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March 9, 2009

The madness. The madness. March is a harsh mistress when you write about college basketball. So much to cover. So little time. It’s great, but the hours get away from you. So, the next thing you know, those browser tabs with all the stories of yesterday’s game are still sitting open after trying to stay on top of today’s games.  And it’s the next day.

Sam Young took home Big East Player of the Week honors for the second time this year.

Starting local, Sam Young gives a little about his first offensive attack on Thabeet.

“They’re trying to take my joy, they’re trying to steal my thunder. That first bucket pretty much set the tone for the game,” said Young, who saved one of his best games for senior day. “It was ‘and-one,’ the crowd got into it, and I had that look on my face like, ‘Yeah, it’s time to go.’

“A lot of teams get intimidated by Thabeet blocking shots and how tall he is. When you look at that situation, it’s (him) or me. I’m definitely going to make sure that it’s me at the end of the day.”

Sophomore center DeJuan Blair, who had 22 points and 23 rebounds against Thabeet last month, said Young’s high-energy play was exactly what Pitt needed.

“It told them we ain’t backing down, we ain’t scared,” said Blair, who tangled with Thabeet near midcourt in the second half. “Thirty-one points and 10 rebounds. That’s an excellent game against the No. 1 team in the country.”

Senior day and the family coming to town did not hurt.

“I had a lot of family in the building,” Young said. “It was real emotional.”

And really, really good.

Just a thought, the first meeting had a nice impact on DeJuan Blair’s NBA draft profile taking a sizable jump. I’m guessing Young’s got a bump as well after this game.

The win snapped UConn’s road perfection and gave Pitt a perfect year at the Pete and the game had the largest crowd at the Pete with 12,908.

Then there’s Levance Fields’ great game running the show. Though, Ron Cook even while gushing over Fields maintained his man-crush on DeJuan Blair by running with the whole Batman comparison. Yeesh. I can’t even bring myself to quote from it.

Moving out of the ‘Burgh, Dick Weiss was there and he notes how much Sam Young is in the mind of UConn and Calhoun.

Sam Young has become the University of Connecticut’s unsolvable riddle.

The 6-6 senior forward torched the Huskies for 31 points and 10 rebounds Saturday as No. 3 Pitt rocked top-ranked UConn, 70-60, before an ear-shattering, standing-room only crowd of 12,908 at the Petersen Events Center.

“I’ll tell you one thing,” UConn coach Jim Calhoun said after this battle of Big East heavyweights. “When he graduates, I won’t be shedding any tears. We play pretty good defense but he’s scored 56 points on us in two games.”

Young scored 25 points against UConn in the Panthers’ 76-68 win last month in Hartford.

“There hasn’t ever been a player who gives us as many problems as he does,” Calhoun said.

The New York Times story notes that the UConn players put a brave front on losing twice to Pitt. That it doesn’t matter, and it means nothing. But…

But the grins on the faces of Pittsburgh Coach Jamie Dixon and his players revealed that the third-ranked Panthers had a different view.

“Senior Day is special and you want it to end the right way, and I’d say it certainly did,” said Dixon, referring to the ceremony before the last home game of the year.

Even though the Panthers have beaten most Big East teams in both games this season, beating UConn has become personal.

“Recently, it seems that when I see a UConn jersey, my eyes light up,” said Sam Young, Pittsburgh’s 6-6 senior forward, who had a game-high 31 points on a variety of 3-pointers and breakaway dunks. He scored 25 in the first game between the teams.

Now for the Connecticut media. Seems that whole Thabeet-Blair rematch was the focus, even if it wasn’t really the story other than that brief collision.

Early in the second half, Thabeet threw a bad pass to UConn’s Kemba Walker, forcing Walker to save the ball from going out of bounds by lobbing it up near midcourt. Thabeet then bumped into Blair as both were jumping for the loose ball, knocking the Pittsburgh center to the ground.

Both Blair and Thabeet, who said Blair tripped him after the foul, got up yelling at each other.

“Don’t nobody knock me over,” Blair said. “I ain’t going to let nobody knock me on the ground.”

Thabeet had a slightly different take on the exchange.

“He tripped me after I fouled him. I was just not happy with that,” Thabeet said.

“He punked me the first time and I didn’t do nothing about it,” said Thabeet, referring to the flip-over Blair he took in Hartford. “He got fouled and he wanted to trip me. I was just reacting to that. OK, I fouled you. I’ll let it go. I fouled him and he flipped me.”

Makes it seem like Blair was fired up and angry about it. Or, not.

“Don’t nobody knock me on the ground,” Blair said with a laugh. “Actually, I would have done that to anybody.”

[Emphasis added.]

And Jim Calhoun was calm after the game, conceding he didn’t want to have another YouTubed press conference. He instead tried to be positive.

”For me to blast my team today would be foolhardy,” Calhoun said. “We’ve got a whole postseason to play and we might see Pitt again. I wouldn’t mind that at all. I really wouldn’t.

”They’ve had two chances to prove they’re the better team. When you’re 27-3, I don’t think you should hang your head. You have to put the season aside and now we’re on to postseason play. Give all the credit to Pitt. They won the game.”

Build up, not tear down his team. Right?

Stanley Robinson has yet to show he can think with Young.

Jeff Adrien can’t run with Young.

Calhoun even tried Scottie Haralson briefly, as Young pointed out, and that didn’t work either.

“Young has a great up fake and it looks just like his jump shot,” Adrien said. “So you have to respect his jump shot, because he hits. He is very versatile, can play [the] three or four. He’s a tough player.”

Heck, one of these times Young (6 feet 6, 220 pounds) is going to up-fake Robinson so badly, Sticks (6-9) is going to knock himself out on the overhead scoreboard.

“Sticks should be able to guard him,” Calhoun said. “He should. He didn’t. We tried Jeff on him. That didn’t work.

Young’s work ethic gets everyone amazed. To say nothing of his conditioning.

After warmups Saturday, Young was feeling a little stiff. So he put on his headphones and stepped on the treadmill. Yes, he ran for 10 minutes — then went and ran over UConn for 37 minutes.

When the Huskies closed to 52-50 with 12-0 run, Young is the one who had all the answers. He scored off a tough drive to the basket. Then, in the moment that sent the Pete into delirium, Levance Fields found Young on the fastbreak for a thunderous dunk to make it 56-50. UConn never really threatened again.

“That dunk will be on Top 10 [plays] on ESPN,” Blair said.

“I came here [and] could barely dribble the ball and could barely shoot a three to save my life,” said Young, one of three Pitt seniors honored. “In my last performance here, to put up 31 and 10 — threes, mid-ranges, turnarounds, free throws, transition dunks and everything — I think I showcased a lot of my talents. I worked to get to that level.

“There’s a lot of muscle memory and getting the moves down pat. That’s behind everything I do. You see something spectacular; I’ve already practiced it to perfection.”





It’s getting to the point now that I can’t go more than 2 days without Pitt basketball in my life.

I don’t care who we play in the BET, or even if the tournament isn’t really all that important to us this year, I CAN’T EFFING WAIT TIL THURSDAY!!!!

Comment by Jimbo Covert's my dad 03.09.09 @ 1:16 am

Haha, you said effing!

I couldn’t agree with you more though, it’s like a drug, I need my Pitt basketball fix.

Comment by Dugdog 03.09.09 @ 4:18 am

Young was in another galaxy. Fields and Blair were superb as well. But, Wannamaker’s improvement over last year is a testimoney to the teaching abilities of our mentors. Watch Brown in the BET. He is about to explode. Go Pitt. For the Ohio fans I remain a solid Panther. George Mehaffey, Pitt News (sports) ’52 & ’53.

Comment by rev. george mehaffey 03.09.09 @ 10:06 am

Great to see another long-time, dedicated Pitt fan like you Rev. George. And I think your analysis is spot-on. Wanamaker should be getting more press for the game he had — nobody could stop him. I love the way he owns rebounds, too. Little bit of Jaron Brown in him as far as rebounding out of a guard position. (And that’s HIGH praise for anybody.) Also agree with you about Gil (and really, how hard would it be to get him a nickname? I’m partial to the Gila Monster myself, but I’m open to other ideas). I think Gil Brown is the next Sam/Aaron Gray type Pitt player who tantalizes us (with athleticism for Sam, size for AG, and athleticism again for Gil) for a couple of years and then just puts it all together. Gonna be exciting to see him put an all-around game together.

Comment by maz. 03.09.09 @ 10:34 am

Does anyone know if we had recruits at the UConn game? I heard rumors, but nothing solid. The place must have been crazy and i wish i would have been there.

Comment by beanboy 03.09.09 @ 12:20 pm

Yes, Kyhril Natyazhko was definately there I saw him. He’s a 6’10” player that could be added to next years class if a spot opens up. Apparently others were supposed to be as well: Dokish said the following:
As promised, I did some checking to see who will definitely be visiting this weekend for the UConn game and verified to attend thus far are Dante Taylor, Talib Zanna, Tom Droney, and Kyryl Natyazhko. Isaiah Epps, Adreian Payne, and Sterling Gibbs have also been invited.

I have to say whoever actually made it had to be completely blown away. The energy in the building was unreal. As a fan, I was exhausted at half-time after all the yelling and cheering in the first half.

Comment by Ontario Lett's Go Pitt 03.09.09 @ 12:38 pm

Just incredible to see Young really putting it altogether after that stretch of a few games where he just seemed out of sort. Clearly he’s letting the game come to him and man he is awesome when he does that.

And can’t agree more about Wannamaker. His confidence is just growing in leaps and bounds.

I know Fields back was bothering him, but I wish he would stop fading away on so many jump shots. When he steps into the shot he is far more consistent. I do think he has an (admittedly outside) chance to play at the next level if he can correct that, among other things.

Comment by Carmen 03.09.09 @ 12:52 pm

No surprise, UNC voted #1 by the coaches…

link to sports.espn.go.com

After completing a regular-season sweep of Duke on Sunday, Roy Williams, while talking about how much this year’s North Carolina basketball team means to him, struggled to control his emotions.

More reason for the coach to gush (or turn to mush): On Monday, North Carolina regained the No. 1 ranking in the ESPN/USA Today coaches’ poll. The Tar Heels, whose 79-71 win over the Blue Devils secured the ACC regular-season title and top seed in the conference tournament, had been tops the preseason and for the first seven weeks of the regular season.

UNC (27-3) received 23 of 31 first-place votes for 767 points, 40 points ahead of No. 2 Pittsburgh. The Panthers (28-3), fresh off their second win over Connecticut in 19 days, received five first-place votes to move up two spots. Memphis (28-3) collected three such votes — one fewer than last week — and remained third while riding a 22-game winning streak.

UConn (27-3) checked in at No. 4, one spot ahead of Big East regular-season champion Louisville. The Cardinals (25-5, 16-2 Big East) secured the top seed in the conference tournament by beating West Virginia 62-59 on Saturday.

Comment by Rex 03.09.09 @ 1:21 pm

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