September 10, 2011
WVU notebook: Garrison earning niche in receiving corps
AP Photo
West Virginia's Dustin Garrison is tripped up by Norfolk State's Ricardo Volcin. Garrison finished with three receptions for 51 yards for the Mountaineers.
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MORGANTOWN - After gunning for a first-team tailback slot in the preseason, true freshman Dustin Garrison was somewhat disappointed after the Marshall game.

He had no carries. He caught one pass for 9 yards.

On Saturday, though, in the Mountaineers' win over Norfolk State, Garrison made the catch of the game. He almost single-handedly turned the boos into cheers, and he helped turn the game into a WVU 55-12 runaway.

With the score 17-12 in favor of West Virginia, Garrison made a nice, instinctive catch in the middle of the field for a 36-yard gain to the NSU 44. He then ran the ball for a gain of 13. A personal foul - one of a whopping 19 Spartan penalties - pushed the ball to the NSU 16.

The hosts, now 2-0, finished off the drive with a Geno Smith-to-Tavon Austin touchdown pass. The runaway was never headed afterward.

"We went out there with a sense of urgency," Garrison said of the second half. "We just had to put plays together and put points on the board."

That the Mountaineers did after trailing 12-10 at halftime.

Garrison, a product of Texas high school power Pearland High, smiled of his catch.

"I did a lot of those routes in high school," said the back. "In the Cover 2 defense, the middle of the field is wide open. You just have to get around the linebacker and you're there. It's something I'm used to doing. And I did it. It's a great feeling catching the ball and getting the first down."

Garrison said much of the catch was on instinct. He turned and the ball was there.

"That's pretty much what it was," said the freshman. "We called the play before we went on the field, so I was getting mentally prepared for it. I was like, 'I can't drop it.' I tried not to think too much about it. We ran it and it worked."

It seems Garrison is earning a niche as a receiver that can catch.

"Coach [Robert] Gillespie likes the way I catch the ball, whether downfield or screen passes," Garrison said. "He admires my hands out of the backfield. It's a great feeling to know I can go out there and catch a ball.

"He told me to keep it up. That's what I'm here for, to make plays."

Garrison compared the WVU offense to that of Pearland.

"It was the same tempo," he said. "A hurry-up offense. What's different is I'd look to the sidelines and find the call. Here, I'm listening to what Geno has to say. But it's pretty much the same thing. The speed of it, the tempo, it's still the same. It's just the game is a lot faster than it is in high school."

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