You can bet this is going to get beaten into the ground during the many national appearances Pitt will have this season, so this is probably the last time I will post about Coach Dixon helping at the scene of the car accident.
Here’s the video of Coach Dixon’s ESPN First Take appearance talking about the accident.
Dixon does a hell of a job trying to mention all the others who helped.
Baldwin’s stock will rise or fall many times before Indy; some by team need, some by his effort at the private workout, some by pure “specs”, some by Pitt’s play at the end of the year. Sadly, his less than stellar stats/play in the first half of the season (insert blame here) will not mean much once he gets his shirt off in Indy.
Scouts have wet dreams about his skill set and specs at the WR position….
It’s the little things.
…just sayin’
HTscriptP
14) Kansas City Chiefs: Jonathan Baldwin, WR, Pittsburgh
It really is a shame that this exciting Chiefs team is so limited by its quarterback. Matt Cassel went 10-of-22 for 68 yards in the opener, and tossed two picks at Cleveland. Cassel wasn’t very good at Indianapolis either, but the Chiefs may have won if Dwayne Bowe didn’t drop three passes. At Houston, it was all running game and checkdowns.
As Cassel continues to struggle, Kansas City’s front office will blame his poor production on his lacking receivers. Based on Bowe’s awful hands and the fact that Chris Chambers is still on the roster, I guess that’s a legitimate excuse.
Jonathan Baldwin, at 6-5, 225, caught 57 balls for 1,111 yards and eight touchdowns as a sophomore in 2009.
He has only 25 receptions through six games this season because his 5-foot-6 tattooed quarterback can’t get him the ball.