August 27, 2012
Smith sets a lofty standard for himself
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MORGANTOWN - He's already been saddled with the expectation that he will be the Big 12 player of the year and he hasn't even taken a snap in a league game yet.

His team finds itself in the position of being one of the favorites to win a league championship and a BCS bowl berth, if not more.

That he will shatter every school passing record that he doesn't already hold seems almost a given, like the sun coming up or presidential campaigns getting nastier and dirtier like clockwork every four years.

In other words, when Geno Smith begins his senior season as West Virginia's quarterback on Saturday against Marshall, won't anything less than perfection be pretty much a disappointment?

Well, perhaps. It just goes with the territory of being the focal point in one of the most highly anticipated seasons in WVU history.

But if Smith is uncomfortable with those expectations he's not letting on. In fact, ask him if he and coach Dana Holgorsen have talked about it and you get this:

"There's nothing that needs to be said,'' Smith said. "Coach Holgorsen has gotten to know me and he knows that I hold myself to a higher standard than anybody else possibly can. I expect perfection from myself. Even though it's impossible, I try to be perfect. That's the way I practice, that's the way I am and that's the way I want to be.''

Perfection? Really?

"Sure. I expect to win every game, I expect to complete every pass and I expect to make perfect reads,'' Smith said. "Is that going to happen? No. But I figure if you hold yourself to that standard ... what do they say, shoot for the moon and land among the stars?''

Well, if nothing else, this season is going to be intriguing to see exactly where both Smith and the Mountaineers land.

In a way, Smith understands that the expectations for the Mountaineers might be outsized. It's not that he doesn't have the confidence in both himself and his team, obviously, but he also knows how difficult things are about to become.

He's smart enough to remember that while the expectations are born from a 10-3 season and that 70-33 rout of Clemson in the Orange Bowl, this is also a team that in 2011 trailed in every single game it played. It's a team that was dismantled by woeful Syracuse, lost at home to Louisville, needed a string of near miracles just to get into the Orange Bowl and then found itself in a perfect storm of things falling right against Clemson.

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