COMMENTARY
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. — Ever since Devin Williams’ year-early exit created a man-sized void in the middle of West Virginia’s basketball program, Elijah Macon abruptly shifted his own offseason priority to “just trying to figure Elijah out.”
The same can be said for Macon’s coaches at West Virginia, who know he possesses far more potential than has been realized during his first 68 college games. Through two seasons the former top-60 recruit scored in double-digits four times and fouled out the same number.
Regarding such modest career averages (4.4 points and 2.