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September 12, 2010

It’s A Win, Now Extra Prep

Filed under: Football — Chas @ 11:45 pm

I don’t know how much to focus on the New Hampshire game. It was a win for Pitt as expected against a 1-AA team, but there is the caveat not to take them for granted when VT suffers utter humiliation to James Madison.

The big story/BS controversy is at running back after Ray Graham had a great day in relief of Dion Lewis. Graham on 9 carries went for 115 yards. This included a 64-yard TD run.

Lewis did most of work in the first half, when the New Hampshire defense was keyed on him. Limiting him to under 30 yards. The depressing thing was seeing the O-line getting killed by New Hampshire when they rarely went more than seven or eight up front. Seeing play calls sending Lewis anywhere near the middle of the line was an exercise in futility.

I don’t know if Lewis is banged up. I don’t know what the cumulative effect is of 325 carries on a freshman of his size in 2009 are the following year. That’s speculation.

I do know that Graham had the benefit of Pitt coming out passing in the second half to really loosen up the New Hampshire defense.

One reason for Graham’s second-half running room was that Pitt opened up the offense  — throwing on its first nine snaps of the third quarter. After gaining only 36 yards on 17 carries in the first half, the Panthers gained 133 yards on 12 carries in the second.

“As the game went on, things started opening up a little bit,” coach Dave Wannstedt said. “Maybe we were blocking a little better, maybe they were tired, maybe Ray was fresh. Ray’s got some (LeSean McCoy) in him. He’s a different style of back than what Dion is. Dion is going to break tackles; Ray is going to make you miss.”

The O-line’s continued struggles — and Chris Jacobson hurting his ankle — has most sane Pitt fans concerned. Coach Wannstedt does the positive spin.

“We have a lot of upside and a lot of work to do,” Wannstedt said, “It is exciting to be the coach of this team. We have so many young players with so much growth potential and, as long as our players keep working like we have worked over the past couple of weeks, we should expect to improve week after week.

“But, if you watch us play, we’re still not there yet. This happens every year. The execution is not perfect, but, as long as the effort is perfect, I will accept that, and we will get better. That’s the key.

“We struggled running the ball in the first half, and I thought our offensive coaches did a nice job with their adjustments as we started running some draw plays instead of the power runs and we opened things up. [The screens] were by design, we thought they did some things on defense we could take advantage of by using them.”

You know, like stop running the ball to the inside of the O-line. Unfortunately, Coach Wannstedt went back to the claim that this team is so young and inexperienced.

“They are a great group of kids. When you have ten seniors on the team to begin with and two miss this game, I would beg you to check any team’s roster and you won’t find many, if any, that have that amount of youth participating.”

Please stop. Coach Wannstedt has been banging this excuse since Big East Media Days. I called BS earlier.

On the offense, starting  there are 3 redshirt juniors (Chris Jacobson, Greg Gaskins and Henry Hynoski). Not to mention two other juniors in Jon Baldwin and Lucas Nix.

For the defense there are 4 redshirt juniors (Chas Alecxih, Myles Caragein, Max Gruder, Tristan Roberts/Greg Williams) plus junior Antwuan Reed.

That’s 7 starters on offense and 9 starters on defense that are juniors or seniors. That’s not a youth-filled group. Please, never speak of that again.

But he did, and now Joe Starkey is not buying it.

You know what? I’m not sure anyone cares. Wannstedt frequently mentions his team’s inexperience, and it comes off sounding like a preemptive excuse if Pitt loses more games this season.

Besides, it’s not like the Panthers have a bunch of freshmen running around. There isn’t a single freshman in the starting lineup, and every starter but two — tailback Dion Lewis and middle linebacker Dan Mason —  is at least a redshirt sophomore, meaning he is in his third year in the program.

No fewer than seven redshirt juniors start, and several departed players still would be here if Wannstedt had redshirted them as freshmen. They include tight ends Dorin Dickerson and Nate Byham, cornerback Aaron Berry and offensive lineman John Malecki, who spent his freshman year as a backup defensive lineman.

The time for excuses has passed. This is year six of the Wannstedt regime. If it’s true that he is a great recruiter, as he has so often been labeled, then his classes should be bearing bushels of fruit.

Young or old, it’s time to win.

Young or old, anything less than a Big East title is unacceptable for this group.

/deepsigh

The defense had a good day. Even without Greg Romeus. Sacks were accumulated.

Saturday afternoon against New Hampshire, Pitt decided to make up for lost time. The Panthers sacked New Hampshire quarterback R.J. Toman six times as they defeated the Wildcats 38-16.

“We took it extremely personal,” defensive tackle Chas Alecxih said. “We go from leading the country in sacks last year to not one sack? It was embarrassing, quite frankly.”

Defensive end Greg Romeus missed the game with a bad back, giving redshirt junior Brandon Lindsey (Aliquippa) his first career start and putting more pressure on Alecxih and senior end Jabaal Sheard to provide pressure. Alecxih had a career high three sacks, while Lindsey had two and Sheard one.

“Everyone knows Brandon can do it,” Alecxih said. “What the coaches told him is that with Greg out, we can’t let the production drop. You’ve got to keep the production up and he did it.”

Now they have to prepare for Miami. Both teams will absolutely need that game.





I’ll be the 1st one to admit that I was too optimistic about the condition of our “O” line. Two games in and I agree, no interior run game is present. I thought that we would be able to establish a solid run game against NH but it didn’t happen (with one 64 yard exception, when Graham exploded up the middle for the late TD). Now with Jacobson having an ankle issue, it gets gloomier. Our only hope against Miami will be to continue to develop the passing game, giving Sunseri the chance with play action and screens to prevent them from stacking the line against the run. I think Tino has demonstrated that he can handle more responsibility in the passing game at this point. For some unknown reason the “O” line appears more competant during pass protection, I say play to your strength. On defense, a different story. We are deep and fast there. It was a relief to watch our “D” flying around with abandon while racking up 6 sacks in spite of having a couple key starters out. If you watched the game, there also were a bunch of QB hurries caused by them as well. I hope Romeus is OK for Miami though, cause we’re going to need all of our horses on defense to keep up with Miami, I fear.

Comment by Dr Tom 09.13.10 @ 8:12 am

On the recruiting front we keep adding running backs, qb’s, defensive backs/linemen, etc.
THE ABSOLUTE #1 PRIORITY IS AN ALL OUT EFFORT TO ADD QUALITY OFFENSIVE LINEMEN!!! I believe that Pitt has only 2 or 3 scholarships left to offer this year…based on what the O line did (or in their case was unable to do) against “mighty” UNH I fear that we are in major trouble against Miami, ND, Cinn, WVU and possibly South Florida.
Make no mistake about it UNH is not quality competition when compared with the Miami’s of the world. My fear is that we lose another 1st stringer on the O line to injury and call the season over. We HAVE NO DEPTH!!

Comment by isnore 09.13.10 @ 9:54 am

They have a walk on starting at center. Give me a break. If they played in any other conference, this team would get throttled.
They are a bunch of gibronis with a handful of legit D1 – NFL prospects.
What I find amazing is that this program seems to sign the number of NFL stars it does.
Don’t get me wrong, I root for Pitt. But, watching fringe D1 players play against other fringe D1 players is not exactly exciting football. It’s even worse when they play at home in front of 25,000 … my bad, paid attendance 60,000.

Comment by pitt79 09.13.10 @ 10:39 am

Pitt79 – I thought attendance was pretty good Saturday. The Student sections were completely full (and loud – the students are becoming better fans each year). The home side (both levels) was ~90% full, as was the lower bowl on the closed end and visiting sides. The only areas that were sparsely populated were the closed end upper deck and the sides of the visiting upper deck.

People arrived late and left early, but for most of the game the stadium as pretty full. I’d estimate that just under 50,000 were there. I’ll take that against a FCS team.

Comment by JTS 09.13.10 @ 11:04 am

HOW IN THE WORLD DID WE LET OUR O-LINE GET SO DEPLETED! A WALK ON STARTING AT CENTER, WHO EVEN IF HE PLAYS DECENT,WILL BE GONE NEXT YEAR AND WE’LL BE BACK IN THE SAME SITUATION. AND ANOTHER THING, I THOUGHT THE PLAYERS WERE SUPPOSED BE IN GREAT SHAPE,A COUPLE OF THOSE LINEMEN HAVE BIGGER GUTS THAN MY BROTHER-IN-LAW WALLY.

Comment by CATAMOUNT 09.13.10 @ 11:44 am

People keep harping on how “real teams don’t start a walk on at center”.

This is total BS, look at number 1 Alabama. They start a walk-on at safety. He had a pick vs. PSU. So please stop bringing up the point in every thread that walk-ons starting means a team is a joke, its just false.

Comment by Henry Hynoceros 09.13.10 @ 11:46 am

HH,

I agree that the “walk-on” argument is BS. No one seems too upset about Chas Alecxih being a former walk-on starting at DT. It is a ridiculous distraction, that has become an unfortunate shorthand for the fact that the team has not recruited the O-line — particularly center — well.

What makes Karabin egregious to me, is that he also is converted to center. He played offensive guard in high school and at Air Force prep. The back-up center is a converted defensive tackle. These are the best options Pitt has for center. In that respect, it is inexcusable at the spot to have failed to recruit/develop any centers.

Comment by Chas 09.13.10 @ 11:53 am

And as far as having fringe players with a few of NFL talent also a ridiculous comment. This is a team that last year handled UNC and their boatloat of NFL prospects in the bowl game. Its clearly not a team of “fringe” players. Fans need to relax, they’ll come along. And if you say its not exciting to watch this team your clearly no Pitt fan, sorry.

Comment by Henry Hynoceros 09.13.10 @ 11:48 am

[…] good chance of walking out of Columbus with a win last week against the Buckeyes.  Still, as both Pitt Blather and Pitt Script said, a win is a win is a […]


Henry, the monster programs attract kids as walk-ons even though they could get scholarships at “lesser” D1-A schools. The Alabama player you mentioned passed on two 1-A scholarship offers because he wanted to play at Alabama.

I don’t know Karabin’s recruiting history but I doubt he had offers from 1-A schools.

Regardless of that, the Alabama kid gets on the field due to talent, not due to desperation by the coaching staff.

Comment by Chuck Morris 09.13.10 @ 12:08 pm

I believe Karabin’s offers were from Air Force, Army, and Navy. At least we know he is a smart kid! I don’t mind the switch from DL to OL, it worked out pretty good for Russ Grimm, but we do need to target and get one or two top OL in every class.

Comment by HbgFrank 09.13.10 @ 12:40 pm

Please, every program has a couple guys who were walk-ons that earned playing time and became successful. Who could forget the million stories about Owen Schmidt driving around from college to college looking for someone that would let him play?

The fact that we’re starting a walk-on doesn’t make Pitt some loser football program. It makes them just like a lot of other decent NCAA teams.

It’s just that this walk-on pretty much sucks at his job.

Look, I know that mentioning “the Stillers” sends some Pitt fans into a blind, frothing rage, but the interior of their offensive line IMMEDIATELY got better when they got rid of whatever stiff they had and put Pouncey in.

Maybe Lippert doesn’t have the experience, but I’m willing to bet that he has more talent than Karabin. According to Rivals, Lippert was a 4 star recruit (I don’t remember that, but it says it right here link to pittsburgh.rivals.com

Now, I believe he was a defensive lineman in high school, but the rating leads me to believe that he is the better athlete and, experience be damned, should start.

The walk-on story is nice, and we’re all proud of him for sticking it out and earning his scholarship. But, that doesn’t win ballgames.

Comment by Jimbo Covert's my Dad 09.13.10 @ 1:57 pm

the kids not starting b/c he stuck it out, its because right now he’s the better football player. Maybe we should just play everyone based on their star ratings in HS? Not saying its the best thing to start someone who walked on, or that Karabin is a stud of a C or anything. But, he’s starting because he’s the best option right now. Now if we have guys like that on the O-Line, that is why we shouldn’t try to win by overpowering teams and why the playbook must continue to open up.

Comment by Henry Hynoceros 09.13.10 @ 6:02 pm

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