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September 1, 2006

There’s the obligatory Groh and Wannstedt crossing paths stuff.

Wannstedt and Cavaliers head coach Al Groh have a tendency to find each other on the schedule.

Their careers have crossed paths almost every step of the way in the last 17 years, first with the Cowboys and Giants in the NFC East, later in the AFC East with the Dolphins and Jets and now in the college ranks.

“It seems like we’ve ended up in the same conference a lot,” said Groh, who has gotten the better of Wannstedt in their only two meetings as head coaches, both in 2000.

It’s more than that, though. Their coaching careers are near facsimiles. Both latched on to a successful head coach early in their careers (Wannstedt to Jimmy Johnson; Groh to Bill Parcells). Both are defensive specialists who eventually got NFL head jobs. And both opted to go back to their respective alma maters.

So both know what to expect from their coaching counterpart this weekend.

Like Groh and his affinity for the 3-4 defense and tall, lean, athletic types who fit in well at either linebacker or tight end, Wannstedt has his preferences.

Groh and his players had praise for Tyler Palko.

“[Palko] has a really good arm,” said UVa outside linebacker Clint Sintim. “He takes chances with the ball and he throws them in tight coverages, and he makes them look easy.

“He puts it right in there and his receivers make catches on it. He is a good quarterback and he is elusive.”

Palko, a junior, enters his third season as the starting quarterback and already ranks fifth all-time at Pitt with 5,472 passing yards. Earlier this week, Palko was one of 34 players to be named to the “watch list” for the Davey O’Brien National Quarterback Award.

Sintim said he has been thinking for months about sacking Palko and other quarterbacks who lie ahead on the Cavaliers’ schedule. That’s only natural.

“His receivers make catches?” They must have skipped the tape featuring Greg Lee and Erik Gill.

Both teams start a 5th year QB. Here, though, Pitt should have an advantage as Palko in that Virginia’s Christian Olsen has never started a game in college.

Olsen is a 23-year-old fifth-year senior, and he’ll start his first college game at 7 p.m. Saturday, when Virginia plays at Pittsburgh. He inherits from Hagans an offense that lost its starting running back and three starting offensive lineman. Olsen also will miss Deyon Williams, because the Cavaliers’ leading wide receiver from last season is out indefinitely with a stress fracture in his right foot.

All that uncertainty, and Olsen’s the focus of it. All these years of waiting, and still no answers.

“All the questions about Chris, any answers that I give … it’s just so much b.s.,” Virginia coach Al Groh said. “There are no answers that count about Chris other than what happens on the field.

“This is his chance. It’s now or it’s never gonna happen.”

Olsen came to UVa after transferring out of Notre Dame. I love this, in large part because the social scene sucked.

“It was a little uptight,” he said. “It was cold, it was gray, it was gloomy.”

Said McCabe, Virginia’s No. 2 quarterback: “He said the girls are walking around in sweatpants all day.”

An area of potential strength for Virginia is its secondary. Apparently this had been a weakness before.

When Virginia travels to Pittsburgh today for Saturday night’s season opener at Heinz Field, the Cavs’ secondary will be armed and dangerous. New secondary coach Steve Bernstein probably hasn’t had as many talented defensive backs to work with at one time in his 37 years in the business.

Not only does Virginia return All-America candidate Marcus Hamilton at one starting cornerback spot, the walk-on Byron Glaspy (who started at safety), the soccer player Ryan Best (who played in every game, mostly in the nickel and dime packages), and Mike Brown (who gained valuable game experience as a true freshman), but there’s a plethora of other talented players that potentially makes the Cavalier secondary one of the deepest in the country.

Hamilton is a player Coach Wannstedt and Pitt players have singled out as deserving praise.

Hamilton’s 10 career interceptions ranks third in the nation among active players. He had six last season, when he was named second-team All-Atlantic Coast Conference.

“A lot of his interceptions come from being aggressive, but he’s a playmaker, and you have to know where he’s going to be at all times,” Pitt quarterback Tyler Palko said. “He does it all. He can cover and he can be physical and he’s not afraid to stick his nose in there and stop the run.”

True, the 5-foot-11, 198-pound Hamilton has been known to blitz the quarterback, and is averaging 47 tackles the past three seasons, and 58.5 the past two years. Hamilton is an All-American candidate and an NFL prospect.

“He’s a big-time player. I’m sure if you would talk to the Pittsburgh Steelers, Philadelphia Eagles or Washington Redskins, he would be a guy that would be listed as a potential pro prospect,” Pitt coach Dave Wannstedt said. “He’s a guy you better be aware of at all times because he can turn a game around in a hurry.”

Hamilton will almost assuredly be trying to lock up Derek Kinder. Both teams seem to have defenses where the strength right now is in the secondary. God help us, it may actually come down to the running game.





Repeat after me… “Throw to the tight ends, throw to the tight ends.”

Canceled my NC trip as, after living through 12 hurricanes and typhoons already, I decided not to drive thru one today. So, I’ll expect the Blather to keep me posted through out the game.

Comment by Reed Kohberger 09.01.06 @ 9:32 am

Looks like the weather might not be too bad for the game.

Saturday:
Showers early then thundershowers developing later in the day. High near 65F. Winds E at 10 to 20 mph. Chance of rain 60%. Rainfall may reach one inch.

Saturday night:

Cloudy with a few showers. Low 59F. Winds SSE at 5 to 10 mph. Chance of rain 30%.

Maybe it will be good enough for our passing game to work…

Comment by Reed Kohberger 09.01.06 @ 9:35 am

I am interested in seeing the battle of former Pitt qb’s, Morelli and Getsy. I would love to see Getsy torch penn st while Morelli is still learning to read the playbook. One can only hope.

Comment by Rex 09.01.06 @ 12:05 pm

I like that Rex. If only joe Flacco were relaying the plays in to Morrelli from the sideline… sigh..

Comment by Chris 09.01.06 @ 12:08 pm

Well, you have to say that Walt Harris could recruit good QBs. Keeping them in the fold was another matter.

Actually, I think that QB is one of the positions that will be most interesting to follow in next year’s PITT camp. Stull looks to have done well, I’ve always liked Kevan Smith who may have the most ‘upside’ (whatever that actually means) and then throw young Bostick into the fray and they’ll be some excellent competition.

Am feeling better and better regarding PITT’s team this year – and I don’t know why. Maybe its because each interview I read from the players themselves has been full of embarrassment about last year’s team – and heavy on the ‘we need to play as a team’ sentiment. Much better to be down and looking upward as opposed to be told how great you’ll be once the season starts like happened last year.

Comment by Reed Kohberger 09.01.06 @ 4:45 pm

Yeah but they were embarrassed after the ND game last year, and that didn’t make them play Nebraska or Ohio any better. I’d rather they be pissed off than embarrassed. They need to not worry about how the season is going as if they’re ranked no. 1, and focus on hurting the team in front of them.

Comment by bill 09.01.06 @ 10:37 pm

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