masthead.jpg

switchconcepts.com, U3dpdGNo-a25, DIRECT rubiconproject.com, 14766, RESELLER pubmatic.com, 30666, RESELLER, 5d62403b186f2ace appnexus.com, 1117, RESELLER thetradedesk.com, switchconcepts, RESELLER taboola.com, switchconceptopenrtb, RESELLER bidswitch.com, switchconcepts, RESELLER contextweb.com, 560031, RESELLER amazon-adsystem.com, 3160, RESELLER crimtan.com, switch, RESELLER quantcast.com, switchconcepts , RESELLER rhythmone.com, 1934627955, RESELLER ssphwy.com, switchconcepts, RESELLER emxdgt.com, 59, RESELLER appnexus.com, 1356, RESELLER sovrn.com, 96786, RESELLER, fafdf38b16bf6b2b indexexchange.com, 180008, RESELLER nativeads.com, 52853, RESELLER theagency.com, 1058, RESELLER google.com, pub-3515913239267445, DIRECT, f08c47fec0942fa0
April 10, 2009

The Spring Game

Filed under: Football,Marketing,Practice — Chas @ 1:57 pm

Lots of activities and autograph sessions with some past Pitt players. Q&A with the coaches. The game will be televised locally, but does little good for those of us not living in the ‘Burgh. I would have enjoyed a road trip this weekend just for fun, but between family obligations, taxes not done and, well — I think the wife would have beaten me with a tire iron if I had even suggested any more college sports activities — it just isn’t going to happen.

Still, seems like a lot of fun.

Fans will have a chance to interact with coaches and learn about some tactical decisions and why they are made, the recruiting process and a typical practice schedule, as well as some other aspects pertaining to the Panthers or college football in general.

Wannstedt said he is looking forward to the event because he thinks it is a good way to get fans more engaged with the program.

“We just decided we needed to change some things up,” he said. “I’ll talk a little bit about recruiting and the process and the program over all and then we will have Phil Bennett talk about defense and obviously Frank Cignetti, the offense.

“Then it will be open to questions, and that will probably be as much fun for the fans as anything because they’ll get a chance to ask questions about what takes place during practice, game day or halftime or whatever they want to know.”

Of course, one reporter said that odds are very good that the first question will have something to do with quarterbacks, to which Wannstedt quipped, “I’ll defer that one to Frank. That’s why he’s talking.”

Seems like Coach Wannstedt went out of his way to stress to the beat writers that the spring game is not any more meaningful than the other practices. I noticed a similar thing in Gorman’s blog post as well.

Perhaps the biggest misconception revolving around spring drills is the importance of the Blue-Gold Game. In reality, it’s little more than a glorified scrimmage in the eyes of Pitt coaches. And they evaluate it as such.

“We’ll put it in the same category as our last (two) Saturday scrimmages,” Wannstedt said. “We’ll look at the execution and how the players respond that way. It will be an important day for our players, no question about that, but I wouldn’t say it’s really any more important than the last two scrimmages.”

Added offensive coordinator Frank Cignetti: “You won’t see much. It will be real vanilla. We’ll just go out there and run a base offense and, obviously, just try to come out of it healthy.”

There is something to be said for the Panthers putting on their uniforms and performing in game-type situations before fans at Heinz Field.

“Just by being in the stadium and having people in the stands and knowing it’s on TV, that has a tendency to affect some players differently than if we were just up here on a Saturday morning, having a scrimmage in the bubble,” Wannstedt said. “That’s good. That type of exposure has a tendency to bring out the best and, sometimes, the worst in players.

“We need to find that out now.”

I think most fans know that it isn’t any more than a light scrimmage that is the end of a spring fan fest. It’s just a way to help generate more interest in Pitt football. The only reasons it takes on a bigger meaning to the fans is that it is one of the only times they get to see the team at this time, and it is the final practice and scrimmage of the spring.





I supposed it is much like spring training in baseball ….. as I recall, 2 of the stars from last spring’s scrimmage were Shariff Harris and Greg Cross (collectively, they played a total of 4 plays this past season.) The big star of the previous spring scrimmage was Elijah Fields who sat out the following fb season.

Comment by w bill 04.10.09 @ 3:28 pm

Harris had 12 carries, Cross had four – but I get your point.

Comment by Reed 04.10.09 @ 6:04 pm

After second thought – Spring Ball is when you get to see players in position switches and if they will do well there. Last year at this time we had our first look at Malecki on OL, Ransom at LB and Dickerson at TE.

That may be be worth the price of admission (free) but it makes it a little more fun to have something to watch.

I’m driving up for the scrimmage today and want to at least see Dion Lewis carry the ball, if Bostick has truly lost that throwing motion, and Brandon Lindsay line up at DE….

Plus drink beer with friends.

Comment by Reed 04.11.09 @ 3:44 am

Comparing the “C-boys”

(An allusion to link to vault.sportsillustrated.cnn.com )

But now it’s Cignetti vs. Cavenaugh.

What one can infer from link to pittsburghlive.com that, under Cavenaugh, the QBs
>weren’t students of the game
>didn’t do repetitions
>didn’t know what was going on
>weren’t being pressured to perform well, and
>weren’t getting any better

(Of course this begs the question, what the hell were they doing?)

Some quotes:

(Cignetti) has brought a high-energy attitude to practices and placed pressure on his quarterbacks to perform.

“Everything they do from the time they walk on this field is evaluated,” Cignetti said. “Everything.”

The Panthers have added twists such as more rollouts for quarterbacks and choice routes for receivers

“He’s very intense,” Stull said. “We come in at 6 in the morning with sleep in our eyes, and he makes sure we’re ready to go.

He’s bringing a lot of new stuff, and we’re really enjoying it. The coaching is different. It’s making us better.”

“It’s refreshing because you’re doing certain things, and you’re repeating them every day,” Bostick said. “You get to master it and own it.”

“That’s one thing that coach stresses,” Stull said. “We’re going to be students of the game, and we’re going to know what’s going on.”

…….

We’ll see!

Comment by steve 04.11.09 @ 7:21 am

steve, all we know so far is that in 1 1/2 months with Cignetti, Bostick is hardly showing a hitch and is not winding up in his delivery as he did in the 1 1/2 years under Cav. Of course, Cav has such a good record of QB development … remember the wonders he performed with Kyle Bollar in the 5 years they were together in Baltimore (yes, a very low blow.)

Yes, we’ll see … but while I was not as critical of Cav’s playcalling as most (except for the fade before halftime vs WVU), I do think he longed to get back in the NFL and didn’t want to be the patient teacher required by a college coach.

Comment by w bill 04.11.09 @ 8:04 am

I won’t believe anything about coaching being different until the first game of next season. Everything sounds great in the offseason and all is well until Stull sharts himself in the 4th play from scrimmage….maybe we can play Eastern Michigan again…..

Comment by Joey D 04.11.09 @ 9:57 am

steve, just got time to read Cope’s 1960 SI article abut Beano per the link in your post …. a pretty fascinating read …. I recommend it to all Pitt bloggers

Comment by w bill 04.11.09 @ 10:31 am

Turning to hoops – the sport of sports – some tentatively good news from Mr. Dokish on Mr. Natyazhko:

link to bebballreportpitt.blogspot.com

Comment by steve 04.11.09 @ 12:21 pm

Halftime …. and same old, same old.

I expected the defense to dominate epecially with some injuries on OL, but every once in a while there should be some risk / reward when blitzing this offense. It seems like evry time pressure comes, it’s either a sack or an hurried incompletion. Just once, can’t they hit a hot receiver, or evade a rusher and complete a pass???

Comment by w bill 04.11.09 @ 3:12 pm

w bill, give us out-of-towners another update.

Comment by BigGuy 04.11.09 @ 4:00 pm

w bill–IMO, you expect too much. Remember–

1. This is a good to great defensive unit

2. They know the Pitt offense since they play against it every practice

3. The offense in the spring game is intentionally plain vanilla for obvious reasons

Comment by pitt1972 04.11.09 @ 4:10 pm

I know Pinkston was out today and the game plan is blah and all else, but the OL looked horrible just as it did in the Sun Bowl. I believe the OL will be the deciding factor of this years success with no start quarterback or running back.

As for the quarterbacks, a brief assessment:
1) Stull–looked halfway decent in my opinion, nice throw to Baldwin for a TD, looks like his throws are a little better, not the classic Stull rainbow, more of a line drive

2) Sunseri–looked mobile, calm, threw a couple of nice screens, needs to work on down field accuracy, a couple near interceptions

3) Bostick–maybe I got bored and started to flip back and forth between the scrimmage and the Pirates, but I can’t really say anything good or bad, they stressed that he has lost over 35 pounds and the hitch is gone

Comment by AJ 04.11.09 @ 4:25 pm

Was this AP article on Lewis posted here?

link to rivals.yahoo.com

Comment by BigGuy 04.11.09 @ 4:48 pm

On the 3rd play from scrimmage, Stull fooled everyone with play action pass (in fact Sheard took Dion Lewis’ helmet off on the fake hadn-off), and then hit Baldwin on approx 55 long post pattern for TD, beating Antuan Reed (no safety help). On ensuing possession, Tino led 2nd team offense against 2nd team defense down the field mostly on short passing plays, and Kevin Harper drilled a 40 yd FG.

The balance of the scrimmage was dominated by the DL — it was about as simple as that. There was not that much blitzing but total dominance by the likes of Sheard, Caraegein and Mick Williams (1st team) and Hale, Tkach andBokor (2nd team) penetrating to stop both the run and the pass.

Dion Lewis’s best runs, as explained by Wanny which did the color on the telecast, were turning a 2 yd loss into a 2 yd gain. I don’t believe there was a run more than 5 or 6 yards all day.

Except for the initial TD pass to Baldwin, the average completed pass play went about 5-8 yards. No QB stood out — all were bothered by pressure with a few sacks and many hurried incompletions. Bostick’s delivery is much improved — he made a nice completion on a rollout to the left of about 20 yds ut was negated by a definite push-off by Shanahan who made the reception. Greg Cross made a nice 10 yd recetion for a first down ove the middle … but that’s about it.

Fields played very well including an acrobatic interception. Gruder, Dell, G Williams and J Chappel all made good tackles keeping short passes to minimum gains.

Comment by w bill 04.11.09 @ 5:44 pm

More notes from PSI:

Prior to the game, Wannstedt announced the winners of the Ed Conway Award, annually presented to the most improved players of the spring. This year’s recipients were junior quarterback Pat Bostick and sophomore linebacker Max Gruder.
Pitt also presented its freshman Academic Award, which was shared this year by wide receiver Mike Shanahan and linebacker Joe Trebitz.

The Gold were led by senior quarterback Bill Stull, who finished the day 12-of-17 for 132 yards and a 54-yard touchdown pass to sophomore Jonathan Baldwin. Baldwin concluded the game with five receptions for 75 yards and a TD on the day.
Bostick finished 4-of-10 passing for 31 yards and an interception, while redshirt freshman Tino Sunseri was 5-of-15 for 38 yards and one pick.

Freshman running back Dion Lewis led the Gold with 12 rushes for 34 yards and redshirt freshman Chris Burns finished with 11 attempts for 13 yards.
————————–
Sunseri is mobile and has a strong arm but forces the ball into coverage — could have had 2 more INTs. 4th team walk-on QB Andrew Janocko is left-handed. Brandon Lindsay also looked good as 2nd team DE.

Comment by w bill 04.11.09 @ 6:29 pm

Some observations:
Shane Hale will be an excellent player for us.
E. Fields is a monster, as is J. Sheard.
Joe Thomas was terrible.
The defensive line was much too tough for the offense.
Stull’s touchdown pass was under thrown and he was not the least bit impressive. But then, no quarterback was.
Both Antuan Reed and Jarred Holly are upgrades over Berry.
Dion Lewis is smaller than advertised and it will need to be running back by committee.

Comment by Gas 04.11.09 @ 7:02 pm

Jarred Holley, the Easton Assassin.

Comment by steve 04.11.09 @ 7:08 pm

Stull looked poor-mediocre. Don’t make too much of the Baldwin TD, the ball was ridiculously underthrown….

Comment by Joey D 04.11.09 @ 8:20 pm

Hmmmm. The posts are not very encouraging. Come Saturdays this fall, I may be doing yard work.

Comment by BigGuy 04.11.09 @ 9:12 pm

I am not going to jump ship yet but I can feel everyone’s pain, believe me. By the sound of it, our defense will be a good one again. Everyone agree? I am a defense guy and I honestly think that if we’re quality, we can provide a boost for an anemic offense.

The QB spot has to improve without a doubt. That was one of our weaknesses last season and it cost us an Orange Bowl. I’m going to grind a tooth loose if Stull wins the job again and we score 10 points against Youngstown State. A good mobile QB can compensate for an average OL. Speed thrills and I want my boys outrunning the train.

Let’s give these kids a chance to prove themselves. They have the summer to boil in the sun and get better. I’m still excited about the season.

Comment by Panthoor 04.11.09 @ 9:54 pm

two things:

1) it looks like we have a real strong defense and a rather weak offense. sounds like 2007 all over again. but in reality i think our offense will improve as the o-line becomes set and is able to work as a unit. plus one of the qbs will present himself as a frontrunner at some point in the summer/fall.

2) does anyone else find it weird that the “gold” team wore white? especially when we have a gold alternate jersey? have we scrapped them or could this be a sign that… gasp… another alternate uniform might be in the works? perhaps one that has a bit more of a royal shade?

Comment by Jon 04.12.09 @ 1:09 am

while agreed that the QBs weren’t that good, I believe it was more of a result of poor offensive line play (or more hopefully, superior defensive line play.) Not only were the QBs consistently hurried, the offenses were completely unable to establish any type of run game. For this offense to have any production, it needs to run so to take the pressure off the QBs.

However, note that as has been previously posted, the defense knew the plays and the offense was vanilla.

Comment by w bill 04.12.09 @ 7:24 am

I only saw parts of the scrimmage on TV, but the first two offensive series had some success, and then the defense seemed to dominate. I also think that at this point the offensive line, if it ever even had who we’re projecting as the starters, began to shuffle in other people. The O line was never at “full strength”.

Comment by KeyboardKev 04.12.09 @ 9:22 am

Can anyone out there please knock me out until Stull graduates and leaves. PLEASE! I don’t want to have to sit through another season with that incompetant buck teethed idiot as our QB. I am praying for a fair and open QB competition, if Pitt doesn’t have someone who can challenge him, than we are definately in for a long season! In the meantime, I am going to sample what meds can help me endure the pain that is headed our way if he is our QB.

Comment by Heel Hater 04.12.09 @ 10:36 am

It appears that Dokish got snookered by Natyazhko who just commited to Arizona instead of “his top choices,” Pitt and ASU. Worth a read for whys and wherefores:

link to bebballreportpitt.blogspot.com

Comment by steve 04.12.09 @ 1:20 pm

Let’s all remember this was a glorified scrimmage. That said Here are my impressions…

We have two very quick and strong D players in Brandon Lindsay and Shane Hale – and so much depth at DE it’s almost criminal. Caragein looked good also I thought, and with Mustakas returning our DL may be excellent and pretty deep.

All three QBs had rough days I thought. Stull’s pass to Baldwin was under thrown as mentioned above – and the DB missed an easy INT on it. Sunseri obviously has some athletic skills, but I don’t think we’ll see him for awhile – even if the competition is truly open. Bostick’s throwing motion is completely different than 2007 – and his release is faster. Also – and even though we’ve read this over the last month – his ability to move around is much improved.

He had a real nice roll out and completion – going to his left, then followed that up with a six yard scramble a few plays later.

One thing was nice about the offense that as ‘vanilla’ as the playcalling was, there seemed to be much more planned movement by the QBs – so I thought that was good.

All in all if a fan went in expecting to see anything other than a practice he’d be disappointed, but I’m fine with it. The only strong impression I got was that our defense could definitely be kick-ass this season.

Comment by Reed 04.12.09 @ 3:46 pm

Sounds like it was Arizona who got snookered. The big Ukrainian will probably not even be eligible!! Good thing we found out before it was too late.

Comment by Mark 04.12.09 @ 4:23 pm

One positive about the scrimmage: it appeared that Oderick Turner tried the entire time. That is a big improvement.

Comment by Joey D 04.12.09 @ 7:44 pm

Great line yelled out from the stands when Tino called a timeout as the play clock wound down,
“Hey Walt, get the play in!” Even the fans were practicing.
Not too much should be made of any of the scrimmage other than it was nice getting to see the team practice.

Comment by wldrnss 04.12.09 @ 7:52 pm

I wanted there to emerge a REALLY viable alternative to Stull or Bostick.

Comment by steve 04.12.09 @ 8:02 pm

alright guys!

i just heard a leak that an anouncement will be made by pete the athletic director on tuesday. its gunna be about all sports switching to nikes.

Comment by big mike 04.12.09 @ 9:37 pm

Powered by WordPress © PittBlather.com

Site Meter