Somewhat relevant, I promise [Bryan Fuller]

Unverified Voracity Mounts Horse Comment Count

Brian July 19th, 2022 at 2:05 PM

HI. Let's get back on the horse. Hello, horse.

Local politics bits. I won't be writing a full-fledged endorsement post this year largely because two other people have done the work for me. I endorse the endorsements of Damn Arbor and Brandon Dimcheff. If you are an Ann Arbor resident please check those posts out; over the past two years we've seen a sitting councilmember drop a homosexual slur because he was mad at a local reporter for supposedly taking unflattering zoom screenshots of him; his faction on city council declined to even slap him on the wrist. There are two toxic CMs running for re-election in Wards 4 and 5 who need to get the boot.

Oh so that happened. The Big Ten added some schools, as you may have heard. USC and UCLA will get a full revenue distribution immediately, unlike Maryland and Rutgers. This is because uh well:

…the price tag for the Big Ten’s rights will exceed $1 billion, first reported earlier this year. Interestingly, Ourand claims that the additions of UCLA and USC to the conference could result in the rights fees increasing “more than 15%,” which would be (at least) another $150 million.

I'm long past the point where I look at this as good news since it doesn't seem to do anything to help close the gap with the SEC but does presage even more commercial breaks. If all that TV money didn't help Michigan retain Erik Bakich when a school getting relatively pathetic ACC money came in, what's it really going to do for fans?

I am in broad agreement with the Ringer's Kevin Clark:

College football, I believe, is not built on TV markets and cable sub fees. It is built on crisp, perfect fall days, and pure spite. College football is propelled by a type of fury that is completely unintelligible to anyone who does not experience it. Fury at your rival, their coach, your own coach, the people who make recruiting rankings, the people you work with who once taunted you after the wrong loss. It is about the most American force possible: vague, mostly unexplained hostility toward your coworkers and neighbors.

Most people have never set foot on their rival’s campus—some fans have never set foot on their own team’s campus—and yet college football is their favorite thing in the world. Not, crucially, because it’s a farm system for the NFL, or even because it makes them happy: The only real goal is for your rival to be more miserable than you are.

I guess it'll be fun to play USC and UCLA occasionally, but I'd rather lose 13-11 to Iowa. Is this a cry for help? No. Probably not. Maybe.

[After THE JUMP: Oh hi, Ono.]

On the new guy. This twitter thread from a CBC Vancouver reporter is the most comprehensive Santa Ono take I've seen:

"Isn't a big ol' idiot who's going to send moony love notes about knishes on an FOIA-able email account" is a low bar, but here we are.

Oink. I know he’s like 30 now and no longer at the university but I’m still betting this is Mitch McGary:

Is… do you have to legally register a pig’s name? With the city?

We’re doing this again? The aircraft carrier game returns, featuring the most attention-hungry program of them all:

The other aircraft carrier games that actually happened—the last two were cancelled because of weather—featured a three-point make rate of a cool 15%, so maybe that helps MSU level the playing field against a Gonzaga team that should blast them by 20 on paper.

Inside Wakeyleaks. Excellent Athletic piece on the 2016 “Wakeyleaks” scandal, in which Wake Forest was sold out by a disgruntled former coach:

Wake Forest had installed a new play before a September 2014 game against Louisville that called for the quarterback to run a speed option with the running back to one side, while simultaneously, a receiver would peel back across the line for a misdirection shovel pass.

“We had never run that play, ever,” Anderson says.

During the game, Terry squared off against Sheldon Rankins, a future first-round defensive tackle and one of the toughest assignments Terry drew in his career. Late in the third quarter, with Wake Forest leading 10-7, Ruggiero decided it was time for the new play — Terry thinks the play call had “chuck” in the name — and quarterback John Wolford yelled it at the line.

Terry says Rankins took a knee and hollered, “Shovel pass is coming! Shovel pass is coming!” Terry was stunned. “I had Sheldon Rankins that play — I had to block him,” Terry says. “So when he said that, it’s like going into war and someone knowing where your bunker is. What the hell do I do?”

Just a true freshman, Terry wondered: “Can I call a timeout right now and still be on scholarship?”

That former coach was a color commentator for Wake Forest radio, and called opposing coaches the week before games on a university-provided cell phone. Does no one in this country have any operational security?

The usual draft preview. The NHL draft has come and gone so it’s time to look at the 2023 class. Corey Pronman’s first look includes two guys who will be freshmen in Ann Arbor this fall. Adam Fantilli:

3. Adam Fantilli, C, Chicago (USHL)

Fantilli is what you envision when you are trying to build a prototypical top NHL prospect. He is a tall, fast, highly skilled centerman. He can make difficult plays with the puck both as a handler and a passer. He can create for his teammates and can finish plays from range. He’s got the flashy skill but also competes hard and isn’t afraid to lean into opponents with his big frame. He may not have the same level of skill and sense as guys like Bedard and Michkov but this is still a player you think is going to score a large amount as a pro.

Gavin Brindley:

22. Gavin Brindley, C, Tri-City (USHL)

Brindley isn’t the tallest forward you’ll ever see, but everything else about his game is very good. He’s been an impressive junior player, being a top player for a top USHL team. His skating is high-end, and he’ll be able to turn around NHL defensemen. His skill isn’t all-world, but he can make plays and beat opponents with his hands with pace. Brindley competes well and showed he could PK in junior. Realistically he’s a winger in the NHL.

Also in roster news, Nolan Moyle is back for a COVID super-senior year. That'll provide some veteran depth for what is otherwise going to be a stunningly young team.

Etc.: Andrew Copp is a Red Wing. Sherrone Moore and Mike Hart (also Josh Gattis) make Josh Rittenberg’s list of minority coaches who could move up to head jobs in the near future. John Saward finds glory. I’m always up for tales of mutants in high school, in this case Lavar Arrington. Yards of the Big Ten basketball coaches. Hockey adds a third goalie. DONE. Don't click here. Basketball summer workouts are underway.

Comments

Vasav

July 19th, 2022 at 2:18 PM ^

welcome back. 1000% agree on expansion - if all that extra money can't retain our baseball coach - probably the 3rd most popular men's sport in the nation that suddenly became nationally relevant because of him - then what does it matter for the fan? are students getting lower ticket prices? is the money going to players so they come here instead of the SEC? Since the answers to all of these are "no," then I don't really see what the point is and yes I'd rather lose at Iowa.

los barcos

July 19th, 2022 at 2:55 PM ^

I listen to the Yahoo Sports Podscast with Dan Wetzel and Pat Forde (and previously Pete Thamel) and this is essentially their whole argument.  What's all this money getting the common fan?  A big fat nothing.  

Taking fans for granted and shoving realignment down our throats isn't going to have an immediate negative impact, but give it 10, 15, 20 years and the trajectory won't be moving upwards...

lilpenny1316

July 19th, 2022 at 3:48 PM ^

The common fan sits at home and watches games on television or their mobile devices. The common fan doesn't fork over hundreds and thousands of dollars to go to sporting events. Therefore, TV companies/streaming providers are forking over billions to reach them where they are.

30 years ago, there was a multi-year waiting list for UM season tickets. Now, you can grab a season ticket plan a couple months before the season. Do you think Fox cares if the Big House is half empty? No. They know and Levitra knows that more people with ED will be tuning in from their couches than sitting in the stands.

Vasav

July 19th, 2022 at 5:36 PM ^

I will admit - it is much easier to watch a Michigan game (or a Northwestern game) on TV now then it was 20 years ago. Especially if you don't live in Michigan. The prevalence of fancy TV deals has had some benefits for the fan. But, the point of these non-profit AD's isn't to make money - not going in the red is important, sure, but the point is to win and graduate, supposedly. Personally, I think all of the money in the black should go to winning. Bakich is gone, NIL is...well at least needing to be defended so it's clearly not as effective as whatever Oregon is doing, and attending games is getting harder and tougher. So on expansion...meh.

TrueBlue2003

July 19th, 2022 at 6:26 PM ^

Oh, it's 100% understandable for the networks (and ultimately the advertisers).  But yes, in the interest of taking advantage of the blind fan loyalty that causes us to give up 4 hours of our weekend (2 of which are meaningless ads), they will destroy that blind loyalty.

They really pretty much have for younger folks.  So the long tail is just slowly dying out with those of us that have already been indoctrinated.

gustave ferbert

July 19th, 2022 at 8:42 PM ^

A ticket to the big house was worth its weight in gold.  I don't believe the Anthony Carter vs Indiana game was even televised was it?  You couldn't experience the awesomeness of that moment unless you were listening to Ufer or at the game.  

I remember years when Michigan was on TV maybe 2 or 3 times a season.  If that.  And one of those could have been the bowl game. 

rposly

July 20th, 2022 at 12:13 PM ^

I'm terrified of the possibility that the Big Ten's rights get sold to a streaming service that doesn't provide the ability to start a game in progress from the beginning.  That's how I watch now, I DVR the game and start it about an hour in, so I can skip all commercials and still be live by the end.  But ESPN+, for instance, doesn't offer that ability; you have to either watch it live or wait until it's completely over for a while to watch the replay.  MLB.TV, however, does offer the ability to start an ongoing game from the beginning, so it's obviously technically possible.  

I'll be curious to see how Amazon handles it this fall with their NFL games.  

gbdub

July 20th, 2022 at 1:38 PM ^

IF expansion meant adding 2 conference games, thus replacing an annual MACrifice with UCLA (or at least a B1G team we would not otherwise play) then I think the fan gets something.

But it does make it harder for the schools to keep a 7 home game schedule.

I like the idea from the podcast of adding a 13th game as a "preseason" game. 

Blue Vet

July 19th, 2022 at 2:42 PM ^

New ground, and variations on a theme. 

Here's what I wrote, similar to what others have written, on the Home Run Inequality topic earlier today.

"Don't forget that the purpose of watching sports is not only for seeing impressive feats and winning or losing.

"Watching sports just as much provides something to talk about, argue about, whine about, rejoice about, long after any particular game is over.

"E.g., 42-27"

WindyCityBlue

July 19th, 2022 at 2:31 PM ^

Welcome back!

EDIT: when I'm in a bad spot, I go back and watch the speech from the movie Rocky Balboa, and it gets me back in my mojo.  To quote:

“Let me tell you something you already know. The world ain't all sunshine and rainbows. It's a very mean and nasty place, and I don't care how tough you are, it will beat you to your knees and keep you there permanently if you let it. You, me, or nobody is gonna hit as hard as life. But it ain't about how hard you hit. It's about how hard you can get hit and keep moving forward; how much you can take and keep moving forward. That's how winning is done! Now, if you know what you're worth, then go out and get what you're worth. But you gotta be willing to take the hits, and not pointing fingers saying you ain't where you wanna be because of him, or her, or anybody. Cowards do that and that ain't you. You're better than that!"

befuggled

July 19th, 2022 at 2:50 PM ^

Anybody else surprised that Bobby Petrino was the coach of that 2014 Louisville team? Wait, I'm not either.

(Unfortunately I'm not surprised at the other coaches who were cheating, either.)

Kapitan Howard

July 19th, 2022 at 3:14 PM ^

I heard from someone I was dating in college that you were required to plot out and register your pot-bellied pig's walking path with the city if you got one as a pet. I imagine there's a place on that form for name. Of course, I don't know if this is still the case, if it varies by city, or if it were ever true to begin with.

25dodgebros

July 19th, 2022 at 3:25 PM ^

If anything ought to be clear by now, it is that college football fans do not get to decide what college football is about.  At the top level, the schools decide what college football is about.  They have decided that college football is about one thing: Money.  Money for them, and not money for anyone else.   Our hopes, desires, wishes, dreams and prayers are irrelevant to them.  

TrueBlue2003

July 19th, 2022 at 6:36 PM ^

This isn't necessarily true.  Theoretically, we could decide not to watch on TV but we dutifully do so, despite ever lengthening ad breaks, and we could decide not to show up for crap opponents like Hawaii and Uconn, but we dutifully do so. Without us there is no money.  Ultimately we enable this. 

But younger generations aren't tuning in and aren't showing up so eventually the gravy train will come to a halt.

bronxblue

July 19th, 2022 at 3:26 PM ^

Glad Brian's back and finding that saddle again.

I don't really care either way about expansion, but adding USC and UCLA makes the conference stronger and gives more chances for interesting games in a variety of sports so it's neutral, at best, to me.  And Bakich leaving UM seemingly had less to do with money as it did with a recognition that Big 10 baseball was never going to be as competitive as southern baseball and Bakich wanting to take that shot.  Michigan isn't afraid to pay coaches at market+ rate (Harbaugh, Howard, Hutch, Mel, KBA, etc. are all paid quite well for their positions).

That MSU game on an aircraft carrier is going to be awful and I still have no idea why teams keep trying to do it; I can't imagine recruits are particularly impressed and if you're a big program like Gonzaga it feels like only downside to play a mediocre Big 10 team in a novelty game where there's a real chance you could get someone hurt.

Santa feels like he's going to be a competent President, something that Schlissel clearly turned out not to be the longer his tenure went on.  That's all I'm hoping for at this point.

kehnonymous

July 19th, 2022 at 3:30 PM ^

Sidegression: I've actually been to UBC since my brother went to grad school there, albeit before Ono's time.  The campus setting is beautiful - a coniferous peninsula overlooking the Strait of Georgia.  There's also a nude beach on the coastline just off campus and if you've ever been there, you'll agree that it's very aptly named Wreck Beach. Ahem.