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February 8, 2009

When you score 1/3 or more of your team’s points it is significant. In college when it happens, and the team scored 90+ it is very significant. Make it a double-double and, well, that is just a little scary. It also makes for the easy choice on story lines. Blair, Blair, Blair.

There he was, DeJuan Blair, just like his days at Schenley High School, playing handball with himself off the backboard glass.

Two times Saturday, Blair pulled down multiple offensive rebounds — off his own misses — while surrounded by DePaul players in a cruel version of keepaway.

Then, in scenes reminiscent of a City League blowout, he softly banked in a layup over his swatting, waving foes.

“I did that in high school,” Blair said, “but I didn’t think I could do it in college. That’s something cool for me, padding my stats.”

Blair, a sophomore center, finished with a career-high 32 points, and added 14 rebounds in No. 6 Pitt’s 92-69 victory over last-place DePaul at AllState Arena.

It’s been a strong week for Blair.

“If DeJuan is playing like this, we’re going to be tough to beat,” Fields said.

The book on the Panthers is that they are susceptible when Blair is in foul trouble. The flip side of that, of course, is that they are literally unbeatable when he is not. Pitt has two losses this season, and both happened when Blair spent large portions of the game on the bench because of fouls.

Playing undeterred with only one foul on his conscience yesterday, Blair was his usual dominating presence inside. He had nine offensive rebounds and raised his NCAA-leading total to 136 offensive rebounds.

“There’s an amazing statistic from this game,” DePaul coach Jerry Wainwright said. “They missed 30 shots and they rebounded [more than] half of them. That’s an amazing statistic. [Blair] is an exceptional offensive rebounder. He reminds me of Moses Malone. He almost gets the ball to get it on the glass and then he goes after it again. He has an exceptional combination of long arms and big hands. He really doesn’t even jump that much.”

Let’s hope Blair keeps it going as he wants. I also hope he doesn’t try to do too much on Monday night.

DeJuan Blair said there will be some special guests in attendance when Pitt returns to the court to play West Virginia (15-7, 4-5) on Monday at Petersen Events Center.

“There are going to be Steelers in the building,” he said. “They are going to be in there. It’s going to be packed. It’s going to be a big night.”

It was a slow start for Pitt. It briefly gave DePaul hope.

”We knew DePaul would be hungry for a win,” he said. ”I’ve seen them in some close games, and they haven’t pulled them out. We got what we expected in a barn-burner to start.”

The Blue Demons had the flame flipped on high for 15 minutes, racing past the Panthers for baskets, forcing seven turnovers and giving 9,814 fans plenty to cheer.

But the fire was doused in the last 25 minutes, the Panthers regrouping with a 19-4 run to close the first half and set the tone for a second-half pounding that led to their 92-69 victory. The turn-around came not just because of Pitt’s burly senior duo of DeJuan Blair (career-best 32 points, 14 rebounds) and Sam Young (10 points, 10 rebounds). It also was sparked by senior point guard Levance Fields, who finished with a career-high 16 assists, 13 points and six steals.

”It starts and ends with Vance,” said Dixon, whose team moved to 21-2 and 8-2. ”That’s a huge amount of assists. He was out 11 months (with injuries), and we were looking at January/February for him to be near full strength. He’s always had a gift. … He knows when and how and delivers at the right spot.”

For all the talk of the importance of ”big men” in the Big East, ”guards run our league,” Dixon said. ”You need to have great point guards to win the league, and we’ve been fortunate to have many — and now with Vance.”

Pitt’s big three all had double-doubles in this game. Pitt’s size, strenght and depth were another factor that Coach Dixon cited for the second half romp.

“Wearing teams down is kind of what we do,” Pitt coach Jamie Dixon said. “We have a history of depth to finish teams off.”

DePaul doesn’t go deep, and players coming off its bench are mostly freshmen.

At this point, DePaul has lost 11 straght. They have an excellent chance of running the table in the Big East with road games at Louisville, Pitt, WVU and Georgetown. They do have a couple chances with home games with Seton Hall and St. John’s. Not much else Jerry Wainwright can do, but claim to see the positives.

The Blue Demons (8-16, 0-11) built a 6-point lead late in the first half and played with a bit of a swagger – until Pittsburgh reeled off the first half’s final 13 points in just 2:20.

“Obviously, we’re at a point in time where the positives are far more important to us than the negatives,” Wainwright said. “We’ve made really significant improvement, in all honesty.”

During DePaul’s early run, it enjoyed a mix of transition baskets for Dar Tucker (18 points) and Will Walker and set plays that featured center Mac Koshwal.

Koshwal (18 points, 5 assists) would either slash for layups or feed 7-foot-2 freshman Kene Obi (career-high 9 points) for easy shots.

“We were real excited about ourselves and having fun out there,” Tucker said.

And then they were not.





Great game yesterday, hopefully they an win the next two and then set up a showdown with UCONN. Also, Pitt’s SOS is at 14 right now, but does anyone know what there non conference SOS happens to be at?

Comment by UCantCMe247 02.08.09 @ 4:59 pm

doesn’t matter — the NCAA selection committee wlll emphasize any crierion they want to seed a team as the wish; they are the model of inconsistency

Since when does Coach Dixon refer to Fields as ‘Vance’? Of course, the same article also lists Blair as a senior.

Comment by w bill 02.08.09 @ 5:35 pm

Vance? Sounds like a white guy who plays for douche.

Maybe they should know the names of the players before they write the articles…

Comment by Stuart 02.08.09 @ 6:31 pm

come to think of it, the article also cites Dixon as saying that Fields was out for 11 months … (obviously not the Gregorian calendar)

Comment by w bill 02.08.09 @ 6:41 pm

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