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November 16, 2011

The Calm Before the Brawl

Filed under: Football,Opponent(s) — Chas @ 5:26 pm

A week off from football before Thanksgiving and the Backyard Brawl. The win definitely helps with a sense of overall calm. It’s been a rough season to date. The transition on the offense has been painful at times. The injuries have also been, well, painful. I’m reasonably certain almost the entire Pitt fanbase has watched Sunseri drop back this year and uttered, “1… 2… 3… Throw the damn ball!”

Yet, a good win on the road helps. Even if it was aided by a video game or what not.

“I said on Tuesday we have guys that miss class because they want to stay (up) all night and play that video game, whatever it was,” Strong said Monday at his weekly news conference. “I didn’t even know what it was, but it’s such a big deal.”

Gamers can participate online and play at the same time or on teams. “Modern Warfare 3” has a storyline that makes the player part of a special forces operation in search of a terrorist.

Strong said he knew it had engulfed the team by hearing players talk about the video game, most simply refer to as “MW3,” and seeing their posts about it on Twitter.

Sophomore strong safety Hakeem Smith was so excited he posted this tweet the night it was released: “Call of Duty at midnight!!!! #Gamerwithapassion.”

Receiver Damian Copeland tweeted at Smith: “Boi You Know U A Gamer When U have To Tape Your Fingers Up Before You Play The Game” — that was in reference to “Modern Warfare 3,” not actually taking the field to play football.

Kicker Chris Philpott posted “On that dutayyy with @G_Scruggs (defensive end Greg Scruggs) scruggy,” that prompted a retweet from quarterback Will Stein that he was “jealous.”

While he was at it, Strong also blamed the midnight release of the final Harry Potter movie on DVD on Friday as playing a role. What happens if the Cards lose to UConn this weekend? Will the opening of the final Twilight movie be cited?

After beating Louisville, Coach Graham said nice things about the O-line.

The Panthers have used six different offensive line combinations because of injuries.

“We’ve now had a few weeks with the same group of guys,” said Graham, citing offensive line injuries as a reason for early struggles. “I thought we blocked really well, came off the football. Repetition in the lineup helps.”

Center Ryan Turnley and tackle Greg Gaskins earned special mention for their performance in the 21-14 win over Louisville.

“Greg Gaskins really sticks out to me. A sleeper,” Graham said Monday. “Him and Turnley.”

And he’s still hoping that Lucas Nix might finally return to the lineup.

“I’ve been saying for three weeks we’re hopeful about Nix,” Graham said. “He was real close coming back last week. He was able to practice some and get some reps, he just wasn’t able to be 100 percent. I am anticipating that he would be back with the extra time. I’d be surprised if he wasn’t.”

And we’ll keep wondering.

Not to diminish the good work of the O-line, but it also has to be noted that it was injury ravaged weakness vs. injury ravaged weakness with Louisville.

Linebacker Preston Brown didn’t practice until Thursday during week he was the league’s defensive Player of the Week. Defensive end Marcus Smith, who leads the team in sacks, suffered a high ankle sprain that cost him the start against West Virginia and kept him out entirely against Pitt.

Linemen Randy Salmon, Roy Philon and Greg Scruggs all have played through ailments.

Add the disciplinary issues — safety Shenard Holton has been suspended indefinitely, and cornerback Adrian Bushell was held out of the Pitt game — and all of a sudden the depth thinned out considerably.

Annoying to put it back into perspective, but no one should be operating under any delusion that the O-line has suddenly found its way.

In general, Coach Graham seemed to be in a fairly upbeat mood. Especially when it came to talking about the future for the team.

Few positions have Graham as excited about the future as the defensive line, and that’s because that unit has plenty of young players who he said fit into the “explosive” category.

Sophomore defensive lineman Aaron Donald has been a fixture since the start of the season, and a few others, specifically freshmen Khaynin Mosley-Smith and LaQuentin Smith, have come on strong in recent weeks.

Graham said those young players, as well as freshman Ejuan Price, are getting experience and improving.

“It is exciting, the power that Aaron Donald has, his potential is off the chart,” Graham said on his weekly teleconference. “Then Juan Price is going to be really special. He is one of the most gifted players we have. LaQuentin has been just phenomenal when he has been in there, and he is guy I’d have no problem playing him every snap.

“And then [Mosley-Smith] is a guy we continue to get more snaps out of. He is an explosive guy and he is very athletic for a big guy and that bodes well for that group.

“The athleticism of those guys up front is impressive and to be so young, is exciting for the future.”

Coming up is the Brawl, and questions are starting. WVU Coach Dana Holgorsen was asked how the transition for his offense has been going and about comparisons to what Pitt has had to do.

On how his start at West Virginia has compared to other places he’s coached

Offensively, slower. This is more like how it was at Texas Tech in 2000 than it was when I went to Houston or Oklahoma State. The philosophy offensively at Houston and Oklahoma State were similar. There were guys that were used to doing things similar to how we run them. The personnel was in place to where we could handle that. We’re not there offensively. It goes back to Texas Tech when we were changing a lot of philosophies and changing the way things were done offensively.

The biggest thing is finding out a way to win. I don’t care where we’re at offensively. It’s about what we’ve got to do to win. We’re not happy with the three losses, but it’s better than four. We’ll keep trying to get better and keep trying to figure out how to put our guys in position to win, which is ultimately the only thing that matters. Things will get easier and easier the longer we’re here.

On if he’s had to slow down the offense a little bit like Pitt coach Todd Graham has done

I’ve changed a lot about how we call plays and how fast we call them. There are times that we try to change it up and try to catch people off guard. I know that Pitt coach Todd Graham has the same philosophy as far as what he’s done for the last three years and what he’s trying to put in. He’s dealing with the same thing that I am as far as changing up what it used to be.

I wasn’t aware that he does that. I haven’t watched film yet, but I know what his philosophy is and what his schemes are. We’ll learn more about how they do it in the next few weeks.

I’ve changed quite a bit in what the play-calling is and how fast it gets done and the amount of plays that we’re running. All that stuff is a little different than what I’ve been used to.

It gives you an idea of how far from the spread offense of Dick Rod, WVU had actually moved in Stewart’s time. Despite having potentially excellent fits for his system in Geno Smith, Tavon Austin, etc. It hasn’t been that simple a transition when they have been playing a completely different style.





well, I wouldn’t venture to say wvu has had too many problems offensively because geno is in the top five in the country in throwing yards per game. wvus defense is what has struggled this year. can’t wait for the brawl h2p

Comment by pk 11.16.11 @ 6:08 pm

Smith is a big guy with a strong arm but has had a few bad games with multiple interceptions. I believe if our D-line can pressure him, he can give up an INT or 2.

On the other side, just like any other QB, Tino does much better when he he is not being hurried (remember, while throwing the ball away is better than a sack, it is still not a positive play especially when the QB has to do it often.)

Comment by wbb 11.16.11 @ 7:25 pm

Good points Chas.

Our OL, while doing yeoman work in the face of injury adversity of major impact, isn’t a complete unit yet. We are still last in the nation in sacks given up. Credit our QB for a lot of those but the OL isn’t innocent in this either.

But, here is some good news for the OL. When we lose a star RB like Graham and still rush for 180 and 200 yards in our last two games, you know they are doing something right. Remember that last season, with our two best OL in there in Nix & Jacobson and an experienced supporting cast, we averaged 165 ypg on the ground.

Todd Graham is doing things the right way IMO. At my last count we have had 12 true freshman play and two highly contributing 1st year transfers in Hubie Graham and Zach Brown.

That is at least 14 players who weren’t on the roster last season who have been getting PT, some with a lot of opportunity to contribute – KK Smith, Price, L. Smith, Bennett, Patton, R. Jones, Anderson, Cory Davis, Brinson, etc… It shows that Graham is not afraid to start changing the guard in his first year to be ready for future seasons. Those kids mentioned above are blessed with the speed Graham wants on the field and we’ll see more freshman from this year’s recruiting class play next season also.

All that with a crap chance to actually get players to PITT last January, having only one month of recruiting coming off a highly publicized rough coaching transition.

To me the future looks pretty bright as we have an excellent nucleus going forward into 2012 and 2013.

Comment by Reed 11.17.11 @ 7:23 am

Reed, while recruiting rankings must be taken with a grain of salt, one of the services has Pitt’s 2012 class currently at 24th … not too bad. And I beleieve that this doesn’t account for the transfers that will be eligible next year .. to my recollection, 2 from Michigan and 1 ea from UNC and PSU.

Comment by wbb 11.17.11 @ 8:43 am

There is talk about another Michigan player transferring to Pitt. Anyone know who this is?

Comment by JD 11.17.11 @ 1:58 pm

wbb – I agree that is was a very good job of recruiting by Graham and staff. Back in August I took a look at the whole of the incoming class, including transfers, and figured we had a 3+ stars average.

But I am also pretty skeptical of rankings but, as far as discussions go they are about the only benchmarks for us fans to use until we see the kids actually play.

More importantly we are seeing that the players Graham specifically targeted, regardless of rankings and offers, have done pretty well for him.

That is what I think bodes well for the future. He has a strong vision of what he wants his team to be and is able to recruit toward that.

BTW folks and speaking of recruiting and the future; E.J. Banks has been working out at QB on the Scout Team this season and in the scrimmage they had this week. You read it here earlier as I posted a while ago that Banks had all the skills that Graham needs in a QB for his offense…

“…hails from Western Pennsylvania and was a standout for Montour High…was twice selected first team Associated Press Class AAA All-State…Pittsburgh Post-Gazette “Fabulous 22″…Pittsburgh Tribune-Review “Terrific 25″…named to the ESPNU150 (No. 135 overall and No. 13 among “athletes”)…rated the No. 13 prospect in Pennsylvania by SuperPrep…broke into Montour’s starting lineup as a quarterback and safety his freshman year…was a 1,000-yard passer each of his final three seasons, throwing for 3,338 yards and 23 touchdowns during that span…rushed for 1,015 yards and 14 TDs as a senior and 920 yards with 10 TDs during his junior season…led Montour to a 12-1 record and the WPIAL Class AAA championship game as a junior…played under Montour coach Lou Cerro…also lettered in basketball and track in high school.”

He also had an offer sheet that lists some very good football schools who wanted him; ND, FSU, OSU, Tenn, Illinois, Ga Tech…

Maybe not as a starter but I think he’ll be in the mix during spring camp to see how well he does with the big boys.

At the very least, should he make the three-deep at QB, it allows Jones to go back to WR and Wildcat QB full time. Don’t let anyone fool you about this either – Jones has been the solid #2 QB for the past three weeks as the staff has only one or two specific plays for Myers to run.

Comment by Reed 11.18.11 @ 6:30 am

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