Английская Википедия:2019 West Virginia Mountaineers football team

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Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Use mdy dates Шаблон:Infobox college sports team season Шаблон:2019 Big 12 football standings

The 2019 West Virginia Mountaineers football team represented West Virginia University during the 2019 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Mountaineers played their home games at the Mountaineer Field at Milan Puskar Stadium, in Morgantown, West Virginia, and competed in the Big 12 Conference. They were led by first-year head coach Neal Brown, who previously coached at Troy University. They finished the season 5–7, 3–6 in Big 12 play to finish in a tie for seventh place.

Preseason

Big 12 media poll

The 2019 Big 12 media days were held July 15–16, 2019 in Frisco, Texas. In the Big 12 preseason media poll, West Virginia was predicted to finish in eighth in the standings.[1]

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Big 12 media poll
1 Oklahoma 761 (68)
2 Texas 696 (9)
3 Iowa State 589
4 TCU 474
5 Oklahoma State 460
6 Baylor 453
7 Texas Tech 281
8 West Virginia 241
9 Kansas State 191
10 Kansas 89

Preseason All-Big 12 teams

To be released

Schedule

Шаблон:CFB schedule [2]

Personnel

Coaching staff

  • Head coach
Neal Brown
  • Assistant coaches
Jahmile AddaeDefensive Backs
Xavier Dye – Wide Receivers
Vic KoenningDefensive Coordinator
Jordan Lesley – Defensive Line
Matt Moore – Co-Offensive Coordinator, Offensive Line
Al Pogue – Outside Linebackers
Sean Reagan – Quarterbacks
Chad Scott – Co-Offensive Coordinator, Running Backs
Blake Seiler – Inside Linebackers
Travis TrickettTight Ends, Inside Receivers

Game summaries

James Madison

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At Missouri

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NC State

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At Kansas

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West Virginia was expected to take advantage of observing the Jayhawks offensive performance the prior week where Kansas had beaten Boston College.[3] When the game rolled around, the Jayhawk offense made two specific mistakes that impacted the game: A lost fumble and a fourth quarter interception. Kansas averaged 7.4 yards per play on offense. It also appeared that KU kicker Liam Jones faked an injury after a field goal to make way for Jacob Borcila to "replace" him at the next kickoff to execute an onside kick—which they recovered but then lost due to a penalty. West Virginia won the game 29-24.[4]

Texas

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Iowa State

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At Oklahoma

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At Baylor

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Texas Tech

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At Kansas State

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West Virginia's Jarret Doege started at quarterback and threw for 234 yards and three touchdowns. This was the first start at West Virginia for Doege who transferred from Bowling Green, as Austin Kendall had been the starting quarterback all season for the Mountaineers. Doege's biggest throw was a 50-yard touchdown pass on third-and-22 in the fourth quarter to take the lead.[5]

Kansas State started strong, holding West Virginia to "three-and-out" and then Skylar Thompson threw a 68-yard touchdown pass on their first play from scrimmage. Thompson ended up 24 of 39 for 299 yards passing with a touchdown but also gave up two interceptions. On the ground, the Wildcats ran the ball 32 times but averaged only 3.2 yards per attempt.[5]

West Virginia cornerback Hakeem Bailey intercepted Skylar Thompson’s pass toward the end zone in the closing seconds of the game. The Mountaineers left Manhattan with a 24-20 upset of the Wildcats.[5]

Oklahoma State

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At TCU

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Players drafted into the NFL

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5 152 Kenny Robinson S Carolina Panthers
5 153 Colton McKivitz OT San Francisco 49ers

References

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Шаблон:West Virginia Mountaineers football navbox