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August 25, 2005

Sartorial Statements

Filed under: Uncategorized — Chas @ 10:23 pm

As the season looms, uniform changes abound and Paul Lukas at UniWatch for ESPN.com, Page 2 has a round-up.

Pittsburgh is now Pitt again, as you can see on its new helmet. But whoever added that gold side panel on the jersey should be pink-slipped, pronto.

This, ahem, coordinates with what we said back at the unveiling.

To just follow that up, back in April when the new unis were revealed I e-mailed Lukas about the new unis and logo and what he thought:

I prefer the script, not the block. But hey, I went to a college that didn’t even have a football team!

Meanwhile, Syracuse is making Pitt look stable in the realm of logos. 15 months after they changed to a new logo, they are changing again. The new logo is here. I like the simplicity, but they sure keep things confusing.

Meet The Enemy Blogs

Filed under: Uncategorized — Chas @ 4:29 pm

With the coming season, knowledge is power. Or something like that. For easy reference here are the team blogs of Pitt’s opponents this season (cribbed from Fanblogs from their full list of college team blogs):

Notre Dame

The Blue-Gray Sky
The Backer
Kanka’s Sports
Kelly Green
NDCHOOCHOO
Brendan Loy
Their Irish Brogue

Ohio University

None (not exactly a shock)

Nebraska

Husker Extra
StrugglingJoe

Youngstown State

None

Rutgers

Knight Hawk

Cinci

Bearcats Blog

USF

The Bull Pen

Syracuse

Orange Juice
Syracuse::44::Orange

Louisville

Before I Get Old

UConn

None (for football)

WVU

WV Law Dog Blog

Words Fail

Filed under: Uncategorized — Chas @ 3:38 pm

Joel, I don’t know if you did this, but now my head really hurts.

The Return of Kendall News

Filed under: Uncategorized — Chas @ 2:11 pm

Yes, I too thought I wouldn’t be posting anything about Levon Kendall for a couple months. But here it is barely a week later. Courtesy of the rapidly indispensable Big East Basketball Report, Levon Kendall has been added to the Canadian National Team as games begin today in FIBA’s Tournament of Americas for qualification to the 2006 World Championships. Also on the team is the seemingly eternal UConn Huskie Denham Brown. Seriously, how long has he been with that team. It seems like he has been there since Ray Allen left.

This is actually fairly significant for Kendall. The competition is better and older and he is still being counted on to produce.

Among the most significant additions are Carl English of Patrick’s Cove, Nfld., and Levon Kendall of Vancouver, a pair of young forwards who’ll be asked to handle a majority of the team’s scoring in the 10-country tournament which starts tomorrow and ends Sept. 5.

English, who played last year with Florida of the NBDL, joined the team for practices last weekend, while Kendall was the best player on the national under-21 team that won a bronze medal at the world championships earlier this month.

If he does well here, then you have to like his chances to earn and keep a starting position for Pitt.

Past and Future

Filed under: Uncategorized — Chas @ 1:28 pm

The Beaver County Times has been doing a Friday feature where they look back at an area great. Past Pitt players are heavy in this thing. This week, a look at former Pitt player and coach, Foge Fazio.

Fazio’s first stop at Pitt came in 1969 when he was named the defensive coordinator under coach Carl DePasqua. It was during his four years in that post he became familiar with Hopewell great Tony Dorsett.

“I was recruiting Tony and wanted to make him a free safety,” Fazio said. “That’s how smart I was.”

Dorsett ended up going to Pitt as a running back, eventually winning the Heisman Trophy. Fazio wasn’t there to share in Dorsett’s days with the Panthers. When Johnny Majors took over at Pitt in 1973, Fazio left for the University of Cincinnati.

After four seasons as the Bearcats’ defensive coordinator, Fazio returned to Pitt as an assistant under Jackie Sherrill. Following five years of coaching under Sherrill – the last three as defensive coordinator – Fazio was named Pitt’s football coach when Sherrill left for Texas A&M.

“It was a great honor, but with it comes pressure because being from the area, people know who you are and they expect a lot out of you,” Fazio said.

Added pressure came when Pitt was the preseason No. 1-ranked team in the country in 1982.

“I guess since we were 11-1 the previous three years with key players (like quarterback Dan Marino) returning, I guess we were the logical choice,” Fazio said.

Injuries to key receivers affected Marino, and Pitt ended 9-3 with a loss to SMU in the Cotton Bowl. The Panthers were 8-3-1 with a loss to Ohio State in the Fiesta Bowl the following year. Things went sour in 1984 as Pitt went 3-7-1.

“We lost some real good players and probably didn’t recruit as well as we had in the past,” Fazio admitted. “But I was the head coach. It was on my watch.

“We were taking kids who we were sure would graduate,” Fazio said. “A few years ago, Dean Billick, who was the assistant athletic director (at Pitt), told me I had the highest graduation rate of all the recent Pitt coaches. I said, ‘Well, that still didn’t save my job.'”

He may not have been a very good head coach, but he was a solid assistant, and remains a good interview.

Meanwhile, on Saturday, Aaron Smith of Gateway high will announce his choice of school live on FSN Pittsburgh in between the Pennsylvania Kickoff Classic II games being aired.

Although Pitt is considered the favorite, Gateway coach Terry Smith warned not to count out Maryland.

Aaron Smith visited the College Park campus last weekend, and the Terrapins are recruiting him as an athlete who could play receiver or defensive back.

“They’re neck and neck,” said Terry Smith, Aaron’s uncle. “They’re sending five or six handwritten letters a day. They’re all calling me, trying to reach me because they can’t call kids until Sept. 1.”

Anyone else wonder how the coaches at any program have that kind of time to write little notes to players. I have to believe that is the job of a cadre of student interns in the athletic department.

Also, September 1 is the first day written offers and telephone contact can be made by college coaching staffs for high schoolers of the class of 2007. According to the story the following local kids can expect lots of attention.

Hampton linebacker Steve Paskorz, receivers Toney Clemons of Valley, Jon Ditto of Gateway and Derek Moye of Rochester, Central Catholic lineman Stefen Wisniewski and Greensburg Central defensive back Nick Sukay.

Gentlemen, start your speed dial.

More Selling Out

Filed under: Uncategorized — Chas @ 1:02 pm

Yes, I am now doing some ads on this site. As the season begins, and my roadies to Pitt games are ready, I need to do something to show the wife that it isn’t really just an outlet for my obsession and an excuse not to spend time with her and the kid.

This ad is for a book by a very infrequent poster to PSB, but a good friend and Pitt grad. I encourage everyone to at least take a look. Hopefully this will also spur John to post a little more on life as a Pitt guy teaching and living in Morgantown.

Goals and Starting Over (Again)

Filed under: Uncategorized — Chas @ 9:00 am

Derek Kinder doesn’t want to be just the 3rd receiver.

“I want to start,” Kinder said. “I want to be that second receiver. I want to be there right behind Greg [Lee] and even pushing Greg. That’s what all of our goals should be. It is nice to get some time and be recognized right now, but it doesn’t mean a thing yet.

“Coach made it clear he wants us to be pushing for that starting job and so that’s what my goal has always been. This is a good start, being third, but I haven’t done anything yet.”

Kinder’s attitude — along with his improved play and consistency — is a big reason he has been moved into the third receiver spot. His desire, however, is why coaches don’t doubt he’ll continue to climb the depth chart.

“Derek has goals, he has dreams,” wide receivers coach Aubrey Hill said. “He wants to be the best. He is always trying to learn from Greg [Lee] or get tidbits from Joe [Delsardo] and then trying to use them to make himself a better player. So there is no doubt in my mind that he isn’t settling for third. He wants to be No. 1.[“]

One other area where Kinder, who played in nine games last year as a true freshman and caught one pass, has separated himself from the others is as a blocker. A big part of Pitt’s offense is running the football, so receivers must be involved in downfield blocking.

“That’s the hardest thing to understand when you are new to this,” Kinder said. “Blocking is important. Everyone wants to catch passes. I want to be the most complete receiver I can be, so I have really tried to take pride in my blocking and work on ways to become better at it.”

With Pitt looking to run a lot more, a receiver willing to do the blocking and dirty work stands a great chance of getting in the game. You would hope that maybe someone asks Hines Ward of the Steelers to stop buy and advise a little.

Coach Hill indicated that redshirt freshman Marcel Pestano will be the 4th WR , with freshman Oderick Turner pushing also. Terrell Allen and Marcus Furman are somewhere in the mix, but are already unable to stay healthy.

Furman is still expected to be playing on special teams. He just wants to help the team.

Fullback Kellen Campbell is still waiting to find out where he fits on the Panther depth chart.

“I’ve had a new running backs coach just about every year I’ve been here,” Campbell said with a laugh. “So at least I’m used to proving myself to a new position coach.”

As camp draws to a close, the question hanging over the running back lineup is whether senior Tim Murphy will be used as a tailback or a fullback.

“We’ve got some good fullbacks,” Wannstedt said. “Kellen Campbell and Justin Acierno, those guys can both line up and play.

“The decision’s to be made is, is Tim Murphy one of our two or three best tailbacks or do we leave him at fullback?”

That decision likely won’t be finalized until next week, when Wannstedt and his crew begin planning for the opener against Notre Dame.

So once again, Campbell will have to wait a while longer before learning his fate.

Campbell could be anywhere from 1st to 3rd on the depth chart. Then there will be worrying about what happens when Shane Brooks or Conredge Collins gets shifted over to FB.

While it seemed obvious that H.B. Blades is something of the vocal leader — or at least the front man/face — of the defense, apparently Coach Wannstedt is still looking for linemen on the defense to take charge. Okay.

Redshirt freshman Adam Gunn attracted attention for his move from Safety to Outside Linebacker. As is the danger for multiple newspaper coverage, you have two stories with virtually the same headline — I guess there are only so many variations the headline editors can concoct.

At 6-foot-1 and 220-plus pounds, Gunn’s a little heavy to play in the secondary at Pitt and a little light for linebacker. But he was moved from safety to outside linebacker in the summer and has been a pleasant surprise during training camp this week at the UPMC Sports Complex.

“The position change with Gunn has been good,” Pitt coach Dave Wannstedt said. “He’s got enough speed to play linebacker, but he wasn’t going to be fast enough to play in the secondary.

“When you move a guy from safety to linebacker, sometimes you’ll find out if they’ll be willing to handle the toughness part of it. But I’m real encouraged with where Adam is at right now.”

Pitt linebackers coach Curtis Bray told Gunn that the transition from safety would be tough, but Gunn took that as a challenge and met it head on.

“I’m loving it right now,” Gunn said.

It has been a change he has been working on since the spring.

Gunn got the news after spring drills, and he spent the summer preparing for his new role. He had plenty of time to study the playbook, meet with Bray, watch film and get a lot of reps in summer workouts.

“This year, I’m coming in thinking any day I could be the starter,” Gunn said. “Last year, I didn’t approach it like that.”

Working mostly at the strong-side (Sam) spot, Gunn is backing up Clint Session and Derron Thomas. But with both of those players nursing injuries, he has gotten more action during workouts the past few days.

He has speed, and with Coach Wannstedt, that will get him in the game.

More On Pope

Filed under: Uncategorized — Chas @ 6:45 am

The kid is apparently telling people different things, or someone is lying.

Arlington Country Day coach Rex Morgan confirmed to the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review on Wednesday that Pope, a 6-foot-8 forward considered one of the nation’s top juniors, is attending the private school in Jacksonville, Fla.

“He’s enrolled and going to class,” Morgan said.

Aliquippa coach Marvin Emerson, however, said that Pope was supposed to return yesterday to Aliquippa, which starts classes Aug. 30

“From my understanding, he’s coming back,” Emerson said. “He was down there and he didn’t like it. I got a phone call this morning that he’s on his way back today. There’s so many things I’m hearing, I don’t know.”

Pope could not be reached for comment.

Arlington Country Day was the Florida 2A state champion last spring and was expected to be ranked nationally this season. Its lineup already features 7-foot-2 Jason Bennett and 6-8 junior A.J. Stewart and a Florida State recruit in point guard Josue Soto.

Country Day also has games scheduled in Hawaii, Kentucky, New York,

“(The transfer) was for academic as much as athletic reasons,” Morgan said. “A lot of people are impressed with our graduation rates and student-to-teacher ratio.”

Pope, who chose Pitt in March, also told the Trib in July that he wouldn’t renege on his verbal commitment – “I’m not changing my mind,” Pope said. “I love Pitt.” – but Arlington Country Day’s Morgan said Pope has decided to re-open his college recruitment.

“Pitt is at the top of his list, but he’s keeping his options open,” said Morgan, who played on the University of Jacksonville’s 1971 NCAA finalists. “He told me he wants to have other people come in and watch him.”

Yes, transferring to a Florida prep school for academics. If by academics you mean easier to get a high school diploma.

This is just getting real seedy. The thing I worry about is that it is the open seedy. It’s the kind of chain of events that somewhere, somehow, a school or a coach goes down for something. With Pitt in the middle of it, I worry.

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