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December 11, 2003

Neil Rudel’s Heisman Vote

Filed under: Uncategorized — Lee @ 10:14 am

I can’t believe that I haven’t even mentioned Neil Rudel (Sports Editor of the Altoona Mirror, Editor of the Penn State Bible, a frequent guest on the Penn State Football Radio Network, and one of the most read, respected, and published commentators on Penn State sports) since September 15, 2003. Neil’s frequent cheap shots at Pitt — commonly born of jealousy these days — are usually more than blog-worthy.

In any case, Mr. Rudel is an official Heisman Trophy voter. In today’s Altoona Mirror, Neil makes sure to clearly point out to the half-dozen-or-so Pitt fans that actually read his crap that he did not vote for Panthers Receiver Larry Fitzgerald this year.

I must confess: I voted Pitt’s Larry Fitzgerald second behind Oklahoma quarterback Jason White. Much as I wanted to vote for Fitzgerald, it’s impossible to ignore White’s incredible numbers of 40 touchdowns against just eight interceptions… Had Fitzgerald played a little better against Miami, it would have helped, and if he were an upperclassman, provincial sentiment would have tugged a little more.

I did vote for Larry Johnson last year on the basis that he gained 2,000 yards, was a senior, played a position more physically demanding than wide receiver, and broke a 100 year-old Big Ten record. At the risk of providing fodder for Pitt fans, that’s my story.

I appreciate that fodder, Neil. Say, the Heisman Trophy is to go to college football’s best player, period. Whether a candidate is a senior or not has nothing to do with it. Whether a candidate plays on what was once the nation’s number one team or not has nothing to do with it. And most of all, whether a candidate just so happens to go to your alma mater (e.g., Larry Johnson) or the program that is in danger of supplanting your alma mater as Pennsylvania’s strongest college football program has nothing to do with it.

Winning a Heisman Trophy is a major boost to a program’s recruiting. Just look at what John Cooper pulled off recruiting-wise in the late 90s after Eddie George brought one back to Columbus. If I bled blue and white as much as Neil does, I wouldn’t have voted for Fitzgerald either. Penn State is far enough behind Pitt in recruiting as it is. Still, you have to admire the regional solidarity there.

Finally, who says that playing running back is more physically demanding than playing wide receiver? Have you ever had to go up for a catch at full speed, Neil? And how many touchdowns was Fitzgerald supposed to score against Miami when he (1) was used as a decoy for most of the game, and (2) was double and triple covered even then?

If this piece came from anybody other than Neil Rudel, I might have taken the stated admiration for Jason White as sincere (after all, White is a legitimate Heisman candidate). But given Rudel’s long-standing agenda of belittling every little advance that Pitt and Walt Harris make on his beloved Nittany Lions, I can’t help but snicker a little.

Hail to the Heisman going to the best player in college football Saturday night, period.

P.S. Charlotte sucks. I wouldn’t go to a bowl game there if Michael Jackson was playing the Santa Barbara County District Attorney’s office.

Continental Tire Bowl

Filed under: Uncategorized — Chas @ 8:26 am

Raise your hand if you are surprised to find that Pitt’s allotment of tickets (12,500) are lagging in sales. Liar.

Pitt has sold only 3,000 of its allotted 12,500 tickets for its Continental Tire Bowl game Dec. 27 against Virginia in Charlotte, N.C.

The low number probably indicates that Pitt fans are disappointed because the Panthers failed to live up to preseason expectations.

Probably? I would say definitely. If you want to hedge, maybe “apparently” or “strongly.” Pitt didn’t even live up to mid-season expectations. Going 2-2 over the final four games tends to suck the life out of any fan, especially when you lose the final game, at home, on national TV.

By comparison, UVA sold 20,000 tickets and has asked for an additional 10,000. No great shock considering that Virginia is adjacent to North Carolina, and the alumni of UVA tends to be more diffuse through the state — not concentrated near Pittsburgh.

Pittsburgh is 447 miles from Charlotte. Charlottesville is 304 miles from Charlotte.

Someone at the Post-Gazette was not fact-checking the driving distance.

Charlottesville, Va., is closer to Charlotte than Pittsburgh, but only by about 75 minutes.

I’d love to know how they calculate drive time.

Here’s the site for the Continental Tire Bowl. There are separate parties for the ACC and the Big East the day before — following the pep rally?

Both head coaches and several players will address the fans and get them pumped. Cheerleader and band
performances will also get the hype going. Special guest speakers include WWE Superstar Ric Flair and NFL Hall of Famer Joe DeLamielleure.

The ACC party will be at a bar called Dixie’s Tavern, while the Big East version will be at the two local branches of Bar and Have a Nice Day Cafe. Glad to see, the local Charlotte flavor won’t be lost.

The UVA athletic site has a good collection of information regarding the bowl for its fans. Pitt’s bowl info site, is less so.

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