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February 9, 2010

Really, About What Expected

Filed under: Basketball,Opponent(s) — Chas @ 11:44 am

I feel a little conflicted about how much I should read into this game.

It’s February, so every game seems to take on a deeper meaning. That there should be so much subtext and things to analyze.  Yet… if this took place back in November or December, I would essentially view this game as about what I expected. Ultimately, that is the way I feel like looking at this. There’s a danger in trying to read too much into a non-con game against a noticeably inferior team.

RMU came out firing and hard charging as a scrappy local team would want to do against the big cat in the area. Pitt was caught off guard at first, but slowly in the first half began to to take control. The Panthers blitzed RMU in the first five minutes of the second half to make sure the outcome would never be in doubt.

“We did a lot of switching and we weren’t closing in the first half,” Jermaine Dixon said. “Coach got on us at halftime, and they shot 26 percent in the second half.”

Pitt also started going inside against the Colonials in the second half. Gary McGhee, who was held scoreless in the first half without a shot, scored the opening two baskets of the second half as Pitt went on an 8-0 run. McGhee scored eight points in the second half.

“I was afraid they’d go to him early,” Robert Morris coach Mike Rice said. “He sets up so close to the basket, he’s like a wall.

“We were able to play with them. We probably played our best basketball of the season in the first half and we were still down six at halftime. They made adjustments and made it more difficult for us in the second half.”

There was the obligatory run by RMU to try and salvage pride coupled with a bit of a letdown by Pitt’s play. Then reassertion and in the end a 77-53 dismantling.

The best you can say about it, is that coupled with the Seton Hall rout, it furthered the confidence re-building on offense.

Dixon tied a season-high with three 3-pointers and scored 18 points.

For Gibbs, it was his first 20-point game in more than two weeks. He had not scored more than 14 points in any of the previous four games.

“It felt good,” Gibbs said. “It’s something I’ve been working on consistently. I knew they would fall sooner or later. I was finally connecting. My teammates did a good job of finding me in open spots and I took advantage of it.”

Dixon came into the game shooting 22 percent from 3-point range, but he made three of his first four 3-point attempts Monday night.

“I don’t think I was shying away [from taking 3-pointers],” Dixon said. “I’d rather drive to the paint. With someone closing out on me, I feel like I can beat them to the basket. But I have to take that 3 sometimes to keep people honest. Today, knocking them down, it felt good for me. I’m knocking them down more in practice. I had some confidence coming into the game with my shot.”

Of more interest, and maybe a little more of a coincidence than the story paints, Jermaine Dixon hadn’t been involved in a lot of team practices for the past few weeks.

Pitt’s recent slide — the Panthers lost four of five games before beating Robert Morris 77-53 Monday night for their second straight win — coincided with Dixon’s absence from practice. Certainly, sitting out the South Florida game directly resulted in 37 points from Dominique Jones. But Dixon wasn’t practicing before that injury because of twice-broken metatarsals in his foot.

“For three weeks,” coach Jamie Dixon said, “he didn’t practice but played. It’s not good to play once or twice a week and not to practice between games. We did that with Levance (Fields two seasons ago). It’s not good.”

Jermaine Dixon’s ability as a shutdown defender didn’t seem to be affected much. What was evident was his offense in particular and the team’s in general. Since a career-high 21 points in that January upset of Syracuse, Dixon shot 25 of 72 (.347) in his next seven games, not scoring more than 14 in any of those.

“He’s a different player and we’re a different team when Jermaine practices,” Coach Dixon said. “Him practicing makes us a better team.”

RMU Coach Mike Rice still doesn’t like to have played the game in February, disrupting the NEC schedule, and being little more than a warm-up for Pitt before WVU.

Not sure I see it that way for Pitt. Yes, WVU had the far more difficult game in their loss to ‘Nova last night. But the WVU-Pitt game isn’t until Friday night. Plenty of time for both teams to get much more meaningful action in practice and forget about Monday night’s games.





If this team is on they can hang with anyone but if they are off the little sisters of the poor would give them a good game and maybe beat them.

They should make the big dance, maybe they will surprise us and win a few; or lose to Pacific or Atlantic or someone we never heard of.

Comment by Brian Wannstedt 02.09.10 @ 11:55 am

I agree with Coach Rice.

Bobby Mo was on a nice little winning streak in their conference. It does them absolutely no good to break up that good mojo (no pun intended) and go up to the Pete and get destroyed by a Big East team.

It makes more sense to play this game in November or December.

Comment by Jimbo Covert's my Dad 02.09.10 @ 12:30 pm

FWIW, Nova outrebounded WVU by 10. You may remember just how badly they dominated Pitt last week. Not sure if that was due to a lack of talent or effort.

Comment by wbb 02.09.10 @ 1:26 pm

On a football note, former Pitt punter Adam Graessle has signed with the Steelers. Barring an injury to Daniel Sepulveda, Graessle would appear to have little chance making the team, unless they resign Jeff Reed and decide to keep a kickoff specialist to make up for the relatively short kickoffs the past couple years. Seems unlikely, particularly if Stefan Logan is still on the team, but you never know…

Comment by Pantherman13 02.09.10 @ 1:30 pm

10-8 in the Big East… we can do it .. to go dancing again !!!

Comment by Snala the Panther 02.09.10 @ 2:38 pm

the dance may end by 9 pm, but at least it would keep the streak alive

Comment by wbb 02.09.10 @ 3:33 pm

We all said that if we got to the dance with a team with this much inexperience that it’d be a successful year. Our expectations just got a little bigger when we started Big East play with a bang.

Look, when you play an inferior, small conference team, you’re supposed to blow them out. We did that, and that’s pretty much all we can ask. So yes, I was happy with the game.

Comment by Jimbo Covert's my Dad 02.09.10 @ 4:04 pm

wbb:

maybe pitt would go to the final 4 if taylor were at the 4…

Comment by Omar 02.09.10 @ 6:14 pm

Then if Taylor played the point, they’d win it all…

Comment by Pantherman13 02.09.10 @ 7:06 pm

Off topic: Pitt offered Sal Sunseri’s other kid, Vinnie, a scholarship.

With names for his kids like Tino and Vinnie, it’s quite apparent that Sal Sunseri is the most Italian person on the face of the earth.

Comment by Jimbo Covert's my Dad 02.10.10 @ 8:39 am

And he makes a helluva nice meat sauce…..

Comment by Bobby 02.10.10 @ 8:55 am

taylor at the point. makes sense, he did win the skills competition at the mcdonald’s all america game. he could be the next magic johnson. jamie dixon has this thing all wrong. if blair was at the point, then scottie reynolds never would have got that shot off.

Comment by Omar 02.10.10 @ 9:38 am

Jimbo Jr., were you offered a scholarship as well?

Comment by steve 02.10.10 @ 9:50 am

An excellent and encouraging article by Ray in today’s Post about Jermaine Dixon. His presence makes a difference and that difference wins games. The challenging stretch ahead is awesome, but Pitt will be competitive. George

Comment by rev. george mehaffey 02.10.10 @ 12:34 pm

Gearge agreed, loved the article on Dixon and a reminder to all one of the concepts we forget in our enthusiasm and criticism of our Pitt athletes.
There is a huge physical and emotional difference between a senior/junior and a frosh/soph. Pitt (other than Dixon) is a very very young team….and Taylor is the youngest. Just want to see him hustle…that’s all.

Comment by Dan 72 02.10.10 @ 12:40 pm

Does everyone else agree that Big G made the difference in the RMU game? At the start of the second hald his two dunks and two blocks really sparked the Panthers at the defensive end and made RMU a little hesitant to drive right into the lane for about 10 minutes. Give it up for the big man who will be a warm body in the NBA with his size and rebounding.(he is quicker than Aaron Gray and he’s still in the league!)

Comment by Wannstache 02.10.10 @ 3:12 pm

Sorry, Wannstache – while I greatly appreciate McGhee’s improvement, he is nowhere near the player Gray was by the time he left Pitt, and the NBA is not the usual landing spot for 6’10” guys with bad hands and no shot outside of a few feet from the hoop. I know people like to bash Gray, but he was over 7′ tall, was a better rebounder than McGhee, and had pretty good hands and a decent shooting touch from about 7-10 feet.

We don’t need to build McGhee up to something he is not to appreciate what he brings to this team.

Comment by Pantherman13 02.10.10 @ 5:57 pm

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