVU is just one of two schools ranked in the top 35 of the RPI with a strength of schedule ranked higher than 100th in the nation.
In terms of playing Quad 1 opponents, WVU has done it seven times to this point, anywhere between 11 and 18 fewer than the bulk of SEC schools.
And so those wins, especially the ones that didn't come in convincing fashion, will get nit-picked and scrutinized.
For those who are quick to hop on board to conspiracy theories about the NCAA selection committees being against WVU athletics — including our state's own Governor — you are now on deck.
Depending on how the Mountaineers play out the season, it's quite possible that a team with 40-some wins and a Big 12 regular-season title, is not a regional host for the NCAA tournament.
Which brings us back to Bassinger's words and what may be the beauty behind this WVU team and season.
They are neither caught up in the historical aspect of their journey they've created, nor do they lose sleep at night worrying about strength of schedules.
'There are obviously things we need to work on as a team, but baseball is already hard enough. You should never critique the wins,' Bassinger continued.
Never critique the wins. Never agonize too much on the defeats, even the ones against Marshall.
'We lose to Marshall and we lose the first game to Texas Tech, but going into that second game, nobody was thinking we had to win that game,' WVU second baseman Sam White said. 'No one was panicking.'
It would have been easy to, without a doubt. Make no mistake, it's not like this team is oblivious to the excitement they've created.
They are also very aware of what the RPI says and doesn't say about the chances of WVU hosting a regional in 2025.
These players simply don't fret about any of it, a true accomplishment on their part.
'If you keep looking ahead and keep worrying about the past, it's going to eat you alive,' was how White explained it. 'Just focus on that next game and control what you can control.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Urban Meyer says NFL should suspend Jim Harbaugh for NCAA violations at Michigan
Urban Meyer says NFL should suspend Jim Harbaugh for NCAA violations at Michigan

USA Today

time28 minutes ago

  • USA Today

Urban Meyer says NFL should suspend Jim Harbaugh for NCAA violations at Michigan

Count Urban Meyer among those who thinks the NFL should punish Jim Harbaugh following his tenure at Michigan football. The former Ohio State football coach said NFL commissioner Roger Goodell should hand down a suspension to Harbaugh — now coach of the NFL's Los Angeles Chargers — due to the penalties arising from the Connor Stalions sign-stealing scandal. Meyer, who coached Ohio State from 2012 through partway through the 2018 season, referenced former Buckeyes coach Jim Tressel as a precedent during an appearance on The Triple Option podcast on Wednesday, Aug. 20. "There's an elephant in the room here that no one's talking about," Meyer said. "When Tressel was fired by Ohio State and he was given a suspension. Roger Goodell, commissioner of the National Football League, came out and said that we're going to honor that suspension. "[Tressel] went to the Indianapolis Colts to work in the replay room. The Colts, because of the respect they had for the NCAA and the suspension, suspended Jim Tressel, so he was unable to perform his duties for the first six games of the year." Tressel resigned from Ohio State in 2011 after an NCAA investigation found OSU players received improper benefits, including quarterback Terrelle Pryor. Tressel then went to work for the Indianapolis Colts as a game-day advisor but, upon his suggestion to the Colts' leadership, did not begin his tenure with the team until the seventh game of the season, honoring the suspension from the NCAA. While Goodell did not hand down Tressel's suspension, he did support it. "I support that decision. I think that's a wise one," Goodell said at the time. "I think it was clear that if they didn't take an appropriate action, I would have taken appropriate action." However, Meyer does not believe a suspension for Harbaugh is coming. "Any chance that Roger Goodell and the NFL, of course not. I don't know why," Meyer said. Harbaugh was suspended for one year and given a four-year show-cause order by the NCAA in 2024 after he was found to have demonstrated both 'unethical conduct' and a failure to promote 'an atmosphere of compliance." The show-cause order is effective from Aug. 7, 2024 through Aug. 6, 2028, and he would face a one-year suspension if he decided to leave the NFL for another college job in that window. Harbaugh has since received an additional 10-year show cause, which will take effect on Aug. 7, 2028. Harbaugh led the Wolverines to the 2023 College Football Playoff championship before leaving to coach the Chargers. Los Angeles went 11-6 in the first season under Harbaugh, losing in the AFC wild card game to the Houston Texans.

College Football season starts with Week 0. Our record projections for all 136 teams
College Football season starts with Week 0. Our record projections for all 136 teams

USA Today

timean hour ago

  • USA Today

College Football season starts with Week 0. Our record projections for all 136 teams

Penn State, Clemson, Notre Dame and multiple teams from the SEC high in the US LBM Coaches Poll are expected to pace the Bowl Subdivision in the USA TODAY Sports record projections for every college football team entering the 2025 season. The Nittany Lions and Tigers are the projected winners of the Big Ten and ACC, respectively. Texas tops the SEC, one game ahead of Georgia and Alabama. Kansas State is the pick to win the Big 12. The Fighting Irish are projected to lose just one game during the regular season and earn one of the top at-large seeds to the College Football Playoff. In the Group of Five, the projected conference champions are Tulane (American), Boise State (Mountain West), James Madison (Sun Belt), Toledo (MAC) and Liberty (Conference USA). Here's how we have the FBS shaking out when the season kicks off this Saturday: Big Ten Penn State, Ohio State and Oregon are clearly ahead of the pack in the Big Ten, though the league could have another three or four teams fighting for nine or more wins and the playoff late in the season. The Buckeyes would still make the playoff with losses to Texas, Penn State and one other Big Ten opponent. Any small stumble from these favorites could open a door for Illinois, Michigan, Indiana, Nebraska or Iowa. SEC The rowdiest conference in the FBS could end up with any one of Texas, Georgia, Alabama or even LSU winning the SEC and earning the top spot in the final playoff rankings. The Longhorns and Arch Manning will draw plenty of attention. Alabama will be better in coach Kalen DeBoer's second year and could end up the best team in the country. Big years for coaches Hugh Freeze and Sam Pittman are not projected to go very well. ACC Clemson, Miami, and then everyone else. The Tigers and quarterback Cade Klubnik are eyeballing not just another ACC crown but the program's third national championship under Dabo Swinney. Miami needs a big year from transfer Carson Beck. Keep tabs on Louisville and SMU as possible at-large playoff teams. And look for a rebound from Florida State after a disastrous 2024. Big 12 Good luck picking this one. Kansas State is the front-runner by a whisper behind defending conference champion Arizona State, transfer-heavy Texas Tech, TCU, Utah and Iowa State. Look for as many as six or seven teams to make a run at the top spot. The depth in this league is noticeable: Brigham Young, Kansas, Houston and others are very solid, well-coached teams capable of knocking off other Power Four competition in non-conference play. Independent Notre Dame may be favored in nearly every game and could run the table by avoiding the Northern Illinois-like slipups that have hampered the program under Marcus Freeman. The Irish need to break in a new starting quarterback but are loaded across the board. Connecticut is going places under coach Jim Mora and should get back to bowl eligibility. American Tulane is established as the top team in the American and, along with Boise State, the odds-on favorite to earn an at-large playoff bid. The Green Wave will face a big threat from Memphis. Alabama-Birmingham comes in last heading into what looks like coach Trent Dilfer's final season. Mountain West Once again, it's Boise State and UNLV followed by a big chunk of teams scrambling for seven or eight wins. The Broncos have a huge hole to replace at running back but are still constructed to win the league and make the playoff. Behind this top pair are an experienced Air Force team and what looks like another strong San Jose State team. Sun Belt There are a handful of strong Group of Five teams atop the Sun Belt, starting with James Madison, Louisiana-Lafayette, Texas State and Georgia Southern. JMU is the preseason front-runner heading into coach Bob Chesney's second year. One team expected to take a big step back is Marshall. Conference USA Liberty remains the favorite even after losing quarterback Kaidon Salter to Colorado. But Western Kentucky should be explosive offensively and contend for nine or more wins. FBS newcomers Delaware and Missouri State will land near the bottom of the conference. Pac-12 The two-member Pac-12, which will grow in 2026, features a home-and-home set between Oregon State and Washington State in November. The Beavers play four Power Four teams in September before the schedule eases up in the second half.

Urban Meyer says Jim Harbaugh should face NFL discipline for role in Michigan's sign-stealing scandal
Urban Meyer says Jim Harbaugh should face NFL discipline for role in Michigan's sign-stealing scandal

New York Times

timean hour ago

  • New York Times

Urban Meyer says Jim Harbaugh should face NFL discipline for role in Michigan's sign-stealing scandal

Former Ohio State coach Urban Meyer said the NFL should punish Jim Harbaugh, the former Michigan coach and current Los Angeles Chargers coach, after Harbaugh received a 10-year show-cause order from the NCAA for the Wolverines' sign-stealing scandal. 'There's an elephant in the room here that no one's talking about,' Meyer said on Wednesday's episode of 'The Triple Option Podcast,' which he hosts with Fox Sports' Mark Ingram and Rob Stone. 'When (Jim) Tressel was fired by Ohio State and he was given a suspension, Roger Goodell, commissioner of the National Football League, came out and said that we're going to honor that suspension. Advertisement 'And you remember (Tressel) went to the Indianapolis Colts to work in the replay room. The Colts, because of the respect they had for the NCAA and the suspension, suspended Jim Tressel, so he was unable to perform his duties for the first six games of the year for the Indianapolis Colts. 'I think we all know the answer. Any chance that Roger Goodell and the NFL (would suspend Harbaugh)? Of course not.' Meyer's comments come after the NCAA disciplined Michigan last week following its investigation into an elaborate sign-stealing scheme concocted by former staffer Connor Stalions. Stalions devised a scheme to circumvent the NCAA's rule prohibiting in-person scouting of future opponents by recruiting collaborators and then securing tickets on the secondary market, which allowed them to attend games involving Michigan's upcoming opponents and film other teams' signals from the stands. Stalions collected footage from 52 games involving 13 opponents during the 2021, 2022 and 2023 seasons, the NCAA's Committee on Infractions (COI) found. The NCAA fined Michigan tens of millions of dollars and handed Harbaugh a show-cause order that effectively bans him from coaching in college football until 2038. The NCAA also suspended current Michigan coach Sherrone Moore, who was an assistant under Harbaugh, for the opening game of the 2026 season, adding to a school-imposed two-game suspension for Week 3 and Week 4 of the upcoming season. Stalions received an eight-year show-cause order. Despite the unprecedented fines that could surpass $30 million, the NCAA spared the Wolverines from a postseason ban as punishment for the sign-stealing scheme. In the 2023 season, Michigan went 15-0 and won the national championship under Harbaugh, who subsequently left the program that offseason to return to the NFL with the Chargers, following the news of the sign-stealing scandal. Advertisement Harbaugh has said he didn't know about Stalions' operation and refused to comment on the situation last week after the NCAA released its decision. But the NCAA's COI wrote in its report that 'Harbaugh ran a program that was largely dismissive of rules compliance,' and 'there was little, if any, emphasis on following the rules.' On his podcast, Meyer referenced Tressel heading to the NFL after Tressel was forced to resign from Ohio State following an NCAA investigation into improper benefits received by some of his players, including quarterback Terrelle Pryor. The players traded their equipment, memorabilia and autographs for tattoos and cash, and Tressel withheld information about it from Ohio State and NCAA investigators. Following the investigation, the Buckeyes received a one-year bowl ban, among other penalties, and Tressel received a five-year show-cause order. However, Meyer was slightly off in his recount of Tressel's suspension with the Colts. The team hired Tressel as a replay consultant and said he wouldn't start his gig until the seventh game of the season. Goodell said he was OK with the Colts' decision, and he would have suspended Tressel for the first six games if Indianapolis didn't make him sit them out. Spot the pattern. Connect the terms Find the hidden link between sports terms Play today's puzzle

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store