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Former good articleWest Virginia Mountaineers football was one of the Sports and recreation good articles, but it has been removed from the list. There are suggestions below for improving the article to meet the good article criteria. Once these issues have been addressed, the article can be renominated. Editors may also seek a reassessment of the decision if they believe there was a mistake.
Article milestones
DateProcessResult
May 27, 2012Good article nomineeListed
May 30, 2021Good article reassessmentDelisted
Current status: Delisted good article

Very special thanks to Al and Sue Johnson

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Several of the images on this page (most notably in the "Golden era (2001-present)" passage of this page's History section) came courtesy of the late Mr. Al Johnson of Bruceton Mills, WV. As his photos demonstrate, Al had a profound passion for photography and for West Virginia Mountaineer football. His surviving wife Sue was kind enough to release his photos for the enjoyment of all readers and visitors of this page. It is our honor to commemorate Mr. Johnson in presenting his work here and to carry on his legacy in utilizing his photos. You can visit their website at http://www.alandsuejohnson.com. Thank you, Al and Sue! Swcrowemsg 03:42, 19 December 2011 (UTC)[reply]

Notable games bias

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Just noticed looking through your notable games section that there are no losses. But I happen to know that the 1989 Fiesta bowl would still be a notable game for this program, as it was the only time WV ever played in a national title game. Also, there are no citations for these games. For NPOV, there should be some independently verifiable sources from the main stream media that would cite these games as significant/notable. Tedmoseby (talk) 17:35, 19 July 2008 (UTC)[reply]

I am conducting an extensive overhaul of this page, and will definitely be including notable defeats in the records. Thank you for bringing this to our attention. Swcrowe (talk) 06:18, 3 December 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Excellent job updating the notable games with some memorable Mountaineer losses. It would be tough to argue that it's still biased.--Shredder2012 (talk) 05:48, 14 December 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks, appreciate it! Obviously the list isn't a comprehensive one and will include more games as time goes on (and as more research is conducted on earlier games in the program's history), but it's a start. Also, please don't hesitate to add any games that you might view as significant to WVU's football history. Just make sure that you provide a solid rationale for doing so, that way we can avoid any questions of bias in the future. Swcrowe (talk) 21:53, 14 December 2011 (UTC)[reply]
This section of the article has been given its own Wikipedia page: List of West Virginia Mountaineers significant football games. Swcrowemessage 21:57, 27 May 2012 (UTC)[reply]

Coaching gap?

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In the coaches section, there's a multi-year gap between Art Lewis (1950–1959) and Jim Carlen (1966–1969). Can someone either fix or explain that in the article? AUTiger » talk 04:30, 4 May 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Thank you for bringing this to our attention. The problem has been corrected (Gene Corum served as head coach between the Lewis and Carlen tenures). If there are any other discrepancies on the page, please don't hesitate to let us know. Swcrowe (talk) 21:55, 14 December 2011 (UTC)[reply]

Overhaul

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I am conducting an extensive overhaul to this page in order to enhance its readability, accuracy, and aesthetic value. Any contributions are more than appreciated. However, please be sure to properly cite any information and/or images provided. Swcrowe (talk) 22:05, 3 December 2011 (UTC)[reply]

Big East or Big 12

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This is to reach a consensus on this. Should the current conference affiliation, say Big East? The truth is actually they are in the Big East until July 1, regardless of them being on the Big 12 schedule or not. I would like other opinions, if no luck here I will try the college football project page.--Rockchalk717 (talk) 02:48, 13 April 2012 (UTC)[reply]

The West Virginia Mountaineers football program will never play another down of Big East football. The fact that the official conference change doesn't take place until July 1 is completely irrelevant. WVU is a Big 12 program. You're starting an editing war over something so pedantic and ridiculous. For example, the Missouri Tigers football page has that program listed as being in the SEC, and that change also doesn't take place until July. The Big 12 Conference Football Navbox has also been edited accordingly, without a word of debate from anyone involved. Again, there is no reason to maintain the conference affiliation as "Big East". It serves no purpose except to potentially confuse readers. However, in an attempt to reach a compromise, I edited the conference affiliation to include "as of July 1, 2012". I also welcome a discussion over this, regardless of how academic I believe it to be. Swcrowemsg 03:14, 13 April 2012 (UTC)[reply]
Let me improve on it. Put Big East, then a line break, then the not about the Big 12. I know they will never play again in the Big East but Wikipedia is about accuracy and what is official and even though West Virginia football is over until September, they are still officially in the Big East until July 1st.--Rockchalk717 (talk) 03:06, 14 April 2012 (UTC)[reply]
So much for that, it didn't work. If you want to accept it, feel free to give it a try. I have changed it "beginning July 1, 2012" though--Rockchalk717 (talk) 03:12, 14 April 2012 (UTC)[reply]
I think that will work...no reason to keep arguing about it. Glad we were able to reach a compromise. Cheers! Swcrowemessage 04:18, 14 April 2012 (UTC)[reply]

GA Review

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This review is transcluded from Talk:West Virginia Mountaineers football/GA1. The edit link for this section can be used to add comments to the review.

Reviewer: Green-eyed girl (talk · contribs) 01:22, 22 May 2012 (UTC)[reply]

I'm not terribly active on Wikipedia any longer, but I had to dive in and take the review for this article. Did the nominator commit some sort of offense? Because otherwise waiting nearly four months for a review is downright inexcusable. Especially when other article reviews are initiated mere hours after the nomination goes through. That's just insulting to this nominator.

Review to follow. Green-eyed girl (Talk · Contribs) 01:22, 22 May 2012 (UTC)[reply]

Very large, detailed article. Did this also perhaps repel reviewers? :S I will go section-by-section

Lead
  • West Virginia University (colloquially referred to as "WVU") Wikipedia doesn't do colloquial. Just change "colloquially" to "also" and it should be fine, though, considering WVU is a perfectly reasonable abbreviation. If headed to FAC (I always keep that in the back of my mind as a possible eventuality), reviewers there may ask you to strike this, or to consistently favor usage of one or the other ("West Virginia" or "WVU") in the body text, but I won't.
  • The Mountaineers will join the Big 12 Conference as of July 1, 2012. This sucks, and I hate it, too, but this is a WP:CRYSTAL violation. You are reporting as fact an unknown and unknowable future. Yes - I know that the move is widely reported and it would probably take the complete obliteration of the athletic program for it not to happen, but the fact is we don't yet know that it has happened. So this needs to be are scheduled to join the Big 12 Conference
  • West Virginia is the 14th winningest Is "winningest" a word? (My Firefox doesn't seem to think so) If it is, this still needs to be hyphenated (second-best, third-fastest, etc...)
  • Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) Do this the first time you use the FBS abbreviation - not the second.
  • West Virginia has produced one undefeated season in its history, going 10-0-1 in 1922 Undefeated means no losses and no ties. If you have no losses along with ties, you are unbeaten, not undefeated.
  • West Virginia is one of only three FBS programs to have won at least nine games in each of the past seven seasons Filed again under the heading of "I know it sucks and I hate it too," but this statement needs to be made timeless. The textbook way of doing that is with an "As of" clause. The idea behind it being if the statement becomes untrue at some point in the future, it will still be accurate with the "as of" wording. Yes, I know you'll be there to update it the second it happens to no longer be true, but them's the rules, unfortunately. Green-eyed girl (Talk · Contribs) 02:44, 23 May 2012 (UTC)[reply]
Early years (1891–1920)
  • Repeated usage of humble beginning. Definitely revise at least one, and I'd suggest revising both as this reads extremely informal and 'colloquial.'
  • The 1904 season may well be the most intriguing in Mountaineer history, as WVU posted a 6-3 overall record despite losing to Penn State, Pitt, and Michigan by a combined score of 217-0.[14] There's gotta be a non-POV way of getting this point across. [14] is simply an historical schedule without any textual prose, so 'intriguing' is indeed unsupported. And is it really so intriguing, anyway? Evidently those three teams were das uberpowerhouses. That's what I gather from it, anyway.
  • The 1908-20 period saw Only use the word "saw" with things that have eyes. Revise.
  • Lueder's Mountaineers produced a 17-13-3 record In the lead, an endash is used for won/lost records. I'm not sure which is correct (I suspect the endash), but consistency is paramount.

Green-eyed girl (Talk · Contribs) 05:14, 23 May 2012 (UTC)[reply]

First glimpses of success (1921–49)
  • The 1920s were indeed "roaring" for the Mountaineers Much too informal
  • Hey, proper use of 'unbeaten' here. Good! ;p
  • Offensive tackle Russell Meredith garner first-team All-American honors. Li'l typo here.
  • Spears produced an impressive 30–6–3 record with the Mountaineers.[17] [17] is again just rote statistics, so 'impressive' is a POV statement.
  • who took over the coaching reigns The expression is take over the reins (although "free reign" is indeed that, with the G. English is fun, no?)
  • a 1923 All-American End Try to avoid consecutive wikilinks like this. They make it appear to the reader that 1923 All-American End is the linked term. I'd revise to something like an end who gained All-American status with the Mountaineers in 1923 wikilinking the terms as appropriate.
  • Similarly with offensive tackle Joe Stydahar. How about Joe Stydahar, an offensive tackle.
  • Running back Harry Clarke paved the way for the Mountaineers that season What does "paved the way" mean? Led the way? Why not just say that?
From regional to national (1950–69)
  • Known by his peers as an exceptional recruiter and by his players as a "father figure," Why the scare quotes?
  • Lewis's Mountaineer teams held true to form, experiencing its most consistent success during the 1950s as it ever had previously. This sentence is a little jarring. You start out with a plural subject Mountaineer teams but then the possessive adjective in the second clause is singular its.
  • After forgettable campaigns in 1950 and '51, the 1952 season brought West Virginia its first winning season since 1948. Abbreviating '51 looks a little informal, and the season didn't bring West Virginia anything - the players and, by extension, the team did. Similar sort of deal with the "saw" wordage.
  • When West Virginia defeated Pitt 17-7 to open the 1953 season, the program was off an running. ?? I cannot make sense of this statement.
  • the Mountaineers finished with a 8–2 record, its first SoCon championship, Plural, then singular again.
  • The 1954 edition of the Mountaineers also finished the regular season with a 8–1 mark, losing its only game If you rectify the above by changing its to their, you should do the same here as well. If you rectify the above by changing "the Mountaineers" to "West Virginia" or "WVU," then no revision is needed with this sentence as it will flow naturally (if a bit awkwardly).
  • Despite winning its second consecutive SoCon title, and earning a #12 ranking in the AP Poll, the Mountaineers Seriously, is this a way people write? Because it is jarring as hell as I read it.
  • Despite its disappointing finish, 1955 Mountaineer team produced two All-American offensive linemen Just want to point out that this sentence comes across absolutely fine.
  • VMI earned the title with a 9–0–1 overall record and 6-0 Again, dash consistency, especially evident when the two usages are this close together.
  • As irony would have it, the 1958 season brought the Mountaineers its first losing season in eight years, but their 4–0 record in SoCon play earned the program its 5th conference title in six seasons. Anthropomorphic language again (revise to something like in 1958, the Mountaineers had their first losing season in eight years) and what does the introductory clause give us? Just an informal feel, as I read it.
  • 1958 would be the final season that West Virginia would win a conference championship under his tenure. Don't use the conditional in place of the simple past. Just use 1958 was
  • making him the winningest coach in Mountaineer history at the time (now 3rd overall) Again with "winningest," spell out numbers less than ten (unless they mark numeral quantities like wins and losses, that usage is fine), and make the statement timeless.
  • The Mountaineers were simply embarrassed by their opponents, being outscored 40-259 on the season.[33] Again, [33] is just rote statistics, so 'embarrassed' either needs a cite or it needs to be gone. 'Outclassed' would work fine here, that's amply supported by the cite.
  • Despite its undefeated conference record, once again the SoCon crown eluded the Mountaineers Another one.
  • West Virginia would not have to wait long for its next SoCon title Did not have to wait long.
  • in the 1964 and '65 seasons consecutively Again, comes across quite informal to abbreviate the year like that.
  • You use "thereafter" a lot, and I'm pretty sure "afterward" would work better in all cases.
  • West Virginia would depart the Southern Conference Departed. It has already happened, no need for the conditional.
  • Carlen's Mountaineers would produce subsequent winning seasons in 1968 and '69 Sorry if this feels like I'm beating a dead horse, I just want to make sure no usages slip through the cracks.
  • The '69 Mountaineers were led Instead of typing out the complete year here, I would just strike it altogether. They are the most recently referred to team in the text, so we know which edition of the club is being discussed.
  • Braxton's performance remains a WVU single season record for rushing yards amongst fullbacks Again, timeless phrasing please.
  • The Mountaineers responded by hiring Bobby Bowden, ushering in the 1970s and a new era of WVU football. Again, too editorial and informal with that last clause. Anyone reading the article will now read about the 1970s, so it's really not necessary to 'preview' it in any way, and the phrasing just does not come across as encyclopedic. Green-eyed girl (Talk · Contribs) 02:08, 24 May 2012 (UTC)[reply]
Top of the mountain to the bottom of the holler (1970–79)
  • What the heck does that even mean?
  • The Bobby Bowden era of West Virginia Mountaineer football couldn't have begun more swimmingly No contractions allowed outside of direct quotations, and ugh, swimmingly? That is not encyclopedic.
  • Despite the disappointment of the Pitt defeat, West Virginia would go on to finish 8-3 in 1970. "Went on to finish," or just "finished" And dash consistency.
  • The Mountaineers continued their winning ways under Bowden in 1971 and '72 I think maybe it's written like this because that's somebody would verbally read it. But that also marks the usage as informal.
  • This one's a little tricky, but The 1972 West Virginia team earned its first trip back to a bowl game in three years doesn't work. The 1972 team didn't go to a bowl three years prior, but the West Virginia program did.
  • The season also witnessed the offensive prowess Anthropomorphic
  • Buggs, meanwhile, was an offensive dynamo. But...he scored less than Marbury did. So was Marbury not a 'dynamo' (and I'm not sure we want that word anyway) also?
  • The 1973 and '74 seasons Horse carcass is finely mashed, now.
  • however, were not kind to the Mountaineers How could they be? Football seasons do not have emotions or virtues.
  • The 1975 season, however, was very kind to West Virginia and Bobby Bowden. Again
  • game-winning field goal in the dying seconds How do seconds die when they were never alive? Closing seconds, maybe? Final seconds?
  • Bowden would later describe My old English teacher used to call these deadwood words. Words that are just there, adding no understanding or meaning. "Would" is nearly always a deadwood word (oddly enough).
  • In just six seasons with the Mountaineers Bowden produced a 42-26 record, good for 5th all-time in the program. Comma after Mountaineers, and spell out fifth.
  • The program's futility would reach a new low in 1978
  • The Mountaineers produced another 5-6 finish, losing its first three games and later dropping three out of their final four games This might be the best example of the inconsistency of grammatical number throughout - you have a plural subject ("the Mountaineers"), a singular possessive adjective ("its") and then a plural possessive adjective ("their")!
  • standout quarterback and current Athletic Director Oliver Luck Just change "current" to "future"
  • having to follow in the footsteps of the great Bobby Bowden Interestingly, the caption of the photo for Bowden gives the necessary context for this, but nothing in the article prose does. I suppose it's still okay, but I might try to work Bowden's eventual career record into the body prose.
  • Cignetti's tenure with the Mountaineers will likely retain its distinction as one of the most forgettable ones in the program's history. Ciiitation needed? "Forgettable" seems an awkward word anyway when you've just spent two paragraphs detailing it. Ignominious, maybe? Undistinguished? Green-eyed girl (Talk · Contribs) 02:28, 24 May 2012 (UTC)[reply]
The Nehlen feelin'
a rise in prominence (1980–90)
  • Yet another editorial-sounding subject header. Rather see this as something more simple and declarative, like Nehlen's arrival, and a rise in prominence (1980–90) Same point, and it doesn't look so editorial.
  • Mountaineer Field, the program's current home stadium Just want to point out that this usage is OK, because a home stadium is a heck of lot more permanent than a mere statistical streak. Don't overlook this if and when they do get a new stadium, though ;p
  • Nehlen brought sweeping change to the Mountaineer football program, going so far as to implement a new logo and color scheme that remains in use to this day. Most importantly, Nehlen brought a winning attitude to Morgantown and demanded that his players and coaching staff follow suit. AGF'ing that that's all supported by [54]. Some...fairly haughty stuff in there.
  • The result would forever change the culture of Mountaineer football Conditional again
  • Continued hyphen/dash inconsistency.
  • the Mountaineers rolled to a 9-2 record Again editorial. Just use finished with a 9-2 record
  • Nehlen's '82 Mountaineers Horse carcass, though again, this team is designated as the subject earlier in the paragraph. No real need to repeat the year at all. You might say something these Mountaineers so the reader doesn't lose focus, though.
  • also produced its first Consensus All-American I'd go with the program's first Consensus All-American here. Avoids the grammatical number confusion and the idea that the 1982 team could have had All-Americans in past seasons.
  • West Virginia started the '84 season Carcass.
  • with an impressive 7-1 record The nearest cite is just a rote schedule, so "impressive" probably should go. Or you could revise to something more neutral, such as "strong" or "successful" (these are more factual descriptors).
  • West Virginia went on a two-year drought in 1985 and '86
  • The shortcomings of those seasons came to a head in 1987, where a young, promising Mountaineer team endured a season of growing pains and near-misses. Revise.
  • The near-misses of 1987 gave way to the 1988 season, a season that will live on as one of the greatest in Mountaineer history. Definitely needs a citation, and axe "live on." Just go with something like a season popularly considered among the greatest in Mountaineer history, with a citation to back up that claim.
  • The 1988 edition of the Mountaineers was one for the ages, Same problem, but doubly so since this is entirely redundant. You don't need to make the same claim twice in consecutive sentences, even when it's the end of one paragraph and the beginning of the next.
  • The fanhood shines through in this paragraph with prose that would be great for a website about football, but not so much for a general-interest encyclopedia. Phrases like breezed through its schedule and It was there that the magical run would come to an end and hit a wall against the Irish defense need to be toned down a little.
  • The Mountaineers would suffer another heartbreaking result Conditional past, POV statement.



I haven't got a lot of time tonight (sorry), so just a couple of quick technical things. There are 2 dab links in the article, please fix. None of the images have ALT text. It's not required for GA (though it should be), so I can't hold the article back if you don't add it, but I do strongly encourage it. It is required for FA, if thinking of heading there. External links all look good. Green-eyed girl (Talk · Contribs) 06:28, 25 May 2012 (UTC)[reply]


And we're back

Continued progress (1991–2001)
  • The Mountaineers put together a slew of exciting victories That's a bit editorial.
  • beginning with a 36–34 upset of #17 Louisville in Morgantown. This is actually the first time Morgantown is mentioned in the body prose. Idiotproof this a little - I'd add "at home" before "in Morgantown."
  • With a Big East title and possible trip to the National Championship Game on the line Was the national championship game a monolithic thing like it is now? As I understand it, and I could be way off (what I know about football might fill a thimble, but barely :p ), the BCS National Championship Game was designed to be very different from past systems, where it was not exactly clear who would be playing for the national championship and when. All this is simply to say I'm not sure it should be capitalized; makes it look like a proper noun when I don't think, for that era at least, it was one.
  • to cap another thrilling 17–14 victory. Again, lovely writing for a football website, but not an encyclopedia.
  • The Bowl Coalition system, designed to place the top two ranked teams in the National Championship Game, slotted the Mountaineers at #3 behind 11–1 Florida State. Remember what I said about the thimble? ;)
  • Unfortunately for Nehlen, the 1993 season would be his final season with double-digit victories There's the conditional in place of the simple past again
  • Marc Bulger set two WVU records with 3,607 yards passing and 31 touchdown passes, while Amos Zereoué amassed 1,462 yards rushing No need to give their full names again, they were both referred to and linked in the previous paragraph.
Golden era (2002–present)
  • Seems editorial, but I'll read on and give it a chance.
  • Despite losing its bowl game, West Virginia finished with a 9–4 record and was ranked in both the Coaches' (#20) and AP (#25) polls for the first time since 1993. Surely you mean to say the final polls, right?
  • West Virginia rebounded, however, and in similar fashion to the previous season reeled off seven consecutive victories Similar phrasing, too ;\ In the interests of WP:Brilliant prose, how about revising this one to "in a similar fashion to the previous season, they recorded seven wins in a row"
  • West Virginia, ranked #10 in the AP Poll to begin the season, raced to a 8–1 record. Editorial again. Ahh, I hate this, I wish we could write this way. Also an 8-1 record.
  • Most importantly, West Virginia's squandered its opportunity to win the Big East outright POV statement, and that extraneous 's sticks out.
  • The disappointing season drew to a close with 30–18 loss to Florida State in the Gator Bowl, giving WVU a 8–4 record. I bet you could find a cite for "disappointing."
  • After a 5–1 (albeit unimpressive) Does this mean "against lesser competition" ? If so, say that.
  • the Mountaineers came alive in Week 7 against #19 Louisville. Quarterback Pat White and running back Steve Slaton cut loose on the Cardinal defense I don't know what any of that means.
  • to a thrilling 46–44 triple overtime victory.[87] Yay, a citation that directly backs up a POV statement. :D
  • West Virginia jumped on the Bulldogs with 21 points in the 1st quarter and never looked back, stunning Georgia with a 38–35 victory. Could use a citation, and the wording seems a bit "huh?" to me. They scored 21 points early but only wound up winning by 3? How does that equate to "never looked back" ? This can probably all be made clearer.
  • The Mountaineers once again posted 11 wins in the 2006 season, narrowly missing out on another Big East championship after losses to Louisville and South Florida. The Mountaineers produced another triple-overtime thriller with a 41–39 victory over #13 Rutgers in the final game of the regular season. West Virginia remained ranked in the top 15 in both polls throughout the season, earning another New Year's Day bowl game as they met Georgia Tech in the Gator Bowl. The Mountaineers came away with another 38–35 victory, winning consecutive bowl games for the first time since the 1983 and 1984 seasons None of this has a citation. The only citation in the paragraph is for rushing statistics, the last sentence in the paragraph.
  • The 2007 season may well be regarded as the most infamous season in West Virginia football history. Citation needed.
  • "Leave no doubt tonight. Leave no...doubt...tonight. No doubt they shouldn’t have played the 'Old Gold and Blue.' Not. This. Night."

- Bill Stewart's locker room speech prior to the Fiesta Bowl vs. Oklahoma. All direct quotations need conspicuous citations.

  • The 2009 season culminated in another nine-win season Ehh, clunky. The season culminated in a season?
  • exacted a measure of revenge with a thrilling upset victory Revenge for what, and both POV statements either need support or to be gone.
  • The 2009 season culminated in another nine-win season and second place finish in the Big East for the Mountaineers. Most notably, WVU ended its two-year losing streak in the Backyard Brawl and exacted a measure of revenge with a thrilling upset victory over #8 Pitt on Tyler Bitancurt's game-winning 43-yard field goal in the closing seconds. West Virginia's season ended on a sour note, however, as it lost the Gator Bowl to a 6–6 Florida State team in Bobby Bowden's final game. The 2010 season brought the program its third consecutive nine-win season. Nonetheless, the season was ultimately a disappointment for the Mountaineers. Despite assembling arguably the strongest defense in program history (surrendering only 176 total points, an average of 13.5 per game) and having a talented offense, West Virginia struggled with consistency all season. The Mountaineers lost to #15 LSU, Syracuse and UConn by a combined 14 points, while the Mountaineer defense did not surrender more than 23 points scored against in a single game throughout the season. None of this has a citation.
  • Luck reasoned that he didn't believe that the Mountaineers had an opportunity to win a national championship with the program under Stewart's guise. Gotta nix the contraction.
  • The Mountaineers were the only Big East team ranked in the final BCS Poll The BCS isn't a poll, is it? It's a ranking based on a number of factors (among them the polls). So it would be more accurate to say they were the only Big East team in the final BCS rankings.
  • the Mountaineers trounced Clemson 70–33, setting a NCAA record for points scored in a bowl game. Editorial again. Just replace "trounced" with something like "soundly defeated." Much more formal, gets the same point across.
  • Starting in 2012, West Virginia will compete in the Big 12 Conference for the first time in its history. Just like the lead. They are to compete in the Big 12 Conference, but we really need to not use "will" statements. Green-eyed girl (Talk · Contribs) 06:15, 27 May 2012 (UTC)[reply]
Mountaineer Field
  • along with "neutral-site" games at numerous locations throughout West Virginia, Again with the scare quotes. If neutral site means something other than neutral site, that bears explaining if it can be done gracefully.
  • led to the relocation of the football program to the "new" Mountaineer Field in 1980. Even more confused by the quotes here. It is the new Mountaineer Field, so.....the quotes?
  • Since 1980, WVU football has called the second incarnation of Mountaineer Field home. Revise if you're looking to meet the FA standard of brilliant prose. This exact phrasing is used in the previous paragraph about the old stadium.
  • Due to Mountaineer Field's capacity and the relatively smaller populations of West Virginia's largest cities, it has been suggested that Morgantown becomes the largest "city" in the state on game days due to the influx of spectators at the stadium. That's a fascinating factoid. Needs a citation, though. I think the quotes work okay in this instance ;p Green-eyed girl (Talk · Contribs) 06:25, 27 May 2012 (UTC)[reply]
Milan Puskar Center
Capterton Indoor Facility
Traditions
  • Ehhhh, bulleted lists. FA reviewers will ask you to refactor this section.
  • forming of the state of West Virginia whilst playing the university fight song "Whilst" is chiefly British in usage. It's not necessarily wrong, but it sure sticks out like a sore thumb.
  • The "Pregame show" paragraph has no citations.
  • The Mountaineer mascot first appeared at WVU sporting events during the 1934-35 school year Endash there. I suspect you went ahead of me when I was away for a couple days and changed most of the other hyphens to endashes, because I suddenly stopped having that to point out as I went on ;p
  • The Mountaineer is selected each year by the Mountain Honorary – West Virginia University's senior honorary. Is there anything you can link to here, because this sentence is gibberish to me.
  • walk along the pathway dividing the Blue Lot and the Light Blue Lot outside of Mountaineer Field. What are those? Parking lots? I might just say that, then.
Logos and uniforms
  • The "Flying WV" is the trademark logo for West Virginia Mountaineer football But why is it boldfaced?
  • widely recognized logos in collegiate athletics.[117]. Little surplus punctuation there.
  • Having worn a gold jersey sparingly over the course of its history (namely during the 1960s), West Virginia reintroduced its gold alternate jersey prior to the 2007 season. The uniforms were first worn against Mississippi State for the 2007 homecoming game, as well as for West Virginia's first official "Gold Rush" game against Louisville. The gold jersey continues to be utilized as part of both an alternate home and away uniform. None of this has a citation, and what is a "Gold Rush" game?
Rivalries
  • No remarks for any of the three subheads except some editorial phrasing at the very end of the last one - Much less competitive, but no less meaningful, was the one-sided series between West Virginia and Penn State. The schools once met annually from 1947 to 1992 with the Nittany Lions holding a stranglehold in the series Cite for meaningful? And revise "stranglehold" Green-eyed girl (Talk · Contribs) 07:00, 27 May 2012 (UTC)[reply]
Remainder of article

Only sparing prose among lists, I'll lump all the rest of it together.

  • With 149 victories, Don Nehlen is the winningest coach in Mountaineer history I noticed you revised "winningest" in the lead, so how about here, too?
  • Head coach Dana Holgorsen and the offensive coaching staff enter their 2nd season at WVU, while the defensive staff is entirely revamped for the upcoming 2012 season. Spell out second, and, uh...make this sure this doesn't age. I'm not sure if there's a graceful way of making it timeless, though I think FA reviewers may ask for it. Just...keep an eye on it, like I'm sure you will.
  • the Mountaineers have participated in 13 "major" Division I-A/FBS bowl games, including three BCS Bowl Games, one Bowl Coalition Game and one National Championship Game. What exactly does "major" mean here? I assumed the forthcoming list would reveal it, but that only adds up to five games.
  • Names highlighted in Gold denote award winners. This fails accessibility guidelines, as a vision-impaired reader won't get this meaning if using a device like a screen reader. This is why you usually see things denoted by a color and a symbol. I can't require you to do this for GA, but FA absolutely will.
  • Other instances of same, later on in the article.
  • Got the issue with consecutive wikilinks again in the "Pro Football Hall of Fame" section. And why are the players' names boldfaced?

And that about wraps it up. Whew! Massive article, and as such there were a great many sniveling little things to point out, but honestly the article was in pretty good shape before we even started. Well on its way to a pass. Green-eyed girl (Talk · Contribs) 07:11, 27 May 2012 (UTC)[reply]


Keep this page in mind, because not everything I've pointed out was revised. It may help to refer back to this if headed further down the chain, and to think of this like a Peer Review. That said, my remarks went well above and beyond the GA standard, so the article most certainly meets it now. Will pass. Green-eyed girl (Talk · Contribs) 17:04, 27 May 2012 (UTC)[reply]

Rivalries

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This talk section is for the discussion surrounding the inclusion of Texas and Oklahoma into the Rivalries section of this article. My argument is straightforward: playing Texas once in its history and Oklahoma on four occasions does not a "rivalry" make. Neither school considers WVU its rival, either, but simply a new conference opponent. Utilizing the definition provided by a user in a previous page edit, every school in the Big 12 Conference would be considered a "rival", which is absolutely not the case. Rivalries are borne out of competition and/or geographic proximity, of which the rivalries currently listed in the article are exactly that. Just because WVU now plays the likes of Texas and Oklahoma and competes for a Big 12 championship with those schools does not make them rivals. It is inconceivable that WVU has any other rivalries than those listed in the article. Swcrowemessage 05:06, 27 August 2012 (UTC)[reply]

History sections

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This talk section is for the discussion surrounding the historical sections of this article. In my opinion, the previous edits made to include the "Big 12 Era" in the program's history should be reserved at this time for the 2012 West Virginia Mountaineers football team article until the conclusion of this coming season. Furthermore, the current format of the historical sections does not follow the football program's conference affiliations (WVIAC, SoCon, Independent, Big East, Big 12), but rather its overall trends. While WVU's inclusion into the Big 12 Conference is a significant event in WVU's program history and might warrant a new section, the program is still in the midst of its current trend of unprecedented success as the 2002–present section outlines. The two undoubtedly overlap. Again, I think it's a good idea to wait until the season concludes to consider introducing a new history section. Until then, the 2012 season article should suffice. Just my two cents. Swcrowemessage 04:53, 29 August 2012 (UTC)[reply]

Inclusion of leagues other than the NFL in Professional Football section

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One of the latest edits to this page is the inclusion of the Arena Football League Hall of Fame section. Previously, I decided to exclude West Virginia players who played professionally in Arena Football in favor of those in the NFL and CFL. In my opinion, the AFL is a marginal football league that plays a brand of irregular football compared to the NCAA, NFL, and even the CFL. However, before removing the section I wanted to provide a forum for discussion of the issue. Swcrowemessage 21:26, 3 April 2013 (UTC)[reply]

Thank you for the notification Swcrowe. Wikipedia has deemed anyone who has played in an Arena Football League game, has met the requirements for nobility per WP:NGRIDIRON. Since the AFL is it's highest level for it's style of football, I believe the section should be included. Had this been some other lower-level league, I would of not added the section. DMC511 (talk) 13:29, 4 April 2013 (UTC)[reply]
DMC511, thank you for chiming in here and for directing me to the WP:NGRIDIRON page. Like I said, I've been teetering on whether to include Arena League players and I'd say you clinched it for me. Not to mention, your section on Gary Mullen (American football) was well-cited and fact-based rather than simply opinion (which, unfortunately, it seems we get more of the latter with edits to this page). I'm convinced, Arena League should be included. That means Cecil Doggette gets the mention he deserves. Thanks again, DMC511! Swcrowemessage 16:36, 4 April 2013 (UTC)[reply]
Swcrowemessage Thank you for keeping this section! I'm glad I could make a positive addition to this already well done article. If you have any other additions you can add to the Gary Mullen (American football) page, it would be appreciated. His career at WV section could use some expansion. Thanks! DMC511 (talk) 18:16, 4 April 2013 (UTC)[reply]

WP:TOOBIG / History of West Virginia Mountaineers football

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This article is currently 168 kB[1] WP:TOOBIG gives:

> 100 kB	Almost certainly should be divided
> 60 kB	Probably should be divided (although the scope of a topic can sometimes justify the added reading material)

One option is moving some of the History section to History of West Virginia Mountaineers football, as seen in Category:History of college football by team. Other options include addressing non-standard sections and those with sourcing issues. UW Dawgs (talk) 19:21, 7 October 2019 (UTC)[reply]

Article (edit | visual edit | history) · Article talk (edit | history) · WatchWatch article reassessment pageMost recent review
Result: delisted (t · c) buidhe 04:28, 30 May 2021 (UTC)[reply]

This 2012 GA about an ongoing subject has fallen into a bit of disrepair. There's some weighting issues with the 80s, 90, and early 2000s being given much more weight than post-2011 material, there is some uncited text, and an outstanding length tag from 2019 that needs resolved. One of the principal sources (Casazza) is published by a self-publishing company with a reputation for publishing almost anything that's not illegal or pure advertising. The table of future non-conference opponents still includes the 2020 season. This just needs a good bit of work to get to GA again. Hog Farm Talk 06:34, 9 May 2021 (UTC)[reply]

GA Reassessment

[edit]
Article (edit | visual edit | history) · Article talk (edit | history) · WatchWatch article reassessment pageMost recent review
Result: delisted (t · c) buidhe 04:28, 30 May 2021 (UTC)[reply]

This 2012 GA about an ongoing subject has fallen into a bit of disrepair. There's some weighting issues with the 80s, 90, and early 2000s being given much more weight than post-2011 material, there is some uncited text, and an outstanding length tag from 2019 that needs resolved. One of the principal sources (Casazza) is published by a self-publishing company with a reputation for publishing almost anything that's not illegal or pure advertising. The table of future non-conference opponents still includes the 2020 season. This just needs a good bit of work to get to GA again. Hog Farm Talk 06:34, 9 May 2021 (UTC)[reply]