Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Brown’s emergence gift in Pitt’s latest win

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per game in the first four contests.

In the past three games, however, he has played 64 minutes. While those minutes were largely empty and devoid of production in wins against McNeese State and Delaware State — with six points and nine rebounds in 40 minutes — he increased his career scoring total Friday by 52.2 percentin 24 minutes. He was efficient in doing so, too, as he made 5 of 7 shots.

“Ryan’s a senior, so he’s got all the tricks handled,” Brown said. “I just kind of learn quick. We’ll get Ry back, but until then, I’m just going to have to keep learning fast.”

Brown still has to work off an accelerate­d developmen­tal curve, especially with ACC play fast approachin­g. While his offensive game has improved, he still too often relies on his overwhelmi­ng size for dunks rather than his skill, a strategy that won’t be effective against improved competitio­n. Though he has had six blocks in the past three games, he can sometimes appear flat-footed and out of place on defense.

For one night, though, he was more than just a potential-laden project. He was, in most every sense of the word, the difference.

“As I said when he [Luther] got hurt, if we can survive these games where he’s out, this would be a good learning experience for these other guys,” Stallings said. “Certainly Terrell took full advantage of it tonight.”

Luther return still uncertain

While he likely won’t be fully reevaluate­d until the days before the ACC opener against No. 6-ranked Miami, the topic of Luther’s return is omnipresen­t, prompting questions even in moments where there aren’t necessaril­y answers.

The 6-foot-9 senior, who is averaging 12.7 points and 10.1 rebounds on the season, hasn’t even taken a jump shot since going down, according to Stallings. The Panthers coach has a return date in mind, though with Christmas on the horizon, it’s more a wish-list item.

“We’re hoping to have him for the Miami game,” he said. “We’re hoping.”

Turnover woes continue

For all the goodwill generated by Pitt’s victory and the way it came to be, there were several struggles obscured by the joy of the win. Perhaps none was bigger than the Panthers’ turnovers woes. It’s not just that they turned it over 21 times against Towson; it’s that such a high number is the continuati­on of a startling trend.

The Tigers employ a press, but prior to Friday, it hadn’t been extraordin­arily effective. In their first 12 games, it forced turnovers on 17.8 percent of opponents’ possession­s, ranking it comfortabl­y in the bottom half of Division I teams. Against Pitt, it caused miscues on 29.2 percent of the Panthers’ possession­s.

More alarmingly, it’s part of a larger story as Pitt’s season continues. In its past four games against pressing teams, it has had 74 turnovers. Bizarrely, the lowest single-game total of that group came against by far the most daunting foe, No. 10 West Virginia, which is the No. 2 team in Division I in turnover percentage. Freshman guard Marcus Carr, the team’s primary ballhandle­r, has exhibited those struggles more than anyone else on the team, as he has 22 turnovers in that quartet of games, including a career-high seven against Towson.

“That’s a little disconcert­ing,” Stallings said. “I have to figure out why I didn’t have our guys in a better position and more ready to handle that.”

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