Unverified Voracity Breaks Comma Usage Portion Of Brain Comment Count

Brian

Scouting Charles Matthews. Scout's Xavier site put together an uncommonly useful reel from Matthews's freshman year at Kentucky:

They don't cover some of the downsides, which comprise almost everything that can go in a Kenpom profile. Matthews had vanishingly small usage, turned the ball over a lot—although low usage will magnify TORate on a small number of TOs—and shot just 42% from the free throw line. All of these numbers have a low sample size, but it's clear Beilein has his work cut out for him developing the offensive side of Matthews's game.

Hudson destroys all comers. Pennsylvania's Big 33 game against Maryland was a few days ago*. Pennsylvania featuring an array of D-I talent. Most of the top guys from PA were there, including five-star PSU RB Miles Sanders, USC TE Cary Angeline, a half-dozen Pitt commits, and Slippery Rock DT Clark Wilford. Hudson blew these dudes out of the water. Hudson was the game MVP per the announcers (the organizers gave it to Sanders) and his coach raved about him to Chris Balas:

“He is an absolute freak,” Pennsylvania head coach Mike Matta of Downingtown East High said. “I didn’t look in advance to see if he’s a three-star, four-star, five-star or what, but I saw the film before the game, and when he got here … I can’t believe he got out of the state. Actually, I can’t believe everybody in the world didn’t make this kid a priority. There’s nothing he can’t do … and what he can do is just outrageous.”

Pitt partisans can only sigh and put weird commas everywhere at his escape:

Doing us all a favor, I'll get the Khaleke Hudson portion out of the way, first. If you watched the game, you undoubtedly understand the reference.  "There's that number 21, again…" … seemed to be the only player on the field, tonight.

Various reporters we like… dang:

Hudson had a ridiculous punt return that was wiped out by penalty and thus not included in the clips VSN TV posted to YouTube.

*[Ohio dumped their traditional matchup in the Big 33 game because they kept getting housed, then tried playing Michigan, got housed a couple times, and has now given up entirely.]

Hawkins wobble: stand down? Brad Hawkins was recently the subject of a bunch of internet rumormongering based on the fact that he scrubbed his twitter page of any Michigan mentions and was not yet in the student directory—everyone else is accounted for. Ominous, but unless something drastic happened in the last few days it seems like it's a false alarm. Philly.com just named him their South Jersey player of the year, and the article to accompany the honor is pretty explicit about Hawkins's near future:

Hawkins has signed to attend the University of Michigan on a football scholarship. He plans to depart Friday for Ann Arbor to begin summer workouts.

Hawkins, who also is a strong student, stood outside the fence at Camden's football field at Farnham Park the other day and marveled at the speed with which his high school career had passed.

If he's not on campus by this weekend then you can start running in circles.

Man did I biff this one. The Swiss national team had a jersey blowout reminiscent of the various issues Michigan had a couple years back, and one of the infinite Swiss soccer players with an X in his name seriously outperformed yours truly when trying to snap back at the clothing company:

The shortage of action in France and Switzerland’s dull 0-0 draw in Lille on Sunday night prompted increased attention on deficient equipment, with Swiss kits tearing easier than paper and the winger Xherdan Shaqiri telling Blick: “I hope Puma does not produce condoms.”

Can't win 'em all. /kicks dirt

While the company in question here is Puma, the Only Incompetent Germans couldn't let a fiasco like this go by without getting involved:

Adidas were also left red-faced when one of their Beau Jeu footballs burst when Antoine Griezmann was challenged by Valon Behrami. One of Griezmann’s studs appeared to put a hole in the ball. The balls retail at £105.

Nike stuff will be available at Moe's in just under two months, everybody.

A minor fan revolt in Nebraska. Via GTP, the Cornhuskers made some news a few weeks ago when some Nebraska season tickets actually went on sale to the public. The local paper took the opportunity to interview some discontents in Lincoln. Nebraska has a get-in-the-door fee of 2500 that is causing a lot of people to balk:

Aaron says: “How many people out there are able to pony up a $2,500 donation per seat — or even $2,000 for seats in the east balcony? Drop that down to something people are more comfortable with and they’ll go in a heartbeat. The desire of fans to see NU play is still there, but the price of attendance has to be rationalized. (Shawn) Eichorst is no dummy, he’ll get it figured out.”

The rub is, these donations have been factored into the NU athletic budget for years. Take them out, or reduce them, and what fills the void? Scott has a thought:

“I can’t believe that the donations that would go away couldn’t be replaced by a $40 million Big Ten annual check.”

Scott also reminded: “In a previous century, considering the fact that 1) we were winning national championships, and 2) every game was not on TV, you could charge a donation to get tickets.”

This guy nails one of the worst feelings the Brandon regime imposed on Michigan fans:

“What really makes me hate the streak are those signs at the stadium: ‘Through these gates pass the greatest fans in college football.’ It’s a guilt trip from the A.D.’s office. ... Don’t tell me I don’t love my team just because I won’t fall for what amounts to ‘emotional extortion’ in an attempt to separate me from my cash in the name of preserving this farce of a streak. Like any relationship, it works both ways."

It's a harsh world when supporting the team that you love simultaneously makes you feel like a rube. College football is trending away from that somewhat with better nonconference schedules, but seemingly only because they have to. If Nebraska's having trouble selling out you know there's something afoot in the wider college football world.

ESPN holds on. The other half of the Big Ten package goes for some dollars as well:

ESPN will pay an average of $190 million per year over six years for essentially half the conference’s media rights package, according to several sources close to the talks. Two months ago, Fox Sports agreed to take the other half of the package for an average of $240 million per year. CBS Sports also has told the conference that it will renew its basketball-only package for $10 million per year.

This is stoking Nebraska fans' ire when they see that windfall and compare it to their pocketbooks. For the league itself it clearly separates the SEC and the Big Ten from the rest of the Power 5, for as much as that actually helps them compete. Survey says… not much. NCAA rules induce a lot of inefficient substitutions that can't overcome proximity.

I wonder if the Big Ten will sit on a big chunk of this money in case the landscape isn't as friendly in six years when these deals expire. At that point it'll be more clear what shape the new media landscape is taking and how much money they can spend without overcommitting to a model that could come apart.

The FOX deal gives them first choice of games, so expect a lot of Gus Johnson and Joel Klatt over the next few years. OSU/Michigan is headed to FOX.

2017 athletic budget items. Michigan is back to break even after some big deficits at the end of the Brandon tenure. The new Nike contract and the return of the International Champions' Cup are aids:

Budgeted corporate sponsorship revenues are projected to increase by $1.49 million due to a new apparel agreement.

• Budgeted facility revenues are projected to increase by $1.4 million due to a special event in Michigan Stadium following a fiscal year with no such events.

Manuel's approach to his budget is slightly different than his predecessor's:

"It's not my mindset to say we're going to use Michigan Stadium to make money," he said Thursday following his budget presentation to the Regents. "We want to look at opportunities where they exist, but I don't step in with a philosophy of, I want to use Michigan Stadium to drive more revenue."

It's fine to use Michigan Stadium to drive more revenue as long as that revenue isn't 1) bankrupting student organizations or 2) flooding commercial breaks at Michigan Stadium with ads for weddings. Extra events are a good thing.

Etc.: Michigan's top newcomer will be a HUGE SURPRISE TO YOU if you just arrived from space from 50 years in the past because of time dilation. NCAA might cut satellite camp window to ten days. That's a more reasonable restriction than zero. Satellite camps cost 0.02 percent of Michigan's athletic department budget. Pride comes before the fall.

Comments

Lanknows

June 21st, 2016 at 5:45 PM ^

Despite being 6'8, Robinson doesn't contribute in rebounds, assists, steals, or blocks. His turnover rate is relatively high compared to previous players with the same role in Beilein's offense and his 3-point shooting was mediocre against legitimate competition (35% in Big Ten play).  His defense is atrocious and major reason for Michigan being 109th in adjusted defense. Given that he's older than Derick Walton and Zak Irvin, it may not be reasonable to expect improvement.

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It's not hard to point out flaws. But it's probably not very insightful to conclude: Beilein has his work cut out for him with Duncan Robinson. Matthews, like Robinson and Rahkman and everybody else, has holes in his game that need development. He also offers a lot of skills that the roster badly needs.

 

Lanknows

June 21st, 2016 at 6:10 PM ^

I would guess there are more high major NCAA coaches out there who would put Matthews defense and glue-guy game on the floor for 20 minutes a game than Robinson. Robinson spaces the floor but he's an enormous liability to team defense. Matthews may not have played many minutes on Kentucky, but Robinson's not playing ANY minutes on that team.

Beilein values shooting more than Calipari yet, even though Robinson is nearly 3 years older than Matthews, it's going to be interesting to see who plays more minutes in '17-18.

Shooting percentage is important - it isn't everything. The best player in the world shot 23% and 34% on 3 pointers the last 2 playoffs and turns it over 13% of the time.  Ben Simmons turned it over 17.4% of the time as a freshman and can't shoot either - and is about to be the #1 pick in the NBA.  Obviously not saying Matthews is anywhere near that good, but common sense says you can look past those weaknesses.

aplatypus

June 21st, 2016 at 1:16 PM ^

are major universities still trying to pretend their athletic departments lose money? Even with Dave Brandon messing things up horrendously, if Michigan had a deficit it's because they largely wanted to and spent money on things to make sure it got spent in that year. This is to me like how every year tons of stories pop up about how some teams lose money going to football bowl games, even though that has been bunked a few times. 

A2MIKE

June 21st, 2016 at 1:16 PM ^

Interesting situation in Lincoln.  They now have an underqualified coach, with several years of mediocrity as the longer term trend.  I think even now, Michigan would have a tough time selling out at $2500 per season ticket.

Also, I don't understand the contempt that Universities and some people hold towards people who have season tickets and sell some games or all games at a profit/loss depending on the game and year.  It's unlike anything else in this country.  We buy and sell literally everything, houses, cars, stocks, toys, etc.  Literally every reality show now is about buying and selling to make a profit.  Why aren't tickets acceptable?

csmhowitzer

June 21st, 2016 at 1:29 PM ^

Top Newcomer Rashan Gary!

This is fantastic news!

10 days for camps! WTF! Honestly why limit it? What's the point? NFL oversight? NCAA ran? Recruitment counceling? This is very odd.

 

 

WolverineHistorian

June 21st, 2016 at 1:38 PM ^

Several years of mediocrity is putting it VERY generously. It's more like an entire decade of crap with 3 mediocre seasons being the high point.

Nebraska hiring that guy is still one of the most mind boggling hires in college football. Even more shocking than the rest of the world's reaction to us hiring Brady Hoke.

ETA: Oops. This was meant to be a reply to A2MIKE.

charblue.

June 21st, 2016 at 1:56 PM ^

observations. About the proposed 10-day period for satellite camps being a reasonable alternative to a ban on them, why? What has the controversy turned up that should spark a change in existing policy? The fact that some schools devote major resources to them and pursue them with an energy unknown to the NCAA and SEC's appreciation based on turf protection is not a sufficient reason to curtail the timeframe to hold them.

There has to be a compelling reason to deny the current allowance for camps because they are run with the single purpose of giving kids instruction and exposure to widespread coaches and schools. The only reason SEC coaches don't like them is because they don't want to compete in sponsoring them in the summer or be forced to participate on a wider scale.

And, this is, in part, because it looks bad not promoting football coaching, and because they fear recruiting reprucussions, the latter being the greater conern. They want to maintain their hold on Southern regional recruiting so that charismatic, energetic leaders like Harbaugh who can coach one day and still produce a child in the same time cycle, won't steal kids from them based on camp exposure alone. As if , this mattered when Harbaugh started working summer camps and clinics while still an NFL player. 

His longstanding participation in off season coaching is both consistent and voluntary which no one will challenge because they can't argue against it. So, why should the NCAA provide an inherent  competitive restriction when nobody can prove the alleged vagaries that the camps augur based on current events? Again, who is being rewarded by such a change and for what purpose?

Nick Saban can take his summer off and send his staff to cover the lone campus event in Tuscaloosa sponsored by  the Alabama football program.  And if Harbaugh goes to Birmingham and works at Auburn looking at kids from the state, what's the concern there? Saban says there is no recruiting advantage from holding camps, that it's more a public service and benefit to non-Power 5 schools wanting to see kids and work them out and then seeing if they might quality for their football programs.

Harbaugh used to do this with his brother at Western Kentucky when his dad was the head coach there. For crying out loud, Harbaugh used to go to Michigan football practice as a kid. That's his life. He's just doing what he's always done. And some people don't like it. That's not a legitimate reason to prevent staging camps as they are now permitted.

OK, the other thing is, Michigan should schedule more off-season use of the stadium for appropriate sporting events like soccer and other attractions. I would have opposed it in the past because of the impact on turf conditions. But with a permanent non-natural field turf in place that's no longer a deterrent in my mind just the type of event scheduled. I think it just makes sense to get additional use.

ish

June 21st, 2016 at 2:19 PM ^

brian, you cited a tweet from a guy named greg pickel.  greg pickel!  that's the NOTY for anonymous sports writers.

Larry Appleton

June 21st, 2016 at 5:20 PM ^

I think it's pretty funny how Sparty keeps talking up O'Connor because "he beat Ohio State." He was 7/12 for all of 89 yards in that game.




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Drbogue

June 21st, 2016 at 6:20 PM ^

Damn your videos - I was listening to Shirley Bassey sing Goldfinger and all of a sudden the worlds shortest Khaleke video cuts it off... Free




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Ty Butterfield

June 21st, 2016 at 6:26 PM ^

Have to say those predictions by Staee writers were.....interesting. One of the biggest issues is that basically no current Staee "fans" know anything about the history of the program. They all jumped on the bandwagon in 2008 or sometime after. I would be very surprised if any of the current "fans" actually know who the coach was before Mork. I have no idea how the game will go in East Lansing but the way they all acted like a victory was a foregone conclusion is crazy. Most Staee fans have turned into exactly the kind of arrogant Michigan fans they claimed to hate.

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