2005 White passed up a career in affiliated baseball and a six-figure contract with the
Anaheim Angels to play college football. He began the season as a co-starter along with Adam Bednarik. He started his season out against
Syracuse, with 63 yards passing and 20 yards rushing. In the 35–7 victory over
Wofford, White passed for 82 yards on six passes out of 10, and rushed for 107 yards and a score. In the 31–19 victory over
Maryland, White rushed for 62 yards on nine carries. In the 20–15 victory over
ECU, White scored his first ever passing touchdown of his collegiate career and added 64 yards passing. In the 34–17 loss to
Virginia Tech, White came into the game in the second half. He totaled 9 passes out of 11 attempts for 85 yards for two touchdowns and 44 yards on the ground. White's shared time with Bednarik continued until the seventh game of the season against
Louisville. With WVU down 24–7, White came in to replace an injured Bednarik and led the
Mountaineers to a 46–44, triple overtime victory. He teamed-up with freshman running back
Steve Slaton to lead the Mountaineers with his 118 total yards on the game, while Slaton scored a
Big East record 6 touchdowns. The game marked the first major game in the duo's memorable career together. The next game, the 45–13 victory over
Connecticut, White totaled 106 passing yards and a touchdown, along with 63 rushing yards and two touchdowns for a total of 169 yards and three scores. In the 38–0 victory over
Cincinnati, White passed for 100 yards and a score and rushed for 111 yards on only eight carries for 211 total yards. It marked the first 200-yard game of his career. One of White's best games in the tenure before the bowl game was against
Pittsburgh in the
Backyard Brawl rivalry game. He threw for 41 yards and a touchdown, and ran for 220 yards and 2 touchdowns in the 45–13 win. It was only White's second career 200-yard game and it had come consecutively to his previous 200-yard game against Cincinnati. Against
USF, White led the Mountaineers to their first undefeated Big East season since
1993 with a 177-yard, two touchdown rushing performance. He had the longest rush of his career to date, a 76-yard run, and also totaled 89 yards and score through the air for his third consecutive 200-yard game of his freshman season. With White now the starting quarterback, the Mountaineers won the rest of their games to win the Big East Conference title and earn a bid to the
2006 Sugar Bowl against the
Georgia Bulldogs. In what was essentially a home game for the Bulldogs as the Sugar Bowl was moved to the
Georgia Dome due to
Hurricane Katrina, White had what many described as his "coming-out party", rushing for 77 yards and throwing for 120 yards and a touchdown in WVU's 38–35 win against the Bulldogs. That season, he passed for 828 yards and 8 touchdowns. He also rushed for 952 yards and 7 touchdowns, which was then a new Big East and WVU record for quarterback rushing yards in a season. He also had three consecutive 200-yard games, which ended when he came short with 197 yards in the Sugar Bowl. White and
Steve Slaton ended the season with 2,995 total yards and 24 touchdowns between the two players.
2006 White, running back Steve Slaton, and fullback
Owen Schmitt were featured on one of the six regional covers of the August 21, 2006, issue of
Sports Illustrated, as part of their "Big Men On Campus" article and their 2006–2007 college football season preview. Slaton was named West Virginia's "Big Man On Campus" in the same issue. White was named as one of 35 players to watch for the
Walter Camp Football Foundation Player of the Year award. White followed up a tremendous freshman season with a great sophomore season, in which he passed for 1,655 yards and 13 TDs and rushed for 1,219 yards and 18 touchdowns on his way to being named the Big East Offensive Player of the Year and was named to the first-team all-Big East squad. He was considered the leader of the team and his three best performances of the year came in the Gator Bowl, in the loss to
Louisville when White continued to try to come back late in the game, and against
Pittsburgh in the annual rivalry game, a 45–27 win, when he threw for 204 yards and two touchdowns, and ran for 220 yards and two touchdowns. His 200+ rushing and passing yards makes him one of only eight players in
NCAA history to do so in a game. He was also caught on camera mocking the Pitt Panther growl by a national
ESPN audience in that game. Pittsburgh linebacker
H. B. Blades, who was an all-Big East selection that season, said, "Pat White is the best quarterback in college football," after the loss. In the
Gator Bowl against
Georgia Tech, White battled ankle, neck, and wrist injuries and a 35–17 third-quarter deficit to bring the Mountaineers back to win 38–35 without the help of back
Steve Slaton, who was out with injuries as well. White took the ball on 10 of the last 12 plays, gaining 54 yards and four first downs, to run out the clock for the Mountaineers. Georgia Tech linebacker
Philip Wheeler said when asked the three players he liked to watch in college football, "Three? Forget it. How about one? Pat White. Dude is unbelievable. I mean, he can do it all. He's fast, he stronger than he looks and he can throw it. Yeah, I love watching him – as long as he's not doing it to us." Also against
Syracuse, White rushed for a career-high 247 yards and scored four touchdowns. White earned the Alabama Athlete of the Year award on May 8, 2007, for his sophomore season. He was also granted the key to his hometown of
Daphne. White's all-purpose offense total of 2,878 yards is ranked third on the most total offense yards in a season in West Virginia school history, while his 1,219 rushing yards is the most ever in a season by a West Virginia quarterback, breaking his 2005 record. His 18 rushing touchdowns is tied for a school record in a season with running backs
Ira Errett Rodgers and
Amos Zereoué. White and running back
Steve Slaton combined for 2,963 yards and 31 touchdowns rushing in the season. They totaled 4,978 total yards and 49 touchdowns together on the season, the second-best output between the two in their three-year career together.
2007 (left) and White on the sideline of the
Mississippi State game. In the season opener against
Western Michigan, White ended the day going 10-of-18 with 192 yards and two touchdowns through the air, also rushing for 98 yards and two touchdowns as the Mountaineers won 62–24. White's first rushing touchdown was a 38-yard scramble. In the next week against
Marshall, the Mountaineers pulled away in the second half with 42 points to win the game 48–23. White led West Virginia to the win with 149 passing yards and two touchdowns and 125 rushing yards and a touchdown – WVU's first score of the game coming off of White's 46-yard pass to
Darius Reynaud. In the third game of the season against
Maryland, White was eight of thirteen passing with 92 yards and eleven rushes for 22 yards and a touchdown in the 31–14 win. In the following contest against
ECU, White went 18-of-20 with 186 yards and two touchdown passes and nine rushes for 44 yards and two touchdowns. White's 90% passing accuracy tied a school record set in 1970, and he completed passes to eight different receivers. The Mountaineers' lost against
USF 21–13 at South Florida the following game. White was injured in the game, but went 12–18 for 100 yards, although throwing his first interception on the season. The next game against
Syracuse in a 55–14 win, White went 12–15 with 148 yards for a touchdown before injuring his shoulder. He also had 89 yards and a touchdown on 14 carries while being named Big East Player of the Week. At homecoming against
Mississippi State, White only played the first half of the 38–13 blowout of the Bulldogs – totaling 8-of-12 passing with 61 yards and a touchdown and had five rushes for 89 yards, including a 64-yard run on the first play of the game for a touchdown. In
New Jersey against
#25 Rutgers, White threw for 144 yards while going 10-of-16, also rushing for 156 yards on 22 carries for a touchdown – accounting for 300 total yards of offense in the 31–3 win. Against
Louisville, White led the Mountaineers to a 38–31 dramatic win. With the game tied 31–31 with less than two minutes less, White ran 50 yards for the game-winning touchdown – finishing the game by going 16-of-25 for 181 yards and two touchdowns while rushing for 147 yards on 24 carries and a touchdown (328 total yards), while also being awarded the Player of the Game honor from ESPN and named Big East Offensive Player of the Week. In the 28–23 win on the road against #22
Cincinnati, White led the Mountaineers to the victory by going 13-of-19 for 140 passing yards with an interception and rushing 27 times for 155 yards and two touchdowns, a total of 295 total offensive yards. His 155 rushing yards put him over
Vince Young on the career
NCAA quarterback rushing list as he moved to over 3,000 career rushing yards, the first Big East quarterback ever to do so. White and the Mountaineers wrapped up the 2007 Big East Championship with their 66–21 win over #20
Connecticut. White ended the game by going 9 of 13 for 107 yards for a touchdown, but throwing a late interception, and running 16 times for 186 yards and 2 touchdowns. He ended the game with a total of 293 yards and three total touchdowns. White also passed former Mountaineer quarterback
Rasheed Marshall to become the school leader for the most total touchdowns. WVU entered the game against Pittsburgh as 28 point favorites to win the 100th Backyard Brawl and earn a berth in the BCS championship game. The Mountaineers, however, could never get their high-powered offense going against the Panthers and were hurt by fumbles, missed field goals, a run game they could not stop, and a thumb injury to the non-throwing hand of White. Trailing by one possession late in the fourth quarter (Pat White's backup had scored the only touchdown for West Virginia), West Virginia twice had the ball in Pitt territory. White had just returned but both times failed to convert on fourth down plays. The final Pitt possession saw the underdogs run the ball out of the back of the end zone for a safety as the clock expired. West Virginia kicker
Pat McAfee missed two field goals in the game and Pitt's kicker missed one. The loss cost his team a place in the national championship game. In the 48–28
Fiesta Bowl victory over
Oklahoma under interim head coach
Bill Stewart, White earned the MVP award after passing for 176 yards and two touchdowns and rushing for 150 yards – his sixth career 300-yard game effort. White was named to the ESPN All-Bowl Team following the bowl season, being the only quarterback on the list. ESPN ranked White's performance in the Fiesta Bowl as the #9 best in
BCS bowl game history.
2008 White was named to the Preseason
All-American team. To open up the
2008 football season under head coach
Bill Stewart, West Virginia defeated the
Villanova Wildcats 48–21. White finished the day by completing 25 of 33 passes for 208 yards and a career-best and
stadium-record five touchdowns, while also rushing for 63 yards. White's five passing touchdowns before a sell-out crowd is second-best in school history only to
Marc Bulger's six in
1998, and his completions and attempts were also career-highs. In the following game against
ECU, White was 11-of-18 for 72 yards and rushed 20 times for 97 yards in the 24–3 loss, for a total of only 169 yards of offense. West Virginia followed-up their loss to ECU with a 17–14 loss in overtime to
Colorado, in which White rushed for 149 yards and two touchdowns and passed for 43 yards on 10-of-14 passing. White's 149 yards rushing led the team and his two touchdowns were the only scores of the game for WVU. Following the Colorado game, White completed 17 out of 21 passes for 130 yards and two touchdowns and also rushed 11 times for 61 yards against
Marshall. West Virginia began Big East play with a 24–17 victory over
Rutgers, in which White was 12-of-17 for 137 yards and two touchdowns passing and rushed 11 times for 59 yards before being taken out in the 3rd quarter after being injured. However, White sat out for the
Syracuse game with a head injury, but the Mountaineers won 17–6 – snapping White's consecutive starting streak of 19 games. White started the following game against
Auburn, in which the Mountaineers won 34–17. White had two interceptions early in the game, but finished the victory with 174 yards and three touchdowns on 13-of-21 passing. West Virginia then defeated #25
Connecticut 35–13, picking up the team's first road victory of the season. In the win, White completed 11 of 18 passes for 121 yards and a touchdown and rushed 21 times for 109 yards and two touchdowns. White finished the game with 230 total yards and three touchdowns – earning him Big East Offensive Player of the Week honors. However, the Mountaineers then lost the following Big East matchup against the
Cincinnati Bearcats, 26–23 in overtime after a late comeback. White finished the game 20 of 38 passing for 219 yards with two touchdowns and an interception, and also rushed 20 times for 41 yards – totaling 260 total yards in the loss. White's 38 passing attempts was a career-high. White and the Mountaineers followed their loss with a 35–21 victory over
Louisville in their annual series. White finished the game with 122 yards on 6-of-11 passing for two touchdowns and a season-high 200 yards on 21 carries for three touchdowns, including a 66-yard touchdown run. White's 200 rushing yards broke the NCAA record for most rushing yards in a career by a quarterback, passing
Brad Smith for first place with his then-total of 4,292 yards. White's 5 total touchdowns (all of West Virginia's scores in the game), also made him become the most prolific scorer in Big East history, passing
Donovan McNabb's 10-year record of 96 total touchdowns responsible for. but his two picks allowed Pitt back to finish the comeback win. For White's final regular season game as a Mountaineer, at home against
South Florida, West Virginia promoted a "White-Out" to honor his career. In his Senior Night performance, a 13–7 victory over South Florida, White passed for 141 yards and a touchdown and rushed for 40 yards on a snow-covered field to finish his career at West Virginia in front of 48,000 white-clad fans. The Mountaineers' lone touchdown in the win, White's pass, was his 100th career touchdown and credited him with the milestone of 10,000 career total yards. Prior to the game, WVU managers scraped out the number 5 in the middle of the field in snow and formed a "5" in the student section with T-shirts before it opened for fans. In spite of all his accomplishments, White was never an NCAA All-American so he is not eligible for the
College Football Hall of Fame.
Awards and honors 2005 • ESPN.com all-Big East • Freshman All-American • Two-time Big East Player of the Week • WVU Coaches Contribution Award
2006 •
Walter Camp Award watchlist • Two-time Big East Player of the Week • first-team All-Big East • first-team All-
ECAC • Big East Offensive Player of the Year • West Virginia University MVP •
Gator Bowl MVP •
Davey O'Brien Award semifinalist •
Alabama Athlete of the Year •
West Virginia Amateur Athlete of the Year
2007 • Three-time Big East Player of the Week • Four-time WVU Offensive Player of the Week • first-team All-Big East • Big East Offensive Player of the Year • West Virginia University MVP •
Davey O'Brien Award semifinalist •
Walter Camp Award semifinalist •
Heisman Trophy 6th Place • Hardman Award • ESPN All-Bowl Team • Archie Griffin Award •
2008 Fiesta Bowl MVP •
West Virginia Amateur Athlete of the Year
2008 • Hardman Award •
Johnny Unitas Golden Arm Award finalist • West Virginia University MVP • First-team All-Big East •
Heisman Trophy 7th place •
Meineke Car Care Bowl MVP • 2009
Senior Bowl MVP •
West Virginia Amateur Athlete of the Year
Records • Has started a total of 40 games during his 4-year career. • Starting record of 35–8 is unmatched by any quarterback in WVU history and sixth in the
NCAA in most career victories as a starting quarterback. • First quarterback to have started and won 4 consecutive bowl games. • His 4,480 career yards rushing are the second most among any quarterback in FBS history. Denard Robinson, the career leader and former quarterback at the University of Michigan, also took snaps at the running back position when an injury to the elbow of his throwing arm prevented him from playing quarterback. • He has accounted for 100+ touchdowns, which is a Big East record for any position.
Game • One of only nine players in
NCAA history to rush for 200 yards and pass for 200 yards in a game (
Pitt 2006, 220 rushing and 204 passing) • Highest single-game rushing total by a quarterback in Big East history – 247 yards against Syracuse on October 14, 2006 • Tied for most yards of total offense in a single-game in WVU history – 424 yards against Pittsburgh in 2006 • Fourth highest single game rushing total in WVU history – 247 Rushing Yards against Syracuse on October 14, 2006 • Has three of the top seven highest rushing games in WVU history – #4: 247 yards against Syracuse on October 14, 2006, (tied) #7: 220 yards against Pitt on November 24, 2005, #7: 220 yards at Pitt on November 16, 2006.
Season • First in rushing yards in a season by a WVU quarterback (2007) – 1,335 yards • Second in rushing yards in a season by a WVU quarterback (2006) – 1,219 yards • Third in rushing yards in a season by a WVU quarterback (2005) – 952 yards • First (tied) in rushing touchdowns in WVU history (2006) – 18 touchdowns • Second most rushing yards in a season by a freshman in West Virginia school history (2005) – 952 yards • Second in Season Total Yards Gained in WVU history (2007) – 3,059 yards • Fourth in Season Total Yards Gained in WVU history (2006) – 2,874 yards • Fourth in Season Total Passing Touchdowns in WVU history (2008) – 18 touchdowns • Sixth in
NCAA single-season quarterback rushing list in yardage (2007) – 1,335 yards • Sixth in Season Rushing yards in WVU history (2007) – 1,335 yards • Second best passing efficiency in a season at WVU (2006) – 159.73 rating • Fifth best passing efficiency in a season at WVU (2007) – 151.40 rating
Career passing stats • Second in passing efficiency at WVU with a career quarterback rating of 147.62 • Second in completion percentage in WVU history by completing 64.6% of his passes • Second most in WVU history in passing touchdowns – 52 touchdowns • Second all-time in WVU pass completions – 467 completions • Fourth all-time in WVU passing yards – 5,576 yards • Fifth all-time in WVU pass attempts – 728 attempts
Career rushing stats • First in NCAA career quarterback rushing list in yardage – 4,480 yards • First in Big East and WVU career rushing yardage record for a quarterback – 4,480 yards • First in most 200-yard rushing game in a career in WVU history – 4 games • Second in total rushing yards in WVU history – 4,480 yards • Second in total career rushing touchdowns in WVU history – 47 touchdowns • Fourth in total rushing attempts in WVU history – 648 attempts • Fourth in WVU career 100 yard rushing games – 18 • Fourth in WVU career all-purpose rushing yardage – 4,480 yards • First in 200 yard rushing games at WVU with 4 total • Third duo (along with
Steve Slaton) in
FBS history to rush for 1,000 yards in consecutive seasons
Career passing/rushing combined • First in total offensive yards in a career in WVU history – 10,529 yards • First in total touchdowns responsible for in WVU and Big East history – 104 touchdowns • Fourth player in NCAA history with 40+ rushing and 40+ passing touchdowns in a career • Second player in NCAA history with 4,000+ rushing yards and 5,000+ passing yards. • One of five players in NCAA history to rush for 1,000 yards and pass for 1,000 yards in a season. (Accomplished twice, 2006 and 2007)
Versus ranked opponents • Has a W/L record of 7–2 against top 25 ranked opponents. • Has a W/L record of 2–1 against top 10 ranked opponents. • Has a W/L record of 1–0 against top 5 ranked opponents.
Bowl games • White is 4–0 as a starter in bowl games, 2–0 in
BCS Bowl Games, becoming the first starting quarterback in college football history to do so. • Joins
Georgia's David Greene,
Tennessee's Peyton Manning and
Nebraska's David Humm to win three New Year's Day bowl games. • Led WVU to an upset victory over the #9 ranked
SEC Champion
Georgia Bulldogs in the 2006
BCS Nokia Sugar Bowl. • Led WVU to an 18-point come-from-behind victory over
ACC runner-up
Georgia Tech in the 2007
Gator Bowl. • Led WVU to a stunning 20 point upset over #4 ranked
Big 12 Champion
Oklahoma Sooners in the 2008
BCS Tostitos Fiesta Bowl. • Was named 2007
Gator Bowl MVP. • Was named
2008 Fiesta Bowl MVP. • 79-yard touchdown pass in 2008 Fiesta Bowl is longest pass play in WVU Bowl history. • Ran for a team-high 150 yards in Fiesta Bowl victory over Oklahoma. • Was named 2009
Meineke Car Care Bowl player of the game. • Set career highs with 26 completions and 332 yards passing in final game (Meineike Bowl) • 387 total yards against North Carolina was fifth-best single-game total in WVU history
Statistics Regular and post season Bowl games ==Professional football career==