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Juwan Howard Fired As Michigan Men's Basketball Coach Comment Count

Alex.Drain March 15th, 2024 at 2:41 PM

2.5 years ago, your author wrote a brief post about the news that Juwan Howard had been extended as Michigan Men's Basketball Head Coach. In the intervening time since being given that five-year extension, Howard's Wolverines went 43-55 and today, just two days after finishing 8-24 in the 2023-24 season (Michigan's worst record in four decades), Howard has been fired. Statement: 

Juwan Howard was hired May 22, 2019, after former coach John Beilein exited for the NBA's Cleveland Cavaliers. Michigan's coaching search was muddled due to a lack of quality candidates, with the search coming a few months after most coaching vacancies were filled nationally. Howard was the consensus option, a program icon as a player from the Fab Five days who embarked on a long and successful professional playing career. After his playing days, he had been an assistant coach in Miami under esteemed NBA coach Erik Spolestra. Howard had no NCAA coaching experience, or head coaching experience of any kind, but was regarded as a talented up-and-coming coach. 

Howard's first season was rocky, finishing 19-12 after getting off to an illustrious start. Michigan was only 10-10 in conference play but were headed for (roughly) a 6 seed in the NCAA Tournament, thanks to the B1G being loaded in 2019-20. The NCAA Tournament never happened due to the COVID-19 pandemic, but it was an okay opening. Howard followed it up with a magical 23-5 season that earned him the extension, winning the B1G Regular Season Championship and a #1 seed in the NCAA Tournament. The team made it to the Elite Eight but fell just short to a Cinderella UCLA team. 

Howard brought in an elite recruiting class for 2021-22 and signed the extension shortly into the next season, then holding a 2-0 record. Things got murky after that, the team alternating wins and losses before just barely slipping into the NCAA Tournament as an 11-seed, with a 17-14 record. Along the way, Howard was suspended for five games for slapping a Wisconsin assistant coach during an infamous altercation following a loss to the Badgers in Madison. In the NCAA Tournament, the Wolverines moved past Colorado State and then upset Tennessee, making the Sweet 16 and seeming to salvage an otherwise frustrating year. The team got blown out by Villanova in the next round and the season came to an end. 

[Marc-Gregor Campredon]

The wheels came off over the next two seasons leading to the present. Howard's 2022-23 team endured a series of baffling late-game collapses that submarined their season, narrowly missing the NCAA Tournament and then getting bounced from the NIT after another meltdown against Vanderbilt. The offseason saw star Hunter Dickinson transfer out of the program, while Kobe Bufkin and Juwan's son Jett Howard declared for the NBA Draft.

Michigan struggled to fill those holes, as they battled continued problems with the transfer portal. Howard also underwent a serious heart procedure in the offseason, leaving him unable to coach the beginning of the 2023-24 season. The season that unfolded was a catastrophe, starting reasonably well but coming apart by December before losing 19 of 21 games in calendar 2024 to end the year. Along the way another incident unfolded, an altercation with strength coach Jon Sanderson, leading to Sanderson's exit from the program and recent hiring by Illinois. Michigan finished last in the B1G for the first time in over 55 years and were easily bounced on Wednesday night from the Big Ten Tournament by Penn State, ending their season. 

Despite frequent discussion of whether Howard would return, from a bird's eye view Michigan had no choice. The conditions of the program had deteriorated so severely that only one choice could be made here, coming on the same morning that The Athletic published a piece about cultural problems in the Michigan program. The candidates to replace Howard are not yet obvious and the next few days will see people, including AD Warde Manuel, assemble a list of targets. We will have coverage on that in the near future but for today, the news is simply that a long-needed change has been made. 

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Comments

Harbaugeddon

March 15th, 2024 at 4:21 PM ^

Warde/The University should have let him go for cause as soon as the Wisconsin incident happened. That was unacceptable behavior at the time and in retrospect was a major red flag/ precursor of what was to come. At the time winning covered over his flaws and prevented what should have been a clear cut decision to move on. 

snarling wolverine

March 15th, 2024 at 6:34 PM ^

It was the second anger incident.  The year before he had had to be restrained from going after Maryland’s Turgeon.  

I was OK with the 5-game suspension(that’s not a slap on the wrist, especially since it took place in the stretch run of the season) but I don’t know how he survived the Sanderson thing, on top of all that. 

schreibee

March 15th, 2024 at 7:00 PM ^

 I defended him then, and thought a zero tolerance agreement was just right going forward. 

It's when he violated that on more than 1 occasion I thought he had to go.

And I'll be honest, if he were still winning & making deep tournament runs I'd still have supported more chances for him.

I'm no better than a Hoosier fan apparently 🤷‍♂️

stephenrjking

March 15th, 2024 at 3:01 PM ^

You and hundreds of others would have blamed Warde if Juwan hadn’t been fired, so now that he has fired Juwan promptly, it’s “questionable.” Warde literally can do no right in the eyes of some people. If you want to blame him, you need to credit him too.

And this is important from a public pressure standpoint; so much of the criticism of Warde is specious, which makes real shortcomings harder to see clearly. I respect criticism that focuses on known issues like the Mel Pearson fiasco. It is, additionally, fair to connect that situation with scrutiny of the basketball program’s culture. But most of the hate directed at Warde is packaged with no evidence that he is actually responsible for the presumed offenses, or traffics in assumptions that are not proven by the facts, and often build suppositions on events or presumptions that are not known at all.

Internet hate is a stupid thing. Warde has shortcomings, and I thought he would be gone last summer. It’s frustrating seeing so much of the hate directed at him be for things that are either not based on fact or not his responsibility at all.

Edit: you appear to have edited your post. And the new text is still bad. You say it’s questionable because we “know that Warde’s preference is to do nothing.”

We don’t know that. Many internet people assume it. A big plank of that assumption is the assumption that Warde didn’t want to fire Juwan and the further conclusion that this was because he didn’t want to go to the effort of hiring another coach. Well, he fired Juwan. You don’t “know” anything.

I’m sorry, I'm tired of this. That is stupid. Circular evidence-free reasoning that should be beneath Michigan fans. 

bronxblue

March 15th, 2024 at 3:43 PM ^

Fantastic response.  This fanbase is as full of the dumbest fucking takes as any one out there, and it's stuff like "the AD is still incompetent at his job even though he did what I wanted" because the hive mind has been (including by writers at this blog) that Warde is stupid and so no evidence to the contrary is acceptable.

4INROW

March 15th, 2024 at 3:10 PM ^

Guy came from New Orleans and played def. line at Michigan for Bo. After breaking his neck he stayed at Michigan and received 2 Masters degrees from Michigan. I can't question this guy's resume and especially his loyalty to Michigan. Go Blue!

three_honks

March 15th, 2024 at 5:08 PM ^

I think those saying "Warde's preference is to do nothing" are misinterpreting Warde's bureaucratic instincts to minimize risk (which often incentivizes doing nothing to avoid the ownership of hirings and firings).  Keeping Juwan would have been a big bet on Warde's part; instead, he made the obvious choice for Michigan and the smart choice to reduce risk to himself.  

Football is king, and if Warde really means it when he says "Transformational not Transactional", then Warde will be putting the program at risk.  I'm expecting an excellent 2024 team, largely due to a phenomenal 2022 recruiting class.  But when that class heads off to the NFL after this year, we may see an impact from the lack of NIL since then.  Hopefully, Warde shows himself to be a chameleon, moving from "Transformational not Transactional" to "Transformational not Transactional" (and here's your blue-blood market value NIL).  I'm also annoyed at the lack of support he showed Harbaugh for penne-ante infractions, but I guess it all worked out.  He did decide to keep Harbaugh after 2020, so he gets credit for that.

As a minority partner in the athletic department, basketball is not going to drive a Warde firing unless it is absolutely putrid like it was this year.  I thought the Juwan hire was a good choice at the time, and Warde made the obvious decision to move on this year, so I have no complaints there.  As long as he doesn't flat out blow it in the upcoming  coaching search, I don't see it impacting his standing as long as football carries the water.

JonnyHintz

March 15th, 2024 at 7:23 PM ^

Here’s the issue. It seems like every decision Warde makes (or any AD for that matter) makes is either wrong, and he deserves the blame for it, or it’s an obvious decision and he deserves no credit. 
 

Warde made the right decision. Yes, he deserves credit and should be applauded for that move. It doesn’t matter if it is an seemingly obvious decision. And no, it does not outweigh all of his poor decisions or make him a great AD. 
 

Someone who is bad at their job can still do a good thing and it’s okay to acknowledge that. 

jsquigg

March 15th, 2024 at 4:13 PM ^

While I was pleasantly surprised by the decision, I think that Warde waited too long. Hindsight being what it is, his decision to back Juwan in the midst of the Sanderson incident was wrong, and many people pointed that out at the time. I will apologize for the Warde criticism if he knocks the hire out of the park which itself will require a big picture assessment.

willirwin1778

March 15th, 2024 at 5:14 PM ^

Good point.  Keep in mind, coach had some medical issues he was working through, and his son was on the team, so maybe riding the wave to the end of the season, doing his due diligence, conducting inter-program interviews and letting cooler heads prevail was the smartest way to begin this new chapter.

This probably didn't need to be rushed.  

 

DennisFranklinDaMan

March 15th, 2024 at 5:02 PM ^

I assume by "knock[ing] the hire out of the park" you mean "hire someone I approve of." Otherwise, what's the standard? How will we know?

love the confidence everyone here has that they know more about the job Warde is doing than the regents, Ono, the coaches in the athletic department, and the boosters. I have yet to hear any of them express criticism of Warde — even Harbaugh, who as far as I know never said a bad word about Warde.

Nonetheless, we all know he's shit at his job. Despite the national football championship. Hell, even despite the apparent consensus that Warde screwed up the Pearson firing, in fact we've made the NCAA hockey playoffs every year since. What kind of results do we want from an athletic director, or an athletic department, honestly? 

I'm 100% on board with the job Warde is doing, and my only concern is that knuckleheads like the ones who comment on this blog will somehow force him out to replace him with someone who ... I don't know ... goes public with statements demonstrating righteous anger whenever the blogosphere wants him to, regardless of the actual success of the programs he oversees.

JonnyHintz

March 15th, 2024 at 7:31 PM ^

That’s the thing. Michigan athletics is making money hand over fist and we’re winning conference titles at an unprecedented rate and competing on the national stage. We are winning and making money. The results are there. There’s really no debating that. 
 

I don’t like many of the decisions that have been made or the scandals that have happened during his tenure, but I also struggle to sit here and say any of them are fireable offenses on their own. It’s also not my job, nor the job of anyone on this blog, to make that determination. Much of the criticism of Warde seems to be people upset about a certain outcome and looking for a scapegoat or a general ignorance of the inner workings/hierarchy of running an athletic department. Specifically one the size of Michigan’s. 

JonnyHintz

March 15th, 2024 at 7:51 PM ^

Apparently you don’t pay attention to anything other than our #1 sport. We literally broke the school record for most conference championships each of the past two years… 
 

https://www.on3.com/teams/michigan-wolverines/news/michigan-wolverines-athletics-wins-13-record-big-ten-championships-in-2022-23/

“The Maize and Blue won 13 Big Ten championships, a school and conference record, one year after taking home 12 Big Ten (and 13 total) league titles in 2021-22“

jmblue

March 16th, 2024 at 12:17 PM ^

I certainly follow our #2 and #3 sports.  Manuel's hires in those (Howard and Pearson) didn't work out the best, and yet, they were easy hiring decisions.  Time will tell about Naurato.

Beyond that, our most successful programs have tended to have coaches whose hirings predated Manuel. 

He made the right move here, and in a timely fashion.  I have no complaint about how he handled Howard.  But I'm not sure how much confidence I have in him to find the right replacement.  There is no obvious candidate this time.  I hope my concern turns out to be misplaced.

JonnyHintz

March 16th, 2024 at 1:42 PM ^

I certainly follow our #2 and #3 sports.
 

Well Warde’s job is to oversee the success of all sports, not just the top 3. Though the top 3 have all seen their fair share of success during his tenure as well. 
 

Howard and Pearson) didn't work out the best, and yet, they were easy hiring decisions


Howard was really the ONLY option based on the timing of Beilein’s departure and he had initial success. Warde also moved on from him when it was clear the success isn’t going to return. Pearson was a very successful hire, the issues with Pearson came off of the ice. Naurato took the team to the Frozen Four during his interim season and was widely considered one of the top young coaches rising through the ranks. Again, no brainer. Making the easy decision means making the right decision and not trying to be the smartest guy in the room and going off script. That’s a plus in an AD.

 

Beyond that, our most successful programs have tended to have coaches whose hirings predated Manuel. 

And yet, the most successful stretch of conference titles in school history didn’t occur under any of the ADs that preceded Manuel. Why does he only get credit for the success of coaches he hires? It’s still his responsibility to make sure those coaches have the resources they need to compete long after they’ve been hired. Considering we’re winning more conference titles than we (or any other B1G school) ever have, sounds like he’s doing that.
 

Again, if we’re looking strictly at the results, he’s been very successful as Michigan’s AD. Using the metrics his superiors would use to judge success, he’s passing with flying colors. Win and make money. Any questions related to his job status would be centered around his handling of specific events/scandals that have occurred. Which is a fair criticism, but it’s unclear whether any of it is worthy of causing the guy his job on its own.

JBLPSYCHED

March 16th, 2024 at 11:18 AM ^

Good question. And in terms of Warde's performance, the one really crucial moment in his tenure was his handling of Harbaugh's contract after the dreadful 2020 Covid season. Many wanted Harbaugh fired, some wanted him retained, but it was all in the context of a global pandemic that completely altered the context of the decision.

In that extremely unclear and challenging moment Warde did something unconventional and in fact quite remarkable: he cut Harbaugh's salary in half and incentivized him to make needed changes and earn back the cut in his pay. This quite obviously pissed Harbaugh off, making it a very risky move on Warde's part, but it turned out to work perfectly. Despite Harbaugh being offended he did make major changes to his staff and his approach and then we had the best 3 seasons of Michigan football in my lifetime (I'm 61).

While Warde's handling of several other incidents with Pearson, Juwan etc. may be open to question, the one big decision that he had to get right, he nailed. (I'm not blaming him for pulling back on the TRO hearing last fall--I think that decision was probably made above Warde's head.)

As for the impending hire of a new men's basketball coach--the proof will be in the pudding. And it will take 2-3 years to see how it actually turns out. IMHO it's time for the armchair AD's to stand down and continue reveling in the our national championship football team.