Last Big East regular season game. Forever. Considering Pitt doesn’t do much in the way of Chicagoland recruiting, there’s not going to be much of an interest in future scheduling with DePaul. After a brief glimmer of hope at not finishing in dead last in the Big East, they are right there for a 5th straight year.
Clemson just hasn’t been the same since Oliver Purnell left for DePaul. I would wonder if Purnell looks at the fact that he’s won 6 Big East games in three years at DePaul, and has a bit of remorse. But then I remember that he’s getting $4 million a year for 4 years (or is it 5?), guaranteed. He made the money grab and damn the losing.
DePaul is a team that wants to score and tries to pressure and trap on defense to create turnovers. They do score well, but not exactly efficiently. It makes their defense that much worse since pressure defense depends on scoring to give them a chance to set things up.
When they don’t score, or teams break the pressure it can get really ugly as we saw in the January blowout where Pitt won by 38. That game was one of only three all year where DePaul didn’t crack 60 points (Louisville and Gardner-Webb were the others).
The concerns for Pitt are three-fold. It’s a road game, and things have gone wrong for plenty of teams on the road this year (Michigan losing to Penn State, Wake Forest over Miami, all the top Big East teams that lost at Villanova, Washington St. stunning UCLA…). Pitt has been off since last Sunday, and we have seen Pitt look extremely sluggish and struggle when they have extra breaks between games.
Finally there is the injury issue.
Starting center Steven Adams missed Sunday’s game against Villanova with a left ankle sprain. The 7-foot freshman is expected to play, but was sore and limping in practice this week and could be limited.
His backup, 6-9 senior Dante Taylor, also missed two practices with a stomach illness. That could force 6-9 power forward Talib Zanna, coming off a 14-point, 19-rebound game, to play the post.
“They’re obviously not ideal (circumstances), but that’s where we’re at,” coach Jamie Dixon said. “Depth is our strength … but if you take one away, it changes your depth.”
Pitt’s depth doomed DePaul in a 93-55 victory Jan. 26 at Petersen Events Center, as the Panthers’ bench outscored the Blue Demons, 52-26. Pitt also enjoyed a 58-34 rebounding margin, as Adams had 14, Taylor eight and Zanna six.
Another area of concern is DePaul’s press. Pitt had 18 turnovers in the first game against the Blue Demons, who have since started to rely more upon press defense.
“I’m sure they’ll throw a different look at us,” said junior guard Trey Zeigler, who scored a season-high 18 points against DePaul. “When you have a game like we had, you played really well, they’re going to try to take something away.”
To make matters worse, freshman point guard James Robinson injured his thumb in practice this week. Robinson leads the Big East and ranks seventh nationally in assist-to-turnover ratio (3.18).
These are not serious, long-term injuries. But they are reason to be cautious heading to the Big East Tourney and the NCAA. The last thing you want is to have one of your key players go down or exacerbate a minor injury against the worst team in the conference, in a relatively meaningless game.
That said, I have no doubt that Pitt will play to win this game and the banged-up players will do as much as they can. Coach Jamie Dixon just doesn’t do it any other way.
When Pitt was rolling to #1 seed for the NCAA Tournament in 2009, Fields suffered a bruised tailbone in the second-to-last game of the season. A reasonable precaution would have been to sit him for the finale against UConn. But Fields was out there for his usual minutes. Yes, that was UConn and Senior Day at the Pete, not DePaul in a half-deserted Rosemont Arena; but you get the picture.
Next week, at the Big East Tournament, there will be plenty of sentimentality on the end of the Big East. Hard to do it, even for a season finale, when the foe is DePaul. But damnit, it will get shoehorned in there somehow.
“It’s somewhat sad it’s coming to an end,” said Pitt coach Jamie Dixon, who is in his 10th season as head coach. “We’re in a good place, but we’re going to a good place. We’ve had great memories, but I’m sure it’s going to be great [in the ACC], too.
“It’s hard to believe it getting better than this, the rivalries we’ve had. But I see that continuing. It will be a little different. We found new rivalries in the Big East. We developed rivalries. That will happen in the ACC, too.”
Pitt’s first Big East victory didn’t come until almost a month later. The Panthers opened their first Big East schedule with four losses before beating Seton Hall Jan. 22, 1983.
That first season Pitt finished 6-10 and in sixth place in the standings and then lost their first Big East tournament game to St. John’s. It wouldn’t be until four years later, in 1987, that the Panthers finally would win a Big East tournament game and 20 years until they finally cut down the nets at Madison Square Garden for their first tournament title.
As an aside. For possibly the best piece on the loss of the Big East Tournament (or at least the early leader in the clubhouse), this Dan Wetzel piece was top-notch. He actually talks about hope for the future BET, but when you read it, you just know that it will never be the same.
It’s 2pm eastern (1pm in Chicago). Locally the game will be on WTAE in Pittsburgh. As for the rest of the country, it will be ESPN3, ESPN FullCourt or one of many Big East syndicated outlets:
New York (SNY), Los Angeles, Calif. (KJLA, 5 p.m.); Chicago, Ill. (WCIU-DT4), Washington, D.C. (MASN), Tampa-St. Petersburg-Sarasota, Fla. (Brighthouse), Orlando-Daytona Beach-Melbourne, Fla. (Brighthouse-O), San Francisco-Oakland-San Jose, Calif. (CSN-Bay), Pittsburgh (WTAE-TV), Baltimore, Md. (MASN), Hartford-New Haven, Conn. (SNY-CT), Columbus, Ohio (WWHO), Milwaukee, Wis. (TW-WI), Cincinnati, Ohio (EKRC), Las Vegas, Nevada (KVMY), Harrisburg-Lancaster-York, Pa. (EHP), Louisville, Ky. (WHAS), Buffalo, N.Y. (TW-Buffalo), Wilkes Barre-Scranton (WSWB), Albany-Schenectedy-Troy, N.Y. (TW-Albany), Dayton, Ohio (WBDT), Lexington, Ky. (WTVQ-DT), Green Bay-Appleton (TW-WI2), Toledo, Ohio (WTVG-DT2), Rochester, N.Y. (TW-Rochester), Syracuse, N.Y. (TW-Syr), Madison, Wis. (WMSN), South Bend-Elkhart, Ind. (WMYS), Johnstown-Altoona (WHVL), Evansville, Ind. (WTVW), Youngstown, Ohio (WYTV-DT2), Lansing, Mich. (WHTV), Binghamton, N.Y. (TW-Binghamton), Wheeling-Steubenville, W.Va. (WTOV-DT2), Utica, N.Y. (TW-Utica), Elmire, N.Y. (TW-Elmira), Watertown, N.Y. (TW-Watertown)
Emphasis added to sports networks that those of us who don’t live in some of these areas get on our sports package.
You got to be kidding me, this is like the old days when the screwball committee would Pitt in the most far, most remote places to play.
While San Jose isn’t remote, it is as far on the continental US they could send PITT.
I remember one year they sent us to Boise, Idaho.
Yea really and this was way BEFORE Boise State was even on the map of college football.
One year it was El,Paso Texas, that was almost in another country……Oy Vey
Which just makes it even more imperative that we do well in the BE Tourney and hopefully win it.
Then they would have to keep us closer to Pittsburgh, you’d think.
Although this way doesn’t really technically qualify as scalping. Nonetheless.
Get in NYC on Weds nite, go to bars around the Garden.
Make contacts with opposing fans of all the other schools. Exchange cell phone numbers.
When their teams lose buy their tickets to the next round.
Wash, rinse, spin….repeat.
Why pay top price when it’s very easy not to have to do so. You got a mouth, use it ! lol
I went to the Akron Kent game the night after the Zios point guard got busted.
They are a totally different team without him. Absent a tourney championship Akron is out of the picture..
BUT…note to Pederson. Since you’ve kept your job is it too much to ask that you actually do it?
Akrons facilities..natatorium, track, etc…put our to shame.
You sent me a letter last week asking me for money: so state your goals and give me a plan…otherwise you are begging and I don’t support beggars.
Next year if the coaches can work on entry passes to Adams and get him to be think of himself as not just a part of the team but consider himself as the leader of the team he could become the player his abilities can make him.
I also think Young can be a big assest next year.
Moore, Patterson, and Zanna I’m afraid will always be inconsistent.
John is his partner and Brandon is his son.
Transfered the following Sept. to Kent State got M.A., enjoyed going to school at Kent. Fresh air, good faculty, and no National Guard.
Meanwhile, here is some reading for you all in this downtime
Kent, Ohio is a great little town, enjoyed my time there.
They also have a nicer facility than Trees Hall for swimming, intramurals, etc.
Akron’s nicest feature is Firestone Country Club.
nuff said.
Read that piece, wbb. According to that, Savage is not exactly killing it. I would say if he & any other of the others (Voytik & Chapman) are about equal, PC needs to go with the younger guys.
As we’re just going to have to break in yet another new QB next year.
And if he does settle on Savage, someone other than him needs to get some PT. We don’t need another repeat of last year !!
I would be somewhat embarrassed if I was a Pitt admin person bringing up theses schools from the ACC to compete at Trees. As they all have very nice facilities. We need to get into the 21rst century. Since we’re going to be getting all this extra TV revenue from the move to the ACC, get a loan, float a bond, whatever but get to work bringing Pitt’s facilities up to snuff.
Why the basketball arena wasn’t built with a natatorium attached is beyond me. Lot of wasted space is sitting right behind the Pete.
Can’t vouch for the faculty but your comments about Akron are fairly common; so too with Kent. Akron was an easy choice for undegrads in Ohio in my day. Lot of nurses too.
Kent is a nice place and sadly the killings there marked the university.
Oddly, the Akron hoops place named after former James
Rhodes …the same guy who ordered in the National Guard that fateful day. Thinking about it makes me sad.
Speaking of swimming facilities but my towns school and community pool complex is far superior to Trees. And my town is one of the top places to live in the USA. Does Pitt want to become a top destination?
Pitt does have plenty of wasted space. If you recall Stevie said he would build dorms in that space behind the Pete and create some green space. Well the dorms got built elsewhere and that green space doesn’t make Pitt any money.
Pitt needs to get its school spirit back and begin building new traditions. You do that with the right harmony between athletics and academics. You do that with facilities one can be proud and on campus not off. You find a way to make it happen.
If Pitt leadership doesn’t realize this or are too lazy to actually lead, they need to get out of the way and have others do it for them…for us.
BTW, I guess there may be some misperception that Akron still has the rubber smell. Well, just like Pittsburgh no longer is consumed by the smoke of the steel mills, the same goes for Akron, although it is not that scenic of a city (because “all of the forests were replaced by shopping malls, and musak filled the air from Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls.”
There is the Cuyhaoga Valley national park to the north and the Portage Lakes to the south though