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May 5, 2015

As early as December — barely a month into the college basketball season — the stats were already damning the college basketball season as likely to be one of the slowest. Sure enough, it came to pass.

Everyone has their favorite reasons. Lack of skill by incoming players — which goes in several directions. To the pernicious effect of AAU basketball in this era and all the societal blame that follows.  Or that it necessitates coaches of those particular teams to slow the game down to give them a better chance to compete.

The increased emphasis on defense, coupled with the rising trend of statistical analysis and film scouting to have players in better position. Correlated with that is the use of offensive efficiency which values the possessions and slows things down on the offensive end as well.

An obvious issue has been the reversal of the emphasis on the block/charge from the previous season.

The previous record for sluggish pace was set just two seasons ago with 65.9 possessions per 40 minutes in 2012-13, which led to the lowest-scoring season since 1952. The reaction last season was a sweeping crackdown on contact with the ballhandler and a block/charge interpretation that was friendlier to the offense. It appeared that coaches, fans, media, and officials had accepted this new approach in the college game. At the beginning of last season, fouls were called in bunches, pace and scoring increased significantly, and the reaction wasn’t completely negative. The games were choppy and full of fouls, but we could all look forward to the day when there were fewer called as players and coaches adjusted, and the game would emerge more free-flowing and with fewer obnoxious defenders sliding in to take obnoxious charges.

And fewer fouls were called as the season progressed, just as it happens in every season, but then everything ground to a halt in tournament play. The postseason tournaments were played at a pace slower than even the previous record-breaking season. This year, the sport is picking up where it left off in March with what is probably the slowest-paced start to the season in the sport’s history. (We obviously don’t have data going back far enough to know definitively, but realistically, only some pre-shot clock years in the early 80’s are possible competition.)

Coaches howled about the block/charge change after last season and it was revoked for the previous season. Guess what happened? Less twos, more threes.

Strong evidence to support this idea is that teams are struggling to score inside the arc much more than they did a year ago. Last season at this time, players across the country made 48.7 percent of their two-point attempts. This season, that number has plummeted to 47.4 percent. Additionally, teams are taking fewer of those shots. Last season, teams devoted 32.5 percent of their field goal attempts to three-pointers early in the season. This year, that’s risen to 34.0 percent.

It seems reasonable that the fear of a charge has teams increasingly avoiding the paint and hunting for a good jump shot, and that’s leading to longer possessions. If so, any change in the shot clock is going to have to come with a plan to reduce the incentive for secondary defenders to stand in the lane and get run over.

There is no indication that the return to being more NBA-esque or offensive friendly viewings of the block/charge rule will be coming to pass. Instead, the likely result will be a reduction of the shot clock from 35 to 30 seconds.

“Now there’s a real decent chance,” [NCAA rules committee chairman and Belmont coach Rick] Byrd said. “It’s pretty evident a lot more coaches are leaning that way. The opinion of coaches on the shot clock has moved significantly to reducing it from 35 to 30. And all indicators are pointing toward that.”

The rules committee will meet May 12-15 in Indianapolis and review all the data and surveys on the matter from this past season. The NIT, CBI and CIT postseason tournaments all experimented with the 30-second shot clock this past March. The rules committee can change rules every odd year.

“I think it’s fair to say the buzz about the game is that scoring in the 50s can be ugly,” Byrd said. “There’s a lot of talk about it — more coverage than ever before. All of that has created acceptance from the coaches’ side.”

Byrd said coaches, fans and media are expecting the rules committee to do something that impacts scoring.

The problem is — and this is my opinion based on what I saw in the NIT and CBI games I watched — is that it isn’t going to do too much good. The 3-point line will remain the same, the lane won’t be widened to create any additional room under the basket. Heck, it isn’t even a given that the block/charge arc will be extended from 3- to 4-feet.

The moving the clock up a few seconds will create a extra possessions, but that will be offset for plenty of teams by turnovers and empty possessions.

The other thing, is that absent any other changes, it will be a greater incentive for teams to emphasize defense even further. Ramp up pressure in the backcourt. Clutch and grab inside to prevent getting the ball inside for a big man to post up. Use more of a packline defense to force teams to pass along the perimeter, and just hoist jump shots as the clock winds down because there is no room to work the ball inside. Teams don’t have to play defense as long, so there is less chance for a breakdown.

Teams don’t attack inside as much because the incentives aren’t worth it. There isn’t enough space, and the way the college game is called, it simply doesn’t give sufficient freedom of movement.

I love college basketball. Heck, I really like good defensive teams like Virginia that often executes with such precision that is almost hypnotic. Too often, though, what you see are a lot of defense first teams that just count on officials getting tired of calling everything. Mucking things inside to make teams unwilling to go inside if there is no reward.

If college basketball is serious about increasing offense, then the shot clock is the least of the issues. All it is, is just the easiest thing to do.





TX Panther,
In Kansas they still use Royal Elite typewriters! Hard to get hold of any rule breaking story when there’s no computers or internet access there!!!

Comment by pittman4ever 05.06.15 @ 9:41 am

lol pittman

That brings back memory of banging the keys of our old Underwood typewriter. Thing weighed a ton.

Things have sure changed a lot in a couple decades.

Comment by Emel 05.06.15 @ 9:45 am

Comment by Emel 05.06.15 @ 9:48 am

Duke had scandal they booted someone off team

Comment by punxypanther 05.06.15 @ 9:54 am

Not having a rival on the schedule and certainly in conference games is not helping the Pitt brand.

None of these teams we play have any feelings toward Pitt at all. You got to have 1 or 2 teams(schools) that truly hate you.

For that reason, much as I don’t really like it, Pitt and WVCC need to start playing again.

They at least hate us.

Comment by Emel 05.06.15 @ 9:55 am

PSU and ND are good rival games. Hope we play PSU every year.

Comment by Frank MD 05.06.15 @ 10:01 am

Plus that was another game (or at least one game) where Pitt was featured on national TV.

It’s still ranking #11 of biggest rival games.

link to athlonsports.com

We can’t just throw that away.

Comment by Emel 05.06.15 @ 10:01 am

ND fans don’t truly hate us, since they’ve owned us in football.

Comment by Emel 05.06.15 @ 10:08 am

“The football rivalry is the 14th oldest in the United States and is typically shown on national television. In the past, the Backyard Brawl has been seen on ABC, CBS, ESPN, and ESPN2. Through the 104 games played between these two schools, Pitt leads the series 61–40–3. On Saturday, December 1, 2007 the 100th edition of the Backyard Brawl took place at Mountaineer Field in Morgantown, West Virginia. The 4–7 Panthers upset the 2nd–ranked Mountaineers 13–9, knocking West Virginia out of the BCS National Championship Game. The game was one of the most important Backyard Brawls, one of the biggest upsets for the Pittsburgh Panthers, and one of the biggest upsets of the season, voted as the “Game of the Year” by ESPNU.[2] The Mountaineers got revenge when the series returned to Morgantown in 2009, upsetting the No. 8 Panthers 19–16 on a game-ending field goal.

The 2009 Backyard Brawl was the most watched game in the history of ESPN2.”

Too much history in this series of hated rivals, not to play this game.

Comment by Emel 05.06.15 @ 10:09 am

Comment by Emel 05.06.15 @ 10:13 am

EMel…speaking of history, Pitt/WVU was the first game ever broadcast on radio

Still, I don’t even want to play them in croquet!

Comment by Dan 72 05.06.15 @ 10:21 am

wbb @ 9:20
PSU scandal free for thirty years? State Police did not enter State College and State College and Campus Police were to take FB offenders to Joe and he would decide who was charged. You can get away with that in a small isolated rural town, not in an urban setting. No issues off field; none you knew about back then.

Comment by rkb 05.06.15 @ 11:07 am

right rkb.

As we saw they control the police and even had the District Attorney who was investigating……just disappear off the FACE OF THE EARTH !!

So only God (and in this case the Devil) know what was going on in Creepy Valley all those decades.

Comment by Emel 05.06.15 @ 11:11 am

And might yet still be going on !!!

Comment by Emel 05.06.15 @ 11:12 am

True. Above based on sources I had.

Comment by rkb 05.06.15 @ 11:15 am

I will take a contrarian view regarding the school out east not having any issues before Sandusky. Look, if your athletic administration is so powerful to cover up Sandusky for twenty five plus years, it is also powerful enough to do just about anything illegal, including recruiting. I will disagree with you that the Sandusky cover up didn’t have anything to do with that schools success. Unless you live in the athletic administration space, you can’t understand the amount of hyper paranoia that attaches to big time football program and its coaches. They are afraid of every news story and how it impacts recruiting. That to me is why that school never reported Sandusky. They were afraid that the social response might crush their program. And, they would be without a defensive coordinator that knew how to play defense and recruit. So I say, yes, it did have a direct correlation to on field success in my opinion. College sports in general is inherently dirty. Money and success do that to people and entities.

I would not say that school was clean in recruiting. They just weren’t caught. As many weren’t. With 125 division 1 programs, my sense is that there are probably 80 shades of grey with recruiting and I have no problem with it. Call it what it is and be a realist. These kids are athlete students.

I heard a funny comment last week on Mike and Mike. They said that if you are a qb going to college, Urban Meyer is the best coach for that. Did I miss something? Who has he coached that has been an nfl star? Seriously, I can’t think of one. Is it all about perception. Maybe we get some defenders based on our new guy! We surely didn’t with the quarterback whisperer.

Comment by dhuffdaddy 05.06.15 @ 11:21 am

rkb, I was primarily referring to recruiting and/or booster scandals. I am well aware of hushed up on campus arrests … but certainly don’t recall any major incidents.

Comment by wbb 05.06.15 @ 11:24 am

dhuffdaddy, the Sandusky shower incident took place in 2002, about 35 years after JoePa became HC.

Comment by wbb 05.06.15 @ 11:34 am

wbb, I get what you’re saying but it is a slippery slope once it starts even with boosters. There was a slight problem with institutional control and oversight, nothing criminal or rising to level of punishable infraction but we now have Team Pittsburgh. You raise an arguable point but it is a slippery slope.

Comment by rkb 05.06.15 @ 11:36 am

Wasn’t an incident brought to Pedo State authorities in 1998.

And I would think Sandusky was engaged in that stuff long prior to 1998.

Here’s something that was in 1990.

U.S. President George H. W. Bush praised the group as a “shining example” of charity work in a 1990 letter,[5] one of that president’s much-promoted “Thousand points of light” encouragements to volunteer community organizations.[6] Citing Sandusky’s work with The Second Mile charity to provide care for foster children, then U.S. Senator Rick Santorum honored Sandusky with an Angels in Adoption award in 2002.[7]

Comment by Emel 05.06.15 @ 12:27 pm

a “shining example”. Yea if you’re a pedophile.

Anybody hear of the Franklin Boystown scandal.

Comment by Emel 05.06.15 @ 12:28 pm

When you take into account, that Spanier, Curley and Schultz have still not been put on trial, and nor has even a trial date been set (as far as I know).

Makes you wonder, how deep does this Rabbit Hole goes ?

Comment by Emel 05.06.15 @ 12:37 pm

@ Dan72. That 1st collegiate football radio broadcast between Pitt and the Hoopies was way back in 1921. The reason was all about KDKA and it’s leadership in broadcasting.
Sorry thing about it though was the only people who got the game were the city slickers in Pittsburgh. Plus you had to own a radio. Those hillbillies in West Virginia were still trying to get electricity into their shacks back then let alone a radio to use the juice once a line was run up in der hollow.

Comment by Dr. Tom 05.06.15 @ 12:48 pm

Come on Doc, it’s a holler. Hock….poo

Comment by Nick 05.06.15 @ 12:55 pm

Comment by Emel 05.06.15 @ 12:57 pm

Hoop news.

Seton Hall transfer guard Sterling Gibbs remains the biggest name available in college basketball ‘free agency’, if you will. While numerous schools have pursued Gibbs to this point, he recently trimmed his list of potential schools. The good news is that the Panthers have made the cut, per ESPN’s Jeff Borzello:

Seton Hall transfer Sterling Gibbs tells ESPN his final list is Pittsburgh, Ohio State, Connecticut, Baylor, North Carolina State and VCU.

— Jeff Borzello (@jeffborzello) May 5, 2015

Comment by Emel 05.06.15 @ 1:30 pm

If we get Sterling Gibbs, and we have the other Sterling transfer who also is Guard.

We could then sit Robinson.

And that would be Golden !!!

Comment by Emel 05.06.15 @ 1:34 pm

wbb really? He got caught in 2002. Do you honestly believe that the shower incident of 2002 was the first? C’mon man! He didn’t wake up in 2002 and start his perversion.

His issues go way back before that and if we could ever get to the truth, you would probably see that his behavior started before he was hired at that school. C’mon now, read and study the data related to the perversion and you will understand it doesn’t manifest late in life. It clearly was a black eye much earlier and I understand their head coaches predicament of telling the truth in the 80’s or trying to sweep it under the carpet. It is an ethical dilemma. He failed the ethical standard in my opinion. Sorry.

The Freeh Report was commissioned by the university and it only asked them to do 2 things. Understand that they did not ask them to investigate how long or when that stuff started and who knew what. You have to read critically. Most people believe the Freeh Report was the end all and turned to the juicy stuff. The most important part of the report was the first couple of paragraphs where they wrote the scope of the assignment by the school. It was well focused to NOT give them an opportunity to investigate. If that school wanted to really know what happened, they would have told Freeh to investigate everything. C’mon man! This is why the whole thing was a farce and continhues to be.

Comment by dhuffdaddy 05.06.15 @ 1:48 pm

~ ddaddy

So in the other words…the ‘fix was in’ before the investigation even began.

Typical whitewash.

Comment by Emel 05.06.15 @ 1:58 pm

My reason for ND to be a rival FB game is because I like to beat them every time. Remember Dorsett’s runs against them.

Comment by Frank MD 05.06.15 @ 1:59 pm

I agree. The Devil is the only one that will truly know what transpired at Pedo State since Paturdo became coach. I believe once Poopy Pants sold his soul for a national championship, Creepy Valley came into existence. So the Devil has been pulling the strings at the Cult for the past 30 years at least. State Penn still needs an exorcism.

Comment by TX Panther 05.06.15 @ 2:01 pm

link to philly.com

This is how nuts the university is. If link doesnt work go to the site. Hilarious. Think they could cover up booster stuff. Just sue the facts out of existence. As Churchill said ‘history belongs to the victor.’

Comment by rkb 05.06.15 @ 2:02 pm

For Christ’s sake, I know this was going to happen. The Sandusky scandal had nothing to do with the point I was trying to make @ 9:21 .. whether it was 2002 or 1998.

The issue was that the type of players recruited by JoePa was more than sufficient for his first 30 years or so. The did very well on and off the field. Then all of a sudden, they couldn’t compete on the field, which caused them to recruit different types (and go to different areas) and resulted in a lot of off-the-field issues …. much, much more than what they ever had experienced before.

Comment by wbb 05.06.15 @ 2:56 pm

My point was all about the players that were recruited … not the kids that were abused.

Comment by wbb 05.06.15 @ 2:59 pm

FYI

Paul Zeise @PaulZeise
#Pitt guard Josh Newkirk has knee surgery. Will be out 4-6 months. Could still be ready for start of season

Comment by wbb 05.06.15 @ 3:07 pm

Josh Newkirk out 4-6 months. Knee surgery

Comment by Yeti 05.06.15 @ 3:08 pm

Pitt guard Josh Newkirk had arthroscopic surgery to repair damage in his knee today.

The surgery corrected Newkirk’s lateral meniscus along with a micro fracture on the outside part of his left knee. He is expected to miss to miss the next 4-6 months of workouts.

“We expect Josh to make a full recovery and rejoin his teammates for the upcoming 2015-16 season,” Pitt coach Jamie Dixon said. “The surgery was a success, and we know that Josh will work hard during the rehabilitation period.”

Newkirk averaged 5.9 points, 2.7 assists and 1.3 rebounds in 34 games this past season.

link to post-gazette.com

Comment by Yeti 05.06.15 @ 3:10 pm

Speaking of dubious behavior leading to championships …. as if we didn’t already know it … ad Belichek to the names above (Saban, Calhoun, Myer, Boeheim, Pitino and Calipari)

NFL finally ruled that deflate gate did have substance and that Brady was ‘generally aware’ that the balls were deflated

Comment by wbb 05.06.15 @ 3:19 pm

The scenarios you cite wbb are not mutually exclusive. They are complimentary. The kids recruited by Sandusky would not have been recruited had he been doing jail time in the 80’s. You can’t possibly say that the kids that were recruited to play still would have gone to PSU? Conversely, I can’t definitely say they wouldn’t have.

A paranoid head coach, could and would cover that stuff up in the 80’s but not today. If there is anyone doubting the paranoia of a P5 head coach, please speak up. Our new guy, won’t let media in because he is paranoid about who he can trust and what will leak out and plays and…keep going.

Comment by dhuffdaddy 05.06.15 @ 3:39 pm

Shady McCoy. Have some class and quit being a moron and embarrassing yourself and Pitt.

Comment by Upittbaseball 05.06.15 @ 4:17 pm

Played like shit last year and has to make excuses.

Comment by Upittbaseball 05.06.15 @ 4:18 pm

There are stories going back to the 80’s re athletic department interns visiting students who were non-pedo victims to convince them that they should not pursue charges on whatever (not a crime to do this – “how will Joepa win on Saturday” type stuff). IMO it began to really go bad when Ped St lost to Alamaba in `979 or so and they had to take more at risk athletes which can go bad at any university. It is just that out of the media spotlight it was easier to keep quiet. sight of media. Most athletes were good people but trouble can happen. Why wasn’t Sandy barred from campus, why was he in President suite when Joe got his big win right before his firing? Was PSU afraid of non-pedo stuff Sandy could raise? wbb I am not sticking you with Pedo stuff just pointing out that a mindset can pervade any program including that sparkling one out east. Just an opinion, Who will the trustees sue next to try to erase history?

Comment by rkb 05.06.15 @ 4:31 pm

Buffalo News all over Shady.

He’s going to wear out his welcome….fast.

link to buckyandsully.buffalonews.com

Comment by Emel 05.06.15 @ 4:44 pm

The Chief Pedo at Pedo State, started coaching their in 1969 for the D-Line.

In 1977 he founded his Pedo front, the 2nd Mile.

I’d be willing to bet, it’s been going on since AT LEAST 1977, if not before then.

He probably concocted that idea after showering, entrapping several boys well before then, and then got the idea to start mass marketing for future prospects.

Dirtbag scum should have got the Death Penalty !

Comment by Emel 05.06.15 @ 4:50 pm

lol wbb

aren’t you glad you posted that at 9am.

Comment by Emel 05.06.15 @ 4:52 pm

“An investigation was initiated by the Pennsylvania attorney general’s office into sexual abuse allegations against Sandusky in 2008.”

Synopsis……Cornhole had to have known that the AG’s office was investigating Pedo State(I think a Pitt Law grad was the leading investigator in AG’s office). And what the ramifications were going to be to their football program if the allegations proved to be true. And what opportunity/advantage that would give Pitt in the recruiting game.

So why did Cornhole dismantle Pitt’s football program in late 2010 ? Which resulted in Pitt’s program being in a state of utter upheaval at the same time as PSU’s, resulting in not being able to capitalize on Pedo State’s self-inflicted wounds.

Comment by Emel 05.06.15 @ 5:02 pm

One could say, because of Cornhole, Pitt’s program was in more upheaval than Psu’s was.

And that took a unique talent to manage that.

Comment by Emel 05.06.15 @ 5:06 pm

The Sandusky cover up had an impact on PSU football fortunes. Poopy could not let the news out during the 90s , he was raising large donations to build the best sports facility in the East which swayed recruits to pick PSU over everyone else. Do you think if the Pedo crimes surfaced in the 1990s or even 1980s the embarrassment would have closed those wallets for building the biggest and best sports facilities. Even that 109,000 stadium may never have happened, as witnessed that after the news broke on Sandusky attendance went down. Penn St supporters always tell us their recruiting is made easier by the large attendance. I’m sure Sandusky cover up saved the golden goose.

Comment by Spindler's Spirit 05.06.15 @ 5:09 pm

lol wbb and emel. Maybe Shady should get Rash Hard as his media relations point man. 🙂

Comment by rkb 05.06.15 @ 5:37 pm

Listen, the point I was trying to make about PSU @ 9:12 am was as it was related to other schools who are in the same dilemma (including Pitt) … do you recruit great players at just about any cost? Where do you draw the line? what priority do you put on winning?

What happened at PSU would not happen anywhere else, so it is mutually exclusive.

Comment by wbb 05.06.15 @ 5:45 pm

While Newkirk disappeared the second half of the season, I doubt he will be back in six months. Micro fracture surgery involves creating small holes in the bare femur in order to PERHAPS stimulate cartilage formation…as there is no longer cartilage present on the articulate surface.

In other words, thing Greg Oden.

Comment by Gas 05.06.15 @ 5:59 pm

It really depends on the extent of the damage. My son had the same surgery and was back playing college baseball in 3 months.

Comment by Rayhpgh 05.06.15 @ 6:10 pm

Put a high priority on winning and be excellent in athletics. Push the boundaries and play with that fine line.

But what Penn State did, created a whole new line…a Pedo line with corrupted morals and sanctioning of child rape.

A cover-up like many know designed to protect the school’s image and keep the money train rolling. Paterno’s legacy was at stake.

These heinous crimes were helped by an insular community and local media and police bought and paid for by the State. And the worship of a false idol who controlled the message, the thought and the actions of the CULT.

Without football, State College is just another poor hick town in PA.

Comment by TX Panther 05.06.15 @ 6:29 pm

I think we could have seen the last of Newkirk.

Microfracture surgery took Amari’s Stoudimire’s game away as well. You lose your quickness a lot. Which is all Newkirk has going for him.

Tough break, between that and having to sit behind the Pet.

Comment by Emel 05.06.15 @ 6:44 pm

And yes Cornhole did everything in his powers to give Pitt the death penalty without aid of a child rape scandal. That ASS Clown has earned his ticket to HELL.

Comment by TX Panther 05.06.15 @ 7:05 pm

Amen TX you summed up what I muddied up all day Thanks.
Also huffdaddy excellent post on branding which is what the false idol did with his “Penn state way” garbage that the cultists still believe, smart but warped. Wish I had been in that class.
Free Range Blatherites. H2P

Comment by rkb 05.06.15 @ 7:40 pm

The Grand Experiment was genius marketing. But it is now known as the Grand Excrement.

Comment by TX Panther 05.06.15 @ 8:00 pm

Sorry to learn of Josh Newkirk’s knee injury but it wasn’t like the Blather faithful didn’t know that something was wrong with him this season. Wish him the best in his rehabilitation and recovery. He still has two years to tap that potential he flashed year 1! Way to play through the pain Josh! UPone

Comment by UPone 05.06.15 @ 10:22 pm

From the Trib: West Virginia offensive tackle Russell Haughton-James posted $5,000 bond Tuesday morning and was released from jail after being arrested on a burglary charge.
West Virginia State Police said they responded to a domestic violence call about 6 p.m. Sunday at a Morgantown, W.Va., apartment. That is when Haughton-James, 22, originally of Plantation, Fla., was arrested. He was taken to North Central Regional Jail in Greenwood, W.Va., and faces one count of felony burglary.
A jail spokeswoman confirmed that Haughton-James posted bond Tuesday. (No couches were reported being burned – yet) ikr
“I have been made aware of the situation,” coach Dana Holgorsen said in a statement released by the university. “I am gathering the facts at this time and will to continue to monitor. I have no further comment at this time.”
Haughton-James is subject to disciplinary actions under the student conduct code.

That disciplinary action may be cleaning up after a couch is burned – stay tuned…

Comment by Erie Express 05.07.15 @ 4:26 am

From the P-G: Woodland Hills coach George Novak met with Sanders Tuesday and Novak said “he didn’t ‘decommit.’?”

“He just wants to make some visits to make sure he made the right decision. I guess Penn State took that as a decommitment,” Novak said.

Sanders has been to Pitt a few times, but also has scholarship offers from Ohio State, Alabama and LSU, among others.

“I told him that I thought it was too early to make a decision last summer,” Novak said.

I guess the Pedo State cult isn’t happy that Mr. Sanders has a wondering eye. Here’s hoping Miles is receiving good advice – I believe coach Novak can be considered a “good” advisor.

People will respect your character more than your accomplishments (except UPitt). A key to character is trust. I think the Pedo State FB program has demonstrated they are “lacking” character, from top to bottom. Maybe Miles sees the difference (HCPN vs Franlinsteen).

HTP and good character!

Comment by Erie Express 05.07.15 @ 4:42 am

This also speaks somewhat of early commitments unless its Ohio St or Bama, etc.

A few years ago, Challingsworth committed to Toledo but then recommitted to Pitt a few days later when HCPC offered. This is just one example of handful when Pitt flipped someone … and then, there were 2 that PSU flipped fro us (Bowers and Givens) in the week before LOI earlier this year.

This is why I don’t get upset when a Tony Collins or anyone else visits others. It is obvious that they committed too early, and sometime it works for us and sometimes it works against us.

Heck, Terrell Pryor committed to JD as a soph .. so not only did he change schools, he changed sports.

Comment by wbb 05.07.15 @ 6:10 am

Exact quote from an above post —- “That imo was an attack on ‘men’s space’. You know men can’t have their own clubs, exclusively to men, as women can. Men can’t do this and that, without women being allowed to engage in it too.”

Wait….hasn’t Pitt Football been starting “females” for the last 5 seasons?? If not it seems like it. Heyyy-yoooo.

Women should be given great opportunity, so I disagree. I love watching women broad-casters and commentators. Plenty of males coach women’s basketball.

P.S. —- Larry Fitzgerald shocked PSU coaches when he chose Pitt, basically because he visited by Coincidence. LeSean McCoy was all set for Miami even after his injury, but he came to Pitt because he felt so much love from Wannstedt, etc.

…..Tino Sunseri was all-set to go to Louisville, but luckily his “Legacy” School made him an offer and he flipped. (lol)

P.S. people said Pitt has no “Identity” …. I rock my Pitt gear all over, and people always comment on it. People I meet think the classic “Script” is Sexy-As-Heck.

I get a lot of Blair, Young, And Fields in that Elite 8-loss comments. People still joke that we ruined their 2010-2011 Brackets to me!

….Larry Fitz, McCoy, Revis, and now Donald comments about football, and sometimes even people mention the all-timers like Dorsett and Marino.

Big-time football guys always poke-fun about why Antonio Bryant was such a headcase / and what was wrong with Jon Baldwin and how they never panned-out in the NFL!

Dunno why some don’t feel that same love I always seem to get for Pitt. Maybe one must dole-it-out to get it in-return, as I’m a junkie for college sports from Spokane to Miami, Bangor, Maine to Tucson (go Cats!) Arizona.

Comment by Pat "Dark Knight" Narduzzi 05.07.15 @ 8:27 am

Couldn’t disagree more with most of these comments. If you’re speaking from a “purist” standpoint, nothing has strayed further away than college basketball. Do you really think great defense is keeping the scores low? Ever attribute it to the fact that 80% of teams run the clock down to 15 seconds before even considering penetrating or dishing the ball further than the wings? 50% of the game goes unplayed because college coaches are too afraid of turnovers or letting their players command the game. Look at every coach on the sideline….waves his hands**** “SLOW DOWN SLOW DOWN.” The game is now longer being played to out play your opponent, but moreso outwit the clock and the format the game is normally played in and the one we grew to love in the 90’s.

Comment by Roc the Panther 05.07.15 @ 9:08 am

The best defensive teams ever in the NFL …. 76 Steelers, 85 Bears, 92 Giants, 00 Raven and 13 Seahawks all benefitted by a ground control offense.

Same thing for the recent UF and Bama college national champs.

Yes, you are correct that low scores in college BB are due somewhat to the ball-control offenses. However, don’t tell me that UVa is not good defensively, or that Duke didn’t play MUCH better D in the NCAAs than they did in reg season. (that was one of the first things Coach K said was the key … their commitment to defense in the NCAAs.)

Comment by wbb 05.07.15 @ 10:12 am

From a national championship game write-up:

It was a situation where you just have to be able to handle all the hands and the checking,” Wisconsin coach Bo Ryan said. “There was more body contact in this game than any game we played all year, and I just feel sorry for my guys that all of the sudden a game was like that, and I think they’re struggling with that a little bit.”

Even though Kaminsky schooled Okafor to draw both his third and fourth fouls early in the second half, Wisconsin couldn’t pull away from an aggressive Duke defense that allowed only 55 points a game in the five contests leading to the final.

Wisconsin shot 41 percent — 7 percentage points under its season average.

Comment by wbb 05.07.15 @ 10:26 am

The key to the NC bball game were the Refs !

Comment by Emel 05.07.15 @ 11:32 am

I rooted for Duke because it probably meant more money for the ACC and us.

Sports go in cycles and we have endured the near bottom. Not as bad as it could be but we certainly deserve an upward bounce.

Comment by Frank MD 05.07.15 @ 1:23 pm

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