*Sigh* It's Finally Time, #FireWarde. (a wholly unoriginal take on why Michigan must move on from its AD)

Submitted by MaizeBlueA2 on February 6th, 2024 at 11:49 PM

[Diary-worthy. Bumped it to the top for a few days -S]

Another #FireWarde thread?  Yes.  Another post that should probably be a diary?  Yes, that too.  An early vote for the winner of TL;DR thread of the year?  Probably.  But these will probably be my last posts for awhile, so...fuck it, let it ride.  Hopefully it sticks.

My hope is that my unique perspective of college athletics administration and long history with this site, coupled with the fact that its OT season and this isn’t OT, will buy me some leeway. 

The idea for this thread was sparked by a few of my (really long posts) in THIS (https://www.mgoblog.com/mgoboard/herbert-gone?page=8) thread on Ben Herbert's departure.  With that in mind, I stopped adding to that thread because I wanted to sit with my thoughts for a little bit.  Like many of you, I was angry - more like, "fucking pissed" - and I didn't want this to be entirely a reaction of the moment.

In the eyes of many, there have been several reasons to fire Manuel over the years...so what makes this recent misstep any different?  I'll start by sharing a little about that unique perspective.

While still relatively young, I'd like to think of myself as a veteran college athletics administrator.  I have worked in college athletics my entire adult life, starting as a student intern...to this point where my title is now "Executive Associate Athletic Director" (which is just a fancy way of saying senior or executive level administrator).

I'm originally from Ann Arbor (no need to ask, Huron, but didn't graduate from there).  I do not work at Michigan, nor have I ever worked at Michigan.  I do have many friends and colleagues at Michigan.  I have also met Warde Manuel several times, going all the way back to his days at Buffalo. 

I've worked at 10(!) different colleges and universities over the years.  In THIS (https://www.mgoblog.com/mgoboard/herbert-gone?page=8) thread I talk about how college athletics administration is very linear.  Some people get lucky and they find a place they like and they're able to rise within that organization.  Others, like myself, have to move to get to the next rung on the career ladder (some of those were internships - I am intentionally not saying how many because someone in the Michigan athletic department is probably on LinkedIn trying to connect the dots, and that is not the point of this post).

In terms of conferences, my 10 can be broken down by 2 B1G, 2 ACC, 1 Big East, and 5 G5/Mid-Majors.  I've worked in departments just as big as Michigan's, and at public and private schools.

It's this experience which has allowed me to look past *some* of the frustrations that fans have had in the past.  The fact is, most people have no idea what ADs do or are supposed to do.  Some think they're GMs, others think they make every decision in an athletic department, and only few understand the climate around being an AD in 2024 (this NIL thing is wild and most aren't even close to figuring it out).

So many times Warde has been blamed for things that were:

  • A. Out of his control
  • B. Not part of his job responsibilities
  • C. The result of unreasonable expectations 

Other times when he's been blamed, it's been absolutely warranted, but no one is going to bat 1.000.  When Warde was originally hired, I said Michigan was getting a B-level AD.  Solid, nothing groundbreaking, but certainly nothing to be ashamed of.  In fact, I compared him to Harbaugh...who at time wasn't Saban, Swinney or Meyer.  Wasn't Riley or Kelly either.

Since then, I've called him a C+/B-.  He's a C+ AD (Michigan could do a lot worse), and if you grade on a curve due to the fact that there aren't many GREAT ADs right now...a B- is fair.  Emotional people will say F, but come on, he is not an "0-12" AD.  He's a consistently 7-5/8-4 AD who never beats Ohio St. - and too many of those at Michigan will get you fired.

If you don't read much further, here is the problem with Warde.  I said he is a B-level AD...if it was 2004.  He operates at an exceptional level for a 2004 AD, we'd be lucky to have him.  To this day, he's between solid and great at the traditional "AD stuff."  Small problem though, it's 2024.

Athletics administration is moving faster than ever, for reasons I don't have to explain.  It blew past Warde 3-4 years ago and hasn't looked back.  He's antiquated.  The job description for a 2024 AD is like 15% 2004 AD and 85% something completely new.

Sidenote, this is why you are seeing a HUGE trend in college athletics with big time college ADs hiring sitting G5 ADs and making them their "#2."  Ole Miss just did it last week, hired LA Tech's AD to be the #2 at Ole Miss.  In today's world, the #2 is like your classic 2004 AD, while the 2024 AD is doing something almost entirely different.  Iowa's new AD was the AD at Ball St., she left to be the deputy at Iowa, the AD eventually retired, and now she has the top job.

Anyway, now I obviously no longer compare Warde to Harbaugh, I compare him to Brady Hoke.  Who if we're being honest, is probably a C+.  Remember no headset or long-sleeves Brady Hoke?  The guy who couldn't stop clapping and did everything as if he was replacing Gary Moeller in the 90s?  That's Warde Manuel.  Maybe not to that extreme, but it certainly paints the picture I want to paint without further explanation. 

So, why now?  Well, the past two weeks have displayed something you never want to see from ANY AD.  Regardless of the era, the last couple of weeks have been completely inexcusable.  I can look past missteps, some coaching changes, and mismanagement of "unwinnable" situations (e.g., Jim Harbaugh's constant flirting with the NFL during the best 3-year period of our lifetime), but one thing I can't overlook is...a lack of preparation.

Warde, I'm speaking directly to you.  Being prepared for outcomes is literally part of your JOB.  Preparing your staff and coaches for all possible outcomes is literally part of your JOB!  Yes, you have to lead and manage a department, and yes, you have to manage and grow a budget, and sure, you have to fundraise, build facilities, and hire/fire coaches.  But preparation is the key to success and Michigan has been unprepared for this coaching transition except for the obvious part of actually hiring Sherrone Moore.

There was always a chance that Harbaugh was going to leave.  With DeBoer and Fisch off the board, Moore was always the coach if Harbaugh left for the NFL (and probably even if they were on the board).  So why is Michigan so unprepared?

In my current role, I am the sport administrator to our Volleyball and Baseball programs.  In my career I've led the hiring process for 7 active head coaches across 4 different sports.  In my desk right now is a list of 25 volleyball coaches that I would interview tomorrow if I needed to...same for baseball.

On my computer is a checklist of exactly how I would handle the coaching transition with our student-athletes, alums, and donors.  I have already-written boilerplate press releases if we have to make a change AND more for when we hire a new coach.  I know exactly what I'm going to do every step of the way, including how I'm onboarding and setting a new coach up for success.

Why?  Because as a sport administrator, it's my damn job!  How the hell do I know when a coach is going to do something stupid and get fired or if they're going get a dream offer and leave?  I have to be ready for every situation, even if that's an impossible ask (but I can tell you from experience, it's a lot easier when you're prepared!)

Not too long ago I hired a first time head baseball coach.  Here are some things I did to set him up for success (beyond the obvious).

1. Contacted University Communications and made him go through TWO mock opening press conferences with our executive administration team acting as reporters.  Win the first impression!

2. Scheduled a series of meetings with three of our veteran coaches, so he could begin to learn what it takes to have success at our institution. 

3. Before we even offered, I made him share a list of assistant coaches he was interested in bringing on and I strongly recommended he find at least one assistant with D1 head coaching experience (kind of the Martelli thing, even though that hasn't worked out).  I vetted the list and made sure he could execute and move quicky if we offered. 

4. Got him in front of our social media team, it was important to engage and bring a new energy to the program...but I also know a first time head coach doesn't have time for all of that stuff when they're trying to move a family, build a staff, learn the roster, learn their JOB, etc. - so we got 3 weeks worth of content before we ever announced him as the next head coach.  Saves him time and keeps the positive momentum going in the background.

5. Helped him vet and hire coaches for his staff, with the goal of eliminating bias and a first time head coach's natural instinct to just go with what they know and rebuild the things that have worked for them up to this point.

...and so much more.  The point is, I was prepared, and it was a baseball search, and oh, I'm not the athletic director. 

Once again, Warde is not a GM...he can't just start hiring/retaining assistant coaches while Harbaugh is the head coach.  That is not his role, and would never happen.  However, it IS his job to set his new head coach up for success - and I believe he's failed miserably.  As soon as Sherrone was hired, there should have been a detailed plan on how to move the program forward.

Also, with Moore, money can't be an issue, not when you're saving $5M on a head coach.  But here is the thing I said earlier, Warde is antiquated.  He's clearly failed to grasp the notion of value.  Value isn't solely determined by success or merit, value in large part is determined by demand.

I'll give you an example, Erik Bakich is not the best college baseball coach in the country.  He's not.  He also hasn't had the success to warrant being the highest paid coach in college baseball. 

HOWEVER, Bakich's value to Michigan, a northern school in the B1G, with no prestigious history in baseball...is far greater than his value to say, Texas.

So unfortunately, this means you have to pay the man.  If he is the highest paid college baseball coach, so be it!  Get off the "principle" of things and make the best decision for your department.  Of course there is a limit (to salaries), but it's not "he's one of the best in the B1G, so I'm going to give him one of the best in the B1G money."

Ben Herbert was the exact same thing.  Unless he just absolutely wanted to go or unless they're paying him $4M/year...Herbert should still be at Michigan. 

Now, is it true people are leaving college sports at an alarming rate?  Absolutely.  Who knows, I might be next.  The NIL stuff and the money has gotten out of control.  Also, college athletics is a GRIND.  In many ways, much more than pro sports.  Post-COVID, people want their nights and weekends back, they want remote working opportunities, they want to see their families, and they don't want to always be working and tired.  It's only going to get worse.  We are not exempt from what the rest of the world is feeling just because we work in sports.

But again, preparedness.  This shift in society isn't a new phenomenon.  Where is your retention plan, Warde?  What are you doing to keep people at Michigan?  Not just these coaches...everyone, what are you doing that you have never done to keep people at Michigan?  Or are you just saying, "THIS IS MICHIGAN"?  How are you being proactive, considering the current climate?  Or are you just making excuses like almost every other AD out there?  What is your PLAN?

I have had multiple people at Michigan tell me that right now Warde is unprepared, reactive, and making excuses.  It's time to go.

Now Warde isn't all bad, he truly does love Michigan.  It's just time.  The same way it was time for Lloyd to step down because he couldn't stop hiring his friends while the game was passing them by, the same way Hoke had to go because he was too subborn to change or evolve.

I've shared the story many times, I was in the room when Warde told the B1G office, "fine us" when the B1G wouldn't let Michigan wear special #42 jersey patches honoring a fallen member of their community during the B1G Championship game when we played Iowa.  Saw it with my own eyes.

I know that Warde had to smooth over A LOT of damage that Dave Brandon left behind, especially with the conference office.  I know that Warde intentionally didn't go scorched earth in 2016 to defend Harbaugh because he was finally close to winning everyone over and getting things back to "The Big 2" where Michigan had say about some things (understand, at the time it was Gene Smith and everyone else...OSU ran EVERYTHING).  That was a big test to gain trust and he handled everything behind closed doors.  I know he was applauded by the most well-respected ADs on how he handled the Harbaugh post-COVID season contract situation (most ADs fold to the mob in that situation).

Warde has raised money and built buildings...and Michigan, admit it or not, is better/healthier today than it was when he arrived. 

But this nonsense post-hiring Moore was avoidable.  It has nothing to do with "era" and everything to do with doing your job and being prepared.  THAT is why this is the last straw for me.  Michigan could've had all of this ironed out with the remaining staff in 48 hours.  It's understandable that Moore hasn't filled the vacant positions (LB coach, Minter, and JayBaugh were always gone).  You have to interview new candidates for those roles, but Herbert, Elston, (maybe Clink)...these guys were already on the team!!  There could've been a whole "Those Who Stay" social media campaign for the returning coaches (celebrating their return to Michigan), we lost the moment and the momentum. 

So, the time has come, the industry came and went, and quite frankly, Warde is lucky he got a championship out of it.  It is clear, Warde was a solid AD for the past, but he is *NOT* the person that is going to lead Michigan into the future.  The thing he signed up for is not the the thing is oversees today, and we aren't going back - and for all of these reasons, #FireWarde.

 

Go Blue!

sdogg1m

February 7th, 2024 at 11:33 AM ^

The post was C- level as he was verbose and light on the details of how the 2024 AD should function. I read up until he mentioned preparation to handle potential outcomes which is something even a 2004 AD should know how to handle.

In my view the 2024 AD needs to possess marketing, management, and administration skills. If rumors are true and Warde is getting paid seven figures then it's not far fetched to expect those skills from one man. Based on evidence Warde fails at managing the people who bring the most value to the school.

College football programs and ADs need to excel in (A few examples):

1) NIL program development (Working with large donors, corporations, and legal)

2) Public Relations (NCAA, Big 10, etc involvement)

3) Official recruitment

4) Player Development

5) Coaching

Michigan employed a head coach that had the program excelling in 3-5 but provided incentive for him to look elsewhere. Warde was the leader of passively pressuring Harbaugh to go elsewhere. Warde demonstrated a lack of preparation for Harbaugh's departure and finally there has been virtually no leadership on communication or direction regarding Michigan's NIL program.

 

Commie_High96

February 7th, 2024 at 5:11 PM ^

I tend to agree that Warde isn’t a great fit, but this place has lost its mind. Warde looks like genius to most people who are not posters with brain worms for his handling of Harbaugh in 2020. Maybe Santa replaces him, but Michigan generally does not operate fast unless you all want to meet with about 5000 others on a certain lawn on South U.

FB Dive

February 7th, 2024 at 9:02 PM ^

I am also not a Warde defender (I wanted him gone after the Pearson debacle) but I do find it baffling that failing to retain a coach who clearly wanted to go the NFL is the reason this blog now wants him fired.

I appreciate OP's post -- it's an interesting/unique perspective -- but I don't find it particularly persuasive. I'm curious if OP believes that the fans of whatever school he works at could accurately judge his job performance. The job duties that OP describes happen almost entirely behind the scenes. How does OP -- or any of the people calling for Warde's head -- know that Warde doesn't perform these duties well? The bottom line is that only Ono, the Regents, and the others in the administration are truly positioned to know how good or bad of an AD Warde is. And at the moment, it seems like he has their vote of confidence.

It seems like fans reflexively use Warde as their boogeyman for anything bad that happens. NCAA/Big Ten investigates us? Warde's fault. Coaches leave? Warde's fault. Recruit signs elsewhere? Warde's fault. That's fine as a coping mechanism, but it's not a serious critique of the AD's performance. 

Like it or not, the truth is the AD is not some all-powerful figure with unilateral control over the football program. There are other actors, both internally at the University and externally at the NCAA/Big Ten/NFL, who make decisions that affect Michigan football. Warde can't force coaches to stay, and he can't prevent the coach who left from trying to bring more with him. He can't make NCAA/Big Ten investigations disappear, as our pathetic little lawsuit should have made clear.  

Like I said, I want Warde gone for completely separate reasons, but even if he leaves, I suspect most people here will hate the next guy just as much unless they stop viewing the AD as someone who "allows" bad things to happen.

BoFan

February 7th, 2024 at 6:41 PM ^

No current AD, person or department, in college football is set up for success.  Warde can’t succeed in this environment but neither can the next guy.

Without a functioning NCAA, the changes coming to college football are unprecedented and unpredictable.  Tennessee’s attempt to sue the NCAA is no different than criminals learning they can “flash mob” mass retail and overwhelm law enforcement. I guarantee you, even the OP is not set up for success if he has a major football program. There is no current model. 

The successful model for the next generation athletic department is difficult to define given there are no clear rules for fair play and the few we have are being gutted by the courts and “flash mob” football programs. 

During the next 2 - 3 years, college football will go through mass disruption where many competing interests will try to take control of the gravy train.  Who ends up on top we won’t know.  What, if any, rules there will be to encourage fair play we don’t know.  If there are even any rules for fair play and competition is still uncertain. We could end up like European Football where the same few teams with the most money win each year. I don’t think that will happen.

Most athletic departments are either going to wait until the dust settles and then build a new organizational structure accordingly or they will hire a wildcat leader like at OSU where they believe rules are made to be broken while subjecting their school to uncertain risk in exchange for the shot at championships.  

There is an opportunity for an innovative athletic department to take a leadership approach, and build a strategy and organization for that anticipates how the dust might settle, as well as try to influence the transition in their favor or in a direction that still resembles something similar but different (players get paid) to what we’ve had. 

If you take that approach, the organization has to fund each of the key risks and opportunities where significant skill gaps will exist.  For example you need a structure where the coach can go back to coaching.  That will require the equivalent of a football GM who has to manage all the new moving parts (e.g. roster building, trade deadlines, recruiting and incentives, regulation, and most likely salary caps). Hire someone from the NFL. That’s the closest model. 

You need a bigger legal and regulatory staff to influence and manage the changing landscape of rules.  That role will partner with other schools, regulatory bodies, and conference organizations to have bigger and more powerful voice. We see some of this today. There are certainly meetings happening all the time.  But it appears ad hoc and still more like a land grab. 

Warde does not appear to be either a war time leader or a transformational leader. Michigan may well wait this one out and it could be a difficult three years.  

1408

February 7th, 2024 at 9:14 PM ^

So this is what the blog has come to. I only read half of this illegible screed but essentially some guy administers the volleyball program at Kalamazoo College and uses that esteemed position to pontificate about the job status of someone at the top of the profession. 
 

At this point, how could anyone be dumb enough to try to argue, in a serious fashion, that these Harbaugh coaches would not be loyal to the person that brought them to Michigan blows my mind. “A social media campaign” would have kept them here? These are Harbaugh people, not Michigan people. How anyone can’t understand this by now quite frankly frightens me about the future of this country.
 

The entire post, in my view, is an indictment on how absurdly bloated these athletic departments have become. We should honestly just start all over again.

jonnyknox

February 8th, 2024 at 12:10 PM ^

They are hiring a General Manager and this is a new position, as I understand.  It will be this person's job to oversee NIL and stay in lockstep with other schools.  Compliance should be be important and rewards given to existing players.  Up front money is going to be the tempting carrot to stay away from.  

San Diego Mick

February 7th, 2024 at 4:18 AM ^

You're wrong, it's long alright but sorely needed to be said.

I've always felt from the time they hired Warde that he just seemed ineffectual and just plain meh.

He's so slow to act and it never feels like he's proactive when it comes to defending our football HC for example or the athletic department for that matter, Warde needs to be gone asap, he can go back to being an AD of a mid major, that's more suited to his level of inability. 

Blau

February 7th, 2024 at 10:10 AM ^

Unfortunately I believe you’re correct that Warde’s demeanor and old world approach is better suited for G5 or mid-major university. Hell, he may be more suited as a GM of a retail or restaurant chain where he isn’t expected to change or accommodate new clients.

I don’t begrudge his sentiment as I think a lot of folks agree that unregulated NIL and the player/employee conundrum is bound to strip some layers of the student-athlete experience by motivating factors alone. I do find it hard to keep someone in his role that can’t back the united front of his coaches and administration while publicly delivering less than enthusiastic results.

JHumich

February 7th, 2024 at 12:10 AM ^

Excellent diary. I don't quite understand why you didn't make it one. It's good enough that I feel badly that it's going to drop off the front page so quickly. 

MaizeBlueA2

February 7th, 2024 at 12:13 AM ^

And because I don't bring problems without solutions...here are some names.

Top Tier - A+: Have to try, but unlikely

  • Danny White - Tennessee (best AD if Michigan wants to get where Michigan fans want to be...but you see what that can lead to with the latest news at Tennessee).
  • Jim Phillips - ACC (best AD if Michigan wants to be the very best version of what Michigan claims to be).
  • Jen Cohen - USC (west coast, just got to SC, she is absolutely incredible).

Next Tier - A/A-: More realistic

  • Martin Jarmond - UCLA (self-promoter, but still a great AD...basically the AD version of Santa Ono, they'd probably have a TikTok and a podcast in the first week...students would love them. Warning: OSU ties).
  • Carla Williams - UVA (more of a southern AD, UNC would make sense for her. She's great at assembling a talented staff around her).
  • Heather Lyke - Pitt (can be rough around the edges but incredibly effective. Warning: OSU ties).
  • Jeremiah Dickey - Boise St. (fast riser, very good AD).
  • Travis Goff - Kansas (see Jeremiah Dickey. Probably never leaves Kansas, dream job).
  • Hunter Yurachek - Arkansas (strange culture fit, makes more sense at a Texas or Oklahoma after Castiglione retires...front runner for Texas A&M).

Third Tier - B+: Clear upgrades

  • Pat Chun - Washington St. (somehow finishes #2 for like every job. Had the NW job until 11:59pm when they snatched the offer. Warning: OSU ties).
  • Vicky Chun - Yale (no relation to Pat, incredible leader and person...someone you root for, certainly ready for a set up).
  • Bryan Blair - Toledo (rising star, would crush it at Michigan, doubt Michigan would reach for Toledo).
  • Rob Mullens - Oregon (people think a little higher of him than I do...I think he's got everything and just doesn't mess it up).
  • Nina King - Duke (safe hire, but a clear upgrade nonetheless).
  • Mack Rhodes - Baylor (see Nina King, but much more experience, well respected).
  • Beth Goetz - Iowa (not happening, she was just named AD like ten minutes ago).

Forth Tier - B/B-: Better, but not best

  • Boo Corrigan - NC State (uninspiring, but absolutely attainable).
  • Jeremiah Donati - TCU (probably should be higher, but I don't know enough about him).
  • Wren Baker - WVU (Boo Corrigan-esqe)
  • Joe Parker - Colorado St. (just another name Michigan fans seem to know...the new Jeff Long.)
  • JD Wicker - SDSU (doesn't make sense for Michigan, maybe Arizona or Arizona St., both are currently open).


Warde is in the next tier, with about 50 (no exaggeration) other people.  He is a C+ level AD.  There aren't too many who are better (I'm missing some), and even fewer who would come or make sense for Michigan.  That said, it's time to make a change and Michigan is a good enough job that it can EASILY upgrade.  MSU would have to live with a Warde, not Michigan. 

--------------------------------

I'm not naming wildly unrealistic people like Greg Byrne at Alabama.  Who might be the next SEC commish if Sankey gets to be commish of whatever new two conference football league that we're headed towards.  Not getting Chris del Conte at Texas.  Joe Castiglione is about to retire, as is Jamie Pollard.  As is Dan Radakovich, even though he is no better than Warde (for Michigan)...he just had Dabo and championships while at Clemson.  Bubba Cunningham and Bernard Muir are in their twilight years.  Josh Brooks at Georgia, Scott Woodward at LSU, and Troy Dannen at Washington aren't happening.  Kirby Hocutt maybe, but he's mentioned for Texas A&M and Arizona St.  Desiree Reed-Francois at Mizzou is popular, but whew, she's tough, controlling, power hungry...I can't get behind that one.

ThadMattasagoblin

February 7th, 2024 at 1:00 AM ^

Jen Cohen would be great. I don't know that she would leave USC for Michigan since that is a pretty lateral move but she did leave Washington to go to USC. I would be open to the Iowa State AD. He seems to have made some decent hires for Iowa State and would fit with Michigan and midwestern culture more than a SEC or Baylor/TCU AD would.

MrWoodson

February 7th, 2024 at 5:47 AM ^

How about Gloria Nevarez? I've heard great things about her. She's MWC Commissiomer, but with things rapidly moving to P2 and everyone else maybe she would see it as a step up? Also, throw money at her if need be. And why does it have to be a sitting college sports administrator? What about someone from business like a younger Jim Hackett?

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gloria_Nevarez

 

Midukman

February 7th, 2024 at 9:05 AM ^

Heather Lyke may have some OSU ties, but she’s a Michigan grad. Has a ton of experience at big time programs and just flat out gets it done. Plus, as someone who’s been married for 27 years, women are bad asses! It’s time. Warde always seems to me as a “don’t rock the boat” kind of guy, and was. But not now. The ship is sinking and there’s no excuse to be treading water with filling and keeping a staff after winning the CFP. Wardes fault or not sometimes you need to clear the room. 

Blau

February 7th, 2024 at 10:28 AM ^

Whoa. Good work. I’m quite amazed that anyone knows this much about college athletic directors and/or AD candidates.

Because I personally don’t know the complexities and specific responsibilities of a top-tier college AD, I’d shoot for anyone with the following:

- Best interests of student-athletes, programs, and athletic staff who embraces NIL and makes it a focal point.

- On board with the administration and willing to stick their neck out with a united front.

- Lastly, listen to the alumni/fans but make the obvious move. 

MGlobules

February 7th, 2024 at 10:59 AM ^

Great couple of contributions, starting with the OP--thank you. People need to read and absorb this. What you sidestep, on purpose probably, is NIL. How might these candidates artfully, successfully, approach it? Because there are, to my mind, too many contradictions to successfully navigate.

Take Juwan. I've defended him, but he can't defend himself, not adequately. Which by itself may mean he needs to go. He can't rebuild in a year, whether Warde retains him or not. But he's lost nine-ten players to the NBA, admissions, and NIL, some that we'll never hear about. Put those players back on the floor, even in clumps of two or three, and we're grumbling but not braying for Juwan's head. (A grievous state of affairs for a Michigan elder statesman.) Really, really good odds that Juwan leaves in disgrace, with terrible bad blood, and the next coach flounders, too. For a long time.

I don't think that there are solutions. I hate the NFL for a dozen reasons, but it's a better game to watch. College hoops, floor and talent and organization-level, is garbage, eight out of ten games. A new AD has to quietly abide some cheating, beat up on people for money, draw coaches public and private--licit and illicit--guidelines in a shifting landscape. . . smile as he or she and the emerging conferences cut the throats, and lifelines, of a host of institutions as the new college football landscape emerges.

It's ugly, and not getting prettier. And we may well have a long period of groping in the darkness ahead of us.

What about NIL?

ThisGuyFawkes

February 7th, 2024 at 11:09 AM ^

Very interesting, what is your criteria for these rankings? I'm not saying you don't know more than me about ADs, but you list ADs (and thus athletic departments by proxy) such as Baylor, Toledo, Washington St (who just lost their eh... conference), Arkansas and Boise St - and say that they are clear upgrades and A level hires. Um.... okay - based on what?

AWAS

February 7th, 2024 at 12:19 AM ^

This is the indictment of Warde that resonates.  A lot of the feelz up to this point were related to things Warde didn't have responsiblity for or control over.  Succession planning, contingency planning, and staff retention are clearly Warde's responsibility, and he has demonstrably failed at each of them.  It's year three of the JH to the NFL merry-go-round, and we are still fully unprepared for the event.  It is failure to perform core responsibilities of your role, for which most would be relieved of their job.  It's time to move on.

RobM_24

February 7th, 2024 at 12:40 AM ^

Total guess here, but I think Warde really thought all this success and program culture that was built was truly a "Michigan" thing. He's finding out in the most brutal way possible that it was a "Harbaugh" thing. He wasn't prepared for this, because he didn't think there was a situation where Harbaugh was greater than his beloved Michigan prestige. 

Coach Carr Camp

February 7th, 2024 at 10:49 AM ^

Its Bill Martin all over again. He genuinely though every top coach in the country would be begging to coach Michigan when Carr retired. He screws up Les Miles hire, gets rejected by Schiano, and then scrambles to find Rich Rod who was clearly going to have culture/style issues taking over the program. 

 

goblu330

February 7th, 2024 at 11:31 AM ^

My biggest gripe with Manuel right now is what most people thought was not controversial in the first place, and that was hiring Moore without a search.  To me it was 100% foreseeable that Harbaugh was going to raid the entire staff.  We were replacing a coaching staff, not just a head coach.  There are a lot of coaches all over the country that would have given serious consideration to coming to Michigan for the right offer, and would have brought their entire staff with them.  If that meant losing Moore that would have been unfortunate, but a lot of better of a situation than employing a first time head with an entire staff to fill.

TESOE

February 7th, 2024 at 12:41 AM ^

Let's move this to Diaries. This is well done. I wasn't on the train. I am now.

We have to give Sherrone what he needs. We need leadership from the AD to get this done.

Thanks for writing this.

Pioneer here. Go Blue!

ThadMattasagoblin

February 7th, 2024 at 12:46 AM ^

I don't even care that these threads should be snowflakes. I will still watch the men's basketball games to support the team and players but man it is hard. It just annoys me when posters say that Warde should be applauded for keeping Harbaugh in 2020 when Brian, Seth, other posters, and myself wanted Harbaugh gone. I will give Warde credit for keeping Jim but that's such a layup. He lucked into that and the next time that situation arises he will make the same decision even with different circumstances. He's going to keep Juwan when the end of the basketball season comes next month because Harbaugh turned it around so surely Juwan will too. Warde didn't win a national championship. Harbaugh (who was brought in by Jim Hackett), the assistant coaches, and the Michigan football players won a national championship.