State Senator Wants to Mandate WVU-Marshall Series

A state senator wants to force the men’s basketball teams from Marshall and West Virginia to play each other every year.

Cabell County Democratic Sen. Mike Woelfel says he plans to introduce a bill requiring WVU and Marshall to meet once each season if school administrators can’t first reach an agreement.

Marshall and WVU have met every year since 1978, including in Charleston since 1992. WVU has won five straight meetings and nine of the last 10, including an 86-68 win last month.

Woelfel noted that he’s both a Marshall alumnus and a graduate of WVU’s law school.

Marshall Basketball Assistant Arrested

Marshall men’s basketball assistant coach Chris Duhon has been suspended for an undisclosed violation of athletic department rules and policies.

 Marshall’s athletic department announced Duhon’s suspension Monday and said it won’t comment further.

Records at the Western Regional Jail in Barboursville show the 33-year-old Duhon was arrested earlier Monday on a charge of aggravated driving under the influence and was released from the jail on bond. Jail records didn’t indicate whether Duhon has an attorney.

Duhon was arrested in Putnam County, but details were unavailable. Putnam County Sheriff Steve Deweese didn’t immediately return a telephone message Monday.

Duhon was hired by Marshall basketball coach Dan D’Antoni last year. Duhon played in the NBA for nine seasons and was a member of Duke’s 2001 national championship team. 

Son of Crash Victim to Speak at Marshall Memorial Serivce

A Kentucky resident whose father was among the victims of the 1970 Marshall University plane crash that killed 75 people will speak at a memorial…

A Kentucky resident whose father was among the victims of the 1970 Marshall University plane crash that killed 75 people will speak at a memorial service.

Stephen Ward will speak on Nov. 14 at the Marshall Memorial Student Center plaza in Huntington.

His father, Parker Ward, was a Marshall booster and owned a Huntington car dealership. He was on the Marshall team plane that was returning from a game at East Carolina when it crashed just short of Tri-State Airport near Huntington on Nov. 14, 1970.

The crash killed 75 people, including 36 football players in the worst sports disaster in U.S. history.

Stephen Ward was 5 at the time of the crash. He now lives in Louisville, Kentucky.

State Colleges Tip-Off Basketball Season

College basketball season has begun in West Virginia.

The West Virginia University men’s team tips off its season in exhibition play Friday night against Glenville State. Last year, the Mountaineers made a run to the Sweet 16 of the NCAA Tournament. It was the most successful season since an appearance in the final four in 2009. WVU Head Coach Bob Huggins said the key to last year was adopting a full-court press on defense, where defenders guard their player all over the floor. 

“I was tired of losing was the biggest thing. I think sometimes it’s good to do something different and I kind of looked around the league and nobody played that way and so it kind of gives you an advantage to a degree when you do something that other people don’t do,” Huggins said.

The West Virginia women’s program finished last year with a loss in the women’s National Invitational Tournament Championship game to UCLA. The NIT tournament is considered the second in prestige behind the NCAA Tournament. The WVU women have already knocked off Shepherd in their exhibition opener on Halloween. Head Coach Mike Carey said they’ll try to be more aggressive this year, maybe press more like the men.

“We want to, we’re working on some things this year that we didn’t do the last couple of years to be honest with you because we feel we’re a little bit deeper especially on the perimeter, because we’re not really big inside that we feel we have to defend out on the perimeter and take some time off the clock and not just let people bring it to half court and start running their offense,” Carey said.

The Marshall men’s basketball team enters the second season of the Dan D’Antoni era with almost an entire new unit of players. Marshall finished last year 11-21, but won five of their last nine regular-season games. They open exhibition play next Thursday against Bluefield State. Coach D’Antoni said he thinks the new roster can better handle his up-tempo style. 

“We’ve overhauled our team, 11 new faces, two seniors, three juniors and a lot of underclassmen,” D’Antoni said. “I think this ball club has the potential to reach our goals. And they’re working hard on the floor to give you a more exciting brand of basketball that has a chance to advance in the NCAA.”

A year after making its first postseason appearance in the Women’s Basketball Invitational, the Marshall women’s team has been picked to finish 10th in a Conference USA poll. The postseason appearance was the first since an NCAA Tournament appearance in 1997. Head Coach Matt Daniel said it’s an extremely young roster. 

“I’m really excited about our team, we’re really young. We have 16 on the roster, 14 or 15 will be available,” Daniel said. “Of our 15 or 14 that are available, 10 of them didn’t play Division I basketball last year so we’re picked young, I don’t know what we have we’re so young. I can tell you I really like our team and the people we have on our roster.”

In the Mountain East Conference, West Liberty University has dominant teams in both men’s and women’s basketball. The men are preseason number 3 in the NCAA Division II Preseason Top 25 poll. While the West Liberty Women are picked 12 in the preseason poll. 

Marshall Names Gilbert New President

The Marshall University Board of Governors today named Mississippi State University Provost Jerome A. “Jerry” Gilbert the 37th president of Marshall University. Gilbert will assume the presidency in January.

Earlier this month, the Presidential Search Committee announced Gilbert as one of three finalists for the position following a national search. All three candidates participated in open forums last week with students, faculty, staff and members of the community, and the decision to hire Gilbert was made yesterday by the Board of Governors in executive session.

Gilbert’s appointment and contract will require final approval from the West Virginia Higher Education Policy Commission.

A Mississippi native with a background in biomedical engineering, Gilbert has served since 2010 as provost and executive vice president of Mississippi State. Prior to that, he was the university’s associate provost and associate vice president for academic affairs for six years. He has held various administrative and faculty positions at Mississippi State, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and North Carolina State University.

He has a bachelor’s degree in biological engineering from Mississippi State and a doctorate in biomedical engineering from Duke University. An event is being planned to introduce Gilbert to the community.  

Police Use Stun Gun on Suspect During Campus Disturbance

Police have arrested a man who officers say caused a disturbance on the Marshall University campus while possibly intoxicated.

WSAZ-TV of Huntington reports that students outside residence halls told police a young man approached them on Tuesday night, threatening to kill them. One student says the suspect bit his finger.

Campus police say the suspect ran after a fight broke out. He was subdued with a stun gun by university officers.

Campus police called for assistance from West Virginia State Police troopers.

Troopers say the suspect was taken to the hospital to determine whether the man had taken any drugs. The suspect’s name has not been released.

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