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By David Whipkey The most anticipated season in the Dave Wannstedt era of Pitt football is inching closer and closer by the day. Training camp is over and the two-deep roster is set as the nationally ranked Panthers are preparing for a trip to Salt Lake City, Utah for a battle with Mountain West Conference heavyweight Utah. The Utes hammered Pitt in the 2005 Fiesta Bowl by a 35-7 count. Utah sacked then Pitt quarterback Tyler Palko nine times as Utes coach Urban Meyer put the finishing touches on an undefeated season before heading east to lead the Florida Gators to prominence. Both squads are much different this year from New Year’s Night 2005. Wannstedt had accepted the Pitt job days before the game while Kyle Whittingham was getting ready to take over the reigns from Meyer. This year, Pitt appears to have the slightly better roster and higher expectations. But question marks at several key spots along with an ambitious schedule could put a damper on what is thought to be a breakthrough year for the Panthers. Pitt brings back many key performers from last year’s 10-3 squad that earned a tough victory over ACC heavyweight North Carolina in the Meineke Car Care Bowl. Sophomore running back Dion Lewis (1,799 yards rushing, 17 touchdowns) is believed to be a Heisman Trophy candidate while Jon Baldwin (57 receptions, 1,111 yards, eight scores) is the next great Pitt receiving threat. Bookend defensive ends Greg Romeus and Jabaal Sheard lead a unit that garnered 47 sacks last year, tops in the nation. Safeties Dom DeCicco and Jared Holley are also expected to help solidify the secondary. But personnel losses need to be addressed, spots such as right tackle, center and the all important quarterback position need to be filled on offense. Sophomore Tino Sunseri will start at quarterback. He has shown a strong arm and ability to escape, but has little experience. But if offensive coordinator Frank Cignetti can do with Sunseri as he did with last year’s starter; Bill Stull, the offense will move. Senior Alex Karabin and junior Greg Gaskins are expected to start at center and right guard respectively. Chris Jacobson started the bowl game last December at left guard and acquitted himself nicely. No drop-off is expected at that position. Replacing Gus Mustakas and Mick Williams at defensive tackle will be hard. But Myles Careagin and Chas Alecxih received valuable playing time as part of line coach Greg Gattuso’s rotation. They are expected to fill in nicely. Freshman Aaron Donald from Penn Hills could also be part of the rotation. Fellow Penn Hills Indian Dan Mason will start at middle linebacker and is seen as an athletic upgrade over the graduated Adam Gunn, though the former Kiski Area Cavalier was a keen leader in the middle for the Panthers last year. Rick Gary and Antwuan Reed will man the corners, taking over from the departed Aaron Berry and Jovanni Chappel. Both Gary and Reed had strong camps this summer. The Panthers also face one of the more daunting schedules this season. After beginning the season at Utah, Pitt will face Miami at home and travel to Notre Dame. Big East foes Rutgers and West Virginia visit Heinz Field, while road tests at Connecticut and South Florida await. A Big East title and BCS berth is there for the taking, whether or not these Panthers can cash in is yet to be seen. Courtesy The University of Pittsburgh Pitt true freshman tailback Dion Lewis added to his impressive list of honors earlier this week by being selected to the 2009 Football Writers Association of America (FWAA) Freshman All-America Team. The 28-player team was selected by an 11-person panel of nationally prominent college football writers led by Mike Griffith of the Knoxville News Sentinel. True freshmen and redshirt freshmen are both eligible for the team. This is the latest honor for Lewis, the most decorated freshman in all of college football in 2009. His other noteworthy honors include: Selection as the Big East Offensive Player of the Year and Rookie of the Year, the first time a player has won both awards in the same season since Virginia Tech quarterback Michael Vick in 1999. Lewis was also named Unanimous First Team All-Big East, the first Pitt freshman to accomplish that feat since 2002 when receiver Larry Fitzgerald, now a perennial Pro Bowler with the Arizona Cardinals, earned the honor. · Recognition on no fewer than seven All-America teams, including The Associated Press, Sporting News, CBSSports.com, SI.com, Phil Steele, Rivals.com and Scout.com. · Unanimous Freshman All-America status. · Most Valuable Player honors for the 2009 Meineke Car Care Bowl after he rushed for 159 yards and a touchdown in Pitt’s 19-17 victory over North Carolina. · Selection as the Eastern College Athletic Conference (ECAC) Rookie of the Year. Lewis (Albany, N.Y./Blair Academy [N.J.]) rushed for a Pitt freshman-record 1,799 yards on 325 carries (5.5 avg.), surpassing the 36-year-old mark held by the legendary Tony Dorsett (1,686 in 1973). Overall, Lewis’ total is the second-highest single-season rushing mark in Pitt history, trailing only Dorsett’s 2,150 yards in 1976, the same year he won the Heisman Trophy and the Panthers won the national championship with a 12-0 record. Lewis additionally totaled 18 touchdowns (17 rushing) for a Pitt freshman-record 108 points, breaking the prior frosh record of 90 points set in 2007 by tailback LeSean McCoy, now of the Philadelphia Eagles. With its bowl victory over North Carolina, the Panthers finished with a 10-3 record, their winningest campaign since 1981. By David Whipkey It may not have completely washed away the bad taste of the loss to Big East champion Cincinnati earlier this month, but it did help put a nice bow on the most successful Pitt football season in nearly 30 years. Dan Hutchins’ 33-yard field goal with 52 seconds remaining provided the No. 17 Panthers the winning margin in a thrilling 19-17 win over North Carolina in the Meineke Car Care Bowl Saturday evening in Charlotte. The victory gave Pitt a 10-3 record, their best season since an 11-1 campaign in 1981 that ended when Dan Marino’s touchdown pass to John Brown beat Georgia in the Sugar Bowl at the end of that year. “I think that people know that we are back as a program and you have to go out and prove it,” said Pitt coach Dave Wannstedt after the game. “You have to show up and you have to win games like this.” Plenty of Pitt players showed up and put on a stout performance in the Tar Heels’ backyard. Freshman sensation running back Dion Lewis gained 159 yards on 28 carries against the nation’s No. 6 defense. Quarterback Bill Stull had yet another efficient performance, completing 17 of 24 passes for 163 yards and no interceptions. Stull’s favorite target was freshman receiver Mike Shanahan, who hauled in five receptions for 83 yards. Pitt’s defense acquitted itself nicely after the fourth-quarter collapse against Cincinnati earlier this month. The Panthers sacked Tar Heel quarterback T.J. Yates three times, intercepted him once and recovered one fumble. The unit held on fourth-and-10 near midfield late in the contest to seal the win. “We knew we were going to be in a 15-round fight,” said Pitt linebacker and Charlotte native Max Gruder. “We didn’t expect anything other than that.” Gruder led Pitt’s defense with 11 tackles and recovered an Erik Highsmith fumble that helped set up Hutchins’ 31-yard field goal in the second quarter. The Tar Heels (8-5) got on the board first on their opening drive when Yates hooked up with Greg Little on a 15-yard touchdown pass. Little then inexplicably punted the ball in the Bank of America Stadium bleachers and forced the Tar Heels to kick off from their own 15 due to his unsportsmanlike conduct penalty. Pitt appeared poised to even the score on their next possession, but Lewis fumbled the ball through the end zone after North Carolina defensive end E.J. Wilson punched the ball free, giving the Heels the ball on their own 20. The Panthers got back into the contest when Hutchins booted a 31-yard field goal early in the second quarter. The kick was set up when safety Jarred Holley stripped Highsmith of the football and Gruder recovered near the North Carolina 40. Lewis made up for his earlier fumble (the first and only one he lost this year) by capping a 45-yard drive in the second quarter with an 11-yard scoring run. Hutchins’ kick was true and Pitt led 10-7 early in the second quarter. North Carolina then went on a 14-play, 58-yard drive that looked to either give the Tar Heels the lead or at least tie the score. But Pitt’s Dan Mason made a huge play when he intercepted Yates on the Pitt two-yard line. The Heels eventually tied the score with 1:05 left in the first half when Casey Barth drilled a 37-yard field goal. But Pitt responded when Stull engineered a 46-yard scoring drive that culminated with Hutchins’ 31-yard field goal which gave the Panthers a 13-10 halftime lead. Hutchins’ third field goal, a 42-yard boot ending Pitt’s opening drive of the second-half, extended Pitt’s lead to 16-10 early in the third quarter. But Yates and the Tar Heels snatched momentum for their own on their next possession. North Carolina marched 70 yards in 11 plays. Yates capped the drive with a 14-yard strike to Little midway through the third quarter. Barth’s kick was good and the Heels were up 17-16. Yates finished with 183 yards passing on 19 completions. Little grabbed seven passes for 87 yards. Ryan Houston paced North Carolina’s ground game with 83 yards on 24 carries. But Pitt was able to summon additional strength and finished the game in winning style. North Carolina was in position to put the Pitt away midway through the fourth quarter. The Tar Heels had the ball at the Pitt 29. But sacks by Jabaal Sheard and Mick Williams pushed North Carolina out of field goal range. With a little more than nine minutes remaining, Pitt took possession of the ball at their own five-yard line following a North Carolina punt. The Panthers were able to march deep into Tar Heels real estate thanks to Lewis’ 58 yards rushing on the drive and the conversion of a fourth and inches play on their own 30. Pitt reached the North Carolina 30 with 1:56 remaining. The Panthers were lined up for a 47-yard field goal on fourth and two, but the Tar Heels jumped offside and gave Pitt an important first down. “They were jumping the gun a little bit, so we told our center to take his time adjusting the ball,” said Wannstedt. “If they didn’t jump offside, we were going to kick the field goal. The extra 20 yards sure did help.” Pitt advanced to the North Carolina 16 and set the stage for Hutchins’ clutch kick. “I had a weird feeling with a strong defensive team that I would be kicking a lot today,” said Hutchins. “I am excited.” Pitt held on for the win when Yates fourth and 10 pass from midfield fell incomplete, giving the Panthers a much-needed bowl win and boost into next season. “They are a good football team,” said North Carolina coach Butch Davis. “There is a reason that they were 35 seconds away from going to a BCS bowl as Big East champions. We have a lot of respect for Pitt and their football team.” Notes: Lewis’ 159-yard day gave him 1,799 yards rushing this season, good for second all-time at Pitt behind Tony Dorsett’s 2,150-yard Heisman Trophy campaign in 1976. His second-quarter touchdown gave him 17 rushing scores on the year and 19 total, both freshman records. Lewis also has ten 100-yard rushing days this season, tying him with Dorsett’s 1973 campaign for first in school history. Hutchins’ four field goals in a bowl game is a school record. By David Whipkey The Notre Dame-Pitt series has provided the football world with some of the most vivid memories and best players to ever step foot on the gridiron. Coaches such as Knute Rockne, Elmer Layden, Frank Leahy, Ara Parseghian, Dan Devine and Lou Holtz have led the Irish into battle against the Panthers while Pitt coaches Jock Sutherland, Johnny Majors, Jackie Sherrill, Foge Fazio, Walt Harris and Dave Wannstedt have prowled the sidelines in contests against Notre Dame. Players such as Joe Montana, Jerome Bettis, Paul Hornung, Johnny Lujak, Daryle Lamonica, Raghib Ismail, and Ricky Watters along with other Irish legends have squared off against Panthers such as Dan Marino, Tony Dorsett, Bill Fralic, and Larry Fitzgerald Notre Dame holds a decisive 44-19-1 series lead over Pitt. However, the Panthers have won two of the past three contests. Here is a brief synopsis of the rivalry’s modern history. November 15, 1975: Panthers running back Tony Dorsett basically beat the Irish by himself on a crisp fall day at Pitt Stadium. Then a junior, Dorsett torched the Irish for 303 yards on the ground in a 34-20 win. September 11, 1976: Pitt kick-started their national championship season with an impressive 31-10 win over the Irish in South Bend. Dorsett, the eventual Heisman Trophy winner, ran for 181 yards in the win. ABC moved the game, which was previously scheduled in the middle of the season to week one. Legend has it the Notre Dame grounds crew allowed the natural playing surface to grow higher than usual in an effort to slow down the fleet Dorsett. September 10, 1977: The Joe Montana-quarterbacked Irish spoiled Pitt’s home opener with a come-from-behind 19-9 win. Notre Dame’s fierce defense knocked Panther quarterback Matt Cavanaugh from the contest. The Irish used the win as a spring board to a national championship. November 6, 1982: Dan Marino and his Panthers entered the showdown with the Irish at Pitt Stadium ranked Number 1 in the country and had visions of winning a national title. But the Gerry Faust-coached Irish hung tough all day and upset Pitt 31-16 before an overflow crowd. Notre Dame running back Allen Pinkett helped salt the game away midway through the fourth quarter with a 76-yard touchdown run. October 10, 1987: Notre Dame entered the 1987 game at Pitt Stadium undefeated and with a roster that included players such as receiver and eventual Heisman Trophy winner Tim Brown and quarterback Tony Rice. But Pitt running back Craig “Ironhead” Heyward was unstoppable in a 30-22 win over coach Lou Holtz and his Irish. November 13, 1999: The Panthers sent Pitt Stadium out in grand style with a pulsating 37-27 win before an overflow crowd of 60,190. Pitt quarterback John Turman tossed two touchdown passes to Antonio Bryant and running back Kevan Barlow scored twice. The Pitt student section took the field and the goal posts with nine seconds remaining on the clock. Approximately 300 former Pitt players were saluted in a stirring halftime tribute. October 12, 2002: The eighth-ranked Irish used defense and opportunistic offense to hold off the Panthers 14-6 at Notre Dame Stadium. Pitt outgained Notre Dame in total yardage by a margin of 402-185. But the Irish defense sacked Pitt quarterback Rod Rutherford eight times. Rutherford threw for 313 yards in the game. October 11, 2003: In their first visit to Heinz Field, Notre Dame secured a 20-14 win over Pitt. Notre Dame’s Julius Jones enjoyed a career day against Pitt’s defense, rushing for 262 yards and two scores. Pitt’s Larry Fitzgerald finished with five catches for 79 yards and two touchdowns. The Irish defense again terrorized Pitt quarterback Rod Rutherford and sacked him eight times. November 13, 2004: Pitt earned their first win over Notre Dame since 1999 by virtue of a thrilling 41-38 win at Notre Dame Stadium. Panthers quarterback Tyler Palko tossed five touchdown passes and led a game-winning drive late in the fourth quarter that culminated in Josh Cummings 32-yard field goal. Palko finished with 26 completions in 42 attempts for 334 yards. Pitt’s defense intercepted Brady Quinn twice. September 3, 2005: In a game that was the first contest along the sidelines for Notre Dame’s Charlie Weis and Pitt’s Dave Wannstedt, the Irish defeated the Panthers 42-21 at Heinz Field. Notre Dame’s offense bulldozed its way to 275 yards rushing and paved the way to victory. Brady Quinn threw for 233 yards for the Irish. November 1, 2008: Pitt outlasted Notre Dame 41-38 in four overtimes. It was the longest game in the history of Notre Dame Stadium. Panther running back LeSean McCoy ran for 169 yards on 32 carries and had one touchdown. Pitt’s Conor Lee drilled a 22-yard field goal to win the game after Notre Dame’s Brandon Walker missed a 38-yard try.
SOURCE: Pro Football Hall of Fame / PittsburghPanthers.com Four former University of Pittsburgh players have been inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame.Dan Marino is the latest Pitt player to earn induction, officially receiving the honor on Aug. 7, 2005. Marino had a legendary 17-year career with the Miami Dolphins. An eight-time Pro Bowler, he retired after the 1999 season holding an incredible 25 NFL regular-season records and as the career leader in passing attempts (8,358), completions (4,967), yardage (61,361) and touchdowns (420). He was also one of the winningest quarterbacks in NFL history, earning 147 regular-season victories, one behind all-time leader John Elway. Tony Dorsett was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1994. He left his professional mark as the NFL’s fifth-leading rusher behind Walter Payton, Barry Sanders, Emmitt Smith and Eric Dickerson. Dorsett has the distinction of being one of only two players in the history of football to win the Heisman Trophy, a collegiate national championship, a Super Bowl championship, and to be elected into the college and pro football halls of fame. Mike Ditka was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1988. Ditka was an All-America tight end at Pitt in 1960, his senior season. Ditka’s pro football career included All-Pro honors. He also was a member of the Chicago Bears’ 1963 NFL Championship squad. Ditka worked as an assistant coach at Dallas for nine seasons, spent 11 seasons as the head coach of the Chicago Bears and three seasons as head coach of the New Orleans Saints. Joe Schmidt, Pitt’s other inductee in the Pro Football Hall of Fame, was an All-America linebacker at Pitt in 1952. He went on to spend 13 years with the Detroit Lions, and was a member of the Lions’ two NFL championship teams. He later coached the team for six seasons and led Detroit to its only playoff appearance of the 1970s. He was inducted in 1973.
The only Pitt Panther to win the Heisman is Tony Dorsett in 1976. |
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