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November 18, 2009

Nothing like a strong national win, to change Bruce Feldman’s opinion (Insider subs).

I was skeptical about Pittsburgh. Not anymore. I do think it’s one of the country’s best teams. Dave Wannstedt has built a very solid team in all areas, and the Panthers showed that Saturday night against Notre Dame. They have a much-improved QB in Bill Stull, a great RB in Dion Lewis and two playmaking receivers in Jonathan Baldwin and Dorin Dickerson. Plus they have four excellent D-linemen and a capable secondary. That was a very good offense that they bottled up for much of the evening.

As for the Irish, what more can you say at this point about Charlie Weis? His O-line looked overmatched again, and his defense was shaky.

Baldwin got a haircut before the ND game which provided a hook for a couple stories.

Pitt wide receiver Jonathan Baldwin showed up for Saturday’s win against Notre Dame sporting a Mohawk haircut. It was a new look for the sophomore off the field, but on the field it was the same old Baldwin, making acrobatic catches for touchdowns and helping to keep drives alive.

“I was sitting in the barber’s chair at Damions in Ambridge paging through the haircut book and I liked the Mohawk cut so I went with it,” Baldwin said. “I just wanted to go out in this game and have a good time in helping us win.”

With the talent on ND, and many of them juniors and seniors it’s no surprise that plenty of scouts were there as well as media. So, you know that Baldwin just rocketed up some boards for 2011.

The new ‘do made Baldwin stand out, but it was the epic performance he delivered in a 27-22 victory over Notre Dame on Saturday night that turned heads all over the country.

NFL scouts in the press box must have been drooling when they watched the 6-foot-5, 225-pound Baldwin make two catches that any great receiver this town has seen — Larry Fitzgerald, Lynn Swann, whoever — would have been proud to call his own.

Notre Dame’s star receiver, Golden Tate, was getting all the publicity heading into the game, which led a reporter to wonder if Baldwin was trying to “make a statement.”

“I don’t get much into that stuff,” he said. “I just go out there and make the plays that are there to be made.”

Pitt made the big plays throughout the game. On the ground and air. Something that ND’s defense has allowed to happen all season.

Didn’t we just see this last week?

The Irish defense, one of the worst in the country giving up plays of 20 yards or more, was true to form. The Panther offense had six plays of at least 20 yards.

Weis calls them “explosives.” Saturday they detonated a desperate bid. Later, they may add to the implosion of a regime.

Pitt generated 429 yards of total offense. Stull wasn’t sacked, and the Panthers didn’t have a turnover.

The puzzling over ND’s struggles keeps falling on the coaching since they have the talent.

Recruiting evaluations over the last five years don’t add up to explain the present situations facing the Notre Dame and Pittsburgh programs.

Both have head coaches that took over in 2005. Notre Dame’s Charlie Weis and Dave Wannstedt at Pittsburgh had to do some scrambling to put that first class together.

Since then, the Irish have had talent success that hasn’t necessarily translated onto the field.

That first year was the only year that Rivals.com rated the Panthers (38th in the country) ahead of the Irish (40).

Notre Dame has had its classes ranked in the top 10 three times – 2006 (eighth), 2007 (eighth) and 2008 (second). Those years, Pitt was 21st, 26th and 28th, respectively. Last year, Rivals rated Notre Dame 21st and Pittsburgh 47th.

In those five years, the Irish have signed seven five-star recruits while Pitt has landed just one.

But there is always that decided schematic advantage.

Even as Pitt is on the edge of discussions for the BCS bowls, the team is sticking with the “one-game-at-a-time” position.  It makes them a collectively boring quote.

Q: I see a really positive trend in the maturity of this team Paul. I have noticed in this six game win streak, the team has had less penalties. Aside from the absurd 4 or 5 pass interference calls against them in the Syracuse game has this team matured through this year?

ZEISE: Yes, the maturity factor is key to the success. And while there are a lot of signs of it on the field — the lack of penalties, the composure, the lack of panic, the lack of making key mistakes and turnovers — where it really shows up is during the week. This team is all business. A lot of us media types often say this team is one of the most fun Pitt teams to watch in recent history – but one of the most boring to cover. And by boring, I mean, they are focused, they are serious and they don’t say much of anything during the week. It is just all business with this group. They practice hard, they are focused and a couple of the guys who are seniors have set the tone by making it clear that anything less than a Big East championship will be a failure.

Pitt QBs have endeared themselves to fans when they show toughness. Rutherford won over many when he ran over defenders — particularly in a VT game. Palko for knocking over a BC guy. Not only tough plays, but moments that swung the momentum and energy completely to the Pit side of things. Stull didn’t do it like that against ND with the ball and plowing a guy over. Instead, he threw a key block that was big.

Stull’s numbers — 15 of 27 for 236 yards and a touchdown — were rather ordinary. Yet, Stull’s extraordinary lead block helped pave the way for tailback Ray Graham’s dazzling 52-yard run in the third quarter.

Graham scored from the 2-yard line on the next play to give Pitt a 20-3 lead. The margin was too wide for the Irish and their star quarterback Jimmy Clausen to erase.

While Graham’s touchdown and a 152-yard effort by tailback Dion Lewis enabled the Panthers to stretch their record to 9-1, it was Stull’s block that fueled a Pitt engine that seemingly ran on empty much of the first half.

“That was a highlight reel in one run,” Notre Dame coach Charlie Weis said. “I’ll have to wait and see (who missed tackles).”

It wasn’t the missed tackles. Rather, it was Stull’s block of Notre Dame strong safety Sergio Brown — a telling blow that energized his teammates and the Pitt fans.

And luckily he didn’t get concussed doing it.

It seems a little early — what with two games left — to declare the promise fulfilled, but it fits with the whole full circle of the ND game now and in 2005.

That was in 2005, Dave Wannstedt’s first game as Pitt’s head coach, a 42-21 loss to the Irish. After the game he said the Panthers would not be able to compete until he rebuilt their lines. He then preached patience because he said rebuilding lines — as well as changing the mentality of a team — took time.

With that in mind he took to the recruiting trail hard in search of offensive and defensive linemen and made several changes in the next two years that he believed would give the Panthers’ lines a chance to develop into dominant units.

Those included moving Greg Gattuso from tight ends coach to defensive line coach after the 2005 season and hiring Tony Wise as the offensive line coach and Buddy Morris as the strength and conditioning coach after the 2007 season.

Fast forward to Saturday night when those same Irish came to Heinz Field to play the Panthers. By the time that game was halfway over this much was clear — Wannstedt has delivered on his promise of rebuilding the Panthers’ offensive and defensive lines into physical and dominant units.

West Virginia next week will be the continuation of another full circle moment regarding the need to “get faster.”





On Jonathan Baldwin, I also liked the way he was acting like a leader on the sideline. Specifically he was addressing Antwaun Reed letting him know that the team needed him and not to get down on himself. He is clearly playing with confidence and has stepped up as a vocal leader.

Comment by Coach Ditka 11.18.09 @ 2:27 pm

Anything added to the editorial comments above would be superfluous. George

Comment by rev. george mehaffey 11.18.09 @ 2:48 pm

Excellent job, Chas. The game Saturday night really was a referendum on both administrations; one that peaked early, showed flashes of brilliance, with talent that never seemed to evolve or translate to dominance on the field; another, was a slow burn, showed periods of growing pains, but has evolved into a dominating force on the field.

The beauty for the Wanny adminstration, it is sustainable. Charlie’s adminsitration…not so much.

With all due respect to the great pitt performances, the love from this win goes to Wanny in my eyes…

Comment by Pauly P 11.18.09 @ 3:37 pm

ND got exactly what it hired – an offensive coordinator. Pitt actually stopped itself IMO more than ND did.

What I like the most of what I’m seeing is that even though they will be losing some really good players, they can reload into a viable favorite for next year. By all accounts, it is a program and not a flash in the pan.

Comment by wbb 11.18.09 @ 3:42 pm

man if only we got rid of cavanugh earlier…

Comment by Snala the Panther 11.18.09 @ 4:15 pm

Cinn game kickoff is scheduled for 12:00 noon.

Comment by TMGPanther 11.18.09 @ 4:46 pm

I should have added that it will be a nationally televised game on ABC, as expected.

Comment by TMGPanther 11.18.09 @ 4:51 pm

Great summary Chas.

I must say it again:

During 2009 only one school has been in the top 10 in both football and basketball.

Pitt is it.

Pretty amazing considering the resources the state universities bring to the table.

Keep up the great reporting.

Comment by Steve 11.18.09 @ 5:11 pm

IMO, these rankings of recruiting classes are somewhat superficial. 1. If a kid gets recruited by ND, USC, or FLA he must be good. If he gets recruited by PITT, Rutgers or Syracuse he gets knocked down a notch. Basically lot of the ranking has to do with who’s looking/offering. 2. This only accounts for how good he was in high school, not his development while in college. I think all the coaches here at PITT deserve a lot of credit on this point. 3. I would really like to see a recruiting ranking for the 4th & 5th year kids in the program comparing what they’ve become versus what was expected of them. Sort of like a look back at draft picks from 3-4 years ago for pro football or hockey teams.

Comment by tsquare 11.19.09 @ 12:10 am

This team still has a lot to prove and they are in a position to do just that.

While the basketball team looks like it is going to have a rebuilding year, looking at the football roster makes me think we are going to reload next year. We will lose some great players but Wanny has stockpiled the depth needed to compete year after year.

Comment by gc 11.19.09 @ 7:59 am

FWIW, here are the stars’ stars vs ND the other night:

Baldwin 4*
Sheard 3*
Berry 3*
Romeus 2*
Lewis 2*

Note that if Pitt maintains its Top 15 ranking ona an annual basis, they will attract better recruits …both in reality and in the minds of the scouting services

Comment by wbb 11.19.09 @ 8:05 am

Pitt will run the table. WV will make a game of it and the shine of the brawl wears off they go down to the deep six. Cinci fans IMO hate Pitt because it’s a Stiller thing. After watching Cinci, Pitt has the better team and wins a close game.

Pitt is stocked for the long haul but Wanny must start winning bowl games.

Comment by joel 11.19.09 @ 7:31 pm

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