Outlook on the 2008 West Virginia Mountaineers
Posted by allsportsandmore on January 15, 2008
With a few starters from the West Virginia Mountaineers going to the pros, many are questioning just how good the 2008 Fiesta Bowl champs will be next year. The Mountaineers took a big loss yesterday when Junior running back Steve Slaton Virginia after Rich Rodriguez left the Mountaineers to head for Michigan.West Virginia has already proven that they can overcome adversity after losing to a 4-7 Pittsburgh team, which cost them a shot at the national title; then losing their head coach, before finally knocking off what many believed was the number one team in the nation, the Oklahoma Sooners, in the Tostitos Fiesta Bowl. . Not only did they beat the Sooners, they beat them by 20 points in a very impressive and improbable victory. After a very emotional win in Arizona, the Mountaineers gave interim head coach Bill Stewart the head coaching job in Morgantown. Even though the Mountaineers have a new head coach and have lost many starters, I still believe they will again be in the National Title hunt all year during the 2008 season. With the Freshman Sensation RB Noel Devine returning for his sophomore season and Patrick White coming back for his senior season, many believe West Virginia will be able to continue their high powered offense that they have shown over the last few years. Noel Devine decided to stay in Morgantown after many rumors spiraled that he would be transferring to Florida State. He made his decision after stating that everything happens for a reason. He will be looking at having an even better Sophomore season and making a race for the Heisman trophy. Being in the hunt for the national championship will not be easy, but these Mountaineers have proven they can overcome just about anything. Be ready to see West Virginia in contention all year long as they will be out to prove that they are one of the best teams in the nation.
-Troy Wilkerson





JIMBO said
January 15, 2008
Football player files missing
Fingers point to Rodriguez
By Dave Hickman
Staff writer
MORGANTOWN — West Virginia officials are wondering if assistant coaches aren’t all that Rich Rodriguez took with him to Michigan. They believe he may also have destroyed all or most of the paperwork files relating to every player on the current Mountaineer roster and virtually all of the activities conducted by the program over the past seven years.
Soon after returning to work after the Fiesta Bowl a little more than a week ago, the staff at the Puskar Center found that most of the files — including all of the player files — that had been stored in Rodriguez’s private office were missing. In addition, all of the players’ strength and conditioning files in the weight room were gone.
“It’s unbelievable. Everything is gone, like it never existed,’’ said a source within the athletic department, who spoke on the condition of anonymity. “Good, bad or indifferent, we don’t have a record of anything that has happened.’’
According to the source, the files in Rodriguez’s office that are now missing included everything from records regarding summer camps — financial and otherwise — to data on boosters, recruiting and most everything related to activities within the program during Rodriguez’s seven years at WVU.
Most disturbing, though, is the absence of all of the players’ personal files, which included, among other things, contact information, scholarship money awarded, class attendance records and records on personal conduct and community service, be it positive or negative.
“If a player spoke to a school or did public service, we don’t have a record of it,’’ said the source. “If he broke a rule or missed class, we don’t have a record of that, either. We don’t have anything. All the good things these kids have done over the years, there’s nothing — not a picture of somebody speaking to a class, nothing. Why would somebody do that?’’
West Virginia athletic director Ed Pastilong did not return a message seeking comment Monday night. Neither could Rodriguez be reached for comment.
The files went missing sometime between when Rodriguez resigned on Dec. 16 and the time the team and staff returned from the Fiesta Bowl on Jan. 3. It could have happened as early as the first days following Rodriguez’s resignation because his old office was largely ignored by the support staff and the coaching staff between the time he left and Dec. 26, when the team and support staff all went to Arizona for the Fiesta Bowl.
According to multiple sources, several people in the Puskar Center reported seeing Rodriguez and at least one member of his inner circle, video coordinator Dusty Rutledge, in Rodriguez’s private office shredding paperwork on Dec. 18. That’s the day he returned to clean out his office after being introduced as the Michigan coach at a press conference in Ann Arbor the day before. At the time, those who say they witnessed it either did not know what was being destroyed or paid it little attention to it until the files were discovered missing more than two weeks later.
While the files in Rodriguez’s office held a wide range of information, those that were discovered missing from the weight room office were more specific. Those included every aspect of strength and conditioning progress made by players under former strength and conditioning coordinator Mike Barwis, who along with most of his immediate staff followed Rodriguez to Michigan after the Fiesta Bowl. Those files included the progression made by each player in every specific area, from bench-press totals to 40-yard dash times. The files even included pictures of the players at different points in their careers.
While a source within the athletic department said the department itself wasn’t launching any type of investigation into the missing files — “Our plate is pretty full right now with trying to put together a staff and everything else,’’ the source said, “and we don’t have time to deal with [stuff] like this right now.’’ — it has apparently drawn the interest of the university’s legal counsel.
WVU lawyers are in the process of trying to recover $4 million from Rodriguez as a condition of breaking his contract with six years remaining to become the coach at Michigan. While Rodriguez has maintained that West Virginia breached the contract by not fulfilling all of its terms — an argument the university denies — the school filed suit in Monongalia County Circuit Court last month detailing what it claims are breaches by Rodriguez above and beyond simply breaking the contract. Those include calling recruits to tell them of his decision to switch schools before he told his own team. It certainly would not help Rodriguez’s case if the school can prove that he also destroyed what WVU officials consider state files on his way out.