[Eric Upchurch]

Football Recruiting Bits Is Counting Down to Early Signing Day Comment Count

Alex.Drain December 9th, 2022 at 2:26 PM

It's been a little while since we checked in on Michigan Football recruiting, not since the bye week roughly seven weeks ago. The second-half of the season has consumed most of our time with content, but now getting a break before the Fiesta Bowl, it's time to check back in on recruiting, especially with the early signing day coming up very soon. This piece will go over recent updates on the 2023 class, talk about the remaining targets, check in quickly on 2024, and then move into a long monologue about the state of recruiting and answer some pressing questions you may have. One more note: next week I'll begin pumping out Hellos for all the kids we've missed, so that is coming soon. 

 

Recent Updates on 2023 

Well, a lot has happened since the last update, so let's try and get everyone up to speed. You can classify this into two categories, the good and the bad: 

BAD

  • Michigan lost out on several OT prospects they liked, Spencer Fano and Caleb Lomu, both of whom opted to stay out west. OG DJ Chester also chose to stay in the south, picking LSU 
  • Top Michigan DT target Kayden McDonald picked Ohio State over Michigan 
  • Top Michigan CB target Chris Peal picked Georgia over Michigan 
  • EDGE Commit Collins Acheampong flipped to Miami from Michigan 

GOOD 

  • Michigan nabbed 3* OG Nathan Efobi from the Atlanta area, a prospect some see as high as the top 150 range, while others rate much lower 
  • Michigan flipped 3* CB Cameron Calhoun from Cincinnati, beating out Kentucky in the process 
  • Michigan has made additional in-roads into Ohio, picking up 3* LB Breeon Ishmail from Cincinnati and 3* defensive ATH Jason Hewlett from Youngstown 

The bad was not terribly surprising outside of the Acheampong flip, which was fueled by a messy personal life situation that fueled Acheampong's desire to seek a more NIL-friendly school. Fano and Lomu picking Utah was more geographic and religious-focused than anything else and the others were lost to schools who have much more to offer financially... for several reasons, Michigan is not winning many battles against other blue blood programs (something I'll dig into later). 

The good was decent. Nothing particularly groundbreaking, but Michigan has begun making more in-roads into Ohio than they have at any point since Brady Hoke was the coach by picking up Ishmail, Calhoun, and Hewlett. They still have another Ohio target on the board in D'Juan Waller, but these pickups seem to be laying the groundwork for a strong push into the Buckeye State for 2024. Calhoun in particular is a prospect I like and Hewlett has pretty high upside. If we're talking about guys to take chances on, these aren't the worst ideas. As for Efobi, he is a prospect that is pretty divisive among the rankings services but I defer to Sherrone Moore's judgement. This staff has earned that right. 

In the national rankings, the class sits 22nd to On3 and 19th to 24/7. Why is this lower than we want? Keep reading and I'll get into that later. But first, a look at the targets left on the board. 

[AFTER THE JUMP: Closing 2023, targets in 2024, and what's up with NIL?]

 

Jyaire Hill [247Sports]

Remaining 2023 Targets

With under two weeks to early signing day, Michigan still has a number of players they're looking at and trying to nail down to complete the 2023 recruiting class. Some of these targets will spill over into the late period but they're going to try and land as many as possible that they deem "takes". Michigan seems set at QB (taking no one, though ATH Kendrick Bell may start there), RB, and TE, while they keep looking around at prospects at the other positions. Here's a quick run through of the remaining targets: 

Wide Receiver: 

  • Karmello English (4*): Auburn decommit who Michigan likes a lot and seem to be towards the top with. Big question is whether he'll leave the south. 
  • Chance Fitzgerald (3*): Likely the backup plan if things don't go well with English 

Offensive Line: 

  • Taliafi Ta'ala (3*): After losing out on Lomu and Fano, a big question is whether Michigan will push to add a fourth OL to the class or keep portal shopping. If they do push for a fourth OL, Ta'ala seems like the most likely, and a very winnable recruitment 

Defense Line: 

  • Jamel Howard (3*): An underrated DL who decommitted from Wisconsin after the coaching turmoil, Howard looked to be an easy pickup for the Wolverines but more suitors are getting in the race. This one may go to the late period  
  • Roderick "Trey" Pierce (3*): Similar story to Howard, also a Wisconsin DL decommit who Michigan was considered the early favorite for when the recruitment re-opened, Pierce is vetting several options before making a decision 
  • Cameron Brandt (4*): Stanford commit who the Wolverines are starting to poke around on in the aftermath of David Shaw's firing. If he visits campus, that's the time to watch out ($)

Defensive back: 

  • Aaron Gates (3.5*): Michigan has been trying to flip this Florida commit forever and now we're in the final stages of finding out whether this will happen. He's the #1 option at nickel in this class 
  • Jyaire Hill (4*): Michigan's top CB target since Chris Peal picked Georgia, Hill is a legit prospect who would be a massive win. It's been a contentious battle with in-state Illinois and is down to the wire 
  • D'Juan Waller (3*): Another Youngstown kid, BFF of Michigan commit Jason Hewlett. Diamond-in-the-rough DB who could play safety or be a tall corner, battle between M and Kentucky right now 

Athlete 

  • Nyckoles Harbor (5*): The crown jewel recruitment will go well into the late period as Harbor weighs Michigan against several SEC schools, with a strong eye towards his track career in addition to his football career
  • Malachi Coleman (4*): Top 100 Nebraska commit who is looking around after Frost's firing, reportedly planning to visit Michigan. Harbaugh's staff was a bit unclear of his position, but he could be a take as an EDGE to replace Acheampong if he were to commit. May go to the late period 

These are the main targets I've been tracking, but there are others committed to other schools that Michigan may be trying to flip behind the scenes that will pop up in the final days. The biggest priorities seem to be landing one more WR and then beefing up the DL and DB classes, both of which are rather thin right now. A best case scenario finish for the early period sees Michigan nail down one or two defensive linemen, land one of the two receivers, flip Gates and pick up Hill and Waller. It will not be the prettiest class in the world, but it will still have some prospects I am really high on. 

 

Luke Hamilton [On3]

2024 Happenings 

So far things seem to be much better with the 2024 class, although it is still in its infancy. Michigan already has a trio of top 300 commits, LB Mason Curtis from the summer, OG Luke Hamilton, who committed the day after The Game, and TE Hogan Hansen, who committed yesterday. There is another group of prospects who Michigan is in good standing with, none bigger than 5* QB Jadyn Davis. Michigan has been courting Davis for months and the expectation was that he would commit after his HS football season ended. His season ended a few weeks back but we are still waiting on a commitment. With Clemson on the periphery, the big thing here is to get Davis committed by the end of the year. If this bleeds into 2023, it's time to start looking at other options. Michigan cannot afford another Dante Moore, where they go all-in on one guy and come up empty. Nailing down Davis/figuring out the QB question is the single biggest story in the 2024 recruiting class. 

If they can get Davis in the class, then thing begins preceding in a pretty straightforward manner and are looking pretty up. Getting a QB helps build momentum and Michigan's board is lined with other sought-after prospects they seem to be in good position with. This starts with in-state Top 300 players like S Jacob Oden and TE Brady Prieskorn, both of whom are very winnable recruitments. They are also in good position with Ohio's Brian Robinson (EDGE) and Ben Roebuck (OT), who are in or around the Top 300 range. The OL board in particular looks pretty strong, and Michigan also has leads at WR with I'Marion Stewart and Channing Goodwin, both of whom are in the 4* to 3.5* range. The 2024 class does, at this point, undeniably look to be set up better than the 2023 class in terms of projection. That does not mean that there aren't issues in football recruiting to be handled. How good 2024 is likely hinges on getting some of those issues sorted. 

 

[Eric Upchurch]

A monologue about the current state of Michigan Football's recruiting

I wanted to put a long section together talking about Michigan Football recruiting as a whole and my thoughts on the situation, because there have been plenty of takes shared across the internet in recent weeks. I did a long tweet thread on this subject last week and this will be a more comprehensive version of that. I want to preface it by saying that I know nothing more about recruiting than a Michigan fan who subscribes to the paid insider sites. I read those like everyone else and have no additional information. I don't have recruiting sources and I am not a recruiting insider myself. What I will write is simply my assessment of the situation as someone who reads the various paid outlets religiously as part of my job. 

The Michigan 2023 recruiting class is simply not up to program standards and there's no way to put lipstick on that pig. I'm not saying there won't be gems in the class, or that there aren't commits I like. There are. But we can't sit here and pretend that this class isn't a step below where Michigan had been in the preceding four recruiting classes (2019-22), the four that make up the meat of this current team. I'm not a "recruiting stars are everything" guy like Ari Wasserman- I think that sort of rhetoric is tiring at best and foolish at worst. There's more to building a football team than just recruiting 4 or 5* players. But to win at the level Michigan is currently winning at, yes you need 4 and 5* players. 

I like to think of college football recruiting like a graph. On one axis you have "recruiting talent" and the other axis is labeled "coaching/development/systems". In order to make the playoff and truly compete for a national title year in and year out, you need some combination of both. If you have just talented players, you are USC from the years 2010-2020, an incoherent mess that is far less than the sum of its parts, stumbling to 6-6. If you have only great coaches but no talent, you are Michigan State under Dantonio from 2010-2015, a very good team that wins a lot but has a brutally hard ceiling that doesn't allow you to truly compete with the big dogs (see: CFP vs. Alabama in 2015). 

[Bryan Fuller]

Michigan has proved over the last two seasons that with this current crew of coaches led by Jim Harbaugh, they do not need top five talent to be neck-and-neck with Ohio State and make the playoff. They can attain that by sitting in the 8-12 range of the national recruiting rankings, as they did over the past four seasons (10, 12, 13, 12). Harbaugh's staff has proven to be good enough at scouting and development to get top five level output out of classes that aren't quite that highly rated by the scouting services. 

Which is why it's notable that this 2023 class is not in that range, and is not particularly close. Perhaps if everything goes exactly to plan to close out the cycle, it might get to #15, but still below what Michigan is looking for. We can't sit here and say "stars don't matter!" because they do. Anyone who watched the B1G Championship Game and saw the dominating performances of JJ McCarthy, Donovan Edwards, and Will Johnson, all of whom were 5* recruits to at least one scouting service, should know that. Stars aren't everything, but you gotta have some highly rated kids to win big. That's a fact of college football and has been for a very long time. 

So what's going on with 2023, especially when many expected it to be even better than a typical Harbaugh class, given that it was coming off of a playoff appearance? There are a few items to discuss on this subject. First of all, it's important to point out that recruits do not watch the same amount of college football that we do. This is the biggest thing that people get wrong about football recruiting. The top HS athletes in America are not CFB sickos like us. They don't know what year a program is 9th in SP+ vs. 4th in SP+. Recruiting is much more about vibes than on-field success. Winning helps the vibes, especially if it elevates your program's image, but Michigan's brand and image was already very strong despite never beating Ohio State. It was reasonable to expect gains in recruiting, but those who just expected that winning on the field would magically make Michigan #1 in the recruiting rankings were naive and uninformed about what matters to 16 and 17 year old kids. 

[Patrick Barron]

What definitely did hurt the 2023 class, and this can be seen in relation to the 2024 class, which, in its early stages, appears set up to be far better than 2023, was the staff shakeup that occurred in January of this year, just as things were getting going for '23. Losing both coordinators and shuffling positional coaches ruptured relationships, which do matter a good deal for recruiting especially if you are a program that is choosing to recruit the way Michigan is, with words more than $$$ (more on that later). Jim Harbaugh's flirtation with the NFL (and frankly, more than flirtation, a desire to bolt) made things slow out of the gate.

Starting slow creates bad press and unfavorable narratives. By April of this year it was already pervasive in recruiting circles that "Michigan is recruiting badly". That sort of narrative is a double whammy, because it's a self-fulfilling prophecy of sorts. Once recruits hear "Michigan is sucking this cycle/have no good recruits" they have less desire to be a part of that class, thus making it suck more. It creates a snowball that is hard to stop unless you can get a few recruits that change the narrative. Michigan did start to pick up more favorable recruits over the summer months, but the one piece that really could have changed things, say, a 5* QB who everyone believed Michigan would get in the beginning and who Michigan badly wanted, did not commit. That was Detroit's Dante Moore, who never seemed to click or be terribly interested in Michigan, leaning Notre Dame initially and eventually landing with Oregon. Losing Dante hurt majorly and marred some positive in-roads going on in the summer otherwise. 

In other words, Michigan was playing from behind this cycle after stumbling out of the gates from a coaching standpoint. They needed to make up ground, did in some areas, but didn't close with the biggest piece that could have changed things. If you're playing from behind on kids, what's the easiest way to make up ground? The answer of course is to toss some money around. This was true in the pre-NIL era, but as $$$ has become legal, there are dozens of recruitments in which one school leads most of the way, only to have the rug pulled out from under them at the last minute by a school who barely even recruited the kid previously because of the money. How do I know this? Because I've been following recruiting this cycle and have seen that happen to Michigan several times already, with the Wolverines being the team with the rug pulled out from under them. The best way to make up ground was to pull off those sorts of heists, but Michigan will not do so. 

[Bryan Fuller]

Which leads me to NIL. It has become the hottest piece of discussion in Michigan football circles outside of what happens on the field and let's be honest here: Michigan has consistently been behind on NIL this cycle and that is the biggest thing hurting recruiting. Look, I am not an NIL expert. I don't know what Michigan's NIL pitch sounds like or what the best schools are doing. It's something I'd like to do more digging on in the offseason and figure out what exactly is going on because NIL is infuriatingly opaque. But it does not take a recruiting genius to know that what Michigan is doing is behind the curve. You can figure that out every time you go into a recruiting thread and someone asks "why doesn't Michigan go after X prospect?" and EJ Holland responds "NIL" and that's more or less the end of the discussion. 

Michigan's 2023 class is uniquely disappointing due to the convergence of factors I laid out. If there is less staff turnover in January this coming year, 2024 will almost certainly be a better class, and it might approach the Harbaugh standard ranking. But what will hold it back is the same central problem holding back their ability to finish strong in 2023 and it's NIL. NIL. NIL. NIL. The way Michigan is doing things now is not going to get it done in this modern day of age. College sports are dramatically different than they were only a few years prior. JJ McCarthy committed to Michigan in May 2019, less than four years ago, yet the recruiting landscape is a completely different world than it was then. It's like NHL finances before and after the hard salary cap was imposed after the 2005 lockout. A completely different world and old ways will not get it done anymore. Those who cannot see that it is time to adjust will be the ones wearing a dunce cap in only a couple seasons. 

What frustrates me the most about NIL discussions on the internet, be it on message boards or twitter, is that people seem to believe that it is a stark dichotomy, black-and-white. Either schools must do pay-for-play a la Texas A&M or they must do what Michigan is doing, and on the flip side that kids are either Virginal And Noble for not wanting money or WHORES SELLING THEMSELVES TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER. But like nearly every supposed binary, it is a) mostly false and b) not as simple as it makes it seem. 

[Marc-Gregor Campredon]

It is your author's opinion that the opimal NIL strategy is neither hardcore pay-for-play nor what Michigan has been doing for the past 18 months. And likewise, most kids in the top 300 of the composite are neither virtuous teetotalers abstaining from the evils of cash nor players who will go to the highest bidder. Some of those kids on either end of the extremes exist, but most football recruits want to go to a good college football program that balances winning/NFL development, school, and the ability to make some money too. 

Michigan has battled Notre Dame for recruits for years, because the kind of kid that goes to Michigan is similar to the one that goes to ND. Typically they'd be within a few slots of each other on the team rankings, with M coming out ahead one year and ND coming out ahead a different year. But what about 2023? While Michigan is mired around #20, Notre Dame boasts the #3 class in the country. Are they going wild with the $$$ like Texas A&M? None of the reporting seems to suggest that, but they have their NIL game in order and Michigan doesn't. If you put yourself in the shoes of a kid choosing between the two, it's not hard to see why. Both are great academic universities, both are big brands with legendary history, and both have been to the CFP within the last three seasons. But one offers a clear and coherent path to make regular income off your profession (let's be frank, it is their job) and the other's plan is more wishcasting and hope than a definitive vision. These kids aren't only in it for the money, but the money does matter and will matter to most all top 300 type kids from here on out. Especially QBs. 

So you can either choose to be Old Man Yells At Cloud or you can live in the year 2022 and get with the modern times. Michigan badly needs to get its NIL program up to speed. What does that look like? Again, I don't know exactly. The reports are that Michigan would like a "base salary" system akin to what some other schools have come up with and that sounds like a fine idea. There just needs to be much more movement towards making that a reality. It seems that NIL pitches towards players currently in college, either those on the team or portal targets, are better than those targeted at recruits right now. Those efforts need to trickle down to he recruiting level, and quickly. Those who follow insider reporting can agree that there have been many months of promises about big changes "coming soon!", but they haven't turned into anything groundbreaking yet. 

[Bryan Fuller]

The loss of Collins Acheampong, related to his family's urgent need for immediate $$$, is something Michigan probably could not have averted even if they get their NIL base salary system up and going. It was a unique situation and isn't something you can extrapolate to all kids. But the pay-for-play programs are lurking and offering all of Michigan's 2023 recruits who are worth anything. I assume the Wolverines will keep most (maybe all!) of those kids in the class, but they can't breathe a sigh of relief until the final bell sounds. In the current landscape, Michigan is low on the food chain despite being #2 in the country on the field, and the carnivores at the top of the food chain come by to see if they can find prey every day. 

I do believe that Michigan will figure it out, and there have been rumblings about meeting(s) taking place between Santa Ono and Warde Manuel to hopefully get things organized on the NIL front. The fact that such a meeting needs to take place, 18 months after NIL was legalized, is an embarrassment for the football program, but it is what it is. Ono is reportedly knowledgeable about NIL and what it takes to succeed and we can only hope that that meeting will bring much quicker movement towards the NIL programs that Michigan desires. The tune of the insiders seems to have changed in recent weeks, from "you'll be excited to see the changes soon!" to a much more dire "things need to change ASAP!", which makes me believe that their sources on the football staff have grown frustrated with the NIL progress of their superiors. The more pressure that the big name coaches put on the athletic department and university administration, the faster things are figured out. I don't have a culprit here to put the blame on, because I'm not that in the know, but whoever the central stumbling blocks are need to be rectified in time for the 2024 recruiting cycle to proceed with minimal NIL pitfalls.   

[Patrick Barron]

Michigan won't let itself suck at football for no reason- they're not going to become Northwestern. Football makes the university far too much money for that to happen. The question is whether changes in leadership are needed to get it figured out, and how much longer it will take. If Michigan can get it figured out in the next couple months, I think they should have the sort of recruiting class in 2024 that is up to program standards (or even slightly better!), especially since the early gains in 2024, even with wobbly NIL, seem quite promising. Harbaugh comfortably stomached one class below program standards in 2018 because they found some gems and got back to normal in 2019. That can happen here with 2023 and 2024, but it requires program organization and continuity on Harbaugh's end *and* a much more coherent NIL strategy moving forward. One that allows them to win battles with other football powers and close on recruits instead of those recruits waiting until the last minute for any new $$$ offers to roll in. 

What I've laid out is somewhere between catastrophic dooming and dismissing NIL problems outright. Michigan football recruiting has a real NIL problem which, if allowed to fester, poses an existential threat to the program's current status as a football powerhouse. However, there are several reasons, from insiders as well as simple logic and intuition, to believe that the doomsday scenario bandied about on On3 message boards by trolls and neurotics is likely not going to come to pass. It's just abundantly frustrating to ever have been in this place to begin with. I don't want to write about how Michigan is late to the party out of a combination of some misplaced sense of moral superiority and incompetence but here we are. From here on out the focus must be on closing 2023 strong and getting things right for 2024 so that no future damage can be done. If Michigan can get their donors in order, and cooperation established with a powerful NIL collective, they have more than enough $$$ to recruit at a high level, even with academics and everything else in mind. But I'm pretty tired of using the word "if". 

Comments

TESOE

December 9th, 2022 at 6:12 PM ^

Are there alums willing to give $100 - $500k to get individual recruits (like has happened at MSU (Ishiba), Miami, A&M, Tennessee, and Bama for years?  No.)

This is why these collectives need to be accountable.  We've had several rich alums give money to the school earmarked for Athletics, these collectives won't have anything to do with the school financially. AFAIK - there are no collectives that are accountable (maybe there are...it would be public information if so, I'd imagine. Has anyone seen a yearly financial statement from these groups?)

If collectives show a return and value, larger donations would be doable - they would also pull from the relationships that got Glick and the Ross Athletic Campus built. I can see why Warde wouldn't want to go down this path. This is the NIL issue for ADs. Other schools just shunt the previously illegal funding to the collectives and call it good.

Shop Smart Sho…

December 9th, 2022 at 3:23 PM ^

"Look, I am not an NIL expert. I don't know what Michigan's NIL pitch sounds like or what the best schools are doing."

This came after 3 or 4 teases throughout the shorter recruiting-focused section. 

While I'd genuinely enjoy someone writing out a primer and/or opinion piece on MIchigan's NIL program, maybe it would be better after the research you said you haven't done?

Wallaby Court

December 9th, 2022 at 4:08 PM ^

While I would love to get a deeply researched piece into Michigan's NIL program and a comparison to other schools' NIL programs, that may be impossible for MGoBlog. FOIA (or the corresponding state laws) do not apply to the underlying NIL agreements. That means Alex can only get what people voluntarily provide. That creates a multilayered data problem. First, Alex has to get enough data. That means a sufficient sample of Michigan NIL agreements and sufficient number of sufficient samples of NIL agreements from other schools. That will probably require a tremendous amount of work that exceeds MGoBlog's resources. It's the kind of project that requires the backing and resources of a behemoth like ESPN or the New York Times. And even if he gets that data, Alex has to hope that he receives representative data from Michigan and the other schools.

dragonchild

December 9th, 2022 at 3:26 PM ^

I'll say it again: M does not need to be the highest bidder.  They only need to make the money not matter.  If Miami is offering 20%, 30% more than Michigan, I like M's odds anyway. The problem is when Miami is offering six-figure NIL deals and Michigan counters with nothing (or what's more likely, no details).  A recruit could come from a millionaire NFL family so money might not matter in a need sense, but just the insult of "we think you might be worth nothing" when everyone else is scrambling to put together deals makes Michigan look comically disorganized at best.

It's like any other job.  There will always be employees chasing the brass ring, but they're invariably never your best anyway.  We've seen 5-star slouches at OSU and hamblasted them.  You don't want 'em.  The best love what they do, but still, they're not stupid enough to work for a multi-billion-dollar enterprise for just good feelings.  You have to pay them enough that they're not thinking about the money, and FFS that is not that difficult!  Just offer something competitive and then both parties can quickly move on to more exciting topics.  The guy who's gonna go through a brick wall for you would really rather not spend months haggling, so the way you lose out on that guy is to sink below lowballing and into the muck of straight-up insulting.  You can't be "Leaders & Best" when you're Stragglers & Stooges on such an important issue.

Wallaby Court

December 9th, 2022 at 4:15 PM ^

I agree. Your comment piggybacks on my personal ideal for Michigan's NIL program. Michigan should promise every recruit and player an identical NIL commitment solely because they play for Michigan. All other NIL deals can follow Michigan's current setup whereby Michigan facilitates connections and provides support. That gives every player a basic income while allowing particularly enterprising, notable, or marketable players to capitalize on their value. I would also like Michigan to maintain a database of other players' NIL deals so they have data to show recruits, but that is not as important as getting a salary analogue in place.

njvictor

December 9th, 2022 at 3:27 PM ^

One of the things that pisses me off the most about our NIL is our AD's lack of embracing or even advertising collectives. They don't even seem to want to acknowledge they exist. We are the #2 team in the country, beat OSU in back to back years, and are back to back B1G champs and currently Ann Arbor NIL Club has less than 1300 active members with less than $27k being contributed monthly. It is insane that the advertising for these collectives is so bad. We have one of the largest alumni networks in the world, many of which are wealthy and love football, and we can't get like 10,000 people at a minimum to give money to a collective? I honestly think outside of Twitter, Reddit, and MGoBlog, most casual fans have no idea these collectives exist

Coldwater

December 9th, 2022 at 3:29 PM ^

Man, young Alex went Scorched Earth on the football team's poor recruiting class.  I like Alex because he doesn't hold anything back.  

Michigan has NEVER been hotter than they are right now.  At least in the era of the Rivals, Scout, 24/7, On3.  Michigan should be able to get into the living room of any 4 and 5 star player they want.  Harbaugh is known around the country.  If not to players, at least the players parents.  He's famous.  The poor recruiting and lack of big time QB's (Other than JJ) is shocking.    Yes, we NEED 5 star talent to keep up with Ohio State, Alabama, and Georgia...    I'm all for using NIL in any way to sway players here.  We just don't want a Texas A&M situation on our hands.  No one should be guaranteed playing time as a freshman.    We have PROVEN coaches, we win, we beat OSU back to back, Ann Arbor is cool....if they get their NIL business in order, there's no telling how great the recruiting can be.

 

 

 

 

 

goblue2121

December 9th, 2022 at 3:32 PM ^

If the B1G is going to keep expanding, I hope they add a few schools from the south. It's already a difficult task to try to lure premier southern talent all the way up north. It's going to get even more challenging when the SEC expands and starts to form a wall to keep all the talent in thier area. 

bronxblue

December 9th, 2022 at 3:36 PM ^

This is sobering and deep analysis but I've said this a bunch of times in other articles but please list actual issues or shortcomings.  I'm sure there are real issues and they're probably related to some slowness by the AD, misplaced arrogance, etc.  But even with the Erick All situation the goodbye post from this site was "it's NIL" and then All, his family, various insiders, etc. all came out and said it wasn't NIL and then we spent days complaining about medical care.  If NIL is this huge issue please let us know and do the research because otherwise it's starting to sound a lot like BPONE talking points that aren't necessarily tied to actionable, identifiable issues.

Colt Burgess

December 9th, 2022 at 3:42 PM ^

How can Michigan have been caught so flat-footed on NIL? Not even Sam Webb will be able to spin this year's class into a positive. But I bet he'll try to focus on making inroads (temporarily?) into Ohio. 

Brian Griese

December 9th, 2022 at 3:47 PM ^

Alex: Thanks for the write up. I don’t follow much of recruiting anymore but I appreciate the update.  If you read this, I have an honest question for you or anyone else that wants to answer: Should Michigan promise playing time or starting positions to any recruit? If your answer to that is no, how is that any different than Michigan making promises on NIL? Wouldn’t the pitfalls of saying yes to the former be the same as saying yes to the latter?

I am of the opinion Michigan should do everything they can to give athletes opportunities for NIL but I think football programs that try to run a program off of promised NIL amounts are going to crumble.  My opinion, of course.

 

rice4114

December 9th, 2022 at 4:20 PM ^

Michigan is going to scoop up 100 million a year for eyeballs watching their team on tv. If you cant figure out how to have a minimum to pay players for NIL with this number in mind I just dont know what to say. It doesnt take the schools money it just takes time and organization of the money that is out there. 

99% of this entire problem/issue is since day one even fans on here has been pushing this "lets just sit on our fucking hands and wait". I was pissed off back then wondering why would we take this stance but now its time to pay the piper. Someone is VERY well paid thanks to the $100 million that comes into the program funds. One of those well paid people do something NOW! Michigan Arrogance has really reared its ugly head and I hope Ono maybe makes a few heads roll. 

rice4114

December 11th, 2022 at 6:38 PM ^

Im making this too hard for you. Lets me simplify.

The 100 million represents a number for the athletic department. There is a number that represents how much booster money is out there. Let the first number motivate your ass to organize the second number to get to the players. Good god no wonder we shit our pants on NIL. Our fans are enablers.

mackbru

December 9th, 2022 at 3:50 PM ^

Michigan will figure it out because it has no other option. You can't be elite with recruiting classes consistently outside the top 10ish. The running narrative here -- that Michigan is the exception to the rule, because "culture" -- is kinda bullshit. The success the team has had over the past two years stems from solid recruiting classes in the past. Just because some underrated kids -- Hassan Haskins et al -- outplayed their recruiting ranks does not change the equation. All elite teams have some stars that were more generic 3-stars out of HS. The falloff in Michigan's recruiting won't be seen until 2024 and beyond. The program can withstand one off year, but not two or three.

Michigan doesn't need to become TAMU and basically offer huge signing bonuses. That's not even good business most of the time since many recruits won't be worth it. What it does need is a clear and coherent plan beyond "you'll see." For Pete's sake, just copy what ND is doing.

JusticeFrankMurphy

December 9th, 2022 at 3:56 PM ^

There is very little real evidence to support your take that Michigan is behind the curve on NIL. Conversely, I've seen plenty anecdotes and arguments from people around a variety of big schools asserting that their program is doing NIL all wrong and is going to lose out on recruits because of it. I don't think anyone actually has a clue right now, which you more or less admit yourself. 

"Notre Dame boasts the #3 class in the country. Are they going wild with the $$$ like Texas A&M? None of the reporting seems to suggest that, but they have their NIL game in order and Michigan doesn't." 

This is a really weird set of assertions without any evidence to back up any of it. It is entirely possible that ND has stepped up its recruiting a bit under an exciting new coach. It's entirely possible that Michigan is just having a down recruiting year, like the occasionally have had in the recent past (ex: the 2018 class was ranked #22, but it was sandwiched between #5 and $10 classes). The truth is that no one really knows at this moment, and the degree to which it can all be chalked up to NIL or not is a giant question mark right now. Seems borderline irresponsible to so publicly dump all over Michigan over it without much in the way of evidence or reporting. 

 

JusticeFrankMurphy

December 9th, 2022 at 4:17 PM ^

Are the 2022 and 2024 classes somehow exempt from the effects of NIL? 

As Alex himself points out we also lost a bunch of coaches last year and with them a ton of relationships. More than just NIL has changed with respect to 2023. 

I'm not all that worried about the 2023 class. Sure, I would like it to be better and I hope they still get some guys in (Nyckoles Harbor and Jyaire Hill would go a long way to changing how this class looks on paper), but I'm willing to reserve judgment until 2024 or until someone can actually report facts about NIL before I start worrying that the sky is falling. 

bronxblue

December 9th, 2022 at 5:49 PM ^

We're basing this off two classes, one that finished #9 in the country and one that's probably going to finish in the mid-20s.  This class seemed off from the jump and maybe that has to do with NIL but it could also be because they lost both their DC and OC (and the OC was a crack recruiter) and they replaced them with a guy who's most recent college experience was at  Vandy and a guy who was in the NFL for the past decade+.  It may take some time for those relationships to reform.  Honestly, the bigger issue here seems to be that guys like Mike Hart and Ron Bellamy are being out-recruited (per the rankings) by Ron English and Scott Hazleton.  

Is NIL not helping?  Sure.  But there are some supposed "crack" recruiters on this staff who haven't closed on anyone who they didn't coach in HS or lives 15 miles away from campus.  That's gotta at least be as important of an issue.

bronxblue

December 9th, 2022 at 5:14 PM ^

Regarding your comment about NIL at other schools I remember some article that came out around OSU last year showing the total NIL expenditure for every team combined was something like $2/2.5M and Quinn Ewers, a guy who never played a down at OSU and then transferred, was the single biggest earner.  

I think a lot of schools are figuring it out and UM is probably somewhere in the middle.  They will need to figure it out but I really hope this site and others give actual information around it and not what seems like a bunch of speculation and pearl clutching.

bronxblue

December 9th, 2022 at 5:42 PM ^

Yeah, the OSU AD released an email yesterday begging for more money and name-dropping collectives because they weren't staying competitive with the Joneses.

It's still the wild west out there but if anyone honestly thinks the University of Michigan, one of the richest colleges AND athletic departments in the world, is going to lose in this race then it would be a dramatic departure.  Do I think they're a bit behind some of the leaders right now?  Sure.  But thus far Miami and A&M are in constant flux and not even being particularly effective in their recruiting so maybe the money cannon approach ain't working.

Koop

December 12th, 2022 at 10:23 AM ^

All evidence to the contrary of this sarcasm.

Warde Manuel negotiated a cutting-edge deal with Jim Harbaugh that left the university in the driver's seat when Harbaugh's teams underperformed. Harbaugh turned things around and has led his teams to consecutive sole B1G championships for the first time in 30 years.

Manuel hired Juwan Howard, who won the B1G in his second year and has led the team to consecutive Sweet Sixteen appearances.

Under Manuel, Michigan has won: wrestling championships, field hockey championships, men's and women's gymnastics championships, rowing championships, swimming & diving championships, baseball championships, softball championships, men's and women's tennis championships, hockey championships, and, oh yeah, men's basketball and football championships.

Easy to gripe from the couch, but Warde Manuel has overseen one of the consistently best athletic departments in the country, full stop, and done so at one of the more academically and legally rigorous institutions as well.

Michigan as an institution is complex. It's an institution of people, and so by definition imperfect. But credit is due to the man in the arena.

Magnum P.I.

December 9th, 2022 at 4:12 PM ^

It's like Alex said, U-M has had almost two years to get its shit together and be innovative and planful with NIL. Instead, we're the laggard amongst elite programs. All the best and brightest hopeful talk about how NIL would level the playing field for anti-bagman programs like ours sounds like a joke now in retrospect.

It's so fucking simple. Organize a collective. Guarantee money. If Warde can't figure that out then GTFO. I could get a grad student to organize it in a month. 

S.G. Rice

December 9th, 2022 at 4:16 PM ^

Alex with the very long and well written hot take which at the end of the day is just that, a hot take.  It's what he believes, after noting several times that he does not have inside information.  Okay.  There are undoubtedly kernels of truth contained therein but it's just opinion and I can't say that I share a lot of it.

Can't wait for another offseason of people bitching about recruiting.  One of the real joys of college football.

 

 

6tyrone6

December 9th, 2022 at 4:21 PM ^

There is something fundamentally wrong w an athletic department that has revenues of $210,000,000 and expenses of $202,000,000. Title 9 in my opinion is flawed as well, I think things will get way worse for the AD before NIL gets figured out in a way that is competitive. I don’t have a lot of confidence in bureaucratic regimes to figure common sense stuff out, hope we don’t lose JH over having his hands tied behind his back next 2-3 years. Football should be separate budget all its own. 

BOLEACH7

December 9th, 2022 at 4:45 PM ^

The future needs to be sorted out on NIL … it’s here and probably not going anywhere … can’t blame the kids for wanting $$$ , the university makes millions off them and the coaches get paid handsomely as well … Michigan can’t fall way behind on this … that’s a fact … these two years have been great because of a special class of players… the future, well that is totally NIL related !!! 

AlbanyBlue

December 9th, 2022 at 4:56 PM ^

It's reasonable to have a good NIL program while still staying away from signing bonuses / pay-for-play. As others have said, it requires enough organization to have NIL packages lined up and ready for incoming recruits. That way, Michigan can recruit the way it wants to, while still being able to say to someone like Davis, "OK, we know school O is offering you $1 million to sign your LOI with them, but what we are prepared to do is have a $1.5 million NIL package available to you assuming you are here for fall camp in 2024 and do X, Y, and Z for the booster or collective."

TL;DR There needs to be an organized effort to have NIL packages available for recruits as they join the team. Saying to a recruit "yeah, we'll have something for you" when they're staring at a big check from another school just won't work at the Power 5 level.

hfhmilkman

December 9th, 2022 at 4:59 PM ^

I am confused.  A lot of word written and I still have no idea what the exact problem is or what the solution should be.  I look at the NCAA guidelines.  It states that NIL is not supposed to be an enticement for signing a letter of intent.  So, what is the answer.  Is it we promise NIL to recruits?  Or do we hire a birdy that whispers in their ear the exact amount they will get even if coach is saying nothing.  I have been in debates that NIL promises are just administrative.  It seems pretty clear to me.  Either some kind of information is getting to a 5 star that they are getting X, a 4 star Y, and who cares if you are a preferred walkon, or this information is not available.

Magnum P.I.

December 9th, 2022 at 6:09 PM ^

The answer is to create a "collective," which is a private entity created for donors/boosters to funnel money into. The collective then makes official NIL payments to players. The collective makes a clear arrangement wherein it will pay all players on the team $100K per year (or whatever) for all their autographs (or whatever). This precedent quickly becomes clear and that money is then effectively "promised" to recruits without the university doing anything. 

U-M is either unwilling or unable to facilitate the formation of such a collective.

True Blue Grit

December 9th, 2022 at 5:15 PM ^

Clearly, Michigan has been underperforming this recruiting cycle.  And that's both relative to where they "normally" are and where they should be given their huge success on the field over the last two seasons.  For example, I can't understand at all why highly rated offensive linemen aren't lining up outside Schembechler Hall to get in.  And the same with running backs.  It isn't like we have poor coaches at those positions either.  It must be something else.  

I think there probably are programs that have a more aggressive and relentless approach to recruiting.  But it's not like Michigan doesn't go after highly rated guys hard either.  We're not getting them for a reason and NIL is a likely cause I'd guess.  IF Warde is the roadblock here, he has to go.  Santa may have to make his first big sports decision at U-M.  Because I'd imagine if he doesn't, he's going to start hearing from some pretty wealthy donors about it.  

Blue Vet

December 9th, 2022 at 5:17 PM ^

You mentioned Ono's role, and others have commented on it.

I wonder if Schlissel hindered progress, because of his notorious non-interest in big-time college sports. Or because he was otherwise occupied "interacting with a coworker."

getsome

December 9th, 2022 at 5:18 PM ^

i was curious about ND since theyve always been the near peer and one of the major recruiting obstacles.  michigan wont recruit like bama or osu - but could and should aim to maintain irish level recruiting. 

not much else to say other than decision makers and program influencers need to step up the NIL campaign to ensure michigan doesnt remain well behind their competition.  its embarrassing to even be in that spot, to not be able to fully capitalize on undefeated season

bronxblue

December 9th, 2022 at 5:20 PM ^

I would also like to add that I think we should start looking at the recruiting ability of some of those coaches.  It does feel like some guys are...lagging in that department and it might be time to start wondering how they're going to address that.  For example, looking at 247 recruiter rankings Mike Hart is 5th on this team per 247 recruiter rankings and in the mid 30s in the conference.  By comparison Moore, Clinkscale, and Elston are all top 20 and JayBaugh is close.  Feels under discussed but not helping.

ERdocLSA2004

December 9th, 2022 at 5:23 PM ^

It is your author's opinion that the optimal NIL strategy is neither hardcore pay-for-play nor what Michigan has been doing for the past 18 months
 

But you just said you don’t know what Michigan or other schools are actually doing.  From the looks of it, the places getting the 5* players and who are pulling off these “heists” are the teams going hardcore.  I’d bet we are right in the meaty part of the NIL bell curve.  I, for one, am happy with Harbaugh’s approach even if it costs us some elite recruits.  He seems to want to reward players who choose to come to Michigan, not to pay them to choose Michigan.  He knows that relationships are most important and that even a bag of money won’t create a working relationship.  The guys on the roster certainly seem to be doing just fine with whatever our NIL is.  We will continue to evolve, albeit at a slower rate than everyone else but this will also be a more controlled(thoughtful) approach versus the Wild West that we have witnessed thus far.  He wants guys to buy into the program first, then reward them.  I’m ok with this.

burtcomma

December 10th, 2022 at 9:36 AM ^

How much?  Will they pay tax on it?  Will scholarships including room & board & training tables & academic support now become income for “employees”?  
Easy to cry “pay the players”, but without answering these and a bunch of other questions with an intelligent and competent structure, we’ll see a continuing struggle and continuing problems.

oh, and pay which players how much?  Market value for QB is much higher than RB, right?  So, let’s have a bidding war between colleges and turn this unique game where the vast majority never go on to the NFL into a minor league baseball model.  No thanks, no one graduated from the University of The Yankees.

schreibee

December 11th, 2022 at 2:29 PM ^

Probably seeing/replying to burt's opinion piece too late to get engagement, but burt asks a number of very good questions about how NIL will factor in for tax & other purposes. 

But I would like to respond by asking burt why it's Michigan that has to sort all this out before engaging, rather than all those schools who are diving right in Torpedoes be damned?!

If everyone is jaywalking to get to the bank before there's a run, are you gonna be the guy waiting for the light at the curb, worried about getting a ticket?!

LabattsBleu

December 9th, 2022 at 5:23 PM ^

this was something that had the ability to negate bagmen - those shadowy figures Michigan blamed for poor records since Carr retired to before Harbaugh. Instead of embracing a legal chance to level the field, they have bungled it (based on recruiting rankings at least).

its disappointing how Michigan has not taken to NIL like ND has.

its LEGAL, regardless of what people think about it, it is here to stay. They need to embrace it or get left behind.

Blue Middle

December 9th, 2022 at 5:35 PM ^

Great article, thank you!  

I find the NIL situation troubling, because there is so much great writing about it but no specifics.

What is Michigan doing so poorly?  What is everyone else doing so well?  Piecing it together, it sounds like:

  • Other schools are giving larger, up-front "signing" bonuses.  Is Michigan giving any bonuses for joining the good guys?
  • Michigan is focused on paying current, producing players.  Play better, get paid better.
  • Michigan is giving something to everyone, but not enough and not allocating well.
  • Michigan has barriers to success from the AD and the administration...Why?  Where is the evidence of this?
  • What's the strategy in the AD to fix this?

Candidly, I'm not sure absurd signing bonuses will work in the long run.  Texas A&M's early returns are not good.  There is a cultural problem with giving 18-year-olds a ton of money before they play, and it could create problems with current players who are actually producing and getting paid far less.

That said, you can't be so far behind the curve that no top talent wants to join.

Here's my hypothesis: most of this hand-wringing around NIL and Michigan is bullshit.  The real story is losing two coordinators and having a head coach interview for an NFL job.  Michigan can and should do better with NIL, medical systems, and everything else related to the program, but if NIL were really a problem our 2024 class wouldn't be off to such a good start.

And my guess is we close the 2023 class better than most are expecting, with at least one surprise blue chip recruit.

There's just way too much conjecture and basically zero facts in this whole NIL conversation.  I'd LOVE to see some concrete reporting on what's actually happening.