Unverified Voracity Has A Hut Belly Comment Count

Brian

[Bryan Fuller]

Open practice! Sunday 6-7. Free parking, be there or be normal.

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He's excellent at parsing things.

This is a separate bullet point and therefore not part of the sponsor note. Police horses.

Basketball practice. This was the longest segment of the open basketball practice I ran across:

Jon Teske for 3: eyeballs emoji. UMHoops and Brendan Quinn have some takeaways for you, Quinn's from Michigan's first game in Spain.

AS THE URBAN TURNS. If you thought things were weird in Columbus, you are correct, but we're gonna need a bigger word:

Zach Smith Ordered Sex Toys to Ohio State Offices, Had Sex With Staffer, Took Nude Photos at White House

More than $2,200 in sex toys! To the office! Hugh Freeze is impressed! He's like "dang, son!"

[After the JUMP: what does 2,200 dollars worth of sex toys even look like! How big was this box? I don't want to know the answers to these questions!]

This sounds a little grim for Notre Dame? Practice reports are generally sunny things but recent talk out of South Bend is pretty skeptical for the genre. 24/7 on the running back situation:

Senior Dexter Williams’ talents are unlikely to be available until at least Game 5. That leaves junior Tony Jones whose pedestrian results – amid a quartet of runners whose individual efforts consistently superseded his own last fall – have failed to pique the interest of Irish fans. ... Notre Dame’s most productive runner in the season’s opening month could be the guy receiving all of the snaps from center.

Everyone other than Jones is either a true freshman or a redshirt freshman who just switched positions. They go on to say Notre Dame "has two quarterbacks who can win games," but it doesn't sound like that many?

Book’s strengths – efficiency with the read option, accuracy on both short and athletic throws – are starter Brandon Wimbush’s apparent weaknesses. But Wimbush is a big play waiting to happen and more important, a first-down machine with his legs. If he can hit the easy throws that plagued him last year (screen game and wide open deep posts) and occasionally did as well in our four camp viewings this month (the hot reads), the Irish offense should click.

This follows on from an Athletic article about a week ago in which Pete Sampson was trying to gently talk ND fans onto the ledge:

What I didn’t see coming was the possibility Wimbush would start training camp the same way he finished last season, where the hard throws look doable and the easy throws look wild. I will stick to my position, that what I’m seeing from Wimbush today doesn’t necessarily have much to do with the Wimbush you’ll see in September. But it’s hard to hold that line based on three open practices. Because the Wimbush who’s resurfaced this month looks like every bit the wildcard who finished last year.

That Wimbush completed less than half his passes, but did hit a lot of deep throws and ran for 800 yards at 5.7 YPC. A one-dimensional running offense without a running back going up against Don Brown is probably doomed. Michigan's offense has to be marginally less doomed against a good defense that returns virtually everyone. First one to 20 wins?

The shoe thing. Harbaugh told the assembled media that he doesn't expect any suspensions for sale of merchandise:

“Our compliance has investigated that,” Harbaugh said. “There’s been — a couple shoes reported that were (size) 14s that were out there. Talked to everybody that’s currently on the roster, and they’ve accounted for those pairs of shoes.

“The latest of what I saw was a No. 52 number. No one currently on the roster that had that number last year.” ...

“I don’t know what’s happened with every single case, but if somebody sold their shoes, they’re going to be ineligible. That point’s been hammered home. It’s been — ad nauseum — explained to the players. They understand, and hopefully they’ve done the right thing."

Mason Cole and Elysee Mbem-Bosse both wore 52 but Cole is in the NFL and Mbem-Bosse left the team after having a bit of a public breakdown. Once you're no longer in the NCAA's grasp you can sell whatever you want since capitalism is generally legal.

This does bring to light an interesting material benefit for Michigan players now that the program has returned to Nike and gotten that Jordan swag. These shoes are absurdly valuable. By the time you graduate you could be sitting on five digits of merch easy. I am not a shoe person but I don't think I've heard of Adidas shoes having anywhere near the same cachet for limited editions.

Mesmerizing. The essence of football coach:

Mo Hurst is still Mo Hurst. Seems familiar:

Hurst is going to go down as the weirdest Michigan-related draft day drop in recent memory.

Yooooooooo. Ding dong, the stat is dead:

This is only a halfway accomplishment. As we noted last year, the presence of disgraced former MSU AD Mark Hollis on the selection committee got an even worse metric on the teamsheets. We're not talking about a room full of Will Huntings here. There are many potential pitfalls in picking a different main metric. One of the most obvious things to do is use Kenpom, but Kenpom is a margin-aware predictive ranking. If you play to win the game the metric used should be a descriptive, margin-unaware Strength of Record evaluation.

In case you weren't feeling old. Hockey commits! Michigan just took a 2004, D Hunter Brzustewicz. You can see his picture if you're inclined to click through, but be warned: you will sprout ear hair just doing so. As a 2004 I assume Brzustewicz is very good and virtually unscouted. He'll be easy to google down the road at least.

In less absurdly far-future but still sort of absurdly far-future players, Michigan picked up a couple of four-star-ish 2020 commits. Shattuck St-Mary's teammates Mackie Samoskevich and Brendan Brisson are seemingly both in the second tier of prospects in their age group, just outside of the NTDP. Brisson might be moving into that top tier after going from 22 to 67 points on Shattuck's U16 team—he played up last year—and standing out at the recent Select 17 camp. Jeff Cox named him one of the top three forwards at a camp that has just about every high-end American except NTDP selections. (The other two were Michigan commit Austen Swankler and an OHL guy, so that's pretty good for that 2020 class.) "Trending up" is the general vibe:

Mike Legg goal fans should be pumped:

Brisson is indeed that Brisson: he's the son of NHL SUPER AGENT Pat Brisson, who is also the advisor for the various Hughes.

Samoskevich was Shattuck's second leading scorer a year ago but was about 20 points behind Brisson. Despite that, the Neutral Zone likes him slightly more:

That 2020 class now has about five top-end forwards with Brisson, Samoskevich, Swankler, Josh Groll, and Andrei Bakanov. One or two of those guys will probably cool off and arrive as a career third-liner but even though Michigan took a couple of OHL hits it looks like Mel's first class that's entirely his own is going to have a ton of skill. 

Etc.: Grant Newsome, retired. A&M transfer alleges violations in an effort to be immediately eligible at his new school... which is also Kevin Sumlin's new school. Rawr. Biff Poggi's new program at St Frances is making people mad, because they recruit I guess? Engler gonna Engler. This is Jim Delany's gravestone. Unions for football players might prevent them from dying so much. John Beilein's influence.

Comments

outsidethebox

August 23rd, 2018 at 8:10 AM ^

Exactly!!! ND may be very strong in the middle but I simply cannot see ND being able to grind out sustaining drives that get them TDs. I know Mone gets down-graded a lot here but this can kid play a little too. Anyone who believes Mone, Dwumfour, Solomon and company will not provide significant resistance here-and free up those LBs to blow up the backfield is crazy. If this is ND's strategy they will have to dedicate significant resources/numbers/bodies to the cause-more than Michigan will need to shut it down...this is advantage Michigan. With Winovich and Gary being pretty much unblockable and Hudson flying around-coming out of nowhere/everywhere...I simply do not see great success running the ball-even if it Wimbush scrambling.

dragonchild

August 22nd, 2018 at 12:59 PM ^

It's not that they'd necessarily complete them; it's that the defense is forced to respect them -- unlike, say, DPJ flying downfield with a lone CB five yards behind him and the opposing DC going "eh" because that resulted in a downfield completion, like, once.  But I'm speaking in general terms, just to disagree with the notion that an offense that can stress the safeties is one-dimensional.  If you can threaten with four-verts and have a mobile QB, you don't need an elite RB to get things going, at least in theory.

Brown is going to attack it like he always does, with man coverage and quick pressure.  We have arguably the best CB duo in the country, the best DE duo in the country, and Bush & Hudson can cover a lot of ground to clean up whatever gets past the D-line, so that offense is gonna have a bad time.  However, a deep ball at the safety is generally how Brown's defenses get got, so it could happen a couple times.  13-17 is a fairly typical output against this defense.

stephenrjking

August 22nd, 2018 at 1:43 PM ^

I think your thoughts here are really fair, and I'm scrounging to look for something to disagree with mostly because talking actual on-field football like this is a blast and I could do this for hours (to the detriment of, you know, my own work). 

JT Barrett's OSU but not as good does sound like a reasonable expectation for the ND offense, and Brown's only flaw against JT Barrett is that Michigan's offense in both of those games simply couldn't get that one drive in the second half to put the game away. 

The thing about "respecting the deep ball" is that Brown's press style allows most of the defense to ignore it even when it's a real threat. We've known from the beginning that he puts his DBs on islands, and he'll do that against ND and dare Wimbush to beat them while Chase Winovich and Rashan Gary are thundering toward him at full throttle. 

stephenrjking

August 22nd, 2018 at 12:52 PM ^

Interesting choice to tape on the international rules court. They're playing international rules games in Europe, of course, but they're just exhibitions--seems to me like it would make more sense just to practice on college regulation floors and take the hit that comes with unfamiliar dimensions. 

But I'm not a multi-millionaire basketball coach who has won two consecutive B1G tournaments and made it to the NCAA championship game with Mo Wagner and a box of spare parts. 

outsidethebox

August 23rd, 2018 at 8:20 AM ^

Well, this was a demonstration of why defense is so important. In intra-squad situations where the kids know each other well defense wins. The shooters had very few good looks because the defenders of the poor shooters were (very effectively) hedging to help their teammates...thus forcing a lot of bad shots and gambling/risky passes-that mostly failed. As I have stated previously, weak offensive threats from the PGs may be the Achilles heel of this team. 

crom80

August 22nd, 2018 at 12:39 PM ^

after reading the article about biff poggi i will no longer care whether he sends any of his blue chip players to michigan or alabama. he is a god damn saint.

lhglrkwg

August 22nd, 2018 at 12:51 PM ^

If he can hit the easy throws that plagued him last year (screen game and wide open deep posts) and occasionally did as well in our four camp viewings this month (the hot reads), the Irish offense should click.

If Nick Sheridan can grow 6 inches, add on 20 lbs of muscle, increase his arm strength by 2x, and play as well as Tom Brady has been playing for the Pats, the Michigan offense should click

bronxblue

August 22nd, 2018 at 1:11 PM ^

I'm shocked that Mo Hurst is destroying people and looks like a massive steal.  Good thing some anonymous scouts questioned his health.

I went back and looked at Notre Dame's season, and it sort of follows the pattern of a team that went against convention early on and got away with it (they were much more run and short-pass heavy in 2017 than in basically any recent season), but as the season progressed they started getting blitzed far more regularly. 

In their first 7 games they scored 289 points while giving up 115, and in their final 6 they scored 156 and gave up 164.  So to me, that's probably closer to the ND Michigan will see than the fire-breathing one to start last year, as people have now sorta figured out that Wimbush is erratic as a thrower and they can't really run the ball all that well without his legs.  So it's a worse version of OSU on offense and a pretty good but not elite defense on the end side.  I still think ND should be favored in this game because it's a road game and UM's offense is butt until proven otherwise, but we're talking 51/49 favored.

Blue Vet

August 22nd, 2018 at 1:52 PM ^

BEILEIN & POGGI

I'd have been happy if this veritable version of Unverified Voracity had simply carried the pieces on Beilein — we are soooo lucky to have him coaching Michigan — and on Poggi.

zh2oson

August 22nd, 2018 at 1:54 PM ^

Because the Wimbush who’s resurfaced this month looks like every bit the wildcard who finished last year.

The thing about wildcards is that they sometimes hit. 

I have endured so much UM trauma over the past 12-ish years that I can totally see Wimbush completing a bunch of deep throws against perfectly-placed defenders next Saturday.

Teams we play seem to flop wildcards a lot against us. 

markusr2007

August 22nd, 2018 at 2:28 PM ^

I think Notre Dame will play better than people think.

One big change for their coaching staff, aside from Clark Lea as the new DC replacing Mike Elko, is Offensive Line coach Jeff Quinn.

Quinn was a big part of Brian Kelly's success at Grand Valley State's program as well as at Cincy. Quinn is probably an upgrade from last year's OL coach and running game coordinator Harry Hiestand because strategically and tactically Quinn is cut from the same cloth as Kelly.

Quinn has to rebuild parts of Notre Dame's offensive line this year, same as Ed Warriner at Michigan.

Both OL's are going up against some very talented and quick DLs on the other side.

I do think Michigan fields a more seasoned and quicker defensive unit than Notre Dame which probably will be a difference maker.

But I think Quinn will have ND's OL playing a lot better than most people might expect.

He's a solid addition to Kelly's staff.

 

 

Lou MacAdoo

August 22nd, 2018 at 2:43 PM ^

Mackie Samoskevich is an underrated NOTY candidate. Also, are we really recruiting nine year olds? I guess those spinning dance moves could be the future of hockey

curtalv8

August 22nd, 2018 at 2:49 PM ^

I feel like Michigan fans are on an all time high alert for false hype surrounding players because our talented players were talked up for improvement last year and I think they expected too much. Not to say you shouldn't be alert for false hype, but I think a lot of fans overthink it now. 

MCalibur

August 22nd, 2018 at 4:16 PM ^

re: Dodd article...

Feels like it’s well past high time for Delany to get off his ass about all of this BS that's happening all across the conference. No, the scandals aren't his fault but he sure as hell can do more than nothing about it. Title IX is tied to federal funding, Title B1G could be tied to dat BTN teat. Bring some proposals to the university presidents and make them go on record in either support or opposition:

  • minimum facility standards (ex: air conditioning, onsite medical equipment, etc.)
  • med staff representatives paid by and reporting to the office of the commissioner
  • league wide standardized concussion protocols
  • player ineligibility while criminal investigations are active (see Grant Perry)

I'm just riffing here and maybe not all of these ideas are winners but it's more than has come out of Delany's office (afaik). The member institutions of the Big Ten have shown that they suck at policing themselves appropriately more often than not. Delany is in unique position to put pressure on the conference members to get their priorities straight.