Pitt modernized its offense over the winter. The growing pains will be felt for a while

health2024-05-21 11:24:0574881

PITTSBURGH (AP) — Pat Narduzzi spent most of his first nine seasons at Pittsburgh building a program whose identity reflected its coach’s old-school values.

Physical. Defense-oriented. Run-heavy. Narduzzi took pride in his team being an outlier of sorts in a game growing ever more innovative — especially on offense — by the season.

Then came last fall and a 3-9 finish in which nothing worked. The Panthers couldn’t score. Couldn’t pass the ball effectively and couldn’t run it well enough to make up the difference.

The result was Pitt’s worst season in a quarter century and a reckoning too. Narduzzi overhauled a significant portion of his staff and replaced offensive coordinator Frank Cignetti and his pro-style approach with Kade Bell, a 31-year-old who turned Western Carolina into one of the most prolific offenses in the FCS.

The injection of youth and fresh ideas has invigorated both Narduzzi and the Panthers. Yet that newness also comes with the kind of growing pains that have been on display most of the spring as Bell tries to get the Panthers to play faster, something that can be tricky when you’re essentially learning a new language.

Address of this article:http://guinea-bissau.argoasecurityeu.com/content-16f899913.html

Popular

The fightback begins: Boss of London's Queen Mary University tells pro

Now THAT'S a holiday photo album: Couple who sold everything they own to travel share 15 jaw

HKFP Lens: Artist displays 'overlapping memories' of Hong Kong and UK on film

Supermarket facial recognition trial: Rotorua mother’s ‘discrimination’ ordeal

Target to lower prices on basic goods in response to inflation

Scott Morrison and Joe Biden to join summit with key Asia

Coronavirus China: COVID

Trapped Chinese miners request pork sausages

LINKS