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. 

West Liberty University Selects New President

West Liberty University announced the selection of a new president this week. Dr. Stephen Greiner is currently the president of Hazard Community and Technical College in Kentucky, but he will take over as president at West Liberty in January.

Greiner originally hails from Weirton, West Virginia. In fact it was his sister, a Northern Panhandle area resident and West Liberty alumna, who brought the presidential search to his attention. Greiner says he wasn’t interested at first.

“Then I said, why wouldn’t I want to be here? This was the very first college campus I ever visited and set foot on. Maybe it’s time I serve the area where I grew up,” Greiner said during a meet-and-greet with community members, staff, faculty and students on campus.

The West Liberty Board of Governors selected Greiner unanimously. He has 14 years’ experience as a college president and 19 years as a professor. West Liberty professor Dr. Peter Staffel says he and many of the other faculty applaud the choice.

“We were nervous as a faculty that we had a short time to do this search and advertise it,” Staffel said. “The final four that they brought to us, each would have been a good president, I think, but each brought very different things and he brought the most. Without question I think he was the best candidate.”

Greiner steps into a position fraught with financial challenges but he says it’s the same reality all over the country.

“We’re seeing reduced state funding all around. I’m experiencing the same thing right now. But when you approach funding as a team and you involve everyone, it’s amazing the ideas employees, faculty and students will come up with.”

Greiner was selected from a pool of 40 applicants during a search that began seven months ago.

West Liberty Committee Names 2 Finalists for President's Job

A search committee has named two higher education officials from Kentucky and Georgia as the finalists for the president's job at West Liberty…

A search committee has named two higher education officials from Kentucky and Georgia as the finalists for the president’s job at West Liberty University.

The West Liberty University Presidential Search Committee says it recommended Ron Dempsey and Stephen Greiner to the school’s Board of Governors on Wednesday.

Dempsey is vice president for university advancement at Southern Polytechnic State University in Marietta, Georgia. Greiner is president and CEO of Hazard Community and Technical College in Hazard, Kentucky.

Denpsey and Greiner will meet on Oct. 29 with the Board of Governors and West Virginia Higher Education Policy Commission chancellor Paul Hill. A final selection is expected following these interviews.

Former West Liberty president Robin Capehart resigned in March amid allegations of ethics violations, which he later settled.

Presidential Candidates to Visit West Liberty for Interviews

West Liberty University's presidential search committee plans on-campus interviews with the finalists later this month.West Liberty spokeswoman Maureen…

West Liberty University’s presidential search committee plans on-campus interviews with the finalists later this month.

West Liberty spokeswoman Maureen Zambito tells The Intelligencer and Wheeling News-Register that three to five finalists will be given an opportunity to introduce themselves to the campus community.

The finalists haven’t been identified.

The search committee will make its recommendation to the university’s board of governors. The board is expected to name a new president in mid-October.

Former president Robin Capehart resigned in March amid allegations of ethics violations. Capehart agreed in June to pay a $5,000 fine and $5,000 in costs to settle an ethics complaint alleging he asked a university employee to work for his film company.

Former West Liberty President Settles Ethics Complaint

Former West Liberty University President Robin Capehart has agreed to pay $10,000 to settle a state ethics complaint regarding his film company.The West…

Former West Liberty University President Robin Capehart has agreed to pay $10,000 to settle a state ethics complaint regarding his film company.

The West Virginia Ethics Commission released the agreement with Capehart on Thursday.

Capehart resigned in March following the ethics complaint and a vote of no confidence by the university’s faculty senate.

In the agreement, Capehart admitted soliciting private business from a part-time university employee. The ethics commission says Kristin Seibert worked as a university consultant at the same time she was managing Capehart’s company Flyover Films.

Under the agreement, Capehart will pay a $5,000 fine plus $5,000 in costs.

Flyover Films produced the 2011 movie “Doughboy.”

West Liberty Faculty Votes No Confidence in Administrator

West Liberty University’s Faculty Senate has voted no confidence in another administrator.

The Intelligencer and Wheeling News-Register reports the Faculty Senate approved the no confidence vote in chief financial officer Jack Wright on Wednesday during a closed meeting.

Faculty Senate chairwoman Linda Cowan confirmed the vote to the newspaper. She says several factors played a role in the decision, including a lack of communication about a plan to close three buildings on campus.

Wright declined to comment on the vote.

West Liberty announced Wednesday that the buildings will remain open for the 2015-2016 academic year.

The Faculty Senate voted no confidence in former President Robin Capehart in early March. Capehart later resigned amid an ethics investigation.

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