National Signing Day II Presser: Jim Harbaugh Comment Count

Adam Schnepp

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[Fuller]

“Hello. Good to see everybody.”

Jim, couple misses today but the new guys that you did get, what do you think about the class?

“Very excited about the class. First time we’ve had two signing days, so many that you know about and proud to announce, officially, Shea Patterson—talked about him; Ronnie Bell, can officially announce Ronnie; Casey Hughes, who’s also a graduate transfer; Vince Gray; Michael Barrett. So, welcome to the Michigan family.”

You started talking about Ronnie the last time inadvertently, but what is it that you like about Ronnie?

“Love all his athletic ability. Start off with production: 86 catches, close to 1200 yards, Simone Player of the Year in Kansas City, player of the year in football. He’s also an excellent basketball player and…love the family, love him. Production. Production being the key thing.”

MGoQuestion: What are you getting in Michael Barrett and do you envision him starting off at quarterback or running back or somewhere else?

“Envision him getting the ball in his hands. Wide receiver, slot receiver, running back: those two areas primarily for him. Spent some time with Anquan Boldin, who was also a high school quarterback. Played some quarterback in college, and eventually wide receiver. Somebody that can get the ball and make yards after the catch or yards after contact. A receiver who can run like a running back and, also, I think he’ll have the ability to be a running back. So, different areas that Michael could get the football, including quarterback.”

Now that it’s all over and you’ve had the two signing days, you’ve had the coaches moving in between, with all of it together, what did you learn about this…new world, I suppose? What did you take away from it overall?

“I don’t know what the numbers exactly will be but somewhere around 80% seemed to sign on the first signing day, and then there was 20% more that signed throughout college football. I think our numbers will be pretty close to that. There was a priority for the youngsters to sign on the first signing day. That’s the biggest thing, the biggest takeaway.”

[After THE JUMP: possible positions for Ryan Hayes and Casey Hughes, another spring abroad, and thoughts on new staff additions (including those no longer here)]

Did you like it? Are you guys still learning?

“Um…”

Jury’s out?

“No, I mean…understand it and feel good about it. A lot of the families felt really good about it. Those that didn’t had the ability to wait and make their decision or take more visits until they ultimately decided on the second signing day, so yeah, felt like [we] understand it and understand the motivations for it.”

With that, with the new signing periods, how did you January help you make inroads on future classes, particularly the 2019 recruiting class?

“Yeah, it was—how did it make us? It gave us the opportunity to do more recruiting for 2019s and 2020s and 2021s.”

Not one of the new recruits but I saw Ryan Hayes listed as a tight end. Is that where you see him starting out? I know there was some thought that maybe he would be a tackle.

“Yeah, I think he’s got the ability to. We’ll see where Mother Nature goes in his physical development. There’s a possibility of playing tackle and also tight end.”

Can you talk about having this signing day press conference here [Ed. A- Schembechler Hall] as opposed to the Michigan Theater or Crisler? Just maybe dialing it down a little bit or maybe times have changed or—any thoughts on that?

“Uh, no. Just what trans—where we decided to do.”

You mentioned Shea earlier. Do you guys have any update or timeline or anything on when you’ll know or expect to hear on whether he’ll play this year? Do you guys have a calendar?

“No.”

So no anticipation—

“I don’t have any update on the calendar.”

Back to the 2019 guys, one of the new things with the calendar is that they can start taking official visits this spring. How have you guys approached that? Do you plan o having a lot of guys in or how will you approach that?

“Um…participate. We’ll participate. I anticipate participating fully in spring visits.”

One of the things is when they take a visit in the environment of gameday and all that. Is that something that would miss out in the spring or how important is that for a typical official visit?

“That’s a good question. I can remember a time where very few visits occurred during the fall. Most all the visits were after the football season took place and there were unofficial visits during the season. Official visits came afterwards.

“I think now you’re going to see a model where official visits will come in the spring and the fall and after the season, so a youngster that’s playing high school football, Friday night games, sometimes that can compact the official visit. So, does it make more sense to visit when you’re not playing a game on a Friday night? That’s the choice now. More options for the families, more options for the official visitors. More options is [inaudible] better.”

Jim, you mentioned Casey Hughes. What did you like about him? What stuck out and do you envision him sticking at corner or could he be a safety for you guys?

“Yeah, another thing to be determined. Think he has the ability to be a corner. Also has the ability by what compiles our best secondary to be a nickel or be a safety. Think he’s got the ability to play all three of those and we’ll determine that when he gets here.

“Coverage ability plus tackling abilities. He’s made quite a few tackles and he’s a strong tackler.”

You have a new strength staff in here you’ve been working with. What went through the process of making that change and how do you feel the results are? Your thoughts on how they’re doing?

“Uh, doing great. Doing great. Coach Herb—Coach Herbert and his staff are extremely hard-working, very detailed, and they’ve hit the ground running. It’s early but already seeing positive results.

“And what went into that was interviewing multiple interested coaches, and really feel we got the right man for the right place, the right job.”

Do you know for sure when you’ll start spring yet?

“Spring practice?”

Yeah.

“I believe it’s March 22nd, if that’s a Thursday in the third week of March. If memory serves, that’s March 22nd.”

Related to spring practice, can you give us an update on any international hopes or plans?

“Yeah, we hope and are planning to go abroad. Paris and Normandy.”

Not sure when yet?

“We’re closing in on a date. It’ll be after finals are over. That’ll be somewhere around the 26th of April.”

Where are you with the 10th coach and how do you like how this staff is shaping or reshaping, I guess?

“Uh…we’re thrilled. Thrilled with the new additions. Sherrone Moore, Al Washington, they’re fantastic. Had a chance to go out on the road, be in meetings, offensive meetings, defensive meetings with both, and they’re tremendous.

“The tenth coach, we’re going through the process of interviews. That’s what we’re…that’s…that’s going on today.”

Offensive side?

“Yeah, yeah. Focused on the offensive side.”

Is Ed Warinner in that pool? I know you guys brought him in as an analyst.

“Yeah, Ed is another great hire to talk about. Ed Warinner’s been just fantastic, so to a man, everybody that we’ve brought in, including our graduate assistants, just top notch. Feel great about Ed. Didn’t know Ed before but feel like we’re becoming best friends. Same with Sherrone and Al Washington. Great coaches, great men. Feel great. Feel great about our recent additions and our hires.”

What are Ed’s duties? What did you hire him for?

“On offense right now we are going through a self-scout period and looking at ways to get our offense up to where our defense is, and all those assignments are yet to be determined. His title is offensive analyst. As good a coach as he is, I plan on this being a long and trusting friendship with Ed Warinner and the Michigan football program.”

What transpired with Dan Enos? Was that a surprise to you or had there been some conversations that he potentially could be here and move on like he did?

“Uh, that—you know exactly what transpired. He was here, then he left and went to Alabama.”

Did that catch you off-guard at all?

[/shrugs, smiles]

Speaking of off-guard, about Otis [Reese], when did you know he wasn’t going to be coming here?

“Well, I mean, it’s really the same situation. One person closes a door, that opens a door for somebody else, and it’s our job to make sure that whoever turns the knob on that is what’s right for Michigan.”

What about Otis? Are you talking about Otis or Dan?

“Both, yeah.”

Oh, okay.

“What—”

I wasn’t sure—

“What was your specific question?”

I just wondered, when did you know that Otis—

“Today. Today. Found out today.”

And that caught you off-guard?

[/shrugs]

“I wouldn’t say…we were informed today.”

I would assume now that signing day’s over you have some time with the last assistant—

“Wouldn’t say caught us off-guard. We understood that that was a possibility, yeah.”

You have some time now with the last assistant. Signing day’s over, you have until March 22nd. Do you plan on taking some time with this to see how the whole staff looks or how it all shakes out or do you want it done sooner?

“Well, it’s gonna happen soon. It’s gonna happen soon. Yeah, I’ve been—I’ve spent a lot of time and effort, as we do, as I do, for each and every person that you hire.”

Do you anticipate any more departures off your staff as well?

“I do not.”

Comments

Don

February 8th, 2018 at 12:59 PM ^

So many Michigan fans seem to believe he's been some sort of difference-maker as a coach, when the reality is that if he didn't have a connection to Michigan nobody would think about even interviewing him. It's like Cam Cameron, Lord help us.

bronxblue

February 8th, 2018 at 1:12 PM ^

Not to defend Loeffler, but BC got demonstrably better running the ball this year (25th), and their overall ranking was weighed down by the passing game, which was starting a freshman at QB until he got hurt.  As for VA Tech, that wasn't great by any means.  Though I honestly don't know their talent and players at the time; Beamer's philosophy for that team might have put some limitations on that team's ceiling.  

I don't want Scott Loeffler by any means, but possible shark humper/offensive coach candidate Jim Mcelwain had some really good offenses at Alabama and CSU, then went to Florida and couldn't mount anything resembling a credible unit despite a lot of talent.  Don Brown is fantastic, but he's also a bit of a unicorn in that he can turn crap into gold no matter where he seems to land.

BlueHills

February 8th, 2018 at 1:54 PM ^

Maybe the Enos hire wasn’t exciting to our hand-wringing fan base, but obviously the guy has something seriously good going, or Saban wouldn’t have hired him away. Tells me that Harbs is a pretty good judge of coaching talent. Perhaps, maybe, a better judge of coaching talent than our fans. It’s possible.

UMAmaizinBlue

February 8th, 2018 at 11:21 AM ^

Seeing things on 247 about Michigan trying to forge a stronger relationship with Belleville, and Pep Hamilton is the main guy trying to do just that. Maybe Pep is crucial to signing some big in-state kids in the next 2 years...? Just speculation here.

Noleverine

February 8th, 2018 at 1:23 PM ^

This is such a tired line of thinking. I really can't even read the comments anymore with all the HOT TAKES. I've been here since the Haloscan days (different account at that time) and this place is just becoming an echo chamber for the lowest common denominator of the fanbase (and trolls).

Am I happy with where this offense was? No. Is Harbaugh happy with where this offense was? Hell no. Do you think you're more upset than he is? Get over yourself.

To assume you know more, after watching, what, 13 games, than Harbaugh does after interacting with them on a daily basis for years plus and watching them coach dozens of practices (for Drevno, hundreds), is ridiculous.

It is it possible that there was more going on than "hurr hurr Drevno and Pep are awful?"

No, because that wouldn't fit your narrative.

Pepto Bismol

February 8th, 2018 at 2:43 PM ^

Beside all of that, which is spot on, how does Harbaugh's "meritocracy" actually work for players? If a player fails to perform, do they get shit-canned from the team? Do we boot players for performance? No, someone else on the team is given an opportunity to perform those duties at a higher level.

So the "meritocracy" way to handle Drevno and/or Hamilton is not to fire them, it's to pass their duties along to another member of the team (like say, I dunno, Ed Warinner? Or maybe Tanner Engstrand?) to see if they can perform at a higher level.  

1VaBlue1

February 8th, 2018 at 11:40 AM ^

Sounds to me like Enos really surprised him with the backdoor cut to Bama.  But, taken into consideration with missing out on Otis Reese, the transcript reads like there was form of commonality in the way both went elsewhere.  If so, I hope it gets figured out and fixed.

maize-blue

February 8th, 2018 at 11:53 AM ^

Seen on another board that McElwain may be in on play calling in 2018. No idea if that means Drevno will no longer be calling plays, if McElwain is sharing play calling with Drevno, if Drevno, Hamilton, McElwain are all play callers....... 

Offensive organization still seems like a cluster.

Quailman

February 8th, 2018 at 12:47 PM ^

Why dont all of us take a step back on the speculation and hand-wringing for awhile and see what JH does?

Everyone goes on and on about "too many cooks" with Pep and Drevno and JH and now maybe McElwain. We don't know right now what JH's plan is with playcalling. He says in his comment about Wariner that they are in a self-scout/evaluation period right now.

Maybe, everyone who says "hurr hurr, meritocracy", JH is doing just that right now and evaluating everyone on offense after some time away from an emotional end to the season and figuring out who deserves to be where. Maybe we will find out once everything is set where everyone is working.

Maybe he doesnt do anything, and then we all have a reason to hem and haw. But until we know what happens all the complaining is just self-fufiling and tiresome.

Schem Bobechler

February 8th, 2018 at 12:36 PM ^

OSU and PSU really knocked the ball out of the park while you seemed to whiff time after time after time.  You seem a little down in the dumps.  How about that Petit-Frere kid?  He looks like a real bulldozer!  I'd hate to have to face him the next three years."

BoFlex

February 8th, 2018 at 12:42 PM ^

I still find it illogical that Ed Warinner somehow willingly agreed to leave Minnesota where he was a Running Game Coordinator/OL coach making $375,000/year to be an “Offensive Analyst” making $250,000/year. That seems like a clear demotion in position and salary, which only makes sense if Warinner was actively looking for a cushier job where he could still earn a 6-figure salary.

M-Dog

February 8th, 2018 at 12:58 PM ^

"On offense now, we are going through a self-scout period  . . . and looking at ways to get our offense up to where our defense is."

That warmed my heart.  

It's not going to just be business as usual, he recognizes there is a problem.

He's not going to just wait for the 34,214th pump at the well to produce water.

His approach may be, um, unorthodox, but he is going to shake things up. 

 

M-Dog

February 8th, 2018 at 1:51 PM ^

I've often thought that Jim Harbaugh should just ask Don Brown what should be done on offense . . . 

"Hey Don: What offensive scheme and which offensive coaching candidates would you least like to face in a game? 

That's what we'll go with."

You know that Don Brown will cut through any bullshit self-delusions and give it to him straight.

I don't know exactly what Don Brown would say, but I'm pretty sure that the current offensive scheme and current offensive coaches would not be long for this world.

 

 

Mr Grainger

February 8th, 2018 at 1:51 PM ^

I agree. That was the number one thing that stood out to me -- Harbaugh knows there is a problem and he is going to make changes. Remember, the offense was decent in 2015 and led the league for much of 2016 so it is not like this has been a problem for his full tenure. It is relatively new and it's hard to make a total overhaul in the middle of the season.

Mongo

February 8th, 2018 at 2:10 PM ^

"self-scouting" means guys are getting evaluated by their peers and that usually results in changes.  Which could mean position re-assignments, scheme changes, play calling duties, etc.  Sometimes these "self-scouting" sessions can lead to major disagreements or even demotions which leads to someone leaving.  We will just have to wait and see what happens.

Blue in PA

February 8th, 2018 at 3:42 PM ^

Thank God he cleared the air about Drev and Pep.  With a couple million dollar assistant coaches on offense, we're close to hiring another offensive assistant coach.  That might be the missing piece!   LOL

NateVolk

February 8th, 2018 at 3:59 PM ^

Couple observations:

 

--Outside of the post OSU "bitter" statement in 2016, same press conference as the rest. Really including the intro one which was basic vanilla. A high energy coach who is busy and wishing he was somewhere else accomplishing something more integral to his job. 

--Glad to see they are going overseas. Great for the players.  

--If signing of the stars was dropped this year to keep a lower profile with a less hyped class or because it was after a 5-loss season, it's probably good judgment. Or maybe it was because of the split nature of the class with the two signing days. 

--The speculation he isn't fully into his job is based on basically nothing. He's 24-7 from what I hear from people and we'd be shocked by the hours and intensity. He'll make the changes necessary. One thing not seen in the press conference is a stubborn, rigid thinker

 

Jonesy

February 8th, 2018 at 7:33 PM ^

Harbaugh isnt old or sick or out of passion. He simply said in his podcast, and his dad seconded it, that he didn't like how he looked throwing tantrums on the sideline and wanted the focus to be more on his players.

Sten Carlson

February 9th, 2018 at 11:39 AM ^

^^^ This!!! He knew he cost his defense/team a bundle when he got flagged (for a foul that doesn’t exist ... but that’s just a minor detail /s) and he can not tolerate that. Overall, I think Coach has built a “brain trust” of people he respects and he’s going over everything with a fine toothed comb on the offenseive side of the ball. He’s “self-scouting” and pouring over film to find the solution(s) that can work with his roster. The fire Pep and Drevno meme needs to die now! They’ll get it straightened out, but it’s clear that Coach opted for continued continuity as he probably felt that the issues were (possibly) overall schematic and organizational, not due to a lack of coaching talent. I’m highly optimistic that we’re seeing a more cerebral Coach, a more measured and methodical Coach, not one who is losing his zeal for the job — which I think is a very good thing. I think people forget (or are simply ignorant of the fact) that these are real-time decisions, and that making changes mid season with limited practice time is very tough to do, and often leads nowhere good. I hate to keep repeating it but 2017 was ALWAYS going to be a tough(ish) year roster wise. It was pointed to as a near term low, and although it remains to be seen, it seems to be playing out that way. Let’s let Coach and his guys do what they do without freaking out at every turn, ok?