Unverified Voracity Fought In T-Shirt Stalingrad Comment Count

Brian

The T-shirt arms war is being lost. This aggression will not…

BoLGFEmCUAENxXh[1]

…uh. This aggression will be tolerated. Just point that somewhere else, PCP-raging hell-coyote(?).

One dollar this is not a thing. Former Oregon QB Jake Rodrigues is transferring, and Michigan has just been mentioned as a school that has "reached out" by Scout West Coast recruiting guru Greg Biggins. Michigan would have four other available QBs by the time he was again eligible, so it doesn't seem likely he'll be heavily pursued.

The one thing that makes it seem even vaguely possible is the lack of a redshirt on Shane Morris. Rodrigues would have to sit out one year and then would be able to play three, which would restore one-a-year balance to the Morris-Speight-Malzone wave of QBs. Still: doubtful.

FWIW, Michigan did offer his first time around. He went off the board to Oregon in May, so Michigan didn't have much opportunity to make an impact.

I know I said I'd make these separate posts… but there's not enough for a full basketball recruiting post, so I'll just mention it here. CA PF TJ Leaf did visit briefly after playing at an AAU tourney in Indiana before catching his flight back to California:

"Michigan likes to run a point guard, a center and then three players who are versatile and can create," he said. "The coaches have brought up Glenn Robinson to me a couple times before as far as a comparison, but nothing too specific. They say I'm a perfect fit for the offense and I agree. I really like that about Michigan and I also really like the fact that Coach Beilein is under contract there until the 2019-2020 season. I don't have to worry about him not potentially being there if I was to play there."

Glenn Robinson plus about three inches (and minus three inches of vertical) sounds pretty good to me. Sounds like Michigan has sold him on both fit and the fact that Beilein ain't Tom Crean when it comes to legions of fans just waiting for an excuse to pull the lever on his ejector seat.

Michigan would be "at or near" the top with an offer and is looking to decide in January or February.

/waves tiny punt flag. For the Nth consecutive year the Big Ten leads college sports in filthy lucre. I used to think this was terrific until it became clear that the relatively narrow gaps in revenue are meaningless when it comes to competing in the sports that drive all the interest.

Purdue can offer ten million dollars to alum Kevin Sumlin and he's not leaving A&M, and even though SEC outfits have somewhat less money they also run significantly fewer teams than the Big 10 does on average. As the money has spiraled upwards the Big Ten's national reputation has spiraled down. So congratulations, various high-level administrator types who can now afford a third house. Everyone else should shrug.

See also: BTN on basic cable in New York now. That it got done so quickly without terms being disclosed suggests the BTN is coming in at a much lower price than it does elsewhere in the footprint, because obviously. Also the money, it does nossing.

But at least they're working out how to throw less of it away. The Iowa Gazette has a look at bowl ticket guarantees and the changes the Big Ten is finally imposing on them. First a boggling statistic given stubhub exists:

Top-10 teams Ohio State and Clemson rank among the nation’s most devout bowl travelers. However each school absorbed more than 11,100 tickets of their 17,500-ticket requirement to the Orange Bowl. Yet the Orange Bowl posted an attendance of 72,080.

Michigan sold 40.7 percent of its ticket allotment to the Tempe-based Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl. Wisconsin and Minnesota sold barely one-third of their tickets to the Capital One and Texas bowls, respectively. Among Big Ten schools only Iowa (78.2 percent at the Outback) and Michigan State (94.5 percent at the Rose) sold more than half of their allotted tickets this year.

Despite no running game, no quarterback, a late-night December bowl game, and the high probability the market gets flooded with cheap tickets to a game far from sold out Michigan still sold almost half of their allotment. We love vacations, I guess.

Anyway, all those losses are pooled with the bowl payouts and then everyone gets an equal slice, so any "TEAM X LOST MONEY ON BOWL Y" headlines you read are fictional, at least for the Big Ten.

As for changes:

“We’re paying less money in a guarantee, but there will be years where they’ll make more money,” Outback Bowl President Jim McVay said. “There’s a shared revenue deal where the schools are going to keep all the money over a certain threshold."

The schools are going to get less terrible tickets, and of course it's now the Big Ten in charge of where schools go (for the most part). With the newly diverse slate of bowl locations it's no longer just Florida Florida Florida, so people can go other places for the warm-weather vacations they inexplicably crave.

Paternalism! MLive finds some former Michigan players and asks them about paying guys. They are generally against it*. David Cone:

"I think that (allowance) number should come up a little bit. It should. I came from a middle class family, it couldn't have covered Michigan, but they could help me out if I didn't want to eat what the team was eating, I could eat something else. (But others couldn't, and) that number has to come up.

"But I don't think kids should be paid differently. If they're paid differently, then it's a salary. If it's a salary, then you're an employee. And if you're an employee, you can be fired."

That argument is just so frustrating. It is the opposite of reality. Two BU hockey players just got "fired". It happens to a half-dozen Alabama players annually. Kansas State refuses to release Letitia Romero so she can transfer. Employees can enter into contracts that guarantee X in the event they get fired—Charlie Weis is laughing right now about this fact. There is a ton of law about the rights of employees in this country, and none about the rights of student athletes. Reclassifying them puts them in a position of power.

Cone is in favor of a player having right to his likeness, so at least there's that.

Marcus Ray:

"If we give these kids money, we're opening up a can of worms for a different set of problems," former Michigan safety Marcus Ray said. "Casinos, expenditures on drugs and alcohol, giving them the means to finance some of that stuff."

This kind of thinking bugs me. We are perfectly happy to have baseball and hockey players sign contracts with huge signing bonuses without worrying that they'll end up playing Pai Gow in a den of ill repute. Everyone treats the first round of the NFL draft as a watershed moment where you buy your mom a pink Cadillac, but what happens when you're Denard Robinson instead of Teddy Bridgewater? Maturation is a gradual process that everyone approaches differently, and if there are some guys who will waste whatever's provided them (hello, Allen Iverson) that's unfortunate but it's no reason to prevent the guys who will just send it to mom from benefiting properly from their hard work and talent.

*[This is not a unanimous opinion. At the event we had last year with Chris Perry, Marlin Jackson, and Jerome Jackson all three were in favor of some level of payment. Marlin has a quote in this one on the conservative end of things; the other two guys were more strident, IIRC.]

Dey tik r jebs! Mikey Weber got one of those photoshops from Michigan.

It has been asserted that the photoshoppist* misspelled "All American" as "All Amercian," but I have it on good authority that this is a long game that ends with many hilarious references to the South Park episode "Goobacks" and convinces Mikey Weber that he should attend Michigan because of a cartoon about immigration from the future that probably came out when he was like eight or something.

Also I don't think Weber noticed it.

*[I am less careful about spelling photoshoppist than rappist.]

Interesting. The Eagles are embarking on a draft strategy wherein they draft almost exclusively guys who have graduated. Six of seven draftees this year were college graduates, and that is not a fluke:

Allen, who made the Big Ten Conference's all-academic team while at Wisconsin, is one of six Eagle draftees to be on track to graduate out of the seven players they selected. In today's game, that is unusual: This year, 98 college players went pro after their junior season, a record that marks a 34% increase from 2013 and an 85% increase from 2010. (That total doesn't include players who had playing eligibility left but had already graduated.)

The Eagles' operative theory is based on Patriot and Colt outfits laden with graduates that were successful. They seem to think that football is hard and complicated so smart people are better at it. Also people who go do things even if they are hard.

He told Kelly "the guys with degrees have what you are looking for. They are driven. If it's between two players, a degree might tip the scale. But at the time, I don't think he was even thinking of the NFL."

If there's something behind that it should benefit Michigan, which tends to take the high school equivalent of the guys the Eagles are looking for in the draft. Just as soon as our smart guys are old, anyway.

Welp. Mike Babcock says any rumors about him and Michigan are bunk. All I can say is that the reason I thought it was possible was because guys high up in the Michigan hockey program thought it was likely. Quite high.

Etc.: Composite top 100 2016 IN SG Kyle Guy is coming in for the elite camp, as will fellow 2016 SG Justin Turner. Eric Davis talks offer.

Even more horrifying old Sparties. Recruiting thread turns into pages-long civil war trash talk festival. Name that school. Hooray 14 team conference scheduling.

Comments

bigmc6000

May 22nd, 2014 at 2:39 PM ^

gets ignorned in this whole thing since they actually have a good setup in terms of college vs pro.  But, yeah, baseball players get hosed but since they actually have an option to go play in the minors the choice is either play in our world by our rules or you can go play in the minors.  The problem with basketball and football is the professional leagues tied to those sports refuse to take on the risk that baseball teams are willing to take on by offering a bunch of 18 year old kids big money contracts.

Vote_Crisler_1937

May 22nd, 2014 at 5:16 PM ^

I played in the Big Ten '02-'06 and yes there are a few prestigious summer leagues that make it impossible to work but not all. Some summers I stayed on campus which is what the football players do and I worked camps. Yes there is NCAA regulation and you pay in to Social Security but net of all that $3,000 per summer lasted me the whole school year and as is custom for baseball, I didn't even have a full ride. I was still able to play local summer ball while doing this and Baseball America found our World Series (of some sort) bound team and did a great write up on us. We had 3 kids drafted and 2 more sign pro contracts in some part due to that exposure. What more would one need?

It's not a perfect answer for baseball but it's more than doable.

As for football, those guys do have full rides, earn just as much working the camps and between their training table meals and monthly stipend, that $3,000 can really last. The amount we made went up every year too I'm sure it's higher today.

JeepinBen

May 22nd, 2014 at 1:15 PM ^

I agree with the theory and like the idea that it might tip the scales - but isn't the end all be all. I remember some of this coming up when Bill Parcells drafted Henne. Parcells had rules for drafting a QB, he wanted someone who played 4 years, started at least 3, had graduated, and some other stuff too.

BeenBlueSince82

May 22nd, 2014 at 1:44 PM ^

Why would you look at Iverson when talking about wasting things? Is it because of the $50 million he has or because you didn't know he has it? Research should be more than... "this one headline I saw on Yahoo once"

ppudge

May 22nd, 2014 at 2:44 PM ^

Are you AI's accountant? First of all, he has $50m from Reebok in a trust fund that he can't touch until 2030. That's another 15+ years. He hasn't actually filed bankruptcy yet but there are reports of creditors who he hasn't paid and he's been looking for ways to get additional income (per Forbes). He made over $150m in basketball salary alone and now all he has none of it left to pay his creditors? I'd say there was some wasting going on. I mean didn't he purchase some assets or investments he could cash in???

wile_e8

May 22nd, 2014 at 2:58 PM ^

Despite no running game, no quarterback, a late-night December bowl game, and the high probability the market gets flooded with cheap tickets to a game far from sold out Michigan still sold almost half of their allotment.

Someone has to buy the tickets the first time for there to be a resale market. This wasn't a regular season game were there are lots of season tickets holders trying to pawn off the crap games once things go south, outside of the corporate sponsor freebies not many people are going to get tickets unless they want to go. Stubhub prices leading up to the game were slightly above face value, and I ended up buying tickets ahead of time so I could just relax and enjoy the time before the game instead of searching for deals.

(I went through the BWW website instead of the UM ticket allotment because I could pick my seat instead of playing the last row lottery, plus the later deadline allowed me to track Stubhub longer, but those things still apply to the people who went through the athletic department for tickets).

We love vacations, I guess.

I'm pretty sure this was the first game in a while that was drivable distance for a lot of people in this part of the country, which probably helped the demand.

The FannMan

May 22nd, 2014 at 5:48 PM ^

I don't get the sarcasm with the "we love vacations, I guess."  I can 100% state that I, The FannMan, do love vacations.  And warm weather.  Love 'em, love 'em, love 'em.  If Ms. FannMan would permit me to skip the inlaws over the holidays and combine a vacation, warm weather and Michigan football I would be sitting at a bowl game enjoying the combination of things I love.  Hell, add a beer into that mix and I would be in heaven.