SEARCHBITS XV: MACHINATIONS Comment Count

Brian

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Eric DeBoer

REMAIN CALM. I am now getting some chatter to the effect that Harbaugh is coming, pending t-crossing and i-dotting. None of it is from a source I would consider rock solid, and all of it comes with an ominous "barring a last second change of heart" disclaimer. Please remain calm.

It feels like warranted optimism transforming itself into e-fact via a game of telephone—I can confidently say that there are people close to the situation who think it is happening, some of them very strongly. Whether they're right is another matter. Harbaugh may get NFL offers that change the equation. Right now Michigan can talk to him all they want; NFL teams would get hit with accusations of tampering if they did so. Everyone, including Harbaugh, is working with incomplete information.

A POTENTIALLY MEANINGLESS STATEMENT WE'LL TAKE AS GOSPEL. Raiders owner Prince Valium on his general manager:

-Q: Have those two wins helped you in your assessment of the football operation? Are you sticking with Reggie McKenzie?

-DAVIS: As I said, I never really said I wasn’t going to keep Reggie on board.

-Q: He’s your guy still, right?

-DAVIS: He is my guy right now, absolutely.

-Q: That means there’s still the possibility of dramatic changes, I guess.

-DAVIS: There are always possibilities for anything.

-Q: What do you think about Jim Harbaugh?

-DAVIS: (Laughs.) It was great talking to him.

McKenzie (not that McKenzie) is coming off an excellent draft, FWIW. Davis seems positive about him but "never really said" and "right now" are back doors that indicate some hesitancy. The upshot for Michigan is that if Oakland is inclined to keep McKenzie, they wouldn't be offering Harbaugh the moon that is full personnel control.

Of course, Oakland could be convinced to throw McKenzie overboard if Harbaugh was interested. Cue rumor:

This has been a completely useless searchbit. Thank you for your patronage.

OTHER NFL MACHINATIONS. Dolphins coach Joe Philbin is under pressure in Miami, with local reporters asserting that his job "may hinge" on making the playoffs. Philbin's in his third year with Miami, having gone 7-9 and 8-8 in his first two years. They're 7-6 this year and currently trailing the Patriots. If they do lose that game they'll have a very tough road to a bid.

The guy firing Philbin is of course Stephen Ross, Michigan mega-donor. Ross has been rumored to be amongst the heavy hitters putting together a neato financial package for Harbaugh, so a Harbaugh pursuit would be an about-face. Said local reporter says this would happen. At least, I think so. The article is full of seeming autocorrect errors:

The source said Ross would try to upgrade a team that missed the playoffs for a sixth consecutive year by revisiting the idea of hiring Jim Harbaugh. … If the Dolphins cannot get to the postseason, Ross would have work to do and most of the assignment will center on Harbaugh.

What?

Anyway: Ross pursuing Harbaugh would be tricky if Ross wants to get into all the good parties when he comes back to Ann Arbor. If Harbaugh does turn down a generous Michigan offer because he wants to stay in the NFL and that becomes public—probably because Michigan hires someone else—then Harbaugh could end up with the Dolphins without making Ross look that bad. Anything else and not so much. Steve Lorenz reports that Ross gave his word he would not chase Harbaugh to "more than one figure" in the Michigan community.

Given that, if the Dolphins do go hard after Harbaugh you should take that as a sign the dream is dead.

NON-MACHINATIONS? Ian Rapoport says the Dolphins are still not a player for Harbaugh. Rapoport previously reported that M left a meeting with Harbaugh "convinced he wants to be an NFL coach" a week ago, something that is almost certainly not true given the way the search has developed (or not developed) and the steady drumbeat of positive insider chatter. So take it with the appropriate level of certainty.

I do think Rapoport's more likely to be on point when he's talking to NFL teams about what they plan to do than trying to read the mind of Jim Harbaugh. Also:

If Michigan was convinced that Harbaugh wasn't coming, wouldn't Ross 1) know that and 2) being going full guns here?

PLAN B. To my moderate chagrin, it is looking increasingly like Miles is the fallback option. He is definitely a fallback option, and depending on who you listen to (and what time you listen to them) there are somewhere between 0 and 2 guys between him and Harbaugh. Since the guys who could intervene are usually of the Stoops/Mora/Payton variety—longshots—Miles would become the favorite if Harbaugh turns M down.

The heavy favorite: everyone who knows Miles swears up and down he would come with two nanoseconds of the offer. What about 2007? Miles was never officially offered in 2007 and got roped into an LSU extension before Michigan could seriously contact him; with LSU on the verge of playing for a national title and Michigan's interest uncertain Miles had to go with the LSU AD's clever power play. There is no such hold on Miles now, as his team prepares to play in the Music City Bowl.

Why only moderate chagrin? Hey, he's not Schiano or Adddazio.

ON THE OTHER HAND. Webb reports that contact with Miles has not yet been "substantive." The focus is on Harbaugh.

Joe-Moglia-2[1]

IT COULD HAPPEN

JOE MOGLIA IS ALL YOU NEED TO HEAR. Football Scoop weighed in again, for what little that's worth. Michigan's honchos now "understand that Jim Harbaugh is unlikely to come to Michigan," according to site that previously said M had been turned down flat two weeks ago. Meanwhile, Steve Lorenz reports that the idea that Jim Mora and Dan Mullen have been run by the regents is "total bunk," so that's most of the post.

The rest of it is spent promoting the fortunes of Joe Moglia, the CEO-turned-Coastal-Carolina coach, who is 65 and coaching FCS. (Yes, that's totally different than pumping Bob Stitt.)

While I'd like half of that post to be true (the bits about Mora and Mullen being next options), it's clear that whatever FS gets right about this search will be by accident. This offseason they've already "reported" Bo Pelini to Youngstown State, Bret Bielema to Nebraska, and Lane Kiffin winning the Broyles.

GOING OFF THE BOARD? Ohio State OC Tom Herman is under heavy consideration at Houston. Houston's a good mid-major job that has sprung Art Briles and Kevin Sumlin into the big time, and Herman has a decade of Texas experience to his credit. Houston would be dumb not to offer him the job; Herman would be dumb not to take it. If Houston does in fact go after Herman that'll almost certainly be before Michigan gets down to the coordinator-scouring level. So merph.

Given the Miles chatter this is all likely to be moot anyway.

ALSO OFF THE BOARD. Sportsbook.ag again pulled the Harbaugh bet after more and more Michigan money came in. Last time this bet came up, a commenter pointed out that as online books go, Sportsbook.ag has a D- grade from an industry rating service and is not taking major money on this—it wouldn't take a whole lot to swing those odds.

FOUR WAY TRADE? Bo Pelini for Pitt. Yeah. Yeah man.

Etc.: ESPN's Dan Murphy has the least dismissive national take on Michigan's search that I've yet seen.

Comments

NJWolverine

December 14th, 2014 at 10:35 PM ^

For those who say Miles can never be considered due to his personal conflicts with the administration, consider this.  It was rumored that some at ND was reluctant to hire Brian Kelly because it came out in the lead up to his hire that he's pro-choice.  Yet ND (the standard bearer Catholic university), hired him anyways.  You could argue that Kelly being pro-choice does hurt ND because of the prominance of its football program.  So if ND will hire Kelly anyways despite this, what's stopping us from hiring Miles?  Even if everything about his past is true, does that mean he should be excluded, especially when we need him, and especially when he's willing to listen to us even though he's in a great situation now?  Did this past do anything to hurt the football program?  What's worse - what Miles (allegedly) did, or publicly calling out your alma mater for having fake academic standards?  The latter is undeniable, and it was Harbaugh.

The question then becomes, why are we so quick to forgive Harbaugh for his transgression and not Miles for something that didn't even hurt the program (and that happened a long time ago)? 

dryadams

December 14th, 2014 at 3:30 PM ^

Harbaugh say the words "I am not interested in the HC position at Michigan because i want to stay in the NFL", I will continue to believe that he is going to land in Ann Arbor. He's had plenty of opportunities over the past 10 days or so to shoot the rumors down. He hasn't. Silence can sometimes speak loudly.......

Don

December 14th, 2014 at 3:35 PM ^

1. Anybody who writes "A number of coaches I have spoken with feel Moglia might just be the perfect coach to invest in Michigan football." is either the dumbest motherfucker on the planet, or thinks everybody else is.

2. Anybody who can work for Mark Davis and not burst into hysterical laughter every time they're in the room together has self-control that makes Darth Vader look like a quivering nancy.

3. Monkey Rodeo.

4. 

Don

December 14th, 2014 at 4:00 PM ^

Not really, but it doesn't make me more pessimistic, either. The coaching searchbits haven't changed my opinion one way or the other, because literally none of it is verifiable.

My pessimism is based on the fact that he left the college game for the NFL in the first place, on the several public comments he made about UM and Stanford when he took that job, and that it's 2014 and we seemingly can't have nice things.

I hope to hell we can swing him here, but I won't be surprised if he turns us down.

hajiblue72

December 14th, 2014 at 8:51 PM ^

that Brian said there was a brief bit of buzz/euphoria Thursday night that then subsided. I friend of mine has a friend who has a BIG donor in the family and knows Ross well. He said Ross' plane was used to get things locked up on Thursday. He didn't say anything about who it was; just said it was getting done and Michigan had hired their coach. Does eerily coincide with all the rumblings.

CR

December 14th, 2014 at 7:23 PM ^

I think your friends are correct re: UM's side of the equation. UM would take Harbaugh at most any price tag.

But I don't think  Harbaugh has made up hs mind, yet. A return to SF seems pretty unlikely. Pushing zero, it seems.

So I would surmise Hackett is in an awkward position. Maybe by the close of the day it will be clearer  (SEA is winning in the 4th) but, right now, he must be looking for a coach who isn't really #1 on the Hit Parade and, somehow, hold him in line while Harbaugh decides or it plays out.

Speaking only for me, this seems a silly game.  I would hire Tom Herman yesterday since the upside seems great and the downside more remediable than other choices. But, I know, my preference for Herman over Harbaugh (or Miles) puts me with almost no one. I understand other POVs.

On the other hand, Jack Harbaugh has been involved. Maybe this awkwardness/dithering is mere appearance, albeit in the face of national opinion that Harbaugh will be in the NFL next year. The reach out to/by the elder Harbaugh seems relevant. 

west2

December 14th, 2014 at 3:55 PM ^

is that Harbaugh might not want to agree to be traded to Oakland or wherever as a back at ya maneuver directed at the SF GM/owner.  Unlike player trades in the NFL, a coaches contract doesn't transfer to the new team and the "trade" is only binding if the traded coach agrees to a new contract with the new team.  If the coach doesn't sign the trade-deal is off.   This is a particularly interesting option for Harbaugh with the M option obviously his for the taking.   Guess it depends on the relationship with the owner and how good or bad it is right now. Could there be action today with a Lions victory and 49ers loss?