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October 14, 2007

Basketball Getting Underway

Filed under: Basketball,Coaches,Dixon,Practice — Chas @ 11:57 am

That means previews and seeing Pitt mentioned as one of the top-25 teams in most publications. Seth Davis at SI.com has a story with questions for many of the top programs.

Pittsburgh: Are the juniors ready to step to the head of the class?

I’m speaking specifically of the Panthers’ two junior forwards, Tyrell Biggs and Sam Young. Yes, there are a lot of expectations that 6-7 freshman DeJuan Blair will help make up for the departures of Aaron Gray and Levon Kendall, Pitt’s two leading rebounders the last two seasons. But anything you get from a freshman in that situation is gravy, especially since Blair could struggle with conditioning at the start.

Biggs and Young, however, have two years in this program under their belts, and don’t have much to show for it. Though they entered last season with much promise, Biggs and Young averaged 1.4 and 6.3 points, respectively, in Big East games (along with 2.7 and 3.1 rebounds). In Young’s case, those numbers were actually down from his freshman season. Pitt is well-stocked on the perimeter and has several big — though inexperienced — bodies to throw around inside. It needs Biggs and Young to provide consistent, versatile production if it’s going to challenge for the Big East crown.

Speaking of the heralded Blair, he seemed to have dropped a bit of weight. Even since the summer league.

Blair has slimmed down since the summer. He tipped the scales at 303 pounds when he first showed up for conditioning. But the AP Pennsylvania Player of the Year is down to about 270. “We’re still finding what his ideal weight is,” Dixon said. “But it’s going to be a big number.”

Blair seems a bit embarrassed about all the weight he had been carrying.

“I always look at the state championship (game tape) and say, ‘That was me? I was that big?’ ” said Blair, who acknowledges having been above 303 last season but won’t give an exact weight. “I didn’t look 300 at all, I carried it great. It didn’t matter if I was 300 or 200, I still played the same, still got up and down the court.”

Blair’s ability to post up against taller players down low, combined with his size and athleticism, is why he expects to be former Pitt star Aaron Gray’s heir apparent at center. Pitt’s offense revolved around Gray in the middle during the last two seasons, and it may do so around Blair very soon.

“He was a big factor on this team, and that’s another reason I came here,” Blair said. “They give the big man the ball.”

Blair said a lot of the right things on media day.

Pitt coach Jamie Dixon always makes freshmen earn their way into the lineup, and there’s no guarantee that Blair will start in the season opener Nov. 9 against Houston Baptist, or in the Big East opener Jan. 6 at Villanova.

That’s fine with Blair, who grew up only minutes from Pitt’s campus. He feels at home there, and is determined to prove that he should start as a freshman on merit, not the reputation he built as a rugged inside player for 2007 Pennsylvania Class AAAA champion Schenley.

“He’s not going to say, ‘Oh, you’re coming in, I’m going to give it to you,’ ” Blair said. “That’s what I like about him. He’s not giving me nothing. He’s making me earn everything I got, and I’m learning from him. And there aren’t too many freshmen, I think, than can come right in and start (in the Big East).”

A great mix of confidence and work ethic in that statement. Just what you want to read from a freshman. I also like his eagerness to go out there and play where he would be out of position for NBA ambition.

“I want to play the 5, let’s get that out there,” Blair said, referring to the coaching vernacular for the center position. He cited the Big East’s reputation for toughness and the physicality of its play dating to the Patrick Ewing days in the 1980s.

“I would like to play the 5, play against the bigger, stronger guys like me. That’s why I picked Pitt, the Big East,” Blair said. “I think it’s the best conference in the whole United States. They battle and I like to battle.”

If he plays center, Blair would give up eight inches to UConn’s 7-3 Hasheem Thabeet, for example. But Blair predicted that he wouldn’t be overmatched physically against any Big East center.

“My arms are like I’ve got a 7-3, 7-2 wingspan,” Blair said. “I’ve got the same arm length as someone who is 7-foot, so that’s a bonus for me. I’m wide and I’ve got the arm length. I play like I’m 6-10.”

Of course, part of that is just wanting to get onto the court, and the center spot is the biggest hole in Pitt’s lineup.

Moving back to the issue of weight, conditioning and appearances. It seems that many of the players — once more — have slimmed down and reworked their bodies in preparation for 2007-08.

From point guard to center, Dixon rattled off the pounds shed.

It’s not strange for Dixon to talk about the conditioning of his players, but the remarks could be a telling sign.

Without Aaron Gray at center and Levon Kendall at power forward, Pitt’s most-experienced players are at the guard positions. And according to the players, the weight loss goes hand in hand with the Panthers shifting to a more guard-oriented, up-tempo offense.

“We’re going to be very different,” point guard Levance Fields said. “We’re going to be more guard-oriented. We don’t have that definite post presence like we had with Aaron and Levy last year. That’s the good thing about having veteran guard play, so it will be up to us to get things going.

“I’ve been waiting for this. Nothing against the system we’ve been playing. It works. It worked for the past seven or eight years. But now, due to the loss of Aaron and Levon, we’ll be more up-tempo, fast-breaking. It’s definitely exciting. It’s why me and Mike lost the weight that we did. We want to be able to get up and down the court as much as possible.”

Fields has lost 20 pounds since the end of last season and weighs in at 195 pounds. Cook is 212, down seven from his playing weight a season ago. And it’s just not the guards. Every player on the team has had their weight monitored strictly by the coaching and training staff.

“We’ve seen some dramatic changes in some guys,” Dixon said. “They’ve really responded in a positive manner. And they’ve exceeded those goals.”

I think there will be some added pressure on Pitt’s basketball team to do well this season by fans.  The disappointment of the football season, rather than make many appreciate what the basketball team has and will do; may cause some fans to expect more from the b-ball team. Some sort of bizarre, unconscious compensation of balancing things out.





Sorry to post this on a basketball piece, but…
Cincinnati is ranked #23 in both polls. Looks to me as if this is Pitt’s best chance to defeat a ranked opponent since 2004. Any thoughts?

Comment by Nick in State College 10.14.07 @ 2:14 pm

If seth davis is right and we have to rely on our juniors we could be in for some trouble. Young is incosistent and biggs looks like a ne conf player not a big e player.

Comment by alcofan 10.14.07 @ 2:38 pm

i dont know…i was very impressed with Young late in the season, he might be coming into his own and getting rid of the inconsistencies. if thats the case, watch out.

Comment by matt in orlando 10.14.07 @ 2:45 pm

Young will be fine. He had such bad tendonitis. That really messes with you. If he stays free of injury he will be a stud. Biggs is a ? though. I want to think that now he will step up and see its his time. What worries me is our power forward being 6 foot 6. what if we play a team with some 7 footers and some other bangers. Our guards are good, but i dont know if they are scorers. i cant say i see this years team being a sweet 16 team..

Comment by adam 10.14.07 @ 5:43 pm

Cinci gives us our best chance to win against a ranked opponent because we haven’t lost yet – all the other games in the last few years have already been played and lost. We have no chance to win, much like last week, or the week before, etc. I do think we’ll only lose by 1 score though.

Young – it all depends if he plays like he should after his freshman year, great! If not, well, oh well. Either way I don’t think we’re a sweet 16 team, we’ll probably just make the tournament, and that’s about all. Biggs – this guy needs to have improved a ton since the middle of summer.

Comment by Stuart 10.14.07 @ 10:59 pm

Biggs has gotten better every year and Young will need only to step up his level of intensity and both will be fine. Look at the teams the go far in the tourney they ALWAYS have good guard play. It counts always for much more then a good big man. (you need both to win it) This team may not have Gray out there but I still think they can go two deep in the tourney. The only ? out there are the freshman and how big a role anyone of them may play this season. I know this team wouldn’t lose to Navy!

Comment by Tony In Harrisburg 10.15.07 @ 12:33 am

I’d take our *basketball* team against our football team…in football. Blair and Fields are both fat and can block – we’ve seen Fields knows how to shove people and must be double teamed – and just with their effort i think they could easily play defense better than most of our football team’s defense – at least they understand you’re supposed to stay in front of your man.

Comment by Stuart 10.15.07 @ 1:07 am

Oh – I forgot – from what I read from Dixon in the post-gazette it seems like he has the same assessment as I did of Diggs and McGhee – he mentioned Diggs as maybe playing this year – but no mention of McGhee. He’ll be the center unless we decide to go “short” with Blair – or with the most experience in Biggs. He mentioned all three, but no mention of McGhee.

Comment by Stuart 10.15.07 @ 1:25 am

Can’t wait for hoops. Young’s biggest problem, IMO, is just working within the flow of the offense. He seems to think he’s the only guy out there some times. That, and clearly the knee problems messed him up terribly last year. I swear even when he did play well, he looked to be gimping down the court many times.

Comment by Carmen 10.15.07 @ 1:25 pm

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