Preview 2016: Wrap Comment Count

Brian

j2sMvgV[1]

Hello. You have made it to the end. This year's preview checks in at 54,543 words.

THE STORY

No Dress Rehearsal. When will then be now? Now.

OFFENSE

Quarterback. Eh, it'll be fine.

Running Back. Wild Thing, now with glasses?

Wide Receiver. African refugee special in 3… 2… 1…

Tight End And Friends. Jake Butt's vacuum hands and some Kaiju.

Offensive Line. Middling is the bet, but Drevno effect?

5Q5A: Offense. There is a schematic advantage and it will be felt this year.

DEFENSE

Defensive End. In Soviet Russia—[is sacked]

Defensive Tackle. Hahahahahah oh my God you guys.

Linebacker. Peppers Peppers Peppers. Release the McCrayken.

Cornerback. All-American and friends

Safety. When the weight comes down.

5Q5A: Defense. Just the sacks, ma'am.

MISCELLANEOUS

Special Teams. Kenny Allen is the Peppers of special teams.

Podcast 8.0. Stop 30 seconds from the end.

Heuristics and Stupid Prediction. Predicting 12-0 is an act of bravado and unserious.

ELSEWHERE

Genuinely Sarcastic posits Harbaugh as the counter-revolution in a post that you should really read:

A wise old political science professor once taught me that there are eight stages to a revolution:

  1. The existence of preconditions
  2. Fall of the old order
  3. The honeymoon phase
  4. Rule of the moderates
  5. A counter-revolution
  6. Rise of the radicals
  7. The reign of terror
  8. The Thermidor

The list very obviously follows the blueprint of the French Revolution - which makes sense, since most revolutions since the French Revolution have tried to follow that same blueprint.

Gazing back at the last 10 years or so of Michigan football, I see vague parallels that I the historian naturally blow out of proportion to try and make my point. I have to shuffle the order and tweak some things, but I think it fits, more or less.

Holdin' The Rope:

Each season begins with its own set of expectations, a reasonable subset of all possibilities. For Michigan, that subset was limited indeed for some time.

Now, though, the whole playbook of expectation is in play. The Jabrill Peppers carry is as much a part of it all as the handoff to De'Veon Smith or the deep throw to Jehu Chesson. Nothing is out of play, too farfetched, too crazy.

If this all sounds hyperbolic, well, maybe it is. But why hold back when it's so plainly obvious?

Robin Wright in the New Yorker:

In 1975, I moved to Mozambique, then a scenic colony on the Indian Ocean, where a ten-year guerilla war was ending a half millennium of Portuguese rule and, in turn, igniting challenges to white-minority regimes across southern Africa. It was a historic time, and I needed a telephone to report on it. Impossible, the post, telephone, and telegraph agency told me—the waiting list was nine years long. I worked through layers of bureaucracy at its headquarters—pleading, cajoling, pressing, and flirting—until I found someone who spoke English with an American accent. He, too, said no. I was about to leave his office when, in one last stab, I noted his accent and asked where he had learned English. “The University of Michigan,” he said. Bingo. I told him I was an Ann Arbor girl, born, raised, and educated.

“If you can sing ‘Hail to the Victors,’ ” he replied, skeptically, “I’ll give you a phone.” I stood on a chair and belted out the Michigan fight song. Then we talked Michigan football. He handed me a phone. I never got a bill, even when I turned the clunky black phone back in.

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

Just under a year ago I stepped out of my car and began my walk to my family's tailgate. The buzz of low-flying craft trailing banners was in the air. I smiled ear to ear like Jim Harbaugh at the spring game. The unusually cool morning had the tang of fall in the air. Every year this is my favorite time, the ritual before you enter your section and see that great bowl—the greatest anywhere—filling with people.

Last year's walk was the best. Forgive me if you think this unkind, but I thought about the fact that the Michigan fanbase had rose as one to eject Dave Brandon from its midst. I thought about Jim Harbaugh's walk. Just a few weeks before in Chicago he'd told the assembled press that his walk was Bo's walk. Told them the actual streets, all the better to stalk him by. And I thought about how one of these things led to the other, how the shape of the Michigan thing that led to the ejection also led Harbaugh back home where he plans to coach and die, God willing and the creek don't rise.

Several years earlier I'd been furious as the shape of the Michigan thing ate itself under Rich Rodriguez and then reaped its reward, so this is a double-edged sword. Hubris always wins eventually. But we've been down. We've been scuffed up, yelling more at each other than anyone else. If there's any hubris left after dead last in TFLs allowed and unable to either protect a guy with a concussion or prevent that story from turning into a week-long fiasco it's hardier than a cockroach. There's certainly none in this program, which is pushing every possible advantage it could ever have and working its fingers to the bone.

This has been a Queensbury's rules kind of program. No longer. Now we take the lessons learned at the bottom and shiv our way to the top.

15236640993_b0414d8a6b_z

[Bryan Fuller]

Go Blue.

Comments

enlightenedbum

September 2nd, 2016 at 5:39 PM ^

The mood was so cheerful last year at the first home game.  That's what I remember about my walk to the stadium.  I also couldn't stop grinning from ear to ear.  Everything just felt right again.

stephenrjking

September 2nd, 2016 at 5:43 PM ^

Hop on the Koolaid train.

Thanks for the preview, Brian. This is one of the best weeks of the year. 

And it's even better now, because it's like those years I remember as a kid. With the early colors on the leaves and the grudging first days of school and the SI college football preview and that feeling, the best of all feelings in sport:

Hope.

Go Blue.

Cranky Dave

September 2nd, 2016 at 5:49 PM ^

Fantastic but the thought of shiv our way to the top is scary and inspirational. I would pay money to read this site. I do buy Amazon through here but feel like beveled guilt is next. But mis titled because giving isn't out of guilt but out of thankfulness and appreciation

Parkinen

September 2nd, 2016 at 6:13 PM ^

This year, admittedly without a down yet played, reminds me of 1997. Crushing defense and a serviceable offense. The only glaring difference my get be this years D line might be better and O line not as good.



Sent from MGoBlog HD for iPhone & iPad

huntmich

September 2nd, 2016 at 6:37 PM ^

I can see your comparison in a vacuum.  But in 2016 in order to get to the NC we will always have to face the country's best, including one team in the middle of an unprecedented (for the modern era at least) dynasty.  If we want it all, our road will be harder this season than in 1997, says me.

Retnep

September 2nd, 2016 at 6:42 PM ^

The world should never forget that Content is King. I love this site. I love the sites that get linked from this site. The writing is top notch. This site reflects AA; it's the most educated city in the country and this the most educated college football fan site anywhere.

Thanks Brian, Ace,Seth, Adam...special shot out to some of the long term posters that I see a lot. Great to see The Other Brian post...great article...ah, I'm all up in feelings...

Go Blue.

Blue Durham

September 2nd, 2016 at 7:00 PM ^

For some reason you seem to have enjoyed doing this year's preview over the past 8 or so. This is as loaded of a team as we have had for a decade, maybe even longer. Because of that, I really wish there was a big non-conference game. I have little doubt that this team would clean Notre Dame's clock, and I think that the coaching staff would learn more than with the current slate, which is pretty awful. Would be better prep for Iowa, MSU and OSU.

Ferg0dsakes

September 2nd, 2016 at 9:08 PM ^

With apologies to Clement Clarke Moore, for my hack edit job….

A Visit from Coach Harbaugh -

'Twas the night before KICKOFF, when all thro' the house
Not a creature was stirring, POINT 7 MILES, FROM THE BIGHOUSE;
The JERSEYS were SET by the COOLERS with care,
In hopes that COACH HARBAUGH soon would be there;
MY SON WAS nestled all snug in HIS BED,
WITH visions of TOUCHDOWN DANCES in HIS HEAD

And WIFE in her NIKES, and I in NEW JUMPMAN cap,
Had just settled our brains for a LATE SUMMER’S nap‍—‌
When out on the lawn there arose such a FUSS,
I sprang from the bed, TO THE SHOUTING, “WHO’S GOT IT BETTER THAN US?!”.
Away to the window I flew like DENARD,
Tore open the shutters, and LOOKED AT THE YARD.
The moon on the breast of the LAWN DEW A’GLOW,
Gave the luster of GAMEday to objects below;
When, what to my wondering eyes should appear,
But a TACKLING SLED, and eight PLAYERS IN GEAR,
With a SHIRTLESS driver, WITH BIG BUTT, YET SLIM,
I knew in a moment it must be COACH JIM.
More RABID THAN WOLVERINES his PLAYERS they came,
And he whistled, and shouted, and call'd them by name:
"Now! SPEIGHT, now! JAKEBUTT, now! CHESSON and DARBOH,
"On! LEWIS, on! PEPPERS, on! GARY and TACO;
"To the top of the porch! FROM SCHEMBECHLER HALL!
"Now dash away! Dash away! Dash away all!"
As dry leaves that before the wild hurricane fly,
When they meet with an obstacle, mount to the sky;
So up to the house-top the PLAYERS they flew,
With the BAG FULL OF FOOTBALLS—‌and COACH JIM too:
And then in a twinkling, I heard on the roof
The HIGH-STEPPING and JUKING of each CLEAT’D hoof.
As I drew in my head, and was turning around,
Down the chimney COACH JIM came with a bound:
He was dress'd all in NIKE, from his head to his SHOE,
And his clothes were all SWAGG’D WITH MAIZE AND WITH BLUE;
A bundle of BALLS was flung on his back,
And he look'd like a TWITTER’ER just BLOWING HIS STACK:
His eyes‍—‌how they twinkled! His SCOWL, HOW SCARY,
His cheeks were like roseBOWLS, his nose like a cherry;
His CONFIDENT GRIN was drawn up like a bow,
And the GAMEPLAN DRAWN UP, TO VANQUISH A FOE;
The stump of a SHARPIE he held tight in his teeth,
And the smoke OUT HIS EARS encircled his head like a wreath.
He had a YOUTHFUL face, and a PALE WHITE belly
That shook when he laugh'd, like a bowl full of jelly:
He COULD STILL THROW AND JUMP, a right jolly old QB,
And I CHEER’D when I saw him, in spite of ME;
A wink of his eye and a twist of his head
Soon gave me to know I had nothing to dread.
He spoke not a word, but went straight to his work,
THEY SAID HE HATED RECRUITING, THEY CALLED HIM A jerk,
And laying his finger aside of his nose
And giving a nod, up the chimney he rose.
He HUDDLED HIS DUDES, to his team gave a whistle,
And away they all flew, DOWN STADIUM, like the down of a thistle:
But I heard him exclaim, ere he drove out of sight‍—‌

GO BLUE to all, and to all a good night.