- Messages
- 62,336
- Reaction score
- 64,039
The List: Greatest Players 50-26 LINK
By John Antonik for MSNsportsNET.com
July 2, 2007
ESPN.com’s Ivan Maisel recently offered us his version of college football’s 100 iconic moments, rolling out 138 years worth of history in five days. Recruits are ranked. The History Channel has the show The Most.
If they can come up with lists, why can’t we?
Over the next three weeks we will reveal the 50 greatest college football players, the 20 greatest coaches and the 25 best teams West Virginia has faced on the gridiron.
Of course many of the choices are obvious. Pitt’s Tony Dorsett abused the Mountaineers for four years. Same goes for Larry Csonka. Joe Paterno, Jock Sutherland, Tom Osborne and Bobby Bowden rank among the greatest coaches in NCAA history. Miami, Pitt, Nebraska, Syracuse and Penn State all won national championships during years it faced West Virginia.
However, some of our picks weren’t quite so obvious.
Our criteria were simple: the players, coaches and teams had to not only achieve fame but also perform well against West Virginia. That eliminates many great players like Franco Harris, John Mackey, Michael Irvin and Barry Sanders who had exceptional playing careers but had ordinary games against West Virginia.
Is this a definitive list of the very best players, coaches and teams West Virginia has faced? Probably not. We’re sure you’ll come up with many more. So without further delay, let the arguing begin!
50 Greatest Players: 50-26
West Virginia certainly did its part in helping Joe Morris become Syracuse’s all-time leading rusher. Morris antagonized the Mountaineers for three years, running for 166 yards in 1979, 192 yards in 1980 and 168 yards and a pair of touchdowns as a senior in 1981. That’s 526 yards in three games.
Later a well-known all-pro defensive back with the Dallas Cowboys, Mel Renfro was an All-American halfback for the Oregon Ducks in 1962. He helped Oregon to a 35-0 victory over WVU in 1963 by accounting for 102 all-purpose yards and a touchdown. And after the Ducks scored touchdowns – which happened quite a bit in '63 -- Renfro also kicked the conversions.
Randy Moss is no stranger to West Virginia having grown up in Belle, W.Va. After trying Notre Dame and then Florida State, Moss settled at Marshall and had a record-breaking career with the Herd. In 1997 in his only game against West Virginia, Moss showcased his immense talents by catching seven passes for 85 yards and a touchdown in Marshall’s 42-31 loss to the Mountaineers. He has since become one of pro football’s top wide receivers.
It’s no wonder West Virginia couldn’t beat Maryland with players like Shawne Merriman running around on the Terp defense from 2002-04. The Upper Marlboro, Md., resident played a part in three straight victories over West Virginia in 2002 and 2003, producing 17 tackles, four tackles for losses and a pair of sacks. Today he is one of the NFL’s top pass rushers.
This almost-Mountaineer completed 19 of 36 passes for 211 yards and a pair of touchdowns in a 20-3 Miami victory against West Virginia in 1983. Kosar went on to lead the Hurricanes to their first national title that season, beating Nebraska in the 1984 Orange Bowl.
Long before Art Monk was setting records in the NFL with the Washington Commanders he was making his mark as a receiver for Syracuse. Against West Virginia in a 28-14 Orangemen victory in 1979, Monk caught three passes for 93 yards and a touchdown. His NFL career reception record was eventually eclipsed by Jerry Rice.
Penn State coach Joe Paterno once said of Ted Kwalick, “He’s what God had in mind when he made a football player.” West Virginia thought so much of Kwalick that they double and tripled-teamed him at the expense of others like running back Charlie Pittman. The day after Penn State beat West Virginia 21-14 in 1967, Kwalick got married. Now that’s Joe Paterno’s kind of player.
Calvin Johnson put on a clinic for NFL scouts against West Virginia at the 2007 Toyota Gator Bowl, catching nine passes for 186 yards and a pair of touchdowns. He was the second overall player selected in the 2007 NFL draft by the Detroit Lions.
West Virginia got a preview of the all-pro running career of Edgerrin James in 1998 when he ran for 162 yards in helping the Hurricanes to a 34-31 victory over the Mountaineers in Morgantown. James has become a 1,000-yard rusher with both the Colts and now the Cardinals.
Bruce Clark won the Lombardi Award in 1978 as college football’s top defensive lineman. He helped form an impenetrable wall for Penn State that led to 49-21 and 31-6 victories over West Virginia in 1978 and 1979. Clark was a No. 1 draft pick by the Green Bay Packers in 1980.
Marvin Harrison owns the Syracuse record for the longest touchdown catch of 96 yards against West Virginia in 1995. Harrison finished that game catching nine passes for 213 yards and he continues to catch passes today as an all-pro receiver for the Indianapolis Colts.
The Pahokee, Fla. native played in the shadow of Hugh Green at Pitt before going on to earn six pro bowl trips in the NFL with the Saints and 49ers. In a 1980 win over West Virginia, Jackson, Green and Co. limited the Mountaineers to just 177 yards of offense. Jackson and Green made up one of the most formidable defenses in NCAA history.
The extraordinarily talented Mike Reid was a unanimous All-American; an Outland Trophy and Maxwell Award winner in 1969 for Penn State. He led a dominant ‘69 Nittany Lion defense with 89 tackles on the way to a perfect 11-0 season and an Orange Bowl victory. Reid played five seasons in the NFL with the Cincinnati Bengals before choosing to focus on a country music career.
West Virginia got an unpleasant dose of southern style football in the 1954 Sugar Bowl against Georgia Tech. Pepper Rodgers jump-passed his way to a 42-19 Yellow Jacket victory, completing 16 of his 26 aerials for 195 yards and three touchdowns.
A two-time NCAA heavyweight wrestling champion, Jim Nance was no lightweight on the football field either. Bridging the gap between Ernie Davis and Floyd Little, Nance ran for 163 yards in Syracuse’s 28-27 upset loss to West Virginia in 1964. The Orangemen had already accepted a bid to play in the Cotton Bowl before the West Virginia game in Morgantown.
The first in a long line of great Penn State tailbacks, Lenny Moore gave West Virginia fits in the mid 1950s. He ran for 139 yards and a touchdown in 1954 and followed that up with a 17-carry, 131-yard performance in 1955. Moore later had a distinguished career in professional football with the Baltimore Colts.
Boston University’s first All-American football player showed his passing touch against West Virginia in 1949, firing three TD passes and running for another in Boston’s stunning 52-20 victory over the Mountaineers. A year after setting the school record for touchdown passes, Agganis left school to join the Marine Corps. The college football hall of famer later briefly played for the Boston Red Sox before dying tragically of a pulmonary embolism at age 26 in 1955.
Penn State’s two-way end Dave Robinson earned college football player of the year honors by the Newark Athletic Club in 1962. Robinson keyed a Penn State defense that limited West Virginia to just a pair of touchdowns in 1961 and 1962. A first-round draft pick of the Green Bay Packers, Robinson was a three-time all-pro and MVP of the 1967 Pro Bowl.
Scrambling Terry Baker was the second of three straight Heisman Trophy winners West Virginia faced from 1961-63. Baker helped his Heisman cause in 1962 with a 177-yard, three-TD performance against the Mountaineers on the way to a 51-22 Beaver victory. He was also a point guard on the Oregon State basketball team that reached the Final Four in 1963.
West Virginia fans can back up the claim made by many faithful Detroit Lion supporters that Matt Millen was a much better football player than he is a football executive. Millen spent three years ruining West Virginia coach Frank Cignetti’s afternoons from 1977-79. The All-American defensive tackle went on to earn four Super Bowl rings in the NFL with the Raiders and the 49ers.
Jerome Brown was pro football’s top defensive lineman before tragically dying in an automobile accident at age 27 in 1992. Brown is most known for leading a walkout at the 1987 Fiesta Bowl dinner against Penn State famously saying, “Did the Japanese sit down and have dinner with Pearl Harbor before they bombed them?” Three months earlier Brown and his Miami teammates were bombing West Virginia, 58-14 in Morgantown.
A two-time consensus All-American, Bill Fralic was also a two-time Heisman Trophy finalist – a rarity for offensive linemen. College football’s most dominant blocker of his time paved the way to three straight Panther bowl appearances in 1982, 1983 and 1984. The No. 2 overall player selected in the 1985 NFL draft, Fralic was a member of the NFL all-decade team for the 1980s.
You’ve got to be a pretty good running back to keep Barry Sanders on the sidelines and that’s exactly what Thurman Thomas was able to do in 1987. In the 1987 Sun Bowl, West Virginia managed to hold Thomas to 157 yards and four touchdowns in Oklahoma State’s 35-33 triumph.
The one-time snuff pitch-man first began rubbing out football players at Maryland where he won the Outland Trophy in 1974. Once a fullback, White moved to defensive tackle under new Maryland coach Jerry Claiborne in 1973. In his very first game at defensive tackle against West Virginia, a White-led Terp defense permitted less than 250 yards of offense and only eight first downs in a 20-13 loss to the Mountaineers. The game’s deciding play was a last-second Danny Buggs punt return for a touchdown.
Outspoken Warren Sapp won the Bronko Nagurski, Chuck Bednarik and Lombardi Award as college football’s top defensive lineman in 1994. Sapp’s dominant play in the middle led to a 38-6 Hurricane victory over West Virginia in 1994. He went on to earn seven trips to the Pro Bowl and was the 1999 NFL defensive player of the year.
On Wednesday: 25-1
The List: Greatest Players 25-1 LINK
By John Antonik for MSNsportsNET.com
July 4, 2007
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. -- We gave you our first 25 players on Monday, now here is the cream of the crop. Larry Csonka and Floyd Little had pretty good games against WVU -- in the same years -- and the closest anyone from West Virginia ever got to Tony Dorsett was on his recruiting trip to Morgantown. But were they the best to face WVU? | Who is No. 1 on your list? Feedback
50 Greatest Players: 25-1
The one-time Kent State transfer eventually found his niche blocking for Dan Marino at Pitt, where he won the Outland Trophy as college football’s top offensive lineman in 1980. May took part in three West Virginia beatings, including a 52-7 thumping in 1978. The 13-year pro played in one Pro Bowl in 1988.
West Virginia coaches had an opportunity to recruit Donovan McNabb out of Chicago’s Mount Carmel High School but instead took a pass on him. McNabb passed for 308 yards and accounted for 354 yards of total offense in a 1995 Syracuse triumph over West Virginia, and he threw six TD passes in games against the Mountaineers in 1997 and 1998. Today McNabb is one of the top quarterbacks in the NFL for the Philadelphia Eagles.
Lydell Mitchell managed impressive numbers despite sharing a crowded Penn State backfield that included Charlie Pittman in 1969 and later Franco Harris in 1970 and 1971. Mitchell caught two passes for 76 yards and ran for a TD against WVU in 1969, had a 13-carry, 93-yard performance against the Mountaineers in 1970 and added a 128-yard, two-TD effort in 1971. Penn State won all three games by scores of 20-0, 42-8 and 35-7.
Ray Lewis, the biggest and baddest linebacker in the NFL, first terrorized ball carriers at Miami from 1993-95. The two-time All-American had a 15-tackle performance against West Virginia in a 1995 Miami victory before moving on to an all-pro career with the Baltimore Ravens where he twice earned NFL defensive player of the year honors.
A lot of the misery West Virginia fans have had with Penn State had its root in players like Jack Ham, who Ham-sandwiched West Virginia running backs for three seasons from 1968-70. The lightly recruited Johnston, Pa. native earned All-America honors as a senior in 1970 before becoming a key member of the Pittsburgh Steelers’ famed “Steel Curtain” defense in the 1970s.
Dan Marino only played two full games against West Virginia, but he was spectacular in both. As a freshman in 1979, Marino threw for 232 yards and a touchdown to lead Pitt to a 24-17 victory over the Mountaineers in the final game at old Mountaineer Field. Three years later in 1982, Marino engineered a late touchdown drive to lift Pitt to a 16-13 victory in one of the most exciting games in Backyard Brawl history.
Defensive end Bruce Smith’s rare blend of size, speed and athleticism made him college football’s dominant defensive lineman of the early 1980s. Smith had a sack and a pair of tackles for losses in a 1983 loss to West Virginia, and helped the Tech defense limit WVU to 240 yards of offense in a 1984 loss to the Mountaineers. The 1985 Outland Trophy winner went on to become the most prolific sacker in NFL history.
Chris Spielman first caught the attention of the country when his picture was on the front of a Wheaties box while still playing at Massillon High School. He only added to his legend at Ohio State. Spielman produced a season-high 19 tackles and picked off two passes against West Virginia in a 24-3 victory over the Mountaineers in 1987. He won the Lombardi Award as college football’s top linebacker before being taken in the first round of the 1988 NFL draft by the Detroit Lions.
Any conceivable way to score a touchdown Charlie Pittman did it against West Virginia from 1967-69. Pittman ran for 137 yards and scored a TD in Penn State’s 1967 victory over the Mountaineers, but it was his 83-yard second-half kickoff return that proved to be the deciding score in one of the closest WVU-Penn State games in more than two decades. In 1968, Pittman ran for 125 yards and a touchdown against WVU before having a 13-carry, 84-yard, one-TD performance against the Mountaineers in 1969. Pittman played briefly in the NFL with the St. Louis Cardinals.
Glenn Davis was one part of Army’s famous “Touchdown Twins” backfield along with Doc Blanchard. The 5-foot-9-inch, 170-pounder won the Heisman Trophy in 1946, doing so by helping the Cadets knock off West Virginia 19-0 along the way. Army coach Red Blaik thought so much of the Mountaineers that he chose not to attend the game and instead scouted the following week’s opponent.
West Virginia football fans in 1986 got a brief glimpse of Heisman Trophy winner Vinny Testaverde before he retired to the sidelines with Miami well in control of the game. The Hurricanes were so good that an exasperated WVU coach Don Nehlen asked his defensive coordinator Dennis Brown earlier that week if the Mountaineers had any chance of beating Miami. “Yeah,” replied Brown, “if your offense can get us 60.” Brown was right: Testaverde and Co. only put 58 points on the board in a 44-point victory.
Pass-rusher extraordinaire Hugh Green came the closest of any defensive player to winning the Heisman Trophy, finishing second to South Carolina running back George Rodgers in 1980. He was the Walter Camp national player of the year in 1980 after compiling 441 tackles and 53 sacks during his four-year Panther career. Green showed very little generosity to West Virginia, limiting the Mountaineers to only 204 yards in 1979 and 177 yards in 1980.
Gino Torretta’s Heisman Trophy candidacy was on display against West Virginia in 1992. The senior completed 28 of 40 passes for 363 yards and a pair of touchdowns in Miami’s 35-23 victory over the Mountaineers in the Orange Bowl. Torretta’s only loss as a Hurricane starter came in the national championship game that year against Alabama.
Air did a better job of covering Pitt’s Larry Fitzgerald than West Virginia’s secondary, which was torched for 344 yards and four touchdowns in a pair of games in 2002 and 2003. Fitzgerald, the 2003 Walter Camp player of the year, was also a Heisman Trophy runner up that season. He was the third overall player taken in the 2004 NFL draft by the Arizona Cardinals where he still plays.
A four-touchdown favorite against West Virginia in 1978, Oklahoma covered easily with its 52-10 romp over the Mountaineers in which most of the key Sooner players were out of their shoulder pads and standing on the sidelines before halftime. Among them was Heisman Trophy winner Billy Sims, who clocked in with an eight-carry, 114-yard, one-TD performance before clocking out early.
No quarterback drove college coaches nuts quite like scrambling, 5-foot-9-inch Doug Flutie, whose last-second TD pass to beat Miami in 1984 will forever be immortalized. And while Flutie had great numbers against West Virginia, accounting for 464 yards of total offense in 1983 and throwing for 299 yards in 1984, he could never manage to beat the Mountaineers. That’s why he’s No. 10 instead of No. 1 on this list.
Having Jim Brown No. 9 on any list is almost blasphemous, but the reason he’s No. 9 here is because his numbers against West Virginia were merely ordinary by Jim Brown’s great standards. He accounted for 188 all-purpose yards against the Mountaineers in 1955, and he ran for 165 yards and two touchdowns in a 27-20 loss to West Virginia in 1956. Yeah, ordinary.
Before he was dramatized in the movie Something For Joey, John Cappelletti was terrorizing West Virginia defenders in 1971, 1972 and 1973. As a junior Cappelletti ran for 154 yards in a 28-19 Nittany Lion victory. A year later in ‘73, he scored four touchdowns and ran for 130 yards in a 62-14 romp. Cappelletti ran for more than 1,500 yards his senior season to win the Heisman Trophy. He played nine professional seasons with the Rams and Chargers.
In the mid-1960s, West Virginia had trouble tackling good running backs of all sizes. And while Syracuse teammate Larry Csonka was running people over, Floyd Little chose to run around them. In 1965, Little ran for 196 yards and scored four touchdowns in 41-19 Orange victory over WVU. A year later in 1966, the Mountaineers held Little to just 127 yards in a 34-7 Syracuse triumph. Little took his show to the AFL in 1967 where he was a three-time all-pro runner for the Denver Broncos.
Some argue that Tommie Frazier ranks among the best quarterbacks in college football history and you’ll get no argument here. The Bradenton, Fla. native is the only quarterback since the mid 1950s to lead his team to back-to-back national championships in 1994 and 1995. On the way to his first NCAA title in 1994, Frazier ran for 130 yards in Nebraska’s 31-0 victory over West Virginia in the 1994 Kickoff Classic. Frazier was 33-3 as a starter at Nebraska.
Leukemia robbed what would have been a great professional career for Syracuse Heisman Trophy winner Ernie Davis, who was born and raised in nearby Uniontown, Pa. before moving to New York before high school. Davis enjoyed his trip back to Morgantown in 1960, running 14 times for 125 yards in Syracuse’s 45-0 victory over the Mountaineers. A year earlier during Syracuse’s journey to the 1959 national title, Davis ran nine times for 141 yards and two touchdowns against WVU.
With the exception of Tony Dorsett, no running back has enjoyed more success against West Virginia than Syracuse battering ram Larry Csonka. The Stow, Ohio native ran for 216 yards and scored two touchdowns as a sophomore in 1965 against WVU including 139 in one quarter, and added 145 yards in a 1966 Syracuse win. As a senior in 1967, West Virginia was able to hold Csonka to only 117 yards in Syracuse’s 23-6 victory. Csonka was the first running back drafted in 1968 and was a standout runner for the Miami Dolphins in the NFL.
Based purely on athletic ability, no player West Virginia has faced comes close to matching Michael Vick’s enormous skills. In two seasons at Virginia Tech, Vick took the Hokies to the national championship game his freshman season and then to a Gator Bowl triumph before declaring early for the NFL. As a freshman, Vick kept Tech’s unbeaten regular season alive by engineering a last-minute game-winning drive at West Virginia. A year later in 2000, Vick passed for 233 yards and two touchdowns and accounted for 288 yards of total offense in a 48-20 win over the Mountaineers. In two games, Vick produced 593 yards of offense against WVU.
The closest West Virginia ever came to Tony Dorsett was on his brief campus visit before signing with Pitt in 1973. After that he was gone. Dorsett erupted for 150 yards and three touchdowns his freshman year, produced 145 yards and a touchdown as a sophomore in 1974, had 107 yards in a loss in Morgantown in 1975 and finished his career against West Virginia in 1976 with a 199-yard, three-TD performance on the way to winning the Heisman Trophy and leading Pitt to the national championship. Dorsett continued his hall of fame career with the Dallas Cowboys.
It was the 100-year anniversary of the state of West Virginia and its flagship institution planned on celebrating in style with a new press box and a capacity crowd to witness exciting quarterback Roger Staubach and the No. 9-rated Navy Midshipmen. Staubach took care of the party quickly by dropping a dead cat in the punch bowl, completing 17 of 22 passes for 171 yards and a touchdown before retiring to the sidelines at halftime. Navy won the game 51-7 and made it to the Cotton Bowl where it lost 28-6 to Texas. Staubach won the Heisman Trophy in 1963 completing 66 percent of his passes for more than 1,400 yards. He later distinguished himself in the pro ranks with the Dallas Cowboys.
Missing the cut: John Mackey (Syracuse), Franco Harris (Penn State), Marshall Goldberg (Pitt), Michael Irvin (Miami), Dennis Harrah (Miami), Curtis Martin (Pitt), Carroll Dale (Virginia Tech), Dan Morgan (Miami), Roy Jefferson (Utah), Tim Green (Syracuse), Chris Doleman (Pitt), Bill Romanowski (Boston College), Bennie Blades (Miami), Doc Blanchard (Army), Jimbo Covert (Pitt), Mike Ditka (Pitt), Joe Schmidt (Pitt), Keith Dorney (Penn State), Stan Jones (Maryland), Frank Loria (Virginia Tech), Richie Lucas (Penn State), Dennis Onkotz (Penn State), Barry Sanders (Oklahoma State), Chris Zorich (Notre Dame), Chester McGlockton (Clemson), Willis McGahee (Miami), Bryant McKinnie (Miami), Lawrence McCutcheon (Colorado State), Jesse Arnelle (Penn State), Curt Warner (Penn State) and Mike Esposito (Boston College).