This Week's Obsession: Can Hoke Save Himself? Comment Count

Seth

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What about this do you think can be saved? [Glanzman]

Ace: There's a very good chance this is moot after a beatdown this weekend, so it's now or never for this question. If you ran the athletic department, is there anything Brady Hoke could do the rest of this season that would convince you to keep him around for another year? If so, what would he have to accomplish over the rest of the year?

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BiSB: There is absolutely room for Brady Hoke to save his job. And it absolutely won't happen.

People get WAY too caught up in wins and losses. Devin Funchess was right: wins are just a statistic. Any time a coach is on the "hot seat," the offseason features constant and breathless blathering about "how many wins Coach X needs to keep his job," as if win totals by themselves tell us everything. Hoke's problem isn't that Michigan is 3-4. The problem isn't that Michigan has lost 10 of its last 15. The problem is that Michigan has been bad at football. The records are merely a symptom of being bad at football. You look at the guy trailing by 10 meters at the halfway point of a 100 meter dash, you don't say to yourself "he's going to lose because he has too much ground to make up." You say "he's going to lose because he isn't as fast as the other guys."

And that is why Brady Hoke will not keep his job. The football team he has assembled is not good, and has shown no signs of improvement over the last four years. Some people got excited last week because "a win is a win," and ignored the fact that Michigan displayed plenty of the same crippling weaknesses that have led it here. At some point, as they say, "you are who you are." The flaws with this team are not small, technical issues. They have deep, fundamental, systematic problems. They can't block. They can't get open. They flat-out can't play the coverage scheme they have been trying to play. They can't... uh... score points. Their special teams, as a whole, are bad. Michigan is just bad.

You don't throw away a coach who is moving in the right direction because he took momentary detour into Derpville. If Hoke can turn this team into the kind of team that can beat Michigan State and Ohio State and (sigh) Maryland, then sure, why not keep him. But if he could do that, we probably would have seen evidence of it by now.

[After the jump: votes of confidence?]

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Brian: There's nothing Hoke could do, because I wouldn't give him the opportunity to save his job with an OSU win.

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It would take a statue-worthy coaching job to turn this team around. [Fuller]

I mean, okay, yes, in the event that Michigan makes an unprecedented in-season turnaround, beats Michigan State without an all-time sixty-minute Sparty No facilitating it, rips through Maryland and Indiana and Northwestern and enters OSU 7-4 then he would be coaching for his job.

In a world where previous events can be used to project into the future—which I still think is the case despite the Blake Countess counterpoint—there is no scenario where he gets to the OSU game better than 6-5, and at that point I'm giving him the Earle Bruce and moving on. Unless the next few weeks radically reshape the way this team plays the narrative of his four year tenure at Michigan is luck and Denard saving his ass until he could screw it all up, and I'm not putting Michigan in a spot where an all-time luck explosion forces me to retain a guy who is in so far over his head that he needs a periscope to see hell.

Hoke's recruiting is permanently damaged after the Morris thing; you can't extend him; you can't let him coach a lame-duck season; scenarios in which retaining him is even vaguely spinnable as plausible are 1% things now. He gone.

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Seth: Speculating whether Hoke can upset a rival on the march to the inevitable is like asking what if Dave Brandon's contempt for fans hadn't made a disaster out of the concussion incident, or if Romeo and Juliet would have made a nice couple if their families weren't trying to kill each other. They are all symptoms of THE inherent flaw. Barring a string of extraordinarily fortuitous bounces, Brady isn't going to defeat Mark's or Urban's football teams, because those guys are that much better at building and coaching football teams.

(football gods PLEASE bring a string of extraordinarily fortuitous bounces anyway.)

In case 31-0 to Notre Dame, Wanking in the Rain, Playing Shane, and Mattison's Bad Game left any reasonable doubt, consider the new judge.

jehegbdc

I've yet to see it evidenced, but those who talk hot seats like to mention that a new AD is death to a coach on the fence. We don't have to look very far for examples: Brandon got rid of Rodriguez after about 350 days. Ellerbe lasted exactly a year after Martin took over. Roberson accepted Moeller's resignation a few months after assuming office. Goss fired Steve Fisher at the barest whiff of implication in the Martin scandal. Frieder couldn't even leave to take the ASU job without Bo canning him first. And Canham didn't fire Bump in 1968, but he did go down to his office to say "Do you really wanna do this still?" (Strack retired into the athletic department the same year, but certainly of his own volition).

In counter-examples, Bo Pelini survived a new boss after last year, though his hot seat was always overblown. Kyle Flood still has a job (and GOT EXTENDED!) despite not being a Herman hire, but all Rutgers precedent should be considered inadmissible on grounds that we'd rather keep Dave than be Rutgers.

I am wary that the things we see in our little bloggersphere are not the things people in charge see. What I see: in four years with the guy, Hoke's most innovative use of Devin Gardner was to leave him in during blowouts to create the appearance that Michigan wasn't giving up on games they'd given up on. Hoke was granted that fourth-year-with-a-new-coordinator that Rodriguez was begging for, and then the whole team got worse. This year's Minnesota game was the 2010 Penn State moment of the Hoke regime, except instead of launching a parade of tight ends at Ray Vinopal's head, the panic move was to let irresponsible Minnesota DEs run at Shane Morris's. These are all pretty specific things that not everybody noticed or talked about. Most people talk about how they can't run the ball or "do anything right."

But then most people want him gone. Hoke's biggest supporters aren't on the team; they're the guys who saw him coach DL in the late 1990s and early 'aughts, when Michigan's roster actually was experienced and talented enough to win by doing hard things better than their opponents could do easier things. That faction reached the zenith of its influence when Michigan hired Hoke; since then it hasn't grown its ranks or furthered its cause. You'll note that Hagerup's 'When the fall is all that is, it matters' letter to his teammates said nothing about their coaches. The Hoke people got their wish and it didn't work out for exactly the reasons the rest of us feared it wouldn't. Hearing the States' evidence now is just asking for more pain.

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Can you spot all the things wrong with this picture? [Fuller]

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Adam: I'm still giving Hoke the opportunity to coach for his job. The problem for him is that seeing what I would need to for him to be around next fall is about as likely as Michigan getting a defensive touchdown with three seconds left in the first half against Penn State. In other words, things aren't looking very good.

At this point winning is necessary but not sufficient. Michigan has to beat at least Michigan State or Ohio State and run the table otherwise. Beyond that, though, they have to show some kind of progress in their in-game strategy. That means no more sloppy mistakes (e.g. 10 men on the field for special teams situations) and no more poor decision-making from on high (e.g. the kind of timeout management you'd expect if Chris Webber was the head coach).

I like Brady Hoke as a person. When he's not in front of the camera he drops his deer-in-the-headlights act and he's charismatic. I can see why his former players are so supportive of him, but being a nice person or a "Michigan Man" won't save him anymore. Michigan's general disorganization and game theory blunders fall on Hoke, and they can't continue. The obvious problem is that there's no evidence that would lead me to believe they won't.

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A lame duck situation only freezes that program in place while its rivals continue to build. [Fuller]

If this thing gets turned around mid-season and Michigan suddenly looks competent then I'll happily deploy the "Brady Hoke poops magic" tag in my posts that probably hasn't been used since 2011. Right now, though, it's almost certain I'll be using the "coaching changes" tag.

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Ace: Since everyone else has covered the "no realistic way in hell" aspect of this, I'll approach it from a recruiting perspective. If Michigan decided to keep Hoke on for another year, it'd be disastrous in that regard. Michigan is already hemorrhaging commits as ugly play reigns on the field and uncertainty off it.

In this 2015 class, at least, M has few enough spots that a reasonably timed coaching change should allow the program to piece together a serviceable group of incoming freshmen—and depending on the hire, potentially a very good one. Keep Hoke around, though, and it's tough to see how his staff even goes about recruiting; these prospects—as well as their families and their coaches—know the situation, and at this point few could take Hoke seriously when he says he expects to remain the coach here. That's going to make it extremely tough to retain enough pieces of the current class while finding interested players with Michigan-level talent.

If Hoke is then allowed to assemble the 2016 class, Michigan could face the type of gap in depth/talent we pointed to when his offensive line stopped functioning. Hoke has made his recruiting hay early in the cycle, for the most part, but in a hypothetical '16 class that'd be the time when he'd be considered the coach on the hottest seat in the country—not exactly an ideal recruiting environment. Then the athletic department would have to trust that Hoke would win enough games during the season to lift any uncertainty and make up for lost time on the recruiting trail. That doesn't sound like a setup for success.

Recruiting is one of the last reasons Hoke should be let go, of course, but with how far the program has fallen he's managed to take a once-unassailable strength and turn it into a potential weakness.

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Mathlete: To Ace's point, the recruiting stakes will be very high. The 2015 class is one of the smallest in available spots possible under current scholarship rules. With only 13-15 spots possible to be filled, taking a hit this year is going to have far less downside than going into 2015 with a coach on a hot seat and probably 20+ spots to fill. A start to next year with Hoke at the helm that in any way resembles the start to this year, will potentially leave the 2016 class barren. The current struggles have already slowed the start to the 2016 class.

As to what it would take on the field, to echo everyone above, it's not just wins and losses, the narrative has to change. Michigan doesn't look anywhere near the level of the top of the Big 10. What could we see that would make this team look like they deserved to be in the same conversation as OSU and MSU? There haven't been the impression that this team was potentially elite since last year's Notre Dame game.

The other piece that concerns me is that 2015 will feature a new, unproven quarterback. It's hard to look at an offense that hasn't seemed to be on the cusp of greatness and add in a raw QB and expect things to take a big step forward. 2015 will be a critical year with recruiting momentum stalled and hopes pinned on a new quarterback. Any AD that would stake his name by Brady Hoke has either seen something we haven't on the field, will see something in the coming weeks that has defied the prior 3+ years or is just seeing things.

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BiSB: So... no? I feel like we're going with "no" here.

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All: No.

Comments

bronxblue

October 22nd, 2014 at 10:25 AM ^

I'd like to think he couldn't, for the reasons BiSB laid out.  But because of the toxic nature surrounding this program right now, I don't think he could even if he ran the table going forward.  As soon as Brandon is sent packing, the new AD is going to want to install his own guy at the top.  Maybe Hoke survives a year, but this team isn't going to be demonstrably better next year, and at some point he'll lose 4-5 games such that he'll be let go with a firm handshake.

Hoke probably doesn't deserve all the scorn he's received, but he's had 4 years to make Michigan a consistent winner and he hasn't.  His story isn't as tragic as RR's, but at some point you have to move on.

mich_engineer

October 22nd, 2014 at 10:28 AM ^

I agree with all the points made in this post, but it doesn't address the major issue - what WILL happen?  I understand that reading tea leaves isn't an exact art, but just because an echo chamber of "small time" (read: not major donor/former player/VIP) fans believe that he should be gone does not mean that he will be.

 

Brian made the point yesterday that season tickets are on a knife edge - I believe that the desirable home slate next year can superficially cover that wound.  On top of that, Sam Webb (who has been touted by Brian as being the most plugged-in guy around) has been continually beating the "Hoke ain't being fired" drum, up to and including a blog entry last night.

 

In the last half-decade, there are many many things that UM SHOULD have done, or should not have done, but for some reason, took the opposite tack.  I sadly see no evidence at all that this time will be different.

991GT3

October 22nd, 2014 at 11:53 AM ^

but if DB stays so does Hoke. You can take that to the bank.

Though football is important to the Michigan brand, Schlissel prioritizes academics and rightly so. Michigan has been graduating most of the football players and hasn't had any off field scandals. Wins and losses are not that important to Schlissel. Should he decide to keep Bandon Hoke will stay especially if he makes a bowl game which is a distnct possibility.

tedheadfred

October 22nd, 2014 at 3:39 PM ^

I respectfully disagree - Michigan football is a public example of what we expect out of our entire university.  It's been that way for nearly 40 years.  It's not part of the brand, it's darn near the marketing program for the entire school.  We continue to be left adrift and we will flush that down the toilet.  At that point, we should pull a U-Chicago.

 

P.S., nice car

AnthonyThomas

October 22nd, 2014 at 6:38 PM ^

The academics Schlissel cares about are tied to research dollars and drawing reknowned academics to the school. As the university's head fundraiser, he's not going to be overly concerned with athlete graduation rates. It isn't at the top of his list of priorities.

What he does care about, though, is that athletics continue to draw positive interest and therefore dollars to the school. That will cease if Brandon and/or Hoke remain on staff.

A2Fan

October 22nd, 2014 at 10:30 AM ^

Having a Major college program run by a committee so that the head coach has the luxury of relating to the players at an individual level on Game day rather than being in charge, setting the tone, holding coaches & players alike accountable for their assignments and calling the shots is too big of a handicap to overcome, 

oHOWiHATEohioSTATE

October 22nd, 2014 at 10:35 AM ^

is after this Saturday's loss Hoke should be told publicly he can finish out the year. DB should be let go and a new AD hired next week. Then a coaching search could start by the beginning of November.

alum96

October 22nd, 2014 at 11:01 AM ^

This is an EXCELLENT point.  It has been done in the past, and at a top school - recently.  (past 5 years) I can't remember which one.    Hoke has zero legs to go recruit at this point so the one last viable reason to keep Hoke is gone now too. 

It lets Brandon do the firing (let's him put the "blood" on his hands and give a clean slate to the next AD) and then gives time between Hoke's firing and Brandon's firing as opposed to doing both at once.  Which some might find difficult for a President to do 

Without being an insider there is way too much smoke for there not to be a new AD here - and with all the smoke signals being sent those things (done behind the schemes) have started as of 3 weeks ago.  Which is also when Brandon went radio silent on twitter.  David brandon would not stopped twitter if he was coming back next year. 

AmishRule

October 22nd, 2014 at 10:41 AM ^

I really hope this quickly becomes a dead issue (not that I wish we lose this weekend).

If you're in the dark pit as we are, we should be talking how to get out of this pit, rather what got us here. Even if we we win out and crush Tulane in the New Orleans Bowl, we are not totally out of the pit and I fear we could more easily fall back to the dirty bottom versus finishing the climb out.

 

caup

October 22nd, 2014 at 10:41 AM ^

Look at those two schmucks yuckin' it up at their shitty bowl game like they haven't a care in the world, while one of the few guys who is actually worth a damn hobbles by on crutches.

 

That photo should be the included in their post mortem Montage of Suck.

 

Ali G Bomaye

October 22nd, 2014 at 12:15 PM ^

Give me a fucking break.

Yes, the fact that we're in a shitty bowl game while a guy that gave it his all and took a hellacious beating is on crutches is emblematic of Hoke's failures.

But it's stupid to insinuate that the coach should never talk to the athletic director, or that everyone should act pissed off all the time unless we're in the Rose Bowl.

Hail-Storm

October 22nd, 2014 at 1:50 PM ^

I'd rather have a coach spend time with the AD at a bowl game, joking and relaxing, rather than get the players prepared. I mean, this is why he is a great coach right, because he's great to have a beer with and loves Michigan?

It definitely worked out well last year. It is this type of preperation that has Michigan right in the hunt for the BIG championship this year. 

Skapanza

October 22nd, 2014 at 1:29 PM ^

Preach!

 

*edit* since there's that post above mine I didn't see, I think there's a big difference between when people get annoyed with players having fun at a game they are losing versus the coach and AD doing the same. Hoke (and Brandon, at least compared to Martin) is being payed extravagantly, and he should be focused on doing the job they are paid so much to do.

Do we know when the pic was taken? No. Do we have missing context? Almost certainly. But there's stark contrast between Gardner, who laid everything on the line, and Hoke and Brandon, who have helped torpedo what was a promising career (and program).

Bluemama

October 22nd, 2014 at 10:45 AM ^

I'm starting to think Hoke will be back next year. The last few Inside Michigan Football episodes have been focusing on his interactions with the players. The last one had a pastor say what a great guy he is and how much he respects Hoke. It just seems like that's the direction things are heading. I do think Brandon is out the door.

Bluemama

October 22nd, 2014 at 11:19 AM ^

I am not saying I agree with the episodes but between everyones focus on getting Brandon out first i think it has taken some of the pressure off Hoke. He is still coaching for his job and clearly not doing a good job at that. We all want Harbaugh but why would they build a guy up that they intend to fire. 

maizenbluenc

October 22nd, 2014 at 11:40 AM ^

Maybe I am mixing the two up, but I seem to recall several sideline shots of Hoke coaching the dline up during the Penn State broadcast coverage. And then there was the "this is horrible ... Shane Morris shouldn't be on the field ... but Brady Hoke should absolutely keep his job next year Minnesota coverage.

tjking82

October 22nd, 2014 at 3:05 PM ^

Each of your assessments, independently, jive.  But I don't think they can work together.

I could see Hoke being retained (sadly).  And I could see DB being fired (thankfully).  But I strongly believe that IF DB is fired, THEN Hoke is fired as well.  I can't see an AD walking into this fit of incompetence and saying "hey, why not" and keeping Hoke.  The new AD would be hated almost as much as the outgoing Brandon.

dragonchild

October 22nd, 2014 at 10:48 AM ^

Overall I'm on the same wavelength as BiSB, but while I don't see Hoke saving his job either, as AD the future is not for me to prognosticate.  I need information, not prediction.  BiSB's reply is really kind of a rant (though it's the rant I most strongly agree with).

If I was AD I'd tell him, "In my office, NOW," and have him lay out what the hell plan he's got because his pressers give me no information and from the AD position I'd be privy to what he thinks is going on.  (Oh, while we're at it, I'd also roll back like 90% of the crap Brandon has done to alienate the fans.)  They say, "You're not at practices," but I sure see the result, and while that's dissatisfying as it is, as AD the same excuse won't fly.

That's one of the things that annoys me about Ft. Schembechler.  It works if the team has no scandals and looks functional.  There is a facet of intelligence to football and as long as the students are making grades, staying out of trouble and winning on the field, the coach has something to lose by revealing too much.  When they're making national news and can't even do the simple things like have 11 men on the field, it's just shirking accountability and their opaqueness has gotten much worse.  I'd LOVE to be Hoke's boss for a day, just to really hear what's going on in his smug head.  I've worked in emotionally abusive Japanese-style Deming Cycle environments so I will make that guy sweat.  Being AD would give me the chance to force Hoke to defend his job directly, no BS, and while I'm not nearly as learned as people here at football, I know the difference between a good plan and a bad one.  (Rule 1:  If they can't explain their plan, they can't teach it and most likely don't even understand it.  Rule 2:  If you don't understand something, you can find someone who does.  I'd hire Space Coyote as a consultant for a day if needed.  There is no situation where a guy can get out of a meeting unscathed because he/she managed to confuse everyone.)

I think it goes without saying Hoke's management of the program is terrible, but if this thought experiment involves taking on a position of responsibility, I wouldn't let my emotions as a fan dictate my approach.  But professionally, from an accountability standpoint Hoke's aloofness and incompetence are unacceptable and demand straightforward answers.

Sam1863

October 22nd, 2014 at 10:45 AM ^

BiSB's comment was probably the best summation of the Brady Hoke era that I've ever read. It's a bad team that has played badly and has been coached badly. Its lousy record did not happen by accident. It happened because they earned it.

And this bad team is not going to magically become better just because we want it to, or we hope it will, or through any other kind of mental desperation. It only gets better if the man in charge changes direction and makes it so.

But as BiSB said, "If he could do that, we probably would have seen evidence of it by now."

I suspect that line will be Brady Hoke's epitaph.

JFW

October 22nd, 2014 at 2:36 PM ^

Where did the failure come in? I mean, I can see an activist head coach forcing coordinators to do bad things; force them into schemes that they didn't like, etc.And even if he did, they can't stop position coaches from improving players. But we've seen huge break downs.

Hoke seems largely hands off. Yet we have two at least good coordinators who are putting crap out there and doing inexplicable things. 

Obviously Hoke has to go barring a near miraculous turnaround. We all know this isn't going to happen. But I could see Nuss and Mattison going on to have some success elsewhere if they wanted. What went wrong? Where? 

Its important to me because if we don't know (or more importantly the AD doesn't know) then we can have the same stuff happen all over again. 

JFW

October 22nd, 2014 at 2:36 PM ^

Where did the failure come in? I mean, I can see an activist head coach forcing coordinators to do bad things; force them into schemes that they didn't like, etc.And even if he did, they can't stop position coaches from improving players. But we've seen huge break downs.

Hoke seems largely hands off. Yet we have two at least good coordinators who are putting crap out there and doing inexplicable things. 

Obviously Hoke has to go barring a near miraculous turnaround. We all know this isn't going to happen. But I could see Nuss and Mattison going on to have some success elsewhere if they wanted. What went wrong? Where? 

Its important to me because if we don't know (or more importantly the AD doesn't know) then we can have the same stuff happen all over again. 

Cranky Dave

October 22nd, 2014 at 3:44 PM ^

I stumbled across Heiko's interview with Al Borges from May 2013.  While Hoke is largely hands off Borges says the following:

What about coach Hoke?

“Coach Hoke has the plan presented to him once we’re done. Coach Hoke is more involved on the defensive side of the ball. What we do is we put together the plan and we present the plan and the approach to him. And if there’s anything he doesn’t like about the plan or the approach, he’ll tell us and we’ll tweak it to accommodate what he doesn’t want. He sits in there, for example, when we go back over the tape on Sundays. He will watch the tape with us and see how well the plan was implemented and offer us suggestions. Maybe personnel suggestions, maybe schematic suggestions or whatever just to make sure we’re all on the same page.” 

Obviously it's a matter of degree but perhaps some of the questionable plays calls/game planning etc. are attributable more to Hoke than the coordinators.

jmdblue

October 22nd, 2014 at 10:49 AM ^

I like Hoke.  I like what he's done recruiting and retention wise (notwithstanding potential future damage done by the "Morris thing").  I hate the results, but we are still talking about a very young team and an offense working with another new system.   Things look grim right now for Brady.  But if he wins for the rest of this year and looks good doing it, we'd damned well better have an agreement with a verified 5* head coach (not many come to mind) ready to assume our head coaching duties prior to letting Hoke go.  Our program couldn't afford the failure of Hoke.  It really can't afford the failure of the next guy.

dragonchild

October 22nd, 2014 at 10:56 AM ^

I'm OK with the line having trouble picking up stunts because it's their first year of IZ (as long as they keep getting better).  I'm OK with Jake Ryan's early season shakes because he's learning a new position (as long as they're corrected).  I'm even OK with 3-4 (as long as the new offensive scheme was the sole reason).

Having ten men on the field twice in one season in your fourth year?  Making the national news due to sideline miscommunication?  Putting the wrong players on the field and ignoring their strengths in favor of asking them to do things they're not suited for?  The program has a lot of growing pains I can forgive, but they're also piled on top of comical and even scandalous breakdowns that are unacceptable at ANY college program.

I see your point about "young team new system" but the program's issues go way, way beyond that.

jmdblue

October 22nd, 2014 at 11:08 AM ^

My fear is another "coaching search" conducted like the last two and getting similar results.  Does Hoke "deserve" to be retained if he has a strong finish?  Probably not.  Is he better than an unknown option?  Maybe.  If one of the Harbaughs or Mullen is onboard then fine (great!), but I've seen lots of other ideas posted in the diary section that don't exactly give me big confidence.   Amazingly, I think this entire problem stems from the firing of Moeller.  We were as solid a team as they come from a talent perspective and that was the opportunity to get the next Bo.  Instead we got Lloyd whom, as with Brady I like, but was not the level of coach Michigan needs/deserves.

funkywolve

October 22nd, 2014 at 11:29 AM ^

If the UM team doesn't show improvement over the last 5 games, I'm not sure what the benefits are to keeping Hoke.  As others have said, his one calling card has been the ability to recruit and pull in highly ranked classes.  However, the 2015 class is falling apart and if Hoke is retained after going 6-6/5-7, the odds of the 2016 recruiting class being strong is pretty slim.  So then you're looking at two straight recruiting classes not being very good.  When those two classes will comprise almost half your roster, that's a big hole.

Carr - I think a lot of people think it's easy to go on the runs that Saban has had at Alabama, Tressell had at USC or Carroll had at USC.  It's not and the catch is the first two coaches bend/bent a ton of rules and I wonder how much other rule bending was going at UCS besides the Reggie Bush incident.  Heck, Carr's accomplishments and record are almost identical to what Spurrier did at Florida and whereas a lot of Michigan fans feel Carr is overrated, Spurrier is a saint in Gainesville.

jmdblue

October 22nd, 2014 at 11:57 AM ^

retaining Hoke are entirely predicated on a strong finish to the season.  If we continue to suck he's outta here and should be. 

As for Carr.... He wasn't as successful as Spurrier (not that I wanted him anywhere near A2). 

Spurrier... 12 seasons, 2 4 loss years, 8 major bowls (Sugar Fiesta Orange) winning 4.

Carr... 13 seasons, 5 4-5 loss years, 5 major bowls (Rose Orange) winning 2.

Certainly there was a lot of cheating going on during Carr's years and I'm pretty sure USC had a little more than R. Bush going on.  As I said... I like Carr.  I don't know who I would have liked to coach M post-Excalibur.  But we had the opportunity to inject fresh blood into a program before it desperately needed it and we didn't take it.

jmdblue

October 22nd, 2014 at 12:15 PM ^

I would say if we beat OSU or Sparty and win the rest - and look good doing it, then retaining Hoke should be considered. As in my original post this assumes one of the Harbaughs didn't shoot a call to the new AD to express how badly he wants to turn this mess around.

umumum

October 22nd, 2014 at 12:22 PM ^

So you remain onboard with Hoke if we lose Saturday.  How about close losses to MSU and OSU?  I don't care if either Harbaugh, Mullins or Miles is available---Hoke should be gone on his own (lack of) merit.  His record speaks for itself.  And his returning will only further damage recruiting as explained above.