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November 2, 2004

Highest Ranking Yet

Filed under: Uncategorized — Chas @ 11:07 pm

Courtesy of Mike DeCourcy of the Sporting News.

11. Pittsburgh Panthers

THEY’LL HIT IT BIG IF: Point guard Carl Krauser leads the offense in the right direction. The Panthers won’t be as good defensively, so they’ll need to make better use of post scorer Christ Taft.

BIG-TIME ISSUE: Pitt needs to replace Jaron Brown‘s leadership. Chevon Troutman leads by example but isn’t a talker. Krauser has to get his teammates’ attention in tough moments.

He ranks Syracuse #4, UConn #13, and ND #19. This is part of getting ready for the season. They rank the Big East the #2 conference behind the ACC (of course).

He actually gives some more love to Pitt in circling a couple of the games as big match-ups to watch.

December 7

Jimmy V Classic. Think John Calipari might want to do a little damage to Pittsburgh, the school that once employed him as an assistant but declined to consider hiring him in 2003? And as much fun as Memphis-Pitt will be, that’s only the undercard. The second half of the doubleheader at Madison Square Garden matches Syracuse and Oklahoma State, two of TSN’s top five teams.

February 26

Super Saturday. Warm up the remote, ice down the beverages and keep the pizza delivery number handy. This will be the best day of the conference season, with showdown games in the Big East (Connecticut at Pittsburgh), SEC (Kentucky at Alabama), Conference USA (Louisville at Memphis) and Pac-10 (Arizona at Washington). If you’re able to handle more on Sunday, the Big 12 championship could be decided when Oklahoma State visits Kansas.

No one will be sleeping on Pitt this year, but if Pitt even stumbles once during its cakewalk of a non-con, the doubters will be there.

New Recruit from JUCOs for B-Ball

Filed under: Uncategorized — Chas @ 9:37 am

Another big body for the 2005 recruiting class. Doyle Hudson is 6’8″, 225 pounds. Nothing on him in the recruiting databases, other than him being ranked a 3-star recruit (out of 5). He chose Pitt over Tennessee, Georgia, South Carolina and Virginia Tech, so based on the teams pursuing him, it looks good. Hudson was not bothered that Pitt got Biggs, who plays the same position and is a top high schooler. He’s looking forward to competing. His JUCO coach apparently liked the way Pitt recruited Hudson,

“I’ve had people calling me the last couple of days and asking me if he’s really committed. Originally, he was not intending to sign until the spring. But when Pitt decided to work really hard on him he changed his mind. I know Georgia was really upset when they found out he was thinking about committing. Pitt did a good job with him.”

Considering the way Felton has already started turning around Georgia, I find that to be a good thing.

As pointed out, it looks like Pitt is trying to stockpile some big men with Troutman and McCarroll graduating this year, and Taft expected to go pro after the season. Pitt has one scholarship left to offer for 2005,

The Panthers could use their final scholarship on a guard, possibly 5-10 Levance Fields of Xaverian High School in Brooklyn, the same school Taft attended.

Fields visited this past weekend.

Also a story on the two freshman from Pitt’s 2004 recruiting class, Kieth Benjamin and Ronald Ramon. Unsurprisingly, both are eager to get involved and “help the team.”

Noise

Filed under: Uncategorized — Chas @ 8:38 am

Pitt has a record of 3-8-1 in the Carrier Dome. Prior to winning in 2002, Pitt had not won there since 1982. According to some of the players the noise is the thing. The stands almost feel on top of the players on the sidelines. Part of what Pitt attributes to winning there in 2002 was taking the crowd out of the game early with a good start. Kind of a truism for Pitt, anyways. Except for Furman and Temple, if they get out to a lead first they win. Fall behind or struggle and, well, you have Nebraska and UConn. I’m not sure if noise will be as much of an issue this time. Another review of the Syracuse game notes (PDF), shows that the Dome hasn’t even come close to meeting its nearly 50,000 capacity. Last week against UConn, they didn’t crack 35,000. Even when they hosted Florida State, it was only 40,539.

Harris seems to know what the key to stopping Syracuse is, stop their running game. He is saying all the right things about not looking past this game. Others are willing to look back at some of the positives.

Harris might not want to think about it, but the facts are the facts. Should the Panthers defeat the Orange, he would hold the distinction of being the only district Division I-A coach to finish with at least a .500 record the past five seasons, in addition to securing a potential fifth consecutive bowl berth.

Since 2000, West Virginia has been to three bowl games, including the past two under coach Rich Rodriguez, and Penn State has been to one, which occurred in 2002 under longtime coach Joe Paterno.

The Mountaineers, who are 7-1, will garner their third consecutive bowl bid this season, while the Nittany Lions, at 2-6, are out of the running.

Pitt is 36-21 (.632) since 2000, WVU is 34-23 (.596) and Penn State is 24-32 (.428). Over the past two-plus seasons, Pitt is 22-11, WVU is 24-10 and Penn State is 14-19.

The pessimist or cynic (hi) might point out that, that is more indicative of problems with the other programs than any true superiority by Pitt. Still it’s something.

Pitt was able to “contain” Walter Reyes last year with help from the Syracuse coaching staff. You have to believe that with Reyes fully recovered from the flu, I have to believe that Syracuse will go to the game plan I presumed they would use last year: Walter Reyes running right. Reyes running left. Reyes running straight up the middle. For variation, they give the ball to Damian Rhodes. I know Pitt has good numbers against the run, but I also saw a good/solid running back — Cornell Brockington at UConn — absolutely wear down and shred the Pitt defense. I think Reyes is a better back, and I worry that he will do the same.

On the defensive side, Syracuse has been improving. And they have been getting key turnovers, led by their safety.

“I think the key to becoming a good turnover-strip team is to get the kids to focus on it in the emotion of that moment,” Pasqualoni said. “You’re going hard, trying to make a tackle, an interception, whatever it is, and sometimes you don’t stop to think, ‘Maybe I ought to try to strip the ball.’ ”

At least one player seems to be thinking along those lines. Safety Diamond Ferri leads the Big East with four forced fumbles, ranks second with three recovered fumbles, is tied for first with three interceptions, and leads the conference with 117 interception return yards.

“Diamond Ferri has got himself to the point almost like Dwight Freeney,” Pasqualoni said. “Every time he sees the ball, he’s after it. Diamond has become that kind of guy for us.”

Pitt has done a good job in its last two games of neutralizing the big defensive playmaker of the opposition. It will need to continue.

For Pitt, one big plus is that the team is at its healthiest point in the year.

Joe DelSardo Strikes Again

Filed under: Uncategorized — Lee @ 7:04 am

Remember Joe DelSardo’s “jaw-dropping one-handed catch” against Rutgers that was SportsCenter’s number one play for October 23? Well, during this morning’s “Top Ten Plays” segment on SportsCenter, DelSardo’s catch came in as the second best play in all of October 2004. Once again, not bad… given that Pitt-Rutgers was a relatively unimportant, second-tier, blowout game in the middle of a month where the Boston Red Sox finally humiliated Chas’s New York Yankees and ended 86 years of basically just taking up space in the AL East.

I just watched the replay of Walt Harris’s weekly press conference on Fox Sports Pittsburgh (yeah, we get that in Altoona). Chas is right. It was pretty much your standard, mind-numbing Walt Harris performance… nervously glancing around the room at reporters as if they were police interrogators. Boring and even a little painful. The only interesting part was when fullback Tim Murphy came to the podium. He was charming, intelligent, and noticeably more well-spoken than his coach. You could almost feel the tension leaving the room. Murphy didn’t say anything revolutionary, but explained very intelligently how he will help defeat Syracuse’s excellent pass rush.

I’ll get the Pitt-Syracuse game in Altoona, so I’m happy.

Hail to this election just being over already. And hail to just watching the sun set… from my office desk at 4:30 PM…

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