[Bryan Fuller]

Harbaugh Watch Definitely Sees a Shadow Comment Count

Seth February 1st, 2022 at 12:14 PM

If you’re following closely—and nine of ten doctors recommend not doing this—you’ve probably been convinced several times that Jim Harbaugh is going to one NFL team or another, or definitely returning. Balas at the Wolverine says morale has suddenly plummeted($) among the people they talk to. Poor Sam Webb’s “Harbaugh going or staying? What I’m hearing($)” is now on Part 11. The title of that latest edition is also the most ominous:

'if offered, he's gone'

The good news, groundhogs, is that we probably don’t have to suffer through another six weeks of this.

SO HE’S GONE?

Well, there’s an “if” in there. IF the meeting tomorrow goes well and the Vikings offer Harbaugh the job, it sounds like he’s going to take it. Sam said today that the Vikings have Harbaugh on the top of their list, but that he needs to address concerns held by others in the organization. From conversations with a reader who knows the organization well, I get the sense that “others in the organization” refers to the ownership.

WHAT CHANGED YOUR TUNE?

I don’t think it’s a slam dunk that Harbaugh’s offered the job tomorrow—I was at 60-40 yesterday when I made my hot take on this morning’s podcast that Jim was going to coach Michigan next year. I wasn’t worried this whole time because we’ve done Harbaugh to NFL bler bler so many times since 2015 that I’ve become used to NFL reporters using his name for clicks and NFL executives wanting no part of him. I think the hidden story of what’s changed is Matt Weiss was able to convince his friend (they went to grad school together at Stanford) and analytics soulmate Vikings GM Kwesi Adofo-Mensah that Harbaugh is the only guy with a chance to turn around the fortunes of a team stuck in Kirk Cousins hell.

WHAT CHANGED HARBAUGH’S TUNE?

That’s for Harbaugh or those closer to him to answer. He’s always been a weird dude capable of pursuing one route with an enthusiasm unknown to mankind, then reversing course and going just as hard that way. There’s also a big difference between talk in 2016, when he was just getting started at Michigan, and in 2022, after seven seasons in Ann Arbor, a Big Ten championship, a defeat of Ohio State, a playoff appearance, and a young roster and durable young staff set up for future success if the next guy can fill a few holes.

I maintain that the 2021 negotiation shifted Harbaugh’s sense of himself in the grand scheme of Michigan. Warde Manuel and the Michigan administration were always behind him—Schembechler Hall does what it wants and Weidenbach Hall does what they can to help, as the saying goes—but it was clear after the 2-4 season that Harbaugh was no longer the toast of the town, or completely synonymous with Michigan Football. Once it got in everybody’s minds that Michigan had a future beyond Harbaugh, and maybe a brighter one, it must have occurred to him too. There was a time not too long ago that Michigan was still synonymous with Bo, and Harbaugh was the natural heir of that program. I think the fanbase has come around slowly on the sense that Michigan is Michigan, a mega corporation with some quirky values both quaint and admirable, and a history worthy of its brand. The Great Man Theory fell out of favor in the History Department when I was getting a bachelor’s from them. Recent events and revelations finally moved that idea all the way down State Street, probably for the better. But if you’re the Great Man in residence as that happened I have to imagine the experience was humbling.

[After THE JUMP: A timeline, a staff rundown, thoughts.]

HOW DID WE GET FROM ‘OAKLAND IS STILL IN PLAY’ TO HERE?

Harbaugh+NFL rumors is an absolute fount of bad reporting, so piecing together something resembling the truth has been difficult. Here’s the timeline, as I understand it:

  • Jan 2021: The season sucks, Harbaugh makes overtures to the NFL, but nobody wants him, and Michigan offers an insultingly low contract that they can get out of if they need to fire him.
  • Harbaugh reshapes his staff with young guys, several of them former players from the Carr era, including mending fences with Mike Hart, with whom Harbaugh publicly feuded at times.
  • After achieving all the things, Harbaugh senses this is his last opportunity to jump back to the NFL if he’s ever going to, and the first time he’s been able to do so and feel like he’s done right by his alma mater.
  • The first and most sensical opening was the Raiders, as Harbaugh is friends with the owner, got his start in coaching with the organization, and met his wife in Las Vegas. But they go in another direction.
  • Other NFL openings come and go with Harbaugh’s name attached to them only by clickbait news reporters. Jacksonville? Not with Trent Baalke there. The G-Men? No interest. Chicago, who drafted him way back when? Not even remotely interested. Miami? If Stephen Ross is talking to Harbaugh it’s about how much it takes to stay at Michigan.
  • Michigan puts a contract in front of Harbaugh. It’s similar to Ryan Day’s—both parties think MSU’s contract with Mel Tucker is laughable. It has a buyout that would change the math if an NFL team comes in the future.
  • Harbaugh doesn’t sign it, waiting out the stragglers of the NFL coaching cycle. At this point it seems like there won’t be any more interest materializing unless one of the coachless teams hires the odd GM who thinks he can work with Harbaugh.
  • The Vikings hire Kwesi Adofo-Mensah, an analytics-minded executive who worked for San Francisco when Harbaugh was there, and more importantly is good friends with Michigan QB coach/analytics dude Matt Weiss.
  • Adofo-Mensah’s first choice for HC is 49ers DC DeMeco Ryans.
  • Weiss sets up a call between Adofo-Mensah and Harbaugh, and the two hit it off.
  • Rumor spread that Ross would jump in to get Harbaugh for the Dolphins if an NFL job was imminent. This seems to lead back to a conversation Ross had with Harbaugh when they were negotiating the Michigan contract that I interpret to be Harbaugh asking Ross to bring him to Miami and Ross saying something like “Dude, if I’m cutting you a check it’s to coach for Michigan.”
  • Smart guys like me look at the Vikings job holistically—horrible cap situation, ruthless ownership who abhor drama, another Midwest town with less appeal that Ann Arbor—and believe Harbaugh’s interest in that job must be lukewarm.
  • Ryans declines a second interview. Harbaugh moves up Adofo-Mensah’s list. That list includes Rams OC Kevin O’Connell and DC Raheem Morris, and Giants DC Patrick Graham.
  • Harbaugh flies to Minneapolis for an interview today. Multiple reports from all sides saying if offered the job Jim is expected to take it. Balas thinks the Dolphins might make a play if that happens, but at that point it’s all the same to Michigan.

Meanwhile there were a lot of false rumors put to bed beyond the speculation for HC jobs that went nowhere. Harbaugh was not doing this for a contract negotiation—if he wanted anything it was for Michigan do things they already knew they would be dragged into, like paying their assistants more and playing the NIL game intelligently. The dumbest of the dumb were those who thought the dollar amount on the contract was going to matter. What the 2021 contract meant mattered, but the dude ended up making what he usually does in bonuses and then gave all that money back to people in the athletic department hurt by the COVID year.

WHAT HAPPENS IF HE GOES?

They have to sign a class, hire a new head coach, and decide what to do with the staff.

The first immediate need—and also the most minor one—is shoring up the 2022 class. Tomorrow is National Signing Day, but most of the class was already signed in December, and this is still technically just the first day of another signing period, so the only people making a big deal out of the first Wednesday in February these days are those looking to create drama.

Michigan’s still wants to sign 5-star OT Josh Conerly and an impact edge rusher. No doubt their head coach’s long dalliance with the NFL was suppressing those efforts. It’s clear from the comments of recruits and their parents that Harbaugh was honest about the potential he could leave for an NFL job, at least. Most of the class is signed, however. Here the new transfer rules have done us a favor—just last year if a coach left after NSD guys would be able to ask out of their letters of intent and would have had the leverage to get that. Now they just have to use their free transfer year, which means at least it costs something to transfer again. Depending on what happens with the assistants, that might happen with one or two guys, but I don’t think the class falls apart under any scenario. As for anyone not signed, if they’ve managed to draw a guy in, they’ve got it tightly under wraps. If they add someone tomorrow it’s a Dennis Norfleet type they’ve had their eyes on in case there was room. No idea whom that might be.

As for a head coach, it’ll of course be a circus. There are names I could put out there, and names others will come up with, but we have to get to that in its time. I believe the school wants to get it done quickly, has had ample time to think about it already so they’re already down to a narrow list of candidates, and that they value keeping most of Harbaugh’s staff together.

WHO WOULD STAY? WHO WOULD GO?

It depends a lot on the head coach hire, and the staffer. Nobody is 100% safe, but you can split the assistants roughly into three categories:

Harbaugh/NFL dudes. DC Mike Macdonald is already back with the Ravens. I have zero doubt QB coach Matt Weiss would go with Harbaugh. I don’t know what LBs coach George Helow is thinking; he debunked rumors of interest in FAU’s DC job (his brother goes there) over the weekend, but he also followed Macdonald to Michigan and was the weak spot on the coaching staff last year. Losing him might cost Michigan Raylen Wilson. TE/Special Teams coordinator Jay Harbaugh would certainly have the choice to follow his father, but also an opportunity to get out of his shadow, and any head coach would certainly want Jay to remain on staff.

Harbaugh’s college hires. The next three names all depend on who’s named head coach. After the coordinators, the OL coach and the strength & conditioning coach are the core of your program. The S&C guy in particular tends to come attached to the head coach, because that guy gets to work with the players many more hours than any on field staff, and thus serves a de facto role as the coach in absentia. OC/WRs coach Josh Gattis is the reigning Broyles winner and the leading internal candidate to take over for Harbaugh. If Michigan makes an offensive mind HC hire we could lose Gattis; if they hire a defensive guy however it would seem keeping the nation’s reigning top assistant makes a lot of sense since that guy would be high on the list even if he wasn’t already ensconced. Co-OC/OL coach Sherrone Moore is another guy you leave in place unless the new HC has a built-in offensive line coach. S&C Coach Ben Herbert was a coup when he was hired, and again is a top notch candidate you would like to hold onto unless the new coach comes with a certain guy.

Michigan’s college hires. Weirdly, Michigan has more guys attached to the institution than the head coach than perhaps any Michigan staff since the olden days. That’s probably because they were all guys who could believe their positions would be secure no matter what happened with Harbaugh. In ascending order of attachment: DBs (cornerbacks) coach and soon-to-be co-DC Steve Clinkscale is owed a DC title in his contract based on Michigan’s performance last year, unless they want to split hairs because in base passing yards per game they fell to 27th after Georgia where the threshold was top 25. Clink didn’t go to Michigan but he was born to coach in Michigan, has strong ties in the state, and was considered the top in-house candidate for DC when Macdonald left. Losing him would be a big blow one year after they finally brought him home.

RB coach Mike Hart gives people around him the air of a future head coach—it’s an open secret that his arguments with Harbaugh didn’t end when he started working for him, but that’s because the two are strikingly similar people. Hart is clearly here for Michigan, not Harbaugh, so if he leaves it’s because the new coach asked him to. Safeties coach Ron Bellamy is another potential future head coach, finally making the step from Hall of Fame-worthy high school coach to college track. He is beloved, has proven to be their best recruiter, and fits so well in so many spots on any staff that losing him would be a black mark on the new head coach. Finally, DL coach Mike Elston came in just a few weeks ago with full knowledge of the fluid Harbaugh situation. He’s a star DL coach who was passed over for DC so many times at Notre Dame that he decided he might as well be the DL coach at his alma mater. Whoever’s named head coach is stuck with him—it’s not like that’s a bad fate.

I want to stress here that this is not normal--Michigan is about as well set up for a coaching change as you can be, with young staff in key positions who aren't tied to the head coach. Ohio State had a similar transition but they also had to pretend to not have fired Urban Meyer for a year to pull it off.

BEST GUESS?

Harbaugh’s gone, they hire Gattis, and he does fine, because Harbaugh left a solid foundation. But that’s just a guess; coaching situations can get really hairy, as most of us recall. My advice for you today is to try to think of the last one, where your Michigan fandom was in late 2014 before we clinked beers and said “Harbaugh” to each other, and where it was before 42-27. Head coaches matter a great deal, especially in the long term health of the program. But if the floor here is they hire the reigning Broyles winner, that’s a far better place to be than most I could have imagined for 2/1/2022.

Comments

bronxblue

February 1st, 2022 at 12:46 PM ^

This is mostly my take as well. 

I've said for a while that the one thing UM can't offer Harbaugh is the NFL, and it seems like he wants that.  He probably would have jumped last year had anyone offered, and few people here would have been bent out of shape.  So this year it worked out and that's life.  

I don't think Harbaugh gives a shit about what fans think; he's always marched to his own drummer and that isn't going to change.  I don't get a sense the money bothered him as much as realizing that if he wanted to coach in the NFL he didn't have much more time to make that leap and this is an opportunity to do so.  And yeah, if he gets the offer he'll take it, or at least he'll then float it by Miami who'll probably match because Ross doesn't need any convincing.  

mGrowOld

February 1st, 2022 at 12:50 PM ^

"I am not the reason Harbaugh is looking to leave, and neither is Brian or Seth or Ace or Warde,"

Scene fast forwards to Harbaugh's introductory press conference with the Vikings/Dolphins:

Reporter: "So Coach Harbaugh, why leave Michigan now?  Why leave after finally beating Ohio State and finally winning the B1G?  

Harbaugh: "You guys ever heard of the Michigan fan site MgoBlog?  Well last year I was reading a post by a user named stevenrking or something like that and it struck me.  If the average fan doesnt want me there, and the editors of the site agree with him and the AD wants me to work for 50% less then what in the Hell am I doing here?  I'm not saying it exclusively the stevenrking post that did it but it sure did make me think about my options.  I'm not getting any younger you know."

It was you Steven.  Wolverine Devotee got Brandon, you got Coach Harbaugh.  

kehnonymous

February 1st, 2022 at 2:05 PM ^

Reporter: "As a follow-up, what are your plans to get started as the head coach of the Vikings?"

Harbaugh: "Well the first thing Sarah and I are going to do is take a family vacation to Bolivia, and sit up in the mountains near La Paz and watch the farmers overtaking their donkeys as they ascend the foothills.  Michigan futbol jerseys there are selling like empanadas. I was thinking of another great football man in Keith Jackson who recently left us and it reminded me to seize the day while you still can."

UMinSF

February 1st, 2022 at 3:20 PM ^

Every time someone mentions this, I'm reminded of JH's "Peruball" documentary from his days with the 'niners. (If link doesn't work, just google "Peruball Jim Harbaugh") 

He's had a long charitable relationship with an orphanage in Peru - right next door to Bolivia - and IMO the doc is fantastic. I recommend anyone interested check it out; probably should have brought it up at a happier time.

https://vimeo.com/105130356

The prospect of JH leaving makes me sad. Sure he's a weird guy, but I've never been anything less than happy he's our coach - even during the 2020 shit show. The man can coach, and he does a lot of good things in the community and larger world. 

stephenrjking

February 1st, 2022 at 3:27 PM ^

I laughed.

Does identify a thought I expressed poorly, though: I don’t consider my criticism to be something notable to the Harbaughs, just that there was noise on places like talk radio and websites in addition to a renegotiated contract, and my contribution to the noise on this website was not quiet, and it would be dishonest not to acknowledge that my noise was a part of it. But it’s written in a way that sounds me-centric, rather clumsy. 

Brian Griese

February 1st, 2022 at 12:51 PM ^

I think it's three pronged.

  1. Bacon wrote extensively in Endzone that a reason Harbaugh (amongst other things) had no interest in Michigan in 2011 was there was no love from the University; Carr and some players had taken a shot at him, Brandon did not put a full court press on to get him, etc.  The love was certainly brought in 2015 but Seth is right, by the end of 2020 it was gone and getting a low-ball offer shoved down his throat while every corner of the internet called for his head was probably the icing on the cake.
  2. Harbaugh has unfinished business in the NFL.  Honestly, he has probably taken Michigan as far as it will get under any coach.  I am not saying every season was a rousing success but he can leave 'on top'.  
  3. The NFL (in-game theory) suits him more. I will certainly agree that for 2021 Harbaugh was able to marry enough old-school concepts with new-school concepts to have an outstanding season.  However, I have never looked at Harbaugh as a coach that is comfortable with air-raid concepts, blazing tempo offensively, RPO's, 90 snap games, etc.  Due to the salary cap, a longer season and better overall competitive balance, NFL teams cannot be as hyper-aggressive with tempo and snaps.  I think you can still win the Super Bowl with a style of game Harbaugh is most comfortable with.  Of course, in the NFL we all know you don't have to deal with the typical college nonsense either.

Add that up and I think he scoots.  This is probably his last chance to get an NFL job and his star won't get any brighter (age, may not have a season like this again) so I think this the end.  I guess it is time to decide if it is Gattis, Fickell or Rhule.  

BlueKoj

February 1st, 2022 at 2:43 PM ^

"This is probably his last chance to get an NFL job and his star won't get any brighter (age, may not have a season like this again) so I think this the end."

Seth said something similar on the podcast. I just don't think this is accurate. Sure a buyout clause may make it harder, but he's not that old and the NFL doesn't mind older successful dudes anyway. It's better to interview after a successful season, but GM's aren't treating a 2021 12-2 CFP season much differently than a 2023 10-win season in the broken world of college football are they? His resume has enough success on it already at both levels.

I also don't think, even if Seth was right, that Harbaugh would see this as his last chance. A good time to strike, sure. But not his last chance.

 

Brian Griese

February 1st, 2022 at 3:46 PM ^

I disagree.  There were 7 coaches that were replaced after the 2020 season in the NFL. As far we know, Harbaugh didn't even get to the interview stage (let alone an offer) and one of the open jobs would not have even required Harbaugh to move out of Ann Arbor.  One good year later and there's had been chatter about multiple jobs and one one confirmed interview.  Do you think this program has a realistic ceiling higher of what took place in 2021 season? Every year he doesn't achieve that coupled with getting a year older the flame starts to burn less and less. NFL teams have to market and fill a stadium just like Michigan has too. It is easier to market a head coach with previous NFL success coming off of a great year in college more so than one coming off a 2-4 or 7-5 season, right?  

UMinSF

February 1st, 2022 at 3:50 PM ^

Brian Griese, I agree with much of what you said - those may very well be Harbaugh's thoughts.

That said, I'll add one more factor, and push back just a bit.

4. Jim Harbaugh is restless by nature. He's a builder, not a maintainer. The son of a vagabond football coach, he's never stayed anywhere as long as he's been at Michigan. He loves a new challenge - the next challenge. I don't think that's controversial or even doubtful.

Where I'll push back. I know many disagree with me, but I simply don't buy the notion that Harbaugh couldn't win a national championship here based on the drubbing by Georgia.

Harbaugh beat a supremely talented USC juggernaut with far inferior talent at Stanford. He finally beat a loaded OSU team full of NFL talent. Nope, he couldn't win the playoff his first try - most teams/coaches don't. JH is a process guy; he figured out what he needed to do to beat OSU, and I strongly believe he could have figured out how to win in the playoffs/beat top SEC teams. 

Living here in SF, I've watched Harbaugh coach a long time. He's damn good. It baffles me how quickly people gave up on him. He's weird, he can be grating - but the man can coach football.

Anyone who doubts he can win in Minnesota or Miami either didn't watch or is discounting just how fast he turned a lousy 49rs team around. They hadn't had a winning season in NINE years prior to JH, and he took a 6-10 team to the NFC championship game his first year.

I'll be very bummed if he leaves. 

Brian Griese

February 1st, 2022 at 4:18 PM ^

Umin, Thanks for the reply.  I agree with almost everything you said, especially the part about him being a builder.  Hyper-competitive people are probably going to be more likely to take on new situations no matter how difficult they appear and I can see why there is an appeal to the Minnesota job: QB is a bit of a wild card but you have a great RB and two great WR receivers.  That's a great place to start, plus if Rodgers walks the NFC north suddenly becomes the weakest division in the entire NFL.  Some people have said that Minnesota is a terrible job - that I disagree with.  I firmly believe any NFC North job is about to have a great opportunity (yes, even the Lions) whenever Rodgers leaves, and that won't be but one more season, tops.

On the Georgia / National Title topic, I think all fair minded people would agree the only way you win a game like that is either you go plus 3 in the turnover column or your QB has a Braylonfest type game.  To me, the most bewildering part of the Harbaugh era has been QB play. I would have never dreamed Rudock would be the only QB to date to get drafted and not one QB that has played under Harbaugh at Michigan has scored a TD in the NFL.  If I had told anyone that fact would be true on 2-1-22 when Harbaugh was hired I would have been laughed off the blog.  Where I am going with that relates back to my 3rd point about offensive style of play - I just do not think Harbaugh is a guy that is going to embrace an offensively philosophy that involves Michigan getting 90 snaps off of a game, slinging the rock all over the field, etc.  And that's fine! He's proven to all of us in 2021 he can be successful with some old-school techniques coupled with new ones.  But, frankly, I have never seen the offensive innovation coupled with QB play that was going to allow Michigan to win a national championship barring some divine turnover intervention against someone like Georgia or Bama - especially when you consider Michigan's schedule sets up at the end of the year to be OSU (elite program), BTCG, Semi-final against a probable elite team, finals against an elite team. Can you beat 3 elites in a 4 game stretch in this era with Michigan's talent/recruiting level without your QB going crazy once or twice? Maybe JJ and Gattis changes that notion, but at this point I will believe it when I see it.  

To tie this together, I think Harbaugh sees you can still win in the NFL with what he likes: ball control, strong running game, QB's that will protect the ball, punishing front 7, etc.  The Niners just got within 4 points of the Super Bowl this year with that formula and were one quarter from winning it all two years ago.  The Titans had the best record in the AFC (yes, they choked in the playoffs) with a castaway QB and a beast of a RB. I just think his odds of winning a Super Bowl are far higher at a random NFL job than winning it all at Michigan and it is now or never to find out.  

UMinSF

February 1st, 2022 at 5:56 PM ^

If JH goes back to the NFL, we'll never know if he could have beaten the SEC in a playoff - but I firmly believe he's capable.

The thing is, Georgia won the championship this year with a mediocre walk-on QB and certainly didn't play basketball on grass. Their lines dominated ours - and fixing that's where I think Harbaugh could get it done. 

Michigan's O-line dominated OSU, but they were manhandled by Georgia. Was that purely a talent disparity? I doubt it. Out boys were supremely motivated against OSU, and together they played their finest game. They just didn't show the same level of adrenaline/emotion against Georgia. OTOH, Georgia came out with a purpose.

You saw the exact same dynamic in the SEC championship game - Georgia didn't show up with the intensity 'bama did, and it showed.

Then came the Michigan game. Georgia had come up short in the playoff before, and JUST learned they couldn't beat a good team without fanatical desire. They simply were not going to be denied. That's the process I'm talking about. 

Georgia was the better team. But they got clobbered by 'bama the first time, and I'd say Georgia was better than 'bama too. 

So, here's my scenario:

- Michigan's coaches and players learned it takes everything they've got to stand toe-to-toe with the big boys. The O-line is deep and powerful, and plays the entire playoff like they did against OSU this year.

- JJ develops into the best QB Harbaugh's had since Luck. Michigan's strong running game, lots of weapons on offense and strong STs put lots of points on the board.

- Some ball-hawk DBs and clever blitzes create a couple of key turnovers in big moments, while Michigan plays clean football.

- The bad breaks that seem to have tormented JH at Michigan finally go our way.

Boom! There's the formula.  Sadly, we may never get to see it here.

 

HighBeta

February 1st, 2022 at 1:21 PM ^

SRJK typed: "I don't think Harbaugh is bitter about the paycut".

Honestly? I don't think we'd get a straight answer regarding "bitterness" or the contract insult out of JH, at least for several years, because it sometimes takes that long to know one's true feelings. But if I had to guess, based on my interactions with many driven and successful people, I think that latest contract was fundamentally problematic. Problematic to a point where our guy said: maybe this isn't a place to call home forever, regardless of my home's distance from dad's.

When you add that to the crowd calling for my head, even when my players opt out of a season and we're left with a shell of a team in a season unlike any other? Yeah, this just doesn't feel very good any more. Let's see if there's a better situation out there.

Unlike others, I never called for his head, which is besides the point. I never thought the guy walked on water but I wanted his 10 win seasons and the stability that he offered. Yes, he's a hugely poor communicator, but I've worked with *many* of those and I've learned to accept their oddness for the sake of their gifts. What I've never doubted or had cause to doubt was that even the "weird ones", the ones who seem to be above feeling much, if anything - they *do feel*, deeply. It takes a while to be expressed, but it's really there.

I wish him happiness, and I'm sorry that his homies gave him loud crap or always expected what may be only infrequently possible. 

I repeat, I wish him happiness.

gbdub

February 1st, 2022 at 3:34 PM ^

If Harbaugh leaves because he is miffed about taking a pay cut for 2021, then he's a hypocrite if he ever talks about "accountability" - his 2021 contract was a bed he made for himself. That he made the best of it and had a great season is to his credit, but he deserved a pay cut based on his performance.  

Michigan had 4 choices in 2020:

1) Fire Harbaugh (or basically say "don't let the door hit ya" on his way to an NFL job) - probably would have happened if not for COVID. Michigan couldn't afford his buyout, or hiring a replacement. 

2) Extend Harbaugh with a significant raise - Ann Arbor torch and pitchfork would have been in full force, and rightfully so. Even if you don't agree with "fire Harbaugh" after a meh 2019 and a 2-4 2020, certainly he didn't deserve a raise.

3) Let Harbaugh ride out a year with no contract after 2021 - neither side wanted this, and it would have been even more difficult to make the necessary staff changes and recruitment in this scenario

4) What they actually did - cut a contract loaded with performance incentives at the price of reduced buyout. Basically a put-up-or-shut-up year. 

Which would you have rather they done?

Carpetbagger

February 1st, 2022 at 5:51 PM ^

Who the hell cares about AA torch and pitchfork.

If I were Harbaugh it would have stuck in my craw if my boss cut my pay because some people I don't even work with, and don't know anything, don't like how I'm doing my job.

The man had one bad season in his entire career and half the fanbase thinks he's done? Given Michigan's Covid rules (compared to us in the South) and the expectation a University like M was never going to wink wink at following those rules? Heck MSU was a tire fire too, probably because they took the rules seriously too.

I agree with several of the immediately above posters that there are several reason why he may leave, but I don't doubt at all the way he was treated after the Covid season is one of them.

 

HighBeta

February 1st, 2022 at 7:52 PM ^

GBDUB: We'll have to agree to disagree. I don't think he's wired to be a hypocrite and I don't think he deserved a pay cut.

If you're genuinely asking what I would have done if I were Warde, after the 2020 "season that never was"? Your stated choices are incomplete. I would have offered to change the expiration date on his contract by 12 to 24 months and revisited it then.

Edit: with a deferred compensation clause commensurate with the budget woes impacting the entire program and its staff.

Yeoman

February 2nd, 2022 at 2:12 PM ^

They're different jobs, and it's not just the recruiting. In college there are enormous talent gaps among teams, even within the power conferences. There's no such thing in the NFL; when preseason betting spreads came out last year there wasn't a single game over 14 points.

The Vikings might not have a single game all year with a double-digit betting spread. We'll probably have eight out of 12. Massey has us -30, -30 and -46 in the first three games next year.

If you like the long game, developing players, building a program, college is great. If what floats your boat is the week-to-week scheming, it might get old after a while.

LakeWylieBlue

February 1st, 2022 at 12:27 PM ^

Thanks Seth. My thoughts were misguided as I had thought Harbaugh would be at Michigan. Onward and here is hoping Michigan doesn't pull another Rich Rod or Hoke out of the hat with the next HC hire

Thanks again for the excellent writeup!

4th phase

February 1st, 2022 at 12:32 PM ^

What is the connection between Weiss and Adofo-Mensah? 

 

Edit: Staff continuity I think is the number 1 priority with this hire. You're coming off a BTCG win and playoff appearance. You have a really good core to build on. You just spent what, 3 or 4 years trying to get guys like Clink, Hart, and Elston on the staff. Quality assistants that can both coach and recruit are fundamental to success.

 

Also, if you spent last offseason complaining that Harbaugh should be fired, then you don't get to complain about anything now. You don't get to whine that you want him to stay or to just cut ties and fire him, cause this whole silently waiting for and seeking NFL offers is a direct result of the negotiations last year

4th phase

February 1st, 2022 at 3:10 PM ^

Seth, you said Foote was unlikely to be the DC and I think most agree. What are your thoughts on him as a dark horse HC candidate? 

He's not my first choice, but I could see the AD selling it for all the reasons that we want him as DC.

1VaBlue1

February 1st, 2022 at 1:12 PM ^

"Also, if you spent last offseason complaining that Harbaugh should be fired, then you don't get to complain about anything now. You don't get to whine that you want him to stay or to just cut ties and fire him, cause this whole silently waiting for and seeking NFL offers is a direct result of the negotiations last year"

You're speculation is speculation - very similar to all the clickbait stories every off-season.  And yeah, I do get to hope he stays and I do get to comment on it.  He earned all the crap he got last year, and he earned the praise he received this year.  He was able to pull off the unlikely - a complete turn-around that changed minds everywhere.  That's a nearly impossible thing to do, and yet he did it.  It's not my fault he's looking at the NFL - he's the one that wants to go back there (apparently).  He's not looking because I was upset with a 2-4 record from a team that quit.  Blame him!

Nonetheless, if he doesn't want to be at Michigan, find someone who does.

4th phase

February 1st, 2022 at 1:35 PM ^

The last week at least has been non stop complaining on the board. People seem to be oscillating between wanting him to stay (after wanting him fired last year), and now "whatever just fire him for looking around". Which I guess you'd be in that category. How many people complaining have said, "You know what, I was wrong to want him fired last year, and that contract was not a good move."

Carpetbagger

February 1st, 2022 at 5:56 PM ^

I don't oscillate. I want him to stay, and understand why he may not.

I wanted him to stay last year, and didn't understand why people wanted him gone after one bad year.

He's a great coach, although probably not Saban-Meyer elite. I'll take that over Hoke and RichRod or freaking Gattis any day of the week.

AlbanyBlue

February 1st, 2022 at 1:58 PM ^

1VaBlue1 -- this exactly. Of course we complained last year, we went 2-and-MFing-4. Add to that, the team was listless, clearly lacking enthusiasm for playing football -- "hey guys, clap, we did something good".

Now, a lot of that might have been due to the pandemic -- not practicing, coaching by Zoom, etc. But that doesn't preclude us from bitching about it. 

Fast forward to this year -- Harbaugh improved his staff, his attitude, and his own coaching, and the team responded. Of course we're going to applaud that as well as the results. 

The OP is just another "I told you so" variant, and that gets tiring. Good response, VaBlue!!

snarling wolverine

February 1st, 2022 at 2:11 PM ^

When a guy (who has previously won big at San Diego, Stanford and the 49ers) goes 47-18 in five non-pandemic seasons and then 2-4 in one pandemic season, common sense should dictate that we shouldn’t put too much stock in that one season.

This website lost its fucking mind last year, period.  You had even Brian and Ace taking shots at him in the podcasts.  It wasn’t like, “Well that was a tough season but let’s see what happens in 2021.”  It was straight up trying to run the guy out of town (even insinuating that he had CTE, autism or various other conditions).  If he read that and thought, “The hell with this, I’m gone next chance I get,” I can’t really blame him.

MacMarauder

February 1st, 2022 at 2:59 PM ^

Personally I'm ok with the complaining except the CTE and medication stuff, that went too far. However I'll also point out that while the 2020 season was an aberration it came off the heels of the 2019 season which ended with the normal OSU pantsing and bowl loss. I don't think the anti-Harbaugh stuff of 2020 was based only on 2-4 it was also based on the trajectory of the program and the pattern of losing our last two games. 

4th phase

February 1st, 2022 at 3:04 PM ^

Yeah thanks. Probably put it better than I can.

 

SRJK gets it. at least he's man enough to own up to it. 

 

Also its not really speculation at this point. People who cover the team are saying that he was willing to take the pay cut last year, but it definitely rubbed him the wrong way. "Cut my pay in half? Sure where do I sign?" 

And these are the consequences of that renegotiation. I'm not saying one fan on mgoblog, or one Brian column is irritating Harbaugh enough to leave. Its the general feeling that was around the program, which was extremely negative, that negativity bubbles up to donors, former players, and AD employees, and I think people who had a part in that cant all of the sudden turn around when things are going well and then continue to bitch. 

TIMMMAAY

February 2nd, 2022 at 10:27 AM ^

He most certainly did not "earn all the crap he got last year"... how we're at this point, and people still refuse to see this... I will never comprehend. Context means nothing, I guess, and nuance is lost on all but a few it seems. This is why we're here, guys. 

Wake up. And maybe, if we do lose Harbaugh (I'm gonna blame some of the people in this room, and that I do not forgive), maybe we can avoid going through this bullshit with whomever the next coach may be (including JH). He did not deserve the shit he took from the staff here, or much of the fanbase. Unfortunately, the loudest voices carry the furthest. 

The Blue Collar

February 1st, 2022 at 12:38 PM ^

Honestly, I hope he goes. I can no longer be a fan of this man. 

Mich finally got the Harbaugh they paid 10s of millions of dollars to, only to see him leave after the coaching carousel has concluded. It's a bad look, Jim. 

bronxblue

February 1st, 2022 at 12:39 PM ^

I thought Harbaugh was going to interview on Wednesday so I guess we'll get an answer sooner rather than later.

I remain amazed that the Vikings would be his final spot simply because it doesn't seem like a team poised to make a huge jump up in competitiveness.  Maybe he fixes Cousins and they get some good FAs and guys make leaps but this team's MO has been ".500 team" for 4 years now and while he pulled it off in SF that situation featured a younger team with a lot of guys hitting their primes.  But if you want to coach in the NFL it's one of 32 spots so you take it.

I do think the team is set up for success if he leaves; I agree that keeping Gattis as HC is better than trying to nab Campbell or whomever is out there.  

Wolverine In Exile

February 1st, 2022 at 1:17 PM ^

I'm guessing the interview got moved up a day because of the impending snow storm. 

Harbaugh even in his craziness, still is good at evaluating risks and opportunities. And while Minnesota isn't perfect, (1) it's in the NFC North which has a perpetually clueless Detroit & Chicago, and a GB that may be on the precipice of dumping their all-galaxy QB. So there might not be a less competitive division in football in the next 3-4 years. (2) Has personnel issues sure, but they still have Cousins who is serviceable and Dalvin Cook. Piece together a competent defense with Fangio and you might be able to get to 9-10 wins in a weak division. (3) Sounds like he'd have a compliant GM to work with.

And I still think the fact that his brother has a SB ring and he doesn't chaps his ass like nobody's business, especially since he was so close (and John's been on the doorstep to a return trip as well). Like Seth said, this is the first chance Harbaugh has to go to the NFL without him internally feeling like he was unsuccessful in achieving "Bo's" mythical approval of his job. 

As for our guys in blue, Gattis is setup to get his chance at a big time P5 program, he'll keep most of the staff in place (especially on the defense side and those with connections to Old Blue to provide him cover), and we'll find out if he's more Lincoln Riley or Larry Coker within two years. A new, outside-the-program coach doesn't make sense at this point in recruiting and off-season preparations. I'm actually hoping that if Jim leaves, Jay stays-- maybe we got lucky in the lottery of successful case studies in nepotism.