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June 21, 2007

A Long Week

Filed under: Athletic Department,Football,Non-con,Schedule — Chas @ 8:10 am

AD Jeff Long is not evil.

I don’t agree with some of his decisions. He may be tin-eared and lacking a charisma, but he is not out to ruin Pitt athletics. There has even been good like his work to help other sports in the athletic department. Building campus facilities and updating other sports facilities to bring them out of the 70s.

The plan would have the greatest impact on what are commonly referred to as Olympic or non-revenue sports, those programs that have lower visibility than basketball or football.

Pitt plans to build a soccer complex, track/intramural complex, softball field, marching-band facility and baseball complex. The athletic department also plans to spend $11.4 million to renovate Fitzgerald Field House, Trees Hall and the Cost Sports Center and put a diving well into Trees Pool.

The soccer, baseball, track and softball facilities are in the first four-year phase of the plan.

The athletic department construction will take place at the former site of the dilapidated Allequippa Terrace public-housing project, which was torn down in the mid 1990s. In 2000, the Oak Hill housing community opened on a portion of the site and, since then, the remaining land was at the vortex of a tug of war between Pitt, the Pittsburgh Housing Authority, and developer Beacon/Corcoran Jennison. In March, the parties came to an agreement, clearing the way for Pitt to go forward with its plan to build the state-of-the-art athletic facility. While the deal has not been finalized, sources indicate the closing of the deal is imminent, and that will give Pitt the land it needs.

Part of how he’s worked on it is with the unpopular reseating plan for Pitt basketball and the increased mandatory donations.

This hasn’t been a good week for AD Long. There was the leaking of the new Panther/dog/mutant/dino/thing head logo that was widely panned.

Then there was the announced cancellation of the Clemson home-and-home for 2010 and -11. I thought it was probably a mutual thing, though,  because the way it was set, Pitt might have wanted to cancel or change it more. Pitt had a home slate in 2010 of WVU, Louisville, Rutgers, Miami and Clemson (not to mention ND on the road) while 2011 had Pitt with 3 difficult non-con road games and ND as the only attractive home game. Simple marketing suggested that Pitt needed to reorganize the schedule. Add another good home non-con in 2011, maybe go a little lighter with 2010 for the other non-con home games. Plus, 2009 still needs to be finished and it could allow a home-and-home to start then.

Sure, it’s always annoying to give up a decent opponent on the schedule, but it was only Clemson. Instead, AD Long decided to get defensive over the schedule.

“Clemson approached us about getting out of the series because they wanted the dates,” Long said. “At first, we balked, but then we began to talk to some other teams and, when we realized we had enough time to find an adequate replacement, we decided to go ahead and let them out of the contract.

“That’s really all it was — some times things come up. And some of the teams we are talking to as a replacement are very encouraging to me. We are talking to BCS conference teams, so this talk of wanting to add a I-AA is just not fair.”

Long said contrary to popular belief, his policy and desire is to get Pitt at least three non-conference games (out of five) against teams from BCS conferences (or Notre Dame) every year.

Did he really need to put the blame all on Clemson? What was the point? You say something like there was talk of changing the years and in discussions it became mutually agreed that it would be best to cancel.
Long also put himself in a scheduling corner. He now has to make sure that he has a BCS conference opponent to take the place of Clemson. He says they can find an “adequate replacement.” Clemson is a consistent mid-level bowl team. That means to find the “adequate replacement” means he can’t come back with a Northwestern, a Mississippi State, Vandy, Baylor or Kentucky. He’s going to need a Maryland, Oklahoma St., Purdue, Texas Tech, South Carolina — or even Boston College. And that also means no MAC, C-USA or such for the slots.

Give Zeise credit in the article for pointing out the disconnect between Long’s stated goal and desire of putting 3 BCS-quality opponents on the schedule each year and reality.

Although Long’s stated desire is to play three BCS non-conference teams, a look at future schedules suggests he has work to do.

The Panthers are scheduled to play only two BCS conference opponents in 2008 (Iowa, Notre Dame), 2009 (North Carolina State, Notre Dame) and as of now 2010 (Notre Dame, Miami), 2011 (Notre Dame, Iowa) and 2012 (Virginia Tech and Notre Dame).

In fact, the lone exception in the next seven seasons is 2013 when Pitt is scheduled to play Virginia Tech, North Carolina State and Notre Dame.

That doesn’t look too good.





And I applaud Long for the efforts in modernizing the facilities for soccer, baseball, and track.

Unfortunately, when it comes to Pitt pride and traditions, I don’t think Long sees eye to eye with what students and alumni want. For example, they seem to have done no research whatsoever with this logo.

Comment by Chris 06.21.07 @ 10:32 am

Let’s try to have a little bit of perspective on the whole logo business. It’s not like they changed the team name to the Pitt Mountain Lions.
It’s just a logo. You probably won’t even see it anywhere outside of the Pitt Shop and the bookstore. Do you think all Pitt fans liked the goofy panther head that they put on the helmets in 1966? Certainly not… and you know what? You don’t even see that logo any more.
I’m sure some people didn’t like the 70’s-style script on the helmets when that came out. Oh well… now it’s classic.
I don’t like the new panther head very much, but I won’t let it ruin my day. I have accepted that Pitt historically changes its football uniforms. The block letter PITT bears a lot of tradition, but someday they will use something else.
The only logo that has endured is the arched-block PITT and, to some extent the block letter ‘P’. Bitching about how the script is the only acceptable logo is farcical a waste of time.

Comment by ChrisA 06.21.07 @ 12:06 pm

Well, a few years ago they came came pretty damn close to changing the name completely. Pitt is Pitt, not “Pittsburgh”. I think alot of the anger stems from the loss of identity that accompanied that insane period of time where script Pitt became torch-cut, squashed panther head, panther tooth logo, new navy and new gold “Pittsburgh”.

I have to give the athletic department credit- they’ve at least reverted to calling Pitt “Pitt” again.

Comment by Dan35 06.21.07 @ 4:37 pm

ChrisA,

But must the name, colors, logo, and stadium change?

Comment by Kyle 06.21.07 @ 10:45 pm

Has Pitt played as the “Golden Panthers”?
Have they played in past years wearing navy blue uniforms with striped gold helmets?
Did Pitt move on from a well-worn Forbes field?

All those changes have already been made, so my point is that the idea of change is probably worth getting used to. Especially since it’s just a logo we’re talking about.

If Pitt goes 33-5 in the next 3 years you all will be clamoring over each other to get ahold of the newest historical logo’s merchandise.

Hail to Pitt
(the block letter kind… not the script)

Comment by ChrisA 06.22.07 @ 2:50 am

[…] I was surprised to learn that Long and Pitt never signed/finished working out that extension from back in May. Seems to be a bit of a problem for Pitt and Chancellor Nordenberg with those things. Remember how long he let interim AD Marc Boehm twist in the wind? Finally Boehm didn’t want to wait any longer and rejoined Pedersen in Nebraska. Any time I write about AD Jeff Long, it’s with a sense of “ehh.” He has done a lot of stuff in trying to bring the entire Athletic Department and its facilities up to spec. Still, he does enough other stuff that just plain misses. […]


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