Not too high over the wins and not too low over the losses. That is how I am trying to treat the games this season. Otherwise by blood pressure will not be able to handle things.
So, I’ll start with the poor mouthing. Ohio isn’t very good. They were picked to finish last in the MAC-East by a lot of preseason pubs. So beating and even pounding on them the way Pitt did should not have been completely unexpected.
Now, the turnovers. The box score shows that Pitt had 21 turnovers. Sloppy and suggesting that Pitt could have really killed the Bobcats. Breaking down the turnovers a bit, Pitt committed 7 in the first half. Not great but tolerable compared to where Pitt had been. Pitt started out the second half with roughly the same rate. Through almost 9 minutes Pitt had 3 turnovers.
At that point, Pitt was up 21 points. Over the final 11+ minutes, Pitt had 11 turnovers and still won by 25. As Coach Dixon put it.
“That was the only drawback,” Dixon said. “We got careless with the ball. The disappointing thing was we were good at it until late.”
Well, I wouldn’t say “good,” so much as slightly better than it has been.
Jermaine Dixon and Nasir Robinson had 3 turnovers each in that final 11. Travon Woodall and Gilbert Brown had 2 each and Brad Wanamaker had 1.
Otherwise it was a very good night for Pitt, with the overriding story the return of Gilbert Brown.
“I definitely put in hard work and effort to make sure I came back in shape and prepared to contribute to the team,” he said.
Brown is Pitt’s most experienced player, and his presence on the floor made a big impression on his teammates.
“Gil is a great player,” sophomore guard Ashton Gibbs said. “I think he gave us a lot of energy. We’re expecting big things from him, and I think there is more to come.”
Gibbs led all scorers with 15 points. It was his 10th game in double figures. Jermaine Dixon scored a season-high 14 points and Nasir Robinson registered 10, sinking all five attempts from the field. Junior guard Brad Wanamaker contributed an unconventional double-double with 10 rebounds and 10 assists.
Brown looked a little out of sorts when he initially came in. He committed 2 fouls in 2:32, definitely trying to feel his way. Then after a little more time on the bench, Coach Dixon surprised us all by sticking Brown back for the final 4:28 of the first half. He was much more settled and really got into the flow of the game.
Despite committing 21 turnovers, the Panthers finished the game with a season-high 26 assists on their 29 field goals, prompting Jermaine Dixon to call the timing of their holiday break “unfortunate.”
“But I’m sure when everybody gets back, we’re going to get at it,” he said.
Brown showed little signs of rust in his debut, shooting 4 of 4 from the field, including 2 of 2 from 3-point range. He switched from small forward, which he played each of the previous two seasons, to power forward, splitting time with Robinson.
“It was a big adjustment, actually, coming into this first game, switching positions,” Brown said. “Having a thorough understanding of the offense helped me get through it.”
Playing Brown at power forward worked well in this game. It still means a rather small line-up for Pitt. He looked a lot better than I expected in his return. His suspension was the type where he could not practice or workout with the team or coaches. That goes all the way down to what he was eating as well. I really didn’t expect that solid a performance, but I also would not be surprised to see him struggle in the next game.
The reduced minutes for Robinson seemed to light a fire under him. It seemed to finally hit him that his minutes will be impacted with Brown’s return, and if he doesn’t improve it won’t get better. Robinson started the game and came out hot. Finishing all his shots and getting after things.
Jermaine Dixon really looked his best to date. He did not seem as winded despite playing 25 minutes. He was penetrating and finishing. Definitely not looking as hesitant.
Wanamaker had another good game even with only 4 points on 2-8 shooting and 4 turnovers (tied with Woodall and Robinson for highs in the game). He played a team high 34 minutes and had 10 asssists, 10 rebounds and 2 steals. That’s 17 assists in the last 2 games.
With some of the pressure to score off him now that Dixon and Brown are back, Wanamaker seemed to comfortably take more of a supporting and help role.
He has led the redoubled defensive effort for Pitt after the break for finals, and has been the good soldier for Coach Dixon with what the coach wants the team to do. Whether it is be the penetrating/slashing guard attacking the basket. Going after boards and helping to tighten the defense. Or be more of a facilitator.
Dante Taylor looked as comfortable as I’ve seen him at the center position. I’m not sure, but I think the message — whether in talking to Coach Dixon or reading Dixon’s comments — finally got through to him. He’s not going to get to play power forward until he shows more. He has to play better defense and have better footwork. He grabbed 10 boards and had 2 blocks in 18 minutes. Not particularly solid on offense, but that will come.
McGhee played just a little more (21 min) than Taylor and definitely was moving well. He was 3-3 with two slams. He had only 5 boards but also 5 blocks.
Most importantly, McGhee and Taylor had 0 turnovers. An actual positive amidst the volume of TOs.
The near week off for the players is not a bad thing. It means more practice. Something they need — with Jermaine Dixon and Brown there to help push them.
Something I noticed last night was that once Brown and Dixon were in the game, the intensity level of the defense increased, and it spread through the rest of the players. I thought Taylor played his most aggressive game of the season, and played particularly well when Brown was in the game. He rebounded well, and even his defensive positioning was better (the two are not unrelated).
It was a good game in that the team showed signs of progress. Now they need to continue that development.
link to sportsillustrated.cnn.com
In his defense, it looks like he highly values RPI (similar to the selection committee) and right now Pitt’s RPI ranking is 30.
As for Gilbert’s shot, I’m holding off until we see more evidence of consistency. Due to a scheduling quirk, I happened to get to the Pete very early and caught the early shoot arounds. Gilbert was one of the first guys out (only behind Taylor and Miller), and shot medium to long jumpers for a fairly long time. It looked to me like his release is still very inconsistent, and even with good rotation, this usually is an indicator for inconsistent shooting. I do think he can be a fairly effective mid-range shooter, and would really like to see him develop that part of his game more.
Love the Baldwin rumor!!!!
That being said, Brown’s return is encouraging in that regard because if you need to battle for boards at the 4 with undersized players it is better to have 2 guys who can do it rather than 1 so that the extra effort doesn’t fade late in games due to the tired legs a player gets leaping vs taller guys for rebounds.
Also, the Ohio win is also encouraging, pre-season mag predictions aside, because their actual performance since the season began has them (according to Sagarin ratings) in the top 3 in the MAC and every bit as good or better than Sagarin’s bottom 3 BE teams (Providence, DePaul, Rutgers). If Sagarin’s computer is halfway right (and the lack of size at the 4 doesn’t become a “structural” problem in BE play) this Pitt team is likely no worse than #8 in the BE and possibly slightly better (#5-#7 range).
I believe they can be competitive in many league games but still feel that they will be on the outside looking in.
FWIW, I was right with my glass-half-full approach back in August when evaluating Stull and the offense when it was thought that our defense would have to carry all of the load … and certainly hope that I am dead wrong here with my glass-half-empty approach