I want to try and put the ND loss in the rearview and move on to Syracuse. But between what feels like unfinished posting due to limited time, and my own continuing frustration over the game; I am not quite ready to do that. I’m making this the last look-back type of post. Try to get the bile and anger out.
Turning to Coach Wannstedt’s presser yesterday, I’m not sure there is much that he could have said that wouldn’t have me feeling sarcastic and bitter. So, I’m going with it.
Anyone looking for some coaching introspection about the decisionmaking and calls. Well, not really.
“We need to practice hard and clean up some of the things that we addressed. I think that some of the things, whether it be run-game issues, you just have to go out and practice it. We have the best guys out there doing it. They’re working hard and their attitude is good.
“It’s repetition, repetition, repetition. We went back yesterday, looked at some of the plays we called during the game and we said as coaches, ‘the things that we’re dialing up, are we getting the kids enough repetitions in practice?’”
Hear that kids? It isn’t that the decision by the coaches were wrong. It’s that you guys just haven’t done it enough. It’s not the calls. It’s not the talent.It’s the execution. Remember that, when you are told to run the ball up the middle three straight times against 10 in the box.
“We should be confident with it. We’re double-checking all those things. You have to add things every week from the game-plan standpoint, but you have to make sure that you’re getting enough reps to make sure that the guys can play fast.”
We are back to “play faster?” Here I thought this was 2003 repeating itself. For Coach Wannstedt it is 2005. That isn’t an improvement.
“I think we’ll correct some of the kicking game issues. We’re not going to mishandle the snap, and we’ll kick the field goals. That’s just how it goes. Dan Hutchins was the Special Teams Player of the Week the week before in the Big East Conference, so I’m not concerned about that. He punted the ball well. You look at the fake punt, and it was there. We had the look that we wanted, but we didn’t execute. We go back and we work on those things again and just keep working on them. We’re not going to shy away from doing things. We just have to do it better.”
We can rebuild him. We can make him better than he was before. Better. Stronger. Faster. Sorry. Drifted away for a minute. Where was I?
How about the cleats? Anything to say about all the slipping? And whether anyone really checked the turf before the game?
“We had them go up and warm-up with their cleats on. We had two fall downs. One fall down was an interception with Mike Shanahan. We thought that was going to be a 16-yard completion. Then there was the (would-be) touchdown in the end zone. We had the guys go out and warm-up with the cleats on. Obviously, they didn’t think it was a problem until they fell.”
And obviously no one thought to do more than have the players just warm-up in them to find out if the cleats were right on a road surface. The first road game Pitt had played since the season opener.
/facepalm
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1997 Pittsburgh 6–6 4–3 3(t) L 7–41 Liberty Bowl
1998 Pittsburgh 2–9 0–7 8
1999 Pittsburgh 5–6 2–5 6(t)
2000 Pittsburgh 7–5 4–3 3(t) L 29–37 Insight Bowl
2001 Pittsburgh 7–5 4–3 3(t) W 34–19 Tangerine Bowl
2002 Pittsburgh 9–4 5–2 3 W 38–13 Insight Bowl 19
2003 Pittsburgh 8–5 5–2 3 L 16–23 Continental Tire Bowl
2004 Pittsburgh 8–4 4–2 1-T L 7–35 Fiesta Bowl † 25
Pittsburgh: 52–44 28–27
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2005 Pittsburgh 5–6 4–3 T-3rd — — —
2006 Pittsburgh 6–6 2–5 6th — — —
2007 Pittsburgh 5–7 3–4 T-3rd — — —
2008 Pittsburgh 9–4 5–2 T-2nd L Sun — —
2009 Pittsburgh 10–3 5–2 T-2nd W Meineke Car Care 15 15
2010 Pittsburgh 2–3 0–0
PAUL HACKETT – 13 wins 20 losses and 1 tie
MIKE GOTTFRIED -26 WINS 16 losses and 2 ties
We have been a mediocre football since the 70’s so it doesnt matter what coach we have.
Hopefully someone gets the head out of their ass soon. WIN THE BIG EAST, GO TO THE BCS GAME AND WIN!
HAIL TO PITT!
Not just for the Big East title, but moreso for preventing a entire season collapse.
Maybe I am overstating it, certainly this isn’t as bad as the 2007 season…but it just feels like there is an urgency in the air.
DaveD
Walt put us back on the map, and stocked the team with plenty of national talent for it to be taken to the next level. His time was up, and it was time for Pitt to move forward. Stache has taken the program back several steps and appears to be intent on dragging us back BELOW PSU and WVU.
why is it good enough for you? please explain that? Again I feel like im taking crazy pills. Stache has demonstrated over and over again that he is clueless at coaching football, literally he doesnt know how to do it in a manner that wins games against equal competition at any point over the last 20 years. And you are satisfied with this? This type of complacency would have kept Ralph Willard at Pitt. It also will ensure Pitt’s attendance dwindles away and we start to lose recruits… there has to be ACCOUNTABILITY
It’s a give-and-take situation I guess. You sacrifice coaching prowess for more talent.
Pete Carroll was another shitty NFL coach that won in college because he could recruit. And while our recruiting has improved, it’s nowhere near USC’s during Carroll’s tenure, and not nearly good enough to overcome bad coaching like the Trojans did.
There is and was talent at Pitt. Aaron Berry’s a prime example.
Playing in Wanny’s ultra-conservative defenses drove him from being a 4 star recruit, to not being drafted (half the reason our corners can’t cover a comeback route is Wanny’s soft-ass schemes).
He gets picked up as an undrafted free agent in Detroit, makes the team (I don’t care if it is Detroit, the NFL’s the NFL), and actually played a pretty nice game for them in his first EVER NFL game (a few tackles and a pick) in the opener before getting hurt for the year.
So yeah, there’s been talent for him, he’s just a boneheaded, neanderthal, closed-minded coach. Always has been.
I’m actually afraid that Wanny’s coaching is driving us to become one of those programs that sends a lot of guys to the NFL that have success there, but can’t win in college.
maybe it doesn’t sound like much but the fact that the Stache loves to play close games means very little game reps for the depth chart.
As you have to play the death struggle with the likes of FIU/UNH for the whole game.
Nothing simulates experience like actual game experience.
Perhaps the reason our underclassmen seem so unprepared when they start is they have very little game time experience.
Perhaps it’s not much but it seems like we keep on returning to these kids not being ready for primetime.
I actually don’t think it’s one thing. I think it’s a combo and a lot of it has to do with how the Stache develops and coaches. It’s holding back good recruiting classes.
DaveD
From my perspective, every week the fans of about 50% of all colleges are really ticked-off on their coach, think that their coach made some bone-headed decisions, and think that their coach can be replaced with someone superior. I was not in favor of terminating Walt Harris. I remember how he came into a situation where there was utter chaos and made us respectable. As long as he was going to be replaced, I was and still am glad that it was with DW, a Pitt man who loves his school, who has character, who has his players’ interest at heart, and who puts a competitive product on the field.
Sunday evening watched Shady play. He also is a different player and was told he was not strong enough when he arrived in the pros. He is now. Those are just the facts. Draw your own conclusions.
And yes, go to any college blog after a loss and you will see discontent fans with some aspect of the coach. However, you will never see a blog like ours, Miami’s or Chicago’s when Wanny coached displaying the outpouring of frustration and disgust with the waste of another afternoon. All the comments are the same and that is NO accident. I believe Pitt will lose badly to a very mediocre Cuse team. Still, hope I am wrong…but have come to expect the worst. We are truly at a crossroads with Pitt Football.
This is starting to sound like Rush about 8 or 9 years ago when he blamed everything wrong in the world on Bill and Hilary.
End rant.
11/2 can not get here quick enough for both!
get real. hopefully there was jest in there.
I love Pitt. I love Pitt sports. I love everything about this school. I don’t love this team…anymore or DW.
Pitt wasn’t mediocre in the early 1980’s. I don’t know what you’ve been smoking. Maybe 70’s hash. Pitt was 11-1 in 1980 and ranked #2 by AP & UPI (#1 in the NY Times Poll). Pitt was 11-1 in 1981 and was ranked # 1 all year until the PSU game and finished #2 (UPI) & #4 (AP) after beating Georgia in the Sugar Bowl and Pitt was 9-3 in the 1982 season and finished ranked #9 (UPI) and #10 (AP) losing in the Cotton Bowl. In 1983 Pitt was 8-3-1 ranked #18 (AP) & #19 (UPI) losing to Ohio State in the Fiesta Bowl by a couple points in the final moments. Those were NOT mediocre years, they were part of the Pitt ‘Glory Years’, along with the 1930’s and 1963 (9-1) ranked #4 (AP) & #3 (UPI), 1910 (10-0), the Pop Warner years: 1915 (8-0), 1916 (8-0),1917 (10-0), the early Jock Sutherland years 1927 (8-1-1) Rose Bowl, 1929 (9-1) Rose Bowl.
Hail to Pitt !
And that friends is how people and their frustrations work. Jimmy J. was long gone and working for CBS, so you take it out on someone that is available.
He plays not to lose, he is not going to be agressive, and probably won’t dictate the terms of the game…it can be hard to watch, and at times, it is painful. He recruits well, believes in PITT, and will, all in all, win more games than he loses.
With the right talent, he can win on talent alone, but because he plays not to lose, he’s unlikely to be aggressive and step on the gas—you want more, but with Wanny, what you see is what you get. He won’t outscheme anybody, but believes in sticking with the basics—and tries to build a fundamentally sound, but basic team.
He’s not a Ferrari nor a Yugo, but a Chevy Impala.
Just understand what we have..a dedicated PITT alum coaching a vanilla team.
Hail to PITT!
-al-
HAIL TO PITT!
Numbers… our best win statistically was over NAVY… I love the Middies but thats not an elite program, they werent ranked at one point last year. Next, it was the signature win over Rutgers?! We went 1-1 against the midtier ACC teams as well. That team is an 8-4 team in the prior big east… and a 7-5 or 6-6 team had we played Utah or another ranked non-conference team. Starting to see how big of a joke that “10 win season” was?
link to realtimerpi.com
Virgil – the hiring of Foge Fazio was a DISASTER. Many of you either were ignorant to what was going on with Pitt football at the time, or just choose to remember it more fondly now that the years have passed. Foge Fazio was hired because he was a “Pitt Guy” despite any success in head coaching and a completely different profile from the last two coaches (Majors-Tenn, Jackie-Bama). His hiring was protested at great lenghts by many boosters instrumental in hiring Majors/Sherrill, but the “Pitt Guy” crowd won out (sound familiar?? idionts wanting to hire Wanny instead of Bo Pelini and Tom Bradley!) He inherited the best team/program in the country… 1982 Pitt was preseason number 1 with Marino/Fralic/Covert and the crew.
link to en.wikipedia.org
He somehow found a way to lose 3 games including getting beat by PSU.,,he then proceeded to bring us to mediocrity with a 3 win and 5 win season. Firing his was 100% warranted… and the only reason Gottfried didnt succeed was because Posvar increased academic requirements to athletes like a complete moron and nearly destroyed Pitt football.
Consider yourself schooled
Pitt’s current power rpi…90… lowest since Dave was hired.
As I’ve stated many times, I was not a fan of the Wanny hire for many of the reasons stated here. But, I grew to accept him because of his fervor for Pitt and the steady progress made on and off the field. Last year got me buying into the whole package albeit with some reservation, because as you correctly pointed out Pitt played a fairly weak schedule and won several close games that could have gone either way. The emergence of the offense under Cig and a defense that led the nation in sacks without a lot of blitzes helped make the season exciting, in spite of Wanny’s boring, vanilla, conservative style, and led to higher expectations this year.
I bought into the preseason media hype and #15 ranking despite Wanny himself saying there were holes on this team. Seems like many here did the same. The result is a whole bunch of frustration over what many betting experts actually said would happen – Pitt would lose to Utah, Miami and ND. But, they also said Pitt would contend with WVU for the Big East title. As I recall, that was the stated goal for the team by Wanny himself. As mediocre of a goal as it may seem, that is the goal. That goal is still possible, so it’s the only reason I’m not writing the season off – and won’t write it off until we’re mathematically out of the race.
As far as Wanny: Reed’s post in the other thread made a lot of sense from a financial standpoint. Coupling that with the facts that he has talent in the Sophs and Freshmen, his best recruiting class ever is coming in 2011, and the administration and many boosters are still behind him, says that you can scream “fire Wanny NOW” all you want but it’s not going to happen. As a realist not an apologist or someone settling for mediocrity, I defer to one of Mike Tomlin’s favorite sayings: “It is what it is.” Therefore, the debate on whether or not to fire Wanny IMHO is a waste of brainpower and eventually will put you “on crazy pills”.
The debate really should be about how to save this season and restore some of the pride we had before it began. To me, that starts with Wanny turning over all game day responsibilities to the coordinators and becoming more of a CEO like AZ Panther suggested in a previous post. The big question is can he put his ego aside and do that? If he’s truly a “Pitt man”, he will.
Despite how good his recruiting classes are, he will never win the big games and get Pitt where it should be with the talent, facilities, history/presence, and support.
To anyone that says Pitt has been mediocre for 25 years… look at what Kelly did with ZERO recruits, no history, barely any support, and only 3 years. He never had a losing season at Cincy… he won 2 Big East championships… he ran the table in the Big Least… he owned Wanny 2 years with teams with HALF the talent…He beat good non conference teams on the road..etc etc etc
how can many of you continually say we should be happy and this is all pitt is capable of when kelly did so much more with so much less?
clearly coaching is the weak link
ESPN Classic replayed the Pitt Syracuse game at the carrier dome from October 2000 the other night. There was a ton of talent on that team: Antonio Bryant, Ramon Walker, Latef Grim, Bryan Knight, Claude Harriot, Torrie Cox, Rod Rutherford, Shawntae Spencer, Lousaka Polite, Andy Lee, Nick Goings, Kevan Barlow, Gerald Hayes, Rob Petiti, Kris Wilson…
fyi, Pitt lost in double overtime on a syracuse 3rd and 20 busted play touchdown….so many heartbreaks I’ve forgotten over the years.
Kelly is a great game day coach. You saw that last year and again this year against Pitt. He got Pike’s head back into the game last year, and he made tempo changes that resulted in key scoring drives for ND this year. I need to see how he handles the pressure at ND before crowning him a great HC. He had zero pressure at Cinci, and he’s getting a pass this year for the most part.
Wanny is a terrible game day coach. Like many said, he plays not to lose. Special teams, his personal responsibility are a mess, and major adjustments come at halftime, when the coordinators are with the players instead of in the booth.
I think Wanny’s overall, long-term strategy is sound. It will keep Pitt in games against teams with more talent and it will get Pitt recruits looking to play at the next level. As others have pointed out, it’s not all that different from Saban’s. To me that says he can succeed as a HC, but only if the coaching on the field is turned over to the coordinators. I think Coach Ditka and I are on the same page there.
That overall strategy – pro style offense, 4-3 defense, strong running game, strong defensive front, etc. – had Alabama in the national title hunt the past three years. And, they may yet make it two out of three depending on how the chips fall. I think Alabama still plays COLLEGE football. Many SEC and Big Ten teams use that overall strategy. I believe those are the two strongest COLLEGE conferences.
Wanny’s game day use of that strategy however, leaves a lot to be desired.
One word: COACHING!
Omar, maybe we should try to hire an established, respected coach like VT’s Frank Beamer. Look how Virginia Tech kicked hell out of inferior James Madison this year. (er…ah…, I checked that score and that was probably not a good example. Actually, my research suggests that there appears to be a number of upsets of various teams every year.)
DeVanzo, did Posvar really increase the academic requirements for Pitt’s athletes???? How could he have done such a thing! Oh, my! No wonder you are so upset.
why do you constantly defend Wanny’s patterns with anomalies?
VT lost to James Madison… Pitt has many losses to inferior opponents… therefore Pitt=VT
really?
in the words of Cris Carter… Come on man
Look at Bo Pellini now, we couldn’t pay him $10 mil a year to come here. There has always been some lame local bias / homerism with this university that’s held it back for a long time. And until someone takes the bitter pill and cleans house in the FO it’ll stay that way.
Please join the reality-based fans.
The context of my posts are: I’m not a Wanny fan, but LOGIC and REALITY says we’re stuck with him, and probably for a while. So how can Pitt football succeed with him, and more importantly in spite of him?
How about some posts along those lines instead of the dreamworld musings of we could have had Pellini or there’s a young, magical football version of Jamie Dixon out there just dying to take us to the promised land?
Coach Ditka and I both said he needs to hand over the game planning and in-game coaching to the coordinators – totally. I think the overall strategy of proven pro-style football still works in the college game and will eventually lead to better recruiting classes. But again, Wanny needs to let the coordinators handle the tactics.
Matt N.: I hear you regarding Wanny being stubborn. I’m HOPING, WISHING, PRAYING that he realizes he needs to trust his hires and hand over the gameday duties. I’m Wanny’s age and I’ve been successful in my field, but only because I’m constantly adapting my strategy to conditions. I don’t change the strategy. I change the tactics.
Tactical change #1 for Wanny: Take off the headphones on game day.
groundswell of support for “Pitt guy” hire made the Wanny choice all but a sure thing despite Pelini’s better credentials
and guess what… a fan/booster movement to fire him will ensure it happens… this hopeless crap is nonsense… he doesnt generate enough revenue to cover his salary… the boosters pay it, and they will decide his fate
you are in the 1% club… go cheer for an Ivy League team… and dont worry, they bend rules for football players too. Not as much, but the vast majority of the kids on the teams couldnt get in without football
whether or not you like it, football teams are assembled to win, not to improve the medical field in America. And rather, let the doctor study medicine, let the kid from coral gables play football and maybe turn into a college grad and businessman… your statement is completely blind to the good that football has brought to many underprivileged kids from dead end backgrounds
do yourself a favor and watch ESPN’s “THE U”… it is tremendous and will show you how a team can help a community, and its not by fielding a team of upper class pre meds who try really hard
I don’t have a problem with a pro-style offense or a 4-3 defense. I have a problem with Mr. Wannstedt’s application of the offense and defense. He coaches to keep both teams in the game which leads to upsets. Pitt has had more talent than the opponent in all but a handful of games in the past 3 year. Unfortunately Pitt still can’t avoid losses to inferior teams each and every year. That is my point. Your point is well taken.
“a fan/booster movement to fire him will ensure it happens”
Absolutely, but let’s look at the facts:
1. Based on Reed’s calculation, it will take $4.2 million to buy out his contract and Wanny needs the money. The university won’t do that, so it will be up to the boosters. If any of you has an extra half-million dollars lying around, please lead the charge. I’ll be right behind you.
2. Wanny’s coming off consecutive winning seasons and the best season in years (I know. Easy schedule, etc.) This season is not over and so far Pitt has lost only as expected. Even if it goes further South, it will probably be looked at as a bump in the road, because he warned everyone in advance that he had some major holes to fill with inexperienced players.
3. He’s stockpiled talent in the lower classes and he has his best class ever coming in for 2011.
4. I haven’t heard of anyone in the administration or among the major contributors calling for his resignation. If anyone has, please enlighten me. That would certainly change my thought process.
Therefore, again LOGIC says we’re stuck with him for now.
Hopeless thinking says, “We’ll never win with Wanny, so let’s all jump off a building.” I’d rather focus on how do we win with Wanny and in spite of Wanny.
That’s why Pitt will only move forward when he gives up the game day coaching, either because he finally sees the light or he’s forced to do so (includes firing). I like his passion and vision for bringing the glory back to Pitt football, so I hope it’s the former.
DeVanzo, during my time at Pitt, most of the players came from “working” families. Many were the sons of immigrants who were coal miners and steel workers. Their parents spoke broken English and were either uneducated or undereducated. Yet these “underprivileged kids” learned proper grammar and went on to receive meaningful degrees. I refuse to believe that the prior “underprivileged kids” were somehow superior to today’s “underprivileged kids” in their abilities. Obviously, this is a complex subject that may have something to do with “expectations”.
Dave is also VERY closed-minded and NEVER takes accountability. To me, that is why is he will not take Pitt to the next level on the field. He does not have the strategic thinking or leadership qualities.
One thing I don’t get is his image of being a great coach except during game days. How many times have we seen Pitt not able to defend the spread, look completely unprepared (for example the cleat issue on Sat.), or just play flat. That directly contradicts the “great” football mind persona Wanny has.
They won’t be getting ride of him for at least another couple of years, so at least we will have something to talk about! All the heat he gets is well-placed and deserved; don’t say you are going to be national contenders in 3 years and then be upset when you are called out.
Actually, Pitt’s defended the spread pretty well (USF, WVU, even Utah and ND in the second halves). What they haven’t defended well was the tempo of the offense. That adjustment can only be made after the game begins, and it had to wait until halftime in both cases instead of after the first series.
The cleat issue was clearly game day. They had the right cleates in the bag, but didn’t change them until halftime. Shanahan should have changed his during warmups or at worst after the first slip. The second slip led to an interception and points for ND.
Coming out flat is also game day. What’s said in the locker room to get the kids fired up to play? What’s done during the game to shake out the cobwebs, like Kelly did with Pike in last year’s Cinci game? What’s done during the game to change momentum? I’ve got a feeling it goes something like, “Play hard. Don’t make mistakes.” That would sure get me fired up.
“and the only reason Gottfried didnt succeed was because Posvar increased academic requirements to athletes like a complete moron and nearly destroyed Pitt football.”
“i have no idea what relevance that has to the wannstache debate”
“end of conversation”
i was explaining why Pitt football was mired in mediocrity starting with the poor hiring choice of Foge Fazio
ugh
Foge was a good choice, the 1982 Pitt team had plenty of problems other than Foge, with the most being Marino’s off field activities(among others), which is why he was drafted next to last in the 1rst round of that years NFL draft after 5 other QB’s were chosen in the 1rst round. Among them some real stiffs. Did you say schooled ?
Does the $4.2 million buyout number referenced above a NPV? Because at $1.4M a year, I come up with $5.6M – 4 more years to run, through 2014. By that time, we will be lucky if we get an invitation to join the WPIAL.
So, your figure is probably correct – without any of us knowing the intricacies of his contract – and makes it even more unlikely that he’ll be dismissed after this season.
Two other unknowns are: 1) I recall him saying he would coach as long as he was enjoying it. He can’t be enjoying this season so far, but he could be enjoying the challenge of turning it around. 2) How badly did the Orion Bank debacle hurt his finances? He might need and demand the full $5.6 million, he might be desperate enough to settle for less, or he might be just fine due to other successful investments. Only Wanny knows the answers.
I think what Wanny meant by “enjoying it” is getting paid millions for doing a lousy job. I can relate – I have longed for such a position all my life.
It’s one thing to look at this as a fan and think “Well, it is logical and best for the program”… it is a whole other world trying to convince a Board of Trustees who are still grappling with a huge loss of endowment funds due to the recession.
Sorry, but I just don’t see PITT football being that important to the University as a whole to where they would throw money away like that.