Pitt No. 2 in Big East tourney
PITTSBURGH — Rutgers coach Fred Hill voted for Jamie Dixon as the Big East coach of the year. Hill only wishes Pitt's dominant-in-all-phases performance against his team hadn't justified his vote.
Gilbert Brown scored 19 points and No. 17 Pittsburgh took control early with a 19-2 run Saturday that sent the Panthers to an 83-54 rout and the No. 2 seed in the Big East tournament.
The Panthers (24-7, 13-5) were picked to finish ninth in the Big East preseason coaches poll, only to earn a double bye into the conference quarterfinals — setting themselves up for a possible semifinal matchup against No. 10 West Virginia if both win Thursday in New York.
This kind of season wasn't expected from a Pitt team that lost four starters — including all-Big East players DeJuan Blair and Sam Young — after going 31-5 and reaching the NCAA round of eight last season.
"Losing the amount of talent he did, that's the sign of a great program to finish second," Hill said. "He's done a phenomenal year."
Pitt followed one of its most uneven performances all season, a last-second 73-71 victory over Providence made possible by Ashton Gibbs' buzzer-beating 3-pointer, with one of its best to win its eighth in nine games.
After West Virginia beat No. 9 Villanova 68-66 in overtime earlier in the day, Pitt knew it could be seeded No. 2 if it won. The Panthers needed about 10 minutes to make sure they did.
They turned a 5-3 deficit into a 22-7 lead during their big run, scoring 15 straight at one point while holding the Scarlet Knights (15-16, 5-13) scoreless for nearly 5Z\x minutes.
"We wanted to come out and play well and play together as a team," Brown said. "Against Providence, we had a couple of letdowns on defense so we really strived to make a strong effort to play defense, and it showed."
Pitt led by 24 at halftime and by as many as 32 in a second half. Freshman Dante Taylor had 11 points and seven rebounds off the bench, while Gibbs scored 13 and Brad Wanamaker had 12.
Brown followed up a scoreless game against the Friars with an excellent two-way game, getting six rebounds and three assists while making 3 of 4 from 3-point range and all six free throws. Pitt was 9 of 22 beyond the arc to Rutgers' 4 of 16.
The Panthers were especially dominant on the defensive end, limiting the Knights to 40.9 percent shooting (18 of 44) and outrebounding them 41-24. Rutgers was outrebounded 97-52 during losses to Seton Hall and Pittsburgh.
The Scarlet Knights looked a step slow at the start and never got better during a loss that dropped them into the 14th seed and a Tuesday game in Madison Square Garden. Mike Rosario scored 14 points, but he missed eight of 12 shots and was 1 of 7 from 3-point range. Austin Johnson scored 12 points.
"This was my worst nightmare come true, but you've got to let it go and move on," Hill said. "Mentally, got to get ready for the Big East tournament and just throw this one out."
