Coaching Changes, Recruiting, and the "Harbaugh Experiment" Comment Count

Brendan Roose June 16th, 2021 at 10:59 AM

Note: I’m new here. I’ll be writing a couple posts each week this summer about football, hockey, and whatever other random stuff I think of. I’m also a senior sports editor and football writer at The Michigan Daily, where I’ve previously covered hockey and women’s basketball. 

Beyond that, I’m a rising senior (*internal screaming*) at Michigan with a major in Economics and a minor in Writing. You can follow me on Twitter @BrendanRoose for incoherent rambling about football, the Red Wings, future Formula One world champion Yuki Tsunoda, and why transit-oriented development is the solution to all of society’s ills.

Is it telling that Brian asked me to write during what he has dubbed the “SUMMER OF TRASH”? Possibly. Do I have any idea what any of my content will look like? Definitely not. Will Yuki Tsunoda someday be remembered as the greatest driver to ever set foot on planet Earth? 100% yes. 

Excited to get started. On to the real stuff… 

The Harbaugh Experiment

One of the most annoying Twitter takes about Michigan’s struggles over the last couple years has been that it’s time to end the “Harbaugh Experiment.” Mind you, it’s not the “end” part that I take issue with — even if I don’t necessarily agree that Harbaugh should’ve been fired, it’s not an unreasonable take to have. It’s the “experiment” that gets me.

Jim Harbaugh was never an experiment in Ann Arbor. His methods were unconventional, but they were tried and true at Stanford and in San Francisco. In December of 2014, he was everything Michigan fans thought the program needed — a proven winner, a bona fide “Michigan Man,” and a supposed quarterback whisperer that turned the likes of Andrew Luck and Colin Kaepernick into two of the NFL’s most fearsome quarterbacks. Harbaugh was about as far from an experiment as Michigan could get. He was a sure thing. 

Six years later, as Luck and Kaepernick have both left the NFL, so too have all of Harbaugh’s high-profile quarterbacks either transferred or underperformed. The on-field performances that readers of this blog know all too well have transformed December 2014’s certainty of success into an expectation of abject misery. Put simply, none of the circumstances that surrounded Jim Harbaugh’s arrival in Ann Arbor remain the same today. 

Harbaugh, for his part, has recognized issues in his program over time and has worked to fix them. Some of his changes have been marginal — such as the regular reshuffling of position coaches and the slowdown of his social media presence — while others have been more major, such as the hiring of Josh Gattis and embrace of his modern offensive philosophies. 

This offseason, though, has seen Harbaugh’s most significant gamble to date. Coming off his worst season ever as a coach — and a late contract renewal that cut his salary in half — Harbaugh realized that he needed new voices in the locker room, and with that realization, completely altered the way his program approaches recruiting. 

Consider the circumstances surrounding the search for Don Brown’s successor at defensive coordinator. The nearly universal expectation was that Harbaugh would pursue an established name like Derek Mason or Will Muschamp. 

But he didn’t. Instead of going for a safe hire that, in all likelihood, would have at least brought the defense back into the top half of the conference, Harbaugh decided to pursue two young position coaches with no play-calling experience — at least one of them, Mo Linguist, specifically for his recruiting acumen. When Linguist left for Buffalo, Harbaugh almost immediately nabbed Steve Clinkscale, another young coach with deep recruiting ties to the Midwest, to coach the secondary. That series of hires on defense reflects what could be the defining trend of this offseason: Harbaugh wants to recruit, so he’s hiring young. 

Enter year one of the new Harbaugh Experiment. 

It’s no coincidence that many of Harbaugh’s new hires have connections in areas where Michigan has struggled to recruit lately. Clinkscale and Ron Bellamy both have Michigan roots that should help establish a stronger in-state presence. Their efforts should be bolstered by Mike Hart because, well, he’s Mike Hart. George Helow brings connections in Florida, and even if Mike Macdonald doesn’t have much experience recruiting, odds are that his top priority won’t be 200 lb. three-star prospects from New England, so that’s a departure from the previous regime. 

Linguist’s departure hurt, but hiring Clinkscale was pretty much the best-case scenario for Michigan. The post-Linguist staff has already passed its first test in keeping Will Johnson committed; whether it can maintain that success could determine whether the Harbaugh Experiment pays off. 

[after THE JUMP: help on the way?]

Can better recruiting solve Michigan’s problems?

Ideally, Harbaugh would have done more to address the talent gap in 2018. But he didn’t, and now he has to confront both that and a development problem. 

Zooming out and looking at the Harbaugh era as a whole, the defining characteristic has probably been his teams’ performances against Ohio State. In that regard, yes, the talent gap has been a major obstacle to Harbaugh’s success, and a recruiting overhaul could in theory lift Michigan over that hurdle. 

The problem is, other teams are also getting in the way. From 2017 to 2020, Michigan ranked seventh, eighth, eleventh, and seventeenth in 247’s Team Talent Composite Rankings. Even if those numbers are trending downward (and probably not conducive to national championships), they should be high enough to consistently field a top two or three team in the Big Ten. They haven’t. In that same timeframe, Michigan State and Wisconsin — teams that Harbaugh is 3-3 and 2-3 against, respectively — have never cracked 247’s top 20. (If you’re a masochist and want to know Ohio State’s rankings, they were second, first, second, and third in that period. Try not to think about it.)

If talent alone was the problem, Michigan would not be struggling to handle less talented programs like Michigan State and Wisconsin. In 2020, Michigan had 41 four-stars on the roster; Michigan State had nine. Better recruiting won’t put Mel Tucker’s program in the rearview mirror. To do that will require better development and less predictable (and exploitable) schemes. 

Still, that doesn’t mean Michigan’s new recruiting-focused coaches can’t dig the program out of the hole. Their age means they’re unproven, but it also means they can bring more energy to practice and connect with their players better. Based on the few media availabilities during spring practice, it seems the players have responded well to that (though I’d always take players’ evaluations of their coaches with a grain of salt). I’d also expect Matt Weiss is coming in with an understanding that his sole responsibility is to ensure J.J. McCarthy becomes the world-class quarterback he’s been billed as — something Harbaugh and Ben McDaniels couldn’t do with the program’s previous saviors at quarterback. If he can succeed, Michigan’s situation will improve dramatically. 
 

What does this say about Harbaugh’s future at Michigan?

I’m of the increasingly unpopular opinion that extending Harbaugh was the right decision. The COVID coaching carousel was dull enough that, unless Matt Campbell was at the door asking for a job, there wasn’t really an alternative out there that’s worth tearing down the program for, especially with the financial and PR issues that would come with a coaching change during a pandemic. 

Still, after the unmitigated disaster that was 2020, keeping the same coach inherently requires some new understanding on both sides. First, Harbaugh has to recognize he’s on a much shorter leash. Obviously, this observation isn’t anything new or world breaking — it’s reflected in the very extension that’s keeping Harbaugh in Ann Arbor. Nobody, least of all Harbaugh, thinks the current regime will last if things don’t improve soon. 

On the other end, re-signing a coach that just went 2-4 requires an awareness that any possible resurgence from Harbaugh and co. will take time. So while the leash is still short — any season short of 8-4 or maybe 7-5 would almost certainly end with a coaching change — nobody within the athletic department can reasonably expect the team to win a Big Ten Championship in 2021. Right now, the focus should be on fixing broken systems, making meaningful progress, and laying the foundation for Michigan to re-enter the national conversation in 2022 or 2023. 

Whether or not he says it out loud, Harbaugh understands this. A newfound emphasis on recruiting is a recognition that rebuilding his program will take a few years, and a sign that he’s willing to commit to that timeframe. So, while the athletic department’s patience with Harbaugh certainly won’t be limitless, the gamble he’s taken by hiring a young staff indicates that he thinks he has at least a little leeway. 

Will the Harbaugh Experiment pay off? I have no idea. Even if Harbaugh’s fate is truly settled — and I don’t think it is — at least he hasn’t chosen to go the Dantonio route and doubled down on a coaching and recruiting philosophy that just doesn’t work anymore. Some people might see 2021 as a make-or-break season for Harbaugh. I don’t. As long as there’s some real, visible progress, and as long as the focus on recruiting looks to be yielding results, I think you have to give the Harbaugh Experiment — the real one — a fighting chance. 
 

Comments

Sultans17

June 16th, 2021 at 4:29 PM ^

The greatest breakout debut I ever saw was Michael Keaton in Night Shift. This is pretty close! Welcome aboard Brendan, appreciate your measured takes on Harbaugh, I basically agree agree. After 2017 he started scheduling weekly meetings with Winovich and other team leaders, and listened to them/pivoted on his approach to practices, January workouts, and many other aspects of everyday player life. Harbaugh is actually fairly nimble and open to change; he might just shock the world and adapt/regain his touch from 2004-2016. 

As far as F1, my naive take is that it's exactly the same as D1 football; only a 4-6 select programs are willing to spend what it takes to become elite. And by "spend" I mean drop bags.

MadMatt

June 16th, 2021 at 5:05 PM ^

Welcome, and MOAR hockey (both teams) and women's basketball articles would be nice. 

I appreciate this site's enthusiasm for men's hockey, but they are a little heavy on analytics and inside hockey details that fly over the heads of we casual fans. If you could add more traditional journalism, that'd be great.

GRWolverine1223

June 16th, 2021 at 5:10 PM ^

Nice article but some reasoning I have a difference of opinion with. 
 

Your point about Harbaugh had the option to bring in young coaches vs. a “Will Muschamp” is a little flawed. Every good coach knows Harbaugh has one yr/max 2 to turn this ship around (which would require an Ohio state win or playoff birth). Why would a proven coach join that dilemma?
 

Secondly, why would a enthusiastic young recruiter suddenly change the picture for an elite recruit? They still can’t answer the question against contending with the big boys who will be pointing it out (i.e. we can’t beat Ohio state).

 

I see the biggest thing to get us out of this funk is the expansion of college football playoffs. IF we were to get in… suddenly we can leverage that to elite recruits which is they do not have to be at bama, OSU, Clemson to play in the playoffs. In fact they will have a better chance of playing AND being in the playoffs if they were at michigan… good article and always enjoy the content on this blog. 

Dr. Funkenstein

June 16th, 2021 at 8:15 PM ^

Great first article, almost makes us look forward to football season till we remember everything else.... sure as heck beats another BPONE one.... looking forward to your next pieces!

tybert

June 16th, 2021 at 11:05 PM ^

Thanks for your commentary and being a future UM alum (I'm a Dec 1985 UM Engineering grad and also MMB alumni too). 

I too struggled with what to do with JH after last year's meltdown - and agree with someone who said unless Matt Campbell was WhatsApp-ing Wade privately begging for the UM job, we were better just chalking up this as a Covid-crap-out year.

Just two seasons ago, I was at the glorious beatdown of Mike D'antoni and MSU (44-10 with a late rub-it-in TD pass). Then I was Frankfort Germany hotel following our beatdown on my phone of Tom Allen's IU team in Bloomington. I was back in at the game vs OSU that started great but the D sucked all game long and the O tanked in the 2nd half. Like many, I concluded we had our own John Cooper (9-3, 10-2, with a bowl loss). 

I'm quietly optimistic this year - since very polls even have us in the Top 25. My favorite JH moment was having the team go into the submarine prior to the 2015 season. That team seemed focused and ready for anything. The MSU loss was a once in a century fluke, but felt great overall even though a mad OSU team beat us. 

Simply put, in 2014 we had an obvious successor to Brady Hoke waiting for us. Who is that person today? I don't think Sark is going to be that great at Texas - and don't want to be like them firing a coach every 3-4 years. 

uminks

June 17th, 2021 at 1:29 AM ^

Nice job! I hope Brian keeps you! I happen to agree on many of your points. I think Harbaugh's basement is 6-6 but I think the team will win 7 or 8 games this season. If for some reason the team implodes sub .500, then exit Harbaugh.

CLord

June 18th, 2021 at 1:53 PM ^

The biggest problem is what does Harbaugh himself do particularly well?  Turns out really nothing.  His schemes have been sub-par, his recruiting has been sub-par (with the measuring stick being the widened gap with Ohio State), his QB whispering has been non-existent, his coaching decisions have been sub-par (keeping Don Brown around 1 if not 2 years too long) and his energy has also waned.

Does he still deserve another shot? Sure.  He seems to be introspecting and trying to make changes . But if this experiment fails, it will simply have exposed him for a guy who rode the coat-tails of a generational QB in Luck and a couple of good years in San Francisco, for which it is increasingly appearing he was not personally responsible for given his inability to demonstrate any similar magic here.

Regularly getting out-schemed by talent-inferior MSU and Wisconsin, and both out-schemed and out recruited by OSU  is no way for a Michigan coach to go through life.

Rooting for him to have found the right approach starting this year.  Like the author, I'm just looking for relevant progress this year.  Go Blue.  Go Harbaugh, get it done sir.

FrankMurphy

June 19th, 2021 at 1:06 AM ^

Nice work, Brendan. Great to have you aboard.

I disagree with your conclusion about the "Harbaugh Experiment" though. In today's college football landscape, you kind of are what you are by the end of year five or so. Just as success builds upon itself, failure also builds upon itself. Recruits and opposing coaches view Harbaugh as an emperor with no clothes. Particularly given the swagger and flamboyance that Harbaugh carried himself with when he arrived, that reputation in year seven is going to be near impossible to shake. That's why it's so rare to find coaches who suddenly figure things out so late into their tenures. The Dabo Swinneys and Mack Browns of the world are the exceptions that prove the rule.

ch1townma1ze

June 21st, 2021 at 5:17 PM ^

Thank you for a realistic and sober summary of the state of the Harbaugh Union and Michigan Football in general. I've been presenting these very thoughts to family, friends and colleagues of the Maize and Blue without much agreement. They double down on why this happened the way it did and why we are here justifying this guy remain at the helm.

It's a very long story...one that maybe even starts with the loss to App State and the cleaning of the locker room post Carr, Rich Rods lack of focus in the Midwest and the Hoke rebuilding and Hoke re rebuilding and then Harbaugh re re rebuilding....

We are all frustrated, exhausted for B1G championships, quality wins, dominating runs, game changing plays on both sides of the ball. It's going to take a little while but I am a little more optimistic then most...

I disagree with you on one very important point, however.

George Russel will prove to have a much longer and successful F1 career than Tsunoda once he displaces Bottas in the Merc ;)

 

Go Blue.