This weekend’s matchup with No. 8 Pittsburgh certainly got more interesting with Notre Dame’s shocking loss to Navy. What looked like a battle for a BCS bid now looks like a battle for Charlie Weis’ survival.
Pitt has slowly worked its way up the rankings, and has ascended into the top ten for the first time this season, quite a surprise for a team that lost its most explosive weapon when LeSean McCoy left early for the NFL.
Nobody follows the team closer than John Grupp of the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review. John was kind enough to answer a few questions to give us a little bit more in-depth look at the team that could very well decide the fate of this year’s Notre Dame squad.
Inside the Irish: Obviously this game lost some prestige when Notre Dame lost to Navy,
but now it’s got a whole other level of intrigue. Do you think Pitt
smells blood in the water? Do they think ND will be primed for a rally? How is Notre Dame perceived this week, as opposed to pre-Navy?
John Grupp: Honestly, I really don’t think a lot of the luster of the game wore off
because of the Irish’s loss to Navy. It’s already a sell out and will
likely be the biggest crowd to ever witness a sporting event in
Pittsburgh history — pro or college. Certainly, the game doesn’t look
as difficult as it did a couple of weeks ago, but the players and
coaches aren’t taking Notre Dame lightly in any way. If anything, the
Panthers expect an angry, hungry Irish team.
ITI: Where does the Pitt-ND rivalry stand for the football team and fans of Pittsburgh?
JG: It’s not nearly as important as some of the Big East rivalries,
especially West Virginia. Really, I wouldn’t call it a big rivalry as
much as just a big game. There’s not a palpable dislike of Notre Dame
by Pitt fans that you typically see in most bitter rivalries. But they
have such a long history of big games, dating from Tony Dorsett to Tyler Palko, and Notre Dame will always be a big game.
ITI: Dion Lewis has been a force. Do you expect the the offensive formula to
be a steady diet of Lewis with some play-action passing against a
suspect ND secondary?
JG: Pitt will follow the same recipe for success — let the defense decide
what it does. The Panthers will certainly get Dion Lewis involved — he
has fared very well against top rush defenses this year — but if Notre
Dame sells out to stop the run, they will let Bill Stull throw to their
wide array of receivers, such as WR Jonathan Baldwin and TE Dorin Dickerson, two of the best at their respective positions in the Big East, if not the nation.
ITI: The lightbulb has gone on for Bill Stull. What’s changed this season and contributed to the gaudy numbers?
JG: Stull was awful late last season after suffering a concussion. He’s healthy now, but the biggest change is offensive coordinator Frank Cignetti Jr.,
and a system that gives Stull a good chance to succeed. He has a ton of
weapons, a good offensive line and the play-calling has a set, defined
progression of reads. Stull is confident right now and he gained the
respect of a lot of people with the way he handled the booing and
backlash earlier this season.
ITI: What’s the recipe for a Pitt win?
JG: Basically, the same for every game. Avoid turnovers and don’t let Jimmy Clausen
beat them. The Panthers allowed 400 passing yards to Buffalo and their
lone loss to N.C. State. Their secondary looked vulnerable early in the
year, but some personnel changes seem to have helped.
ITI: If you had to predict what was going to happen this weekend, what’s your gut telling you?
JG: Biggest crowd in Heinz Field history, excellent game by Clausen, big game for Dion Lewis, three-point final (not ready to commit to winner).
Special thanks to John for the help this week and be sure to check out the excellent coverage from the Tribune-Review.