Pitt hopes to take Final (Four) step
PITTSBURGH Two seasons ago, they won 31 games with an experienced cast that was within minutes of becoming the first Pitt team since 1941 to reach the Final Four. The Panthers called it a disappointment.
Last season, the inexperienced and undersized Panthers won 25 games during a season in which they were picked to finish ninth in the Big East Conference. Again, they called it a disappointment.
What many schools would consider to be memorable seasons are viewed by the Panthers as routine. Maybe that’s understandable given they’ve averaged nearly 27 victories during coach Jamie Dixon’s seven seasons, winning at least 25 each of the last five seasons. During that time, only Duke, Memphis, Kansas and North Carolina have won more games.
They’ve accomplished it by recruiting largely within an area confined to a few states close to Pennsylvania, and with players that routinely aren’t ranked in the top 300 by recruiting services, much less the top 30. They haven’t had a single player average 20 points per season, make the AP All-America first team or get selected in the first round of the NBA draft under Dixon.
“We always have high expectations, so that hasn’t changed,” forward Gilbert Brown said. “But our goal is to exceed expectations. We’ve come close, but we want to do something very special this year.”
For Pitt, that means extending a season not just deep into March, but into April. For Pitt, the Final Four is the final step.
A year after being the most anonymous of Dixon’s teams when the season started, these confident, experienced Panthers begin this season Monday against Rhode Island ranked No. 5. They’re coming off a 25-9 season in which they tied for second in the Big East despite being picked to finish in the bottom half, and they return all but 14 percent of the scoring and 9 percent of the rebounding from that overachieving team.
This might be the deepest of Dixon’s teams, one that could easily rotate 10 players rather than the customary seven or eight. The backcourt has a proven scorer in point guard Ashton Gibbs (15.7 points), a dependable swingman in Brad Wanamaker (12.3 points, 5.7 rebounds) and a playmaker, Travon Woodall (5.0 points), who would start at many schools.
Inside, Brown (10.7 points) is a streaky shooter and a reliable defender, the 6-10 Gary McGhee (6.9 points, 6.8 rebounds) provides the prerequisite toughness that all good Pittsburgh teams seemingly possess. Nasir Robinson (6.6 points, 5.6 rebounds) is capable of a big game at either end of the floor.
Another player with something to prove is 6-9 sophomore Dante Taylor, a former McDonald’s All-American who averaged a somewhat disappointing 4.1 points and 3.7 rebounds.
Although most Pitt players establish their identity, carve out a niche and stay in the lineup until they graduate, this might be the first Dixon-coached team where multiple freshmen — 6-foot-6 J.J. Moore, 6-9 Talib Zanna and 6-4 Cameron Wright push hard to dislodge some of the familiar faces. With Robinson out until mid-December after needing surgery to repair cartilage in his right knee, Zanna figures to start in November.
