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August 26, 2003

They Must Be Buying What He’s Selling

Filed under: Uncategorized — Chas @ 9:38 am

Pitt and Walt Harris has landed a couple more verbal commitments for the 2004. A solid all-state DL from New Jersey, Chenry Lewis

Lewis, who chose Pitt over Boston College and Rutgers, is the Panthers’ 12th recruit from the Class of 2004. He is the third player to commit in the past week, joining Penn Hills quarterback Anthony Morelli and Upper Merion offensive lineman Dave Weber.

He was named first-team all-state by The Associated Press and first-team All-Passaic by the coaches. While Tom Lemming ranks Lewis the No. 14 linebacker in the nation, SuperPrep ranks him the No. 20 player in New Jersey.

A huge 6’4″ 310 pound OL, Dave Weber, from the Philadelphia area committed to Pitt over Syracuse, Georgia Tech, Northwestern and Rutgers.

Pitt now has verbals from 12 recruits for 2004. Apparently the BCS fear isn’t stopping Harris.

August 25, 2003

Puffing the New B-Ball Coach

Filed under: Uncategorized — Chas @ 10:02 pm

This story is already a month and a half old, but I just noticed it. A CBS Sportsline story on Pitt’s new b-ball coach, Jamie Dixon. Most of it is spent focusing on his acting in TV commercials to give him the human, light touch story. That would have been fine, but it’s the rapid revisionism that the piece does in how Dixon got the job.

Which is why when Skip Prosser turned the Panthers down to stay at Wake Forest, the Pitt administration turned to Dixon despite interest from a number of proven head coaches.

“As anticipated, some very high-profile parties expressed interest in the job,” said Pitt athletic director Marc Boehm. “In the end, discussions on who would be the best fit kept coming back to Jamie. Over the last four years, our basketball program has reached heights some people once considered impossible. In Jamie, we have a person who helped us reach those heights and will help us reach even higher in the future.”

The run that Dixon was a part of the past four years is, indeed, amazing. The Panthers were a struggling, almost forgotten power in the Big East. But the past two seasons, they captured at least a share of the Big East title, reached the Sweet 16 twice and put together a ridiculous 57-11 overall record.

No wonder UCLA made Howland its first choice. And Pitt had few reservations about handing over its program to Dixon. That’s something Dixon, who figured his first head-coaching job would be at a good mid-major or a rebuilding big program, is grateful for. All the work he did to get Pitt to this level, he now gets to reap the benefits of.

Wrong. Wrong. Wrong. Wrong. Wrong. Wrong.

Pitt totally flubbed the hiring so many ways. Dixon may work out, and I hope he makes me look foolish about this, but my main problem was and still is with the way they went about the whole damn thing. This article makes it seem like the administration had a solid plan the whole time.

Reconsidering

Filed under: Uncategorized — Chas @ 7:48 pm

I may have worried needlessly and thoughtlessly at a potential WR curse at Pitt, after reading about how Pitt WR and best in the Big East lost his mother to breast cancer last spring. More important things for Larry Fitzgerald than that. Also, nice to note that he is carrying a better than 3.0 GPA in school — living amongst Buckeye Fans (Motto: “classes and exams, optional”) it’s nice to read.

Holy Crap

Filed under: Uncategorized — John @ 7:01 pm

Pitt sells out. 62,644 tickets, including two that belong to my father-in-law, a long-time Pitt fan (his father played for them in the 1920s), who never bought season tickets before. We’re going to have more fans than Woodland Hills-Mt. Lebanon. I can’t believe it. A far cry from the mid-1990s, when it was just Chas, Pat and 226 other fans sitting in the big bowl on Cardiac Hill. It’s nice to finally be one of those people who can scoff at the Johnny-Come-Latelys.

Now we’ve got to start playing some real opponents in the early season. They’re drawing up the 2005 schedule as we speak: Homewood Montessori in the first game and a tough match-up with Chatham’s field hockey team in the second. I think we can take ’em.

Hail Ball State!

Pitt sells out…

Filed under: Uncategorized — Patrick @ 6:42 pm

What? Pitt has sold out to corporate America, becoming the boot licking capitalist running dog lackeys we always knew they could be? Well, yes, but that’s not what I mean in this post.

Pitt’s season ticket allotment is now SOLD OUT.

There are still some club seats left for you capitalists out there – $240 per season PLUS an extra $500 per seat donation to the athletic fund.

Pitt has already sold 62,644 season tickets; that number includes 10,000 student tickets as well as corporate sponsor tickets and club seats. There are still some single game tickets left for each game, plus there may be additional seats depending on whether the away teams use their whole allotments. Virginia Tech, Miami and Notre Dame are sold out (standing room tickets will go on sale for ND in September).

This may not be a big deal to fans of the Tennessee Volunteers, but for Pitt, this is huge.
Our record for attendance was against Fordham back in 1938 – only because they put up additional bleachers in old Pitt Stadium (capacity 56,000).
To get 65,000 or more for each game? That rules.

Hooray for Hoopietown

Filed under: Uncategorized — John @ 3:03 pm

So here I am back in Morgantown, after spending an enjoyable Saturday evening with Pat and Shawn in the ‘Burgh. Since moving here two months ago, I’ve gotten used to the dearth of Pitt info in my new hometown paper, the Morgantown Dominion Post. (I know I could just log on, but as an ex-newspaperman, I like to hold the damn thing as I read it.) So it was a shock to open the DP sports section and see this headline in bold across the top: “Pitt Panthers Roaring: Harris seems to have everything on his No. 10 team.” (Sorry, I just don’t care enough to learn how to link this story. Beside’s it was just a wire story — both readers of this site have probably already read it.)

[Chas, here. Learn damn it. It really doesn’t take much effort.]

Two thoughts come to mind. One, running this story above the fold in this town is the most courageous act of journalism since Jayson Blair decided that you don’t really need to interview people in order to quote them. I mean, folks here hate Pitt. The way we hate Penn State. I told my class the other day that I graduated from Pitt and spontaneous boos broke out. This was the first day of class. And I’m the freakin prof.

Two, I don’t know about the headline: “Harris seems to have everything.” Everything? What about a modicum of play-calling ability?

Hail to Shawn Reading This Blog Someday

More Notice of Pitt

Filed under: Uncategorized — Chas @ 11:25 am

Pitt and coach Walt Harris are getting more national love. A piece in the Sunday New York Times. The focus is on two aspects. The rebuilding of Pitt to national prominence by Harris; and the loss of Miami and Va Tech from the Big East as a danger to Pitt’s future football prominence. Nothing earthshatteringly new in the piece except for this nugget.

Despite the departure of Miami and Virginia Tech, the Big East will have a Bowl Championship Series berth through the 2005 season.

A split, in which the six remaining Big East universities with football teams would recruit two programs to form a new conference, remains a possibility.

With a new B.C.S. contract due to be negotiated about a year from now, officials from Big East universities need to find a solution quickly, and [Pitt Athletic Director, Jeff] Long said the conference had a timetable of Sept. 1.

“Some people perceive us to be in limbo,” Long said, referring to the remaining members of the Big East, “but it’s not really limbo. It’s a question of what our new direction is going to be.”

A week to a decision. I hope so. And it better be the right decision.

The NYTimes also put out it’s preseason top 20. Pitt is #11. The NYTimes is always a little weird — Auburn #1, VA Tech #2 (?), NC State #5(??), Miami #6, Ohio St. #7. It just gets stranger.

The Oregon Award

Filed under: Uncategorized — Lee @ 9:50 am

As has been noted previously on this site, we will bestow an award (non-monetary, of course) on the Division I-A college football team with what we feel are the worst uniforms this season. This award will be named “The Oregon Award.”

Why Oregon? Because of the University of Oregon’s long standing tradition of having absolutely butt-ugly uniforms, a tradition made even more inexcusable given that Oregon is practically Nike’s home team. For instance, take a look at Oregon’s home uniforms from last season.

Nice work, guys. Somebody should have sued Phil Knight. Fortunately for Oregon — which is a solid football program underneath it all — they decided to redesign their uniforms for this season. Furthermore, they decided to get rid of the two-tones-of-green-at-once look. Unfortunately, this is what they came up with.

As if the contrast between the dark green (called “thunder green,” by the way… and anytime you have to start making up names for colors, you know you’re in trouble… see “Vegas gold”) and bright yellow (called “lightning”) wasn’t shocking enough, Oregon had to go one step further. Like all too many major league baseball teams, they had to make a “alternative home jersey.” Brace yourself…

Yeeouch!!! That’s the most painful thing that I’ve had to look at since Willis McGahee’s injury in the Fiesta Bowl. Once again, nice work guys. Now go sue Phil Knight. NOW!

(Incidentally, I love how enthusiastic the involved model looks about his threads.)

Thus, given their brand new alternative home uniforms, I would like to humbly submit for consideration… for the 2003 Oregon Award… the University of Oregon. Way to dig yourselves out of a hole, fellas.

So why does a Pitt fan care so much about the University of Oregon and bad uniforms in general? Only because Pitt used to have the best uniforms in college football. Then, we threw them away so that we could look more like Notre Dame, apparently (and a cheesy, corporate version of the Irish at that). I feel Oregon’s pain.

Bring back Pitt’s old unis now. At least for one game.

Hail to Shawn Posting Something Someday

August 23, 2003

B-Ball Side Note — Filling a Need

Filed under: Uncategorized — Chas @ 8:34 pm

After letting a good recruit walk — since he had second thoughts, Pitt has depth at his position and, probably most important, he has yet to academically qualify — Pitt has used that freed up scholarship to get a point guard to back-up Krauser this coming season.

They have signed, Antonio Graves of Mansfield High School in Mansfield, Ohio. Graves was first-team all-Ohio last year. He’s 6-3. He was a late qualifier. Not a blue-chip recruit — his main offers were from Rutgers, Charlotte and Bowling Green (though Ohio St. and Cincinnati started showing some late interest). Still, he fills a big need for Pitt.

Corso and Herbstreit’s Big East Picks

Filed under: Uncategorized — Lee @ 12:21 pm

For those of you who didn’t see the ESPN College Gameday Pre-Season Special, Lee Corso and Kirk Herbstreit’s picks for the Big East championship went like this:

CORSO: (confidently) “I like Pittsburgh. They get both Virginia Tech and Miami up in Pittsburgh.”

HERBSTREIT: (very dismissively) “Yeah, we’ll see if their fans show up. I’ll take Virginia Tech.”

Was that a dis, Kirk? Well, I’ll be there. The rest of this site’s contributors will be there. According to what I’m reading about Pitt’s ticket sales this summer, a $#%@load of other Panther fans will be there. And, given that we play Virginia Tech on November 8 and Miami on November 29, Old Man Winter may be there as well.

Yes, even Herbsteit can tick me off every now and then.

Hail to Heinz Field Sellouts

August 22, 2003

Compliance, Hubris and Splitting Hairs

Filed under: Uncategorized — Chas @ 8:28 pm

Living in Ohio in just the last couple months has led to much in the way of thoughts on NCAA compliance. So, it partially amused me to note that the Pitt Athletic site has a section on “Compliance.” Most of it appears to still be under construction, i.e., no content.

Of course, when talking of compliance and NCAA violations, there is no one that knows it better than the man that leaves a trail of slime wherever he goes, a man who causes other attorneys (like myself) to say about him, “sure he went to law school, but he’s not really a lawyer. He’s not one of us.” I’m speaking of course of Rick Neuheisel.

Neuheisel is now suing his last employer, the University of Washington, and the NCAA over his termination for cause. This comes, just as Washington released a series of tapes, pursuant to public disclosure laws via requests from The Seattle Times and the Seattle Post-Intelligencer.

The tapes tend to show Neuheisel lying to direct questions.

Former Washington football coach Rick Neuheisel told NCAA investigators he never gambled, then later acknowledged his involvement in neighborhood NCAA basketball pools.

Audio tapes released Thursday showed Neuheisel lied when initially questioned by the NCAA about gambling. The organization considers gambling a major rules violation.

The tapes support handwritten notes, released last month, from the meeting. Neuheisel was fired July 28 as Washington’s coach for participating in the pools and for not being forthcoming with NCAA investigators.

“I never placed a bet on anything,” Neuheisel said early in the tapes, recorded June 4 when NCAA investigators first met with him.

A short time later, he was asked whether he had any concerns about going to the event in 2002 and 2003. Teams of neighbors pooled money and bid on NCAA Tournament teams in an auction-style setting.

“I won’t go again, if that’s the question,” Neuheisel said, laughing. “No, I didn’t have any concerns at all. I know we can’t gamble. I know I can’t place a bet or anything like that, but I wasn’t. I was just there watching.”

He kept changing his story the deeper it got. His lawyer is arguing in the lawsuit, much the way Neuheisel did when he was publicly fighting to keep his job (actually, he was just trying to get a buyout rather than dismissal for cause). That he never really violated any rules, and if he did it was based on mistaken advice given by the University of Washington’s compliance officer.

It’s consistent with Neuheisel’s violations of recruiting and ethics at Colorado and Washington. Skate up to the razor’s edge of the line, and maybe fall over it just a little, but not so much that it can’t be argued that there was a gray area — thus precluding major penalties, only continual paper cut, minor ones.

I’ve always thought that was in part because of Neuheisel taking the wrong lessons from law school (the majority of it is because Neuheisel is a slimy, corrupt, and doesn’t think the rules apply to him kind of guy) — the line can be blurry and as long as you don’t go over a clear line, you can wriggle free.

Quick, before they fix the error, look at this website. It belongs to WTAJ-TV, Channel 10, a television station in Altoona, Pennsylvania (Altoona is the nearest TV market to State College, by the way). This is how the top story reads as of 4:15 PM, August 22, 2003.

PENN STATE IS NUMBER 5 – BUT NOT IN FOOTBALL

The University of Pennsylvania is in a four-way tie for fifth place in the U-S News and World Report annual ranking of “America’s Best Colleges” released today. Princeton tops the list for the fourth consecutive year — this time sharing the top spot with Harvard, which was second last year. Yale is third and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology fourth. Penn State shares the fifth spot with the Cal Tech, Duke and Stanford.

Apparently, some overzealous Nittany Lions at the station failed to recognize the difference between the Ivy League’s University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia and the Big Ten’s Penn State in State College. Easy, Lion fan. You ain’t in Stanford’s league academically, at least not yet. Heck, you may not even be in Pitt’s league.

Hail to Penn… heck the Quakers may have a better football team than the Nittany Lions too.

UPDATE: WTAJ-TV has now fixed this error. But not before I print-screened it.

In Ivan Maisel and Gene Wojciechowski’s column on ESPN.com this morning (click on the “For Argument’s Sake” link on this page), there is a brief discussion on the future of the Big East Football Conference after Miami and Virginia Tech leave.

Will the Big East be football irrelevant in three years?

Let’s see: Rutgers will be looking for another head coach — again — if Greg Schiano doesn’t start proving he knows an X from an O. The Scarlet Knights are 3-20 during his tenure, 0-14 in league play, and gave up 34 or more points in nine of 12 games last season (including a 37-19 loss to D-IAA Villanova). UConn (which joins the schedule in 2004) is finding it a challenge to find buyers for its big-money seats at new Rentschler Field. Pittsburgh, West Virginia and Boston College are tracking upward, but Syracuse has won six or fewer games in three of the last four seasons. Temple is about to become Big East history.

League commissioner Mike Tranghese, who didn’t exactly have his finest hour during the ACC raid of his conference (a little too much finger-pointing and verbal hysterics for our tastes), says the Big East will survive. Tranghese is a smart guy, so you know he’ll do what he can. League athletic directors have had recent meetings and teleconferences to discuss the conference’s future makeup.

For now the Big East is good to go in the BCS for three more seasons (that’s when the BCS pact expires). Then the BCS powers have to decide if the Big East is worth the trouble.

Right now, the vote appears to be a tentative and polite yes. But that could change, depending on what direction Tranghese and the school presidents point the conference.

In other words, Commissioner Tranghese, stop pointing fingers, rebuild the Big East Football Conference with the best teams you can realistically get, and you’ll probably stay in the BCS. Chas and I would both argue that splitting the league’s non-football-playing members off might be a good fiscal move.

But either way, Pitt will most likely continue to have direct access to a BCS bowl after 2005. I’ve been arguing this for a while now. The BCS needs the Big East to maintain its majority over the Division I-A schools, and to maintain a presence in the most populated corner of the United States.

So once again, Mr. Rudel, forget about Pitt begging Joe Paterno for forgiveness and admittance into the Big Ten. We’re probably going to be better off where we are.

Hail to Tranghese Getting Off His Butt And Doing The Right Thing

August 21, 2003

Neil Rudel is the Sports Editor of the Altoona Mirror. He is also one of the most read, respected, and published commentators on Penn State sports. He is frequently heard on the Penn State Football Radio Network during the season.

Mr. Rudel, like all good Penn State fans, completely hates Pitt and disrespects our current renaissance. I can’t begrudge him that. But I will make fun of him and his always-left-handed compliments from time to time. Here’s a snippet from his column in today’s Altoona Mirror, apparently inspired from Morelli’s commitment to Pitt.

Pitt’s apparent rise in stature, followed by better recruiting and signs of improved attendance, has to be viewed as bittersweet in that the Panthers, unless they can get into the Big Ten, will be playing in a second-tier league beginning in 2004 — abeit one they should be able to win every year.

Rudel seems to be once again suggesting that Pitt’s long term survival depends on its admittance to the Big Ten. I completely disagree. The Big East will remain in the BCS because the BCS needs the Big East and its members to maintain its slim majority over Division I-A schools. Thus, the Big East will not become a second-tier league after Miami and Virginia Tech leave — although it will admittedly become easier than the Big Ten (and how many times have your Lions won that conference?).

Penn State fans love to think that Pitt has no choice but to beg for Joe Paterno’s forgiveness and mercy, so that Pitt may save itself from a dying Big East and jump to the glorious Big Ten. But not only does Pitt not have to join the Big Ten, but Pitt shouldn’t want to. The road to a BCS bowl is much easier from where we are. Besides, I seriously doubt that the Big Ten is going to expand anyways. Nobody outside of Pennsylvania — not even the ADs — appears to want it.

But of course, I think that even if the Big Ten did expand, they’d take Syracuse first.

But anyways, knock off the paternalistic attitude, Neil. We’re ranked much higher than you in the polls, we’re beating you in the classroom, we’ve got the better coaches, and we’re out recruiting you. We’re no longer in Lion country, you’re now in Panther country.

Hail to Pitt.

Herbstreit and Alberts

Filed under: Uncategorized — Lee @ 11:25 am

This is why ESPN’s Kirk Herbstreit continues to be my favorite college football analyst.

Best Quarterbacks [innovator’s category]
#4 Rod Rutherford

Best Running Backs
#1 Maurice Clarett

Best Wide Receivers
#1 Larry Fitzgerald

Best Clutch Performers
#1 Craig Krenzel
#4 Larry Fitzgerald

Hogmollies
#5 Rob Petitti

Offensive Geniuses
#2 Walt Harris

Defensive Wizards
#3 Paul Rhoades

Fear Factors (DE’s)
#3 Claude Harriot

Moving on Up Schools
#3 Pittsburgh

Herbie then picks Traitor Tech to win the Big East, thus proving that nobody’s perfect (Why do ESPN analysts always pick Virginia Tech? Does Disney own Blacksburg or something?).

Meanwhile, Trev Alberts continues his reign of idiocy and Big XII worship with this piece.

First and foremost, there will be the excitement generated by Kansas State and Oklahoma, two legitimate national championship contenders. Those are the two best teams in the nation in my mind, and it’s just too bad they will likely have to meet in the Big 12 championship game rather than the national championship game.

Sure, Oklahoma is for real. But Kansas State? Are you serious? Nothing — not Ford Mustangs, sloppy wet kisses, Bush’s pre-war intelligence on Iraq, the observation windows at the top of the Cathedral of Learning, or even Virginia Tech — is as perennially overrated as Kansas State. Every freakin’ year, they play nobody for the first half of the season, and then get promptly decapitated by either Colorado, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Texas, or Texas A&M. Whose leg does K-State rub up against to keep getting in the top five?

No team in America is as overrated as Kansas State, no conference in America is as overrated as the Big XII, and no analyst in America has gotten so far on pretty-boy looks alone as Trev Alberts.

Hail to Mark May, The Most Intelligent, Brainiest, and Best Spoken Analyst on ESPN

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