Friday, February 5, 2010

What has happened to Pitt?

Pitt started the Big East season on fire. They won five straight out of the gates, including a three game road trip in which they took down Syracuse, UConn and Cincinnati.

But after a loss to West Virginia in the Backyard Brawl, the Panthers have dropped four of their last five games to fall to 6-4 in league play, just a half-game in front of Louisville and a game in front of South Florida, Marquette, Cincinnati, and Notre Dame.

So what happened?

How did Pitt go from the darling of the national media to a team in free fall?

Its simple. They can't score.

Through five Big East games, the Panthers were averaging 74.0 ppg. In their last five, that number has dropped to 60.3 ppg. When the Panthers were 5-0, Ashton Gibbs was averaging 20.0 ppg, shooting 52.0% from the field, and hit 16-22 three's. In his last five games, he's averaging just 13.4 ppg while shooting 26.4% from the field and 6-29 from deep.

Don't put it all on Gibbs, however. He isn't the only one struggling. Brad Wanamaker is averaging just 9.6 ppg over the last five games, including being shut out against the Mountaineers. Jermaine Dixon sprained his ankle in the St. John's game and missed the Panther's loss to South Florida. Dante Taylor hasn't scored in four games, and Travon Woodall has just eight points in that span. Gary McGhee, Pitt's 6'10", 260 lb center, couldn't hit a layup if his life depended on it. There is not reason someone should go 3-11 from the field when they don't take a shot outside of two feet from the rim. Nasir Robinson has scored 23 points in five games in his 26 point outburst against Louisville.

Gilbert Brown is really the only guy playing well offensively right now, and even he has been painfully in consistent. He scored 20 and was 8-9 from the floor in the loss to Georgetown, but scored just 16 points on 3-13 shooting over his next two games. After dropping 25 in the loss to South Florida, Brown was shut out against West Virginia.

Its really that simple. The biggest reason that Pitt was thought to be down this season was their lack of firepower offensively. There isn't anyone on this roster that is considered a go-to scorer. Even Ashton Gibbs, who has been one of the most improved players this season in the Big East, is more of a secondary scoring option. He's not great at creating his own shot, especially against a set defense, and it is starting to be exposed.

But Pitt has never exactly been known as a team with tremendous offensive prowess. They aren't going to be scoring 85 points a game and beating teams in a shootout.

Pitt's success hinges on their ability to defend, which is something they haven't exactly been doing great of late either. Their four losses have been some of their worst defensive performances of the season.

What is a good way to go on a losing streak?

Struggle to score the ball while playing shoddy defense.

1 comment:

Troy Machir said...

Is it safe to say that Pitt is this year's G'Town?

Lost a bunch of talent, low expectations comming in. Over-achieved in the early part, inflatted ranking, unavoidable collapse.