Tree of Life

23 Mar

Pitt Coaching Search

published in category: College Sports on Wednesday, March 23rd, 2016 – 2:40 pm

Scott Phillips of NBC Sports joins Ken Laird to talk Pitt Coaching Search. Looking at each possible candidate and the positives, negatives and chances of each.

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College Hoops Analyst Mike DeCourcy joins Junker, Laird and Benz to talk Pitt Coaching Candidates.

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Rob Rossi In-studio with Junker, Benz and Laird on the Pitt Coaching Search, this needs to be done by Monday.

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Pitt Coach Search and Jag Off of the Week Voting. Plus Ben Howland turns down Pitt job? BROUGHT TO YOU BY THE TEAM SPANOS GROUP OF RAYMOND JAMES. RECENTLY HIGHLIGHTED AS THE FACE OF FINANCIAL GUIDANCE IN PITTSBURGH MAGAZINE.

Posted in College Sports

 

23 Mar

RMU Hockey players turning pro

published in category: College Sports on Wednesday, March 23rd, 2016 – 2:15 pm

Head Coach Derek Schooley joins us to wrap up the great season. Five Seniors have signed to play pro hockey so far. Notre Dame joins Big 10 Conference in hockey.

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From RMU Athletics-A pair of Robert Morris University men’s hockey seniors have signed amateur tryout agreements (ATO) with American Hockey League teams. Pittsburgh native forward Zac Lynch has signed with the Portland Pirates, the top affiliate of the NHL’s Florida Panthers. Defenseman and team captain Tyson Wilson has signed with the Manitoba Moose, the top affiliate of the NHL’s Winnipeg Jets.

A Hobey Baker Top Ten Finalist this season, Lynch set the Robert Morris all-time scoring record with 156 career points and set the single-season record with 55 points this season on 25 goals and 30 assists.

He finished the season as the third leading scorer in NCAA hockey and leads the nation in shorthanded goals with 8 this season. Lynch set an NCAA record, scoring shorthanded goals in four consecutive games this season and holds the shorthanded goals record at Robert Morris with 14 in his career. Lynch is second all-time in career assists with 89 and holds the program record with a plus-64 rating as well.

Lynch’s Hobey Baker Top Ten Finalist status is the second such honor for a Colonials player, following Cody Wydo in 2015.

“I’m very excited for Zac to start his pro career one level below the NHL,” said Colonials head coach Derek Schooley. “He had a outstanding college career and I am sure he will continue to keep getting better.”

Wilson finishes his Robert Morris career as the second-highest scoring defenseman in program history, playing 145 games in a Colonials uniform, eighth all-time. The Brockville, Ontario native has scored eleven goals and tallied 80 points in his career. Wilson has 69 assists and is plus-40 for his career, both fifth in the RMU record book and best by a defenseman.

Team captain during his senior season, Wilson was a second team Atlantic Hockey all-conference selection and played 38 games, scoring 27 points on 2 goals and 25 assists, with both goals coming against opponents ranked in the top 15 nationally. Wilson blocked 63 shots and was a disciplined player, taking only 11 penalties this season. The senior defenseman was not only a solid penalty killer but contributed 10 points on the Colonials top power play unit that led the nation at a 30-percent conversion rate for much of the 2015-16 season. Wilson finished the season sixth in scoring among free agent NCAA defensemen, second highest senior.

“I am very excited for Tyson to realize his dream of playing professional hockey, in a league that is one step below the NHL,” said Robert Morris head coach Derek Schooley.

Robert Morris men’s hockey has had its highest level of success during the time Wilson has been part of the team, wearing the ‘A’ as a junior and ‘C’ as a senior.

“He has worked hard to overcome injury to get back to the level he had in his freshman year,” Schooley said. “Tyson has the ability to have a long professional hockey career.”

Lynch and Wilson are both top ten finalists for the Senior CLASS Award for excellence on the ice and in the classroom.
Lynch and Wilson have won five championship trophies with the Colonials, two Three Rivers Classic tournament championships, two Atlantic Hockey regular season titles and one Atlantic Hockey playoff championship, helping Robert Morris to its first NCAA tournament appearance. The Colonials seniors have been part of 87 wins, more than any class in program history.

Lynch has already arrived in Portland and will be eligible for the Pirates Friday as they open up a two-game home series with the Springfield Falcons.

Wilson has already traveled to join the team in Manitoba. The Moose play on tonight at home vs. Stockton and host Charlotte for a pair of games Saturday and Monday.

Four other Colonials seniors have also signed ECHL ATOs: Goaltender Terry Shafer, defenseman Evan Moore, forward Greg Gibson and forward David Friedmann.

Posted in College Sports

 

22 Mar

Main Event-WrestleMania

published in category: Wrestling Reality on Tuesday, March 22nd, 2016 – 2:23 pm


Posted in Wrestling Reality

 

22 Mar

Defining Dixon by Tim Benz

published in category: College Sports on Tuesday, March 22nd, 2016 – 8:27 am

In the 8 hours since Jamie Dixon left Pitt to become the new men’s basketball coach at Texas Christian University, I have had about a thousand different thoughts/opinions/proclamations run through my mind. So here they are in no particular order:

-In three years Jamie Dixon will have wished he never left Pitt.

-In three years Pitt fans will have wished that Dixon never left.

-Before the start of the 2019-2020 season, Dixon will still be at TCU. I’m less sure about whoever Pitt hires to replace Dixon here.

-If Pitt hires Sean or Archie Miller, I will retract those previous two statements.

-Pitt will not be able to hire Sean or Archie Miller.

-Apparently, if Pitt fans have their way, no one who hasn’t coached in, played in, or was born/lived in the 412 or 724 area codes should be considered a candidate to replace Dixon. I even heard a guy call a talk show and suggest Billy Knight. For the record Billy Knight is 63 and has never coached.

-That being said. If Dan Burt’s Lady Dukes had beaten UCONN, I would’ve demanded Pitt hire him. Or maybe they should just consider having Susie McConnell Serio coach both the men’s and women’s teams at the same time. Progress people. Progress. And it is cost effective.

-For those who really do want to consider a women’s coach for the sake of optics, please…I beg you, do look at those two before you even say Geno Auriemma. At least they want to coach basketball. Geno wants to run Geno’s program Geno’s way. And having Geno coach a men’s team at this stage of his life would be the worst coaching experiment since Notre Dame hired Gerry Faust. Talk Sal Busacaglia out of retirement before hiring that guy.

-In terms of flat out length, Dixon’s run is underrated. The Penguins/Pirates/Steelers/& Pitt football have had a combined 18 coaches during in his 13 years on the Pitt bench.

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-If Pitt beats Villanova in the ‘09 Elite Eight, you aren’t reading this column.

-I don’t think Scott Barnes wanted Jamie out. But I don’t think he’s torn to pieces over the fact that he is gone either. Similarly, I’m not of the opinion that Dixon distrusted Barnes. But I don’t think Jamie felt secure either. So there you go.

-From a contractual standpoint…Jamie should’ve felt secure.

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-The Barnes/Dixon dynamic was starting to get weird quickly though. Not too long ago Barnes came on our show and stated that he wanted to see a better pre-conference schedule for the hoops team. A few days later, Dixon fervently defended his scheduling on a podcast with ESPN.com. Also, I distinctly remember the press conference after that double OT win at home vs Wake Forest this year in front of half full house. Barnes looked disgusted. And Jamie bounded in like they had just gone to the Final 4. Dixon cherished every win. And good for him. Winning is hard. But he never seemed to grasp that while on the score sheet every win counts the same, the public disagrees. And I think his bosses did too.

-Consider this quote from Dixon on that front- “If you believe you should win every game, I don’t fault people for being disappointed when we lose.” No one believed you should win every game, Jamie. You made that up in your own head. They did, however, have a right to expect more than one NCAA tournament win in the last five years.

-The Pitt program was stagnant under Dixon. Recruiting was fading. Attendance was dropping. The team was elite for a while. Just consistently OK of late. Getting into the NCAA tournament 11 of that last 13 years is filthy. Syracuse can’t make that claim. Nether can UCONN. Or Indiana. Or Georgetown. But mainly Dixon’s teams lacked an exclamation point in March Madness. They never made a run beyond where the fan base expected them to go. They were taken out by lesser seeds five times. And they never pulled off an upset of significance. That can go a long way towards quelling fan complaints. Sometimes the teams that overachieve do more to cement your legacy than the ones that are supposed to win. Ask some of the coaches from that list above.

-Don’t diminish the allure of coaching at your alma mater. I believe that from Jamie. But I also believe that he no longer felt appreciated here any more for the reasons stated in the previous paragraph. Winning less, but having each win feel like a greater accomplishment at TCU than at Pitt may make Dixon happier at this stage in his life.

-The move to the ACC seems to have hurt the program from a style and recruiting standpoint. Let alone a level of identity from its fans. I’m pretty sure a lot of ND, Syracuse, Louisville, & BC fans would say the same.

-Jamie’s relationship with the media is the most strange one that I’ve ever covered. He was accessible. He’d do your talk show. He’d give you a one on one after a presser. He genuinely appreciated your effort to cover his team. Sincerely. That’s rare for a coach of his standing. I like Jamie on a personal level. A lot. It’s tough to find a media person who thought he was a bad guy. But at the same time, oddly, it’s also tough to find one that really enjoyed the process of covering Jamie. While he was always up to do the interviews, they often came off as defensive. He tried to find an underlying negative intent to any question, even if such an angle never existed. And that interaction translated to the fans who eventually seemed to tire of Jamie’s perceived excuses for their criticism. Often, Jamie’s reasoning was valid. But so were the opinions of a fan base that was justified in feeling stuck in the mud.

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-How should the Dixon era be remembered? Positively. It was far more good than bad. And the program was is in tatters when he and Ben Howland got here.

-How should the Dixon era be remembered? Unfulfilled. It never got over the hump.

-Is that an eternal yin and yang that will never be resolved? I don’t know. Ask Walt Harris.

Posted in College Sports

 

21 Mar

Will Dixon leave for TCU?

published in category: College Sports on Monday, March 21st, 2016 – 2:43 pm

Will Jamie Dixon leave Pitt to coach his alma mater TCU? Pitt loses a big WPIAL recruit to Notre Dame, are more recruiting losses on the horizon?

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From Pitt PR- Coach Pat Narduzzi Quote Sheet

Opening remarks:
“Today was our first day in pads, not a bad day. As I told the kids afterwards, the enthusiasm was good, intensity was really good, but attention to detail not so good. But it was a normal first day in pads. I think there are going to be missed tackles. I think the offense had some big plays that you don’t want to give up on defense, but you’re fired up as a head coach to see those. There were some turnovers and there was some sloppiness, so it was a sloppy first day in pads, but we like to hit and we like a lot of contact, so I think they had a lot of fun today.”

On practicing at Heinz Field:
“I talked to our kids. This is our house and we’ve got to play well at Heinz Field. There’s got to be a different attitude when you walk into this place as opposed to the indoor. And you hope to have that attitude wherever you practice. However, when you come into here, you better be ready to go. And that’s something we’ve got to kick up. Last year we didn’t get to get in here at all. Last fall I think we got in here twice. And when we got in here twice we weren’t allowed to tackle just so we didn’t tear up the grass. So it’s really important to get in here.”

On any perceived difference in attitude practicing at Heinz Field:
“It’s hard to tell the attitude difference because they’re really always just fired up. The first live period after a 10-minute warm-up period just to get it going, there was a ton of enthusiasm there. So I couldn’t tell if it was Heinz or if they were just happy to get out of the shorts and play football.

“It’s hard to tell the difference because I think there was a lot of energy. Was it Heinz or was it contact? I don’t know. We’ll find out the next time for sure. Because then they’ll have hit people already and they’re not so anxious to make contact.

“Twelve [practices are permitted in pads by the NCAA]. You have to have three in shorts but then 12 where you’re allowed to have pads.”

On standout offensive plays in today’s practice:
“Quadree Henderson had a nice big run, kind of like some of the stuff you saw last year from Tyler Boyd, running some sweep plays. Tre Tipton I remember had a big play. You see a big play and you’re getting after somebody or coaching somebody up. I’m sure there were some that I didn’t mention, but those were the two that stood out to me.”

On the quarterbacks:
“I thought, just with the pass ‘skelly,’ I think there’s some pretty good timing with our offense and receivers, and obviously Nathan [Peterman] is our starter. We’re trying to find that next guy and right now I don’t know who that is.
“Nathan looked good, and, like I said, we’re still looking for that next guy.”

On the growing relationship between the offensive players and new coordinator Matt Canada:
“I think they’re having fun. I think they’re having a good time and they’ve bought into the offense, so I think that’s important.”

On what he’s seen from offensive lineman Alex Bookser this spring:
“He’s really playing well at center. Is that going to be his spot? I don’t know. But the move was made because we were trying to get our best five on the field. And at this point, right now, he’s definitely one of those top five. When [Alex] Officer gets back, there’s going to be a battle. I don’t know where things are going to fall but at this point, it’s getting our best five on the field, and he was anxious in trying that spot. So I think it’s good for him that he’s played tackle and he’s played guard and now he’s playing center. So he can play everywhere and he’s done a good job.”

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Posted in College Sports

 

21 Mar

Pirates Roundtable

published in category: Pittsburgh Pirates on Monday, March 21st, 2016 – 2:22 pm

Pirates Beat Writers Rob Biertempfel and Travis Sawchik joins Ken Laird and Josh Taylor for one hour of the best Bucs talk-roster and lineup decision, rotation, analytics and more.

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Posted in Pittsburgh Pirates

 

19 Mar

Pitt and WVU both lose

published in category: College Sports on Saturday, March 19th, 2016 – 10:44 am


Posted in College Sports

 

18 Mar

Pens Win Streak

published in category: Pittsburgh Penguins on Friday, March 18th, 2016 – 10:19 am


Posted in Pittsburgh Penguins

 



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