On Woolfolk: Soup, Hats, Hugs Comment Count

Brian

Tim posted the relevant quote from Troy Woolfolk about Denard's perceived lead in the QB race, and I thought that was bombshell enough, but then the Daily published the whole exchange. Since Woolfolk comes very close to calling Tate Forcier a leper in it, it set off the usual avalanche. In case anyone's living under Charlie Weis*, the full monty:

"Denard has been out there through the thick and thin and been out there all the time regardless if he's hurting," Woolfolk said. "And Tate, he tries to come out, but he's not as consistent as Denard is. And that's allowed Denard to jump a little bit ahead of Tate and I think that Tate's going to have to do a lot of work to catch back up to Denard in camp this year." …

"I personally have a lack of respect for them [players who don't show for voluntary workouts]," Woolfolk said. "The outlook on them is kind of diseased. Like you don't want to be hanging around those people because they have bad work ethic. But at the same time, it's my role to try to persuade them to come out more."

According to Woolfolk, Forcier hasn't shown up to as many workouts as he and the other seniors feel he should have, and Woolfolk said it's hurting his teammates' perception of their signal caller.

"The only reason he's not really labeled as diseased is because of the way he was able to carry the team last year before we started losing. People still trust him a little bit, but he's starting to lose that trust."

Though he quickly retracted the phrasing of those comments on his (protected) twitter account, the sentiment is clear. It matches up with the buzz we've heard since spring practice, except that the original statement had Devin Gardner as the guy who was around all the time, not Denard.

These days my sense of how important things are to the national media is warped to the point where I my first inkling that a local story is going to get splattered across blogs and whatnot nationwide is when Doctor Saturday pings me to get the peanut gallery's view on whatever Michigan item he's about to post. When this happened yesterday, he said a "senior calling out the QB is not such a great way to start the year."

I had not thought about it this way. It hadn't registered as an event to me. Four years ago I might have engaged full-on PANIC; yesterday as I searched for a response I just thought, and eventually said, "I've seen worse."

GD*6909039

I've been through the dust bowl. Now I've got soup, and some bread, and a hat.

At the risk of seeing the entire offensive line arrested for stealing the Ambassador Bridge and both quarterbacks transfer to Arkansas, this summer has passed for tranquility compared to the last couple. From the beginning of the 2008 season to the beginning of 2009, Michigan saw Taylor Hill, Zion Babb, Jason Kates, Artis Chambers, Carson Butler, Avery Horn, Sam McGuffie, Steven Threet, Toney Clemons, Kurt Wermers, Dann O'Neill, Justin Feagin, Marrell Evans, and Vince Helmuth leave the program. Fourteen kids. From the beginning of 2009 to now they've lost Boubacar Cissoko, Brandon Smith, and Donovan Warren. Three. Michigan's Fulmer Cup count stands at zero. The worst thing that's happened this offseason is the sturm und drang about Demar Dorsey and his eventual rejection by admissions; Michigan also lost a couple of meh recruits who weren't going to do anything in this critical year.

I'd really like to have one of those corners back— make that two of those corners—but the chatter about Dorsey's legal stuff is emblematic of the summer: a lot of noise about something that doesn't really matter. Compared to the rampant attrition of the past couple years it doesn't rate. Media opinion is a lagging indicator anyway.

What I think it does mean:

  • The heavily-rumored preference of the team for Denard is incontrovertible now. Steve Schilling may not have launched into anything as likely to get splashed on posts everywhere, but his statement on Robinson ("He’s definitely taken on some leadership. He’s there every day working hard. He’s been a guy that doesn’t complain. He makes you want to play for him, and he has those qualities to be a special leader and a special quarterback.") says as much or more coming from a guy on the same unit not known for saying much of anything.
  • While a lot of the attention is on Tate, if Robinson is around every day earning people's trust that's more positive than it seemed in spring, when both sophomores were in the same boat when it came to work ethic relative to Gardner. Apparently one of them got the message.
  • It's up to Tate to earn that trust back in fall practice, which starts in five days. While the competition has gone from obviously Tate to neck-and-neck to edge Denard, Tate still has a huge experience edge and is likely to see the field even if Robinson does win the nominal starting job. The two candidates are so different that it will make sense to play both as long as they remain close to even overall.
  • Given the statements about playing banged up it's possible that Forcier's absences have legitimate reasons behind them. Those have not been communicated.
  • I still expect both QBs to play early in the season.
  • "Hugging it out" needs to occur; Woolfolk's tweet indicates that it should happen.

I don't think it will affect the team much; it does provide some hard evidence for the things that had been whispered all summer. The intrigue at fall camp will put the Cold War to shame.

*(Miss you, big guy. xoxo.)

Comments

evilempire

August 5th, 2010 at 6:51 AM ^

if he harbours those thoughts about tate....HE better perform on the field this year as well. HE was hardly the rock of Gibraltor himself last year. And twinkle,twinkle little 5 star who plays like 3, steve schilling better back it up as well .......

MGoLiteral

August 5th, 2010 at 8:12 AM ^

This is why I think all players should record their interviews and post the audio files online so that people can get a sense of the context of the questions and answers.

canzior

August 5th, 2010 at 9:41 AM ^

One thing we all know about Tate, he is affected by things that happen around him.  It's likely that Denard's acclaim since the spring has gotten in his head.  I think he is much better when he is in the light and not forced to fight for a job he might not win.  I think it's a case of RR pushing him harder because he was the starter last season and it doesn't seem like Tate is answering the bell. 

As far as Troy's comments are concerned...I love it.  The seniors have had the worst UM career in about 40 years and they are responsible for this team. If you're a partner in a law firm, you most definitely call out the hot shot new Harvard grad getting complacent.  Tate can either respond by stepping up and showing his maturity or he can concede. 

It has also been mentioned that BOTH of his brothers transferred schools as they fell down the depth chart...

ijohnb

August 5th, 2010 at 10:05 AM ^

but I don't like.  I think itis cause for at least a little concern.  I agree that the partner in the law firm needs to call out the hotshot newbie, but to his face, not to the rest of the world including the opposition.  When it comes down to communcation with the media, and thus the rest of the college football world, in-fighting is bad, and does signal a lack of continuity within the program.  Wolfolk would not have made the statements unless there was a reason to make them in the sense that somebody needed convincing.  If that somebody is the head coach, then he is essentially calling out RR as well.  I know that Wolfolk is a senior, but he is a senior defensive back with a career dripping in mediocrity to this point.  The offense did its job last year and will continue to this year.  I think Troy should concentrate on keeping tight ends in front of him and leave the quarterback situation to those in charge of making those calls. 

NO SPARTY

August 5th, 2010 at 4:39 PM ^

Troy Woolfolk is an average Big Ten corner and should shut his mouth. Forcier won two games by himself last year. Woolkfolk should focus on improving his game and making our terrible defense better.