[Patrick Barron]

Unverified Voracity Looks Like Tennessee Cannoli Comment Count

Brian October 13th, 2020 at 1:05 PM

Transfers away. College football looks set to implement the one-time transfer idea Jim Harbaugh started pushing last year:

The Division I Council is expected to vote next week to introduce the one-time transfer exception proposal into the legislative cycle, two sources told The Athletic. A formal vote by NCAA membership could take place as early as January at the NCAA’s annual convention. If adopted, the rule would take effect for the 2021-22 academic year. That means if an FBS football player decides to transfer following the 2020 season and has eligibility remaining, he would be eligible to play at his new destination next fall.

This exception already exists for all sports except football, basketball, and men's hockey. The legislation does have a restriction that seems fair enough to me:

…the legislation includes a May 1 notification date for fall and winter sports and a July 1 notification date for spring sports. Athletes who miss those deadlines would need waivers to receive immediate eligibility.

That would prevent guys leaving fall camp for immediate eligibility elsewhere. This would prevent a carousel effect where someone leaves or gets hurt at one school, which poaches a player, creating an opening for another poaching, etc.

[After THE JUMP: the best Patriots sixth-rounder out of Michigan ever]

Nicole Auerbach points out that there is almost a de facto one-time exception:

According to information provided by the NCAA through Oct. 5, 88 percent of the immediate-eligibility waivers submitted for men’s basketball players and football players for the 2020-21 academic year were approved (320 out of 363). In 2019-20, 69 percent of such waivers were approved (374 out of 539).

If 88% of your waivers are approved you don't have a waiver system, you are selectively blocking 43 guys from playing for untenable reasons.

Related: hopefully this means Chaundee Brown will be eligible. Speaking of:

A projected lineup. Via Franz:

If Brown is eligible that might bump Wagner down to the 2. A starting lineup fielding Davis and Smith is likely to be rough on defense. It's probably for the best that Michigan decided against the Empire Classic.

A dollar says Michigan ends up hosting its own "MTE", because the NCAA is still requiring them if you're going to get your 27 games in. This is insane. The workaround seems to be putting together an event on your campus. Howard broached the possibility in a presser about a week ago:

…we’re trying to do whatever’s best to make sure we choose whatever — if we play an M.T.E. (multi-team event) or host our own M.T.E. that the health and safety is No. 1.

I'd expect Michigan to start the season with an MTE at Crisler against nearby teams. Hopefully a couple of them will be mid- or high-majors.

Onwenu making it work. One of last year's weirdest internet controversies was "is Mike Onwenu good?" Seems like he's good. He's on The Athletic's all-rookie team:

Michael Onwenu, New England Patriots (6th round, No. 182 overall)

As the Patriots have struggled with injuries on the offensive line, Onwenu has not only filled in, but he has established himself as one of New England’s five-best blockers on the roster. The Michigan product has been one of the pleasant surprises from this rookie class as he has already out-played what almost everyone thought of him from Ann Arbor.

Despite playing almost exclusively at right guard in college, Onwenu has shown his versatility in the Patriots’ complicated system, seeing action at both guard spots as well as tackle. While he needs to improve his timing and technique, he has relied on his strengths, using his natural balance and body power to win the point-of-attack.

I've been team Onwenu but not even I would have suggested Onwenu could survive as an NFL tackle.

Meanwhile, PFF has him as the top rookie in the league. This is a frankly incredible grade:

For context, last year's midseason PFF All Pro team had guards grading out in the mid-to-high 80s. They're grading him as the best guard in the NFL.

A time. Michigan has a gametime for their opener:

Night games are going to much less relevant this year what with no fans in the stands.

Few takers for the NCAA's version of NIL. Pat Forde has a rundown of the current state of name and image legislation, which isn't perfect but sounds like a significant step forward nonetheless:

As expected, the legislation grants athletes the right to use their name, image and likeness (NIL) to:

• Promote private lessons and business activities and operate their own camps and clinics, as long as they do not use school marks.

• Profit from endorsing products through commercials and other ventures, as long as they do not use any school marks or reveal the school in which they attend. They are only allowed to refer to “their involvement in intercollegiate athletics generally,” according to documents.

• Be compensated for autograph sessions, as long as they do not occur during an institution event or competition and no school marks or apparel is used during the sale of the material.

• Solicit funds through crowdfunding, such as GoFundMe, for non-profit or charities, catastrophic events, family hardships and educational experiences, such as internships.

The proposal does prohibit athletes from endorsing "sports wagering and banned substances" and have a carve out for "activities that conflict with existing institutional sponsorship arrangements or other school "values." This is a little hypocritical and also a massive reduction in the level of hypocrisy.

Meanwhile, the NCAA's attempt to put their thumb on the scale has found few takers other than Marco Rubio. It says something that the country can't agree whether a virus does virus things but can agree that the NCAA can get bent:

Seeking help from Congress, the NCAA’s attempt has somewhat backfired. It has opened itself up to deep inquiries from lawmakers, many of them not fans of the organization. Congressional members are seeking more reform within the association beyond NIL, something raised in the latest and third NIL hearing on Capitol Hill on June 22. In fact, Democratic lawmakers are crafting legislation that they refer to as an “athlete’s bill of rights,” which could potentially fold into an NIL bill.

The only bipartisan thing left is dunking on the NCAA.

The tube. Tennessee head coach Jeremy Pruitt wandered onto the field last weekend looking like this:

https___bucketeer-e05bbc84-baa3-437e-9518-adb32be77984.s3.amazonaws.com_public_images_85847480-4971-4b56-86f4-9e8e470bd4f0_1456x979

Your guess is as good as mine. Maybe he thinks COVID goes in your earholes.

Spencer Hall was alerted to the situation:

Jeremy Pruitt looks like a caterpillar about to tuck into a checkerboard cocoon. When he comes out, he’ll be a beautiful pontoon boat. This is the dream of all people who live in Tennessee for more than three weeks, and we should be proud he’s about to make it happen.

Jeremy Pruitt looks like the loneliest dude at Burning Man. Jeremy Pruitt looks like an undercover cop pulling up to a snowboarding halfpipe asking where he can get some “chronic.” Jeremy Pruitt looks like he’s about to rob the Mapco in honor of General Neyland.

Stay tuned to see what the the God Emperor of Moonshine wears next week. Maybe it'll cover one of the relevant orifices.

Put him in charge of finding D-III uptransfers. John Beilein has been hanging out at his Ann Arbor home doing John Beilein things:

His excitement is measurable as he talks about getting to play tennis for the first time in seventeen years, gleefully adding that his golf game has improved like you wouldn’t believe. He talks about getting to spend time with his grandkids, his smile practically audible through the phone.

I'd imagine he's retired as a full-time coach for good if he isn't already Indiana's head coach. He is talking about chipping in where he can:

“I just have a lot of respect for Juwan and the team,” Beilein said. “I don’t want to do anything that would be a distraction.”

But that doesn’t mean Beilein doesn’t care about Michigan basketball anymore. COVID-19 restrictions have prevented him from attending any practices with the team as of yet, but provided he’s not stepping on anybody’s toes, Beilein is more than ready to get back to work in Crisler Center.

“If and when — I’m going to do it whenever I can possibly do it,” Beilein said.

Grad assistant John Beilein. LFG.

Hockey rules changes. Via @RecoveringOps:

  • Centers will no longer get booted from the faceoff circle. Two infractions on the same faceoff will be a penalty.
  • There are "points of emphasis" focused on embellishment, contact to the head, and "slashing, pinning, and restraining along the boards." Usually these points of emphasis result in an initial surge in related penalties that changes player behavior, and then there's a gradual slide back. Sometimes this takes a few seasons. Sometimes the emphasis is gone by playoff time.
  • Overtime is now three-on-three(!). This is probably good for Michigan because they're going to have the world's most terrifying three-on-three units. It is nonetheless pretty dumb to play 60 minutes of real hockey and then have pairwise wins and losses decided by Gus Macker hockey. Ties are fine.
  • The Mike Legg goal is explicitly legal. Doing a 360 on a penalty shot is explicitly illegal.
  • The attacking team can choose the faceoff dot on an offensive zone faceoff.
  • Officials have been instructed to cut down on the marathon explanation sessions after scrums, video replay, and other incidents.

If college hockey is concerned about a blizzard of ties I'd prefer ten minutes of 4-on-4 to the lottery that is 3-on-3. At least this change gets rid of the incredibly elongated Big Ten overtime procedure last year, which was five minutes of 5-v-5 followed by five minutes of 3-v-3 followed by a shootout. The latter two items counted only for one point in the conference standings!  They had literally no impact on your tournament fate! 

Pairwise is going to be broken. The Big Ten announced its hockey schedule, which is the usual 24-game conference home-and-home. They also announced that every Big Ten team gets four home games against Arizona State.

This means that unless Arizona State has other games this season—it appears they do not—there will be absolutely no interconference games via which to compare the Big Ten to other conferences. That will render the Pairwise system used to select and seed the NCAA tournament useless. Going to have to figure something out.

Also: the Big Ten tournament is going to be a single-site single-elimination tournament. Since there won't be fans at home games that's a sensible way to get the tournament in that will give you some more wiggle room in the event of postponements.

Etc.: The wrestler without wrestling moves

Comments

1989 UM GRAD

October 13th, 2020 at 1:18 PM ^

I was not on board with those folks who were calling for Coach Howard to bring in Beilein as an assistant coach.

But, as a grad assistant?!?  I agree - let's do it!

njvictor

October 13th, 2020 at 1:23 PM ^

But that doesn’t mean Beilein doesn’t care about Michigan basketball anymore. COVID-19 restrictions have prevented him from attending any practices with the team as of yet, but provided he’s not stepping on anybody’s toes, Beilein is more than ready to get back to work in Crisler Center.

“If and when — I’m going to do it whenever I can possibly do it,” Beilein said.

*heavy breathing intensifies*

TrueBlue2003

October 13th, 2020 at 1:32 PM ^

Expected beginning of season starting basketball lineup.  I'd be shocked if Johns didn't supplant Davis fairly early in the season (or come off the bench early in games and end up playing starter min anyway).

Still surprised that DeJulius and Castleton left when starting roles were there for the taking (I mean, all they'd have to beat out is an Ivy transfer and Austin Davis!!), but this should be a solid team.  Franz and Livers with some glue guys / defenders around them.  Shot creation will be a bit of question mark.  Franz will need some help from Smith in that dept.

AC1997

October 13th, 2020 at 1:48 PM ^

I wasn't totally shocked by DDJ leaving because he struggled to establish a consistent role under both coaches.  Maybe he realized that he wasn't a lock to start or even play much more than last year.  I still thought he'd give it a shot....but not shocked.

As for Castleton, I guess it wasn't a good sign when he struggled last year and barely played.  I had hoped he'd look at the depth chart and having Juwan as a coach and realize that he's at worst in line for solid rotational minutes.  

If our extra scholarship could go to any of the three transfers this year, Castleton would be the one I'd want just looking at the depth chart.  I think Bajema's ceiling is highest, but his role is most redundant on this team.

TrueBlue2003

October 14th, 2020 at 1:27 AM ^

He was playing behind Zavier Simpson the past two seasons.  Simpson is probably a top five PG in program history (only definitively behind Burke and Rose). He wasn't going to give up many minutes in his Jr and Sr years so there was almost nothing DDJ could have done to earn a consistent role since he's not a shooting guard defensively.  The best he could have done was wait his turn and that would have been the case with any coach.

How in the world would he not have been in line to start or play big minutes? He already was getting more than half the teams minutes and Simpson was graduating with Michigan literally having no one else.  His departure was totally shocking.

Castleton was a bit less surprising since he was behind a guy last year that was returning in Davis.  Still surprised he wouldn't think he could beat out Davis but my guess is that he might have been worried that Dickinson might pass him eventually.  He had someone ahead of him and potentially coming from behind him.  DDJ didn't have either of those things.  The roster was wide open for him.

AC1997

October 13th, 2020 at 1:43 PM ^

I assume there's zero rules against Beilein being an analyst.  I know it happens more in football, but coaches bring in ex-coaches all the time to do behind the scenes analyst work without necessarily doing any actual coaching.  

As for the Livers quote, I will once again disagree with the MGoBlog staff on Mike Smith.  I think he starts game #1 and is the "primary" point guard all season whether Brown gets a waiver or not.  I think Eli will play plenty of PG, but Smith plays close to 25 minutes per game.  Brown is the perfect 6th man for this team because you can take anyone 1-4 off the floor and bring on Brown - shifting guys around (and he can still play 25-30mpg in that role).  

If I'm the opposing coach when Eli is at PG and Franz is at SG?  I'm telling my team to press & trap and I am going to blitz all ball screens.  Eli and Franz will have to show they have improved their handles.  I am not sure how many minutes Eli has ever played without another ball handler on the court (Simpson, DDJ, Poole, Rahk) and as much as I love Franz and Brown....they aren't the same type of ball handler.

Seth

October 13th, 2020 at 1:46 PM ^

COVID: Mwuahahahaha. Your silly sports postseasons are all ruined! If you try to get together in a populated area with fans I'm going to spread all over!!!

[College Hockey Playoff enters the room]

COVID: Who is this?

lsjtre

October 13th, 2020 at 1:55 PM ^

They forgot the Jeremy Pruitt comp to an old Polish woman (akin to my great-grandmother) in his babushka primed to go smack a ruffian or two from Georgia (country or state) with his coin-heavy purse 

FanNamedOzzy

October 13th, 2020 at 2:22 PM ^

I have no idea how Michigan is going to sort out their lowerweights with the abundance of talent they have. Ragusin came in and beat NCAA champion Darian Cruz and All-American Sean Russell in back-to-back boughts...as a true freshman!!

125: Medley / McHenry / Ragusin

133: Micic

141: Silva

That's simply an insane battle for the 125lb spot.

Kilgore Trout

October 13th, 2020 at 2:13 PM ^

Thinking geographically, how about an MTE with Michigan, Michigan State, EMU, Oakland, Detroit, Toledo, Bowling Green. Then maybe see if Butler, Cincinnati, ND, or Pitt would come? Obviously set it up so UM and MSU don't play each other. 

lhglrkwg

October 13th, 2020 at 2:57 PM ^

If you want to get to 8 teams, I'd hope you can lure in 3-5 'P5' type teams and maybe lure some of the stronger mid majors in region too. I would think a lot of schools are open to a lot of different possibilities for this year and a bus trip to Ann Arbor is possibly more tenable in a budget-crunch year than say flying to a "MTE" somewhere else

Kilgore Trout

October 13th, 2020 at 3:03 PM ^

Agree. I was struggling to think about P5 level teams who would consider driving in but aren't B1G teams. Brendan Quinn had an interesting podcast with Kevin Pagua from MSU about all of the struggles with scheduling going on now in basketball. Keeping costs reasonable definitely seems to be a factor for a lot of these teams. 

MGoBender

October 13th, 2020 at 8:25 PM ^

Oakland, EMU, WVU, CMU, UDM you could all get to come to Crisler. Probably Bowling Green and maybe Toledo. No risk, high reward situation.

However, I'd think the other bigger fish - I'd love Dayton - would require a return trip in the future? At least that's my 'normal times' thought... they have a lower ceiling of benefit to go to Crisler for an away game. However, maybe they are more game for an away game that is without fans. 

M

Blue Vet

October 13th, 2020 at 2:43 PM ^

In case you hadn't ever heard, Beilein has never been an assistant. Unfortunately that leaves a hole in his resume. He could fill that whole, as Brian points out, by being a Grad Assistant.

lhglrkwg

October 13th, 2020 at 2:55 PM ^

Don't know what college hockey is gonna do with a broken pairwise. Go to a committee approach like the CFP for a year? People are going to cry foul no matter what

DogTown

October 13th, 2020 at 3:25 PM ^

Jeremy Pruitt looks like an undercover cop pulling up to a snowboarding halfpipe asking where he can get some “chronic.” Literally laughed out loud at my desk.

Carpetbagger

October 13th, 2020 at 3:25 PM ^

I can only think Pruitt was complying with the letter of the law on masks without complying with the spirit. Nevertheless, my wife, a sometimes Tennessee fan who got me to promise to watch them when Michigan was waffling, was making fun of him all game long.

Quite amusing, as she's a very funny person. She's also quite irritated I now have a man-crush on Georgia's defense.

thedayiscoming

October 13th, 2020 at 3:32 PM ^

I would argue that covid has entered the mind through the eyes and ears and has destroyed a lot of people's ability to critically think.  Maybe coach Pruitt is on to something?

93Grad

October 13th, 2020 at 3:38 PM ^

I think Brown's best role on this team is the 6th man who will play 25-30 minutes a night anywhere from 2-4.   Playing Franz at the 2 for extended minutes still worries me too much.  

Tim

October 13th, 2020 at 3:42 PM ^

PFF has Onwenu as the second-best guard in the NFL. They have the Browns' Wyatt Teller at 94.4 (on about half-again as many snaps as Onwenu has played).

MGoStrength

October 13th, 2020 at 8:09 PM ^

Grad assistant John Beilein. LFG.

That's pretty effin cool.  When a 67 millionaire that doesn't need to work loves UM that much that he's willing to help out while potentially not even getting paid, all the while not trying to step on the guy's toes whom he's helping because he used to do his job, that's pretty cool.

AnthonyThomas

October 14th, 2020 at 12:55 AM ^

I was listening to a PFF podcast a week or so ago and they had heard from someone that Onwenu was playing at around 400 lbs(!!!) last year. He definitely looks slimmer and it shows. He has always been a freak.

Not only was he a sixth round pick, but he was the third Michigan interior OL taken in the draft. Crazy.

schreibee

October 14th, 2020 at 2:18 PM ^

Maybe because he weighed 400lbs?!

How did Hoodie get him to take his weight seriously in 4 months when the Michigan staff couldn't do it in 4 years?

To me, that gives credence to our preferred narrative that M doesn't pay players. But think of the possibilities if Onwenu had NIL rights - he coulda had all kinds of weight loss/fitness endorsements!