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You realize finding and…

You realize finding and developing talent other schools pass over is a competitive advantage, right? I don’t know if Medved really is the best guy for the job, but if a coach can do that at Michigan I am all for it.

I am literally cleaning out…

I am literally cleaning out my filing cabinet now and I want to know when they broke into my house.

The best three year run…

The best three year run anyone alive can remember? At this point the odds that any Michigan fan is old enough to remember any of those teams is exceedingly low. My grandfather, who would be roughly 110 if he were still around, wasn't alive for any of Fielding Yost's Point-A-Minute teams.

1946-1948 is the only other candidate. 19-2-1, three straight wins over Ohio State, 25 consecutive wins (going into 1949), a Rose Bowl win, two straight undefeated seasons and (depending on how you count) two national championships.

Looking at the box score, JJ…

Looking at the box score, JJ threw more than he did against Iowa than he did in all but two other games (30 against Iowa and ECU, 37 against Purdue).

They just didn't have him throw anything remotely dangerous. He didn't have a completion over 14 yards, although he might have tried one or two longer-passes, and he ended up with his lowest yards per pass of the season.

(You should get combat pay for watching all those Iowa games.)

He's Peyton Manning, but he…

He's Peyton Manning, but he beat his team's college rival.

Seriously, look at Manning's college career. Tennessee was 39-3 against everybody but Florida, but 0-3 against Florida.

Manning couldn't manage a win against Spurrier when Steve was coaching Washingon, either.

I think that's unfair to…

I think that's unfair to Belichick. It's not a coincidence that you usually see a great coach paired up with a great quarterback. Belichick provided an environment where Tom Brady could and did develop, and had the sense to stick with him when Bledsoe was healthy again. Imagine if Tom had wound up on one of those Lions teams Millen had hollowed out.

Belichick's decline has been obvious the last few years, though; the man kept hiring Matt Patricia, and he had two of his sons on staff last year, for crying out loud.

Look at New England's last Super Bowl win; that was all on the defense (and the most boring Super Bowl in years). Despite the Super Bowl win Tom's performance had fallen off a bit in playoffs in his last two years in New England, although I think his supporting cast had also fallen off.

It is pretty clear to me, though, that Belichick's biggest mistake was wanting to get rid of Tom Brady. First when Jimmy Garoppolo was a Patriot, and then when Tom actually left for Tampa.

Did the COVID year have an…

Did the COVID year have an effect? The uptick in the Michigan running game began in 2021 immediately after the COVID year, picked up in 2022 and actually fell back a bit in 2023.

Looking very loosely at the 2021 and 2022 previews on this site, most of the OL was pretty young. The obvious exception was Olu Oluwatimi, who had been at Air Force in 2017 and Virginia from 2018-2021. He'd presumably had a redshirt and a COVID year.

So I'm going to say Harbaugh and staff were more of a factor, but the COVID year did have some effect.

(Also, in retrospect it's really funny to see how depressed the Mgoblog staff was for those 2021 previews. Not that I can blame them after, oh, 2008-2020.)

I assume Graig Ross is…

I assume Graig Ross is related to Craig. Whoever he is, he's right; this is the worst basketball team since Bill Frieder's second season (7-20) when I was in high school.

(Odds that BlueBarron fixes the typo before I finish this and I look like a bigger idiot than I actually am: 50%.)

I'd argue that Haskins…

I'd argue that Haskins started to emerge in 2019 (i.e., look at the Notre Dame game and a couple others) but agree that Gattis didn't have much to do with that.

I was watching his 2023…

I was watching his 2023 highlight reel and I think I see where they're coming from. The 2023 Blake Corum was caught from behind a few times where the 2021 Blake Corum would not have been.

At the same time (and I admit I may be wearing my homer glasses here), I think he has the skills to have a decent career in the NFL.

Harbaugh also inherited a…

Harbaugh also inherited a program that was in decline, having gone 7-6 in 2013 and 5-7 in 2014. He immediately turned it around in 2015 and came within a decent spot on that goddamn fourth down in overtime to getting into the playoffs in 2016.

Juwan Howard, on the other hand, inherited a program that had been in three straight Sweet 16s and in the title game two years before. While he was able to do well when he had the talent, he's done a poor job of bringing it in and developing it.

I have to agree with this. I…

I have to agree with this. I'm willing to forgive an occasional bad season; Beilein had a few. Yet other than his first (10-22), Beilein's worst seasons were at .500 or just below (15-17 and 16-16).

There's also been a clear downward trend as Beilein's players have moved on and the team has become Juwan's.

 

 

Looks like he had 35 yards…

Looks like he had 35 yards on 4 carries. On the one hand that's not bad; on the other, it's a small sample and it came in garbage time.

Which isn't a bad comparison…

Which isn't a bad comparison. Jobs, however, was better at sticking to his strengths; Musk is all over the place with companies in completely unrelated industries.

Saban had a brief moment…

Saban had a brief moment when it looked like he might work out in the NFL. The Dolphins had been 4-12 under Dave Wannstedt without a real quarterback; Saban took them to 9-7 with journeyman (and former Lion) Gus Frerotte.

Frerotte went to the Rams, and the Dolphins decided on Daunte Culpepper over Drew Brees. Which was all she wrote for Saban in the NFL; Culpepper--who never played at a high level again--only played in a handful of games, and Joey Harrington played most of the season (eventually benched for Cleo Lemon).

They finished 6-10. Afterwards Saban said that the Dolphins' decision not to sign Drew Brees was a big part of the reason why he went to Alabama.

Spurrier? Never finished better than 7-9.

MS Word doesn’t know shit. I…

MS Word doesn’t know shit. I’m waiting to hear from WordPerfect.

My dad went to law school at…

My dad went to law school at the U of M and had season tickets since I think Bump Elliott's last year--I grew up going to most home games. I was born in Ann Arbor and was a townie on and off until middle school, and my mother lived in Ann Arbor when I was in high school.

I wound up going to school out of state, which was good for me for a variety of reasons, but I remained a fan.

Maybe 3-4 times a month;…

Maybe 3-4 times a month; generally when I've cough had a few cough. Usually the highlights from a particular game, but sometimes the full game.

Not just the last three years, either. The 2019 Notre Dame game is a favorite of mine in recent years, but others as well.

I love this.

I'd like to…

I love this.

I'd like to see Harbaugh and other coaches of interest (e.g., Day and Meyer) in a different color--although I'm not sure how easy/possible that is to do.

Every now and them I stick…

Every now and them I stick my head in because I missed something; why do we have the ball suddenly? What happened to this or that player? I thought that was an incompletion/sack/whatever?

Every time, I regret it.

Absolutely. He also came…

Absolutely. He also came from baseball, where the Astros had a sign-stealing controversy that mattered.

I’m personally hoping more…

I’m personally hoping more Nussmeier than Gattis; say what you will about the man, but he didn’t screw up 2021.

I also wouldn’t mind Ohio State falling into a pit for a decade or two, but that’s just me.

Washington did make it to…

Washington did make it to the finals. Sure, Alabama was probably the tougher team but they did beat Texas to get in.

Oregon also beat OSU in 2021; they’ve had their moments over the lasr twenty or so years.

Oregon? The team whose only…

Oregon? The team whose only two losses were to Washington and both by less than a touchdown? That Oregon? Pac-12 may be overrated but come on.

Good to see you back, Ace!

Good to see you back, Ace!

It sounds like more like a…

It sounds like more like a bad buddy movie. "Two football coaches, one a defensive mastermind and the other an offensive genius, go on the run from fans and boosters after disastrous losses to conference rivals. Hilarity and hijinks ensue."

I'd love something like this…

I'd love something like this.

I'd also love to see a post-season Hail to the Victors (which Seth and/or Brian may have discussed/dismissed already, but if they did I missed it in my championship hangover).

My advice is to detach…

My advice is to detach yourself from the sports media. Watch the games, yes, but why are you watching the talking heads anyway? Most of them aren't that interesting and many of them are downright awful.

I'd add that many people--particularly in the media, but you find them everywhere--like to jump on a bandwagon. There was definitely an anti-Michigan Signgate bandwagon, and nobody who jumped on really thought about the issue.

I'd add that the media thrives on engagement, and all the nonsense about sign stealing definitely drove engagement. Nonetheless, anybody who thinks that sign stealing played a role in any of Michigan's victories after the initial report came out is an idiot.

FYI: if the Lions beat the…

FYI: if the Lions beat the Rams, they're going to the Super Bowl. I know it.

See, my wife bought plane tickets to Portugal and I agreed without looking at the calendar. Odds are good that I am not going to be able to see any hypothetical Lions playoff games after this weekend. And if the Lions are going to go the Super Bowl, it will absolutely be in a season in which I have trouble watching the playoff games.

Will the Lions beat the Rams? Hell if I know. I like Campbell's aggressiveness--even if he should have kicked the extra point against Dallas after the first penalty--and it is a home game. I don't think the Lions have played a playoff game at home since Erik Kramer, and their one (1) playoff win of my lifetime came at home.

(I'm just grateful that the plane tickets weren't for last week. We could have changed them, it would have cost money and been a pain in the ass.)

Picture this scenario: Lloyd…

Picture this scenario: Lloyd Carr retires after the 2006 season like he wanted. Rich Rodriguez takes the Alabama job.

And Nick Saban takes the Michigan job.

I honestly do not know how I would feel about that.

"Fun Fact":  Carroll had a…

"Fun Fact":  Carroll had a brief stint as a coordinator with OSU in 1979, the year after Woody Hayes retired.

I knew I hated that guy for a reason!

I personally was…

I personally was disappointed that they didn't include both the three hours of talking and the full hour of weeping in the podcast yesterday. This makes up for that.

Defense also won the Super…

Defense also won the Super Bowl against the Rams.

Belichick's judgement has clearly been going downhill for some time, though, and for someone with as much power as he has in the New England organization that's disastrous. For instance, he had not one but two of his kids on staff, and he kept recycling guys like Matt Patricia.

Most importantly, he was trying to get rid of Brady as early as 2016 (i.e., when Jimmy Garoppolo won two games when Brady was suspended for Deflategate). On the one hand I get this; Brady was 39, the age Peyton Manning was when his performance fell off a cliff. Nobody plays at a high level in the NFL forever, and I certainly didn't predict Brady still playing at a high level at 45 when he finally retired.

On the other hand, the fact that Brady's stats immediately got better in Tampa Bay just how badly he misjudged this. Oh, and the Super Bowl win, too. That Brady played nearly as well the next year underlines it for me.

Like Michigan culture…

Like Michigan culture changed so dramatically under Moeller and then Carr? Like Stanford culture changed so dramatically under David Shaw? Remember, Stanford won 8 or more games in Shaw's first 8 seasons as head coach--including 12 in 2015--at a school which is hard to win at.

There are certainly arguments against hiring a coordinator. This is not one of them.

Would you give me a referral…

Would you give me a referral? I'm a CEO-type of coach. I'm sure I could get them to at least four wins next year. Maybe five or six!

Sainristil is also a guy who…

Sainristil is also a guy who had key plays in all three of Michigan's recent victories over Ohio State. Lots of plays this year, the almost certain touchdown to Stover he broke up last year and a big reception in 2021 to set up one of Haskin's second half touchdowns.

It reminds me of Tyrone…

It reminds me of Tyrone Wheatley's game in the 1993 Rose Bowl. 15 carries for 235 yards and touchdowns of 88, 56 and 24 yards. The 88-yard touchdown is at about 2:19:00 here (and in retrospect it is surreal to see Bo in the broadcoast booth).

After that game, I have to admit that my expectations were a bit too high--I thought he'd be winning a Heisman. Injury problems his next two years slowed him down a bit, though, and while he had a long pro career he was mostly just a guy in the NFL.

He did, however, play in the Super Bowl when he was at Oakland, albeit in a limited role in an ugly loss.

Last year was the best…

"This should be the best offense of the Harbaugh era by some distance."

Last year was the best offense of the Harbaugh era. Most points per game, most total yardage per game, best offensive line play, etc. There was definitely a drop off this year.

Which had me worried coming into the Ohio State game, especially since JJ looked like he'd been playing hurt since the Penn State game. I was worried that this would cost us a game at the end.

I have never been so happy to be wrong.

With the scores, I think you…

With the scores, I think you have to look at Brian's predicted margin of victory instead of the generally ridiculous score he predicts. Although if Iowa had scored I'm sure it would have been a safety.

Personally, I came into the playoffs thinking that if Michigan were to win out JJ would have to have a couple of big games (admittedly more so against Alabama than Washington). My reasoning was that the ground game has not been as good this year at it has the last two, and Michigan would have to pass in order to score enough points to win, and also that the defense would have trouble stopping playoff teams' offenses.

Yet JJ was--well, not bad, but just fine. He missed some passes against both Alabama and Washington that he normally would make, but he threw well enough to win. And the running game came up big at the end.

I was dead wrong about the defense. They were helped a bit--Alabam's bad snaps, Penix missing a throw or two that could have changed the complexion of the game--but they put a ton of pressure on both Milroe and Penix and came up big in the end.

FInebaum is almost literally…

FInebaum is almost literally all shtick, which is why I haven't watched the video and why I have never taken him seriously. I do admit to some amusement that he called for Harbaugh to be fired right before the 2021 season.

If you look at his wikipedia page, though, he apparently wasn't always like that. His reporting in 1993 about Antonio Langham signing with an agent during the season got Alabama on probation and had them forfeit wins. Which just blows me away.

Anyway, he clearly discovered at some point that there was money to be made by trolling college football fans.

(Langham was a great corner who the year before had a big pick six in the SEC Championship Game against Florida (which I think was the winning touchdown in a 28-21 game). They went on to win all their games and beat Miami (YTM) to claim a national title.)

Congratulations, guys! I…

Congratulations, guys! I think I'm speaking for a lot of us when I say that I've never been happier to see Blake Corum cross the goal line than when he did (both times!) in the fourth.

I first discovered Mgoblog…

I first discovered Mgoblog when I was searching for information about the coaching search after Lloyd Carr announced his retirement. I had wandered into parts of what was the Michigan blogosphere at the time (Maize n Brew before they moved) but I was sucked in by Brian's writing and quickly became a regular reader.

Recruiting isn't the issue…

Recruiting isn't the issue here; it's managing his recruits. Since the end of the 2021 season, he has lost three QBs to the portal, including one who won 11 games for him this year and another who started for a playoff team.

I will admit that the portal really has changed things, and losing Quinn Ewers wasn't surprising. He had essentially skipped his entire senior year of high school for NIL money so he didn't get any playing time, and he'd have had to sit for another year behind CJ Stroud (even if Day managed it like JJ behind Cade in 2021).

I do question Day letting Ewers join the program so early; I don't think it helped Ewers' development or Ohio State. It definitely helped Ewers' bank account, though.

But losing their starter without either a potential replacement or something weird happening behind the scenes seems like it could be a problem.

 

That Orange Bowl was another…

That Orange Bowl was another game where they could have won in regulation. Anthony Thomas fumbled at the Alabama 1 and Alabama blocked Hayden Epstein's field goal at the end of regulation.

I see mgoblue.com has improved football stats--they have a box score for the game now complete with play-by-play. Which I have to admit is like candy for me.

No. I thought of the 2005…

No. I thought of the 2005 Rose Bowl with Vince Young.

Although seriously I really wasn't worried about the refs or a bad spot at this point. Aside from the two non-calls (running into the kicker they could have called against us and the out of bounds hit in the 4th they should have called against Alabama), it was a reasonably well officiated game.

And also I thought Milroe would either walk in or get sacked.

I'd add that Kienholz played…

I'd add that Kienholz played against Minnesota and Michigan State, two November games that weren't close. Their backup QB showed up in the box score in 7 of their 12 games (including Penn State, when I think McCord went out for a few plays with an injury).

The other five were arguably too close to put in the second string QB. They beat Maryland 37-17 and Rutgers 35-16, but those games were close (20-17 and 21-16) at the start of the fourth quarter. Notre Dame came down to the last minute, and Wisconsin was within a touchdown for most of the fourth quarter.

And of course they didn't have a chance to put a backup in against Michigan.

Lots of people--not everyone…

Lots of people--not everyone, but lots of people--will risk their job for a reason like this. The thing to keep in mind, though, is that they don't realize they're risking their job until after they've done it. They think they can get away with it until they get caught.

I know more than one person who got fired for doing something stupid and shady and obvious with either items their company purchased or their customer purchased.

I'd add that another potential motivation for risking their job is if gambling is involved (i.e., they need money to support their habit, they think this will help them get a big payday, they promised shady underworld figure, etc.).

Remember Art Schlichter? If not, he was a former Ohio State quarterback and first round draft choice who after his NFL career flamed out went to jail for various fraudulent shit he did to support his gambling habit. Just got out a couple years ago, I believe.

If you're in Toronto,…

If you're in Toronto, another good spot for gluten free food is Riz for Chinese food (on St. Clair near Christie, not too far from the Annex--and they have another location on or near Lawrence).

Chinese food has been an issue for gluten free food; soy sauce (at least the good ones) have wheat. In the states, I have had mixed luck with PF Chang's.

Riz does a kind of pan-asian thing, but they do Chinese well (particularly in my opinion the popular crispy beef). Some of the dumplings are gluten free but one or two others for reasons I do not understand are not.

My favorite gluten-free bakery: Almond Butterfly. They're on Harbord and they've opened a bistro on Dundas which I haven't tried yet. I personally like the lava cakes (chocolate/paleo thing that is best warmed up). My wife also likes the cupcakes, and she doesn't need to eat gluten free.

I'm in Toronto and I get…

I'm in Toronto and I get them from this place. They're frozen but they reheat well. You pick it up from Kensington Natural Bakery on Bloor in the Annex, but I should stress they're made elsewhere (i.e., a wheat-free kitchen).

They used to have a storefront on Avenue near Lawrence but that closed last year.

We had tortiere, which is…

We had tortiere, which is both a Quebecois version of a meat pie and a Quebecois holiday tradition (which I had no idea about until after we started getting them).

Sadly I have to have the gluten free version, but I know a place that makes a really nice one.

Edit: I forgot the cheesecake! The store-bought crust was not nearly as good as the flaky crust on the tortiere, but it was still good.