Aw crap he's going to Disneyland. [Bryan Fuller]

Harbaugh to Chargers Comment Count

Seth January 24th, 2024 at 7:27 PM

After nine years, three straight Big Ten titles, three straight wins over Ohio State, three straight trips to the Playoff, one National Championship, and many, many failed attempts, someone with a Harbaugh-to-NFL rumor seems to finally be correct.

…as seemingly confirmed by the Chargers.

Whether they initiate a cursory search process first or not, the job is going to Sherrone Moore. Michigan's incumbent OC/OL coach served as interim head man four times last year, winning at Penn State, and winning the most narratively significant Michigan-Ohio State game ever played. More importantly, insiders say Sherrone Moore has the confidence of the players and staff. Also the other names talked about during periods of high Harbaugh departure inevitability were Kalen DeBoer, recently installed in Saban's chair, and Jedd Fisch, who is taking DeBoer's.

While the bulk of the coaching staff should stay put, if/when they name Moore he will need new coordinators for all three phases. During the post-2020 program rebuild Harbaugh brought in a lot of staff with deeper ties to Michigan than himself. If/when Moore is named, he is likely to hold onto critical architects of that turnaround like Steve Clinkscale, Mike Hart, Ron Bellamy, Mike Elston, Grant Newsome, Kirk Campbell, Denard Robinson, and most importantly S&C coach Ben Herbert. Defensive wunderkind Jesse Minter and the somehow still vastly underemployed Jay Harbaugh are expected to join Jay's dad in LA. If I was Sherrone I would ask them to use what they were going to pay Jim to try to hold onto those guys.

Michigan had some hope of holding onto Harbaugh, but one cannot win the Lombardi Trophy at Michigan. College coaches who can make the leap to the pros are rare--Nick Saban, Urban Meyer, Steve Spurrier, Lou Holtz all failed--and among them Harbaugh is the rarest: a successful college coach who's *already* taken an NFL team to the Super Bowl. It stings to lose him now, when Michigan's as strong as it's been in our lifetimes, but I've never met a Stanford fan who lamented Bill Walsh, a Canes fan mad at Jimmy Johnson, or a happy USC fan whether they had Pete Carroll or not.

This will not be the last time we talk about Jim Harbaugh, who turned around a program experiencing its worst decade since the 1950s, and leaves, like Fritz Crisler, after taking one of the greatest teams ever assembled to the pinnacle of college football. Crisler's top lieutenant promptly won another championship, but in the years afterward Michigan's administration fell behind in a rapidly changing landscape. Perhaps the benefit of knowing history is the power to learn from it.

Welcome, fans of the reigning National Champions, to the Age of Moore.

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[Barron]

UPDATE: official. Statements from Santa Ono and Warde Manuel after the jump.

University of Michigan President Santa Ono Statement

We have been in talks with Jim Harbaugh for the last several weeks and have tried our best to retain him as our football coach. Jim called me today and let me know that he has made the difficult decision to leave Michigan and join the Los Angeles Chargers in pursuit of his NFL dreams.

For the fans, the players, and for me personally, we are sad to hear of Jim’s departure. His drive and ambition turned our program around, delivered our first national championship in a quarter century and maintained Michigan as the all-time winningest team in the history of college football.

I thank Jim for all he has done for the University of Michigan and respect his decision. He has been an extraordinary leader and a friend. I will be cheering for Jim as he embarks on this next adventure.

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University of Michigan Athletic Director Warde Manuel Statement

I want to thank Jim for everything he has done for our football program, athletic department and the University of Michigan over the past nine years. Every day, he has worked extremely hard to elevate the stature of Michigan across the world, with the goal of winning championships and developing young men on and off the football field.

Jim did exactly what he sought to do at Michigan, build our program to consistently win Big Ten Championships and compete for national championships, culminating with a record three straight outright conference titles and the national championship this year. He did the same off the field by graduating his players and providing life experiences through mentorships, internships and team trips around the globe.

We have been discussing a new contract that would make Jim the highest paid coach in college football. In the end, he wanted to explore and ultimately decided to pursue a return to coaching in the NFL. We can’t thank Jim enough for all that he has done for our student-athletes, staff and Michigan Football. He will always be a huge part of our rich history, and will be remembered as an all-time great Wolverine, as both a championship player and coach.

Jim has always been extremely upfront with his communication regarding NFL opportunities and has been helpful with this transition in leadership. We had a great conversation tonight when he informed me of this decision to return to the NFL and offered his assistance in helping identify the needs for the program moving forward.

We are working quickly to hire the next head coach for the program and will do everything possible to keep this current staff and team together.

We appreciate Jim’s dedication and passion for Michigan, the university and Ann Arbor, and I wish Jim and the entire Harbaugh family much success with the Los Angeles Chargers.

#GoBlue

Comments

Tapin

January 24th, 2024 at 9:05 PM ^

When the university president needs to step in to help close a contract, it's a good sign that the AD isn't up to the task.

And one glance in the general direction of the basketball program should be enough to convince anyone who wasn't already convinced by the friction between Harbaugh and Warde.

bronxblue

January 24th, 2024 at 9:37 PM ^

So wait, Warde doesn't get credit for Howard's first couple of seasons but then deserves blame for the basketball team's struggles the past few seasons?  Does he get credit for Mel's good hockey seasons and then hiring Nauratu in a tough spot and that success, or only if they keep not playing defense in the third periods of games?  

Oh yeah, Santa Ono "stepped in" to complete a contract but then should we hold him accountable for Harbaugh still leaving?  I mean, I assume that Ono was the only one who offered Harbaugh to richest contract in CFB history (Warde was surely out to lunch).  If him and Jim were so close you'd think he'd have worked harder to retain him instead of letting him leave for the NFL, unless they too had a falling out.  Oh man, the rot goes all the way to the core at UM.

Or, and hear me out, Jim Harbaugh trying to get a job in the NFL for 3 straight offseasons finally came to its natural conclusion with Jim Harbaugh going to take over an NFL squad.

caup

January 24th, 2024 at 8:56 PM ^

Okay, can we all give Warde SOME credit for keeping Jim after the 2020 season, when so many INCLUDING THIS VERY WEBSITE were calling for him to be fired?

Warde made the tough and courageous decision to keep Jim.

Jim promptly went back-to-back-to-back-to-Natty.

It is so easy to rip on Warde, but how many of you would have FIRED Jim in December 2020?

Just be honest and cut Warde a little bit of slack.

 

 

 

bronxblue

January 24th, 2024 at 9:33 PM ^

Oh man, if this site had a functional search mechanism you'd be shocked how many people here who celebrated Harbaugh the past 3 seasons were DYING to fire him in 2020.  I give Warde credit for keeping Harbaugh around, even though I have found Warde's general handling of the AD outside of Harbaugh to be somewhat questionable at times.

shoes

January 24th, 2024 at 10:00 PM ^

You won't find me among that group, and I do think Warde's lack of support was a key factor, whether it was the ultimate factor or not, in Jim's leaving. I don't give him a ton of credit for 2020 because cutting Jim's salary in half was the bigger message sent then keeping him. I think if you hooked a polygraph  up to Warde you'd find that he expected/hoped jim would leave rather than take the pay cut. Warde's supporters are consistently silent about the impact of his ties to Jim Stapleton. You don't think Coach wasn't aware of that?

Dave B

January 24th, 2024 at 11:42 PM ^

Grown men who use "Coach" always make me chuckle.

 

Warde kept Harbaugh here when many, including me!, wanted him to be fired.  Warde lit a fire under Harbaugh's ass and we got a championship out of it.  Awesome!  Now Jim gets to go chase a Super Bowl, which he was always going to do anyway.  Go Blue!  Looking forward to seeing how Moore does as the lead guy.  Please open up the offense!

KornMaize

January 25th, 2024 at 10:28 AM ^

In the seven seasons prior to Jim Harbaugh (2008-14, RR & Hoke) Michigan had the 43rd most wins in college football.  EIGHT Big Ten teams had more wins than Michigan during this time span.  

In the first five seasons with Jim Harbaugh at Michigan (2015-19), Michigan ascended 34 spots and had the 9th most wins in college football during that span.  The average movement among all other teams was +/-9.5 spots.  No other team was even remotely close to the level of improvement that Jim Harbaugh brought to Michigan.

In the first five seasons, in the games leading up to the measuring stick, Ohio State, Michigan was 46-9 overall.  Ohio State was 50-5 overall, a four game separation over five years.  Michigan went 0-5 vs the Buckeyes, had one won in '16, playoff bound in year two, and in '17 probably should have won with arguably Harbaugh's worst team.  ONE Big Ten team had more wins than Michigan during this time span, the team that also had the second most wins in all of college football over the last twenty years.  

The days of losing to Illinois, Purdue, Nebraska, Minnesota, Maryland, Rutgers, Northwestern, Toledo and Sparty were done.

*Covid season 2020, the year in which all records should be officially removed from the books.  The end. 

Warde Manuel "made the tough and courageous decision to keep Jim Harbaugh".  Seriously, Wow!  This was a tough and courageous decision, because a surprisingly numb/dumb:) fanbase wasn't really paying attention and wanted Harbaugh fired?  Keeping Jim Harbaugh after 2020 was one of the EASIEST decisions ever.  Good Grief.  

From here you could certainly argue for any of the many scenario's in play: 

#1 After leading Michigan into the Top 10 in wins over his first five seasons, Jim Harbaugh, Ultimate Alpha Dog, had his pay cut in half by Warde Manual, which, based on the info presented above, was an insane, tactical error by an incredibly incompetent person, who honestly should have consulted ME in 2021 when, after browsing over the roster  I predicted Michigan would be 10-1 AGAIN heading into the Ohio State game in 2021.  And to be fair, my thought was that they probably weren't beating them, but they might.  They did.

#2 In doing so, Manuel opened the door to the NFL for Harbaugh.  They CUT HIS PAY IN HALF after he'd brought Michigan right up to the edge, with the B10 championship and the extremely difficult to achieve playoffs hanging in the balance in two of the first five years...

#3 Harbaugh, being the Ultimate Alpha Dog, responded by basically saying "hold my beer" and proceeded to flip the bird in Manuel's direction after the first one in '21, giving his bonus away and then in each of the last three offseasons, flirting with the NFL and ultimately responding with the Marcus Hall Double Bird of the Week on his way out the door yesterday, albeit with a B1G smile on his face for every single person who doubted him.

Anyone who woke up today mad that Jim Harbaugh is bailing on Michigan after a record setting run needs to go back in time three years and understand that Michigan, Warde Manual, and to a large degree, the fanbase, bailed on Jim Harbaugh.  They all bailed on him because they weren't really paying attention, and because, I don't know man.  I just don't know.  People are stupid.

bronxblue

January 24th, 2024 at 7:42 PM ^

Wish him luck with the Chargers.  Pick up Moore and retain as many guys as you can both on the staff and the roster.  Next year was going to be a step down in all likelihood but continuity plus a shrewd hire or two should help keep UM competitive and they can build on that into 2025 and beyond.

M-Dog

January 24th, 2024 at 9:11 PM ^

He will certainly have the money to make quality hires. 

He's not going to get paid remotely what Michigan was going to pay Harbaugh.  So a good chunk of that money should be made available for an elite OC and DC. 

As we saw with Minter, those kind of guys can make a championship-level difference.

 

ex dx dy

January 25th, 2024 at 9:21 AM ^

If the goal here is to preserve as much as we can of the championship winning team, there's a reasonable way to promote from within for all the big jobs:

Sherrone Moore to HC, since he's already had interim HC experience.

Clink to DC, since he's already co-DC (at least in title).

Hart and Campbell to co-OCs. Hart's already Run Game Coordinator, and Campbell OC'd one of the non-con games. Both can likely keep their positional roles as well, while delegating a bit more to analysts and GAs.

Newsome to OL, since he's been groomed for that role. He can still be mentored by Moore to some extent.

Then we need to find replacements for DBs (Clink) and TEs (Newsome). Safeties and Special Teams (JayBaugh) were going to be needed anyway. That's easier than finding new coordinators.

gruden

January 24th, 2024 at 7:43 PM ^

I like Moore as much as anyone, but he isn't the HC yet, so I don't understand this coronation.  And while he was the game HC for 4 games this season, that's not really the same as assuming the full responsibilities of a HC because Harbaugh still did all the work leading up to the games.  We really don't know how good he is as a head coach.

That being said, I fully expect Warde to take the path of least resistance and effort.

gruden

January 24th, 2024 at 8:08 PM ^

I'm not advocating for a particular person, I'm advocating for a good effort at finding the best person available, whether it's Moore or someone else.  I'm hoping Warde spent the last couple weeks sending out queries to determine who is available that might make a good fit, and then quickly put a list together of strong, available candidates and get interviews lined up now that the news has finally broken. Is that unreasonable?

gruden

January 24th, 2024 at 8:50 PM ^

This reads like an old message board baiting so you can gleefully shoot down whatever I or anyone posts.

Any of us could rattle off a list of names, but we all know how ridiculous and pointless that is.  But Warde could also ask Harbaugh for some recommendations.  Yes, he'll say Sherrone, but he should also be able to provide a couple names beyond that.  Schembechler was hired because other coaches and people who knew football recommended him.  Warde should be talking to people, he's had plenty of time to do the groundwork for what we all knew was coming.  And we have no idea who might have expressed interest from any number of places.  There are credible reports Deboer was interested in coaching at M before Bama made him an offer he couldn't refuse. Warde owes it to the program to make a real effort, even if he does end up hiring Moore.

gruden

January 24th, 2024 at 9:39 PM ^

For all his faults, I hope Warde isn't as lame and defeatist as some of the posters in this thread who negged me.

His other hires have been debated and questioned here and elsewhere, this is the one he will ultimately be remembered for.  Hopefully he tries harder; yeah, it's late and there might not be any good options for available experienced head coaches, but if he doesn't make his best effort to find the best possible fit it's an awfully big gamble he'll make on a coach with no HC experience and Warde will have to live or die by that.

gbdub

January 24th, 2024 at 7:56 PM ^

Moore is clearly the guy Harbaugh trusted most, and HC is not the same job as a coordinator (I suspect Moore might be a better HC than OC). 

The players trust him, most importantly. Continuity is good, especially with the best alternative candidates already off the market. 

I look at Moore as a no brainer: if he works, he keeps the Harbaugh train rolling for somewhere between 10 and 30 years. If he doesn’t, he gives the next guy a chance to start with a clean slate instead of being the guy under the Harbaugh shadow.

If you don’t promote Moore, you probably lose a ton of players and the culture, and you’ll constantly have the “why didn’t you hire the legendary coach’s preferred successor” crowd causing a ruckus (hi, Stapleton). 

M-Dog

January 24th, 2024 at 9:15 PM ^

It is a legit point.  Sherrone has only 12 hours of "head coach" experience.  That is it.  Harbaugh was the head coach during the week, just not during the games.

Maybe it will work out fine, maybe it won't.  But let's not kid ourselves, it is a significant leap of faith.  It is not based on any empirical evidence as would have been the case in getting Fisch or DeBoer.

I like Sherrone and I'm optimistic about what he can do here.  But my fingers will be crossed.

 

kyeblue

January 24th, 2024 at 7:43 PM ^

"During the post-2020 program rebuild Harbaugh brought in a lot of staff with deeper ties to Michigan than himself."

the above sentence need sto be fixed. I think that you meant ".... with deeper ties to Michigan than to himself." Harbaugh has as deep tie to Michigan as anyone.  

The FannMan

January 24th, 2024 at 7:44 PM ^

Should announce Moore tomorrow.  No search needed.  Confidence and continuity is needed.  Please Warde, don’t fuck up the easiest decision in the history of football.  

matty blue

January 24th, 2024 at 8:20 PM ^

moore may be the right choice.  we're not in the locker room, not in the living rooms with recruits.  maybe.

but calling this the "easiest decision in the history of football" implies that there are literally no other options to consider.  and that's just silly.  hiring a football coach is the HARDEST decision a michigan athletic director can make, and it's not close.

M-Dog

January 24th, 2024 at 9:22 PM ^

Every single coach in college football is out there right now, given how much Michigan was going to spend on Harbaugh.  If it chose to, Michigan could pay just about any buyout.

I'm not saying this is the way to go, but Michigan would not have to just shop from the list of publicly available coaches.

 

Colt Burgess

January 24th, 2024 at 7:47 PM ^

I'd rather have gotten DeBoer or Fisch because they're proven, but that would have broken up the staff. Moore may turn out to be a really good head coach. Happy to get the post-Harbaugh era started sooner than later. I recall being sad when Bo retired, but Moeller brought Michigan football out of the Stone Age. He also recruited better than Bo. We shall see. Happy that we won't have to deal with the head coach flirting with the NFL every offseason.