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August 24, 2006

As noted last night, Shane Brooks really stood out in camp, that isn’t up for dispute judging by the articles about practice.

In other parts of practice and depth chart determination. Redshirt Freshman Doug Fulmer has the starting right DE spot won, and Sophomore Tommie Campbell will start at Weakside Linebacker. Both had another very good day on the field.

Surprisingly Left OT is still undecided between John Bachman and Jeff Otah.

Pitt’s radio broadcasts will be moving down the FM radio dial from 104.7 to 94.5 in November. The new station is a 50,000 Watt signal. There is no change to the Flagship AM side (970). During the transition the games will be simulcast on all 3 stations. Pitt basketball is included in this move. (These are all Clear Channel owned stations.)

An AP article that does a good summary of the question marks around this team.

• The offensive line returns four starters.

That would be good news for most schools, but the Panthers almost never mounted a reliable running game while being outrushed by an average of 69 yards per game last season. The lack of a solid running game put even more pressure on Palko to succeed, a problem that could return this season.

“Tyler’s not talking as much this year,” Wannstedt said. “By that, I mean he is more focused on his job. He has been very businesslike and that rubs off on all the players.”

• The defensive line badly needs upgrading.
This is where Wannstedt hopes some of the recruits can move in quickly. Pitt never did establish much of a pass rush last season, getting only 22 sacks. The rushing defense (185.2 yards per game allowed) was one of the worst in Division I-A, meaning opponents could stay on the ground and run the clock after getting ahead.

We just aren’t going to know a thing about these lines until the games start. It’s frustrating, because it really will decide what kind of season Pitt will have. And there is no way to know. Hope, believe, think — sure. Presume it has to be better than last year simply because it couldn’t be much worse — hard to disagree. How much better?

And on the issue of newcomers, the national perspective on the Big East presumes that of the new players in the conference to have the biggest impact, 3 of the 5 freshmen will be Pitt players (Insider subs.).  Call this the conventional wisdom list.

2. WR/RB Dorin Dickerson, Pittsburgh
Dickerson not only will be counted on at wide receiver, but he also might see time at running back as Pittsburgh is searching for some help in the backfield to complement gunslinger Tyler Palko.

Dickerson is big, physical and very smooth for a player of his size. A local Pittsburgh product, he is expected to add speed and a significant red zone threat to a receiving unit that only returns one starter in Derek Kinder.

4. RB Kevin Collier, Pittsburgh
While Collier isn’t very big yet, his speed and quickness will be a significant upgrade to a below-average running game at Pittsburgh.

He is a darter-type back with great explosiveness and vision, but he is also a surprisingly effective inside runner, and the Panthers need a physical presence up front. Also expect Collier to contribute in the passing game as he is a threat in space and can make multiple defenders miss in the open field.

5. WR Tamarcus Porter, Pittsburgh
Simply put, Tamarcus Porter is an excellent overall athlete who we actually projected to play safety, but it seems Porter is making a statement at wide receiver early. He and Dickerson could give Pittsburgh a dynamic young tandem out wide.

Porter is explosive and at his best in space. He can make people miss and has excellent instincts and playmaking skills. He lacks ideal vertical speed, and if he had it, he would have been a national recruit.

Louisville DE Deantwan “Peanut” Whitehead and Syracuse WR Andrey Baskin were 1 and 3.

As for predictions for the BE, at least one person thinks Pitt will get off to a fast start.

4. Pittsburgh will go bowling. The Panthers were within one victory of playing in the postseason in Dave Wannstedt’s first season coaching his alma mater in 2005. With quarterback Tyler Palko bouncing back from an up-and-down junior season, and linebacker H.B. Blades and cornerback Darrelle Revis leading an improved defense, the Panthers will get off to a hot 5-1 start and finish 7-5. Rutgers and Connecticut will play in the postseason, too.

5. The Big East will flex its growing muscles against the ACC, the conference that raided three of its best teams. Connecticut will beat Wake Forest on Sept. 16. Pittsburgh will wallop Virginia in its Sept. 2 opener (ESPNU, 7 p.m. ET) with players from the Panthers’ 1976 national championship team watching. Rutgers will upset North Carolina on the road the same weekend, and West Virginia will beat Maryland on national television on Sept. 14 (ESPN, 7:30 p.m. ET).

I would be thrilled if Pitt got off to that kind of start. If Pitt starts out that way, then 8-4 or 9-3 would be more likely. I know conventional wisdom has Pitt losing the final 2 bames to L-ville and WVU. Fine, pretending to accept that, I have trouble accepting that Pitt would go 2-2 versus UCF, Rutgers, USF and UConn. With Pitt being as young as they are, it is more reasonable to expect the team to get better further into the season as things shake out more and the players become more comfortable with the system and their roles.





RE: Baskin

Looks like the ESPN Insider failed to do a little research.

Andrey Baskin, the much heralded centerpiece in Syracuse’s 2006 recruiting class, failed to academically qualify over the summer. He is currently enrolled at Mildford Academy in upstate New York.

Baskin will not enroll at Syracuse until 2007 at the earliest. In a bit of good news, however, Baskin did re-establish his committment to the Orange yesterday.

Comment by Matt Glaude 08.24.06 @ 9:11 am

Hmm. And Dickerson has already been moved to the running backs. I guess they put this one behind the insider subscription to hide how little they are actually paying attention.

Comment by Chas 08.24.06 @ 9:45 am

And to think, we’re the ones ruining journalism.

The worst part of this whole article is that Luginbill works for Scouts, Inc. I can understand guys like Maisel et al. making the aforementioned mistakes — it’s just inherently difficult to write about minutiae such as this while penning a national notebook.

Luginbill, however, has no excuse. This guy is supposed to write about this for a living. Totally inexcusable.

Comment by Matt Glaude 08.24.06 @ 10:01 am

I think 2-2 vs. UCF, Rutgers, USF and UConn is absolute the worst case scenario.

Comment by Chris 08.24.06 @ 10:50 am

Getting off to a hot 5-1 record would be great, but then projecting us to finish 7-5 means we’ll lose 4 out of the last 6 games. WVU and Louisville I can understand, but that’s a crappy second half to end a season. Think we have a decent chance against Louisville as our pass defense should be good – but if our D line can’t stop the run we have no chance against WVU. So, we could steal one of those two games.

I’ll be on the road for the UVA game and won’t be able to follow along, but I’m assuming the Blather will have in-depth commentary asap.

Comment by Reed Kohberger 08.24.06 @ 10:52 am

I am a little unsure about the move of Dickerson to rb. I guess because I see the impact good young recievers can have on a team…ala Justin King and Derrick Williams in penn state. Especially on a team where we seem to have plenty of rb’s and a shortage of receivers???

Comment by Rex 08.24.06 @ 2:08 pm

I’d like to see them go back to the old uniforms.

Comment by Mark 08.24.06 @ 3:36 pm

OLD UNIFORMS!!!! Start yelling for them Now!

Comment by Tony In Harrisburg 08.24.06 @ 4:22 pm

I was all for Dickerson to be at RB, and still am thinking he could produce there. But, I didn’t realize that Shane Brooks was as highly rated and recruited as he was – looks like he’s able to get yards on each carry. He could be the real deal and could free up Dickerson to go back to WR. We don’t need a 1500+ yard back – just guys that we depend on to get a nice chunk of positive yardage when we need it.

I still think WR is going to work out well, it seems we have good talent there – I’m sold on TJ Porter and think that with the three TEs that can all catch, and take heat off the young WRs, we’ll have a good offense in place (if the O line comes together. I’m really looking forward to see how we use Strong – he could be a great weapon if used correctly.

Now my pre-season worries are kicking in after reading the reviews of the camp… I’m crossing my fingers that Palko isn’t going to push too hard as its his last year. Does anyone else wonder if he has been inconsistent in practice due to this being his last shot at a good year re: personal stats and a bowl game? He blew up a few times and was forcing balls. I understand that DW doesn’t wants to dampen his wonderful competitive spirit, but I believe that Palko will be the one the young kids look to when the going gets rough – and a cool head might be better at times. We’ll see.

By the way, can anyone tell I get bored at work when I write all these long posts?

Comment by Reed Kohberger 08.24.06 @ 4:47 pm

I’m a little disappointed about Fields dropping the 3rd on the depth chart – thought for sure he’d be a starter.

Comment by Reed Kohberger 08.24.06 @ 4:50 pm

I would like to see the team return to the old stadium.

Comment by Chris 08.24.06 @ 5:00 pm

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