Hokepoints: The Hoke Successor Matrix Comment Count

Seth

harbaugh

You're going to see plenty on these pages about guys we think might coach at Michigan next year, since it's pretty much a sure thing at this point that Hoke will not. I thought it would be as good a time as any to build some sort of consensus of what we're looking for and how much of it we want relative to other factors. Other than, you know. "Jim Harbaugh."

Last week one of the diarists put together a matrix for evaluating the coaching candidates. I didn't like how he weighted the things, so at the time I put together a draft version of a more detailed "what we're looking for" system. I have since overhauled and updated it to be a more accurate reflection of my feelingsball:

The last five Michigan hires are given at the time of their selection to establish a baseline. Some things may seem wonky, like Bo being rather low, but remember his resume was that of an assistant (not coordinator) who'd been successful in the MAC. Some candidates in short:

Category: Jim Harbaugh Dan Mullen Gary P'son Les Miles Mike Gundy Tom Herman Bob Stitt Pat Narduzzi
Success (25 max) 43* 24 23 42* 28* 12 12 12
Offense (20) 9 14 2 6 12 19 15 0
Defense (20) 10 6 13 9 3 0 3 20
Teambuilding (15) 11 7 7 11 7 12 5 7
Long-Term (13) 7 0 2 -5 -2 3 11 1
Short-Term (7) 6 3 4 4 3 1 0 3
Attractiveness 68 54 51 50 48 47 47 43

* I calculated success but maxed it out at 25, at which point the guy's proven he can coach.

We can change things around but I figured one matrix would be useful for our discussions going forward. At least it passes the eye exam. Kinda. I don't know how to make it stop rating Les Miles so high unless I need to raise the importance of long-term success.

Why the matrix?

Usefulness is in discussing the particular pros and cons of these guys in context, because things like "is he a culture fit" otherwise tend to outweigh "can he coach football." A brief explanation of my scoring system after the jump.

1. Previous Coaching Success (25 points possible)

This metric is about straight-up previous success. If he's been winning, building programs, and collecting hardware and rings he is already a quarter of the way to a sure thing. I counted accomplishments as a coordinator at 25%; there was a diary in the long long ago that suggested this was a good relative measure for a coordinator who's actually in charge of the side of the ball he's in charge of. Components:

les-miles-gatorade-bath
Number of Gatorade baths should be a metric; number of times the coach then lapped up the spilled Gatorade should not.

1a. Winning percentage. I love winning man. You know? Like it's better than losing? This is a 10-scale. The formula is all wins as a head coach plus .25 times all wins as a coordinator, divided by wins+losses+1/4 coordinator wins+losses. I take the resulting winning percentage, add a tenth (because winning 90% of your games gets a 10/10) and multiply by 10, rounding up. Winning at a Bo clip gets you an 8/10. Yost would be a 10.

1b. Power 5 bonus. +1 for each winning team, win over 9 in a season, conference title/title game, and BCS bowl.

1c. Builder bonus. For each team he rebuilt, max 10, where zero is he didn't change the team's success rate from when he took over and 10 is turning Indiana into a national power.

1d. NFL bonus. +1 for each playoff win, +1 for each win over 10

1e. Other accomplishments. Like coaching hardware, major upsets, winning the FCS national championship.

It's possible to get over 25 points but this is about whether he'll win at Michigan, not Hall of Fame credentials, so I've capped it at 25. At that point the answer is "yes, the guy can coach."

2. Offense and 3. Defense

This is less of a reward for how good his units have been and more of a way to project how good of an offense he would be able to build at Michigan given past performance. Components:

2a. Expertise. Maximum is 10, which is the league follows whatever he's doing. A 5 is an offense that gets what you'd expect from its talent. Head coaches who haven't coached it are graded on their hires at half rate.

2b. Position. Maximum 3 points for being a whisperer of a certain position, e.g. Brady Hoke with defensive linemen. Certainty principles are good.

2c. Innovation. Max 4 = Inventor. 3 = Early adopter. 2 = Keeps up. 1 = Has heard of it.

2d. Execution. Max 3 = Bo-like rep master who keeps things simple and only plays dudes who get it right. 2 = generally plug & play, 1 = don't notice it, 0 = not a priority. I probably should have allowed for negative points, but only someone who's seen Michigan's current coaching staff would ever believe in it.

Tom-Herman-media-day
You get more points for winning national recruiter of the year awards while owning the Midwest than for being raised here.

4. Team Building

Mostly recruiting, but a third of it is development. Recruiting is split into midwest and nationally. Components:

4a. Midwest Recruiting. How well does he know the home front, especially Michigan and Ohio coaches. 5 = Local HS coaches will mention his name unbidden. 3 = Has good ties. 1 = Has only pulled a few recruits from the B1G footprint.

4b. National Recruiting. The corollary to the above. 5 = HS kids mention his name with reverence. 3 = Regularly extends footprint and brings in national blue chips.

4c. Development. A catch-all for whether players tend to play up to/meet their potential. Tendency to redshirt and retain players, and plays a lot of upperclassmen. 5 = Mentally add a star, 4 = Add half a star, 3 = Lots of outperformers, 2 = Regular outperformers, 1 = Some successes.

5. Long Term Program Health

Things are definitely desperate enough that Michigan would take a stop-gap solution and expect to be looking for a successor in a few years; that's a few years of not this. But ultimately coaching transitions are bad, and should be avoided at all costs, as should the things that tend to initiate coaching searches or damage programs down the road. Like…

5a. Will he last? I put this on a scale of +4 to –4, based on age and where he's at in his career (e.g. if he may use success to move on to the NFL). A –4 is a guy already on his downswing; a +4 is a guy not yet 40.

5b. Not a dick? Fuzzy wuzzies win you points at Michigan. A 3 is a loveable bear who walks in saying "Michigan fergodsakes," a 2 is a genial dude, a 1 is a dick but only in a good way, and a 0 is a typical football coach.

5c. Culture fit? Again I'm tempted to include a minus level here because Rodriguez, but I gave nobody negs. A +3 is a guy who knows all the factions already and can walk in and placate them, a 2 is a good fit, a 1 has only some small natural enemies, and a 0 is a stranger who'd have to make his own good will.

10987976-large
Is Mullen's Rodriguezity a concern? What's good for the future only matters if he can get there without the self-appointed caretakers of "Michigan Man" ripping it from him first.

5d. Ethics. This one is a scale of dirtiness or cleanliness. A +3 is Beilein, +2 = good guy, +1 is no problems, 0 = typical, -1 = occasional whiff of a violation, -2 = so what?, and -3 = a concern.

6. Short Term Program Health

Can he save the recruiting class, tack on some late great pickups, keep the team together, and win with what's on hand? Because we'd like to win sooner rather than later.

6a. Hotness. Picking up a big name will stir the positive feelings for the school, lead to big donations, and create an atmosphere of general not like now.

6b. Fit for current talent. Michigan's been running zone this year so they can probably do either that or man blocking; the greater concern is quarterback. Rich Rod wouldn't be a great fit for the guys on the roster now because of that. This is a 4 scale but I was pretty lenient on all but super-spread-to-run guys because of the versatility of the current roster.

6c. Attrition. This is a guess based on feelings and stuff but a legit concern. I only gave out at worst a –2 on a scale of zero to –4. Zero means the hire solidifies the guys with a foot out the door, a –2 means the loose threads snap, and –4 is a mass exodus.

Comments

UMaD

October 29th, 2014 at 12:18 PM ^

I think it was naivety, not arrogance.  He had previously let the DC run the defense and he assumed Michigan's talent would allow him to do the same.  He knew he had a transition coming on O, but figured with Schaefer and Michigan-level talent the D would be alright.

Not letting Schaefer have full control over his assistants was his biggest mistake. Hiring GERG was his second biggest.

Agree with you on Rodriguez, but those opinions have pretty much calcified by now.

alum96

October 29th, 2014 at 3:14 PM ^

I upvoted you but I think Les Miles was THE best hire at the time not RR.  That said, RR was an excellent hire on paper - especially considering we had been turned down by a guy like Schiano.  You could not do better for your "3rd choice" in terms of what was available at the time.  If Tate Forcier had not been a headcase and your backfield was Tate at QB and Denard at RB, combined with being allowed to budget for Casteel, I think RR would still be the coach here although the OL issues would have caused consternation for him in 2012-2013.T

There is a thin line between winning and losing and it seems like many of the things that would have helped RR fell the wrong way.  And I dont think he was ready for the bright lights at Michigan either.

Seth

October 29th, 2014 at 12:56 PM ^

I tried to show what Bo was coming out of Miami (NTM). Moeller wasa  50, which is really high on this scale, despite our misgivings about the fact that he'd only been a head coach for a tiny bit of time and that didn't go well.

This isn't a "is he a better coach" matrix. It's a "what did he look like as a coaching candidate on the day he was hired" matrix. And here's what it looked like when Bo was hired:

That is Don Canham, AD for all of seven months, with a facial expression that is anything but "I just made the defining coaching hire for the next 40 years."

Rodriguez was FAR more established at his hiring than Bo and his two assistants.

snowcrash

October 29th, 2014 at 11:29 AM ^

with one exception: I don't think that NFL experience is relevant other than to the extent that it helps recruiting (and would be captured in your recruting numbers). Coaching in the NFL isn't anything like coaching in college.  

I would also replace Stitt with Jim McElwain of Colorado State, who is a far more plausible candidate and IMO probably the next head coach unless Harbaugh decides he's sick of the NFL.

 

westwardwolverine

October 29th, 2014 at 11:32 AM ^

Truthfully, while it will never happen and I wouldn't want it to happen because the slightest mishap would turn into disaster, I think Rodriguez would be just fine coaching next year's team, so long as he brought Casteel with him. 

At Arizona he's taken three different QBs and succeeded. Next year will see three possible options at QB, unlike 2008's Threet+Sheridan combo. Also unlike 2008, next year's team returns a lot of guys on both sides of the ball and the recruiting over the last few years has been very good to the point where there aren't a lot of gaps. 

If Rodriguez came here next year, he'd be very successful.

But that's not happening, so Harbaugh/Mullen or bust. 

Michigan Difference

October 29th, 2014 at 11:38 AM ^

He is a consistent winner at the NFL level with Michigan connections, and there are at least reported tensions between him and the Ravens' front office following the Ray Rice saga.

In many ways, he's like his brother but without the erratic personality that turns some people off.  Granted, he's never been a college head coach, but he grew up around college football and coached in some of the lower ranks before going to the NFL.

He's won a Super Bowl, which means he may be less tempted to be lured back to the NFL after 4-5 years, since he's "been there, done that."

Also, with John Harbaugh, maybe Mattison stays, which could be a good thing with a better head coach at the helm.

991GT3

October 29th, 2014 at 11:54 AM ^

if Brandon stays this is an exercise in futility. Brandon WILL NOT FIRE HOKE! Hoke will get the remaining years on his contract or possibily an extension.

tjking82

October 29th, 2014 at 4:10 PM ^

Would Schissel do this?  (I have the suspicion an academic guy would be loath to do so).  And if he would, how would he enforce?  DB hires a career coordinator Michigan man, and then gets fired?  Or would Schissel step in beforehand and say "no, you can't go after him?"

This just seems really messy and like something a President would not want to have to do.  I'd love to live in a world where this is the only way DB stays, but I fear I live in a world where if DB stays, he gets to make whatever decision he likes.

GoBLUinTX

October 29th, 2014 at 11:55 AM ^

Is it possible that attrition could in fact be positive?  While a new coach can't create scholarships, depending on the coach, some blue chippers might do a last minute flip to play for him.

bighouse22

October 29th, 2014 at 12:02 PM ^

It seems pretty obvious that you have a lot of bias against Les Miles as the coach based on two categories where he is penalized by your evaluation. 

You decided to cap success at 25 pts, which according to your scoring puts him only slightly behind Harbaugh (but well ahead of everyone else).  This has the effect of severely limiting this category, which was heavily in his favor and adds a penalty relative to the other comparisons.

Then you rated him at -5 for long term, easily the lowest of any other comparisons.  

This really appears to be a manipulation of the data to ensure that he does not come in at the top of your list.    

You weakened his strongest attribute and enhanced the negative effect of his weakest category by creating a differential of (16 points with highest) on long term health.

I think its pretty clear that this analysis is more about your personal bias playing out than any real objective analysis.

I am ok with rating all of these categories, but limiting a positive and enhancing a negative to fit your narrative seems a little sketchy.

GoBLUinTX

October 29th, 2014 at 12:09 PM ^

Additionally, why did Bo receive no Power 5 bonus while Moeller picked up 11 points?  After all, Bo was part of the Woody Hayes coaching tree.  Now I didn't like Woody Hayes any more than the next guy, but it should count for something.

Seth

October 29th, 2014 at 1:10 PM ^

Capping the top category does damage Miles, but I think it also allows us to draw conclusions from other factors than "has won a boatload of games on this level."

From the start my goal was to reperesent the level to which factors, not specific coaches, weighed on the decision of the new coach. Every other category was rated on a scale, while I let relevant coaching success tally up points until it hit a threshold of perfect. 

Miles got a -3 for ethics and a -4 for being too old to be around for a long time. Those are things that people talk about as immediate grounds for disconsideration, and I made them relatively small things. In my ratings Les makes up for being an oversigner and a dirty recruiter simply by being really good at coaching offensive linemen. Because of that he rates a 50--exactly as much confidence as my ratings put on Gary Moeller circa January 1990. It makes him my 4th candidate, which is higher than Brian (not in top 7) and Ace (6th) had him in the podcast.

UMaD

October 29th, 2014 at 12:07 PM ^

Some of the guys listed aren't ever coming here because they're in a better situation where they are.

Michigan has never stolen away a premier coach from anyone, other than Rodriguez because he was feuding with his AD.

Catchafire

October 29th, 2014 at 7:53 PM ^

Seriously.  Our fans are delusional to think that a coach who is enjoying great success at the NFL level would want to come to Michigan to suffer.  Instead of looking outside, look within.  My vote is for Nuss or Mattison.  The Harbaugh, Les Miles, Mullen talk is a waste of time...

jmdblue

October 29th, 2014 at 12:05 PM ^

How long do you think he's gonna coach? I think the "success" cap was put in place so the other catagories remained relevant. 

That said, you may be right about Seth's thinking.  IMO Miles shouldn't coach here.  His history, especially at Okie State, isn't something we need here.  (I do like the grass eating though).

LKLIII

October 29th, 2014 at 12:08 PM ^

We all know "execution" is one of the biggest problems with this current team and coaching regime, yet in the matrix, Hoke is rated as a 2 and Harbaugh a 1.

If that is such a major downfall of Hoke, how is it that Harbaugh would be such a quantum leap forward?

Or is the Hoke "2" grade in that department based on Ball State, etc?  Would Hoke's current grade be "0" or below now that we have a few more data points at a power conference level?

 

 

Ron Utah

October 29th, 2014 at 12:30 PM ^

Seth, what's the basis for giving Jim Harbaugh a "1" in offensive and defensive execution?

Stanford was #5 in oFEI in 2010, and #6 in dFEI.  They were #2 in overall FEI, only behind Auburn.  They were #6 in dS&P and #3 in oS&P, overall #5.

Hard to execute much better than that, especially when you consider they weren't loaded with anywhere near the talent of some other top teams.

Seth

October 29th, 2014 at 1:14 PM ^

Oops. I thought I gave him a 3 in both of those. Maybe I accidentally overtyped it at one point. I'm looking over the metrics again and don't see any other weird things.

Hoke was known for execution. When he came here the positives were all "he teaches you fundamental football." Sometimes the things we think are positives don't translate. I could add Hoke as a candidate for 2015 right now if you like but it won't be pretty.

CompleteLunacy

October 29th, 2014 at 1:35 PM ^

For a guy who made Luck into the #1 QB in the draft...who made Stanford into THE example of manball...who rejuvinated Alex Smith and made into a viable NFL starter...who himself was a former NFL QB...I think his "expertise" level with offense should be greater than just a 3 out of 10.

Credit812

October 29th, 2014 at 12:29 PM ^

and winning percentage at FCS or lower levels?  If not, what's to stop you from rating that Arkansas HS head coach who's become famous for never punting as being more capable of success than Hermann or Narduzzi?

Look Stitt might have some great ideas and be a brilliant OC someday, but there is no comparison between coaching in D II, with partial scholarships, and players who have no pro aspirations and coaching major college football.  He would be the least qualified coach we've ever hired, and we would become a laughing stock if we hired him.   Can you think of one coach in the past that went straight from D II to a power conference team?  The only two that I can think of that are even close to comparable are Brian Kelly going from GVSU to CMU, and Kelly was FAR more successful at Grand Valley than Stitt has been at CSM, and he was local (i.e. knew the local HS coaches), and Gerry Faust going from Moeller HS in Cinncy to Notre Dame in the early 80s, and that was pretty much a disaster.

Also, why do you need to find ways to not rate Les Miles so high?  If you put your finger on the scale to influence the process to get the result you want, it's not much of an objective analysis is it?

Despite my quibbles, i like the idea of trying to quantify the pluses and minuses of every candidate.

Seth

October 29th, 2014 at 1:18 PM ^

It was getting too complicated by separating all those thigns out. So instead I decided to just count all wins and losses as equal no matter what level, figuring if you are in the MAC you do get to play against MAC teams but you also have MAC problems all over your team.

Then I made up the difference by giving bonuses that scale with the level you're at. So Les Miles didn't get big builder points because he inherited a Saban team, but he wracked up 33 points in Power 5 bonuses.

SECcashnassadvantage

October 29th, 2014 at 12:30 PM ^

Do you want a clapping cheerleader or a coach? Bo was an absolute dick to his players. Dantonio, Saban, Meyer, Miles, all rip their kids and say winning is all that matters on game day. F the Michigan bullshit that never existed, except for the blue hairs sitting on the 50 each Saturday. We need to win and points need to be awarded for being a dick. Dicks fuck pussies and right now our team plays like a bunch of pussies. We have tough wonderful kids, but they are taught the score isn't the only statistic by Hoke. They are clapped at when they jump offsides. They are aware they play soft, but aren't fully aware. If Rich Rod was a bigger dick and fired Gerg he would still be here coaching.

Ranger1010

October 29th, 2014 at 12:38 PM ^

I knew it!  I warned you kids of this last week.  Brian, and his anti-Brandon goons can make light of the politics as much as they want, but it doesnt change the reality.

Brandon is a high-profile republican in the state of Michigan.  The faculty, regents, students and people who want Snyder voted out know that hurting Brandon, in a small way, hurts Snyder.  In politics, everything counts.  Small-ball is the rule.

 

west2

October 29th, 2014 at 12:52 PM ^

I don't think you have to be a dick to be a winning coach but winning coaches in their own way demand excellence from players and those around them.  Urban Meyer is generally loved by his players and those near to the program but seems to manage a winning program with 2 NCs on his resume.  Hey I am not here to defend Meyer, so don't start!  Just making a point. 

Since you mentioned politics, one of the individuals running for M regent is running on the platform of excellence in the classroom AND on the football field.  Interesting!

Also today mentioned on the BgTn Network they were discussing the upcoming game between M and Indiana saying its a battle of coaches trying to keep their jobs!   I would say they are 100% wrong on that take with regard to Michigan, Hoke has cleared out his desk I hear as the Sparty debacle finished any debate, if there ever was one, about him staying another year. 

alum96

October 29th, 2014 at 1:56 PM ^

A technical question.  When I did this I had to break it down into 5 charts due to width issues.  How are you able to insert a table with scrolling horizontally? Thanks.

tjking82

October 29th, 2014 at 2:04 PM ^

I'm not surprised that Gary Patterson came up so high.  I love the dude.  In fact, I think you've underrated him on offense.  You're right he hasn't traditionally been an offensive dude... but this year is proof positive that he's a very bright mind, knows what will work at a high level, and will go out and get guys who can teach him.

http://espn.go.com/blog/big12/post/_/id/82719/tcu-hopes-new-offense-lev…

Clif notes:  He wasn't happy with the O, so this offseason he spoke to some spread gurus and completely retooled the O.  Now it's one of the best in the nation.  Sounds pretty awesome from a defensive coach.

alum96

October 29th, 2014 at 3:06 PM ^

He is an elite defensive coach who had an offense that worked fine in the mountain west.  Then in the first 2 years of a new conference it wasnt working.  So he retooled completely.  I think he did more than consult - if my memory serves he demoted his OC and hired two Air Raid OCs, and changed his system 180 on the fly.  Which flies into the face of "oh you can't hire this type of offensive coach when you have not recruited that type of player".

He would be an excellent choice.  The problem with him is he has zero reason to leave.  He is already at the top of a Big 5 conference, in a recruit rich area of the country and unlike Mullen there is no case for him to be made that he is in a division or conference he cannot win in long term.  Look at Kansas State under Snyder - a non traditional power can do well in the Big 12 as there are no Alabama's, LSU's, Auburn's there to roadblock him.  The closest thing is Oklahoma and saying you should leave the Big 12 due to Oklahoma is like saying you should leave the Big 10 due to Ohio State; they have similar levels of success. 

That plus his longevitiy there (since 98 I believe) and his wife apparently loving it there gives me the belief he is about a 1% chance of ever leaving.  There is no reason I can come up with as a neutral for him to leave - he already has a Power 5 conference team angling for a playoff and again - unlike Mullen, there is nothing to stop him from continuing  year in and year out from having double digit wins and chances at a playoff every 3rd to 4th year.  The same topside a program like Michigan would offer - without having to do a rebuild. 

WolvinLA2

October 29th, 2014 at 6:54 PM ^

I agree.  Patterson is going nowhere.  He has no reason to leave and already makes a lot of money (3.4mil I believe) and I'm sure that would go up after this season if teams came calling with more (and even if they don't).  There is lots and lots of money in Dallas.  

alum96

October 29th, 2014 at 2:50 PM ^

I continue to be shocked Todd Graham is not included in this type of conversation when you have guys like Bob Stitt.

Downgrade him for douchie-ness all you want for how he left previous stops but his on the field stuff is sterling.  He is in year 3 at a major turnaround at a Power 5 school that was in the weeds.... in a better conference and is 7-1, winning with a backup QB against USC and Stanford and 9 new starters on defense (incl 3 true freshmen starters).  Last year he had 2 losses to teams not named Stanford in year 2 of his regime.  He is coaching in the 2nd best division in all of football right now with classes ranked in the 30s/40s.  Offensive FEI top 10 last year and this year, defensive FEI in the 20s and 30s the past 3 years in a tough conference.

If somehow ASU can run the table (still have Notre Dame, Arizona, Utah, and Oregon) they will be the #2 seed in the playoffs.  He has an eye for coordinator talent finding Malzahn and Chad Morris (and his current OC), and he cannot even be included in a group of 20 guys including a guy from the School if Mines?

If for nothing else I'd like to see how he ranks in your matrix.  He is basically choice 2A/2B for me along with Patterson with the only "football" knock on him the lack of Midwest relationships.  Of which Graham at least has some due to his year at Pitt.

 

 

charblue.

October 29th, 2014 at 3:07 PM ^

and a "dick" on the sideline when addressing refs and situations, but his players always knew he would be fair and could come see him about anything. He always knew the pulse of his team and how to motivate and encourge. I think that transcends the notion of just being a dick.

And I don't get how sideline demeanor makes you a better coach or not unless you appear to not be fully engaged, which is the opposite of being a dick, but only goes to create a certain image of your personna. Winning and losing dictates how your sideline personna gets spun.

alum96

October 29th, 2014 at 3:26 PM ^

Agree - unless you are making a fool of yourself "sideline demeanor" is overblown.  Saban goes crazy on the sidelines a few times every game.  So does Kelly.  So did Carroll.  Etc.  What I care about is behind the scenes demenaor.  I want a coach who players want to be friends with AFTER they leave the school - they don't need a frigging best friend while they are playing.  Almost all the great coaches you hear the same thing - "I came to respect what he did for me once I left college, even if at the time I didnt always understand why he was pushing me, and sometimes I got upset yada yada yada."  

Hoke is basically today's "helicopter parent" - everyone is a winner, participation awards for all, clap clap clap, positive reinforcement at every turn.  I coach these type of kids in travel soccer and the ones who have parents like this break down during any adversity.  Why ? Because they never face it - they dont have tools to deal with it.  Which is the same thing I see on the field with our players the longer Hoke is around them.  Brady Hoke reminds me so much of these parents. Blah.

DennisFranklinRules

October 29th, 2014 at 3:07 PM ^

lots of way way over the top anticipation around harbaugh.  why in the world would he ever come back ?  If he left SF (where he will probably stay), he would pretty much have his choice of open HC jobs -- Oak, Miami, Bears, Jets, Giants.  as has been pointed out here several times, failing NFL coaches go back -- successful ones do not.

WolvinLA2

October 29th, 2014 at 7:01 PM ^

It's not that cut and dry.  Lots of NFL coaches go back to college, and the reason isn't always that they "failed."  Some coaches just feel they're better suited in college and/or that they'd rather deal with college coaches.  

If Harbaugh leaves SF, he can either take his dream college job (where the money would be comparable, and the job security would likely be much higher, provided he doesn't stink) or he can take over a floundering NFL team where it's 50/50 he either turns them around or is looking for a job again 2-3 years later when Michigan's (hopefully) is not available.  

I'm not saying it's a sure thing by any means, and the biggest determining factor is inside of his head - whether he prefers coaching in the NFL or college.  If he sees himself as an NFL lifer, then we don't have a shot no matter what we offer.  If he thinks college is where he'd rather be, then we're a shoo-in.