| Wish
You Were Here
The presence of these four would have given Pittsburgh
more reasons to cheer in 2004.
Donatas Zavackas
The image most of us remember
is Zavackas pouting on the bench during the Panthers' three-point loss
to Marquette in the 2002-03 season. But the 6-8 forward's shooting ability
was a key to the Panthers' first-ever Big East Tournament Championship
team. He averaged 10.1 points per game on the season, and while his
teammates were able to make up for the points, they were not able to
find anyone to drain threes the way Z did when he was hot. Zavackas
was a dangerous three-point weapon as a senior, hitting 44.3% of his
treys. Last year, Carl Krauser shot .333 from beyond the arc. No Zavackas
meant no outside threat for last season's Panthers - and that ultimately
meant no Big East Tourney crown and a third straight Sweet 16 defeat.
Aramis Ramirez
It's true that Rammy will never
be confused with Brooks Robinson. But you won't hear his name uttered
in the same sentence as Chris Stynes' either. The Pirates' 2004 season
was somewhat encouraging, in that they finally had young talent rather
than veteran rent-a-players, and much of that talent returns next spring.
And it's mostly homegrown talent - you know, the way other teams do
it. Except at third base. The Bucs' homegrown talent at that position
- the guy they patiently schooled through all the strikeouts, immaturity
and inconsistency - was very maturely and consistently bashing 36 homers
and driving in 103 runs while hitting .318 for the Cubs. Jason Bay was
the National League's Rookie of the Year without Rammy imagine his production
with Ramirez's bat behind him.
Fran Ganter
We know Fran's still in Happy
Valley. We're aware that Galen Hall is a great offensive mind, and we're
aware that the Penn State offensive coordinator doesn't actually coordinate
the offense. I guess what we miss most is the idea of Franny actually
calling plays. In 1994, Ganter unleashed one of the most awesome displays
of offensive fireworks ever seen in college football. Of the 11 times
a Penn State quarterback has thrown more than 250 passes in a season,
seven occurred in the last decade. And while you might not have always
seen explosiveness in the post-Kerry Collins era, you always saw a more-than-competent
offense. What you didn't see were 6-4 losses.
Larry Fitzgerald
Yes, Greg Lee is sixth in the
nation with 105 receiving yards per game. And yes, Tyler Palko has lived
up to his lofty expectations. But take a moment and picture Fitzgerald
flanked opposite Lee. Imagine #1 in the huddle next to Palko. Sure,
there likely would have been growing pains even with Fitzgerald in the
line-up. But he and Palko were roommates, best friends, and on the same
page. Many of us thought that even if Fitzgerald had returned for his
junior season, his chances at the Heisman Trophy would have been sabotaged
by a first-year QB. Now that we've seen what Palko is capable of, maybe
he would have helped Fitzgerald win the hardware.
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