Albany Times Union (Sunday)

Orange offense struggles in the red zone and Pitt overcomes mistakes for 21-10 win.

Heavy underdog Orange stay in game late into third, helped by Panthers mistakes

- By Will Graves

Pittsburgh coach Pat Narduzzi watched the Panthers put together a nearly flawless practice last Tuesday, one so close to perfect that Narduzzi admitted he practicall­y had to invent something to complain about.

That won’t be an issue going forward.

While Narduzzi remains high on his team, No. 25 Pitt still has plenty to work on following a sloppy 21-10 win over Syracuse on Saturday.

A week removed from a romp against overmatche­d Austin Peay in the opener, the Panthers (2-0, 1-0 Atlantic Coast Conference) looked very much like a work in progress against the Orange (0-2, 0-2). Seven penalties, three missed field goals and two turnovers allowed Syracuse to hang around well into the second half before Pitt finally pulled away behind a dominant defensive performanc­e.

“It was a lot uglier than I’d like it to be,” Narduzzi said. “Disappoint­ed more with just the penalties that we had, just some stuff that you don’t expect to have at all.”

Stuff Narduzzi told the Panthers “championsh­ip teams don’t do.” Still, it’s a lesson Pitt learned in a victory. It certainly beats the alternativ­e.

“It was definitely a sloppy game,” said Kenny Pickett, who threw for two touchdowns and ran for another score. “Didn’t play the kind of football we need to play to go where we want to go. It’s almost good that it happened, we persevered.”

Having one of the best defensive front sevens in the country certainly helps. Pitt limited Syracuse to 171 total yards, 69 of them coming on backup quarterbac­k Rex Culpepper’s secondquar­ter touchdown strike to a streaking Taj Harris. Otherwise, Syracuse mustered very little in the face of an unrelentin­g pass rush.

The Panthers sacked Culpepper and starter Tommy Devito seven times, rarely letting the quarterbac­ks get comfortabl­e. Senior defensive end Rashad Weaver, who missed all of last season with a torn ACL in his right knee and was forced to sit out the opener due to mixed results on a COVID-19 test, recorded two sacks in his first game in 20 months.

The game turned late in the third quarter when Pitt defensive back Paris Ford picked off a wayward screen pass by Devito with the Orange in Panthers territory and only down four. Pickett drove Pitt 66 yards in eight plays, the final 17 on a touchdown pass over the middle to Jared Wayne.

Ford celebrated by dunking on a makeshift hoop the Panthers use as their version of the “turnover chain” popularize­d by Miami.

The Orange might have a brewing quarterbac­k controvers­y on their hands. Culpepper, who beat testicular cancer in 2018, provided the only splashy play on his rainbow to Harris. Devito spent most of the afternoon running for cover against one of the nation’s top defensive lines. Devito completed 9 of 15 passes for 32 yards and a pick while Culpepper went 4-for9 for 88 yards and the score.

Syracuse coach Dino Babers said there are some packages the team has for Culpepper but seemed intent on sticking with Devito as the starter for now. He’s more concerned about protecting whoever is back there. The Orange have allowed 14 sacks in two games.

“At this stage of the game, we’re going to set the record (for sacks) and I don’t plan on setting the record in 2020,” Babers said.

 ?? Keith Srakocic / Associated Press ?? Syracuse quarterbac­k Tommy Devito (13) endures one of seven sacks by the Pitt defense on Saturday. The Orange have allowed 14 sacks in their first two games.
Keith Srakocic / Associated Press Syracuse quarterbac­k Tommy Devito (13) endures one of seven sacks by the Pitt defense on Saturday. The Orange have allowed 14 sacks in their first two games.

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