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New York Times Article On Pitt Football & Script Return, LINK!

CaptainSidneyReilly

Chancellor
Dec 25, 2006
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Good to see further removal of "Pederson Poison" at Pitt and more proof the Posters of Pitt Malaise were just plain wrong!

No Dot on ‘i,’ but Pitt Crosses the ‘t’s’ in a Return to Its Signature Script

The Pitt Script, the iconic helmet insignia made famous by University of Pittsburgh legends like Tony Dorsett and Dan Marino, has made a full comeback this fall. The current football team loves it.

“When you put that script on the helmet, it makes the bond to the past that much closer,” said Artie Rowell, a senior center and captain from Harrisburg, Pa.

Panthers fans love the Pitt Script, too. The script will not be a part of all Pitt athletic apparel until next year, but merchandise now available with the script sells. The university said sales at the Pitt Team Store and online ran 26 percent higher this October compared with last October.

“It evokes a lot of emotions among our constituents and alumni — in a positive way,” Scott Barnes, who became Pitt’s athletic director in April, said of the Pitt Script.

Few people were more thrilled to see the return of the Pitt Script than the 80-year-old Tennessean John Terrell Majors, because he was the person responsible for it.


“It has a great tradition to it,” Majors, better known as Johnny, said during a recent telephone interview. “It’s very attractive. It’s catchy. It gets your attention.”

Photo
DOG-CAMPUSCORNER-2-articleLarge.jpg


Pitt tailback Tony Dorsett with the script in 1974. Credit Harry Cabluck/Associated Press

Majors coached the Pitt football team twice, from 1973 to 1976, and from 1993 to 1996. After the Dorsett-powered Panthers went 12-0 and won the national championship in 1976, Majors left to coach at his alma mater, Tennessee.

The Pitt Script stayed.

When Majors arrived on campus from Iowa State, taking over a team that had won only one of 11 games the year before, he decided to give the program a makeover in every way. He put together a real weight room, but he also wanted his team to look good on Saturdays.


“I looked at their uniforms, and I thought they were pretty dull,” Majors said.

So Majors redesigned them. The school colors are old gold and navy blue, but Majors decided that a mustard yellow and royal blue looked sharper — in part because Pitt would not resemble the Notre Dame Fighting Irish as much.

He added double “Northwestern stripes” (one wide stripe bordered by two thinner stripes) to the jerseys and a thick blue stripe, a nod to the N.F.L.’s Pittsburgh Steelers, to the pants. He wanted a helmet insignia that stood out in newspaper photos, on television and on magazine covers. Majors dreamed big from the start.

Majors liked the “Ucla” script insignia on U.C.L.A.’s helmets. So he told an artist, whose name he cannot remember, to draw something similar for Pitt.

When the uniform was assembled, Majors had two of his assistants, Jackie Sherrill and Joe Avezzano, model them in the press box at Pitt Stadium. The look lasted 24 seasons.

When Majors’s second stint as Pitt’s coach ended, the Panthers moved to navy blue jerseys with “Pittsburgh” in block letters on the front and shiny gold pants and helmets — which carried an insignia of a growling panther.

Majors said he never liked putting the name of his teams on the front of their uniforms.


“You learn to be recognized by the way you play,” he said.

But the insignia was worse. It was widely referred to as Dino Cat, and not in a positive way. Majors said it “looked like a dog,” pronouncing it “dawg.”

Pitt got rid of Dino Cat for a block-letter logo, and the Panthers played one game in 2005 in throwback uniforms that included the Pitt Script, but die-hard fans wanted it back for good. (A Facebook page, Free the Script, has drawn nearly 1,900 likes.) Steve Pederson, who banished the Pitt Script (not to mention Majors) after becoming the university’s athletic director in 1996, announced last October that the Pitt Script would be placed on the helmets for a home game against Georgia Tech, then for the rest of the season.

“It was kept fairly quiet,” Rowell said, “but everybody was fired up about it.”

After taking over from Pederson, Barnes announced in August that the Pitt Script was here to stay, incorporated into all of the university’s athletic uniforms by the start of the 2016-17 year. Maybe it was not such a coincidence that Pitt won six of its first seven football games and is now 7-3 after a 31-13 win at Duke on Saturday.

“Everything is going in a positive direction now, and people want to be a part of it,” Rowell said.

Barnes said of the Pitt Script, “I haven’t run into anybody who didn’t want it.”

The team’s football uniforms are still navy blue and gold. But Barnes said the athletic department would do a thorough study on using what he called “accent colors,” which may include the royal blue and mustard yellow conjured up by John Majors some 42 years ago. Then the comeback will truly be complete.

LINK:
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/11/15/s...e-ts-in-a-return-to-its-signature-script.html
 
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IMO that is the best part of script Pitt. Majors comes in, changes the unis to include this logo, then wins a NC in his fourth season as coach. Also I think it's a great logo and we have one of the sharpest looking unis the country right now that isn't ridiculous looking.
 
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Thanks for posting!! Morning coffee and The Times - what a great surprise. Priceless publicity for the current team!
Spot on as well, kind of Majors Revenge and proves Pederson made a mistake that isolated Alumni, Contributors, and Fans just like he did at Nebraska!
 
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IMO that is the best part of script Pitt. Majors comes in, changes the unis to include this logo, then wins a NC in his fourth season as coach. Also I think it's a great logo and we have one of the sharpest looking unis the country right now that isn't ridiculous looking.
Good to see a Smarter Chancellor did it within 4 Months, and dumped Pederson!

Additionally, brought in a Smarter Athletic Director that knew the same value of the Script to Fans and Alumni, and bringing it back in all Sports!


The younger posters won't know this, but the New York Times and NYC Media very much favored the return of Pitt to winning big in Eastern Football in 1970s and even picked them as the Best Team in the Nation in their NYT Rankings after 1976 too!

They credit Pitt for returning Eastern Football to prominence not Penn State! The Lions Fans were incensed!
 
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Good to see further removal of "Pederson Poison" at Pitt and more proof the Posters of Pitt Malaise were just plain wrong!

No Dot on ‘i,’ but Pitt Crosses the ‘t’s’ in a Return to Its Signature Script

The Pitt Script, the iconic helmet insignia made famous by University of Pittsburgh legends like Tony Dorsett and Dan Marino, has made a full comeback this fall. The current football team loves it.

“When you put that script on the helmet, it makes the bond to the past that much closer,” said Artie Rowell, a senior center and captain from Harrisburg, Pa.

Panthers fans love the Pitt Script, too. The script will not be a part of all Pitt athletic apparel until next year, but merchandise now available with the script sells. The university said sales at the Pitt Team Store and online ran 26 percent higher this October compared with last October.

“It evokes a lot of emotions among our constituents and alumni — in a positive way,” Scott Barnes, who became Pitt’s athletic director in April, said of the Pitt Script.

Few people were more thrilled to see the return of the Pitt Script than the 80-year-old Tennessean John Terrell Majors, because he was the person responsible for it.


“It has a great tradition to it,” Majors, better known as Johnny, said during a recent telephone interview. “It’s very attractive. It’s catchy. It gets your attention.”

Photo
DOG-CAMPUSCORNER-2-articleLarge.jpg


Pitt tailback Tony Dorsett with the script in 1974. Credit Harry Cabluck/Associated Press

Majors coached the Pitt football team twice, from 1973 to 1976, and from 1993 to 1996. After the Dorsett-powered Panthers went 12-0 and won the national championship in 1976, Majors left to coach at his alma mater, Tennessee.

The Pitt Script stayed.

When Majors arrived on campus from Iowa State, taking over a team that had won only one of 11 games the year before, he decided to give the program a makeover in every way. He put together a real weight room, but he also wanted his team to look good on Saturdays.


“I looked at their uniforms, and I thought they were pretty dull,” Majors said.

So Majors redesigned them. The school colors are old gold and navy blue, but Majors decided that a mustard yellow and royal blue looked sharper — in part because Pitt would not resemble the Notre Dame Fighting Irish as much.

He added double “Northwestern stripes” (one wide stripe bordered by two thinner stripes) to the jerseys and a thick blue stripe, a nod to the N.F.L.’s Pittsburgh Steelers, to the pants. He wanted a helmet insignia that stood out in newspaper photos, on television and on magazine covers. Majors dreamed big from the start.

Majors liked the “Ucla” script insignia on U.C.L.A.’s helmets. So he told an artist, whose name he cannot remember, to draw something similar for Pitt.

When the uniform was assembled, Majors had two of his assistants, Jackie Sherrill and Joe Avezzano, model them in the press box at Pitt Stadium. The look lasted 24 seasons.

When Majors’s second stint as Pitt’s coach ended, the Panthers moved to navy blue jerseys with “Pittsburgh” in block letters on the front and shiny gold pants and helmets — which carried an insignia of a growling panther.

Majors said he never liked putting the name of his teams on the front of their uniforms.


“You learn to be recognized by the way you play,” he said.

But the insignia was worse. It was widely referred to as Dino Cat, and not in a positive way. Majors said it “looked like a dog,” pronouncing it “dawg.”

Pitt got rid of Dino Cat for a block-letter logo, and the Panthers played one game in 2005 in throwback uniforms that included the Pitt Script, but die-hard fans wanted it back for good. (A Facebook page, Free the Script, has drawn nearly 1,900 likes.) Steve Pederson, who banished the Pitt Script (not to mention Majors) after becoming the university’s athletic director in 1996, announced last October that the Pitt Script would be placed on the helmets for a home game against Georgia Tech, then for the rest of the season.

“It was kept fairly quiet,” Rowell said, “but everybody was fired up about it.”

After taking over from Pederson, Barnes announced in August that the Pitt Script was here to stay, incorporated into all of the university’s athletic uniforms by the start of the 2016-17 year. Maybe it was not such a coincidence that Pitt won six of its first seven football games and is now 7-3 after a 31-13 win at Duke on Saturday.

“Everything is going in a positive direction now, and people want to be a part of it,” Rowell said.

Barnes said of the Pitt Script, “I haven’t run into anybody who didn’t want it.”

The team’s football uniforms are still navy blue and gold. But Barnes said the athletic department would do a thorough study on using what he called “accent colors,” which may include the royal blue and mustard yellow conjured up by John Majors some 42 years ago. Then the comeback will truly be complete.

LINK:
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/11/15/s...e-ts-in-a-return-to-its-signature-script.html
 
Thanks for posting this. I read it on Facebook over the weekend and smiled broadly. Where are the nimrods now that bought and attempted to explain how the change to Pittsburgh was so much better? Spent some time with our new AD and Chancellor this weekend. All I can say is wow....what a breath of fresh air when it comes to athletics! Hail to Pitt!
 
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Sort of a poor article journalistically as the unnamed artist was Bob Gessner. One can easily find this information on wikipedia. Gessner did work for Pitt for years and designed the original Penguins logo and the 70s Pirate logo.

Also, UCLA didn't have its script on its helmets until 1973, the same year Pitt put it on theirs. Majors couldn't have gotten inspiration from their helmet logo. Also ignores that Pitt had "script" versions of "Pitt" going back to the 1920s and used a William Pitt signature facsimile of "Pitt" going back to 1939.

Also saying Major's was banished is a little misleading, considering he served as a special assistant to the university for years after he was moved out of coaching for his disastrous 90s run.

But then, the original title of the article was "Pitt Dots the ‘I’ and Crosses the ‘T’s’ in a Return to Its Signature Script"...but at least they fixed that.
 
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Thanks for posting this. I read it on Facebook over the weekend and smiled broadly. Where are the nimrods now that bought and attempted to explain how the change to Pittsburgh was so much better? Spent some time with our new AD and Chancellor this weekend. All I can say is wow....what a breath of fresh air when it comes to athletics! Hail to Pitt!
Nordenberg did his Best and was a Very Good Chancellor, but his relationship with Pederson was a mistake and allowing him to have $5 Buyout made it worse and a show of poor Judgment! Nordenberg gave a Great Eulogy at Elsie Hillman Funeral but Gallagher is a Breath of Fresh Air and was so was Dr. Juhl & the Committee! Pederson remains a Putz for Pitt and Nebraska was Mediocre at Best and worse at Nebraska!!!
HAIL TO PITT!
 
Sort of a poor article journalistically as the unnamed artist was Bob Gessner. One can easily find this information on wikipedia. Gessner did work for Pitt for years and designed the original Penguins logo and the 70s Pirate logo.

Also, UCLA didn't have its script on its helmets until 1973, the same year Pitt put it on theirs. Majors couldn't have gotten inspiration from their helmet logo. Also ignores that Pitt had "script" versions of "Pitt" going back to the 1920s and used a William Pitt signature facsimile of "Pitt" going back to 1939.

Also saying Major's was banished is a little misleading, considering he served as a special assistant to the university for years after he was moved out of coaching for his disastrous 90s run.

But then, the original title of the article was "Pitt Dots the ‘I’ and Crosses the ‘T’s’ in a Return to Its Signature Script"...but at least they fixed that.
Fair and great info as usual from CP, Thank You!
 
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