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January 14, 2010

Final Stuff

Filed under: Basketball,Media,Opponent(s) — Chas @ 10:11 pm

Okay, not much left.

You don’t eff with a streak. Pitt hasn’t lost since Gilbert Brown came back — and came off the bench. No reason to mess with that.

Plus Gilbert Brown doesn’t seem to have a problem with it. Instead giving love to Nasir Robinson as a gritty/glue guy.

“Nas brings all the intangibles,” Brown said. “He’ll scrap every minute of the game that he’s in there. He boxes out. He rebounds. He makes tough plays. When he checked into the game we said, ‘Make something happen.’ And he went out there and made a play. He makes that play every day in practice. He’s great around the basket, and he made a big-time play for us.”

In addition to the earlier mentioned “out-toughing” UConn, both sides acknowledged that Pitt wanted it more.

Pitt outscored Connecticut, 19-8, in the final 5:48 of the game.

“We wanted it more down the stretch,” Pitt junior guard Brad Wanamaker said.

Pitt has beaten Connecticut (11-5, 2-3) three in a row and four out of five meetings, including last season’s sweep of the then-No. 1 Huskies. It is Pitt’s first three-game winning streak against Connecticut since 1996-97.

“They wanted to win,” UConn coach Jim Calhoun said. “They didn’t talk about it. They showed it with great effort.”

UConn is trying to figure out why they are so inconsistent. Speculation is growing that because Calhoun has no faith in his bench, the starters are wearing down in the game.

In the second half Wednesday night, Calhoun used one bench player, Ater Majok, for six minutes. All other minutes went to Jerome Dyson, Stanley Robinson, Kemba Walker, Alex Oriakhi and Gavin Edwards, as has been the case most of the season. Before Wednesday’s game, they had played 81.3 percent of all the team’s minutes. They played between 32 and 39 minutes Wednesday, numbers that will keep Robinson, Dyson and Walker among the Big East’s top 10 players in minutes played.

I worry about Dixon and Gibbs — especially Gibbs — playing too many minutes each game, but compared to UConn, Pitt is in good shape.

Continuing the media recapping from Pitt’s 67-57 win over UConn.

Even Bob Smizik acknowledges that he was so wrong about this team.

Neither graduation, nor eligibility expiration nor NBA defection has managed to stop this bunch, which might be longer on determination than ability but which has far more ability than most of us believed.

When the Panthers were outscored, 14-3, midway through the second half and lost what had been a 10-point lead, I was positive they were done. It was a nice run, but there would be no stopping this Connecticut onslaught.

I had forgotten the enormous heart that these Pitt teams have. This is trite, I know, but Jamie Dixon teams do not walk away. When adversity is at its greatest is when they seem to most step it up the most.

He lavishes some much-earned and deserved praise on how well McGhee played. Something with which I agree. McGhee played an outstanding game where he handled their big guys without help. Some of that comes from the passivity with which the UConn big men played. Gavin Edwards is UConn’s own “serviceable” center and McGhee handled him. The other UConn bigs did little other than follow their training to stay straight-up for blocks but offer little else on offense or defense.

This is not to diminish the work by McGhee. He helped keep them one-dimensional and clogged the inside to make it hard for Dyson and Walker to do much in the way of penetration. He would not let himself be bodied or pushed out of position — which he has often shown a propensity to allow.

Ray Mernagh compliments himself for offering a safe hedge in the preseason.

So I looked for something I had written back in September and sure enough, found the following thoughts from my Around the Big East post on 9/1/09: One national columnist — the excellent Jeff Goodman at Fox — recently opined that this was a rebuilding year for Pitt no matter what…Maybe. I know Jamie Dixon hasn’t experienced a rebuilding year yet (read NIT berth). Check back in mid-January. Before then is way too soon to count out Dixon and the kids he targets to play for him. It would not shock me to see Pitt in the hunt once again come the third or fourth week of the conference season. It’s what they do.

So there you go. Let the record show that I had some initial faith in this Pitt group — especially Jamie Dixon…

Not exactly Kreskin, but better than a lot of others I suppose.

If you can get past the cliched, trite, and downright crappy “this Pitt team is a reflection of the hard-working, blue-collar, tough, gritty city in which the university resides” opening from Dana O’Neil– tough, I know — but it’s a good piece on the game and how Pitt is blowing expectations out of the water.

The Pittsburgh Panthers aren’t just tough. They are the classic underdogs, annually counted out to comical proportions.

Jamie Dixon’s band of misfit toys all were very good players in high school, but none were quite the great ones.

Jermaine Dixon? He needed to go to junior college.

Gilbert Brown? He was in the mix for McDonald’s All-American status, but didn’t quite make the cut.

Ashton Gibbs? He was an all-stater, not an All-American.

And yet here they are again.

Gene Collier acknowledges the need to revise expectations of this team.

These Panthers, following in the fresh footprints of Dixon’s best team ever, a 31-5 unit that came within a whisper of the Final Four, either want to be awfully good or are at least willing to throw themselves on the floor trying to be.

That was both the literal and metaphoric reason they were only the fourth team to win at Connecticut in the past 44 games.

“I think it was just an example of what coach Dixon always emphasizes, which is being tough,” said Gilbert Brown in 26 minutes of Pitt’s seventh consecutive win. “You see how Ashton [Gibbs] almost turned the ball over and then gave up his body? I think this game tonight is where all that toughness really came out.”

When I was watching the game I paused and rewound that moment a few times. Maybe it was the opponent. Maybe the montage before the game made it fresher in the mind. Gibbs dive to recover the ball after it was poked free and call the time out. Before any UConn player had a chance to react made me think of Brandin Knight in the BET Championship game against UConn diving for the loose ball and calling TO while Huskies stood around.

John Gasaway at Basketball Prospectus is still trying to figure out how Pitt is doing it. Looking at returning possession minutes for this years team comepared to last year, shows that Pitt simply more than any other BE team that went to the NCAA last year has less experience by a wide margin. He notes that Pitt should be playing more at the level of 2008 Ohio State — NIT. Gasaway tries to figure out why. Primary reasons he finds is that Pitt is playing defense far better than they have the past couple of years, Ashton Gibbs’ emergence and surprisingly that McGhee and Taylor have been more effective than expected in filling DeJuan Blair’s shoes.

Of course, if there is one thing that sets Gasaway to burning it is use of rebound differentical — he sees it as a relatively meaningless stat. Of course, we all know that Coach Jamie Dixon is passionate about having Pitt outrebound opponents.

UConn held a four-rebound edge on the Panthers at the half at the XL Center. Dixon urged his team to outrebound the Huskies by eight in the second half. The Panthers nearly doubled that, outrebounding the Huskies by 13 in the second half.

It was a major factor in Pitt’s 67-57 victory.

“We had to get that changed,” Dixon said of the rebounding advantage UConn held at the half. “We had to get that turned around and we did. Clearly that was the difference. We just battled.”

I happen to agree that rebounding differential is not a big deal. Too many factors can skew it — bad shooting or good shooting being the primaries. That said, UConn’s front court — despite their size advantage — was pathetic.

UConn’s starting frontcourt of Ater Majok, Alex Oriakhi and Stanley Robinson combined for just 12 rebounds. Oriakhi had all nine of his rebounds in the first half while Robinson had a season-low two.

“For Stanley Robinson to get two rebounds in a game is almost bewildering to me,” Calhoun said.

Not to me. Stanley Robinson looked impressive in the first half — as long as you only looked at the offense. He has this talent, but no effort on defense. His big solo slam came because he was loafing on defense.

Pitt had gotten a steal and raced the other way. Kemba Walker made a tremendous interception of a bounce pass and was able to get it right back down to Robinson who was all alone for an easy slam.

Only, when you watched the replays, you saw that when Pitt took off after the turnover, and most of the UConn players were hustling to prevent an easy transition bucket, Robinson barely moved. He slowly turned up-court and lightly jogged after the play. He made no effort to get down there. Only when he saw Walker get the steal did he move. He raced to his basket.

Should it surprise anyone that when the game got tight and plays had to be made in the final 10 minutes, Robinson was non-existent?

Jerome Dyson was the second half impact. He suffers most in UConn’s offense with their inability to play half-court offense. He can run, but he is most dangerous when given a chance to attack the basket on plays. He did that in the second half, but all too often he had to do it without his teammates helping.

Believe it or not, still a couple more stories to work into a media recap. Later.

Blair Makes Many Look Silly

Filed under: Alumni,Basketball,Good,NBA — Chas @ 2:48 pm

Not sure how many times already this season that DeJuan Blair has been highlighted by NBA hoop heads. Here’s a YouTube from his 28 point, 21 rebound night against the Thunder. Not a highlight reel, so much as an instructional on his game (Hattip to True Hoop).

After the win over Cinci, one of the themes from the losing side was that Cinci was closer than they had been but were still not there as a team putting things together. Unlike Pitt.

That theme repeats itself with UConn.

They are everything UConn isn’t right now. They are tough, physically and mentally. They are patient. They are specific in purpose. They are high energy and low panic. They play as a team. They are learning to finish what they start.

Not quite

UConn has become an almost team.

Yet again the Huskies showed Wednesday that they’re almost good enough to win a tight game against a ranked team.

They’re almost talented enough to overcome their mistakes.

Almost isn’t good enough. Not in the fiercely competitive Big East Conference.

No. 15 UConn’s shortcomings sent it to a damaging 67-57 loss to No. 16 Pittsburgh at the XL Center. It was the Huskies’ first home defeat this season and third loss in five games overall.

“We aren’t putting the package together right now the way we should,” coach Jim Calhoun said. “Obviously, I have great concerns like any coach would. … Everybody is playing pretty well against us, it seems. We’re responding almost enough.

“Almost enough doesn’t get you anything.”

Seems to be the impact of a team that not only exceeds expectations but exposes what the other team isn’t doing.

“I have a problem with 40 and 35 … 40 full minutes and 35 seconds (of offense),” Calhoun said. “I’m not used to games coming down to an end and seeing the other team grab control the way Georgetown and Pittsburgh has these last two games. Very disappointing.”

Why this continues to be a problem for the Huskies almost halfway into the season not only has Calhoun scratching his head in wonder, but also apparently has him so frustrated that he can’t even explode. Maybe it would have been better if the coach had come into the post-game full of emotion, screaming that you’ll never see that type of lethargy from one of his teams again, and that practice was going to be a living hell.

But he didn’t. It’s almost as if he can’t believe what’s happening himself.

“It all goes back to executing our offense, even versus Harvard and some of those other teams, we didn’t execute our offense and make them play defense,” Calhoun said. “We haven’t done that except for maybe one or two games all season.”

I think the Connecticut media is just as befuddled. Calhoun has been — calm isn’t the right word — subdued after these losses. He is likely frustrated, but not actively sparring with the media, implying that the refs cost UConn.

He seems genuinely disappointed with his team, and dare I suggest that he is realizing that he has made some mistakes with the coaching and teaching.

The Huskies inability to adjust to anything other than playing up-tempo, transition game is making a lot of games tougher than they should and costing them against some of the better teams that either play slower or can change tempo.

Lots of problems.

So what’s wrong with the Huskies?

Just about everything.

Their half-court offense is predictable and ineffective.

Their rebounding is an ongoing issue.

Their free throw shooting is shaky (6-for-13 Wednesday).

Their defense is solid but suffers breakdowns at the worst time.

Their desire and toughness came into question against Pittsburgh.

Here’s an interesting quote from senior Stanley Robinson: “They basically out-toughed us and out-played us.”

That’s a bad sign.

And Brad Wanamaker said as much.

“That’s what the Big East is about, out-toughing the other team,” said Wanamaker. “In the second half, I think we did that.”

After being out-rebounded by four in the first half, the Panthers easily won the battle of the boards over the final 20 minutes, 26-13. Pitt (14-2, 4-0 Big East) finished with 19 offensive rebounds – 12 of them in the latter half – as it spoiled some strong UConn defensive stances with second-chance points.

“We’re not playing with a sense of toughness,” said UConn head coach Jim Calhoun. “At times, we stopped them stone, cold dead … and then we’d give them a second chance.”

The near misses has the fans and media wondering if UConn is more than simply a little overrated.

And has nothing to show for it. It all boils down to primarily one thing: horrible half-court offense. The Huskies simply have no idea how to score in the half-court set. It usually devolves into Jerome Dyson or Kemba Walker getting to the basket and then hoping. The same happened again Wednesday night.

It is so unlike Jim Calhoun’s teams that this one is almost unrecognizable. The only conclusion that can be made right now is that the Huskies aren’t that good. They are likely headed toward a major battle to make the NCAA tournament.

Overstatement? Not likely. The eyes don’t lie.

Media recapping will continue in a bit.

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