Welcome to the ACC from Pitt!

5,319 Views | 47 Replies | Last: 1 yr ago by mbBear
CrazyPaco
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Happy Labor Day! I am an alumnus of two ACC schools: Pitt and Miami, but my loyalty and season tickets lie with Pitt. I also lived in San Francisco for about three years and have attended various events at both Cal and Stanford. I'm personally very happy and excited both you and Stanford are in the ACC, and talking to other Pitt fans tailgating at Saturday's opener, I can tell you that excitement is pretty universal. I think it is great for the conference because the institutional fit is near ideal: the ACC is filled with a mix of public and private universities that are very serious about their academic brands and are committed to both their revenue-generating and Olympic sports. I'm confident that the geographic and travel issues will get worked out.

A little about your new conference partner Pitt since you may not be so familiar with it.

Pitt was founded as a private school in 1787 and became "state-related" in 1966. It is a medium-sized, urban, public-private hybrid university located smack in the middle of the city of Pittsburgh. It is most renowned for its medical, health, and biosciences. It is top 20 university in total R&D expenditures and typically top 5 in National Institutes of Health funding (#3 in 2022 after Johns Hopkins and UCSF). Its affiliated medical center, UPMC, is one the largest academic medical centers in the world with over 40 hospitals in 3 states and multiple countries including Ireland and Italy. Notably, Jonas Salk developed the polio vaccine, Peter Safar developed CPR and the field of emergency medicine, and Thomas Starzl pioneered organ transplantation while at Pitt. Pitt is also ranked highly in philosophy, creative writing, information science, and international studies, among other programs.

(Click here for a post of photos introducing the athletic facilities and campus)

The university's main Pittsburgh campus houses just under 20K undergrads and 10K grad students on only about 150 acres, one of the smallest by acreage in NCAA Division I FBS. So the campus is built vertically like no other major research university.

The centerpiece is a 42-story gothic skyscraper called the Cathedral of Learning. It is the largest academic building in the Western Hemisphere, but it is perhaps even more impressive inside with a 1/2 acre, 3-story gothic hall and 31 working "Nationality" class rooms that are essentially small museums. After every football win, the top of the Cathedral of Learning is lit up with blue and gold "victory lights."

Other features around campus are a French gothic chapel with some of the world's tallest stained-glass windows, a neo-renaissance Italian villa arts building, and multiple neo-classical and beau-arts buildings including a student union with immaculately restored Louis XV-style ballrooms. Alas, the campus has its share of modern brutalist beasties as well.

Pitt is located in Pittsburgh's Oakland neighborhood immediately adjacent to the city's major museum and public library complex (the Carnegie), a large wooded urban park (Schenley), botanical garden (Phipps), and Carnegie Mellon University, with which Pitt has a highly collaborative relationship. Pitt also has three additional 4-year regional campuses throughout Western Pennsylvania (all part of the same university), one with Division II sports and the two others competing in Division III.

Pitt's old football stadium, until 1999, was almost identical to Memorial Stadium but wedged within the small, urban campus footprint. Still a controversial decision, it was replaced by the current basketball arena ("the Pete") with game-day football moving 3 miles down the road to Heinz (now Acrisure) stadium. Both the stadium and the football practice facility were originally designed to be equally shared between Pitt and the Steelers, who have long had collaborative partnerships.

Pitt claims 9 national championships in football, primarily based on Sports Illustrated 1967 published research on the subject, 2 of which are AP national championships. Pitt is a top 20 program in all-time wins, has the 12th most College Hall of Fame inductees (19), the 8th most Consensus All-Americans (55), and the 4th most players enshrined in Canton (10). Historically, Pitt is arguably the most decorated football program in the ACC. In addition, men's hoops has 27 all-time NCAA appearances, including this past season. Women's volleyball has appeared in the past two final fours and men's soccer in two of the last three College Cups. Women's soccer and wrestling are nationally ranked.

Hopefully you get the opportunity to visit Pittsburgh and tailgate at our stadium, maybe even catch some fall foliage if the timing is right. Many people find it a surprising city compared to its historical stereotype as there are no longer any working steel mills in the city proper and it has transition into a white collar financial, technology, educational, and medical hub even though it still retains its historic blue-collar sensibilities. There are plenty of things to explore along the city's three rivers which boast the world's most numerous bridges: from the Andy Warhol and August Wilson museums to Frank Lloyd Wright's Fallingwater and funiculars that take you to impressive views, you should be able to find things to fill up any football weekend with additional activities.

In any case, a big welcome from the Pitt Panthers and hope to see you soon either in the Bay Area or in the 'Burgh (and don't forget the "h" at the end of the name; very important to Yinzers).


Stolibear
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Welcome! My wife is from Pittsburgh. Looking forward to a road game there and some good perogies.
Boot
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I moved to Pittsburgh in January of 1977 from Kauai ( Don't ask it was complicated) until June and Pittsburgh was
starting its transformation. Lived in Carnegie and partied hard in Shadyside. Great City!
Big C
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Thanks for coming over here! We are looking forward to playing and getting to know our new conference schools.

My dad grew up not too far from Pittsburg, in Weirton, WV (a steel mill town across the Ohio River from the larger Steubenville, OH, for the uninitiated... interesting to look on a map to see how 3 states can be so close to one another). He used to use the slang of the 20th century greater-Pittsburg area: "hanging out" was "loafing" and a "wimp" was a "cake eater".

My biggest memory of Pitt Football was Tony Dorsett's senior season. What a back and what a year he had!

I haven't been out there since the early '90s. Would love to come out for a game! Best of luck to you guys this season.
CJ Loves Cal
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Big welcome to you too!!

Have family roots in western PA - Greene County going clear back to the early 1800s - but have only visited once, 40 something years ago now. Delighted to have a Cal football reason to make a return trip!!
salbear1984
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We lived in Pittsburgh in the late 80's, a great city with wonderful people.
Big Dog
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thanks for checking in. My D did a SURP at Pitt a few years back. It was a great experience, and she remarked how friendly the locals were.

Looking forward to a roadie.
DWM81
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CrazyPaco...Thank you for the warm welcome...My wife is a Licensed Architect. We are visiting Falling Water next week from Napa Valley. Where should we go eat in the Pittsburgh area...?
Shocky1
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https://instagr.am/p/CwY1y1tp9JC
cal's monster class acc introductions: part vi

school: pittsburgh

mascot: roc the panther

stadium: acrisure stadium (shared with the pittsburgh steelers, 68.400 capacity)

2023 forbes academic rankings: #235
https://www.forbes.com/top-colleges/

fun fact: franco harris did not invent spaghetti o's or pepto bismal

best gameday golf: oakmont & fox chapel


shocky's favorite pittsburgh grad: author john irving or maybe crazy paco or something
CrazyPaco
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DWM81 said:

CrazyPaco...Thank you for the warm welcome...My wife is a Licensed Architect. We are visiting Falling Water next week from Napa Valley. Where should we go eat in the Pittsburgh area...?
So I'm not going to bs you and say the food scene is near that of San Francisco, because SF may be the best of any place I've ever lived. Pittsburgh has some nice spots though, and a lot of burgeoning chefs have moved there because of the cost of living and start up costs so the food scene is decent.

But yours is such an open ended question though...depends what you are looking for. There are certainly some traditionally more high end places up on Mount Washington where you'll pay for the view (e.g. LeMont). There are some newer places like Tako (really good Japanese fusion street tacos)...though generally Mexican subpar in Pittsburgh,.. Talia, Meat & Potatoes, Butcher and the Rye all downtown. Some traditional Italian in the Bloomfield section which is Pittsburgh's little Italy. Butterjoint in Oakland. Or head to the strip district (old produce warehouse district) as there are a lot of restaurants there.

Breakfast, a definite go-to traditional place is Pamela's. But they take no reservations so if you don't hit it right can be a long line. I recommend doing a Sunday brunch at the Grande Concourse (can make reservations...look for their donut machine).

Here's the thing though, I'm not an expert on the latest and greatest because I live in DC and only get up for games, and at most, a weekend. Because of that I'm often unable to stick around after games and explore the food scene in Pittsburgh.

I can tell you that, like many cities, there are some quintessential must tries: a Primanti's sandwich is must try. You don't have to love it but you need to try it once (liberally apply hot sauce, IMO). Pittsburgh is known for putting fries on everything...including their sandwiches and salads. So don't be surprised when you order a steak or chicken salad and it comes with fries on it. Perogies....big polish/eastern European roots in Pittsburgh. If you never had them, find them (try S & D Polish deli in the Strip). They serve them at the stadiums. The Pirates even have racing perogie mascots they are so quintessential to Pittsburgh. Fried fish sandwiches are big in the area too, and the Original Oyster House in Market Square downtown has been serving them up since 1870...oldest restaurant in the 'burgh.

I'm not as familiar with things outside the city where Fallingwater would be if you are staying in the Laurel Highlands. (by the way Wright's Kentuck Knob and Polymath Park are right there too...and I recommend doing a downtown architectural tour.. Union Trust building downtown is one of my favorites...and the Cathedral of Learning and Heinz Chapel are must dos if you are in to neogothic and get into Oakland).

The best place to ask this is probably over at PantherLair.com so you can get more permanent locals to weigh in.


SBGold
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One of my most favored sports memorabilia treasures is Dorsett's Pitt jersey autographed. He noted on the jersey that he is a 4X All American, a Heisman winner, a national champion and in the College HOF.

Pretty amazing career
BGolden
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Looking forward to a road game at Pitt. I visited Pittsburgh in the mid 90s. Rode up the Duquesne Incline & was very impressed with the view and the city. As an architect, Falling Water is like Meca.
JB was a Chieftain
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Do they ever do a Pitt Saturday & Steeler Sunday weekend?
75bear
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JB was a Chieftain said:

Do they ever do a Pitt Saturday & Steeler Sunday weekend?
Apparently this weekend!

Cincinnati plays Pitt this Saturday, and then the 49ers play the Steelers on Sunday.
CrazyPaco
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75bear said:

JB was a Chieftain said:

Do they ever do a Pitt Saturday & Steeler Sunday weekend?
Apparently this weekend!

Cincinnati plays Pitt this Saturday, and then the 49ers play the Steelers on Sunday.
Yes, and early in the season, sometimes you get Pirate games the same weekend too. Double header Pitt football followed by the Pirates. PNC is an awesome stadium. Very much worth checking out.
NYCGOBEARS
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Pittsburgh is also home to the iconic Rather Ripped Record Store as the owner closed up the Berkeley store and moved back home. Rather Ripped is also a very good album by Sonic Youth that is named after the record store.
juarezbear
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CrazyPaco said:

75bear said:

JB was a Chieftain said:

Do they ever do a Pitt Saturday & Steeler Sunday weekend?
Apparently this weekend!

Cincinnati plays Pitt this Saturday, and then the 49ers play the Steelers on Sunday.
Yes, and early in the season, sometimes you get Pirate games the same weekend too. Double header Pitt football followed by the Pirates. PNC is an awesome stadium. Very much worth checking out.


I've worked on several movies in Pittsburgh over the years. Very cool city that's of a very manageable scale. Lots of culture and really good food. Looking forward to attending games there.
KoreAmBear
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CrazyPaco said:

75bear said:

JB was a Chieftain said:

Do they ever do a Pitt Saturday & Steeler Sunday weekend?
Apparently this weekend!

Cincinnati plays Pitt this Saturday, and then the 49ers play the Steelers on Sunday.
Yes, and early in the season, sometimes you get Pirate games the same weekend too. Double header Pitt football followed by the Pirates. PNC is an awesome stadium. Very much worth checking out.
That's my hope as PNC is on the bucket list. Welcome. Always been fond of the Steel City.
NYCGOBEARS
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Couple of my favorite game day drinking buddies are Pitt alumni as their bar is my local sports bar. Really cool people.
juarezbear
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NYCGOBEARS said:

Pittsburgh is also home to the iconic Rather Ripped Record Store as the owner closed up the Berkeley store and moved back home. Rather Ripped is also a very good album by Sonic Youth that is named after the record store.


That's crazy! Was wondering what happened to Rather Ripped! I lived on Ridge Road for 3 years and was there on a daily basis. Met several up and coming acts there including The Police and Patti Smith. Was my favorite record store ever!
Big Dog
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juarezbear said:

CrazyPaco said:

75bear said:

JB was a Chieftain said:

Do they ever do a Pitt Saturday & Steeler Sunday weekend?
Apparently this weekend!

Cincinnati plays Pitt this Saturday, and then the 49ers play the Steelers on Sunday.
Yes, and early in the season, sometimes you get Pirate games the same weekend too. Double header Pitt football followed by the Pirates. PNC is an awesome stadium. Very much worth checking out.


I've worked on several movies in Pittsburgh over the years. Very cool city that's of a very manageable scale. Lots of culture and really good food. Looking forward to attending games there.
I was in Pittsburgh at teh time Christopher Nolan was filming Dark Knight Rises. Spent 2 full days being a nosey tourist. But Nolan didn't seem to think I was worthy of a scene. July was too hot to put on winter clothes for the Stadium crowd, but they were seeking volunteers.
bearsandgiants
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Big Dog said:

juarezbear said:

CrazyPaco said:

75bear said:

JB was a Chieftain said:

Do they ever do a Pitt Saturday & Steeler Sunday weekend?
Apparently this weekend!

Cincinnati plays Pitt this Saturday, and then the 49ers play the Steelers on Sunday.
Yes, and early in the season, sometimes you get Pirate games the same weekend too. Double header Pitt football followed by the Pirates. PNC is an awesome stadium. Very much worth checking out.


I've worked on several movies in Pittsburgh over the years. Very cool city that's of a very manageable scale. Lots of culture and really good food. Looking forward to attending games there.
I was in Pittsburgh at teh time Christopher Nolan was filming Dark Knight Rises. Spent 2 full days being a nosey tourist. But Nolan didn't seem to think I was worthy of a scene. July was too hot to put on winter clothes for the Stadium crowd, but they were seeking volunteers.


My brother in law was an extra for that! Lives there 4 years when wife went thru med school. Lived in Edgewood. I miss yinzers and the burgh, $6 parking across the Clemente bridge for pirate games, primanti bros of course, and feeling naked at a steeler game for not having a jersey. Truly a great city and I can't wait to return.
chalcidbear
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My only problem with Pitt are your colors - it may hard for my aging eyes to tell who to root for on the field ... at least West Virginia is not in the ACC.
KoreAmBear
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NYCGOBEARS said:

Couple of my favorite game day drinking buddies are Pitt alumni as their bar is my local sports bar. Really cool people.
Speaking of hapa Koreans, sports bars, and Pittsburgh, I miss Sullivan and Son. Great little sitcom. A kind of Cheers v. 2.0 but I enjoyed it. I like Steve Byrne as a comic too (and he really is from Pittsburgh).
MoragaBear
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Staff
CrazyPaco said:

75bear said:

JB was a Chieftain said:

Do they ever do a Pitt Saturday & Steeler Sunday weekend?
Apparently this weekend!

Cincinnati plays Pitt this Saturday, and then the 49ers play the Steelers on Sunday.
Yes, and early in the season, sometimes you get Pirate games the same weekend too. Double header Pitt football followed by the Pirates. PNC is an awesome stadium. Very much worth checking out.
Thanks for the welcome. So many interesting road trips will be coming up. Can't wait for a Pitt, Steelers and Pirates tripleheader over a few days period.

I've seen a game in all 30 MLB ballparks and 42 overall (including my 2nd game at Globe Life, the Rangers' new stadium yesterday on the UNT trip) and PNC is my favorite, which is saying a lot with how much I love the others in my Top 5 - SF's Oracle, Wrigley, Camden Yards (Orioles) and Fenway. Pittsburgh amazingly went from my worst to first. 3 Rivers was appalling as a baseball venue with their bright green 70s turf, 4 different color seats depending on what you paid and zero personality bowl.

I'm expecting some absolutely epic road trips coming up, for sure.
Big Dog
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bearsandgiants said:

Big Dog said:

juarezbear said:

CrazyPaco said:

75bear said:

JB was a Chieftain said:

Do they ever do a Pitt Saturday & Steeler Sunday weekend?
Apparently this weekend!

Cincinnati plays Pitt this Saturday, and then the 49ers play the Steelers on Sunday.
Yes, and early in the season, sometimes you get Pirate games the same weekend too. Double header Pitt football followed by the Pirates. PNC is an awesome stadium. Very much worth checking out.


I've worked on several movies in Pittsburgh over the years. Very cool city that's of a very manageable scale. Lots of culture and really good food. Looking forward to attending games there.
I was in Pittsburgh at teh time Christopher Nolan was filming Dark Knight Rises. Spent 2 full days being a nosey tourist. But Nolan didn't seem to think I was worthy of a scene. July was too hot to put on winter clothes for the Stadium crowd, but they were seeking volunteers.


My brother in law was an extra for that! Lives there 4 years when wife went thru med school. Lived in Edgewood. I miss yinzers and the burgh, $6 parking across the Clemente bridge for pirate games, primanti bros of course, and feeling naked at a steeler game for not having a jersey. Truly a great city and I can't wait to return.
Pitt Med has to be one of the best places to attend school. Top 15 med school and the Cost Of Living is reasonable for a grad student.
Cal88
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juarezbear said:

NYCGOBEARS said:

Pittsburgh is also home to the iconic Rather Ripped Record Store as the owner closed up the Berkeley store and moved back home. Rather Ripped is also a very good album by Sonic Youth that is named after the record store.

That's crazy! Was wondering what happened to Rather Ripped! I lived on Ridge Road for 3 years and was there on a daily basis. Met several up and coming acts there including The Police and Patti Smith. Was my favorite record store ever!

Interesting stuff, never knew about this store, it was a donut shop through the 80s to the 00s. Here's a good interview with the owners:


https://devorahostrov.blogspot.com/?fbclid=IwAR30SlC3JwirtnBHkZB_NKkkDY0JslxGzctCtBut3yTAAlU1Au9P8vkm4BI

Quote:

Located at the corner of Euclid and Hearst on the Northside of the UC Berkeley campus, throughout the 1970s Rather Ripped was a haven for Bay Area record buyers and a mecca for music connoisseurs worldwide. "It eventually became one of the most famous record stores in the world," points out Rather Ripped's onetime co-owner Doug Kroll.
KoreAmBear
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Cal88 said:

juarezbear said:

NYCGOBEARS said:

Pittsburgh is also home to the iconic Rather Ripped Record Store as the owner closed up the Berkeley store and moved back home. Rather Ripped is also a very good album by Sonic Youth that is named after the record store.

That's crazy! Was wondering what happened to Rather Ripped! I lived on Ridge Road for 3 years and was there on a daily basis. Met several up and coming acts there including The Police and Patti Smith. Was my favorite record store ever!

Interesting stuff, never knew about this store, it was a donut shop through the 80s to the 00s. Here's a good interview with the owners:


https://devorahostrov.blogspot.com/?fbclid=IwAR30SlC3JwirtnBHkZB_NKkkDY0JslxGzctCtBut3yTAAlU1Au9P8vkm4BI

Quote:

Located at the corner of Euclid and Hearst on the Northside of the UC Berkeley campus, throughout the 1970s Rather Ripped was a haven for Bay Area record buyers and a mecca for music connoisseurs worldwide. "It eventually became one of the most famous record stores in the world," points out Rather Ripped's onetime co-owner Doug Kroll.

What's the best record shop in the Bay? I didn't like Rasputin and Amoeba too much and prices are pretty expensive. I found something in Fremont and San Jose, but looking for decent selection and deals on vinyls.
bencgilmore
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CrazyPaco said:

Happy Labor Day! I am an alumnus of two ACC schools: Pitt and Miami, but my loyalty and season tickets lie with Pitt. I also lived in San Francisco for about three years and have attended various events at both Cal and Stanford. I'm personally very happy and excited both you and Stanford are in the ACC, and talking to other Pitt fans tailgating at Saturday's opener, I can tell you that excitement is pretty universal. I think it is great for the conference because the institutional fit is near ideal: the ACC is filled with a mix of public and private universities that are very serious about their academic brands and are committed to both their revenue-generating and Olympic sports. I'm confident that the geographic and travel issues will get worked out.

A little about your new conference partner Pitt since you may not be so familiar with it.

Pitt was founded as a private school in 1787 and became "state-related" in 1966. It is a medium-sized, urban, public-private hybrid university located smack in the middle of the city of Pittsburgh. It is most renowned for its medical, health, and biosciences. It is top 20 university in total R&D expenditures and typically top 5 in National Institutes of Health funding (#3 in 2022 after Johns Hopkins and UCSF). Its affiliated medical center, UPMC, is one the largest academic medical centers in the world with over 40 hospitals in 3 states and multiple countries including Ireland and Italy. Notably, Jonas Salk developed the polio vaccine, Peter Safar developed CPR and the field of emergency medicine, and Thomas Starzl pioneered organ transplantation while at Pitt. Pitt is also ranked highly in philosophy, creative writing, information science, and international studies, among other programs.

(Click here for a post of photos introducing the athletic facilities and campus)

The university's main Pittsburgh campus houses just under 20K undergrads and 10K grad students on only about 150 acres, one of the smallest by acreage in NCAA Division I FBS. So the campus is built vertically like no other major research university.

The centerpiece is a 42-story gothic skyscraper called the Cathedral of Learning. It is the largest academic building in the Western Hemisphere, but it is perhaps even more impressive inside with a 1/2 acre, 3-story gothic hall and 31 working "Nationality" class rooms that are essentially small museums. After every football win, the top of the Cathedral of Learning is lit up with blue and gold "victory lights."

Other features around campus are a French gothic chapel with some of the world's tallest stained-glass windows, a neo-renaissance Italian villa arts building, and multiple neo-classical and beau-arts buildings including a student union with immaculately restored Louis XV-style ballrooms. Alas, the campus has its share of modern brutalist beasties as well.

Pitt is located in Pittsburgh's Oakland neighborhood immediately adjacent to the city's major museum and public library complex (the Carnegie), a large wooded urban park (Schenley), botanical garden (Phipps), and Carnegie Mellon University, with which Pitt has a highly collaborative relationship. Pitt also has three additional 4-year regional campuses throughout Western Pennsylvania (all part of the same university), one with Division II sports and the two others competing in Division III.

Pitt's old football stadium, until 1999, was almost identical to Memorial Stadium but wedged within the small, urban campus footprint. Still a controversial decision, it was replaced by the current basketball arena ("the Pete") with game-day football moving 3 miles down the road to Heinz (now Acrisure) stadium. Both the stadium and the football practice facility were originally designed to be equally shared between Pitt and the Steelers, who have long had collaborative partnerships.

Pitt claims 9 national championships in football, primarily based on Sports Illustrated 1967 published research on the subject, 2 of which are AP national championships. Pitt is a top 20 program in all-time wins, has the 12th most College Hall of Fame inductees (19), the 8th most Consensus All-Americans (55), and the 4th most players enshrined in Canton (10). Historically, Pitt is arguably the most decorated football program in the ACC. In addition, men's hoops has 27 all-time NCAA appearances, including this past season. Women's volleyball has appeared in the past two final fours and men's soccer in two of the last three College Cups. Women's soccer and wrestling are nationally ranked.

Hopefully you get the opportunity to visit Pittsburgh and tailgate at our stadium, maybe even catch some fall foliage if the timing is right. Many people find it a surprising city compared to its historical stereotype as there are no longer any working steel mills in the city proper and it has transition into a white collar financial, technology, educational, and medical hub even though it still retains its historic blue-collar sensibilities. There are plenty of things to explore along the city's three rivers which boast the world's most numerous bridges: from the Andy Warhol and August Wilson museums to Frank Lloyd Wright's Fallingwater and funiculars that take you to impressive views, you should be able to find things to fill up any football weekend with additional activities.

In any case, a big welcome from the Pitt Panthers and hope to see you soon either in the Bay Area or in the 'Burgh (and don't forget the "h" at the end of the name; very important to Yinzers).





Great to be here.

You just made my mom (Pitt alumna 75) cry, but in a good way. Hail to Pitt!
cubzwin
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When I was on the transplant service at Loyola, we drove down to harvest some kidneys in rural Illinois. University of Alabama and Pitt flew in their transplant teams. Bama took the heart, Pitt took the liver. Their surgical teams were the pinnacle of professionalism. No lie that Pitt was a pioneer in US organ transplant.
91Cal
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Welcome & thank you for posting! Terrific to start new series and very excited about the new travel destinations!
Cal88
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KoreAmBear said:

Cal88 said:

juarezbear said:

NYCGOBEARS said:

Pittsburgh is also home to the iconic Rather Ripped Record Store as the owner closed up the Berkeley store and moved back home. Rather Ripped is also a very good album by Sonic Youth that is named after the record store.

That's crazy! Was wondering what happened to Rather Ripped! I lived on Ridge Road for 3 years and was there on a daily basis. Met several up and coming acts there including The Police and Patti Smith. Was my favorite record store ever!

Interesting stuff, never knew about this store, it was a donut shop through the 80s to the 00s. Here's a good interview with the owners:


https://devorahostrov.blogspot.com/?fbclid=IwAR30SlC3JwirtnBHkZB_NKkkDY0JslxGzctCtBut3yTAAlU1Au9P8vkm4BI

Quote:

Located at the corner of Euclid and Hearst on the Northside of the UC Berkeley campus, throughout the 1970s Rather Ripped was a haven for Bay Area record buyers and a mecca for music connoisseurs worldwide. "It eventually became one of the most famous record stores in the world," points out Rather Ripped's onetime co-owner Doug Kroll.

What's the best record shop in the Bay? I didn't like Rasputin and Amoeba too much and prices are pretty expensive. I found something in Fremont and San Jose, but looking for decent selection and deals on vinyls.

In Berkeley it's Mod Lang Records, though technically they've moved to El Cerrito a while back. Not very big, but very well curated.

http://www.modlang.com/

Amoeba on the Haight in SF is still going in its cavernous bowling spot, but there is apparently a flock of newer stores:
https://vinylvirgins.com/best-brick-and-mortar-record-stores/5-best-vinyl-record-stores-in-san-francisco-ca/
heartofthebear
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CrazyPaco said:

Happy Labor Day! I am an alumnus of two ACC schools: Pitt and Miami, but my loyalty and season tickets lie with Pitt. I also lived in San Francisco for about three years and have attended various events at both Cal and Stanford. I'm personally very happy and excited both you and Stanford are in the ACC, and talking to other Pitt fans tailgating at Saturday's opener, I can tell you that excitement is pretty universal. I think it is great for the conference because the institutional fit is near ideal: the ACC is filled with a mix of public and private universities that are very serious about their academic brands and are committed to both their revenue-generating and Olympic sports. I'm confident that the geographic and travel issues will get worked out.

A little about your new conference partner Pitt since you may not be so familiar with it.

Pitt was founded as a private school in 1787 and became "state-related" in 1966. It is a medium-sized, urban, public-private hybrid university located smack in the middle of the city of Pittsburgh. It is most renowned for its medical, health, and biosciences. It is top 20 university in total R&D expenditures and typically top 5 in National Institutes of Health funding (#3 in 2022 after Johns Hopkins and UCSF). Its affiliated medical center, UPMC, is one the largest academic medical centers in the world with over 40 hospitals in 3 states and multiple countries including Ireland and Italy. Notably, Jonas Salk developed the polio vaccine, Peter Safar developed CPR and the field of emergency medicine, and Thomas Starzl pioneered organ transplantation while at Pitt. Pitt is also ranked highly in philosophy, creative writing, information science, and international studies, among other programs.

(Click here for a post of photos introducing the athletic facilities and campus)

The university's main Pittsburgh campus houses just under 20K undergrads and 10K grad students on only about 150 acres, one of the smallest by acreage in NCAA Division I FBS. So the campus is built vertically like no other major research university.

The centerpiece is a 42-story gothic skyscraper called the Cathedral of Learning. It is the largest academic building in the Western Hemisphere, but it is perhaps even more impressive inside with a 1/2 acre, 3-story gothic hall and 31 working "Nationality" class rooms that are essentially small museums. After every football win, the top of the Cathedral of Learning is lit up with blue and gold "victory lights."

Other features around campus are a French gothic chapel with some of the world's tallest stained-glass windows, a neo-renaissance Italian villa arts building, and multiple neo-classical and beau-arts buildings including a student union with immaculately restored Louis XV-style ballrooms. Alas, the campus has its share of modern brutalist beasties as well.

Pitt is located in Pittsburgh's Oakland neighborhood immediately adjacent to the city's major museum and public library complex (the Carnegie), a large wooded urban park (Schenley), botanical garden (Phipps), and Carnegie Mellon University, with which Pitt has a highly collaborative relationship. Pitt also has three additional 4-year regional campuses throughout Western Pennsylvania (all part of the same university), one with Division II sports and the two others competing in Division III.

Pitt's old football stadium, until 1999, was almost identical to Memorial Stadium but wedged within the small, urban campus footprint. Still a controversial decision, it was replaced by the current basketball arena ("the Pete") with game-day football moving 3 miles down the road to Heinz (now Acrisure) stadium. Both the stadium and the football practice facility were originally designed to be equally shared between Pitt and the Steelers, who have long had collaborative partnerships.

Pitt claims 9 national championships in football, primarily based on Sports Illustrated 1967 published research on the subject, 2 of which are AP national championships. Pitt is a top 20 program in all-time wins, has the 12th most College Hall of Fame inductees (19), the 8th most Consensus All-Americans (55), and the 4th most players enshrined in Canton (10). Historically, Pitt is arguably the most decorated football program in the ACC. In addition, men's hoops has 27 all-time NCAA appearances, including this past season. Women's volleyball has appeared in the past two final fours and men's soccer in two of the last three College Cups. Women's soccer and wrestling are nationally ranked.

Hopefully you get the opportunity to visit Pittsburgh and tailgate at our stadium, maybe even catch some fall foliage if the timing is right. Many people find it a surprising city compared to its historical stereotype as there are no longer any working steel mills in the city proper and it has transition into a white collar financial, technology, educational, and medical hub even though it still retains its historic blue-collar sensibilities. There are plenty of things to explore along the city's three rivers which boast the world's most numerous bridges: from the Andy Warhol and August Wilson museums to Frank Lloyd Wright's Fallingwater and funiculars that take you to impressive views, you should be able to find things to fill up any football weekend with additional activities.

In any case, a big welcome from the Pitt Panthers and hope to see you soon either in the Bay Area or in the 'Burgh (and don't forget the "h" at the end of the name; very important to Yinzers).



I've always loved Pitt and Pittsburgh and have always followed their teams. The "we are family" Pirates with Stargell and Parker is one of my favorite teams all time. It is not lost on me that Pitt wears uniforms almost identical to my favorite Bear uniforms of the 70s. We still wear them for the Joe Roth memorial game every year, which used to be vs. either UCLA or USC. I don't know what is going to happen to them now, but maybe we should wear them when we play you, although that might get confusing.

Ironically this weakend features a great bay area vs. Pittsburgh NFL opener in Pennsylvania. The 49ers are a pre-season super bowl favorite. Some folks are saying that the Steelers are a dark horse and could get to the super bowl themselves. Don't the Steelers have a former Panther starting at QB? What a story that is. I'll be watching
TomBear
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Hey CrazyPaco, thanks for the greeting.

The renaissance of Pittsburgh is impressive. One of my treasured Christmas CDs is of the Pittsburgh Symphony Brass playing at Carnegie (?). It is spectacular. And a beautiful cover too. Really helps a person get in the Christmas spirit!!

As I understand it, with all the hills and various "communities" in the city (and bridges), it sounds like a cross between Portland (when it was nice) and San Francisco (when IT was nicer).

I am definitely hoping to make a road trip to see a game between the Bears and Panthers.

You caught my attention when you mentioned Pitt Stadium. I never had a chance to go there, but thought the architecture of it was really classy. And yes, I did see some resemblances with Memorial Stadium.

I know there has been talk of an on campus stadium at Pitt for some time. Can you fill me in on what's going on there? I'd prefer to see a Cal vs. Pitt game on campus, but am not sure that efforts to have an on campus stadium are still progressing?

Cal88
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Yes it does look like a doppelganger:

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