Football

Things Discussed:

  • Draft Takeaways: Nice that Saban kept being like "I love this dude!" Brian: Michigan and Iowa are the best two teams at developing talent; Michigan also recruits in an area where you win a national title if you outperform like that.
  • Seth: Harbaugh recruited at the same level as previous Michigan coaches but where they were getting 20% to 33% of their players to the NFL, Harbaugh is putting *60 Percent* of his players in the League:image
  • JJ McCarthy: Threw as many passes in the first three Qs as the other guys. Would I trade Goff for JJ, Neil? Can't break up a team on a Super Bowl run, but JJ is more valuable than Goff by far; he's gonna be under team control for a long time.
  • Junior Colson: Sam shares that Minter told him to go pro after the championship because he and Harbaugh were going to the league and they're gonna come get him.
  • Amorion Walker: If he'd stayed at receiver he'd be the breakout player of the year, but he burned his redshirts both years and then was at cornerback and Ole Miss—that is a hard position to play, and it's probably gonna need to be next year before he's a breakout player.
  • CJ Charleston: He's here to be a veteran presence. Sinagosa brought him over from YSU. Tough sell getting receivers.
  • DT? Looks like PT wasn't there for their top prospect CJ West so they're moving on to the GVSU guy (Suggs).
  • Jaden Mangham? Seth: YES TAKE ALL THE FALCONS! Brian: I don't want anybody who thought it was a good idea to play for Mel Tucker. He's also against taking anyone from Belleville.
  • Break: Basketball recruits.
  • Post-break: NCAA has an opportunity with House negotiations to sit across the table from *somebody* and create a sustainable future. Brian: Pendulum swung too far, single transfer rule was correct. Seth: Best thing would be to create an incentive formula that gets small schools out of a huge tax bill and makes players want to stay put.

[Hit the JUMP for the player, and video and stuff]

[YSU Athletics]

UPDATE: Amorion Walker is back as well. Since all he missed was one semester this doesn't warrant a Hello. Since he was one of my 2022 Sleepers of the Class it does warrant a fist-pump. Now back to Charleston.


Michigan's receiver depth was bolstered today with Youngstown State transfer CJ Charleston's announcement. This one:

CAREER THUS FAR

Charleston is a grad transfer, but may have a shot at two years of eligibility; he redshirted in 2019 and lost of all of 2022 to an Achilles injury. He's an athlete, a D1 basketball prospect in high school who won state titles for the long jump and 4x100 relay. Charleston was also an ATH as a recruit, committing to Bo Pelini(!) as an RB/WR/CB. He started in the shortened 2020 season (five games), and caught three passes for 18 yards against MSU as a RS sophomore in 2021, but came off the bench for four of their last six games.

After missing 2022 Charleston was an inside-outside third option for the Penguins behind 6th year Kentucky transfer Bryce Oliver and full-time slot receiver Max Tomczak. Charleston finished 2023 with 33 catches on 46 targets for 504 yards (11 YPT) and 4 TDs, and a 64.6 (meh) score on PFF. The effects of the injury might have played a role; via local press, he was on a limited snap count up until the end of fall camp.

[After THE JUMP: Very limited scouting]

[Patrick Barron]

The end of amateurism. Ol' Jeff Kessler's finally going to put a stake in the heart of the NCAA, it seems, with his latest lawsuit. This one is seeking vast amounts of damages for players who were denied their NIL opportunities. The prospect of a four billion dollar judgment has finally caused the administrator class to throw in the towel. Details are still scanty, but the general shape of it:

With the settlement expected to cost billions in back pay for former athletes, it would likely also require the NCAA and conferences to agree to a system for sharing more revenue with some of the players moving forward.

Sources indicated the top-end revenue share number per school -- once it's determined -- would be in the neighborhood of $20 million annually, although that's yet to be settled. Whatever number is set by the settlement, individual schools will be able to opt in to share revenue up to that number with their student athletes at their discretion.

This is being portrayed as "revenue sharing," as the NCAA hopes to dodge the fact that their athletes are employees. That might also let them dance around Title IX issues that will arise once football and men's basketball players are raking in money that few female athletes are.

As far as the local angle: the faster athletic departments are directly paying players the better. Michigan obviously has the capability to hit the max here, and I can't imagine that anyone has any illusions about the fact that they'll have to. I have no doubt that schools will continue to bring in outside money in an effort to win, and that Michigan won't be on the Kentucky/Memphis/OSU level there, but choosing between 200k and 250k is a lot different than nothing and 50k; the relative gaps will be smaller.

Speaking of NIL. Champions Circle has various autographed objects up for auction to support their NIL objectives:

Slide

Check it out as long as you do not bid on the thing I bid on.

[After THE JUMP: basketball speculation CONTINUES]

Oh nothing just stole a Groza finalist true junior from a team on the schedule.

where to expect all our Wolverines to be picked this weekend 

Sainristil to Lions round one who says no

If they play a bunch of walk-ons wearing #31 we're set.

An SDE ranked around Derrick Moore you say?

"As long as the Ohio State fans figure out which holes are for the legs then then they can put on a diaper, too."

some short takes about the 2024 Michigan Football spring game 

storylines to follow on Saturday

Eclipse appreciators.

How do you name yourself Johnell? You're just asking for this to happen.