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February 10, 2008

Bradley Wanamaker has taken a lot of criticism in his limited minutes. I suppose it’s because there were more expectations for him.

Q: I have been very disappointed in the play of Brad Wanamaker thus far. I thought he was a heralded point guard. I find his play to be quite sloppy and his shooting to be atrocious, especially at the foul line. He has shown minimal improvement. For next year, how do the incoming guards look to back up Levance, and who would be the shooting guard?

FITTIPALDO: Wanamaker was a shooting guard in high school. Pitt coach Jamie Dixon tried to make him into a point guard in the early part of the season, but Wanamaker struggled and that experiment was aborted.

If Wanamaker finds a niche at Pitt, it will be at shooting guard. Wanamaker and incoming freshman Nasir Robinson (Chester, Pa.) will likely battle for the starting job at shooting guard next season. Another incoming freshman, Travon Woodall (St. Anthony’s, N.J.), is likely the backup point guard.

Sometimes, the light goes on later rather than sooner for players. Wanamaker has struggled this season, but he came to Pitt as a top 100 player. I’m sure the coaching staff is hoping that his freshman year is an aberration because the Panthers have a big hole to fill at shooting guard next season with the departure of Keith Benjamin and Ronald Ramon.

First impressions last. I’ve mentioned the Antonio Graves comparisons. Not in terms of talent. I’m talking about development and I might as well throw in perception. Some never forgot Graves as a raw, nervous freshman forced to play because of no depth at the guard spots. Wanamaker will be up against that as well.

I did expect more from him, but I also see flashes and hints of what could be. It’s just not going to be this year.

Of course, he is going to face competition from Nasir Robinson who gets the usual positive reviews that include “tough” and/or “gritty” every time he competes in something. This from the “Primetime Shootout” in Philly.

Nasir Robinson is headed to Pittsburgh next year to play for Jamie Dixon. Nasir has a motor that never stops. He plays hard every time he hits the floor and is an undersized combo forward. Nasir brings that Philly toughness to the floor every night. He dominates on the inside grabbing up everything around the rim. Nasir has a nice feel for the game not only does he play strong on the inside, he sees the floor and makes the big play when needed.

Eric Hall at the Beaver County Times hits a rare daily double with two pieces in a week that state the obvious, even if the answer isn’t: Pitt needs to make free throws and shoot better. Throw in Ron Cook’s piece about Pitt needing to score more points, along with the shooting slump story. The problem is, that there isn’t a good answer. I’m reasonably certain that the coaches and players are aware of the issue, and would like to provide a solution.

Think Pitt and Coach Dixon will get to escape silly coaching carousel speculation this year? Think again.

No more John Brady at LSU means LSU needs a new coach, and the first place the school will look is Southern California’s Tim Floyd. It’s no secret LSU has always been Floyd’s dream job because he’s from the area. But living in Los Angeles — and coaching in the new Galen Center — is kinda dreamy too, and the early word out of Baton Rouge is the school might not be willing to pay the type of money it would take to lure Floyd from the sweet situation he’s enjoying.

If LSU won’t pay, Floyd probably won’t move — in which case some obvious targets are Virginia Commonwealth’s Anthony Grant, Ole Miss’ Andy Kennedy and Washington State’s Tony Bennett. But for the sake of argument, let’s pretend Floyd does move to LSU because that’s when things could get really silly.

Would Pittsburgh’s Jamie Dixon then take the Southern California job?

(Perhaps. But I’m not sure he’d want to battle UCLA’s Ben Howland).

Would Xavier’s Sean Miller then move to Pittsburgh?

(Definitely. He would move to Pitt in like 1.2 seconds)

So yeah, the speculation is endless and head-spinning and tiresome.

Sigh.





Makes you wonder why anyone bothers drawing up a contract. I guess they’re like rules — made to be broken.

Comment by Dave in Orlando 02.10.08 @ 11:10 am

Re: Pederson on PITT football

“I’ve already talked to the Big East, and we’re not ever going to play at home on Friday. And if it works into the schedule, maybe a Thursday night, but we want it to be a game of magnitude. And if we have control of the game time, if there aren’t TV commitments, we’re going to play later in the day or early into the evening. That’s our preference, 3:30 (p.m.) or beyond.”

Comment by Todd Gack 02.10.08 @ 11:43 am

ive said it before (and got tore a new one) and i’ll say it again, sean miller is the next HC at pitt when dixon leaves for another job (family or ‘higher profile’)

Comment by matt in orlando 02.10.08 @ 1:43 pm

While I don’t want Dixon to go, if the result was Miller moving to Pitt, I just don’t see much of a difference, if any, between the two. They are both excellent young coaches. In this case, the fact that Miller played at Pitt is just a nice little extra.

Comment by HbgFrank 02.10.08 @ 2:54 pm

I agree with Matt, S. Miller will be the next coach at Pitt. IMO that Jamie’s next gig is at the pro level not any other college job.

Comment by joel 02.10.08 @ 7:59 pm

I know that given the way coaches up and leave on a whim in college this seems odd to suggest, but is it possible that Pitt’s next coach is 20-30 years from now? Jamie Dixon is very happy in Pittsburgh, and while USC is a return home, it certainly isn’t a step up or even laterally.

I have never gotten the feeling from Dixon that he was shopping for bigger and better. Guys like Calhoun, Boeheim and Coach K probably faced many of the same concerns early in their careers.

I would be really surprised if Dixon left. That doesn’t mean he won’t. But he seems to be building something here. He has an emotional attachment to his players that seems rare (such as crying on camera about Cook’s injury). He also gets along well with Steve Perderson, which is a bonus.

I am also not willing to look forward to Sean Miller, or any other coach, as though I would willingly part with Dixon. Dixon is the reason we are all excited about Pitt basketball. There are no guarantees with Miller or anyone else that that would continue.

Comment by The Prowler 02.10.08 @ 8:24 pm

i dont want to see dixon leave at all, but you NEED a contingency plan in case one day he decides its time to move

Comment by matt in orlando 02.10.08 @ 9:23 pm

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