Unverified Voracity Likes It Comment Count

Brian

Mikey likes it. Sound the greatest horn in the deepest valley and bring all the counts, earls, and dukes to the castle. I have no complaints about a uniform thing. Yea, it is true. I was worried about the matte helmets, but in sunlight they look great:

There's matte like Michigan wore in the no-numbers bowl and there's that. Still some sheen, but not shiny. Dark dark blue. Maize. It looks like the most Michigan version of Michigan. It looks precise and focused and traditional.

It's mildly fussed the Uni Watch guy because he doesn't have things to say...

Nike's characteristic hype notwithstanding, there's nothing to get particularly excited about here, because so little has changed, but there's nothing to complain about either. Carry on.

...and it's caused an ESPN headline that's precisely wrong:

The only thing about these jerseys is nuance, and they aced every one. The logos are tastefully small and distributed symmetrically. The colors are right, the road whites are still so crisp, and the one weird thing has deep Michigan roots*. It feels like Michigan told Nike to do stuff and Nike killing it. This is in marked contrast to how these things go much of the time: wear this ridiculous looking thing that various other schools are also wearing.

*[The diversity angle is a major stretch. Having Gerald Ford's 4 is still cool.]

Senioritis prohibited. Michigan's Jordan-littered offer letters were all over the internet yesterday. An example:

Nick Baumgardner highlights a slightly unusual bit that I'm pretty sure is new this year:

The final bullet point reads: "We expect you to continue to strive for excellence as a student and as an athlete: this scholarship should serve as motivation towards continued growth, not an excuse to become complacent."

Pre-Swenson incident offer letters warned kids to keep their grades up and away from the local constabulary, as had offers dating back to the Rodriguez era. Specifically noting that offers are contingent on continued progress is a Harbaugh thing, and means we can expect more decommit kerfuffles going forward.

Both sides are boggling now. Anonymous coach takes on ACC teams have something to say about Don Brown:

“BC’s defense last year was the biggest pain for us to prepare for because they did so many things, especially on third down. The fronts they lined up in, the pressures they came with were unique, and they had some big, physical players. They were legit.”

“[New BC DC Jim] Reid played a base defense when he was at Virginia, and on third down you get maybe one or two different pressures, so it’s like one end of the spectrum to the other. It’ll be interesting to see what they do.”

Michigan is in the opposite situation. DJ Durkin was a Reid type of guy content to run fairly simple defenses. Michigan did have a big stunt package; blitzes were not particularly common and usually just a five man pressure.

Is this Ryan Glasgow's nickname? This is an amazing nickname for an older brother to bestow on his younger sibling:

Always wanted a guy named Biff around. Biff Poggi, father of Henry, has at various times been headed to Ann Arbor or another high school head coaching gig after his odd and unceremonious dismissal from Gilman. He is officially a Wolverine:

"When you've been doing something for 30 years, I just went back and forth, back and forth, back and forth, and I learned that habits are a hard thing to break," Poggi said. "I love coaching high school kids, but this was such an opportunity."

Poggi's youngest son Henry is a Wolverines fullback with two years of eligibility remaining and his daughter Mellie is also at Michigan.

"I felt like if I was ever going to do it, this is like the sun, the moon and the stars have lined up and I really am very comfortable with Jim and the coaching staff," Poggi said.

Poggi's job will be to advise Harbaugh on strategy and organizational structure. His position does not count as a coaching position and he won't be coaching the players, coaching the team or recruiting, according to the Michigan job description.

It's another analyst role. It sounds like it's a short term thing until Poggi gets the itch to return to high school, where he appears to have a job waiting for him at St. Francis. I wouldn't be surprised if Poggi spent a couple years with his son and then went back.

One interesting side note is that Poggi has some recruiting hoops to jump through because of his generosity and persnickety NCAA rules:

Another issue for Poggi was that he played a large part in funding the St. Frances program from the beginning and that he also paid tuition for a number of young men at Gilman and at other schools. As a coach in the NCAA, he could no longer pay for those things.

"I had to hire a lot of lawyers and go through the complete compliance check to where I have to follow and obey exactly the rules," he said. "For example, I just can't go watch a high school football game which I've done for 30 years. I can't call a kid on the phone. I know all these kids, the Gilman kids and other kids, too. I just can't go, 'Hey, how you doing?' I can't text them. I have to be careful how I reply to a text from them. My life is completely different than how I lived it over the last 30 years."

Good news is that Poggi can slide into their DMs without consequence and retweet them until the sun grows cold and dim, because NCAA communication regulations are all over the place.

PFF previews Michigan. They've kind of done this several times over the offseason already and every time they publish a thing we grab it here and prize it apart for any insight into their database, so there's not a ton that will be new to readers of this space. Their main concern is at QB:

QB is the biggest question on the entire roster, as 2015 starter Jake Rudock is also now with the Lions. John O’Korn (who transferred from Houston after being benched in 2014 by the new regime looking for a more athletic option) and Wilton Speight (64 snaps last season) will compete for the starting position throughout this month and while the winner will be afforded some margin of error with what appears to be a relatively easy schedule early, if the Wolverines expect to win big road games at Michigan State, Iowa and Ohio State, they will need quality play from the new signal caller.

There's no disputing that. Harbaugh's track record helps in this regard; it's nice to have one of the biggest questions you can have seem like no big deal because of the head coach.

Elsewhere some confirmation that the linebackers were eh a year ago...

While the LB corps was turned over completely due to graduation, none of last year’s crew graded overwhelmingly positively and this year’s version of course has the benefit of playing behind likely the best defensive line in the country.

...and the usual praise for Peppers, Lewis, Wormley, Hurst, Glasgow, and company. The chaser: "while many schools may have just one true superstar, Michigan has at least six on the defensive side alone."

Meanwhile in the league. Rashan Gary and Taco Charlton are gonna eat:

Can someone in the tackle class pass block?

With Ohio State’s Taylor Decker moving on to the NFL and Michigan’s Mason Cole kicking inside to center this year, no returning offensive tackle in the [Big Ten] had a positive pass blocking grade in 2015. In fact, Nebraska’s Nick Gates is the only tackle to grade positively on run blocks last year. Offensive line is the unit we typically see the most variance and improvement in from year to year, but with the entire conference literally having nothing but subpar or first-year starters, this could be another rough year against the uber-talented EDGE players littered throughout the Big Ten.

Cole had a positive pass pro grade; Magnuson did not; the rest of the league is going to curl up and die when presented with Michigan's DL (and Jabrill Peppers).

Etc.: Butt, Peppers, and Lewis make SI's preseason All-America team.

Comments

Quail2theVict0r

August 3rd, 2016 at 10:56 AM ^

Someone had a great comment in the helmet-specific thread, the helmets actually look more "satin" or "eggshell" than matte. They still have a gloss to them, unlike the actual matte helmets Michigan wore in the Outback Bowl -- which were totally lacking any shine to them and seemed almost dull:

 

Compared to:

707oxford

August 3rd, 2016 at 11:38 AM ^

Muted matte = leather.

As I said in a previous post, I wonder if what Nike was going for here was something different altogether. This isn't a "traditional" matte, rather something in between glossy and matte. My guess is that Nike was going for a light reflection similar to that of leather.

Those who want people off their lawn because of the move away from glossy helmets are forgetting that before them, there were probably even older people wanting whippernsappers off their lawn when original leather helmets converted to plastic.

If an iconic leather helmet sheen is what they were going for, it would actually be a pretty clever troll by Nike.

M-Dog

August 3rd, 2016 at 11:12 AM ^

I do my very best to uphold the proud tradition of the MGoBoard and always strive to find something to bitch about.

But I can't.  I just don't have anything to really complain about.

The blue helmets are not too matte, the yellow is not too green or too orange.  Michigan still looks like Michigan.  

It's good.

Time for the games to start. 

Mr. McGibblets

August 3rd, 2016 at 11:11 AM ^

The uniforms and helmets are amaizing! I think Nike and Michigan did a great job and I love the matte helmets.

P.S. whenever I hear the name Biff it just reminds me of Back to the Future. Anyone else?

Mr. Elbel

August 3rd, 2016 at 11:50 AM ^

That's not actually what Adidas stands for. I mean, maybe marketing-wise it does, but it's actually a combination of names, along with Puma. the co-founders of the original company were Rudolph "Rudi" Dassler and Adolf "Adi" Dassler. After an argument the two split up. Rudi's company became Ruda (as in RUdi DAssler) ,which was later rebranded as Puma. Adi's became Adidas (as in ADI DASsler). The All Day I Dream About Soccer (or sports....or sex) is a backronym, meaning it was made to fit the word Adidas after the company was already named that. still, I agree that adidas' most well-known sponsors are soccer-related, so your statement still holds water. fwiw, I love the Jumpman on our unis.

Blue2000

August 3rd, 2016 at 11:55 AM ^

Was it better to have our football (and hockey, etc) apparel have a company logo that stands for All Day I Dream About Soccer?

Your point is well taken, but this legend isn't actually true.  "adidas" is a combination of the letters from the name of its founder, Adi Dassler, after he split the company off from his brother. (The company is also German, so it would be highly unlikely that the name would have such a convenient English translation.)  Dassler's brother took the other half of their joint company and founded Puma.  

 See http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/sports_blog/2010/10/sports-legend-revea…

Apropos of none of this, I love the Jordan symbol on our uniforms.  It's unique and clearly is getting people excited.  

BlueFront89

August 3rd, 2016 at 11:35 AM ^

Absolutely hit it out of the park on every aspect of the new uniforms. Traditional for us old guys and unique all at the same time for the recruiting impact. Yes, I realize that I used a baseball reference for a basketball logo on a football uniform.

Amaizing Blue

August 3rd, 2016 at 11:42 AM ^

I agree completely with what Brian said-Michigan told Nike what they wanted, Nike did it perfectly.  

Such a refreshing contrast from "If it's not broken-break it!"  When you have the helmets and uniforms Michigan does, subtle tweaks are all that's needed.  

I'm excited to have Jumpman solely because recruits are excited to have Jumpman and might be more likely to come play for us.  However, that reason alone is enough for me to be REALLY excited we have Jumpman.

This could be SUCH a fun season...