Justin Jackson, Men's Basketball, Sports, WVU Sports

Talent, uncertainty headlines 2018-2019 WVU men’s basketball team

MORGANTOWN — Four hundred thirty seven — that’s the number of 3-pointers Jevon Carter missed over his West Virginia men’s basketball career.
It is truly nothing more than an oddball stat kept in the school record books that showed just how confident the now-Memphis Grizzlies guard was.
Starting Saturday, when the Mountaineers begin full practices for the 2018-’19 season, Bob Huggins would likely take every bit of those 437 misses just to have Carter around a little bit longer.
Huggins and WVU will be chasing after their fifth consecutive trip to the NCAA tournament but will do so with an interesting roster built around strength and size in the frontcourt and a lot of inexperience and questions in the backcourt.
Division I schools are permitted 30 practices over a 42-day period leading up to the regular season.
It’s not just a matter of replacing Carter, the school’s all-time leader in steals who also added 1,758 points and 559 assists over his career, but West Virginia also saw senior Daxter Miles Jr. graduate.
First, the good news: Sagaba Konate opted to withdraw from NBA Draft consideration and returned for his junior season. Esa Ahmad also returns with 89 games of experience under his belt and Logan Routt’s 6-foot-11 frame saw action in 31 games last season.
They will anchor a front line that will also include a now-healthy Lamont West, Wesley Harris, who started all 37 games last season, as well as highly-recruited freshmen Derek Culver and Emmitt Matthews Jr. and junior-college recruit Andrew Gordon.
In Huggins’ first 11 seasons at West Virginia, he may not have had this combination of size, experience and athleticism among the forwards.
Which brings us to the guards, where “Beetle” Bolden and Chase Harler have combined to play in 113 games, but neither averaged more than 18 minutes per game or was called upon to carry the team.
Former South Charleston star Brandon Knapper has had to overcome a serious knee injury and a blood clot issue just to be cleared for action this season.
As preseason practice begins, the door of opportunity will be wide open for junior-college recruit Jermaine Haley and freshmen Trey Doomes and Jordan McCabe.
How quickly they can learn the system and adapt to the speed of Division I hoops will likely be a focus even after the regular season begins on Nov. 9, against Buffalo.
While WVU lacks in experience with the guards, the Mountaineers do have numbers to play with.
The option of remaining “Press” Virginia in the post-Carter years is out there, because Huggins has enough guys to keep rotating in to stay fresh.
And he still has Konate on the back end protecting the rim.
Mixing it all together, the Mountaineers are projected as a preseason top 20 team and will likely be picked either second or third in the Big 12 preseason coaches’ poll, with Kansas being the favorite.
If West Virginia is in the preseason AP Top 25, it will mark the 55th consecutive week the Mountaineers have been nationally ranked.
The streak began in November 2015, and it is one week shy of the school record of 56 weeks from March 1956 to March 1960.
Under Huggins, West Virginia has been ranked in the AP poll for 98 weeks.