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February 19, 2009

Frank Cignetti, Jr., Pitt’s new offensive coordinator sounded all the right notes on his introductory press conference — loyalty, local ties, family and returning home.

“Anybody that knows me, knows that Pitt is my dream job,” Cignetti Jr. said at a news conference yesterday in which he was introduced as the new offensive coordinator.

“This is home. This is like hitting the lottery, not only professionally but personally, for my family, my wife and our kids. It can’t get any better than this: to be a part of the University of Pittsburgh again, living in this great city and working for a great coach like Dave Wannstedt.”

Cignetti, who was a graduate assistant at Pitt in 1989, was the offensive coordinator at the University of California last season.

“It is great to be back at a place with such great tradition both academically and athletically,” Cignetti said. “Being familiar with the city sparked the initial interest, but the bottom line is, to leave a good job, which I had, you have to take a better job. And there is no doubt in my mind that there is a great future and tradition here.”

And to prove it, he confirmed that he took less money to do it.

Cignetti, who worked under coach Jeff Tedford at Cal, admitted he took a pay cut to come to Pitt. He said his compensation package is “competitive” but it is likely in the $250,000 range, which is about where the Panthers’ coordinators have been in recent years.

Cignetti’s base salary at Cal was $168,000, but his total compensation package was in the $350,000-$400,000 range with a $77,000 assistants bonus built into Tedford’s contract, an $80,000 talent fee, $10,000 from camps and the potential to earn $69,500 in merit bonuses.

“If you just look at the base salary, of course [I took a pay cut],” Cignetti said. “But when you look at the cost of living, that’s where you have to make a decision. And there are so many things that are more important than money. How important it is to live back at home, to have my kids grow up around their grandparents, my wife’s family, their cousins — to me, you can’t put a price tag on that, to me, that is priceless.”

And of course, he wanted to come to a good program.

Cignetti said he talked to Cavanaugh “at length” about the job.

Their philosophies are similarly rooted in the West Coast offense, with an emphasis on minimizing turnovers while employing a power-run game complemented by play-action passes.

“What we would like to do,” Cignetti said, “is be a great, physical, downhill run team.”

Cignetti, who will be the primary play-caller after working for offensive-minded Cal coach Jeff Tedford, said he believes the Panthers have all the ingredients to become a Big East and national championship contender.

“The bottom line is, to leave a good job, you’ve got to take a better job,” Cignetti said. “There’s no doubt that at Pittsburgh there’s a great future, a great tradition. Coach Wannstedt was the right man to work for and get this job done.”

Cal Coach Jeff Tedford released a statement on Cignetti.

“Frank did a good job for us in his one year here,” Cal coach Jeff Tedford said. “His family ties are very strong and this is a great opportunity for him to get back to his hometown and for his kids to grow up with both sets of grandparents.

“He has aimed to get back there for some time and we wish him well.”

As the West Coast paper pointed out, this is arguably a bigger opportunity for Cignetti (even if he denies it).

The Pittsburgh job may also be more of an opportunity for Cignetti to make an impact. Although he was the coordinator at Cal, Tedford was still heavily involved in offensive game planning. Pittsburgh coach Dave

Wannstedt is a defensive-minded coach, meaning Cignetti may be able to make more of an imprint on the program.

But Cignetti said that didn’t play a role in his decision.

“It was no factor,” he said. “Jeff Tedford has been awesome. Working for him the last year has been unbelievable. Just because Jeff was an offensive-minded guy and Dave is a defensive-minded guy — that had nothing to do with this decision. This was just a great opportunity to work at a great institution and do it while being close to my family.”

Given that Tedford is an offensive oriented coach, the concern from Cal fans is not vast nor are they expressing much in the way of relief at his departure. Obviously since he was only there for a year it would be hard to completely gague his impact, and thus reasonable fans to take it in stride. Especially since he made the move as much for family reasons.

I expect that Pitt fans would have had a similar reaction if Pitt lost DC Bennett after one year as some expected. No one would have begrudged Bennett going — since presumably it would have been — back to K-State under Snyder or somewhere in Big 12 country to be closer to his family.

This looks like a solid hire. I don’t care that much about the local ties, having spent time as a grad assistant at Pitt. All of limited importance. It plays well for storylines and selling it to boosters and alumni groups. The fact is, he could be from Hawaii, and all that it comes down to is his abilities as a coach, coordinator and recruiter. In those fronts he has a solid to very good looking record. That’s what makes me think this is a good hire.





I was expecting a terrible hire like Mazzone, but I really couldn’t be happier with Cignetti.

Comment by Chris 02.19.09 @ 1:05 pm

Definitely better than Mazzone, I agree, but the quote: “What we would like to do is be a great, physical, downhill run team” has to worry us a bit. We lost our best back in many years and now have burns and a few freshman who don’t, from what I’ve seen, seem to be downhill power type guys. We also have these tallish athletic WRs, it just doesn’t seem to add up. Maybe he is just saying that buy still, it’s a concern, or maybe I’m reading our personnel wrong.

Comment by Matthew 02.19.09 @ 1:22 pm

I totally agree with this hire. It bodes well for the program’s future. With Youngstown State to start the season he will have one game to evaluate his talent in game situations. I only hope Wannstedt lets him do his job. If he does, I look forward to seeing the Panthers in person at NC State!

Hail To Pitt!

Comment by SCPittMBA 02.19.09 @ 2:30 pm

I’m very happy to have him here and can’t wait to see how things shake out. One thing I’m hoping for is that with the new coach there will be a TRUE open competition for QB in the spring and into the fall. Cignetti will have a fresh read on these guys and hopefully can make some immediate impact with how their abilities are utilized.

Comment by Dan35 02.19.09 @ 3:09 pm

Dan – I think that’s the key with the Spring and summer camps – get the proper guy out at QB that can be somewhat consistent.

God – I hate sounding like a wet blanket, and am usually the most optimistic of PITT fans – and I am in this also, but I can’t get past this nagging feeling that expectations are going to be way too high for Cignetti for 2009.

I wasn’t surprised in the least by Cignetti’s quote in keeping the Offensive thrust the same. It’s how PITT has recruited and built itself over the last four years – and like it or not – this is still DW’s team.

I have no problem with it really, because we haven’t been as conservative on offense as some fans believe – what we have been is unable to execute the passing game with any real sustained success, either over the course of a game or a season. Get someone in there that can hit the receivers on time and in stride and suddenly this same offense is going to look very “open”.

Comment by Reed 02.19.09 @ 3:36 pm

Yes! Thank you. I was no Cavanaugh fan and some of the time I had no idea what he was doing – but some part of our offensive problems was inability to execute. Yeah, better plays could have been called a lot of times – but when Stull cant complete a screen pass – even Bill Walsh couldn’t win.

Comment by Joey D 02.19.09 @ 4:02 pm

Here’s a great post by Paul Zeise from the PG blog. Paul always seems to have a good feel of the pulse of the program and the fact that he thinks so highly about this coach and this hire is great news in my book:

link to community.post-gazette.com

Comment by Dan35 02.19.09 @ 4:05 pm

WOW, Zeise is actually more excited than any of the bloggers here .. and he is usally much more objective than we are.

Comment by w bill 02.19.09 @ 4:15 pm

Zeise was on top of the OC search from the very beginning even though off track on Mazzone. Way to go Paul. But his love fest with Cignetti is curious because his article is totally devoid of facts supporting his man-crush. I’d like to know something about the new OC other than he has roots in Pa and that “they” think he’s been beneficially coached some QBs. At Cal, the offensive credit goes to Tedford.

Comment by shadyforpresident 02.19.09 @ 4:28 pm

What I like best about this is the guy is a college coach, not an NFL guy. Cav’s biggest black eye in my book was his inability to develop talent. It just seemed like very few of the guys on offense ever got significantly better. Hopefully this guy will be able to connect with the younger guys and grow his talent.

Comment by Paul 02.19.09 @ 4:58 pm

His work as OC at Fresno St was nothing short of outstanding. Very productive, high scotig offenses even against better competition in their bowl games.

He also did pretty good work with Saints QBs Jeff Blake and Aaron Brooks, both of whom had their best years while he was QB coach

Comment by w bill 02.19.09 @ 5:11 pm

Jamie Dixon on Espn’s PTI in one minute

replay on ESPN 2 at 6:30

Comment by w bill 02.19.09 @ 5:41 pm

Zeise is objective? LOL Please. Cignetti is an excellent hire, but Zeise is such a cheerleader in that blog entry that it’s embarrassing.

Comment by Mark 02.19.09 @ 6:12 pm

Dixon did a good interview on PTI with lots of coach-speak. He talked about how after the UConn game he told the team they weren’t any different than the day before. Kornheiser (I think) said Blair’s parents wanted him to go to Tenn with Bruce Pearl and asked Coach Dixon how he got him to stay home and go to Pitt. Dixon said he focused on Blair’s grandmother (Ms Sadler) b/c kids can’t say no to their grandmothers. When asked about teams that could win the Nat’l Championship, Dixon said he hasn’t looked much outside the BE b/c there are about 8 teams there that could win it all.

Comment by CalvinHobbes 02.19.09 @ 6:17 pm

Burns and Harris are both good size backs, and don’t forget about Hyno! We could easily have a solid power running game. As impressive as Shady was, let’s not forget that Larod S-H also averaged over 4 yards per carry last season. This offense is built to showcase running backs. While there will be a drop off from Shady, it will not be a giant one. What drop off there is in the running game should be easily offset by improvement that must happen in the passing game.

Comment by HbgFrank 02.19.09 @ 6:22 pm

Mark, you are dead wrong about Zeise … and you obviously didn’t see him on last Sunday’s KDKA sports telecats when he wasn’t flttering to either Pitt or the Big East. He is anything but a cheerleader!

Comment by w bill 02.19.09 @ 6:49 pm

FYI – from today’s Post Gazeete’s high school blog:
Bob Gibbons is a highly-respected and nationally-known talent scout who runs the All-Star Sports scouting service in Lenoir, N.C. Kane is currently playing at Patterson School, a prep school near Lenoir. In a conversation with Gibbons the other day, he told me he watched Kane play recently. Gibbons also said Kane is now looking at possibly attending Virginia Tech.

Gibbons also said he was led to believe Pitt is no longer recruiting Kane.

Gibbons chuckled at Kane’s recruiting because it has almost been comical the way it keeps changing. The summer before his senior year, Kane verbally committed to Duquesne, even though he said he might look at other schools. Kane and Duquesne eventually parted ways. Kane had hoped to go to Pitt, but that never materialized. He decided to attend New Hampton, a prep school in New Hampshire, but changed his mind and enrolled at Patterson.

Comment by w bill 02.19.09 @ 7:16 pm

Luke Winn’s power rankings are pretty funny this week:
but that was hands-down the best game of the season, and the feeling, courtside, was like you were watching a national-title battle. I was in San Antonio all over again. The only non-shining moment was courtesy of Pitt reserve forward Gary McGhee, who had the following five lines in the first-half play-by-play:

12:08: Subbed in.
11:51: Fouled Hasheem Thabeet.
11:51: Fouled Craig Austrie.
11:50: Fouled Hasheem Thabeet again.
11:50: Subbed out.

Comment by Ira 02.19.09 @ 10:18 pm

HGBFrank – your post is dead on and, I think, points that are overlooked by PITT fans. We were lucky to have McCoy over the last two years – but I really feel like our running game is about to breakout in 2009. Here’s the sizes of the principals… (I’ll add 10 pounds to Burns and Harris to account for one year with Buddy)

Burns 5’11” – 200 (w/ 4.44 speed)

Harris 6’1″- 225 (4.5)

Hynoski 6’2″ – 250 (4.65)

All three of these guys are big and fast, and don’t get fooled into thinking that Hynoski is one of those big, lumbering white fullbacks from the olden days – this kid ran for 7200 yds & 113 TDs in HS – he can motor.

I firmly believe we’re going to see a very powerful run game this season – and more productive overall than we had with McCoy as the highlighted back.

Comment by Reed 02.20.09 @ 4:49 am

Why is it that you have to take a pay cut to go from Cal (obviously a football juggernaut with all of their National Championships)to come to Pitt? Don’t you get what you pay for!

Comment by J.P. 02.20.09 @ 7:54 am

I know three different people who left comments on Zeise’s blog that were deleted. All the comments disagreed with whatever Zeise was writing at the time and none were vulgar, yet they were deleted. That’s all you need to know about that guy.

Comment by Mark 02.20.09 @ 8:18 am

Why does anyone feel the need to disagree with the guy’s opinion on something like this? Just to be negative?? It’s so damn frustrating that Pitt fans constantly have to be so negative about everything.

Pitt got rid of an unpopular OC, and stole one away from a successful program who wants to be here and is apparently a good recruiter. Yeah, lets all lay into Zeise for being such a cheerleader. Because the last thing Pitt needs is a fan base that’s enthusiastic and positive…

Comment by Dan35 02.20.09 @ 9:33 am

Right on Dan.

Comment by Sharty Mottenheimer 02.20.09 @ 9:56 am

if you have any doubts about Zeise’ comments on Cignetti, go see the press conference video on http://www.KDKA.com for yourself. Go to the sports, then video libray and search ‘Cignetti’ to locate the video. His enthusiasm, fire in the belly (Ditka) and whatever “it’ is are all powerfully on display – you will sense it right away and throughout the entire 9-1/2 minute video. Frank is a very impressive guy and will do well. That is very obvious if you see him… It is nice to look forward to Frank as an additional recruiting force too. PITT will benefit from an OC/QB coach who can complement DW and Gattuso recruiting prowess. That is why Zeise says every HS FB player is suddenly in play for PITT. We will see the impact of that over the next year or two. If you have not seen this video of FC, you need to…

Comment by IronManEE68 02.20.09 @ 10:23 am

He does seem enthusiastic and energetic, but couldn’t someone have told him to take out the gum prior to the news conference? Makes him seem a ton dumber than he probably is……

Comment by hugh green 02.20.09 @ 11:10 am

I am skeptical of anyone who takes a pay cut. Why is having “Pittsburgh ties” an almost necessity to be hired as any coach at Pitt? Hire the best person you can get/afford.

I have Pittsburgh ties and I don’t want to live there. I sure as heck wouldn’t take a pay cut to take a job there.

I hope for the best. We’ll find out soon enough if this was a good move.

Comment by Yeti 02.20.09 @ 11:28 am

Don’t believe the “pay cut” is big a deal. Doubt it is really much of a cut in terms of funding a lifestyle when you consider the enormous difference in the cost of living between the San Fran bay area of Cal and Pittsburgh/Western, PA.

Comment by pitt1972 02.20.09 @ 1:18 pm

well, a pay cut is a big deal if your investing money towards retirement – those dollars aren’t tied into a local cost of living.

Did anyone else watch that KDKA video and crack up? I swear it was like a Saturday Night Live spoof on what a coach would sound like if interviewed – complete with gum chewing.

He’s certainly ready to start working from the sound of it.

Comment by Reed 02.20.09 @ 4:23 pm

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