Jerry West left West Virginia decades ago. He never left his home state behind.
For years, he quietly gave significant sums of money to his alma mater, West Virginia University. He always spoke with pride about where he came from, how the small-town roots shaped who he was even as he became a basketball icon. When asked to go home for various events, he tried to oblige.
''Jerry West was extremely proud of being a West Virginian,'' longtime NBA executive Rod Thorn, like West a native of West Virginia and a member of the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame, said Wednesday. ''And he never lost that.''
West died on Wednesday at 86, a day that his alma mater called ''the day everyone in West Virginia has always dreaded.'' Gov. Jim Justice said Wednesday that he relished all the time he spent with West, whether they were at public events or in private, going turkey hunting or fishing together.
''I'm telling you, this was a good man, a man that loved West Virginia beyond good sense, in every way,'' Justice said. ''A man that told me so many times that people of West Virginia, what makes us what we are, is we're real.''
Outside the statue of West at the WVU Coliseum in Morgantown, someone left a bouquet of flowers on Wednesday with a note that read: ''He was a good guy, who cared.'' It also included the West Virginia school logo and 44, West's jersey number.
It was the perfect tribute to West: handwritten, direct, to the point.
''He is as popular as anybody in West Virginia for not only for what a great player he was and all the success he's had as an executive in the NBA but also for what he's meant to the state," Thorn said. ''He's just a revered figure.''