Huggins preaches scrappiness
PHOENIX -- The West Virginia Mountaineers are far different from most of Bob Huggins' teams, except in one way.
They win.
Huggins inherited a team of sharpshooters recruited by John Beilein, who stressed an intricate offense, and transformed it into a squad that plays man-to-man defense and scraps for rebounds.
No one will confuse these Mountaineers with Huggins' big, bad Cincinnati Bearcats. But West Virginia (26-10) has reached the NCAA Tournament's round of 16, where the seventh-seeded Mountaineers will face third-seeded Xavier (29-6) in the West regional tonight.
"He's completely flipped everything around, with rebounding, defense, intensity and goal-wise," forward Joe Alexander said after the Mountaineers practiced Wednesday at U.S. Airways Center.
"The goals changed when he came, from Day One. They went from making the NCAA Tournament to winning the NCAA Tournament."
The 54-year-old Huggins returned to his alma mater after Beilein, who went 104-60 in five seasons in Morgantown, bolted for Michigan last year.
The players knew little about Huggins, a 1977 graduate of West Virginia, aside from the glowering figure they had seen stalking the sidelines on television.
Huggins has shown his players a softer side since arriving. But he also brought a commitment to defense that has paid off in the first two rounds of the Tournament, when West Virginia limited 10th-seeded Arizona to 65 points and second-seeded Duke to 67.
"I think the defensive end took a lot of getting used to," backup point guard Joe Mazzulla said. "Last year we did two hours of offense and 10 minutes of defense (in practice). This year we do two hours of defense and half-hour of offense."
From the start, Huggins and his staff pushed the players into the weight room. He also brought a treadmill to practice, and players who mess up are asked to go for a spin.
"When I first heard that he was going to get one in the gym, I was like, 'Man, that's not going to happen,' " backup forward Wellington Smith said. "When I first saw it, I was like, 'Man, I'm going to be on there a lot.' I've been on there a lot."
His transgressions?
"Not box out," Smith said. "Let a guy go middle. Just being, maybe, soft."
If there's one thing Huggins can't stand, it's being soft. But while Huggins likes to instill discipline in his players, it has, at times, been missing from his personal and professional life.
His 16-year tenure at Cincinnati produced a trip to the 1992 Final Four and two other regional final appearances. It also included player arrests, NCAA probation and Huggins' drunken-driving arrest in 2004.
Huggins was forced out in 2005, but he wasn't finished. He spent one season at Kansas State before taking the job at West Virginia. Huggins is 616-221 in 26 college seasons.
Xavier coach Sean Miller, who has known Huggins for most of his life, said he's not surprised that Huggins has returned with a passion.
"He is such a survivor," Miller said. "He is so strong-willed. I don't know if it surprised anybody that not only is he back as a coach, but better than ever."