Panthers shooters mired in a slump

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When Pitt was embarrassed more than a week ago by Rutgers it was relatively easy for coach Jamie Dixon to fix the problems that arose in that game -- rebounding and defense, issues that could be cured through cracking the whip.

In their next game, the Panthers responded with one of their best defensive performances of the season.

Fixing problems on offense are much more delicate. A coach cannot will his team to shoot better.

That is the problem Dixon faces tomorrow when the Panthers play host to West Virginia. He will be trying to coax more offense from a group that has lost its magic touch.

Pitt, which scored 70 points or more in 10 of the first 13 games, has reached 70 just once in the past six games. The Panthers have scored 64 or fewer in three of their past four and scored a season-low 53 points in a loss Saturday at Connecticut.

"Defense just requires effort and knowing where to be at the right times," senior guard Keith Benjamin said. "There's nothing you can do when your offense is not clicking. When you're not making shots, you can go to the gym every night and you can practice hard, but sometimes you just go through things as a team. We've happen to hit that right now."

Pitt's scoring slump has coincided with personal slumps for some of the top scorers. Sam Young has made just 16 of 50 shots in the past three games. Benjamin is 9 for 30 and Ron Ramon for 5 for 14 in the same span. Those players are taking the majority of the outside shots.

Dixon said there are a few factors involved in the slump. He said the Panthers have faced some tougher defensive teams recently and the players are playing increased minutes because of injuries.

Those things are out of Dixon's control. Shot selection is not, and it is something he has stressed to his players in the wake of the Connecticut loss.

"We were shooting so well for a stretch there," Dixon said. "Our percentages were off the charts from 3-point range and the field. [The slump] is more because of the shot selection we've had.

"It's been something we've stressed. The last couple of games our shooting percentage wasn't as good as it had been. That really sticks out in our minds. That's something we have to continue to improve on. We have to make better decisions. We seem to have some times when we don't make good decisions and don't take as good of shots."

After shooting 45 percent or more in four of the first six Big East games, the Panthers have shot 38.6 percent, 42.6 percent and 32 percent in the past three games. Against Connecticut, the Panthers did not make a field goal in the final 7:32 of the first half.

"You just have to continue to make the extra pass and stuff like that," Benjamin said. "The shots will start falling again. We're just going through a cold streak as a team right now. We take some bad shots. That starts to affect everybody. You have to start the game off by taking good shots. Hopefully, they'll fall and the rest will fall after that."

The Panthers need to snap out of their slump by the time the Mountaineers come to town. Pitt, West Virginia and Seton Hall are tied for seventh place in the conference standings.

"I think we're going to bounce out of it," Benjamin said. "Our offense is looking better at practice. Our offense hadn't been looking very good in practice the past few weeks. When it looks good in practice it usually looks good in games."

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NOTES -- Dixon said junior point guard Levance Fields, who is rehabilitating a fractured left foot, has begun to take set shots on the court. Dixon said Fields went through yesterday's shooting session without pain. Fields is not allowed to put pressure on the foot yet. ... Benjamin, who has been playing with a bad cut on his right hand for the past four games, said the hand is 90 percent and is as best as it has felt since he injured against Cincinnati Jan. 19.
 

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Win at Pitt would be huge for WVU


MORGANTOWN - Forget about the rivalry and the general nastiness this game generally provokes. When West Virginia and Pitt play the first of their two regular-season games tonight in Pittsburgh, the prize, at least in Bob Huggins' mind, is a bit more tangible than pride.

It's the RPI.

That's right, the Rating Percentage Index, that not-so-subtle indicator of just where every team in college basketball stands as far as its hopes for an at-large NCAA tournament berth.

A lot of coaches don't like to talk about the RPI, at least not to their players. They prefer players concentrate more on the abbreviations used in box scores - perhaps Pts, Reb, Ast or BS (blocked shots, not the other BS).

Huggins prefers that, too, but he doesn't want them to go into a game armed with anything but full knowledge. And the RPI is included.

"I try to be honest with them," Huggins said. "The worst thing you can do is have them come back at the end of the year and say, 'Man, if we knew how important that game was, we'd have done more to be ready.' I don't want that. It's hard to get somewhere if you don't have a road map."

Well, here's the road map for West Virginia, or at least the point on it which the Mountaineers have so far reached. WVU is No. 41 in the latest unofficial RPI. Pitt is No. 22. The Mountaineers were higher before consecutive losses to Georgetown and Cincinnati at home, never a plus in the ratings. They made up a little bit of ground by beating Providence Saturday night on the road.

The goal, of course, is to get higher. While NCAA tournament officials swear the RPI is only one of many tools the selection committee uses to pick the field, it's pretty tough not to be included if a team is in the top 30.

West Virginia would likely have to win at least six of its remaining nine games and probably another one or two in the Big East tournament to become a lock. But part of that means winning the right games.

Beating a higher-rated team on the road qualifies as one of the right games, which makes tonight's matchup between West Virginia (16-6, 5-4 Big East) and Pitt (17-5, 5-4) a great opportunity. The 7 p.m. game at the Petersen Events Center will be televised by ESPN.

"It's one of those games you have to win,'' said point guard Darris Nichols. "There aren't that many games left and you have to take advantage of every opportunity.''

Winning at Pitt, though, is tough to do. The Panthers are 92-9 all time at the arena that was built on the site of the old Pitt Stadium. West Virginia has won there once, a 70-66 decision in 2006.

"It's a tough place to play, but it's tough to play anywhere,'' Nichols said. "Their fans get into it, too, and they're pretty creative with some of the stuff they come up with to yell at you.''

As for the Panthers themselves, well, they're hurting a bit. Senior forward Mike Cook and junior point guard Levance Fields are both out, Cook for the season after he blew out a knee in December and Fields with a broken left foot.

Since those two were lost in consecutive games (the 11th and 12th of the season), Pitt has gone from 11-0 and ranked No. 6 in the country to 17-5 and ranked 21st this week. The Panthers also lost a home game to Rutgers two weeks ago in the 100th game at the Petersen Events Center.

But Pitt also beat No. 6 Georgetown, handing the Hoyas one of only two losses this season.

Fields and Cook, though, weren't Pitt's only good players. Junior forward Sam Young is averaging 18.1 points and 6-foot-7, 265-pound freshman center DeJuan Blair is averaging almost a double-double with 11.9 points and 9.6 rebounds per game.
 
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