The map of flu activity across the United States continues to darken, both figuratively and literally, as case numbers spike upward in most states, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
The West Virginia Mountaineers have added some more speed to the wide receiver room, announcing the signing of Eastern Michigan transfer Oran Singleton Jr. Singleton played one year at Akron and ...
According to On3's Industry Rankings, Johnson is considered the No. 145 overall prospect, No. 23 wide receiver and No. 5 player from the state of Virginia in the 2026 recruiting class. The 6-foot-3, 180-pounder has garnered at least 35 scholarship offers, including Penn State, West Virginia, Virginia Tech, Miami, Tennessee and several others.
Iowa State, Duke and Alabama rounded out the top five. West Virginia, Michigan and Utah State entered the poll at the expense of Cincinnati, Arkansas and Baylor.
A decades-long battle over toxic pollution in Parkersburg, West Virginia, has reignited as a new federal lawsuit accuses chemical giant Chemours of illegally discharging high levels of PFAS (“forever chemicals”) into the Ohio River.
Dropped out: No. 20 Michigan (14-5); No. 23 West Virginia (13-6).
The Old Farmer's Almanac, which has been in business since 1792, recently released its spring weather forecast. The outlook? "Warmer-than-normal temperatures for most of the country, with a few exceptions: southern and central California, Desert Southwest, southern Florida, and western Ohio Valley, where it will be near to below normal."
Sure, the win at Kansas is really the only marquee victory Houston has so far this season, but a 13-game winning streak with 11 double-digit wins over that stretch earns Kelvin Sampson's team a place in the top tier of the sport.
It is only week away. National Signing Day is fast approaching, an even that could take the high school sports world by storm. On Feb. 5, student-athletes who h
Find out where the top 2026 high school football recruits in Massachusetts have offers from and are committed.
States are handing multimillion-dollar contracts to a handful of fledgling private companies to manage the rapidly growing, convoluted marketplace of school-choice programs. The process has been bumpy.
The winter sport season is upon us, so who better than the late John Wooden, legendary head coach of UCLA men’s basketball, to offer some good food for thought. Wooden said,