Peace Between The Wars Comment Count

Brian

16146977221_812246f524_z

[Eric Upchurch]

Jim Hackett talked to the Daily yesterday, and the words that he said were as encouraging as possible for a fan who likes his college football to be as distinct as possible from the pro experience:

The topic of conversation soon shifted to the student experience at Michigan Stadium and the tendency of many students to leave games well before they end. Hackett believes the issue will most easily be resolved by the improvement of the on-field product.

“I don’t want to sound sarcastic,” Hackett said. “What I don’t want is more entertainment that’s not football. I think that works in the pros, but we’re in college. I believe college shouldn’t be like the pros. It shouldn’t cost like the pros.”

Hackett specifically noted that he didn’t want the games to feel “corporate,” a complaint that was commonly voiced by Michigan fans during Brandon’s tenure.

I am still a little hesitant to open the ol' heart to the new AD because I remember the brief, stretchgate-inspired Brandon honeymoon that we all had a few years back… but I'm hopeful that Hackett takes the project of making Michigan Michigan seriously, and am more so every time he is quoted.

We're even seeing some specific steps discussed not only amongst the fanbase but with the guys in charge. After a student complained about the piped-in music, Hackett replied thusly:

Hackett asked the new coach what he thought of piped-in music during warmups. Harbaugh was firm in his answer.

“I don’t care. We don’t need it,” Harbaugh said.

Hackett agreed with Harbaugh, noting that in the past, the loud music has almost discouraged him from sitting through the team’s warmups when he has visited Michigan Stadium. As a result of the preferences of the coach, athletic director and many fans, the Athletic Department is in conversations with the band to have it play more during games.

I did not dream of a day when Michigan would look at the music during warmups as an issue to be addressed, let alone the actual in-game experience. I don't even mind the warmups music that much. I did treasure the quiet buzz of anticipation 45 minutes before the game, though, and if that comes back the stadium will be a step closer to what it used to be.

That thing it used to be was merely itself. The band, the lack of advertising, the silences in between the shouting. The natural up and down of a crowd was an important part of my formative experiences as a sports fan, and I still wince at the idea that doing something for the entertainment of the people in attendance actually, you know, entertains them. Too often piped-in music turns fan participation off instead of on. It's a convenient way to cover the fact that you have a lack of atmosphere. I prefer an athletic department that asks the hard questions about how to create one out of the materials they've been given. If MLS can do it—hell, if Detroit City can do it—there's no reason Michigan can't.

Here's hoping Hackett's the man to do it.

Oh also

We talked about this some on WTKA today: it sounds like when the Adidas contract comes up in a year, Michigan is seriously considering a switch even if that move costs them some money.

“In my first months here, the question of which brand we wear is a big one,” Hackett said during the fireside chat. “We’ve organized — this is a secret — a project team to look at the question of, there’s really three players: Adidas, Under Armour and Nike.”

"Was" a secret if you're talking about it in a fireside chat with students. Adidas or UA will offer the most money; Nike offers the gear it seems like most of the athletes prefer… and it opens doors in recruiting, especially basketball. Like it or not, that is fact.

The mere fact that there's something other than a number in a spreadsheet being considered here is an excellent development. I don't understand people who care a ton about the style of an athletic clothing supplier, but there are evidently legions of them.

Personally, I would prefer Under Armour, which tends to create (or maintain) signature looks for the schools they have. Adidas and Nike both love to suit people up in things that say "this team is part of Adidas or Nike"; UA is better about working for the team, the team, the team.

Okay yes Maryland's flag uniforms are kind of a disaster, but it's not like they've got anything iconic to hang their hat on. Meanwhile I love what they've done with Northwestern and they've left Auburn's classic look virtually untouched. But UA is a distant third when it comes to recognition and door-opening.

It's a tough decision.

Comments

Icehole Woody

April 2nd, 2015 at 1:39 PM ^

Why do Michigan teams have to wear whatever nightmare Addidas or Nike dream up?   Who's in the drivers seat?  Nike or Addidas pay to put thier little symbols on Michigan uniforms and that's it.  Or at least that is the way it should be.

dragonchild

April 2nd, 2015 at 2:13 PM ^

I don't care as long as we tell them what to do and not the other way around.  We're Michigan, not a bunch of dress-up clowns.  If the contract's structured WITHOUT that deep festering insecurity that other schools get by allowing them to use their AD as a test market, we'll be fine.

DomIngerson

April 2nd, 2015 at 1:53 PM ^

Why does a school like Michigan State have Nike? They sure as hell need any additional money they can get.

Mark Hollis seems to be a bright dude. Maybe the money they bring in for apparel sales greatly outweighs what Adidas or UA offers up front.

Long term strategy v short term strategy. Ohhhh, now I know why we have Adidas. Of course this is the work of DB.



Sent from MGoBlog HD for iPhone & iPad

jmblue

April 2nd, 2015 at 10:04 PM ^

The Adidas deal was signed by Bill Martin.

As for MSU, they'll never get a huge deal from a company like UA - they're not that big of a seller of merchandise.  If they were offered the deal we were from Adidas, I'm sure they'd take it, but they won't be.

 

markusr2007

April 2nd, 2015 at 1:54 PM ^

it would be nice if UM administrators would stop greenlighting every proposed design idea that comes across the desk from Adidas marketing & design dolts. Probably too much to ask.

I agree though that Underarmour is now the most badass of the three.

 

 

Stuck in Ohio

April 2nd, 2015 at 2:18 PM ^

they decide on, just get the colors right. Preferably the old maize color that was used back in the day of NO BLARING GODDAMN music between every play, warmups, running out of the tunnel, etc. I prefer listening to the band. To me its a bonus when the visiting team brings their band, even MSU (even though their take the field march step looks like they are trying to shake a turd out of their boxers.) But seriously, Ive had season tickets for 29 years.....call me an old fart (I'm only 54), but I prefer the stadium experience the way it used to be.

WolverineHistorian

April 2nd, 2015 at 2:32 PM ^

Was that a misquote by Hackett regarding when the students leave? Because students have been leaving early ever since the Schembechler years. There were a ton of blowouts with Michigan safely ahead by 40 something points that they wouldn't stay for. And during the RichRod years when the script was flipped, I guess I can't blame folks for not wanting to stay any longer to witness those displays.

Leaving early I never had a problem with. It's the students who didn't show up until the middle of the 2nd quarter that always annoyed the hell out of me. It's not the same effect when you have all those empty seats during pregame. Even now, you're probably only going to have 40% of the student section full for a noon start and roughly 60 to 70% full for a 3:30 start. In the case of the Akron game two years ago, about 10% full if that. What a nice sight that must have been when for the players when they charged under the banner.

Let's not forget that Hoke was 19-0 in home games while all these attendance issues were going on before those two last minute losses that finished the 2013 seasons.

It's getting there on time that is still the issue, not leaving early.



Sent from MGoBlog HD for iPhone & iPad

kstevens26

April 2nd, 2015 at 2:53 PM ^

NIKE. They make better products and that's the brand that the kids want to wear. We are Adidas' biggest contract, of course Nike is going to swoon after us.

I'd rather have UA before Adidas, just freaking leave them already. Let the sun set on them just like Dave Brandon.

Tuebor

April 2nd, 2015 at 3:26 PM ^

If Nike is going to swoon after us how come they haven't made an offer?

 

Nike doesn't need Michigan like Adidas needs Michigan.  Nike has the North American market on lockdown which is why they would never offer up the kind of cash that Adidas has.

 

The fact is that the exclusive negotiating period for Adidas ended December 1st 2014.  Nike and UA have been free to make thier offers since then and neither has done so. 

ST3

April 2nd, 2015 at 2:58 PM ^

I can see them doing a, "We must protect this Big House" ad campaign along the lines of this:

Seems like a natural fit. I like my UA workout gear more than my Nike or Adidas stuff. But I'm really really old.

Philmypockets

April 2nd, 2015 at 3:04 PM ^

Yes, and the recruits and players like Nike, so why would we take away a competitive advantage over fan taste. The team, the team, the team has nothing to do with a design from UA, because "the team" likes wearing Nike. C'mon guys! Great write up by Brian other than the uniform opinion (of which he may be correct, well because it's simply opinions). Maybe I need to lay off the paeody.

CoachBP6

April 2nd, 2015 at 4:19 PM ^

Nike or UA. The adidas era is one of horror. The Nike era was much more fun, and zbrian is right, the kids love Nike. I know Hackett will make the best decision.

jmblue

April 2nd, 2015 at 10:08 PM ^

This is true for football.  For basketball our Nike tenure (1994-2007) generally sucked.

We should go back to Russell Athletic.  We kicked ass in both sports in the early '90s and destroyed all merchandising records.

 

cutter

April 2nd, 2015 at 8:00 PM ^

Schools all over the country have problems with student sections either arriving late to game or leaving early.  It's pretty clear that having success on the field isn't the entire solution to that problem, otherwise it wouldn't be happening in a place like Tuscaloosa when Alabama plays at home.

The "competition" for student attendance to games comes down to big screen televisions, access to alcohol, limited wi-fi coverage at the stadium and less than stellar opponents (particularly the non-conference variety).  Hackett's comments about this issue seem to be rather simplistic to me, but they could have made sense given the forum.

I also wonder how many ways Hackett is looking to slash revenues for the athletic department.  Student ticket prices are now down (that is actually on Brandon) and I assume demand for them is going up--that means less overall stadium revenue there.  He's also ended the dynamic pricing scheme for single game tickets, which also could mean less money for the AD.  Now we're looking at not renewing the most lucrative apparel contact in college sports.  

The Athletic Department is a $150M operation.  More money should roll in just because of the new television contract--upwards of $12 to $14M if the press is correct.  Let's just say that the FY 2016 budget projections will be pretty interesting.

I'll also be curious if Hackett plans to curtail the ticket promotions for the non-revenue sports that are shown during football games.  If yes, I'd love to know what he'd tell the coaches, etc. of those sports about how he's not promoting them in front of the 100,000 plus at Michgian Stadium.

 

mgoblue0970

April 4th, 2015 at 11:37 AM ^

I am still a little hesitant to open the ol' heart to the new AD because I remember the brief, stretchgate-inspired Brandon honeymoon that we all had a few years back

 

I got duped by Brandon before the 20 mins 'o stretching... DB came in and just said all the right things, refreshing things -- which was really nice after having Barnacle Bill screw up the coaching search for Carr's replacement and all of Bill's other curious behavior.

ribby

April 4th, 2015 at 3:13 PM ^

Went to Sparty-PSU game in 09. Piped in music all over the place. Thought "this sucks, glad Michigan doesn't do this." Doh.