A linebacker out of a Western Pennsylvania powerhouse has committed to West Virginia. Daiveon Taylor, 6-foot-2, 210-pounds, revealed his commitment to the Mountaineers during a conversation with WVU legend Pat McAfee.
West Virginia fans will be forced to pick their favorite Pat as the intensity around Saturday’s Gold-Blue Spring Game will be turned up a notch. Two WVU legends, and the greatest Pat’s in the history of the Mountaineers, will be returning as coaches.
Last summer, ESPN college football analyst Kirk Herbstreit had a little fun poking at former West Virginia punter/kicker Pat McAfee on his show, saying
West Virginia Attorney General Patrick Morrisey joined the Pat McAfee Show on Thursday afternoon to discuss the TRO ruling against the NCAA’s transfer rules.
Pat McAfee benefited from West Virginia’s win on Saturday more than any other former Mountaineer. WVU’s seventh win of the season clinched ending the year with a winning record and delivered McAfee a win of his own.
Saturday’s ESPN College GameDay provided the latest chapter in the back and forth between Pat McAfee and Kirk Herbstreit over West Virginia. As WVU is on the verge of delivering McAfee a bet win over Herbstreit, both of them actually selected the Mountaineers as their “super dogs” of the day.
ESPN’s Kirk Herbstreit is just one West Virginia win away from owing former Mountaineer punter and media mogul host Pat McAfee “anything” he wants. At the beginning of the season, Herbstreit was willing to bet it all that WVU would have a losing season.
Pat McAfee has become a social media and TV star since retiring from the NFL in 2017. As you're probably well aware, McAfee's show recently migrated over
Two days later and it's still hard to comprehend how West Virginia didn't leave Houston with a win. In my near 30 years of watching WVU football, I can't recall ever seeing anything like it. As I pointed out on Between The Eers Friday morning, WVU's personnel and alignment on the final play of the game really had me scratching my head.
After watching West Virginia fall in epic fashion on Thursday night, ESPN’s Pat McAfee could barely contain his disappointment in his alma mater on Friday’s The Pat McAfee Show.
1. New York Post sports columnist (and recent SI Media With Jimmy Traina podcast guest) Andrew Marchand reported Thursday that Pat McAfee pays Aaron Rodgers, “more than seven figures per year to come on the show each week.” I was genuinely shocked by some of the reactions I saw after the story broke.
Day by day, former West Virginia punter/kicker Pat McAfee continues to prove everyone wrong in his career after football. Many thought his early retirement from the NFL to start a podcast was the dumbest decision he could have possibly made.
One of the more entertaining parts of College GameDay this season is the back-and-forth jabs between Kirk Herbstreit and Pat McAfee. In three games picked this year, McAfee has gone with his Mountaineers in all three games.
On Saturday morning, the College GameDay crew did their week three picks in Colorado with special guest picker Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson. The former Miami football player, WWE and movie star picked West Virginia over Pitt in the Backyard Brawl.
Speaking on an episode of his eponymous YouTube show on Monday, WVU football alum Pat McAfee ripped current Mountaineers head coach Neal Brown for the team’s season-opening 38-15 loss at the hands of Penn State.
The College GameDay crew picked their week one predictions on Saturday morning, including the West Virginia-Penn State game. Out of the five at the table, four took Penn State to roll past WVU in Happy Valley.
West Virginia is a massive underdog for its Week 1 game against Penn State in Happy Valley. Nearly every national college football analyst believes the Mountaineers will get rolled by what should be a top-10 Penn State team to open the season.
The Pat McAfee Show is reportedly set to get a new home. Former West Virginia and Colts punter Pat McAfee will take his flagship program to ESPN beginning in the fall, according to a Tuesday afternoon report from Andrew Marchand of The New York Post.
The last few years have been forgettable for the West Virginia University football program. Mediocre seasons have plagued the Mountaineers, and the buzz that once surrounded the program has faded into the distance.
McAfee Former West Virginia Mountaineers and Indianapolis Colts kicker Pat McAfee continues to add to his growing resume in the media world as he confirmed a report by the NY Post that he would be joining ESPN’s College Gameday.
Broadcasting star and former Indianapolis Colts punter Pat McAfee says he contemplated suicide after missing two short field goals in an important college game between West Virginia and Pitt in 2007.
The former WVU kicker and punter received death threats, along with vandalism to his car, and says, “I didn’t know if I wanted to live anymore.” Pat McAfee has traveled to various destinations on his journey in life.
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