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March 26, 2010

Sorry for the lateness. Visiting family, and away from what passes for normalcy.

Oregon columnist/sports radio guy blog post on an interview with the David Pump of Pump Bros.:

Said Pump: “Oregon job is a Top 20 job, it’s extremely, extremely attractive. They’re paying top dollars and will probably end up paying more (to the next coach) than any Pac-10 school out there.”

Pump called Pittsburgh coach Jamie Dixon and Texas A&M coach Mark Turgeon Oregon’s top priorities, and saw Saint Mary’s coach Randy Bennett as the fallback candidate.

First, the Pump Bros. are not running the search for Oregon.

Second, money alone does not make it a top-20 gig. In no particular order: UCLA, Arizona, USC, Washington, Kansas, Texas, Oklahoma, Oklahoma St., Kentucky, Florida, Ohio St., Purdue, Michigan St., Indiana, Wake Forest, Duke, UNC, NC St., Maryland, UConn, Syracuse, Louisville and Pitt are all better jobs in terms of the combination of money, recruiting, reputation and fan passion for basketball among BCS programs. That is 23 teams off the top of my head, and Oregon at its best comes into the tier with Tennessee, Michigan,, Georgia and Texas A&M — football schools that are willing to spend money to look decent or better in basketball.

The rumors for Oregon really don’t seem to be focused on Jamie Dixon. More on Mark Turgeon since he was a Oregon assistant in the past and longshots that others claim Phil Knight wants: Tubby Smith from Minnesota, Billy Donavan of Florida and Michigan St.’s Tom Izzo.

Izzo receives $300,000 a year to represent and wear Nike clothing and equipment, plus a $25,000 annual Nike merchandise credit in addition to Nike equipment provided for his basketball camps and four assistant coaches, as well as a bonus package that takes into account postseason games.

Izzo also became embroiled in a dispute during the past season when he came to the defense of Nike and lashed out at Michigan State alums for being critical of a new logo designed by Nike for the school’s sports teams.

Well, that ‘s enough to convince me.

Chris Dokish addresses further comments and notes that it seems unlikely Dixon is leaving for Oregon.

Maurice Walker remains one of the better players not to be signed. Even if he does end up at Pitt. Be realistic. He won’t have much of an impact until at least his second year.

Maurice Walker (6-10, 270) | Grade: 92 | C Rank: 8
Toronto, Can./Brewster Academy (N.H.)

He is a Canadian transplant that has developed his game in the New England prep ranks. He is a space-eater that is a huge presence bumping and grinding in the paint. Although he is limited athletically and is better suited for a team that likes to play in the half court, his combination of size and soft hands will be in high demand during the late signing period.

That description also explains why he is so interested in signing with Pitt and their history of developing big men like that.

Continuing the Pittsburgh area silliness and focused only on the NCAA Tournament to determine that Coach Dixon is an underachiever is today’s Q&A comparing him Cowher. That’s just plain foolishness of the typical fan that only pays attention to things starting in March. That’s as stupid as defining a football coach’s success only in terms of whether he wins a bowl game, because that was the only time you started paying attention.





for an underachiever, Coach Dixon gets a heck of lot of consideration for the real attractive job offers. I still believe the main reason he is always being considered is that he is a west coast guy coaching in the east … and that his mentor made a similar move.

And once again, criticism of Dixon is soley a byproduct of his own success and just how high he has raised the expectation level of the Pitt program.

Comment by wbb 03.26.10 @ 9:24 pm

I think someone had posted this before, but based on the shootout that K-State and Xavier had I would give Dixon even more accolades because Pitt hung in there and had a chance againt X without having any real offensive firepower.

Comment by Pittastic 03.27.10 @ 8:17 am

Let’s also remember that this is Jamie’s first head coaching job with a baptism by fire in the toughest conference in the country year in and year out. All of the other top young head coaches out there started in less competitive conferences and moved up to the big time.

Some will point to Izzo as a more successful assistant to head coach example but he spent 13 years as Jud Heathcoate’s assistant at Sparty, so the program was well established. Jamie didn’t have that at Pitt with Ben who was a relatively young head coach himself.

Comment by TampaT 03.27.10 @ 9:32 am

Sorry to go off track here, but there’s a mass exodus going on in the women’s program. Anyone know what’s up?

Comment by nev 03.27.10 @ 10:23 am

TampaT, yeah, and in that setting all is does is tie a record for most wins in 7 seasons in D-1 basketball. If the team wins 25 games next year, I think he ties Roy Willams for most success in his first eight years as a coach. Based on what we have seen from Dixon plus the fact that the Pitt team comes back almost intact, that seems like a pretty achievable target.

I honestly do not understand how some people can look at all of this a wish for a “better coach”. The talent keeps trending upward on average, and the team keeps winning. (If you don’t believe the talent is improving, consider not just the starters but the ninth or tenth person off this bench versus the ninth or tenth from the team of a decade ago.)

Comment by hollowpanther 03.27.10 @ 11:38 am

I honestly believe that most of the Dixon criticism is from bandwagon Pitt fans with a very false sense of entitlement. The opinions on this blog I believe is much more representable … while we are disappointed by the loss to Xavier, we are by no means dissatisfied with program.

Comment by wbb 03.27.10 @ 12:52 pm

Right on, wbb. As a 1992 Pitt grad, my “glory days” of Pitt hoops while in school involved Paul Evans as coach. Talk about underachieving! Despite talent like Charles Smith and Jerome Lane and Sean Miller, we were usually one and done in the NCAAs. Then Pitt fired Evans and brought on Ralph Willard, then the “hot” coach from a smaller school (Western Kentucky) who was ready to be in the big time.

Do people not remember how bad it got there in the in the Ralph Willard era? No NCAA appearances and one piddly NIT appearance in five long, mediocre seasons. He was clearly over his head from the beginning. When he returned to small-time basketball, Willard was a success again (at Holy Cross).

We have to remember that getting Howland from a small school (Northern Arizona) and having him succeed is the exception to the rule. Not the norm. And having the assistant of that once-small-time coach take over and succeed the way Dixon has is just about a miracle. I would not take any coach in the country over Jamie Dixon right now.

Comment by Jim Lakely 03.27.10 @ 1:16 pm

Is being like Bill Cowher supposed to be a bad thing now? Talk about a sense of entitlement!

Comment by maguro 03.27.10 @ 1:34 pm

No one answered nev’s query about Pitt Women’s hoops. Whay the exodus? It’s not the same situation as PSU and Agnes seems like a very solid coach. What’s going on?

Also this nonsense about Dixon is ridiculous. The guy is our guy and we have a PROGRAM now. He’ll get us there. Rome wasn’t built in a day.

Comment by The Hagen 03.28.10 @ 8:07 am

I’ve compared him to Cowher before… it’s not really a bad thing, both of them had/have times, in otherwise wildly successful careers, where they had a tough time getting over the hump.

Cowher eventually got Roethlis(Rapist)berger and got over the hump, because all he ever needed was his franchise QB.

Eventually Jamie will bring in a lottery pick or two and get over the hump in the tournament, because that’s all he’s been missing.

Comment by Jimbo Covert's my Dad 03.28.10 @ 11:33 am

“That’s just plain foolishness of the typical fan that only pays attention to things starting in March. That’s as stupid as defining a football coach’s success only in terms of whether he wins a bowl game, because that was the only time you started paying attention.”

Disagree with you there. I don’t believe the fan was saying either are bad coaches. But both have had trouble progressing in the post-season, for whatever reason. It’s a valid point.

Facts aren’t stupid, they’re simply facts.

Go Ducks.

Comment by Spanky 03.30.10 @ 4:21 pm

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