Jim Harbaugh: "Go Blue!"

Submitted by DingleberryFinn. on

Just on NFL Network, live television interview. Jim to Rich Eisen: "Go Blue!". Just thought it was nice seeing the Michigan love on display during day 3 of the NFL draft.

cigol

April 28th, 2012 at 3:46 PM ^

b.....but he claimed that michigan football players aren't rhodes scholars (argh!!!!), completely negating his 21-3 record as QB, guaranteed victory over Ohio, and meteoric rise to the upper echelons of NCAA and NFL coaches, bringing a lot of pride to the University.

FrankMurphy

April 28th, 2012 at 5:00 PM ^

It wasn't the fact that what he said had some truth to it, it was the fact that Stanford is essentially in the same boat. Harbaugh recruited plenty of kids who otherwise would have had no shot at getting into Stanford. I doubt he would have been pleased if his 4-star blue chip recruit who had a 3.1 GPA in high school got to campus and decided he wanted to major in electrical engineering. Stanford competes in the Pac-12, not in the Ivy League, so they don't have much of a moral high ground over us or any other BCS school. 

Having said that, I agree that his previous comments don't negate everything he did for Michigan. He is and always will be one of the best to have ever worn the winged helmet.

jmblue

April 28th, 2012 at 5:56 PM ^

FWIW, the Ivies really don't have as much of a moral high ground in this matter as people think.  It's much, much easier to get admitted to an Ivy League school as an athlete than as a non-athlete.  (They also mysteriously have ways of awarding academic scholarships to talented athletes.)

jmblue

April 28th, 2012 at 6:03 PM ^

They definitely find ways to lighten the tuition burden for them. And they lower their standards quite a bit to let them in.  Anyone who thinks Ivy athletes are all 4.0 GPA/1550 SAT guys coming out of high school would be very surprised to see the actual data.

jmblue

April 28th, 2012 at 6:25 PM ^

I had two high school classmates who went on to play sports in the Ivy League - one at Columbia, one at Princeton.  Aside from being good at sports, they were very ordinary students, not even close to being the best and brightest in our class.  

 

Commie_High96

April 28th, 2012 at 7:10 PM ^

I have good friend who is the hc of a women's sport at UM, right now the Ivys have unlimited money to through around. Even if you are not an ATH, havard, Yale and Princeton basically giv you free school if your folks make less that 100k per year. A few years back congress threatened to take back the tax exempt status FO Ivys cause they were just stockpiling endowment money. I believe for every 100k your parents earn under $500k is 25% tuition reduction. Unde 100 is free. With that money to throw around, coaches there have a lot of leeway in getting money.

orobs

April 28th, 2012 at 6:04 PM ^

whether it was true or not wasn't the issue.  He had no reason to call out his alma mater.  It brought negative attention to the school in front of a national audience, and then he got into a shouting match with a 20 year old kid (Mike Hart).  It was completely uncalled for.  

jmblue

April 28th, 2012 at 6:12 PM ^

He had a reason.  He wanted to differentiate Stanford from the large public universities that make up most of the BCS conferences.  I suppose he didn't have to mention Michigan by name, but it was the only university he'd attended, so he didn't have firsthand knowledge of anyplace else.   

I think fans need to accept that this kind of stuff is going to go on in recruiting.  Coaches will use every angle they can find.  At the time Harbaugh arrived at Stanford, they were in terrible shape.  The academic angle was about all they had.

TenaciousGrizz

April 28th, 2012 at 4:27 PM ^

Harbaugh said what he said for the sole purpose of making Stanford and himself look better by comparison.   It doesn't matter whether what he said was true or not.  Being a fan, being an alum, being a member of a club requires a certain measure of loyalty that Jim Harbaugh fundamentally lacks.  He's a shameless self-promoter that threw the institution under the bus in the national media so that he could make a buck, then bolted to the NFL when Michigan needed him most.   He's Fredo, and it burns me to hear that he's still pretending like he's part of the family.  Go Blue?  Go count your NFL money and get bent Jim. 

snarling wolverine

April 28th, 2012 at 5:14 PM ^

He's a shameless self-promoter that threw the institution under the bus in the national media so that he could make a buck, then bolted to the NFL when Michigan needed him most.

Why did we "need him most" then? It seems to me that we're getting along fine with Hoke as our coach.

Also, while I don't think his comments were necessary, I don't know why people seem to think that just because a story gets printed on ESPN.com for one day that it's a "national story."  Few people unaffiliated with Michigan ever paid attention to that story.

stephenrjking

April 28th, 2012 at 5:30 PM ^

If loyalty means never being able to say anything that you don't like without getting a bullet in the back of the head, then count me out. Your Fredo comparison is unintentionally appropriate--the "loyalty" that he lacks by not always falling directly within the party line is only worthy of complete disassociation if the organization he is disloyal to is run by a corrupt, wife-beating murderer like Michael Corleone. 

Is that what we are? 

I wonder how many "Michigan Men" run afoul of your stringent regulations for orthodoxy. Frankly, I don't require 100% mindless support from a person to care about them or appreciate their contribution. It is possible to be a part of a family or group without agreeing about everything. I disagree with my mother from time to time, but under no circumstances do I cease to be her son.

Glad you're not my Don, Michael. 

cigol

April 28th, 2012 at 5:45 PM ^

Stanford is a better school.  I have a lot of pride in Michigan, but if you're just talking academics, the schools don't compare.  There are many people on Michigan's undergrad campus that could have gone to Stanford, but I can near guaranty you that there isn't one person on Stanford's undergrad campus that couldn't have come to Michigan.  Sure there are some world rankings out that have us close, but that is due to the grad programs.  Considering that we're talking about football players who go to undergraduate institutions, the places don't even compare from an academic setting stand point.

Harbaugh could have come out and said Stanford was a better school.  Instead, he simply said that there is more of an academic mind set in Stanford's athletic department. Get over it.

cigol

April 28th, 2012 at 5:49 PM ^

Sorry to break it to the "Fredo" comparison author, but a former QB who teabagged Ohio in Columbus his senior year after a guaranteed victory will forever be more a part of the Michigan football "family" than we will ever be.  What a joke.  Erase everything the guy did and continues to do to bring pride to this school just because he told a truth that everybody in this country knows.

M-Wolverine

April 28th, 2012 at 6:11 PM ^

And don't tell your mother-in-law's friends that she's a much better mom than yours was, just to impress them, and get in good with your wife. (Who you're divorcing in a couple of years anyway for a hotter model). You can disagree, and voice those concerns; but when it's appropriate and constructive, and not self-serving.

TenaciousGrizz

April 28th, 2012 at 6:33 PM ^

That's a nice strawman you've constructed there, Stephen.  Dissent is fine.  Public dialogue is fine.  I don't have a problem with a famous alum criticizing the university, particularly if the goal of the criticism is improving the university.

This isn't about orthodoxy.  This is about intent.  More specifically, it is about Harbaugh's intent, which was, in no particular order, to prop up Stanford's reputation, make his job look harder, and make himself look better--all at Michigan's expense.  This is about publicly putting your self-interest over the interests of the university, which is precisely what Harbaugh did.  Go back and read his comments again.   The objective is manifest.  He's a snake. 

Feel free to define your membership in the institution however you like.  If you think that it is appropriate for a famous alum to trash the university in print solely for personal gain, ok.  If you think that it is not at all disingenuous for that same alum to later publicly suggest an allegiance or a loyalty to that same institution, fine. 

I don't define my membership the same way.  Loyalty matters.  Integrity matters. 

BigBlue02

April 28th, 2012 at 7:39 PM ^

Considering he was doing the same thing at Stanford, he really has no moral leg to stand on. It was completely for his benefit, even if it came at the university's expense. And I'm sure he would have said all those things had Bo been around. Harbaugh is a dick. I won't forget what he did while at Michigan, but that doesn't mean I can't think he is a prick

stephenrjking

April 28th, 2012 at 7:39 PM ^

I'd like to discover in what way Harbaugh damaged the family with his remarks. Did they bother me? Absolutely. Does it damage my life in any way? No. Has it harmed the school or the football team? No. Does it cancel out what he did as a quarterback for the team? No. 

Your hatred of him evokes the emotions Ohio State fans express toward people like Kirk Herbstreit, who had to leave the state for his family's well-being. I would like to think that the Michigan fanbase is more civilized than that, but perhaps not.

I understand emotions were pretty high when Harbaugh made his comments; the reactions of Carr and Mike Hart were rather vehement. That's also their right. After the way the Carr regime undercut his successor, though, I would be wary of taking their word as gospel. What Carr's folks did to RR was worse than anything Harbaugh ever said. And that still does not invalidate his position as a Michigan Man or as a coach who brought us a national championship; it is simply an unfortunate event.

If we start cancelling someone's Michigan card every time they offend us, we're going to wind up with a pretty small list of alums that are true "Michigan Men."

bluenyc

April 29th, 2012 at 6:48 PM ^

If you listen carefully as they are waiting to run in at 3:16 mark, you hear lets kill these guys.  I think it was JH.  God, brings back the memories for JH.  Love it Love it.

Tyang

April 28th, 2012 at 5:44 PM ^

I tell ya, these Spartans with their crazy talk. Who ever thinks Dantonio is going to continue to own Michigan is crazy, he beats us our 3 worse years in pretty much Michigan football history, beats us by one touchdown last year.....2 thanks to Denards pick 6 in hokes 1st year. I keep telling all my msu fan friends y'all don't know what y'all got comin. Go blue! And murder then Spartans on the field!