
Photo by: All Pro Photography/Dale Sparks
Mountaineers, Bearcats to Clash Tuesday Night at Hope Coliseum
January 05, 2026 02:36 PM | Men's Basketball
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. – West Virginia returns to Hope Coliseum on Tuesday night to face the Cincinnati Bearcats in a 7 p.m. Big 12 clash that will be televised nationally on ESPN2.
The Mountaineers (9-5, 0-1) opened conference play last Friday night at Iowa State where they lost 80-59 to the third-ranked Cyclones.
Iowa State took control of the game midway through the first half and shot a sizzling 52% on its 25 3-point attempts, eight coming from Milan Momcilovic, who finished with a game-high 26 points.
Chance Moore, starting in place of injured Brenen Lorient, led West Virginia with 17 points on 7 of 13 shooting. Freshman forward DJ Thomas came off the bench to contribute 10.
The 59 points were the fewest West Virginia has scored in a game this season.
Cincinnati, meanwhile, battled eighth-ranked Houston down to the wire at Fifth Third Arena last Saturday afternoon before falling 67-60.
The Bearcats and Cougars were tied 60-60 with 3:52 left after a Moustapha Thiam dunk, but Houston held Cincinnati scoreless for the remainder of the game.
The Bearcats, which led 33-28 at halftime, got 15 points from guard Day Day Thomas, 13 from Thiam and 11 points and eight rebounds from forward Baba Miller.
Miller is one of three regular Bearcats averaging double figures at 13.4 points to go along with 11.3 boards per contest. Thomas is scoring at a 13-points-per-game clip, while Thiam shows averages of 11 points and 6.9 rebounds per game.
Guard Jizzle James returned to the team three weeks ago and scored 4 points against the Cougars while Sencire Harris, who played for West Virginia last year, scored a basket in 18 minutes of action. Harris is continuing his role as a lock-down perimeter defender that he was known for at West Virginia.
Basketball nomad Kerr Kriisa, who played one season at West Virginia in 2023-24, is playing his final season of college basketball with the Bearcats. He is averaging 7.3 points in about 25 minutes per game.
Cincinnati (8-6, 0-1) is limiting its opponents to 65.6 points and 39.3% shooting, which compares favorably to West Virginia, which is allowing 61.6 points per contest and its opponents to shoot just 40.4%.
West Virginia coach Ross Hodge said Monday he is impressed with the Bearcats' length around the basket.
"Baba Miller and (Thiam) allows them to pressure the ball and kind of funnels people into shot blocking, which allows them to guard the 3 at a pretty high clip," he explained. "They have one of the best 3-point defenses in the country and a lot of that is kind of a by-product of their size and versatility."
Ball movement is the best prescription for attacking Cincinnati's defense.
"That can be challenging because they are not going to let you move it, but you've got to try and get the ball side-to-side, get some reversals, get paint touches and ultimately get good rim decisions when you get into the paint," Hodge said. "It's that fine line of challenging shot blockers to create foul trouble, but at the same time, if a guard goes in and falls down or gets their shot blocked, it ignites their transition offense as well."
Senior guard Honor Huff, despite being limited to only 6 points on 1 of 9 shooting at Iowa State, continues to lead the Mountaineers in scoring with an average of 16.6 points per game.
Moore is now averaging 12.9 points and 6.3 rebounds per outing.
Hodge indicated Lorient remains in concussion protocol but is "progressing nicely."
Tuesday night will be Cincinnati's 12th appearance in Morgantown and ninth in the Coliseum. WVU owns an 8-3 record against Cincinnati in the facility and a narrow 13-12 overall advantage in all-time series play dating back to 1941.
The Mountaineers and Bearcats played regularly from 2006-12 when both were members of the Big East Conference.
This will be their sixth meeting as members of the Big 12.
"We're excited to be back home in Hope Coliseum for a conference home opener," Hodge said.
Mountaineer Sports Network radio coverage with Tony Caridi, Brad Howe and David Kahn tips things off at 6 p.m. on stations throughout West Virginia, online via WVUsports.com and the Varsity Network and WVU Gameday apps.
Tickets still remain and can be purchased through the Mountaineer Ticket Office by logging on to WVUGAME.com.
The Mountaineers (9-5, 0-1) opened conference play last Friday night at Iowa State where they lost 80-59 to the third-ranked Cyclones.
Iowa State took control of the game midway through the first half and shot a sizzling 52% on its 25 3-point attempts, eight coming from Milan Momcilovic, who finished with a game-high 26 points.
Chance Moore, starting in place of injured Brenen Lorient, led West Virginia with 17 points on 7 of 13 shooting. Freshman forward DJ Thomas came off the bench to contribute 10.
The 59 points were the fewest West Virginia has scored in a game this season.
Cincinnati, meanwhile, battled eighth-ranked Houston down to the wire at Fifth Third Arena last Saturday afternoon before falling 67-60.
The Bearcats and Cougars were tied 60-60 with 3:52 left after a Moustapha Thiam dunk, but Houston held Cincinnati scoreless for the remainder of the game.
The Bearcats, which led 33-28 at halftime, got 15 points from guard Day Day Thomas, 13 from Thiam and 11 points and eight rebounds from forward Baba Miller.
Miller is one of three regular Bearcats averaging double figures at 13.4 points to go along with 11.3 boards per contest. Thomas is scoring at a 13-points-per-game clip, while Thiam shows averages of 11 points and 6.9 rebounds per game.
Guard Jizzle James returned to the team three weeks ago and scored 4 points against the Cougars while Sencire Harris, who played for West Virginia last year, scored a basket in 18 minutes of action. Harris is continuing his role as a lock-down perimeter defender that he was known for at West Virginia.
Basketball nomad Kerr Kriisa, who played one season at West Virginia in 2023-24, is playing his final season of college basketball with the Bearcats. He is averaging 7.3 points in about 25 minutes per game.
Cincinnati (8-6, 0-1) is limiting its opponents to 65.6 points and 39.3% shooting, which compares favorably to West Virginia, which is allowing 61.6 points per contest and its opponents to shoot just 40.4%.
West Virginia coach Ross Hodge said Monday he is impressed with the Bearcats' length around the basket.
"Baba Miller and (Thiam) allows them to pressure the ball and kind of funnels people into shot blocking, which allows them to guard the 3 at a pretty high clip," he explained. "They have one of the best 3-point defenses in the country and a lot of that is kind of a by-product of their size and versatility."
Ball movement is the best prescription for attacking Cincinnati's defense.
"That can be challenging because they are not going to let you move it, but you've got to try and get the ball side-to-side, get some reversals, get paint touches and ultimately get good rim decisions when you get into the paint," Hodge said. "It's that fine line of challenging shot blockers to create foul trouble, but at the same time, if a guard goes in and falls down or gets their shot blocked, it ignites their transition offense as well."
Senior guard Honor Huff, despite being limited to only 6 points on 1 of 9 shooting at Iowa State, continues to lead the Mountaineers in scoring with an average of 16.6 points per game.
Moore is now averaging 12.9 points and 6.3 rebounds per outing.
Hodge indicated Lorient remains in concussion protocol but is "progressing nicely."
Tuesday night will be Cincinnati's 12th appearance in Morgantown and ninth in the Coliseum. WVU owns an 8-3 record against Cincinnati in the facility and a narrow 13-12 overall advantage in all-time series play dating back to 1941.
The Mountaineers and Bearcats played regularly from 2006-12 when both were members of the Big East Conference.
This will be their sixth meeting as members of the Big 12.
"We're excited to be back home in Hope Coliseum for a conference home opener," Hodge said.
Mountaineer Sports Network radio coverage with Tony Caridi, Brad Howe and David Kahn tips things off at 6 p.m. on stations throughout West Virginia, online via WVUsports.com and the Varsity Network and WVU Gameday apps.
Tickets still remain and can be purchased through the Mountaineer Ticket Office by logging on to WVUGAME.com.
Players Mentioned
TV Highlights: WVU 62, Cincinnati 60
Wednesday, January 07
Ross Hodge | Cincinnati Postgame
Tuesday, January 06
Treysen Eaglestaff & Honor Huff | Cincinnati Postgame
Tuesday, January 06
Huff with the Dribble Drive
Tuesday, January 06














