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August 26, 2006

Fan Fest Photos, Part 1

Filed under: Football,Practice,Uncategorized — Chas @ 11:07 am

It kind of worked out that I got a slightly later start. It meant I was in a tweener point, so I was able to just walk around the outside of Heinz Field for a little bit. Take in some of the things that I never do. Usually it’s just tailgate in the lot. Get into the stadium just before kickoff, stay there other than the occasional piss breaks, go back to the lot after the team leaves the field, tailgate some more.

Pitt Panther

So, for instance I never knew about the Pitt Panther at the river/open end of the stadium — never go to that side.

I didn’t get a good shot of it, but the stone pattern stretching out as if from the sculpture base is a stylized Cathedral of Learning image.

Then there are the gates to Heinz Field themselves.

The Gates at Heinz Field

I take some measure of joy in thinking about Steeler fans who are Penn State fans. It has to be a bit galling to be constantly reminded that this place is also the home of Pitt football wherever you go inside and outside.

Pitt Sign Banner

When I first got there, I assumed that the players and their family were already there.
The rest of the photos will be below the fold.

This is why.

Bus Sign

Line of Buses

As I was killing time, it was hard not to notice the band, cheerleaders and dance team — euphamistically referred to as spirit groups on the Pitt website –practicing by the river bank. I went down there figuring on getting a couple typical skyline shots, the point, and some of the spirit groups.

Pitt Cheerleader

Kind of a lucky break, actually. Turns out they were delivering the players, family, friends, more members of the dance team and students by boat.

Gateway Clipper with Pitt football players

Players disembarking

I think they did this last year as well. What I liked about it was they walked into the stadium with friends, family, fans and well-wishers. Kind of a nice touch. Letting the players be right with everyone. It also made me realize how physically small I am in comparison.

John Pelusi, Jared Martin and Greg Romeus

Brief note, that little boy is Chase Abdul (the back of his shirt said “‘lil abdul”), holding his dad, David’s hand. David was there with the team and he was even on the field talking with Conor Lee. You could see it was killing him that he could be out there with the team in full.

Dance and Cheer as the Players go into Heinz Field

Of course this is a family friendly event so the Junior Panther stuff was definitely for the dads kids as members of the dance team were helping.

More later.





The pics don’t show up

Comment by Jeff 08.26.06 @ 2:38 pm

Only seeing half the photos

Comment by Reed Kohberger 08.26.06 @ 2:46 pm

I like the Pitt stuff, but I think PSU fans could care less. We share a stadium. They have a much bigger one on campus and they play better competition and win more often over the years. They would tell us to “get over ourselves”. No one cares about the “rivalry”. Lastly, I Love Pitt way ahead of any state school. But unless we play PSU, they are not our rivals and it makes us look pathetic to keep mentioning a team that does not even want to play us. And I hate people who say “it’s because they don’t want to lose to us anymore”. We made our bed when we excluded them and why should Paterno forget it? They then went bigtime conference and we formed one with schools that had no history with us and cared little about our conference. Thus PSU won that battle and we have no room to complain. Like I said. They see the panther at the Stadium as a consolation prize and not a victory. They see Pitt as a Temple and don’t care if they play us. And I have gone to many PSU games against Pitt. They are some of the more polite fans in the country even if they are proud. We are the insecure fans who wish we had a 100,000 stadium on campus, and mentioning PSU just lets them know it. If and when we start winning conference championships or national championships, then maybe the Panther will mean more to PSU fans. As of now, it’s no different then them driving by Duquesne. It does not threaten them. Besides, it might as well be a nitney lion because it looks the same.

Comment by Bruce 08.26.06 @ 2:53 pm

Bruuuuuuucce….The song was called Born to Run not Born to Ramble! You are not too far off, but some of your points are. First, Pitt and PSU will always be rivals. Second, I believe, one of the reasons JoePa does not want us on the schedule is that he does not want to schedule more than one competitive non-con per year. Scheduling Pitt does not help his recruiting (particularly if Pitt beats them), scheduling ND or Texas will. Then he follows on to those with the likes of Fla. International, Buffalo and Temple, who have no chance of beating PSU. They are practice games. Third, the most overrated thing you said is the comment about the 100,000 seat stadium. It sounds good, it looks good on TV, but from a fans perspective (and I have been to many games at PSU) it sucks!!! BIG TIME!!! This is especially true when it is still warm outside. You are litterally shoulder-to-shoulder and leg-to-leg with person next to you. And forget about using a bathroom or buying a Coke. As a Pitt season ticket holder, I can tell you that watching a game at Heinz Field is far more enjoyable than Beaver Stadium. Lastly, it is without question that it bothers the die hard PSU fan who goes to a Steeler game to see all of the Pitt signage at the stadium. But hey, they will just have to get over themselves!!!

Comment by Frank 08.26.06 @ 3:30 pm

I can see a lot of your points about JoePa and I see you don’t argue too much with Pitt’s diss of former good relationship with PSU football and a very healthy rivalry. We argue over why we don’t play each other now, but not over the mistakes we both made.
As far as the stadium aargument goes…I don’t think sharing a stadium comes close to having one on your campus. Please don’t tell me any school desires to share a stadium off campus as a way of showing program strength. Beaver Stadium is a great stadium for a rural state school. You can’t have 100,000 people on the level of the field. That is the cost of having that type of school and stadium.
I am a strong fan with season tickets. I grew up watching Marino through a ball on my street. but I won’t lie to myself and justify Pitt’s refusal to pay for it’s image as a football power. I went to school with Chuck Scales and knew . He got to play under the lights in a classic stadium overlooking Pitt campus and having some historical sense to it. Heinz is the Steelers home and Pitt just rents it. Nothing against Pitt’s teams or the Steelers. No PSU fan is going to be jelous of this relationship with the Steelers and Downtown Pittsburgh. You might not like Beaver stadiums venue as fan. But that is the atmosphere it is supposed to be and the entire reason people chose the giant state school named PSU. Having different preferences for seating layouts is not a proper argument against spending on an on campus venue. Many articles said we had choices of refurbishing, doming, or moving the stadium and that the money was there to do it. Instead they decieded to build more hospitals, a new basketball center, and new dorms. UPMC is a product of Pitt’s investments of the past. Seperate or not on paper, they must spend on each other as needed and they won’t spend. How many years does it take to build a fricken track to attract faster recruits? If Shadyside academy can afford a track, the University can afford one. PSU is not jelous of this type of situation. That is all I’m saying.

Comment by Bruce 08.26.06 @ 4:00 pm

Excuse my type-o’s and spelling

Comment by Bruce 08.26.06 @ 4:01 pm

I think I fixed the picture links. I hope.

Comment by Chas 08.26.06 @ 4:03 pm

Good points Bruce, you are not going to get an argument from me over the fact that Pitt should have an on campus stadium…As an Alum, I miss that dirty, old, concrete bowl of a stadium on Pitt’s campus like you can’t believe. However, I would have told you the same thing about watching a game there vs. Beaver stadium. When the stadium was on campus, I would much rather sit in our half empty stadium to watch a game, then stand in line for 45 minutes to get to your seat at PSU, and when you get to your seat you have about 8 to 10 inches to plant your butt on! The truth is, I don’t care how many other people go to a Pitt game with me. I love going to the games and will continue to do so, no matter where they play or how they play. As for downtown Pittsburgh…You are from the city, so you take it for granted. Trust me on this, it is a spectacularly beautiful city, especially it’s downtown. I live in the Harrisburg area, which is relatively small town. When I go to PSU, I see it as a beautiful setting, but I also see architecture and diversity of downtown Pittsburgh as equally beautiful. If I HAD to choose to live in one place or the other, it would be Pittsburgh becasue I love the city. It just a matter of perspective.

Comment by Frank 08.26.06 @ 8:54 pm

If we had enough fans we’d have our own stadium. We don’t, or at least not enough with $$$ or willing to spend $$$$. Look at Fanfest. less than 5000 attendees, even though people could have stopped in for free before the Pirates game (and they had a good crowd that night because of SkyBlast). And PantherClub has only something like 7000 contributors…just won’t do it.

Comment by geeman2001 08.26.06 @ 10:06 pm

We had a lot more fans with money before they moved the stadium. I think most of those old school deep pockets died off and many of them were pizzed about the departments direction the year they tour down the Stadium. I would always say Pittsburgh is nicer town then PSU and has much more to do. But having a stadium is as possible as they want it to be. If BU, BC, Harvard, CMU, UNC, and many other have city venues with fewer fans, mega hospital chain UPMC and PITT can afford what they want to. It’s all about the fans demanding it. Instead we don’t even care if our baseball team wins in 13 years. Just show up and we will fill 1/4 of the venue. Win a championship and we will fill the stadium. Have one bad year, and we can’t fill fan fest. Still this does not excuse a lack of stadium. I love Dave and the recruiting. Now build a stadium to match your commitment and watch the recruits feel better about chosing Pitt, thus making Dave’s job much easier. Every time the admin talks about a shortage of money and donations, remember that you must 1st build the program up if you want to bring in the people. Pitt controls most of oakland’s land. We can afford a track and a stadium on the upper hill, or Panther hollow, or even a track on the left or back side of the cathedral. Imagine running sprints in from of the campus passer byes. Pitt can afford the several million to do it but it has taken them several years just to debate it.

Comment by Bruce 08.26.06 @ 11:51 pm

Interesting debate on PITT’s not having their own stadium. What makes me scratch my head though is the discussion regarding new hospitals and dorms. I can tell you as a matter of fact that people all over the world know of PITT as a medical school first – way before anyone would think of it’s athletic program. When I mention I went there people’s first response is “That’s where they do all the transplants” or “That’s where Starzel works”. UPMC is a major reason Pittsburgh remains an attractive place for professionals to move. The city, and the State, need UPMC way more than they need a new football stadium.

My point is that PITT is first and foremost a public university, chartered for the education of students. A new football stadium, while nice to have – and needed in my thinking – should not come before academic interests. The lease of Heinz Field was available, PITT sucked in football and there wasn’t enough justification to outlay an exorbitant amount of money for it.

As for PITT vs PSU. It won’t happen while Paterno lives, he’s made no secret about that. And, while I had to laugh about his comment regarding playing Temple because of the fans in that side of PA, there is some validity to it. But, for whatever his reasons are, lets all face the fact that this is not going to happen, and it’s no use beating a dead horse. I, as a PITT fan, will concentrate on what is a better, and in some ways more natural, rivalry with WVU.

Comment by Reed Kohberger 08.27.06 @ 7:50 am

Great idea… let’s tear down Heinz Chapel and put a 12,000 seat stadium next to the Cathedral.

Stupid, man.

Comment by Chris 08.27.06 @ 10:13 am

Hey, my parents got married in Heinz Chapel in 1945.

Not sure where a stadium could go actually, but its been so long since I lived in PGH I’ve forgotten the geography. Panther Hollow maybe – but that’s a nice area as it is now. I guess the new Schenly Plaza is something to see also.

Dokish seems to think that not having a stadium is a drawback in recruiting, but also acknowledges that sharing a space with the Steelers is seen as a plus. It probably falls way down on the list of reasons why kids (and parents) choose which school to go to. The coaching staff, practice facilities and weight rooms probably hold more draw. And, hopefully, the academics, and professional opportunities after graduating, mean something too.

That’s why I think DW’s handling of Matthews and Porter’s mid-camp homesickness was the correct approach – parents want a coaching staff that understands and looks after their sons. Sending Matthews home to discuss his future seemed to have worked out OK (however, I’ll bet DW had some long conversations with Matthew’s parents and HS coach to make sure they wanted him to stay at PITT before allowing Matthews to leave).

By the way, any skinny on a reason for DelSardo’s suspension?

Won’t be able to watch the UVA game as I’ll be in NC schmoozing with family then, but I’ll follow via the Blog. I’m thinking (hoping) it will go well for us.

Comment by Reed Kohberger 08.27.06 @ 11:40 am

There were grandiose plans to build a stadium (and many other things) in PantherHollow in the 1960’s, with architect drawings and everything (that’s in this big coffee table book about Pitt I received in the 80’s). Interesting stuff. Very Jetson’s-looking renderings. The school was hemhorraging money I guess back then and it never happened of course. Too bad. I haven’t been “down there” in ages but the few times I ventured down there (cutting through to the other side of Oakland etc.) it was like dropping into the 18th century, very run down. Hopefully for those folks it has come back.

Yes, Schenley Plaza IS very nice (I have taken my daughter there several times to enjoy the carousel and open lawn). I think Oakland looks great, actually (I know there are some issues with slumlords in the residential areas, but that’s true in many college towns). I love the vibrancy of the urban setting, which was the same thing that drew me there as a student.

I really do think we need our own stadium. The difficulties in obtaining land near the Hill for a track facility shows how difficult it would be these days. Maybe Panther Hollow is completely impossible now (and you’d definitely need a link to the Parkway for drivers). So maybe Second Avenue would be possible.

One bizarre idea that (apparently) only I have is that Pitt could possibly consider Greensburg for a stadium. I understand Pitt controls a large amount of desirable land where Pitt-Greensburg is.

Comment by geeman2001 08.27.06 @ 12:34 pm

As a recent Pitt grad from a just a couple of years ago, I can tell you that having a stadium so far away from campus is a major drawback for casual student fans. I knew students who never went to games at Heinz simply becuase it was too much of an inconvience. You can see this when you go to games- only the “big/national” games draw decent studnet crowds. Most games the student section is only filled at the bottom half. It would be great for the students to have an on campus stadium. But i’m sure this fact alone won’t provide for a stadium. There is much to debate between the comforts of Beaver stadium and Heinz as well as everything that goes along with that. But you can’t deny the fan support, money for, and attenace of football games at PSU, *whether the team is losing or not. The atmospheres at Beaver stadium and Heinz for college games is very different. That is the big difference right now between the 2 programs. Pitt is working on it though.

Comment by Eric R 08.27.06 @ 1:24 pm

Oh and the pics still won’t show up for me.

Comment by Eric R 08.27.06 @ 1:26 pm

[…] Part 1 was here. […]


I’m wondering why we have to compare PITT to PSU in these discussions. It really should focus on whether PITT should/could build a on-campus stadium regardless of what PSU does. It can’t be just for recruiting, that isn’t why we haven’t gotten solid recruits through the last seven years, that was Harris not working the talent in PA.

If PITT gets a solid program together, starts winning games, getting a good graduation rate and putting more that two players a year into the NFL draft, we’ll start getting more recruits yer in and year out. DW has made a good start at this but it’s really still on emotion from his hiring and his personality.

If the question is “Do we need an on-campus stadium to be considered a first rate university” I believe the answer is no. Pitt has a solid reputation now as a good public school; we get students from all over the east, some nationally and even internationally based on what the university has to offer. And, part of what we have to offer is the city itself. Improvements in Oakland have to be made not just for the schools sake – there were crappy parts even when PITT wasn’t the huge institution it is today.

I’ll let PSU do whatever it does, and even though I’m not a big Penn State fan, I’ll give credit where its due – and Joe Pa & PSU deserve credit for their program – it’s well respected, the coach is an icon and their players seem to turn into solid citizens.

Comment by Reed Kohberger 08.27.06 @ 5:48 pm

Having graduated in 97, I was originally upset with the idea of Pitt tearing down Pitt Stadium. That was before I saw the Petersen Events Center, which is truly a world class facility. It’s also impressive to see the efforts made to make Heinz Field “belong” to Pitt on Saturdays. By comparison, I went to a few Pitt-Temple games at Veterans Stadium, and it really had the look and feel of a neutral site game. As it is now, Pitt’s football and basketball teams have the world class facilities that they were constantly crying out for when I was a student. As for spending on dorms and hospitals, isn’t that something that schools that take their academic mission seriously are supposed to do?

Comment by Greg 09.24.06 @ 8:00 pm

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