West Virginia’s quarterback battle is still waiting to get started in earnest, and head coach Rich Rodriguez isn’t hiding the fact that he likes what he has to work with.
At Big 12 media days in Frisco, Texas, Rodriguez addressed the Mountaineers’ situation at the game’s most important position. WVU did not bring a quarterback to the event, but the picture back in Morgantown is clear enough: Scotty Fox, who started five games last season, and transfer addition Michael Hawkins are both still in the mix. Their competition will pick back up when preseason practices begin next month.
Rodriguez said the two quarterbacks remained in Morgantown and painted an optimistic view of what each could bring to the offense. That leaves West Virginia in a middle ground compared with the rest of the league, where some teams arrived with returning starters and others showed off portal additions.
The Big 12’s annual media days drew the conference to the headquarters of the Dallas Cowboys, with head coaches and select players available across radio, television, print and digital platforms. There were 12 quarterbacks on hand. Texas Tech, Arizona State, Kansas and West Virginia were the exceptions.
Texas Tech’s offseason has centered on a departed quarterback. Arizona State lost its two-year starter to a transfer to LSU.
Kansas is without Jaylon Daniels for the first time since 2019. West Virginia, meanwhile, has two candidates still competing for the job once camp opens.
For now, the Mountaineers are holding their quarterback decision until practice begins. Rodriguez’s message was simple: the competition is alive, and he believes both players can help the offense.
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Cooks production at Jacksonville State was the kind that turns heads across the league, and West Virginia is betting that skill set can translate quickly in Morgantown. The fit makes sense on paper, especially for a program that wants more punch on the ground, but the real question now is how the Mountaineers plan to use him and just how much he can reshape their rushing attack once he gets into the system. [Read more 🡒]
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Now Latimer is back with coaches he knows, which matters in a program that has leaned on familiarity and versatility in the secondary. After stops at Jacksonville State and Wisconsin, he arrived in Morgantown with a chance to settle into a role that fits his skill set, and the expectation is that he will work at nickel back. For West Virginia, that kind of adaptable defender can be especially useful, and Latimers journey suggests he may be ready to make the most of it. [Read more 🡒]
