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February 14, 2010

A day later and there is still talk of this being one of the all-time great games for Pitt and in the basketball side of the Backyard Brawl.  Something that will be hard to dispute.

Until we see how the rest of the season goes, though, the actual impact of the game may diminish the importance. Still the claim that it was one of the best games of the year (and wow, it’s already been challenged a day later) and hyperbole to suggest one of the best ever in the Big East.

That’s all for another time. After the season is over. Gilbert Brown made the point about what it meant for the present. F0r the rest of this season.

“It’s a big emotional boost as well as a confidence boost for us,” he said. “I think we needed a win like this to make us believe we can do this. Early on in the season, when we had our first five wins in the Big East, we were rolling. We really felt like we could get it done and possibly be in contention for a Big East regular-season championship. And then after going through the struggles we went through, pulling this game out it really shows the character of the players, how we fought every day in practice just to get back to this point.”

And why you go through the practices and push through the grind at this point in the season. If you are a player and a coach, getting rewarded with a win like this whey you have worked hard and been through a rough patch is vindication and oh, so rewarding.

But also get this straight: the Panthers played with a will and a wont that’s been missing for much of the past couple months. They won this war of attrition by soldiering through foul trouble and substitutions thanks to a level of play not seen by the bench this season.

Travon Woodall, so largely ineffective this season that he’s affected the offense of Ashton Gibbs, had 12 points, seven rebounds and six assists in 31 of the most pressure-packed minutes he’s ever played. More than his stat sheet contributions, though, was that his performance allowed Gibbs to fill up his side of the ledger. With Woodall at the point, Gibbs was able to get open on the perimeter and made 6 of 13 3-pointers, including one to tie the game at the end of regulation. Gibbs had 24 points and hit at least five threes for the first time since Pitt’s equally improbably upset at Syracuse.

“Sometimes (Woodall) feels like he has to make a play to stay in the game,” Pitt coach Jamie Dixon said. “I tell him, ‘You don’t have to make a play. Just let things comes to you. I think he sees that and sees the results.”

Woodall was huge and a welcome re-emergence. Most of us thought he was going to be fine mid-way through the non-con. He had some clunkers, but was improving and there was a learning curve to being the PG for Pitt. Then he started struggling. With Jermaine Dixon and then Gilbert Brown returning, and the team actually winning big games in conference, it became harder to risk playing him out there. It was no longer about Woodall and the rest of Pitt taking some lumps in a rebuilding year. It was about possibly being near the top of the Big East. Things went from being a NCAA bubble team, but playing for seed.

“The guy who really stood out to me was Travon,” Pitt coach Jamie Dixon said. “We keep saying he’s going to make us better, and he really played well. He really played within himself. He was big for us in so many ways.”

“Any time I’m on the floor, I feel like I need to have the ball in my hands,” Woodall said. “I want to create for my teammates and get them open shots. I don’t need to score, but I need to have the ball in my hands to set things up.”

It was a turning point for Woodall, who admits to losing confidence over the course of the season.

He had several conversations with Jamie Dixon, including one this past week that lasted an hour. When Woodall related that he felt the need to make plays to stay in the game, Dixon implored him to concentrate on his defense and to make the simple pass, the simple play.

Woodall did that against West Virginia, and he might have won his coach over.

“He played like a veteran,” Dixon said. “I’m very proud of him because I’ve really been on him. I’ve been pushing him, pushing him. I really believe he can be a big part of our improvement.”

The confidence is important. The next 2 games are against guard-oriented/heavy teams. Marquette and Villanova will be all over Gibbs and trying to pressure the ball. Pitt needs Woodall to play with confidence and take care of the ball.

Final thing, since Huggins’ post-game statements came under scrutiny in the comments. I didn’t see much that was inaccurate or disrespectful about them.  Huggins’ concern is not with Pitt after a game is over, but his team and even his fanbase. Comments in the media are as much directed at his players as anyone else. A good article on Huggins after the game. He apparently laid in to the team afterwards.

Almost without fail after a loss, Huggins will keep his team sequestered in its locker room long past what is supposed to be the 10-minute cooling-off period before he exits and meets – and allows his players to do the same – with the media. What goes on in there is mere speculation, but the words rant and rave and scream and yell are generally good bets.

Often his players will even admit to it. Sometimes, as was the case on Friday, they are reluctant even to discuss it.

“I think we’ll keep that private,” point guard Truck Bryant said after enduring the roughly 20-minute tongue-lashing at the Petersen Events Center just after midnight on what had become Saturday morning.

By the time he got to the media, he was noticeably calm almost subdued. He didn’t single out individual players publicly. He bemoaned their mistakes, but it was hardly a rant on his team. His team made big mistakes. Missed shots and Pitt crashed through the opening. Lot’s of things I find distasteful and downright hateable about Bob Huggins, but this doesn’t make it.





Orangemen looked average this afternoon. The way things are going this season, the Big Dance is going to demand a marathon performance from start to finish.

Comment by steve 02.14.10 @ 5:52 pm

Hoyas go down to lowly RU as well. Better bring your “A” game or stay home.

Comment by steve 02.14.10 @ 6:28 pm

From a Pitt perspective, the Louisville win over Syracuse was very good for Pitt. Cuse’s Pomeroy and RPI won’t fall far. But it will goose Louisville — improving the quality of that win. The Georgetown loss to Rutgers not nearly so good.

Comment by Chas 02.14.10 @ 7:07 pm

The K’s stand out as the cream of the crop. I see a Final Four of Kansas, Kentucky, Nova and ………….PITT!

Comment by steve 02.14.10 @ 10:10 pm

I was actually cheering for the Cuse, as I don’t want another team (Louisville) in contention for one of those coveted top 4 spots for the BE tourney double bye. With that win, Louisville goes to 7-5 and well within reach with 6 games to go….

Comment by bgPitt 02.15.10 @ 9:33 am

Chas, I assume that you saw this Q & A article about Gibbs. In my opinion, he represented himself and the University well. I’m still trying to figure out how he obtained a 3.2 QPA with watching NBA games, extra practices at the gym on his shooting, and his playing around with his computer. Do they still give out homework assignments?

link to rivals.yahoo.com

Comment by BigGuy 02.15.10 @ 12:54 pm

Big, thanks for the Ashton Q&A. Not the same team we saw in Newark, eh?

Note this from Ashton:

“(I) search different news feeds. I like to keep up with current events.”

and,

“You’ve got to come out with your A-game each and every day.”

Ergo, I will take full credit for his statement. (Grin)

And this:

Comment by steve 02.15.10 @ 1:36 pm

Steve Peterson will be on 93.7 The Fan in the 4:00 hours. Can listen online here:

link to player.play.it

Comment by Bryan 02.15.10 @ 3:22 pm

Ah, steve, I guess in Ashton’s Communication classes, they don’t stress citing one’s sources (or maybe that is why his QPA is 3.2 and not 4.0).

Comment by BigGuy 02.15.10 @ 4:33 pm

OK, OK, it’s common lingo. I’ll give Ashton the benefit of the doubt.

Some observations after watching the tape once more.

1) Sleepy was very animated and supportive from the bench. A good sign.

2) We caught a huge break when Wanamaker was not called out of bounds at the end of regulation. He went out then in, a no-no.

3) Richardson has a big upside, he played very well.

4) McGhee continues his astonishing improvement. Props to him.

5) Travon came to life, another good sign.

6) Ashton dwarfed that interviewer after the game. How tall is the interviewer?

7) What guts ALL the players showed against a quality opponent.

HAIL TO PITT!

Comment by steve 02.15.10 @ 5:28 pm

a big shout out for Chas keeping me updated on twitter when I was in dress rehearsal!! you rock- I’ll be at the ‘Nova game this weekend!! Let’s go PITT!!

Comment by Caroline 02.15.10 @ 7:08 pm

Chas, great work as always. And, Caroline, great work with Eligahes!

Comment by steve 02.15.10 @ 7:20 pm

We did catch a break on that Wannamaker play at the end of regulation, but it was just one bad call in a game that had several of them called on both teams. There were numerous foul calls that replay showed no contact on. One call on Woodall was totally dismissed by replay which showed he did not come within six inches of the player. Brad Wannamaker went to the free throw line on a similar shadow foul called on a WVU player. Its just part of the game.

Comment by HbgFrank 02.15.10 @ 7:29 pm

Marquette has won 5 games in a row. Looks like a tough one thursday.

Comment by alcofan 02.15.10 @ 8:03 pm

I don’t think Wannamaker was out of bounds. His left foot was in-bounds and his right foot was grazing the line. He picked his right foot up before he touched the ball, therefore his right foot was in the air and his left foot was in-bounds. His left foot, in-bounds, was the only foot on the ground when he saved the ball to Woodall. I think it was the right call.

Comment by Omar 02.16.10 @ 9:38 am

The rule is I believe that once you have stepped, grazed, touched, anything on the out of bounds line you are considered out of bounds. You can not be the first person to touch the ball when you come from out of bounds. Which Wannamaker would have been. Maybe I am wrong on the rule (but I believe if I am wrong you at least need to get both feet back in bounds before touching the ball). I do think the call was missed, but Pitt deserved it, the foul advantage WVU had was silly, the blowing of the whistle for any touching of a WVU player in the post was a joke. Our players stood firmly with hands straight up and were getting whistled. Heck, WVU spent the entire first over-time from the line. This was one of the worst reffereed games I have ever seen.

I’m glad that the Panthers realized that Kalicli has no right hand whatsoever. In two games versus the Panthers I don’t believe he has ever made a move, dribble, shot, or even glanced to his right. I believe this kept him off the floor as he almost traveled and looked horrible forcing himself to the left.

Comment by PITTapotamus 02.16.10 @ 10:12 am

Omar, after a video review methinks you’re right …as usual. The key here is Brad did not purposely go out of bounds but his momentum pulled him out(he stepped on the line and then came back in). See below:

A.R. 1. A1 blocks a pass near the end line. The ball falls to the floor in bounds but
A1, who is off balance, falls outside the end line. A1 returns, secures control of the
ball, and dribbles. RULING: Legal. A1 has not left the playing court voluntarily and
was not in control of the ball when leaving the playing court. This situation is similar
to one in which A1 makes a try from under the basket and momentum carries A1 off the playing court. The try is unsuccessful, and A1 comes onto the playing court and regains control of the ball.

Comment by steve 02.16.10 @ 10:14 am

the referee had a clear, close view on Wanny’s foot, and said after the game that he didn’t think Wanny had his hand on the ball when his foot was touching the line. A replay may have disputed this, however, it shows the futility of the replay system …. bacuse sometimes it is all about camera angles, where one angle may look like someone is out of bounds but another angle may show differently.

Comment by wbb 02.16.10 @ 10:15 am

Thanks for the link to the Gibbs interview, BigGuy. It shows he’s an intelligent kid with a coach’s mindset. Can understand why Jamie looks to him for leadership even though he’s still young. However, I wonder if he’s getting any grief from Brown for forgetting to mention him as one of the returning players who had a significant role last year. All in good fun of course.

On Wanny’s steal: Regardless of what anyone on ESPN says, the fact is that the ref, who was right there and had a clear bead on Brad’s feet, let play continue. That’s the only opinion that counts. Also, I haven’t heard any complaining from WVU about it, so it seems like a non-issue that ESPN, as usual, tried to turn into one.

Comment by TampaT 02.16.10 @ 10:16 am

Omar is dead on right on that out of bounds call. Les Jones, the ref who was calling touch fouls the entire game on us, was 10 feet away looking right at Brad on that play. He would have blown the whistle if Brad’s foot was on the line with possession of the ball. Gottlieb and other (Pitt haters) are watching it from a bad camera angle. He was in. You can go in and out of bounds in hoops without possession of the ball.

Comment by Bossdaws 02.16.10 @ 10:18 am

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