Clear eyes, full hearts! [Patrick Barron]

Preview 2021: Hot Takes and Wrap Comment Count

Seth September 3rd, 2021 at 9:01 AM

A hype video:

Steven Osentoski (MGoFish) in his own words this time.

Hello, you have reached the end. This year’s preview was just 12,428 words, a quarter of what Brian normally puts out. It managed to fit into our normal posting schedule. It had no positional previews at all. That is because…

THE STORY

As You Can See, I Can't Pay You. Glad you came back.

MISCELLANEOUS

5Q5A: Offense. Run it right or die.

5Q5A: Defense. Ohio State won’t put up 100.

Podcast 13.0A. Podcast 13.0B. Podcast 13.0C. Alex Drain and I try to talk Brian off the ledge, mostly fail.

Heuristics and Stupid Predictions. 8-4.

ELSEWHERE

Godzilla, Spencer Hall/Channel 6($):

It is hard to sit in the stands at Florida Field, with the sun six feet from your forehead, and not feel like someone is trying to kill you. The heat is a misery, the humidity asphyxiating. The press box and luxury suites’ polarized windows, at certain times of day, reflect the rays of the almighty sun directly at the student section. The older wealthy contingent of the Florida fanbase creating a death ray aimed straight at the debt-ridden youth for their own comfort is not commentary, but fact.

There’ also a drop in there about fanbases who sing brightside and schools that play the villain.

We’re Overlooking Hassan Haskins, Again, Ace Anbender/The Bucket Problem

That’s because Haskins is a rolling maelstrom of blunt objects. Tackling him up high isn’t an option unless a defender wants to be on the wrong end of an embarrassing stiff-arm. Tackling him down low can work, eventually, but it’s a commitment.

Austin Meek and Nick Baumgardner/The Athletic($):

But who had Harbaugh’s back?

That question got to the heart of Michigan’s staff shakeup. Historically, Harbaugh isn’t afraid to make changes when something isn’t working. He has employed 31 assistant coaches since 2015, more than Penn State’s James Franklin (25), Notre Dame’s Brian Kelly (20) and Iowa’s Kirk Ferentz (18). The strength coach, the nutritionist, both coordinators, the director of recruiting — all of those positions have turned over during Harbaugh’s tenure, some multiple times. Those changes created the appearance of a program constantly in flux, with no core identity to set the foundation.

“Most places cannot lose the kind of coaches that Michigan or anybody loses and expect to continue to succeed,” a former Big Ten offensive coordinator said. “There’s too much instability. You need a stabilizing factor, whether it’s the head coach and his systematic consistency, plus the influx of good players. That’s what’s made Alabama successful. They can go through coaches and still win. Michigan is nowhere near that situation yet.”

Harbaugh’s best Michigan coaching staffs featured coaches who were confident and capable enough to challenge and push the head coach but also energetic recruiters who knew the Midwest, especially Detroit. His worst? To quote one source: “Too many yes men.”

Results of The Athletic’s pre-season fan hope poll:

“I’m dead inside after the Harbaugh extension,” Chris wrote.

“To be a fan of Michigan is to be a student of pain,” Andre wrote. “And at a certain point pain causes you to pass out and not feel anything anymore. That’s about where I am with Michigan football.”

HERE

The Mindfulness Primer for Michigan Football Fans/Denard in Space

How does this work?

Mindfulness is a skill. It is not something that we can flip a switch and turn on. By engaging in mindful practice on a regular basis, we train our minds to be present, aware, and non-judgmental. This can look like guided meditation, mindful walks, mindful cooking or cleaning, yoga, etc. Mindfulness is cultivated through habit just like any other skill.

How does this apply to Michigan football?

It can be hard to be a Michigan football fan if we rely on the outcome to determine our mood. Learning non-reactive and non-judgmental responses to disappointment can go a long way to mitigating the “BPONE” levels of depression we experience after a grisly loss. In developing such a skill set, we can learn to be happier in general without the weight of a loss on our shoulders, which in turn will lead to a generally less negative discourse between fans, and thus a less toxic fanbase.

Best and Worst/bronxblue:

Best:  Coaching Not Brought To You By Zoom

The pandemic changed the nature of work for a lot of people.  Suddenly, many office workers were sitting at home, spending hours on video calls and telework as cities ground to a halt.  What was once considered the work style of freelancers and Sandra Bullock became the new normal for large swaths of people worldwide, and for the most part people adjusted.  But there were obviously still jobs that could only be done successfully in person, as they required a certain tangible engagement in order to maximize the productivity.  One such position, I have come to realize, is safeties coach on a college football team.  I’ll admit my sample size is small, but in 100% of the cases I saw of someone trying to Zoom his way through player development the end result was a completely frazzled and disastrous part of a bad defense.

College football feels like it’s over/umgoblue11:

College football always felt different to me.

Maybe it was my youth, perhaps a bit of naivety. I just vividly remember watching Desmond and Grbac and thinking how Michigan was the apex of the sporting world.

When you go to a fall game in Ann Arbor, the entire town swells with pride. Every Saturday feels like a world’s fair. No matter if we welcome Western Michigan or Wisconsin to town. You’re supporting local people, not some conglomerate.

You walk into a Jerry World or FedEx Field situated in the middle of nowheresville in a concrete parking lot that takes forever to get into and you can’t help but feel like you’re a character in the Sims or Roller Coaster tycoon— a small pawn in a game where some imaginary person is pulling levers to extract dollars from you as rapidly as possible so they can swim in an even larger Scrooge McDuck like pool. They are soulless purgatories who only exist to make one family as rich as possible.

SMOKING HOT TAKES

Several of our readers earned the right (via the HTTV Kickstarter) to share their smokin hot takes about the season. Consider this the zeitgeist of the fanbase, in the order received.

Chris Gordon: Only the penitent man shall pass. So let's run it up the middle!

Football is religion.

Craig: College football is dead! Long live college football!

This is how it’s always been.

Mitchell Tvorik: 1) Add the University of Toronto to the B1G. 2) ???? 3) Profit

I see the benefit of moving to Canada but how long do we hold out there before the SEC figures out how to cross a lake?

Andrew Sensoli: SCOTT FROST (OR HIS MOTHER) WILL GET INTO A PHYSICAL ALTERCATION WITH A PLAYER / REF / COACH / UNIVERSITY OFFICIAL THIS YEAR

He wrote this before it happened. Credit to Sensoli for writing in the spirit of the RAW takes.

mgoDAB: The truth (that Michigan is a basketball school) will set you free, but hey I'm only 26 years old. If I live to be 80 and Michigan maintains on average a 5% chance to win The Game, I should expect to see 2.7 more wins against Ohio State in my lifetime--I'll stick around for that sweet bliss.

If you’re already mentally healthy enough to be a Michigan basketball fan, I’m taking the over on you living to 80, but if by some chance Michigan wins THE GAME the kid whose dynasty we live in will just reset it.

Steve Nair: I don't think Michigan will win another NCAA championship before the game ceases to exist as we know it. I do think that, with all the conference realignments, the team will play in future Rose Bowl games that are reminiscent of the glory days.

This man lacks sufficient faith in the NCAA’s ability to keep the game existing as we know it. It’s already a century past its sell-by date, why not another?

 

Karl Haviland: Harbaugh wins coach of the year!

You realize Michigan could go undefeated and the other coaches and media would still pick some Big Ten West team that won 7 games right?

Michael Hacker: The 2020 season broke me. 3,000+ days since we beat Ohio. No hope in sight. I’m sorry, Lloyd, I take it all back. It could be worse, I suppose. We could be Tennessee or Nebraska alums.

It can always be worse.

Scott Childers: THE “COACHING SEARCH 2021” TAG WILL DEBUT ON OCTOBER 25.

It’s worse.

John Schultz: Main downtown should be closed to cars every day, forever, and "Who is LeVar Burton?" is the correct response.

There’s something alive in here.

David Glasser: For 11 months each year I remind myself that sports hurt.  Each September I still think this year might be different.

It’s your imagination.

Trevor Faeth: JJ McCarthy completes one 360-No-Scope bomb down the field against Sparty to #Disrepkt the entire fanbase.

…then downs a gallon of Muscle Milk.

Elise Griffiths: Teams in areas where they did not take the pandemic seriously had an advantage last year because they had less to think about. I think that will continue to hold true this fall, albeit not as strongly.

That’s SPICY but then just imagine Illinois could have done to Nebraska if they weren’t quarantining when the Huskers were getting in extra practices.

Jonathan Gaines: Cade McNamara will be a first round draft pick and will replace Tom Brady in Tampa when TB12 retires.

Correction: TB10.

Matthew Duane: Barring injury, Cade McNamara will be the starting QB for the entire year.

“Our starting quarterback will be the starting quarterback” being a hot take is a depressing summary of Michigan football since Henne.

David Hendershot: Congratulations to Carlos on his future Wolverine. Move those chains! Move those chains! Move! Those! Chains!

In 2021, yelling get a first down is a hot take.

[J. Edmunds (who kickstartered via an Apple ID so I can’t reach you), B. VanHulle, K. England, and D. Callahan: You didn’t submit a take, but if you email me or I see it in the comments or DMs I’ll add it.]

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FINAL THOUGHT: MENTAL HEALTH MATTERS

Speaking of mindfulness, a quick reminder that our fan hyperboles are just that. Your life won't actually be any different on Sunday. Your blood is the same color as everyone else’s. The stakes are actually low, and twenty-year-olds on scholarship don’t really *HAVE* to do very much of anything. We really do make all of that up to justify to the unaffected why we’re in such a mood, so the civilians around us won’t be blindsided as we explain how the proper application of the targeting rule is connected to why it’s not a good time to interrupt whatever we’re doing to not think about it.

We also get trolled for not surrendering to the darkness enough. The SEC’s “It just means more” commercials chastise the rest of America for not ruining our economies, for not corrupting our legislatures, and for daring to offer an education as well as a degree, as if those weren’t the very reasons people still choose to live and play here. Kirk Herbstreit recently told the stoolies we have “too many things going on” to let The Streak damage our mental health as much as it should. True, these are self-owns, phrased to cast turning the NCAA into a grift machine and building a fan culture around hate as heroic. But more than that they’re enemy invitations to a headspace where you’re both miserable, and miserable to play for. Also they’re dead wrong.

You—not those of us who make a living by extracting money from your fandom, and certainly not those who tribally hate you—get to control how you interact with your team. When you’re going in #60 out of 62 Power 5 fanbases in the Hope-o-Meter, taking steps to clear your eyes, fill your heart, and keep your reactions positive is just the fan equivalent of watching tape. Telling yourself it doesn’t really matter is stating a fact, but telling yourself not to let it bother you is probably futile.

If you’ve made it this far, you’re a Michigan fan. The feelings are real, and you’re not alone. The path you take towards an uncertain future is up to you, as is how you traverse it. One way you might go has been taken 141 times, hit a Big Ten championship 48 times, found a win over Ohio State 58 times, and we somehow figured out the rest together. It goes through that tunnel, and under that banner. Come, join your teammates, touch it, and let’s football again.

image

[Bryan Fuller]

[Nothing but positive comments after the jump]

Comments

Phinaeus Gage

September 3rd, 2021 at 10:55 AM ^

My parents took me to my first game at 6 years old, a 52-0 drubbing of Duke in 1978. I was hooked. This was the greatest team at the greatest university in the world. 

The image of the teams warming up while standing at the top of the stairs in the north end zone is burned into my mind forever. 

Every year now, as a (semi) responsible adult, I try to care less, be more human on fall Saturdays. Every year I fail. I have now accepted my fandom, blamed my parents for it, and passed it on to my children. 
 

Hard times will make the Glory that much sweeter. 
 

Thank you, Seth. 
 

Go Blue!!

LabattsBleu

September 3rd, 2021 at 11:05 AM ^

Feels like an eternity since we've watched a game that felt like a game...

There's going to be good and bad tomorrow, but trying to focus on the good things and not dwell on the bad things and just enjoy watch the team play football again

mgoDAB

September 3rd, 2021 at 11:09 AM ^

So silly of me to forget we're living in some Ohio State kid's NCAA 14 dynasty on xbox.

But the worse alternative here is that he finally gets bored with the game, and then this hellish simulation ceases to exist.

So fucking bring it on, kid. Go Blue. 

M-Dog

September 3rd, 2021 at 11:25 AM ^

I'm positive we can play better defense and offense than Minnesota.  If it is 14 points better than them when we play Ohio State remains to be seen.

WampaStompa

September 3rd, 2021 at 11:30 AM ^

Seth, you had some huge shoes to fill this summer and I'm blown away by how good of a job you have done. Excellent work as always, and thank you. 

I loved that ending. The writeup of course, but seeing that video of the students at the rally really hit me hard and lit a fire inside of me. I ache to be in Ann Arbor again, and no matter how this season goes, I will always love this team and the school and will always be back for more. 

Forever Go Blue. 

BlueRose

September 3rd, 2021 at 11:30 AM ^

Thank you Seth!  Even Brian couldn’t have wrote a better piece.  My first experience with Michigan football was listening to Ohio St destroy Michigan in the 1968 version of The Game as my dad buzz cut my hair.  I didn’t like what I was hearing but because I was only 8 years old it only made me a bit irritated because my dad was irritated.  My dad took me and my two brothers to the 1969 version of The Game — a truly defining moment in my life and cemented my dedication to Michigan and Michigan football.  I had a hell of a run getting to root for my team for the next 40 years without a losing season.  Then came the losses.  And more losses.  And more losses.  But I am a true fan.  I always root for my team through thick and thin.  Michigan will always be Michigan and I will always look forward to the football season. And I will always hope for another big ten championship.  Thank you again for everything you have done.  Stay true and GO BLUE!

k.o.k.Law

September 3rd, 2021 at 11:37 AM ^

Tomorrow I meet a friend I first met at on our 4th floor dorm room, Wenley House, West Quad, as freshmen in September 1972, to drive to the game.

We tailgate at the Wolverine Little House (see Angelique’s 100 Things Every Michigan Fan Should Do) next to the MGoPatio.

Before the game, I will see our RA, and my subsequent housemate.

He made movies in Hollywood – Cider House Rules, Chocolat, I Walk The Line being the best known.

Stopping here after dropping his daughter off for her freshman year at Wisconsin.

After buying up season tickets so my dad could see the 1973 Ohio state game, I found out you could make money selling the tickets to those other games.

The success of the football team helped me work my way through undergrad and Wayne State Law school.

Once inside the stadium, I will leave a bottle of Woodford Reserve for Bruce Madej, for whom I worked in 1981 and subsequent baseball playoff tournaments.

Proud to say I am the lowest paid employee in the history of the UM Athletic  Department; receiving only a parking pass and admission to the games.

Best job I ever had.

Second best was calling some baseball and hockey games for WCBN.

An Ann Arbor fan interviewed decades ago before a game said that he walks down State Street and turns onto Hoover and he is 18 again.

I am privileged to shout my lungs out for the Maize and Blue.

I am much blessed.

We are the Leaders and Best.

And for now, for the blog, Seth is the leader and best.

Well done, and

GO BLUE!!!!!!!

1989 UM GRAD

September 3rd, 2021 at 11:49 AM ^

Thanks for this, Seth.  And for everything else you've done to keep the blog up and running this spring and summer.

This brought a few tears to my eyes. 

I think part of it is that, like many of us, the events of the past two (and, for me five) years have affected my mindset greatly. 

And, like many of us, Michigan is very special to me.  Both of my parents are grads.  My wife and I met as students in 1988. 

And our son just started his junior year.  When we moved him in to his house on Division (just a block from where the MMB practices) last week, the full band was practicing...so we got a little bit of a preview and a free concert. 

That made me tear up, too.  Listening to the familiar tunes and thinking about my son being halfway through his undergraduate years at Michigan.  Thinking about being back in Michigan Stadium.  Thinking about how my five (yes, five!) years at Michigan in the mid/late-'80's forever changed me and shaped me in to the person I am today.

My pride as a Michigan grad has nothing to do with what happens on the football field...and whether or not we beat OSU.  

So, let's get on with it and enjoy another season...win or lose.

Davymac97.

September 3rd, 2021 at 12:11 PM ^

Logged in for the first time in ages just to say thank you, Seth.  The last paragraph of the final thoughts made me feel that feeling I had been missing all offseason.

I can't quit you, Michigan Football.  GO BLUE!!!

Chris S

September 3rd, 2021 at 12:22 PM ^

Great, GREAT end to this Seth. "Nothing but positive comments after the jump."

I remember umgoblue11 saying in a diary comment about how other schools negative recruit about MIchigan's fan base all the time. We have to make a commitment not to play a part in that, and not give them anymore ammunition than they already have.

It's okay to be in the middle of a game and curse at the tv, complain to your dad watching with you, or call a friend and air your frustration. But not on a public forum!

Looking forward to a great season!

Salinger

September 3rd, 2021 at 12:26 PM ^

There will be a time for reacting to however this season plays out. On the eve of football renewed, however, I sure hope this fanbase can muster up the excitement this team needs and deserves to carry them into the season. 

Today, it is just Go Blue.

Let's fucking do this thing.

 

DonAZ

September 3rd, 2021 at 2:46 PM ^

Brandstatter is not a good play-by-play man.  Bless his heart, he's just not.  I don't know if anyone has sat him down and told him that, and suggested perhaps he should take lessons and practice the art of it.  It's not easy, I'm sure, and not anyone can do it.  But a man should know what he can do well and what he can't, and work to improve those areas that need improvement.  Sadly, I've not seen that improvement.

rob f

September 3rd, 2021 at 12:48 PM ^

Totally AWESOME way to close out a great post, Seth.

I look back at my ~55 years of Michigan Football fandom and I feel myself entering yet another new phase in my mid 60s and find myself at peace with it.

Looking forward to the long drive tomorrow before dawn but much more because of the folks I tailgate with, and the folks in nearby seats who I haven't seen in nearly 2 years, and my ushers Dave and Burt and Charlie who all have been there for decades in section 36. 

The game itself? "Go Blue!", but I may be sitting on my hands a little more than usual this season and beyond.  The ? no longer burns as hot.

TIMMMAAY

September 3rd, 2021 at 7:09 PM ^

Reading in reverse order here... but yeah that's just about exactly how I'm feeling as well. The fire just isn't there like it used to be, and it isn't just the football team. Even hoops, with Juwan taking things further in the right direction, and quickly, I'm just not as into it as I was even two years ago. I hate that, but can't seem to change it. We'll see I guess. 

Hope you all have a good day tomorrow, and the team impresses. 

Go Blue. 

Sparty Doesn't Know

September 3rd, 2021 at 2:08 PM ^

I started to lurk a little bit recently after leaving this place for awhile over the politics. The final thought was well said, Seth, and exactly where I am at this point.  I haven't been this excited for a season to get going in a long while.  Even though we are staring down a very potential shit show, it's our shit show.

I can't imagine a world where I don't get to see 100,000 screaming fans on tv as my 2 daughters and I don our number 1 jerseys and get psyched.  We had to endure that unthinkable scenario last year, and it won't just be us fans that are pumped up to see The Big House as it is supposed to be on Saturday.  The players are going to respond, this will be a good year.  Or it won't.  Either way, I am happy and love this passion we all share and look forward to a positive, potentially even bowl-eligible season, with all you assholes.

Go Blue!  Fuck Ohio.

imafreak1

September 3rd, 2021 at 2:12 PM ^

Why are the students singing Mr. Brightside?

It is a catchy, if decade plus old, pop song... Does it capture collective emo outlook of the student section these days or am I missing something? Is this the new Sweet Caroline, Take on Me, sing along song sweeping stadiums these days?

DonAZ

September 3rd, 2021 at 2:12 PM ^

It was 47 years ago that I went to my first Michigan football game.  My sister was in her sophomore year at Michigan, and she gave me her ticket to the Navy game on September 28.  I was not yet 15 years old. 

To this day I still remember following the marching band as it made its way to the stadium.  I remember walking through the gates and approaching the stadium thinking it didn't look that impressive in person.  And then I walked through the portal and the massive stadium opened before me, and my breath was literally taken from me.  The place was huge.  I was in love.

Michigan won that game 52-0.  I could not have had a better time.

The next year my sister gave me her entire season ticket book.  I went to every game in 1975, and stayed to the end regardless of weather.  I still recall the Northwestern game, which was miserably rainy and cold.  Because the weather was so bad a lot of the people left after halftime, so I moved over to the 50 yard line and watched Michigan win 69-0, with the great Harlan Huckleby coming off the bench to run for 157 yards and two touchdowns ... in the rain and cold and glorious Michigan Stadium.

Michigan finished 8-2-2 that year.  I didn't care.  It was Michigan football.

rob f

September 3rd, 2021 at 4:17 PM ^

Wow!

My very first Michigan game was that same exact game. I was a freshman at WMU, I and my new dorm neighbor who I had only known for a month hitchhiked on Friday to his folks house in Redford and then rode the next morning with his dad to Ann Arbor for that Navy game, tailgating directly across the street from Michigan Stadium at a house on the corner of Main and Stadium across from the high school.

Then in '75 I went to two games (the tie with Baylor and the Northwestern game you described), two more in '76, and finally started getting season tickets in '77---have had them ever since. 

And to this day I still never leave early. I even hung around Ann Arbor in 2014 at a local restaurant/pub with my football buddies and went back in for the final minutes of the Utah debacle, well over 2 hours after a line of thunderstorms rolled in and dumped rain for a while. Was actually headed to the freeway to go home when the announcement was made that the game would resume.

 

BuckeyeChuck

September 3rd, 2021 at 2:29 PM ^

Karl Haviland: Harbaugh wins coach of the year!

You realize Michigan could go undefeated and the other coaches and media would still pick some Big Ten West team that won 7 games right?

True.

Even worse, OSU did not have a B1G coach of the year since 1979, until Day won by the media 2019. Cooper never won it. Tressel never won it (despite being arguably the B1G coach of the decade). Meyer never won it (despite being arguably the B1G coach of the decade).

A Michigan coach won it 5 times in between Bruce & Day.