West Virginia's greatest player — led the Mountaineers to the 1959 national championship game.
Jerry Alan West was born in Chelyan, West Virginia in 1938. He attended West Virginia University and became the greatest player in the school's history. His college career produced 24.8 points and 13.3 rebounds per game across three seasons. He led West Virginia to the 1959 national championship game, where they lost to Pete Newell's California team — West was named the tournament's Most Outstanding Player despite being on the losing side, one of very few players in history to receive that honour in a losing cause. He was a two-time consensus All-American. He won Olympic gold with the USA at Rome 1960 alongside Oscar Robertson, Jerry Lucas and Darrall Imhoff. Los Angeles Lakers selected him second overall in the 1960 NBA Draft. His West Virginia career — the tournament MOP, the All-American selections and the pride of an entire state — established the competitive intensity and clutch ability that would define his entire career. His silhouette became the NBA logo, but before that it represented West Virginia basketball at its absolute peak.
NCAA runner-up (1959)
Career Honours
- NCAA runner-up (1959)
- Tournament MOP (1959)
- All-American 2x
- Olympic Gold Medal (1960)