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February 4, 2010

Non-Con Football ’10

Filed under: Football,Non-con,Schedule — Chas @ 5:02 pm

Okay, Pitt has given us dates (and probable times) for the non-con.

Sept. 2 —- Thursday — at Utah ——- TBA — CBS Coll. Sports

Sept. 11 — Saturday — New Hampshire — 1 p.m. — n/a

Sept. 23 —- Thursday —– Miami ——- 7:30 p.m. — ESPN

Oct. 2 —- Saturday —– FIU ———– TBA —– doubtful

Oct. 9 —— Saturday —- at Notre Dame —3:30 p.m. — NBC

Yeah, that season opener at Utah is going to be rough. My impulse with Pitt’s team, a new QB. Several new O-lineman starting. New D-linemen and a new secondary. Well, I’m halfway to assuming a loss. Granted I haven’t looked closely at what Utah is returning, so maybe I’m overreacting.

I like the Thrusday night game in September (the wife will hate it), if for no other reason then at least it will be warm. Plus, the nostalgia for that 1997 Thursday night upset of Miami.

Player Stories in Recruiting, Part 1

Filed under: Football,Recruiting — Chas @ 10:52 am

Just a quick thank you to everyone. I’m not sure if there has been a busier day at this site. A lot of people came here yesterday for recruiting and the basketball stuff. That’s very humbling and still surprising even after many years doing this. That so many of you come here for Pitt information, thoughts and discussion; welll, it really does mean a lot to me.

Best quote of the day from Pitt’s 2010 football recruiting class came from Eric Williams.

Eric Williams had announced his intention to head to the University of Pittsburgh earlier in the summer. But that didn’t diminish the sense of pride on Wednesday morning when he faxed his paperwork to the university from the counselor’s office at Pennsbury High School.

“When the fax was done going through, I realized that I was a Pittsburgh Panther,” Williams said. “And I couldn’t begin to tell you how great a feeling that was. It’s something that you dream about and you understand what it means.”

Others were just glad to have the whole process over and done.

Arthur Doakes, a lineman for Lebanon, made his decision to go to Pitt official in the morning. Doakes, a 6-6, 330 offensive guard, signed with his mother, siblings and coaches around him.

“A lot of relief,” Doakes said of the signing. “Now I don’t have to worry about it anymore.”

Doakes made his verbal commitment in July. He said that the professional coaching experience of Panther head coach Brian Wannstedt and offensive line coach Tony Wise was one of the factors that helped him choose Pitt.

Yes, I know. “Brian” Wannstedt?

Two of Pitt’s commits played for the national high school champions Don Bosco prep — Brandon Sacco and Bryan Murphy.

Not only is Murphy, who is 6-foot-3 and 245 pounds, one of the most highly recruited prospects at the football factory that is Don Bosco, he’s regarded as one of the best to ever play for the Ironmen.

“Bryan is one of the most dominant players to ever play at Don Bosco, probably the greatest lineman,” Don Bosco coach Greg Toal said. “He’s just a tremendous leader, a tremendous worker. He’s tough and hard-working. Bryan is as high character a guy as we’ve ever had here, and he’s going to make us proud at Pitt.”

Murphy verbally committed to Pitt, which finished 10-3 and ranked 15th in the nation last season, in June. Pitt coach Dave Wannstedt visited Murphy at Don Bosco, an all-boys Catholic school in Ramsey, N.J., and at his Washingtonville home.

“I just felt really comfortable at Pitt,” said Murphy, a two-time all-state selection who had 47 tackles and nine sacks as a senior. “They run the same defensive schemes as Don Bosco, and I just liked the city. To play Division I football is great, to play at one of the top teams is even better. I want to play good enough to at least rotate in.”

At their team signing ceremony they got additional congratulations.

The Jones entourage included former Passaic Tech star Gerald Hayes of the Arizona Cardinals, who came by to support his fellow Paterson native. Hayes also congratulated Bryan Murphy and Brandon Sacco, who’ll be attending his alma mater, Pittsburgh.

Despite the snow in the Maryland-DC area DeMatha was determined to hold their signing day ceremony that included Pitt commits Shane Johnson and Jeff Knox.

Here’s a 1 minute signing day video from St. Joe’s (Montvale, NJ) which includes K’Wuan Williams.

Plenty more later.

That was the most disappointed I’ve been with this team all season. Before the season started. Even after Pitt started 5-0 in the Big East, going down to Morgantown was going to be at best 50-50 that Pitt could win there. There was a reason that WVU was right there with ‘Nova for preseason tops of the Big East. Most of their season has not done anything to really dispute that — close games or not.

So losing there was not exactly a shock. Anytime Pitt loses to the ‘Eers is a disappointment and cause for anger, but in this case my frustration and disappointment was with the way Pitt just collapsed in the final 12 minutes or so. The frustration with their own performance on offense seemed to drag them down further. They managed only 10 points over that bit.

As we all know Brad Wanamaker and Gilbert Brown were stunningly MIA. Shooting a combined 0-8, 0-3 on FTs, 6 rebounds, 1 assist and 3 turnovers. For two vital players they may as well have stayed on the bus.

Ashton Gibbs’ struggles continued and even infected his usually flawless FT shooting. 2-13 shooting (2-7 on 3s), and 5-8 on FTs — missing his last 3 attempts.

Pitt hasn’t been able to win games lately if Gibbs is shut down. This time it was the team’s 3 leading scorers. It’s almost a wonder Pitt was able to stay in the game as long as they did.

The box score is a wonder to behold. 6-30 shooting in the second half. Only 5 assists (though, when you keep missing everything assists become even harder to come by).

Only three players effort and performance made me feel good. Jermaine Dixon worked all game and no matter how much better his ankle was feeling, it still had to take a toll to go for 34 minutes. Nasir Robinson was doing everything he could, he was 5-6 at the line. He led the team with 3 assists and just played very solid defense — even when he was being overwhelmed inside. J.J. Richardson decided that he wasn’t going to just be a scrub. He finished his shots more than anyone else. In only 14 minutes he finished with 7 points and 4 rebounds.

Pitt determined to give McGhee a lot more touches. They did, but he had none. 3-11 shooting — 1-7 in the second half. He got 9 boards but he really struggled. He simply cannot be the focal point of the offense.

The Dante Taylor conundrum continues to confound. The debates rage in comments over what to do. I’m just not sure. I have trouble believing he will be playing better defense at the 4 than the 5.

It sure seems like he is almost pouting about playing center now. That he is frustrated and not putting the effort and thought into what he needs to do. If you are a coach, how do you reward that by putting him at his preferred spot? It is a team, and don’t you put some of that at risk? I suppose you can go to him and say, “Okay, I’ll give you a shot at PF tonight. Prove me wrong.”

Overall, it seems like Coach Dixon’s hands are tied. There’s only so much you can do at this point. It’s nice to say, “shake-up the line-up and the rotation.” But how? Gibbs has to play considering the choice is Woodall or Adams behind him. Jermaine Dixon is still the best defensive player. Gilbert Brown has been unpredictable from game-to-game.

The offense is completely struggling right now as the perimeter game has disappeared. Pitt has been attempting to go inside more to open it up, but it hasn’t exactly worked. Now, the entire team seems to be afraid to take a 3.

On the bright side, I do think it will be hard for Pitt to have played much worse than that final 12 minutes. We will see how they respond.

One final thing. Pitt plays WVU at the Pete in 9 days. There’s going to obviously be a lot of hate — on top of the usual. The students and the rest of the fans still need to keep it clean. Stooping to the behavior of the Hoopie fans is not acceptable.

February 3, 2010

LiveBlog: Pitt-WVU

Filed under: Basketball,Big East,Conference,liveblog — Chas @ 6:28 pm

Backyard Brawl, basketball edition. Pitt is banged up. Confidence a little off. At the same time, Pitt has risen to play well against the good teams.

WVU is at home. They have only lost once at home. They have struggled at times, but still pulled out the games.

Liveblog below or break it out by Clicking Here.

Liveblog tonight.

Let’s see, it’s been hard to be as focused on this game as usual with the coinciding of NLI Day. Takes some of the edge off when there are the other distractions.

Distractions? You mean like the WVU students repeatedly getting slammed lately for their behavior at the games?

Jonathan Kimble, a sports management major at WVU who attends games in the student section, said he and his fellow Maniacs will tone it down a bit later but Pitt is an exception.

“Pitt is our rival so we’ll probably be using a lot of colorful words against them,” Kimble said.

The issues at West Virginia started Jan. 16 against Syracuse when fans threw items onto the court. One Syracuse blogger urged fans for the upcoming Georgetown game to refrain from littering the court: “Let’s stay classy. We’re not West Virginia fans, right?”

Gray said he’s planning to send another letter to students this week. The game isn’t on national TV, but Gray is suggesting fans depart from a certain three-word phrase they use every time the Panthers come to town.

“We would encourage them to be more creative and work on not doing those things that really embarrass and disappoint not only us, but the coaches, the players and other students and fans,” Gray said.

Can’t say I’m shocked. I mean it is WVU. Creativity beyond crudely describing the way they interact with their sisters and farm animals is asking a bit much.

On the court, a more interesting subplot is the debut of a Turkish forward who may be a big addition.

His name is Deniz Kilicli (pronounced “Kah-LITCH-luh”), and there’s certainly a chance that his impact on West Virginia’s season will be limited. It would be unfair to him to expect too much. He’s a Turkish freshman who’s only been in the U.S. for a little more than two years, was forced by the NCAA to sit out for the Mountaineers’ first 20 regular-season games, and has only seen college action in two exhibitions. He’s not yet in peak game condition.

But Kilicli is also a rugged, 6-foot-9, 260-pound power forward who could be an NBA draft prospect in a few seasons, and West Virginia coach Bob Huggins already calls him “our best low-post scorer.” So can you blame us for being intrigued, when no other top-10 team is adding a new player like this in February? The Mountaineers have gone 17-3 (and 6-2 in the Big East) without Kilicli, but, as his prep school coach from Mountain State Academy, Rob Fulford, says: “One thing they’re kind of missing is an a–hole. And he can play like an a–hole.”

Technically, WVU has the a–hole. But I guess, he was talking about players, not the coach.

I’m a little more skeptical of his impact. At least tonight. He may have been playing with the team in practice but a game is far different. Plus, haven’t we heard all this before about another big man who when he became eligible was going to be tremendous almost immediately? Anybody? Anybody?

Ator Majok? UConn? How’s that working out?

Make no mistake, WVU is really good this year. Yes, they have played up-and-down within games. Nearly blowing several and having to stage furious comebacks to salvage a few others. That said, they still won those games.

Jermaine Dixon should be back tonight.

“It was good to see him out there, and I anticipate him playing tomorrow,” coach Dixon said of his senior guard. “We will have to see how he feels. He was able to practice, and that’s a good sign. He’s ready to go, I would think, tomorrow. He seemed to have no problems.”

The players are looking forward to it.

“We enjoy the experience,” McGhee said. “It’s a hostile environment. It’s pretty difficult to play there. The fans get loud. We play harder when the fans come at you. It gets you pumped up and your adrenaline going. It’s something good for us.”

Gary McGhee gets some more love, and the suggestion that Pitt needs to go to him more. I won’t disagree. I will say, that the one area McGhee still needs to work on for that to happen, is making himself a better target for the pass inside. He still struggles to establish position and get the ball.

Coach Dixon is 3-3 down at the Concrete Toadstool. To put that in perspective, he has more wins there than any other Pitt coach.

NLI Day 2010

Filed under: Football,Recruiting — Chas @ 8:47 am

Sure it’s not quite Weasel Stomping Day, but it is one of the big days. The days where Rivals.com and Scout.com find out if all those stress tests on their servers were correct.

Here’s where we already stand with signed NLIs, courtesy of the charts from PantherLair.com and PantherDigest.com.

Listed as signed NLI by both sites:

  • Saheed Imoru (JUCO already enrolled)
  • Brendan Carozzoni
  • Mark Myers
  • Dan Schneider
  • Mark Rotheram
  • Arthur Doakes
  • Brandon Ifill
  • Aaron Donald
  • Eric Williams
  • Salath Williams
  • Bryan Murphy
  • Brandon Sacco

9:24 update:

  • Andrew Carswell
  • K’Wuan Willams

9:30 Update:

  • Kevin Weatherspoon

9:37 Update:

  • K.K. (or Khaynin Mosely-) Smith

9:47 Update:

  • T.J. Clemmings

9:52 Update:

  • Derrick Burns
  • Todd Thomas (take 2)

10:14 Update:

  • Anthony Gonzalez
  • Andre Givens

I’ll be updating most of the morning.

UPDATE 10: 53: 21 of 24 commits are listed as signed.

I’m not sure if T.J. Peeler will be actually signing. It isn’t that he is not committed to Pitt, it is that he has an ACL tear in his left knee. It will take nearly a year to rehab. If he doesn’t sign and goes to prep school, he preserves his full scholarship and redshirt options. If he does sign it may be purely symbolic. Of course, he might still opt to attend Pitt  and take it as a  medical redshirt in 2010.

As for Jeff Knox and Shane Johnson, both attend DeMatha which is closed today. That may delay the signing or at least news of them.

UPDATE 11:25: While still waiting to see if the snow-bound recruits can reach a fax machine, there is one minor, potential addition. Pitt apparently has tried to get in late on Taj Alexander out of Exton, PA. He’s a Rutgers verbal but has yet to send in his LOI.

UPDATE 11:52: Okay, courtesy of Zeise at P-G, Johnson and Knox will probably have their LOI’s in around noon. Peeler is also trying to make arrangements to send his in.

I’m just unclear on one thing. Why a fax? Wouldn’t a signed, scanned NLI,  attached to an e-mail in do the job?

UPDATE 1:20: Looks like a 2 of the 3 made their way to a Kinkos or something. This is Rivals.com only right now but listed as signed are:

  • T.J. Peeler
  • Jeff Knox

That just leaves Shane Johnson and the 2010 class is signed and the angst can begin for 2011.

UPDATE 1:40: Okay, Rivals.com took Knox off the signed list and moved him back to unsigned with Johnson. That kind of makes sense since they are DeMatha teammates and might do this together. Maybe they should call their other teammate, Arie Kouandijo to find where he went to fax his LOI to Alabama.

UPDATE 1:50: According to Zeise, everyone is now signed. 24-24.

  • Jeff Knox
  • Shane Johnson

Now it’s time to turn attention to that little ole’ basketball game tonight…

February 2, 2010

So About Those Struggles

Filed under: Basketball,Tactics — Chas @ 2:08 pm

The danger of trying to post late at night, after having a few drinks, and sweating out a win by Pitt is not writing things I will regret later. Nor is it spelling and grammar issues — well that is an issue but not where I’m going. It’s forgetting the whole point of the post.

After the St. John’s game, one of the primary issues I wanted to write was about how Pitt was playing a lot more along the lines of how they played in the non-con (hence the title of the post). Instead I got bogged down in things about the game, and forgot about tying it together with the intended point. Opting instead for sleep and forgetting all about it.

I’ve been fairly consistent stating that Pitt would be uneven this year. That progress would not be a straight line. Playing at points like they were capable of winning the conference, and others like they would struggle to finish at their preseason projection of 9th. Which of course, leads to the panicky, “oh god, Pitt won’t even make the Tournament,” outbursts. Not to mention silly strawman articles about how Coach Dixon is still the same coach (duh).

It doesn’t make this present stretch any less fun. Doubly so since two of the losses came against teams that were near the bottom last season.

Pitt isn’t in free-fall like UConn. Even Texas has found itself struggling far more than they should. Seth Davis still thinks Pitt is fine and at SI.com listed a bunch of teams with struggles and his evaluations.

Under the hood: When the Panthers knocked off Syracuse in the Carrier Dome on Jan. 2, they made 10-of-24 from three-point range. Turns out that was a mirage. During the last four games, they have gone just 13-for-55 (23.5 percent) from behind the arc. They adjusted during Sunday’s loss at South Florida by only taking eight threes, but they converted just 12-of-22 from the foul line. When the Panthers aren’t making shots, it puts enormous pressure on their defense, and during this recent skid the D has not been quite good enough.

Wheels report: Three wheels wobbly. Fourth holding steady.

It appears Pitt’s win streak inflated expectations, but now that the Panthers have self-corrected, I think they can keep chugging along. Still, they’re going to have to knock down some shots, either from the arc or the free throw line, to win Wednesday at West Virginia. Otherwise that fourth wheel might not hold up.

The last few games have been frustrating to me. The defense has been prone to breakdowns at key spots. Against USF the Bulls were kept to sub-40% shooting, but Dominique Jones came in hot and then Jones shot lights out in the second half (6-9) and continued to get to the free throw line.

What’s been really maddening, though, has been the offense. In the stretch where Pitt has gone 2-3, the perimeter shooting has been spotty to abysmal. Teams have adjusted and are playing a lot tighter outside. Willing to take a chance on letting Wanamaker, Brown and (when healthy) Dixon get past them to the basket.

The reason, obviously is to limit Ashton Gibbs. It has worked very well. He’s getting few open looks and is being guarded tightly at all turns. This has frustrated him and has him rushing his shots at times even when he does get free. The result is a major slump.

The offense’s problems start with sophomore guard Ashton Gibbs, Pitt’s leading scorer. He averaged 20 points and shot 51 percent from the field (28 for 55) in the first five games. In the past four he is averaging 14 per game while shooting 30 percent (16 for 55) from the field.

“He’s just going to have to be patient and let things come to him and we’re going to have execute better to get him shots,” Dixon said. “I think he’s taking pretty good shots. He needs to get to the free-throw line more. Those are things that get you out of slumps. It’s good to get those free throws and get a feel of the ball going through the basket.”

He’s not patient, and that means he is not getting any contact. Excluding the Seton Hall game, he’s had 10 FTAs in the other 4 games. To be fair, Gibbs has had one other shooting slump almost as bad this season — a 29-91 (32%) and 13-48 (27%) shooting slump over six games. That was from the Texas game through Kent St. Not so coincidentally, Pitt lost 2 games, had to go to double-OT to beat Duquesne, and included that 47-32 thriller over New Hampshire.

The other reason teams are playing so tightly and aggressively outside, is little fear inside. After his big game against Louisville, Nasir Robinson disappeared on the offense. He only had limited chances agianst G-town and Seton Hall. When Pitt made a concerted effort the last two games to focus on getting the ball inside on offense and giving him opportunities, however, Robinson has gone back to struggling — 2-13 in the last two games.

With Robinson struggling and Gilbert Brown having career highs in scoring vs. G-town and then topping that against USF, there are the renewed cries to start Brown.

This might be acceptable except that Gilbert Brown plays the same position as Robinson and Brown just might be Pitt’s best player. A struggling team can’t afford to have its best player coming off the bench.

Brown, who did not become eligible until January, scored 25 against South Florida, 20 against Georgetown and 17 against Cincinnati. On a team that has been falling behind early too often, Brown needs to be in the starting lineup.

I’m not sold. While Brown and Robinson play the same position according to the depth chart, they do not play it the same way. Brown is given more room to play the perimeter on both ends. Robinson is much more of the inside presence — even undersized.

Take Robinson out of the starting lineup and the game immediately begins with all the interior defensive weight on Gary McGhee’s shoulders. Given the struggles of Dante Taylor you are risking getting McGhee in very early foul trouble and making Pitt’s offense even more of a perimeter game.

To say nothing of rebounding. USF had a very smart, simple strategy for dealing with Pitt sending so many players inside to fight for rebound. Tapping the ball. Their bigs, rather than try to snare it or fight for it, more often than not merely tapped the ball outside. Getting it back to open guards who could reset the offense.

Then there is the lack of depth on the bench — especially if you move Gilbert Brown to the starting line-up. With Jermaine Dixon day-to-day, Travon Woodall had a chance.

“Travon is a key for us,” Jamie Dixon said. “I said after the Seton Hall game that we need him to play more. He has to continue to improve and not be a freshman. That’s what we’ve talked about. He doesn’t have to score a lot. He doesn’t have to have big numbers. He just has to defend, give us some minutes and run some offense. I think [Thursday] he did a better job of that. That was good for us. Obviously, with Jermaine’s situation it was even more important.”

Dixon was asked Friday whether Woodall was the type of player who needed more minutes to play well. Dixon did not dispute the theory, but he said he has coached players over the years who have made the most of limited minutes as well.

“That’s the argument everyone makes,” Dixon said. “He just needs to play well. Either way, he needs to play well. He needs to do what we need him to do. He doesn’t need to put up big numbers. He just has to help us win games.”

Unfortunately he wasn’t able to step-up. He started, but played only 17 minutes vs. USF. He only took 1 shot and while he only had one turnover, he had no assists. He was overmatched trying to defend any of USF’s guards.

Hopefully Jermaine Dixon will be back in the line-up tomorrow, WVU will continue to play inconsistent ball, and Pitt will play-up to the competition.

February 1, 2010

Yet No One Is On Record

Filed under: Internet,Media,Rumors — Chas @ 4:16 pm

I’ve decided to be bemused with the insane rumors from the weekend through today.

The funny thing to me is how this spread from some bad message board material and specious, unsourced internet writings. Kept getting picked up and enough people were hearing something to wonder if there was something to it.

Now it gets doused in a bath of logic and reason. Yet if you want to play the game, no one is actually on record of saying anything one way or another — which allows it to fester and keep going.

The biggest refutation on the Big 11 side came from the Chicago Tribune‘s Teddy Greenstein.

Bottom line, a source at the conference reiterated to the Tribune on Monday that the Big Ten will adhere to the timetable it laid out in December: a 12-to-18 month period of analysis. The league will then determine whether it wants to expand and, if so, how many schools it will invite to the party.

Unnamed source, but still no formal statement. But that refutation spread as truth (and for the record I believe it but not because of an unnamed source at the Big 11).

Another popular source was ZagsBlog actually getting a “Pitt spokesman” on the record — something local beat writers couldn’t do.

Internet reports that Pittsburgh is moving to the Big 10 from the Big East are “100 percent’ false, according to multiple sources within the Pittsburgh athletic department.

“There is no announcement to make because there is nothing happening,” said Pitt spokesman Mike Gladysz.

Well, that’s neat except that Mr. Gladysz is not an employee of Pitt’s athletic department. Oh, he works in the area. He is employed by ISP Sports Network as an editor of the Pitt monthly “Panther Eyes.” At least that is what his profile says.

Oh, and that KC Star blog post  that wrote:

Speculation is heating up all over the Internet that Pitt has accepted an offer to join the Big Ten Conference.

Here is what popped up on Bleacherreport.com, normally a pretty reliable outlet, just a few hours ago…

[Emphasis added]

Well, that bit has been scrubbed and now he, uh, updated it to say he was just posting the speculation on the internet. Nothing else. No. Of course not.

And the fun keeps coming.

[UPDATE, 5:30: Adam Zagoria has changed his post to delete the attribution to Mr. Gladysz, without indicating he ever wrote it that way. Good to see that responsible journalism hard at work.

UPDATE, 2/2/10, 9:00 AM: Interesting. Now it is back. to the original way written.]

Cranky, Cranky, Cranky

Filed under: Big 11,Conference,Rumors — Chas @ 12:58 pm

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette Pitt football beat writer Paul Zeise must have had a lousy weekend.

I’ve spoken with countless people at Pitt about this situation — and mostly because I am getting  bombarded with e-mails, voicemails, text messages and every other form of communication about it not because I believe any of it — over the last few days and this is the message I’ve gotten loud and clear —

There is no announcement planned (the phrases “total fabrication” and “absolutely 100 percent false” and “there is absolutely nothing to these rumors, nothing at all” have been used on more than one occassion) because there is nothing to this whole ‘Pitt to the Big Ten’ stuff. At least not right now and not in the near future. And to take it one step further, there have been no formal discussions (and I’ve been told there haven’t even been any informal discussions between Pitt and the Big Ten, in other words, there have been no discussions at all) between Pitt and the Big Ten and all of these rumors are just that.

He also points out that Pitt isn’t formally commenting because it is wiser to make sure the door is open if it ever gets to a point where the Big 11 expands.

As has been the case, nothing new. Very quiet and little drama with NLI day a couple days off.

ESPN.com/Scouts, Inc. did a look back on the 2006 top-100  kids in the recruiting class (Insider subs.). Pitt had three players in that list and 0 busts– though LeSean McCoy (#50) ended up in prep school for a year before getting to Pitt. Nate Byham (#68) and Dorin Dickerson (#74) both should be considered successes. Even if Byham’s senior year was disappointing compared to his first few, and it really took until his senior year for Dickerson to become the weapon expected.

Brian Bennett looks at others in the Big East’s 2006 recruiting class, and notes that Pitt really had some good hits in this class with Byham, Dickerson, Pinkston and Romeus were all in this group.

As for recruiting this year, Rivals.com’s Jeremy Crabtree puts Pitt in his list of disappointments.

The Pitt Panthers fall into this category for one big reason – they lost out on the biggest names in Western Pennsylvania. Linebacker Mike Hull, quarterback Paul Jones and offensive linemen Thomas Ricketts and Miles Dieffenbach all bolted the western part of the state. What’s worse is that all four committed to in-state rival Penn State with two of them, Ricketts and Dieffenbach, having family ties to Pitt. Pitt did a nice job on some of the lesser names in their area and helped its cause with some talent in New Jersey, but after some nice success the last few years in their neck of the woods, this year was a disappointment.

Comparatively disappointing, but not devastating. All four are 4-stars, but none are can’t-miss, had-to-have prospects. Losing any top WPa talent is annoying. Especially a couple OLs. Maybe because they all committed early, it does not feel that stinging at this point.

Coach Wannstedt has been using the period after the season ended to check in on kids who have verbaled. Not to mention planning for 2011.

“I was hitting four homes a night,” Wannstedt said. “I like to get in the home of every kid who commits to us.

“All our recruits were excited about Pitt in August, but they are really excited about the opportunity to be a part of the program now. If we had 20 commitments in August, and you win four games, now you’re scrambling to hold on to convince guys why that happened. When you have a good year, it reinforces in the recruit’s mind that it was a great decision.”

The last day of official home visits was Friday. Now, the Pitt coaching staff can only wait for letters of intent to spill through the fax machines.

As he waits, Wannstedt is already looking ahead to next year’s recruiting class.

“This gives us an opportunity to put together our junior list,” he said. “As sick as that sounds, we have a junior recruiting day coming up in February. That’s the nature of the business now. You’re trying to finish strong with this year’s class and make sure you prepared for what’s coming up.”

As NLI day looms, there is no shortage of recruiting stories. And the usual hand-wringing over the state of things. This includes decommits and changing minds. The usual stuff, but this piece is worth noting since Pitt verbal commit T.J. Clemmings is featured.

From the moment Clemmings stepped on campus at Pittsburgh, he was enthralled.

The players seemed like old friends. He found the city exciting. The team was coming off yet another strong season under former NFL coach Dave Wannstedt. Everything he looked for in a school was there.

On his way out of town after the weekend-long visit, the 6-6, 260-pound Clemmings called Wannstedt and told him Pitt was where he wanted to play college football.

“He made a hasty decision without consulting anybody,” Paterson Catholic coach Benjie Wimberly said. “It was almost like love at first sight. You meet your first girl and it’s the best thing in the world — I think that’s what happened with TJ.”

One of the most coveted prospects in the country — he runs a 4.7 second 40-yard dash and was pursued by Notre Dame, Penn State and many others — Clemmings’ parents urged him to carefully weigh his options and visit other schools. This was a life-changing decision, they warned him.

Clemmings took an official visit to Rutgers and unofficial trips to Maryland and Penn State. He wanted to see if those schools could offer him anything that Pitt could not.

In the end, Pittsburgh was still the place for Clemmings.

There was a lot of confusion over Clemmings at first. His verbal was known, then his parents and coaches all said, “not so fast.” This led to the usual overreaction by Pitt fans that the coaches and parents were interfering or trying to steer him to some other school.

Since he still is committed to Pitt, it’s easy to look back with more of an open mind. The truth is, regardless, the adults in Clemmings life actually behaved like adults.

Clemmings had an emotional, impulsive reaction. The sort of thing that high school kids of any type are prone to do. His parents and coach made him look a little more carefully to be sure. The decision was still his (and he chose wisely).

My Life No Longer Makes Sense

Filed under: Athletic Department,Rumors — Chas @ 9:33 am

How do you expect us to function in the world with this kind of message?

EJ Tweets the Big 11 Rumor

EJ Tweets the Big 11 Rumor

But I thought if it was on the internets it must be true?

Hold it, adjusting my paranoia and making it fit to the world view that the rumors are the truth. Ah, there it is.

“It’s not a denial…”

“Just a smokescreen from a Pitt assistant AD/sports information director…”

“He is being kept in the dark to allow deniability…”

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