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February 1, 2006

No Time To Waste

Filed under: Uncategorized — Chas @ 12:45 pm

Sure, there may not be any announcement of a press conference or any celebration by the Pitt coaching staff and Dave Wannstedt,regarding the recruiting class signed. But guess what?

Pitt season tickets go on sale today.

Named one of college football’s top 10 recruiters by SportsIllustrated.com, Dave Wannstedt delivered on that hype today by signing Pitt’s most decorated recruiting class in recent memory.

Armed with 14 returning starters and a recruiting class ranked among the nation’s best, the Panthers are eagerly anticipating the upcoming season and want you to be a part of it. Season-ticket packages for the 2006 campaign are on sale beginning today.

Pitt will host an attractive seven-game home schedule — one more home game than last year and the most at Heinz Field since 2002. Although dates and times are being finalized, the Panthers have a set slate of home opponents that includes the best of the Big East Conference and non-league games against foes from the Big 10 and Atlantic Coast Conference.

I guess that also makes it the time to remind you people about my season ticket fund.

Finish Line Sighted

Filed under: Uncategorized — Chas @ 12:19 pm

Jeff Otah is checked off on Scout.com. That just leaves the kids who are waiting to announce.

UPDATE: Another potential darkhorse signee, QB Thaddeus Lewis, signed with Duke.

Nearly There

Filed under: Uncategorized — Chas @ 11:58 am

Okay, Rivals.com has Byham signed.

Really that just leaves Jeff Otah as the only recruit presumed to sign with Pitt left.

Audi Augustin hasn’t announced if he will go Pitt or NC State. Right now he is not listed on either NC State recruiting site as being a commit of any sort. Same for Pitt.

PantherLair has McKenzie Mathews listed as a Pitt verbal, even though he won’t be announcing until later. He is likely to choose between Pitt and Syracuse, though BC remains a possibility. He is not on any other commit list.

Tamarcus Porter is choosing between Wake Forest and Pitt. Since his original verbal was to Pitt he remains on Pitt’s boards. Both Wake Forest recruiting sites don’t list him.

Hope that clears things up a little.

Rivals.com Crunched

Filed under: Uncategorized — Chas @ 11:15 am

It was inevitable that one of them would go down. Actually, I think Scout.com will hit a wall at some point as well. Still, Rivals.com’s family of sites seems to be totally down for the moment.

UPDATE: Very short crash. All back up it would seem.

Getting Down

Filed under: Uncategorized — Chas @ 11:04 am

Kevin Collier and Elijah Fields are in according to PantherDigest. Meanwhile, PantherLair has Scott Corson signed.

Between the two sites, these are the only ones yet to give an LOI:

Nate Byham
Jeff Otah
McKenzie Mathews
Tamarcus Porter
Audi Augustin

Byham, of course is the biggest blue-chipper left on the board.

Steady Trickling

Filed under: Uncategorized — Chas @ 10:35 am

Rivals has added Greg Webster and Kevan Smith to the LOI list.

Just would love to see Collier finally checked off, just to end any last minute fears.

UPDATE: Scout finally gets one-up on Rivals by having a big number of new checks:

Aaron Berry, Ricky Gary, Greg Romeus and Joe Thomas.

Very, very good stuff.

Another Batch

Filed under: Uncategorized — Chas @ 10:00 am

It really looks like PantherLair/Rivals is really aggressive today in info on who is signed.

Justin Hargrove, Jason Pinkston and Jared Martin are all listed as signed.

UPDATE: And Nate Nix is checked.

Have to admit, that this is kind of silly. Kind of like the political junkies hitting refresh during the 2004 election to see what the absolute latest projections on the election were.

Is This Fun, Or What?

Filed under: Uncategorized — Chas @ 9:18 am

Okay, looks like you can add Lowell Robinson and Tyler Tkach to the in-box.

PantherDigest is now caught-up. I was starting to feel nervous about the discrepencies.

UPDATE: PantherLair now has John Malecki signed.

One of the Big Ones

Filed under: Uncategorized — Chas @ 8:46 am

Looks like Dickerson has made it official.

UPDATE: Dexter Davidson is checked off according to Rivals.com, as well. Scout is still not showing it. Looks like Rivals has the early lead as far as getting the information out.

And Here It Goes

Filed under: Uncategorized — Chas @ 8:42 am

Looks like the letters are filtering in. Aaron Smith and Dan Loheyde are both checked for signing the LOI. This is the day that Rivals.com and Scout.com find out about the stress levels of their servers.

Sporadic Media Recap, Part 1

Filed under: Uncategorized — Chas @ 8:13 am

Let’s face it, with NLI also, this is going to be a disjointed day with lots of posts all over the place.

Andy Katz at ESPN.com was at the game, and came away impressed by Rudy Gay — how could you not — but especially the Pitt team.

There are two stories here that deserve telling.

You can argue which two all you want. But walk away from top-ranked Connecticut’s gut-check 80-76 victory over No. 9 Pittsburgh on Tuesday night and you are left with two overriding thoughts:

UConn’s Rudy Gay was Rudy Gay, the player who was hyped as a preseason potential top pick and a possible player of the year.

And Pittsburgh’s relentlessness, its toughness and its overall will to win is unparalleled game in and game out, matched maybe only by Duke this season.

How tough is it to play against Pitt?

Consider this: Pitt shot 2-of-20 on 3s, was outrebounded 40-29, had four players in foul trouble — including two foul-outs in senior point Carl Krauser (2:58 left) and junior forward Levon Kendall (51 seconds left) — and yet the Panthers were still one possession away from winning the game in the final minute.

Huh?

“We’re winners and we hate to lose, we don’t know how to lose,” Pitt junior center Aaron Gray said. “Coach [Jamie] Dixon is our leader and it starts with him. We never stop. We were down nine at halftime and we came out and got the first bucket. We never thought we were going to lose until that last buzzer went off.”

UConn-Pitt hasn’t disappointed in years. This has been the game in the Big East schedule. They are more than rivals and have become the definition of the new Big East, making it seem like, as Calhoun said, the ’80s again. Unfortunately, because of the unbalanced schedule, this was the only meeting this season. Don’t be surprised if they meet again in March or even April.

Call it a hunch, but after this game, ESPN and CBS aren’t going to screw up and not want this match-up on their networks regardless of preseason predictions.

Pitt just couldn’t quite pull ahead in the second half.

As for that strange technical foul Coach Dixon received at the end of the half:

Pitt had a chance to cut into that lead just before the intermission, but Dixon was called for a technical foul while Pitt had a 3-on-1 fast break with three seconds remaining. Graves threw the ball out of bounds on an alley-oop attempt to Sam Young and referee Ed Corbett whistled Dixon, who was upset with Graves for throwing the errant pass. Corbett mistook Dixon’s rage as anger toward him and called the technical.

“I didn’t say anything bad, I know that,” Dixon said. “Sometimes that happens.”

Corbett made up for the mistake early in the second half and called a technical on Calhoun.

Given how quickly Calhoun was T’d up in the second half, you knew it had to be a make-up call.

It Just Doesn’t Add Up

Filed under: Uncategorized — Chas @ 7:26 am

Before the game, I said Pitt needed to knock down some 3s to loosen up the UConn defense and free-up Aaron Gray a little more. Not only didn’t that happen, but there was surprisingly little help for Gray on the boards. Part of that is attributable to the size and athleticism of UConn. Their guys are not only tall, but their jumping and control inside was something. The way they could go up for blocks and rebounds makes them that much tougher inside. If a team isn’t knocking down some outside shots against them, it allows them to further collapse inside. Limiting the penetration and clogging the passing lanes.

That’s what happened to Pitt. Gray with his sheer size was the only one who could be effective inside. Kendall, DeGroat and even Young had more trouble finding any space to get a clean shot over the UConn interior. Nine blocked shots. The only thing the players on the perimeter were able to do was some nice drives and penetration at times. Even then, however, the UConn defense often played it smart by refusing to be goaded into leaving their man free. Again, not letting the paint open up for Pitt.

Some numbers:

Pitt

Poss 75.6 Pace Fast
O-Rating 100.6 D-Rating 105.9 (Eff. Margin -5.3)
eFG% 45.5 PPWS 1.02
A/TO 1.3 TO Rate 15.9% A/B 51.7%
Floor Pct 51.3% FT Prod 24.2

UConn

Poss 75.3 Pace Fast
O-Rating 106.3 D-Rating 101.0 (Eff. Margin +5.3)
eFG% 50.0 PPWS 1.14
A/TO 0.8 TO Rate 21.3% A/B 48.1%
Floor Pct 52.8% FT Prod 42.9

One of the things that stands out is that UConn got Pitt to play at their pace. That was how Pitt ended up in so much foul trouble. Trying to grab a guy before he broke too far past. It isn’t often over the last few years that a team could get Pitt to play that quickly. That Pitt did as well as it did on the offense is encouraging. The problem, of course, was that it really hurt them on the defense. UConn got the ball upcourt so quickly and easily, that Pitt often seemed on its heels trying to get back on defense.

Pitt was also struggling to get the extra pass away for scoring. In both Pitt losses, the A/B % was in the 50s. No where close to the season average of around 68%.

Interestingly, while both teams went into the game with plenty of depth, it was Pitt — in part because of necessity — that really used its bench in this game. UConn had only 7 players go into double figures on minutes. Pitt went to 9 men.

To summarize, Pitt did not make 3s, were stifled on passing to find open looks, beaten soundly on the boards, had 2 players foul out of the game including Krauser, and played at UConn’s tempo. And yet the team, somehow, almost found a way to get the win.

I’m alternatively frustrated, amazed and impressed.

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