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Posted on September 26th, 2009 by David Whipkey

Pitt Fall: Panthers Defense Falters in Loss to Wolfpack

By David Whipkey

For the second time in three weeks, Pitt’s defense was gouged for more than 500 yards of total offense. Unfortunately, the Panthers were not playing Buffalo this week.

North Carolina State clawed back from deficits of 10-0, 17-7 and 31-17 to overcome Pitt 38-31 Saturday afternoon in Raleigh, N.C.

Buffalo gained more than 500 yards of offense two weeks ago in a 54-27 loss to the Panthers. On Saturday, N.C. State outgained Pitt 530-300. Wolfpack quarterback Russell Wilson showed the overflow crowd at Carter-Finley Stadium why he was an All-ACC selection last year. The redshirt sophomore finished torching Pitt’s secondary to the tune of 21 completions in 35 attempts for 322 yards and four scores. Wilson also gave Pitt fits on the ground, rushing for 91 yards on 10 carries.

Pitt started out well enough on their first possession. Cameron Saddler’s 47 yard kickoff return set the table for Dion Lewis and the Panthers offense. Lewis’ six yard scoring run capped a 53-yard drive and put Pitt on top 7-0 early in the first quarter.

The Panthers made it 10-0 on their next possession courtesy of Dan Hutchins 35-yard field goal.

Wilson and the Wolfpack offense then went to work. Wilson ended the 84-yard scoring drive with a 23 yard touchdown toss to fullback Taylor Gentry, cutting the Pitt lead to 10-7 late in the first quarter.

Pitt responded early in the second quarter when Lewis carried the ball into the end zone from seven yards out, increasing the Panther lead to 10.

Wolfpack kicker Josh Czjakowski ended the first half scoring with a 25 yard field goal right before halftime.

Lewis and the ground game appeared poised to have a productive afternoon in soggy Raleigh, rushing for 79 yards on 10 first half carries. But the Wolfpack defense made adjustments and limited the freshman sensation to 16 second half rushing yards. Lewis finished with 95 yards on 19 carries.

N.C. State roared out of the halftime locker room with a five-play, 58 yard drive that was climaxed by Wilson’s 38-yard touchdown pass to Toney Baker. Czjakowski’s kick was true, pulling the Wolfpack into a 17-17 tie.

But the Panthers regained control of the contest courtesy of quarterback Bill Stull’s arm. Stull completed three of four passes on a 68 yard drive. His 13-yard touchdown pass to Saddler pulled the Panthers back into the lead early in the third quarter.

After the Pitt defense held and forced a punt, Stull struck again. This time, he found sophomore receiver Jonathan Baldwin for a 79-yard scoring strike. The dagger gave Pitt a two-touchdown lead late in the third quarter and appeared to put the Wolfpack away.

But Wilson was just getting warmed up.

It took only five plays for N.C. State to pull within seven points. With 2:44 left in the third, Wilson found Jarvis Williams for a 33-yard scoring toss that cut the lead to 31-24.

Wilson again tormented the Pitt defense on N.C. State’s next possession. His 21-yard scramble on fourth down and 14 gave the Wolfpack a first and goal at the Pitt seven yard line. One play later, Wilson found tight end in the end zone for a seven-yard touchdown and a tie score early in the fourth quarter.

After a Pitt punt, N.C. State went to work. Wilson took the Wolfpack 71 yards in 10 plays. Baker ended the drive with a two-yard touchdown run, giving N.C. State their first lead at 38-31.

Pitt had a chance to tie the game late in regulation when a shotgun snap sailed over Wilson’s head. Linebacker Max Gruder recovered the fumble at the Wolfpack eight-yard line. But the Wolfpack held when Stull’s fourth down pass in the end zone sailed incomplete.

Stull finished with 12 completions in 23 attempts for 206 yards and two scores.

Pitt’s dismal two for 10 conversion rate on third down helped keep their offense off the field and forced the defense to stay on the field for 37 plus minutes.

Posted on September 25th, 2009 by David Whipkey

Wolfpack Coach Impressed With Pitt

By David Whipkey

North Carolina State coach Tom O’Brien knows physical football from his time coaching at Boston College.
So it is no surprise he has come away impressed with the physical blueprint of football the Pitt Panthers display on a regular basis.
O’Brien will get a first hand look Saturday when his Wolfpack collide with the undefeated Panthers at Carter-Finley Stadium in Raleigh.
“We haven’t seen an offensive line like this one,” O’Brien said during his press briefing earlier this week. “They have pro prospects up there. They have guys who have played three and four years and four of the guys have started before. They have a ton of experience and they are committed to running. A lot of the teams haven’t been as committed to the run as Pittsburgh has.”
Pitt’s offensive front, which includes left tackle Jason Pinkston, left guard Joe Thomas, center Robb Houser, right guard John Malecki and right tackle Lucas Nix; has imposed their will in wins over Youngstown State, Buffalo and Navy.
The line has paved the way to 174 yards rushing per game and also has been the platform for an offense averaging 39.1 points per game this season.
Quarterback Bill Stull is enjoying ample protection. He has only suffered one sack in the first three games.
“This game is going to be like 60 minutes ofmidde drill with their offense and their defense,” said O’Brien. “It’s going to be a hard-fought, slug-them-in-the-mouth football game. I love it. They will line it up and run it and throw some play-action passes. It won’t be spread-the-field-and-play touch football stuff.”

Posted on September 21st, 2009 by Admin

Pitt’s Defensive Front Seven Sends Emphatic Message

By David Whipkey | Pitt Panthers Gameday Correspondent

This is the defense many imagined Pitt would possess this season.

The Panthers defense, most notably the front seven, controlled Navy’s potent option attack during Saturday’s 27-14 win before more than 55,000 fans.

“I was pleased with our defense,” said Pitt coach Dave Wannstedt following the game.

Pitt held the Midshipmen to 129 yards rushing, more than 100 yards below their 238 yards per game rushing average.

Both the Pitt players and coaches knew they had advantages in physical ability and talent along the line. But staying focused and playing solid assignment football would be key to winning this game.

“It’s a big step for us,” said defensive end Greg Romeus. “We know today was a better performance, but we’re still not where we want to be. We’d like to have teams not score at all. It’s something that we are happy about, but we’re not satisfied at all.”

Filling in for an injured Adam Gunn, freshman Dan Mason made his first career start at middle linebacker. The highly-regarded Mason made good with the opportunity and finished with a game-high 11 tackles and two sacks.

For his performance, Mason was named Big East Defensive Player of the Week.

“I thought Dan Mason played better than I thought he could,” said Wannstedt. “As a freshman with his first start, I thought Dan was outstanding.”

Pitt’s defensive front performers, which included Mason, Romeus, tackles Gus Mustakas, Mick Williams and Myles Carragein along with defensive end Jabaal Sheard combined for 45 tackles and four sacks. The defense as a whole collected six sacks, giving the Panthers 15 total in three games.

Pitt led the conference last year with 33 sacks.

Saturday’s performance may have calmed some nerves regarding the status of the defense following last week’s 54-27 shootout win at Buffalo in which the Bulls racked up more than 500 yards of offense.

But coordinator Phil Bennett and his charges were committed to not allowing another such offensive outburst before the home crowd.

“Our defensive front played well and came up big,” said safety Elijah Fields, who made his first start. “That helped us out a lot. This week, we went over our assignments over and over again so we were comfortable out there tonight.”

The Panthers (3-0) will travel this Saturday to Raleigh, N.C. for a date with the North Carolina Wolfpack at Carter-Finley Stadium. Kickoff is scheduled for 3:30 p.m. and will be televised on ESPNU.

Pitt’s last meeting against the Wolfpack was a 34-19 win in the 2001 Tangerine Bowl.