One of those odd things of being a FanHouse editor/writer is that to most people I am now some sort of journalist/member of the mainstream media. The main complaint I have been getting is that FanHouse has an East Coast bias to the Big East and ACC. That’s not true, we have a bias to the teams at the top of the standings that people want more. The top-10 has 4 Big East and 3 ACC teams there is only one team from the Big 12 and one from the Big 10 in the standings. What that means, is that the “big” games are all in the Big East and ACC since they are the most likely conferences to have top teams facing each other. Last week it was UNC-Duke, this week it is Pitt-UConn. All the media folk are going from all the major sites (CBS, FoxSports, Sporting News, SI and of course ESPN) for the latest big game, so expect a lot of recaps tomorrow.
Let’s do the quick and dirty media previews.
Fran Fraschilla has a nice breakdown on the game. He also admits that he doesn’t know who will win the game. Big East Basketball predicts a Pitt win. College Hoops Net goes with UConn.
One thing Pitt has never done is beat a team when they are ranked #1. O-13 in that span, including the game that sealed Ralph Willard’s fate at Pitt (IMO — and not just because I was at that game),
Pitt also lost to the top-ranked Huskies in December 1998 and January ’99. The ’98 game at Fitzgerald Field House is one of the most memorable in the Pitt-Connecticut series.
Connecticut point guard Khalid El-Amin jumped on the scorer’s table after making the winning shot to beat the Panthers, 70-69. The Huskies went on to win their first national championship that season.
The Huskies are without Dyson. Yes, he was their second leading scorer, but I think it will be more of a factor in the second game as Kemba Walker hits the freshman wall. The Seton Hall game showed that UConn Coach Calhoun does not have trust in his other guards — Donnell Beverly and Scottie Haralson. That means the Huskies will go maybe 7 deep (possibly 8 if center Mandelove gets some action).
Pitt continues the theme of being ready.
“We will be ready to go,” Pitt coach Jamie Dixon said after the Panthers shot a school record-tying 67.4 percent from the field in an 85-69 victory over Cincinnati on Saturday.
This is only Pitt’s second game against a top-ranked team in the past 10 years — the other being an 80-76 loss at UConn three years ago — and only the second time in school history the Panthers will play in a game pitting two top-5 teams — against UConn in 2004.
“We feel good,” Pitt senior guard Levance Fields said. “We’re mentally ready.”
Calhoun lavishes praise on DeJuan Blair.
“I love Blair — don’t like him, love him,” Calhoun said. “I think he’s one of the best basketball players in America. Love watching him play — I won’t Monday night necessarily.”
And he added praise to Pitt.
”They’re the best team in the league,” coach Jim Calhoun said, “and then there’s us. We don’t have to play us. They’re the most complete team. Everybody has a certain flaw… but there aren’t many things that they don’t do well.
”They defend. They run offense. They’ve got a tough mindset. … They can win a national championship.”
And more.
“I consider (Pitt) the best team in the league,” the Huskies’ head coach said. “Then there’s us, but we don’t have to play us. I think they’re the most complete team. Everybody has a certain flaw. I’m trying to think of what Pittsburgh doesn’t do well. They defend, they run offense, they have a tough mind-set, a great point guard.”
…
“They’re probably the best team we’re going to play this year,” guard A.J. Price said. “We know what type of style and game they play. It’s going to be knock-down, drag out. It’s a huge game for us. Luckily, we have them at home first. We’ll try to take care of business and go from there.”
Taking care of that business requires a slightly different approach. As much as Price denied it Saturday, there is an adjustment period to playing without Dyson. UConn’s first attempt at that in Saturday’s victory at Seton Hall, while successful, wasn’t exactly inspiring.
The issue without Dyson, players getting in the lane and driving to the basket.
But Price, Craig Austrie and Kemba Walker, the guard trio of whom much will be asked post-Dyson, were a combined 6-for-25 Saturday — and that wasn’t even Calhoun’s greatest concern.
“Why did Hasheem block so many shots?” Calhoun said. “[Opponents] are getting to the rim. A.J., Kemba and Craig should do a much better job of stopping penetration. Because what’s going to happen is some of those guys on Pittsburgh are going to bang you, someone’s going to have two fouls and Blair’s going to be allowed to run free. … We need to really improve, and I’m disappointed in the penetration of [Seton Hall’s] guards.”
For both teams, it will be a concern as to how the game is officiated.
“What’s going to happen is, a couple of those guys on Pittsburgh are going to bang you, someone’s going to get two fouls, and now Blair’s going to be allowed to roam free,” Calhoun warned. “We have no one, besides Hasheem, who can play Blair, just like no one else has anybody who can play Hasheem. So, we really need to improve. I was really disappointed in the penetration of (Seton Hall’s) guards.”
I’ll be back just before the start of the game with the liveblog.