September 1, 2012
Alston and Buie help WVU bolt to fast start
Advertiser

MORGANTOWN - With 6:25 left in what's the last Marshall-West Virginia meeting for the immediate future, a message flashed onto the Milan Puskar Stadium scoreboard.

"The national weather service," it said, "has advised of a threat of severe weather to the stadium."

Last season, of course, this game didn't go four quarters because of lightning strikes. Unfortunately for Marshall, this one did.

Marshall was absolutely thunderstruck by the Mountaineers. By a whopping 69-34 count. West Virginia proved, at least on Saturday, before 59,120, it is worthy of its No. 11 ranking and the preseason hype. In its last two games, WVU's average victory is 69.5-33.5.

Geno Smith got off to a hot start in what should be a season-long Heisman Trophy campaign. He was an amazing 32-of-36 passing for 323 yards and four touchdowns with no interceptions. Tavon Austin was Tavon Austin.

And, as a bonus for Mountaineer fans, there were a couple of pleasant surprises.

First, there was the physical play from the home team. All knew the offense would be electric, but there were hard WVU hits from game's beginning to end. Early, Josh Francis blew up a screen play. Late, there was tailback Andrew Buie - 5-foot-9, 188-pound Andrew Buie - putting 224-pound linebacker MU Cortez Carter on his back.

"We wanted to be more physical," coach Dana Holgorsen said afterward.

Mission accomplished.

The team's most pleasant surprise offensively, however, came in a 5-11, 236-pound package. Tailback Shawne Alston absolutely threw Marshall for a loop with his punishing style for 123 yards on 16 carries (a 7.7 yard average) with two touchdowns.

We'd been hearing raves about Alston, but last season he had just 416 net yards in 11 games. That's not exactly how one sets up a Heisman run.

Something, however, has happened. Alston is now a serious threat.

"In the [Orange] bowl game, when Dustin [Garrison] went down, I put Shawne in and he took advantage of his opportunity," Holgorsen said. "We all know he was hurt last year and we didn't have him in the spring and he got better as the year went on. Then, in the off-season, he got himself in shape. He's healthy and feels good and is a leader.

"He thinks he's the boss of the locker room. Which he probably is."

"I definitely think I'm the baddest guy on the field," Alston said. "That's not a cocky thing, but a confidence thing."

He certainly was one bad man on Saturday. And that's one good thing for WVU. We know of the Mountaineer "Air Raid" attack. But now there's a ground attack. Mountaineer opponents will have something extra - as it they needed it - to concentrate on in defensive preparations.

"I think it's very important, especially for our passing game and Geno," Alston said. "If people want to back up for passing, me, Buie and Ryan Clarke are ready to go."

Recommended Stories

Copyright 2012 The Charleston Gazette. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Popular Videos
The Gazette now offers Facebook Comments on its stories. You must be logged into your Facebook account to add comments. If you do not want your comment to post to your personal page, uncheck the box below the comment. Comments deemed offensive by the moderators will be removed, and commenters who persist may be banned from commenting on the site.
Advertisement - Your ad here
Advertisement - Your ad here
Advertisement - Your ad here