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December 31, 2008

Okay, perhaps more like venting. Whatever, it’s good for the soul to get this out of my system before 2009 gets underway.

First, congrats to the Oregon State Beavers. They did just enough on offense, and persevered even when some key plays and calls didn’t go their way. It may have been an ugly 3-0 win, but it was still a win. As a Pitt fan, I’m not exactly going to blast them for not having the style points. Nor am I going to go to the “they got lucky” bit. They didn’t. They made more plays on offense, and left at least 6 points on the field in two drives that failed deep. Pitt’s offense, by contrast was never in a spot where you can that they were going to come away with anything, but for a little bad luck, a call going against them or just a great effort by the opposing player to stop them.

Pop quiz. A day or two before the bowl game and a member of the starting O-line goes down. In such a situation, do you lean heavier on the stud running back that has shown he can make things happen with just the barest openings on the line, and sometimes even with less than that? Or do you come out firing deep with a QB that at his best this season was adequate and before the bowl game the head coach admits he doesn’t know where the QB is mentally?

I don’t think it is any exaggeration, that whatever goodwill OC Matt Cavanaugh had built up in the course of the season after another rough start, has been shot, stabbed, beaten with a meat tenderizer, kicked around the blocks with steel toe boots and just otherwise left bleeding and pulpy somewhere deep in South Oakland.

Apparently giving OC Matt Cavanaugh more than a couple weeks to gameplan is not a good thing. I mean it was just stupifying. You can justify one, two or even three series in the first half to take a shot deep. To try and open things up and give the QB some confidence. But at some point, there has to be a realization that he doesn’t have it. That if they are going to stick with Stull, they can’t put him in the position to have to make plays. Let alone plays that he rarely made most of the season. The lack of throwing in the 7-15 yard range with Stull was stupifying.

As ticked as I am at Stull’s performance, I am far more disturbed and bothered by the playcalling. It was a lot like the Cinci game, where the playcalling  took LeSean McCoy out of the game even more than the opposing defense.

Fans never forgave Walt Harris for many things. One of which was in the Meineke Bowl (or whatever they called it in 2002), trying to get too cute on offense and forgetting the most important weapon — Larry Fitzgerald. At least Pitt moved the ball and occasionally scored in that bowl.

In the first quarter, McCoy touched the ball 3 times — 2 rushes and 1 pass. McCoy ran the ball a total of 8 times in the first half. Stull was 5-14 with an interception and a sack in that half.

In the second half, McCoy got 16 touches, but 5 of them came in the second last series after Stull was pulled due to injury. Meaning, everyone knew and the Beavers were not even bothering to worry about covering the receivers.

We can blame Stull for not making passes anywhere near the receivers. For locking in on his target at the line of scrimmage. But, put the blame on the guy making the decision to keep doing it when it was obvious and apparent very early that it wasn’t going to work.

Oregon State was without their best player and best offensive weapon in RB Jacquizz Rodgers. To say nothing of WR  James Rodgers.  Yet, they still did enough without the two players that accounted for 21 of the Beavers 46 TDs and over 2500 yards. I don’t even want to imagine what Pitt’s offense would have looked like without McCoy.

Pitt’s defense kept it so close that you could believe that one break. Be it a pick six, breaking off a punt return, or a picked up fumble could be the difference. The sad thing was that all of those scenarios were dependent on doing it without having to turn things over to the offense.

The defense held Oregon State to under 300 yards and created 3 turnovers. Pitt couldn’t get 200 yards in the game.

While I’m liveblogging the Sun Bowl, I have the DVR recording the start of Pitt’s Big East Conference. I’ll be watching the basketball game after Pitt-Oregon State. The stories of the day are rather stock as you would expect with the distraction of the Sun Bowl. There’s the opening of conference play for Pitt — along with sidebar story with the Big East Associate Commissioner spinning that they couldn’t do any adjustments to the time of the Pitt-Rutgers game. Right. No changes are possible unless ESPN says so. Then, of course, there is the whole payback/not taking anything lightly storyline.

Feel free to talk about the basketball game here.

Sun Bowl LiveBlog

Filed under: Bowls,Football,liveblog — Chas @ 1:08 pm

Here’s the first rule about this liveblog. If anyone even tries to give a score update on the Pitt-Rutgers basketball game, I’m blocking them from the liveblog for the duration. I have my DVR taping the game, and I intend to watch it after the Sun Bowl. I would appreciate it if you left me in the dark. If you feel you must talk about it, here’s an open thread for the game.

I’ve been waiting quite a while for this. Just before the season started in 2004, I picked up a bottle of Unibroue 2004. I figured on cracking it open for Pitt’s first bowl game in the Wannstedt era. I was beginning to worry. It’s a good thing this beer is one that was bottle conditioned to allow it to age. Hopefully, it has aged well.

I use Firefox for almost all browsing, but Chrome from Google is the best for stability in the Cover it Live format. I never get any crashes or lock-ups using it.

Here’s the link for the live blog. Let’s go Pitt.

Final Links Before the Action

Filed under: Bowls,Football,Opponent(s) — Chas @ 12:42 pm

Scott McKillop gives his final “as told to” first person thoughts.

McKillop Looks to the Future
December 31, 2008

McKillop also gets a puff piece in the El Paso paper.

No, really, Oregon State is happy to be here. Honest.

Even with out the Rodgers brothers, it is still a match-up of top-25 teams.

State of the Sun Bowl. They want to continue as is (as long as ND is included in the Big East portion).

Just, why exactly, is Pitt a 2 to 3 point underdog?

Line play, line play, line play. That is the key for both teams — shocking revelation.

No one is exactly sure how well Oregon State will be able to run the ball.

Oregon State media unsure on the outcome. Seem to be leaning more towards Pitt for this game.

More on Wannstedt being positive about it taking him 4 years to get Pitt into a bowl game.

So, anyone else start breaking into a cold sweat when reading this story on Stull. Even Coach Wannstedt doesn’t seem to be that confident in what to expect.

Yesterday during a news conference, Pitt coach Dave Wannstedt was asked if he thought the extra time off and the fact that the players took some time completely away from football had helped Stull recover fully, clear his mind and get refocused.

“I hope so, and I really wish I could tell you,” Wannstedt said. “His arm is rested, I can tell you that; I just hope his mind is rested as well, but I just don’t know.”

Erp.

I don’t know if the Beavers themselves are going to play as if the Sun Bowl is a letdown after being one game from the Rose Bowl. I do know it is a media obsession for the local coverage.

The 24th-ranked Beavers may in fact be excited to play No. 18 Pittsburgh, but it’s hard to dismiss a loss that figures to resonate for years.

Oregon 65, OSU 38. Beaver Nation wishes that was a misprint.

A 27-21 upset of then-No. 1 USC on Sept. 25 — the Beavers were 25-point underdogs — altered the landscape of OSU’s season. A third straight 2-3 start was followed by a six-game winning streak, and the Beavers were one win away from their first Rose Bowl game in 44 years.

OSU took momentum and home-field advantage into the Civil War on Nov. 29. What followed was a defeat that ultimately dashed the Beavers’ Rose Bowl dreams and sent them to El Paso, Texas, for the second time in three years.

More of that “what might have been” stuff. The coach and players say they have moved on and there should be no whining. There doesn’t seem to be much buying of it.

The Oregon State fans sure are treating the game as a letdown (though, it doesn’t help that this is the 2nd time in 3 years that they are in El Paso).

T here seems to be a feeling among some Oregon State fans that the Sun Bowl isn’t quite good enough, which goes to show if you live long enough anything is possible.

Ten years ago, Oregon State was a college football punch line. The Beavers had wrapped up a 28th consecutive losing season. Mike Riley, considered some sort of miracle worker for guiding Oregon State to five wins in 1998, jumped at the opportunity to coach the San Diego Chargers.

The day Riley bolted, the idea of Oregon State ever being successful enough to reach a mid-level postseason game such as the Sun Bowl seemed as remote as a trip to the moon.

Then came Dennis Erickson, the Fiesta Bowl romp over Notre Dame, Riley’s return and four consecutive bowl victories. Now, this whole late December in west Texas thing seems sort of anti-climactic.

Two years ago, the Beavers brought somewhere between 3,000 and 4,000 fans to El Paso for a memorable Sun Bowl victory over Missouri. This time there might not even be 1,000 Oregon State fans in the stands, if you don’t count the band members, the athletic department employees and their families.

If that underwhelmed feeling carries over to the football field, this could get ugly fast, because Pittsburgh is making its first bowl trip since the 2004 season. The Panthers want to be here.

Oregon State fans, meet Rutgers fans that feel offended that at 7-5 they had to go to Birmingham after years of not even sniffing the possibility of a bowl game by late September.

Time has been a lacking for the past couple weeks. I’m feeling a bit like Coach Wannstedt trying to juggle actually having practices and game planning in December with recruiting.

Let’s start with the seniors. That’s where Coach Wannstedt has a lot of love for the seniors who bought into what he was selling when he took over in January.

Now, he’s doing as much as he can to get them the opportunities to show they can play at the next level. While C.J. Davis and Conredge Collins will return to El Paso in exactly a month for the “Texas vs. the Nation” game; and Scott McKillop and long snapper Mark Estermyer will play in the Senior Bowl in Mobile. There are still other players to get in some showcase games.

“We’re working like crazy on (nose tackle) Rashaad Duncan and (receiver) Derek Kinder and (safety) Eric Thatcher and (kicker) Conor Lee,” Wannstedt said, “but the problem is there’s only three all-star games. There used to be five. Now, it’s down to three. Those things have gotten more competitive, but I’ve called the people in charge of all three of them and I do everything I can to push our guys and get our guys on them.”

Not to mention punter Dave Brytus, who as has been noted put on a show earlier in the week to the fascination of Oregon State beat writers.

He has his pro debut coming up on Feb.21 in Washington, D.C. Mixed martial arts is a career option if he doesn’t kick his way onto an NFL roster, which he has a real chance to do.

Another beat writer dug up a YouTube of a Brytus fight. Yes, I’m sure CBS will run with the Brytus-MMA stuff during the telecast.

Senior LaRod Stephens-Howling gets some more love from his hometown paper and helping to start a line to Pitt.

The four years certainly weren’t wasted for people like Scott Corson, Wayne Jones, Antwuan Reed, Mike Cruz or Marco Pecora. Those are the Johnstown-area players that are now on the Pitt roster, and Stephens-Howling takes great pride in helping to draw some attention to Flood City players.

“I think it’s just about getting the recruiters to our area,” he said. “I’m proud I can say I was one of the first guys to get them back to our area. Now they’re giving us a chance, and I’m glad, because there’s a lot of talent in our area.”

Plus another story on LSH trying to get to the NFL. Just a blitz from the Johnstown paper with stories on Marco Pecora and Antwuan Reed.

It looks like Coach Wannstedt is just having fun with reality.

He joked Tuesday during a Sun Bowl news conference that his previous two stints – as head coach of the NFL’s Chicago Bears and Miami Dolphins – started well, but ended with him being fired or resigning.

“We would have liked it to have happened quicker,” he said of Pitt’s first bowl game under him. “Maybe this is a good omen. When I was in Chicago, the second year we went to the second round of the playoffs and (won) coach of the year. Everything was hee-hee, ha-ha. Five years, later, it was not hee-hee, ha-ha.”

“I think this might be a good omen that we started off slower in Pittsburgh, and then we kind of got it going now,” he said.

Sure. Why not.

According to the Zeise chat today, there are more Pitt fans than Oregon State fans in El Paso. I guess we’ll see how it looks on TV.

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