Three and Out: Pages 250-end

Submitted by 03 Blue 07 on

Okay, last installment. For the previous installments, see: http://mgoblog.com/diaries/three-and-out-100-pagesfor the first 100 pages, and http://mgoblog.com/diaries/three-and-out-pages-100-250 for pp. 100-250. Also, you might want to check out the comments to those entries for more exposition and clarification.

It’s clear that this whole book, and this subject, reopen a lot of old wounds and dig up a lot of old debates. I’ve actually thought a little bit over the past two days about what a couple commenters said, which was that they don’t think they’ll read the book because of a handful of reasons, notably because, well, it’s in the past, and why dig up old bodies, beat dead horses, reopen old wounds? I am conflicted by that notion.  In a way, I understand that line of thinking- reading this book isn’t a fun exercise after a certain point because it reminds the reader of the agony of those 3 seasons. It is not a happy tale, and today, we have a new regime, a 6-0 team, and things are looking up. At the same time, I think it’s hard to discuss the past regime, the differences between Hoke & Co. and the past regime, and, most importantly, the differences between the two transitions without revisiting the dark days of late 2007-January, 2011. But the more I read the book, I could come to appreciate the idea that rehashing all of the negativity may not be something that many wish to do. That being said, I think it will be hard going forward to discuss the RR era without reading this book, even if you doubt the “spin” put on the story contained within its pages.

 Again: this book is written from the RR perspective. Bacon was following RR, his team, etc. So a grain of salt (which many have rightfully pointed out) is wise.

These are just my musings on what jumped out at me, things I found interesting (personally) and thought that those who haven’t gotten a chance to read this yet might also find interesting. I actually finished the book a couple of days ago, but haven’t had a chance to write this yet.

Team Togetherness

One thing that strikes me is that the team really seems to stick together throughout all of the negativity- the Free Press stuff, the losing, the rumors, etc. Over and over again, Bacon muses that he figures the team would quit on the staff, that, at times, they probably should quit on the staff, etc. He seems to look for cracks in the team’s drive/mission/togetherness, especially throughout 2009’s slide and in 2010 when the players themselves are fully aware of all the rumors.  But if that was ever the case, he didn’t see it. Until, perhaps, the Mississsippi State bowl game, where the seniors, at least (but really more likely the whole team) were of the impression that RR was done, win-or-lose (more on that below).

 Dave Brandon

The Les Miles stuff was purely for show and to appease the fanbase. He says, quote, that Les Miles would be Michigan’s head coach “over my dead body” when RR asked him about it when the rumors reached a fever pitch in late December 2010.  The book doesn’t say why. I have a feeling that there are multiple reasons, and at the very least, some of the nastiest rumors must be either a.) true, or b.) believed by enough people in the Michigan community who actually have a say in things (LC, Brandon, among them) that Les was never a serious candidate.

Brandon also handled the transition infinitely better than Bill Martin from a “players leaving” standpoint. As soon as it was announced, he (DB) called a meeting with the players and asked them not to leave. Far cry from LC holding a meeting and saying “if you want to leave, I’ll sign.” DB told the players if there was a mass exodus, they’d be “crippling” the program.

 

Furthermore, after DB left the room, Molk, Van Bergen, and the other seniors-to-be stood up and said, essentially, “don’t leave. We’ve all come too far.” Seems everyone had learned from the 2007 debacle.

 

Also of note: Dave Brandon said that he’d talked to “lots of players” before making the decision to fire RR, and that his “door was always open” and had always been open. Apparently not to Denard Robinson. Denard requested an audience with Brandon multiple times between the U of M Bust dinner and the bowl game, both in Ann Arbor and after they’d all gotten to Jacksonville. Brandon never met with him during that time.

The 2010 Bust, Josh Groban, December 2010, and Senior Exit Interviews

To Bacon, this is where RR’s tenure ended. He seems to think that after the Groban debacle, RR was toast. Many people were exchanging uneasy glances as he started doing it (asking for the song to be played) saying (by their looks) please don’t do this.  When the lights went up, Bacon says that even RR supporters whom he knew were, essentially, like “yeah…that was bad, and he’s done.” Also, apparently, there were rumors that Fox Sports and others were offering $50-100k for the tape. Dave Brandon told the film crew who were present that if the tape of the incident were released, they’d never have access to Michigan again.

 Seniors conducted exit interviews with the A.D. (associate AD Greg Harden) in the weeks following the bust (but before the bowl game) and the conclusions the players reached was that Rich Rod was gone. The student managers told Bacon that, point blank, the seniors all “knew” RR was getting fired and, thus, “no one wanted to be here.” I’m talking about the student managers talking about what the players told them. And that trickled down from the seniors to the rest of the team. “They realized winning would bring not freedom from their burdens—as it would have earlier in the season—but an extension of them. The way things were set up, they had more incentive to lose than to win.” (P. 419). That quote is clearly Bacon’s opinion. 

During this time, the coaches themselves were concerned. Rich Rod, of course, had a contract. His assistants did not. The assistants “knew that other schools might be interested in them—particularly Maryland—if Rodriguez would just entertain the offers, but he steadfastly refused.” (P. 418). Apparently, his assistants refused overtures (if there were any) as well, as Rodriguez said that none of them had approached him in the time between the tOSU game and the bowl game saying that they’d either a.) reached out to other schools, or b.) were considering offers from other schools.

On Hoke, from Dan Dufek: “He’ll be successful because we’re not going to do to him what some of those guys did to Rich,” talking about the former players, etc. (P. 428).

The school orders rings for every bowl game. They are allowed to do so and give them to all members of the coaching staff and football staff who were on the staff at the time of the bowl game. Michigan ordered Gator Bowl rings, but didn’t give them to RR and his assistants and any that RR had hired. They did give one to Scott Draper. When RR came to UM in 2008, even WVU sent him one from their Orange Bowl trip. Petty, not that important, but still…ugh.

Barwis, post-firing

When RR was fired, Brandon told the players that the new staff would pick its assistants and its strength staff, but that Barwis was still employed by the University. Sometime in either January or February of 2011, Florida State offered Barwis a package that would make him the highest paid strength coach in the country, a multi-year deal, and would employ all of his staff. He turned them down, as he was still coaching at Michigan and, assumedly, thought Hoke might keep him and his staff. In March, Hoke went a different direction, so Barwis opened BarwisMethods in Michigan.

Danny Hope

Rodriguez isn’t the one who alerted the Big Ten to the punch by one of Purdue’s players (in a game not against Michigan) that got the player suspended. It was actually someone in Purdue’s own athletic department. However, after the Michigan-Purdue game in 2009, Hope pulled the stunt where he grabbed RR’s hand and brought the player (Zach Reckman)over and said “I want to introduce you to the man who got you suspended.” After that stunt, RR had a quote that I found humorous, which he blurted out after he told Rita what happened: “Bullshit! I gotta get my ass beat by a junior high school, no-class asshole?” I think JHSNCAH should be Hope’s acronym from here on out.

Justin Turner and Wingless Wolverines

So, summertime workouts are voluntary. Showing up to the first day of fall practice, however, is not. In the summer of 2010, Tate, Gallon, Austin White, and Justin Turner showed up to fall camp out of shape, after having loafed throughout the summer. Turner famously said of the S&C staff (when one of his teammates warned him): “they can’t break me.”

The team had a conditioning run, and the three who didn’t make in the time for their position group were White, Gallon and Turner. Tate made it, barely, by diving across the line. However, his landlord then called RR and told him Tate hadn’t been paying his rent. So these four gentlemen got two pieces of special punishment: no wings on their helmets until they earned them back, and a “Breakfast Club” conditioning workout.

Amazingly, RR himself did the drills with them, at least for the first part of the Breakfast Club drills. They involved a stairmaster, then lots of situps. It lasted only 45 minutes, but clearly had an impact on Turner. The workout ended at 7 am. He asked for a transfer by 2 pm.

Coordinators’ Salaries

This is mentioned on page 342. “…the contracts Michigan offered at the time did not permit (RR) to hire his first choice for many coaching positions, including defensive coordinator. In hindsight, he would probably agree that insisting on guaranteed contracts for his coordinators and cutting $100,000 out of the new weight room budget to secure Casteel- plus a multiyear contract- would have been wise, as would making recruiting an acclaimed kicker a high priority.”

RR and the NCAA
He paid most of his life savings (cash savings) on his own attorneys in the NCAA investigation (over $300k). This was to ensure that the charge that he, RR, failed to promote an environment of compliance was vigorously fought, as it wasn’t (in his mind) the University’s top priority. (I actually agree with him here: in any case where the individual employee and the company’s interests are both at stake in any lawsuit, which an NCAA investigation is, sort of, I strongly advise all of you to have your own counsel, not just the one hired by your company. Just my $.02).

Other tidbits

Michigan ranks 5th or 6th in the Big Ten in spending on football (or at least that’s what RR thought, which surprised him). P. 397.

Barwis had a tear come to his eye after we beat Illinois last year in triple overtime. I didn’t even know that was possible.

 

 

Comments

jmblue

October 12th, 2011 at 4:43 PM ^

I've not made up my mind about whether I'll read the book, but your summaries seem pretty fair about it.

One nitpick: "mass exodus" is a redundancy.  (By definition, an exodus is a massive departure.)  That's a pet peeve of mine.

03 Blue 07

October 12th, 2011 at 8:22 PM ^

Don't shoot the messenger...DB's words, not mine (though, to be fair, I didn't put that in quotes. But DB said a "mass exodus" would be "crippling" to the program when he talked to the players).  But that's good- thanks for pointing that out (seriously) and you're right. Any exodus, by its nature, would have to be... mass. Otherwise, it's just a person or some people leaving somewhere. I'd never thought of it before. I can understand pet peeves like that; I hate it when people say "irregardless."

Bando Calrissian

October 13th, 2011 at 3:23 AM ^

If you're going to read it, read it.

If you're not going to read it, honestly, do us all a favor and quit posting about whether or not you're going to read it, or even try to make assumptions or conclusions based on what's been posted about the book.  

Thanks.

BRCE

October 12th, 2011 at 5:11 PM ^

Of these three summaries, Michigan seems to come off the worst in this one. While Brandon is to be commended for holding conference with the players and trying to keep this thing together, he sounds like every bit the colossal asshole many suspect him to be in every other regard. The thing about Draper getting a ring and RR not is shocking.

Nice to get some confirmation that the Miles courtship was a dog-and-pony act. I have no problem with them not being interested in Miles, but to pretend they were is so completely insulting and disprectful to the fans' intelligence. It's the kind of thing P.T. Barnum would do if he was a college athletic director.

 

GetSumBlue

October 12th, 2011 at 5:46 PM ^

Am I the only one that is completely appalled by reading these diaries?

I have to say, I wasn't 100% around for most of the bickering and stuff that went down, but I am disgusted reading what went on at my school.

I am not an RR advocate, but I really do feel horrible for him. For him to not publicly lash out at the university must take a lot.

BRCE

October 12th, 2011 at 8:16 PM ^

No. You're not.

I had been able to handle the revelations in the book I had heard about before this summary. The summarizing of the first 250 pages more or less corroboration of scuttlebutt that had been out there for a few years.

But the newest info makes me want to buy a pitchfork and find DB's house.

 

 

Section 1

October 12th, 2011 at 11:25 PM ^

I won't tell you what to think aobut it.

I will only predict this -- that the book will probably not convince you one way or another whether Rich Rodriguez is a good, bad or indifferent football coach.  And at the same time, you will be left with zero doubt about the fact that Rodriguez was treated with tremendous unfairness while he was in Ann Arbor.  And his personal restraint was amazing.

And one other really, really interesting thing -- look for this in the book -- the Rodriguez staff was predicting a great 2011 season before the 2009 season began.

RickH

October 12th, 2011 at 7:55 PM ^

This just reiterates what I thought about Rich Rodriguez, he got screwed for the most part.  There were times he didn't help himself but throwing out press releases bashing him and people gunning for him right as he steps foot on campus is going to be close to impossible to beat.  I felt bad for him before and I only feel worse for him now knowing just a piece of the whole puzzle that is illustrated in the book.

It really sucks to think that people in our own program would be petty enough to undermine a coach who they don't like.  Hell, I was with Brian at first about Hoke, thinking he's a subpar coach but I would never intentionally ruin him if I had the chance.  I can't help but wish Bo was still alive because this would've never happened with him just being alive (not even having a job with the university).  Fortunately, this is past us but it still pains me to think that people like Rosenberg, Snyder, Stapleton or whatever, etc. got what they wanted after being so cynical to a man who just wanted to coach football without problems.

BRCE

October 12th, 2011 at 8:26 PM ^

Cynical is a kind word for what Rosenberg, Snyder and Stapleton did. Malicious and dastardly are better ones.

The fact that Stapleton and many others (which very possibly included Carr) wanted Ron English to get the job is one of the most pathetic revelations about the culture here and just shows how many people there were at Michigan painfully out of touch with what the norm was at virtually every other program in college football.

Unless these people thought "The Michigan Difference" meant nothing if not the celebration of inbreeding, you don't hire a so-so defensive coordinator with no head coaching experience to lead one of the nation's top programs. It is quite literally insane that there was an actual desire to see it happen.

 

BRCE

October 13th, 2011 at 12:05 AM ^

Do I really need to tell you that Carr was hired on a fluke? Moeller's incident and firing happened in May, essentially forcing Michigan to hire an interim coach. Carr didn't work any miracles in the audition portion of that season but was probably just good enough to make Michigan uncomfortable about ousting a loyal lifer assistant and conducting a full search after 1995.

Until 1997, many were skeptical on Carr's legitimacy as a head coach because of the manner in which he fell into the job.

 

bringthewood

October 12th, 2011 at 11:03 PM ^

They wanted fucking Ron English?  Hoke has a golden track record compared to Ron English.  I used to like Carr, not it's down to meh.  And it's jackoffs like Stapleton and Illich that should not be associated with the University.  Brandon also seems like a dick.  Here is for hoping Hoke wins, gains some power and Brandon runs for some political office once Crisler is finished.

Bando Calrissian

October 13th, 2011 at 3:12 AM ^

I finished the book tonight after a friend and fellow MGoBlogger was kind enough to pick it up for me in Chicago last week.  Picked it up from him on the south side yesterday afternoon.  Started reading it on CTA by 3PM, finished it a couple hours ago.  It's that kind of book.

It left me tired.  It's a very difficult story to read in many ways because, well, like has been said ad nauseum, everybody comes out looking bad.  And, as has been well alluded, everybody thought they were doing what they thought to be the right thing for Michigan.  That's admirable.  But it's problematic.  And we never really get the rationale behind a lot of what they were thinking, only the ensuing actions and their end results.

I'm proud of Michigan because we're Michigan.  I'm proud of what it stands for, going back to ole Hurry Up sprinting up State Street.  But I'm not proud of the Michigan in this book.

And after 437 pages of reading of the misadventures of our dysfunctional family, and the kids/players they fought over and victimized in what really amounts to 3 years of their parents squabbling and divorcing (if it's even kosher to make that parallel), we get to the ultimate kicker, which brought about the first audible gasp/WTF moment of the entire book for me:

Michigan refused to send the outgoing coaches Gator Bowl rings.  After all that.  

This isn't Michigan.  We didn't learn a damn thing.  

Bando Calrissian

October 14th, 2011 at 9:13 PM ^

You're asking me to justify your obsession.  I'm not going to do that.

Mr. Bacon, I think, hits it on the head, that Rich Rodriguez was a good guy who meant well, who saw an opportunity at Michigan to coach at the highest stages of the game.  And who subsequently walked into a buzz saw of a dysfunctional family from Day 1.  And failed to rise to the occasion to get around it.  It didn't work.  And the Freep was only a part of that picture.  

EDIT:  Long post trimmed down, I just don't have the energy to start an argument with Section 1.

Section 1

October 14th, 2011 at 10:52 PM ^

and is merely fading Michigan football history now.

But Michael Rosenberg and Mark Snyder are still in this town, with Snyder the Freep's Michigan-beat writer, and Rosenberg still carrying on his three-way love affair with Lloyd Carr and Jim Harbaugh.  (See, e.g., today's Freep.)  Snyder and Rosenberg are both making careers out of shaping the public perceptions with respect to Michigan football.

And that makes my skin crawl.

Brian Cook provided the best possible two-word summary of this book; "Rosenberg... damn."

03 Blue 07

October 13th, 2011 at 10:54 PM ^

Bando, if I had to concisely sum up my own feelings, post-mortem, after reading the book...I think they'd be pretty much exactly what you just wrote. It was painful to read by the end; exhausting and unfortunate. It's like re-hashing an old relationship or something. Like, emotionally painful at times to read. Hard to explain, but you did a good job doing so.

03 Blue 07

October 13th, 2011 at 10:56 PM ^

And one more thing: I, too, couldn't help but feeling at the end of the book that we haven't learned anything  as an AD/Football department, from an organizational structure standpoint. As in, it's as if people who matter in the A.D. think RR deserved everything he got, was treated properly, and it was his fault, as an interloper, for every trying to come to mighty Michigan and sully it. So NO RINGS FOR YOU OR YOUR PEOPLE! Our arrogance is deeply disturbing. I dare say it's Notre Dame-esque at the highest levels, or at least seems to be. Which scares the shit out of me and upsets me greatly.

Section 1

October 14th, 2011 at 5:10 PM ^

I wanted to offer up some thoughtful disagreement with this conclusion of yours.  I wanted to, and I couldn't.  I was so mystified by the bowl-rings thing, I wasn't so angry (the outgoing coaches wouldn't wear the rings anyway) but astonished.

But there's another reason why I can't disagree with you.  It's the last paragraph about Ryan Van Bergen in the book.  And I am not saying what it is.  People can buy the book and find out.