Pitt Redshirt Diaries

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The lawsuit it settled, West Virginia is officially headed to the Big 12 in time for the 2012-13 season. Here is the link to a short story about it and here is the Big East's official statement:

The BIG EAST Conference Board of Directors has voted to terminate West Virginia University’s membership in the Conference, effective June 30, 2012. This vote is conditioned on WVU fulfilling its obligations under a settlement agreement with the Conference that resolves the litigation between the parties.

 “West Virginia University has acknowledged and agreed that the Court in Monongalia County, West Virginia, will enter a judgment that the BIG EAST Conference Bylaws are valid and enforceable, and will dismiss with prejudice all of West Virginia’s claims against the Conference.” stated John Marinatto Commissioner of the BIG EAST Conference.

 The Bylaws establish the circumstances by which a member may unilaterally withdraw from the Conference, which includes payment of an exit fee and a minimum of 27 months’ notice.  The Bylaws also provide that the Conference may, by 3/4 vote, terminate the membership of any member and that is the process by which West Virginia University will depart as a member of The BIG EAST Conference.

 In deciding to terminate West Virginia University’s membership, the Conference took into account the accusations that WVU asserted against the BIG EAST in the lawsuit that is now being dismissed.  The Conference also took into account the steps that West Virginia University was willing to take to resolve the litigation, including the payment of an exit fee well in excess of that required by the Bylaws. In light of all of these factors, the BIG EAST Conference felt that it was in its best interest to terminate West Virginia University’s membership and conclude the litigation.

The BIG EAST Conference wishes the West Virginia University student-athletes success in their future athletic endeavors.  With the recent addition of Boise State University, the University of Central Florida, the University of Houston, the University of Memphis, San Diego State University, Southern Methodist University, and the United States Naval Academy, the future for the BIG EAST Conference has never been brighter.

 Now, what does this mean for Pitt, well, that is the million dollar question. At this point, the answer is, nobody seems to know and that means the answer is not much. I think everyone involved has agreed that there is no way Pitt will still be in the Big East in 2013-14 even though that falls within the 27-month period but the question is can - or more accurately will - Pitt get out for this year?

I've gone back and forth with this based on conversations I've had with people because there are so many variables but it seems clear Pitt is not going to pony up a bunch of cash to make it happen and thus unless there is some other magic wand we don't know about it, I just don't see how a deal is going to get done.

The one silver bullet that Pitt has is in its pocket, at least according to a lawyer who talked to our own Jenn Menendez about all of this- but absent of being willing to pay money, I'm not sure it has any teeth -- is that one reason the Big East softened its stance and agreed to settle with WVU is that at the end of the day the conference realized it can't really force anyone to stay if the school wants to play elsewhere.

But time is ticking in terms of the need for conferences and networks to get their schedules out. Pitt at this point has not yet commented on the development but keep in mind two key points that make WVU's case a little different than Pitt's case.

1.) West Virginia's brass promised the Big 12 they'd be able to get out of the Big East by 2012 so the school was desperate to do whatever it took to make that happen. In fact, one of the main reasons the Mountaineers were picked over several other schools - including one, whose athletic director I spoke to - is because they boldly made that promise. So there was pressure to get this deal done and that's why the price tag is $20 million. The ACC is not pressure Pitt or Syracuse to come this year, so the two schools, while the would love to leave now, can be a little bit patient.

2) West Virginia filed its lawsuit in part by making the claim that the Big East, without Pitt, Syracuse and TCU, was not the same conference it signed up for and thus they should be allowed to move on. It would be hard for Pitt to make that claim seeing as Pitt and Syracuse triggered TCU and WVU leaving. The other thing is, unless the Big East can convince a few teams to fill some spots it would be a five-team conference in 2012 without Pitt and Syracuse and I'm not sure that the conference brass would allow that to happen. 

If Pitt were to stay in the Big East for this year, it would really be a disaster now when you consider it would have to play six conference games and six nonconference games and that likely means the home schedule would be littered with a who's who of teams from the lower reaches of the football subdivision and Division I-AA. But at this point, absent of Steve Pederson and company completely changing their stance on offering to pay more money to leave, I'm not sure what the next step realistically could be.

West Virginia released its Big 12 schedule - Baylor, TCU, K-State, Oklahoma and Kansas visit Mountaineer Field and they are at Texas, Texas State, Oklahoma State and the Fighting Paul Rhoads....(along with Maryland, Marshall and James Madison)

Now, if you do the math, the Mountaineers will only have three spots for nonconference games just like Pitt so we very well could have witnessed the end of the Backyard Brawl last year. And Thursday night could be the last time the two teams play in hoops for a while also - though I would be very disappointed if they didn't keep that series going because there are enough non-conference spots in basketball that the two schools should be able to work out an annual home and home.

Oliver Luck said on a conference call today that he'd like to talk to Steve Pederson to try and see if they can't make these things work but admits that it will be tough for both sides given the limited number of spaces.

So stay tuned as I am sure this story will begin to move forward - one way or another.

Incidentally, if Pitt stays in the Big East its home schedule at this point is Youngstown State, Virginia Tech, Rutgers and Louisville. Pitt will have to add two more home games - and from what I understand I don't expect them to be much more than fillers - to fill the voids left by TCU and West Virginia.  Pitt also goes to Buffalo, Notre Dame, Connecticut, Cincinnati, Syracuse and South Florida.

One other football related note - Pitt received a transfer when David Durham signed with the school over the weekend. Durham is a fullback from Ohio State and this development illustrates how Pitt has come full circle in a matter of two seasons as the school is back to being the place where pro-style fullbacks and tight ends will find a home. And Durham is leaving Ohio State because they are going the opposite direction - from pro-style to spread.

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I'm sure you all missed me.....but I'm back and there has been so going on in the world of Pitt I feel like it may take me a week to catch up with it all but the bottom line is, it is good to be back on my feet again. Thanks so much for all the well wishes and for asking about my health - I survived it, I am healing well and I am back getting after it, so that's good....

** The number one topic facing Pitt athletics right now is this - when do the Panthers get to begin competing in the ACC? I am now becoming more and more convinced in the conversations I've had in the past two days that Pitt will be in the ACC in 2012 and here is why - the school has had enough with the way the Big East has mangled this all and frankly is waiting on West Virginia.

If - or more accurately - when, West Virginia finally declares they are leaving for the 2012 season officially and the Big 12 schedule is announced with WVU on it, Pitt is going to follow them out the door and dare the Big East to stop them.

The bottom line is this - the Big East let TCU out of things quickly and that left one hole in Pitt (and the other Big East teams) schedule and now, with West Virginia leaving, that will leave a second hole in the Panthers schedule and at that point it is time to punt.

Steve Pederson is making the media rounds today on the heels of the ACC meetings (hopefully those of us who are lowly ink-stained types will get our chance to talk to him tomorrow) and the one thing that is clear is he is far more optimistic about Pitt (and Syracuse's) chances of playing in the ACC in 2012.

This is another classic example of why the Big East is crumbling and will someday be a basketball conference -- oh wait, I'm sorry, they've added San Diego State and Navy, things have never been better ....... - had the powers that be in that league just moved forward and focused on working things out with Pitt, Syracuse and WVU so everyone can move on. Instead, the league decided to be petty and try and play hard ball and now the whole thing is a mess.

And here is the other thing - if Pitt and Syracuse don't get out of this situation even after WVU leaves, expect lawsuits from Pitt and Syracuse against the Big East and WVU for breach of contract as both schools will lose a markee game which would be a television game and have to replace it with someone from the lower reaches of the Football Bowl Subdivision or Division I-AA.

So stay tuned because a lot of this is going to have to start really falling into place soon - as in within a few weeks.

And one other thing, there is some sort of poetic justice that Pitt fans who want to see their team go to the ACC now must do something they are conditioned not to do --- root for West Virginia (to get out of the league).

** This seemingly monthly "coach is leaving the staff" story hit yesterday when Eddie Faulkner resigned his post as the running backs coach at Pitt and was named the tight ends coach at Wisconsin. He played for the Badgers and apparently has worked with Wisconsin offensive coordinator Matt Canada so it is a good move for him, or something like that. Of course, it leaves Pitt with another hole in its staff but if ever there was a school equipped to hire a coach, well, it is Pitt. I mean, six head coaches in 18 months has to be some kind of record and the other thing is this - running backs coaches, other than David Walker, tend to be one year wonders anyway at Pitt, Faulkner just took it to another level when he became Pitt's first "one-month wonder." I'm sure this is a position that will fill fast. This is not a big issue.

** One other interesting development - long-time administrator/assistant/associate AD Carol Sprague is going to retire at the end of the school year. You'd probably be able to count on one hand - and may have fingers left over - the number of people who are in that building that have been there as long or longer than Sprague, who has done a tremendous amount for both the school and the athletic department. It is yet another step in the re-organization of the athletic department that has slowly but surely been going on over the past year as a number of people have been moved into different roles and there are new duties - like all of the TV and video stuff - that people have been hired to refine. Of course, there was also the 30 people who were laid off once www.highoctanefootball.com went under......(that last sentence is an attempt at humor for those who are humorless.....)

** Chris Peak  wrote Monday that Brandon Sacco - remember him? - is back on campus and has rejoined the team. Sacco was a promising lineman from Don Bosco and had academic issues and then left the team last summer. But he told Chris he was coming back and excited about the opportunity. This is a good development for Pitt for one reason - he is an offensive lineman and this team has a real need for them given the lack of them on the roster. Sacco showed some good things in practices during his one camp with the Panthers so maybe he will be one of the answers at offensive line. 

 

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National Letter of Intent Signing Day is one of the most overrated dates on the calender in terms of the amount of hype it receives and what it actually means or what actually happens. Yes, recruiting is the life blood of every program and yes, teams are excited to announce their recruiting classes but ask yourself these questions...

1.) Given the wall-to-wall 24 hour coverage of recruiting by ESPNU, Scout.com, Rivals.com and a host of others - are we ever really surprised by what the classes look like? I mean, Pitt's class is pretty well known and I am sure there will be one or two more commitments by Wednesday, but signing day is somewhat anti-climatic since we already know who is coming and who is not.

2) Every coach talks as if they won a national title when they introduce their class - have we ever heard one stand up and truly be honest by saying "this class is weak, we missed on every kid we wanted and we have a bunch of bodies filling scholarships"

3) The declarations on signing day usually don't mean much - for instance, do we remember last year at signing day Todd Graham rambling on and on about all of the different roles that Lafayette Pitts would play on both sides of the ball and special teams? How did that turn out?

4) We don't know a thing about any of these kids until they put on the pads and start to play.

So with that in mind and trying to keep things in perspective, let's take a quick little preview of Pitt's recruiting class and see what we can make of it. It is tough to grade because, for the second year in a row it was started by one staff and finished by a different staff - that wants to play a completely different style of football.

Now, thanks to my good friend Chris Peak at Pantherlair, here is the actual up-to-the-minute list of commitments. This includes the newest one - Gabe Roberts - a lineman from Wisconsin who committed over the weekend. Roberts fills a need as this team desperately needs depth on the offensive line but he isn't ranked and has no other offers, so obviously he is one of those "wait and see" kind of kids that some coaches seem to find and turn into gems. The one thing I will say is, if you read Chris's story on the kid, he was injured during the summer so when he went to camps it was hard for schools to evaluate him, so perhaps he is truly a diamond in the rough.

Here is the link to the commitment list and now let's see how it matches with Pitt's needs (we will do offense today, defense tomorrow)---

Quarterback: Assuming Tino Sunseri, Mark Myers and Trey Anderson all stick around and are healthy the position is crowded, but as most people who watched the team can attest this is an area which needs improved and in this recruiting class there is a highly rated quarterback - Chad Voytik. So this is an area that has been addressed, though I don't think it can be overlooked that Voytik was recruited to fit into a different system than the one he will play in. That doesn't mean he can't get it done, it just means we will have to see how his skill set translates to the pro-style system.

Offensive Line - Chris Jacobson will almost definitely get a 6th year which helps but the loss of Lucas Nix, Jordan Gibbs and Greg Gaskins means this roster is devoid of tackles, big time. And that is probably the most troubling hole in this recruiting class -there are only two linemen in it and one is Roberts, who may be a good player but he is a reach on paper and he is listed as a guard. Certainly a big-time tackle like Adam Bisnowaty from Fox Chapel helps, but based on what I saw last summer during traning camp from the younger linemen, there is a real need for depth and there seems to be a need for a couple of more scholarships to go to linemen.

Fullback/Tight End - I put these two positions together because they are going to be added again as Chryst's pro-style offense will utilize both of these positions. Sure there were fullbacks and tight ends on the roster last year but we rarely saw either position utilized in that spread offense. Now, we will see more traditional uses from those positions. So I'm assuming that means that Drew Carswell will become a receiver and Hubie Graham will be the primary tight end. I will be interested in finding out what they ultimately do with Anthony Gonzalez but Shaler's J.P. Holtz to me is a great addition and will fit in perfectly as a tight end in this system. I don't see a fullback in the recruiting class and there are a few guys left on the roster, but the fullback position is one that certainly is going to need to be shored up - "Lou Polite, Henry Hynoski, where are you?"

Wide Receiver - The receiving corps is like the quarterback group - they are all back and the position is crowded. But much like the quarterbacks, this group has a lot to prove and frankly an influx of some young talent wouldn't be a bad thing. The key is getting more speed - I don't know that there is a burner in this group. I know Ronald Jones and Darius Patton showed some good things and Devin Street is a big-play, stretch the field kind of guy, but this is a group that needs to perform at a much higher level. Clairton's Trenton Coles is the only receiver in the group - he is raw, but big and fast so perhaps he has a chance - though there are a number of guys listed as athletes who may ultimately turn into receivers as well. I would like to have seen Pitt pick up a top receiver in this class but at this late in the period I'm not sure that is realistic. 

Tailback - I saved the best for last. You take a group that has Ray Graham, Isaac Bennett, Corey Davis and Malcolm Crockett all returning and add one of the top rated tailbacks in the nation - Rushel Shell - and it is clear that this position is in great shape, not just for this year, but for year's to come.

All in all, I'm a bit underwhelmed so far by this recruiting class other than in a few areas, but mostly because I think this team needs more offensive linemen and receivers but I just don't see the numbers coming in. Of course, there are still a few days and number of guys who are going to make their decision late, but for this particular class the changes in coaches and philosophies may be too much to overcome to really bring in the kind of class that is needed to begin to rebuild certain areas.

 

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Jerry Micco asked me to drop a note here and give a little update as to where I've been and when I'll be back so here goes nothing -- 

In case you haven't heard (if you don't follow me on Twitter or something) I was in an accident (I slipped on ice in my driveway and smashed face first into a cement block retaining wall) and have had to have some surgery to my face and whatnot which is why I have been off work and off of TV for a few weeks (until I got the stitches out of my lips, I looked a lot like Freddie Krueger and now that I had surgery on my nose I have two black eyes) even though this is a very critical time for hiring coaches and recruiting.

But I had a concussion which meant I had to stay away from computer screens and limit how much I watchTV and I also have two broken fingers on my right hand which, until the past few days were extremely painful and that made it tough to type on a keyboard. I did little updates on Twitter here and there but that's about it.

I'm happy to report that I am clearly on the mend - Thursday I passed a concussion test and yesterday I had a surgery and that hopefully will be my last so now it is just a matter of healing and so I hope to be back shortly after my follow up appointment which is next Wednesday (signing day).

But I want to thank all of you who have sent me well wishes and asked about my status and whatnot and it let you know it won't be long before I'll be back up and running and reporting on the Panthers. It really means a lot to get e-mails from many of you wishing me well.

There were two significant news items this week:

Shaler tight end/linebacker J.P. Holtz committed to Pitt Wednesday and Friday Paul Chryst made the hiring of receivers coach Bobby Engram official.

I'll say this about both developments - Pitt fans should be very happy with them.

I know that recruiting hasn't gone very well so far for the new staff in terms of bringing in some splash names or even any names for that matter, but (a) they have done a great job of retaining the top players who were already committed to the last staff and (b) they didn't have many scholarships to fill.

But Holtz should fit in very well as a blocking tight end and a pass catching option in Chryst's offense. I've seen him play basketball a number of times and football a number of times (my kids go to North Allegheny so I see a lot of Shaler) and I'm impressed with his strength and his size but more importantly, he has really good feet, he is quick and he is agile for a big guy. He will be a nice player for Pitt.

And Engram really is a class act and a good guy and a clear upgrade over the receivers coaches that Pitt has had in recent years. I think he should be able to be an asset in recruiting and his background as an NFL standout should really do well to earn him instant respect from his players.

There is also a report here that Chryst has finalized his staff by hiring UCLA defensive line coach Inoke Breckterfield to coach the Panthers defensive line but nobody has confirmed that for me yet. If true, however, it means the staff is done and with signing day coming up Wednesday, it won't be long til we start talking about football again.

I won't officially be back until at least Thursday assuming all goes well at the doctors office Wednesday but now that my fingers are feeling better and I have my concussion cleared up I'll be checking in here more as recruiting developments happen and whatnot.

Again, thanks for all your support and I look forward to getting back into things here shortly.

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Keeping you up to date with recruiting while Paul Zeise is off, here's the latest from MikeWhite on Pitt picking up a local recruit who de-committed from Penn State in the wake of the Sandusky scandal:

J.P. Holtz, a standout tight end-linebacker at Shaler Area High School, announced tonight he will play next season at Pitt.

Holtz, a member of the Post-Gazette Fabulous 22, chose Pitt over Michigan State. He made his announcement on KDKA Channel 2 television.

Holtz (6 feet 4, 240 pounds) made a non-binding verbal commitment to Penn State last summer, but decided to look elsewhere after the Jerry Sandusky case became public. He then visited Pitt, Purdue and Michigan State.

High school seniors can sign a binding letter of intent with colleges starting next Wednesday.

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