When you set out to write a story about how old values don't work anymore, and then they work. [Bryan Fuller]

Hot Seat Vibes: They Actually Believe This Stuff Comment Count

Ben Mathis-Lilley December 13th, 2021 at 12:37 PM

Within this calendar year, responses to the announcement of Jim Harbaugh’s reduced-salary contract extension on this site included words and phrases like “apathetic,” “off the rails,” “laughingstock,” “worst deal any coach of a major program has ever signed,” “none of this matters,” “mediocrity personified,” “failing marriage,” and “weird, quirky, catatonic failure.” Now he is a Big Ten champion; his seat is only hot in the sense of being warm and comfortable. It may vibrate a little, to gently massage his buttocks, which are lean and healthy this season.

Elsewhere, coaches with less impressive résumés are getting larger contracts, while coaches with comparable résumés are getting waaaaaaaay larger contracts. Harbaugh and Michigan’s response was to announce that he will be giving the performance bonuses he earns this year, which are already substantial, to athletic department employees who have had pandemic-related pay reductions. It’s a classic Harbaugh move, justified in the abstract but also seemingly intended to really needle the hell out of someone, like, say, a rival school that may have signed its own coach to a 10-year, $75 million extension during its team’s second straight year of having a losing record in conference. It’s also—and look, I was as tired of talking about this trope as anyone else, but I have to call ‘em like I see ‘em—the ultimate triumph of the Michigan Man (and Woman).

A year ago the University of Michigan’s entire philosophical deal, which Harbaugh embodies, appeared outdated. Without rendering any political judgment on the hows and the whys, we can likely agree that the concept of “meritocracy” has become an increasingly controversial one at the same time that long standing American institutions which rely on rules and “norms” have become less stable. This puts a tradition-obsessed institution like Michigan, whose self-conception involves meritocracy and rule-following, but also being the best at everything, in a tough spot.

[After THE JUMP: Sorting out trite from faith]

Trends were also concerning on the granular level. After 2020 a number of players who had started games transferred off the team, which was a reminder that Harbaugh has always been said to “wear” on those around him. It was predicted, not unreasonably, that his cheap-to-terminate contract would be off-putting to potential assistants and staff members mindful of their own job security. It seemed like one thing or the other had to give: Either the football program could start recruiting even more nationally and less selectively, drop some of its emphasis on academics, and perhaps adopt a passing-spread offense, or it could stop playing a video before each home game in which James Earl Jones stated a goal of competing for national championships.

This seemed so obvious as to be conventional wisdom to many outsiders, myself included. What I found in conversations with people around the program was that it was emphatically not so to them. Like, it hadn’t even crossed their minds. Both university regent Jordan Acker—a U of M sports fan who speaks regularly with Warde Manuel—and author John Bacon told me not just that the decision to retain Harbaugh had been made at Manuel’s sole discretion, but that they believed Manuel’s decision was based mostly on his conclusion that while the record on the field needed to be improved, “student-athletes” on the team were still well-served by the type of program Harbaugh operated. Which is one in which players are expected not just to play football but to go to class (in person) and represent the university by being confident, well-spoken role models. “In terms of priorities and all that, they actually do believe this stuff,” Bacon told me. “They want to do it the right way.” I asked Acker if he worried about whether Harbaugh’s motivation may have waned after six years of being called a disappointment by, among others, many people at the alma mater he’d passed up NFL opportunities to work at. Acker said he did not. “That's what's so crazy about it. He really believes, honestly, that he can turn this around and fix it.”

image
Michigan’s AD wasn’t grading on the cherry-picked stats rivals love to share. [Bryan Fuller] 

But Manuel wasn’t just making a statement about Harbaugh’s vision being worthwhile. A principled stand and 25 cents hasn’t even been enough to make a phone call since, as it happens, 1997. He was also counting on other people being willing to work with Harbaugh to advance the cause.

There’s more than one way to win in college football; to illustrate the point to me, 247 pundit and recruiting expert Bud Elliott contrasted Alabama and Clemson. They’ve been about equally successful in the last decade, but while Dabo Swinney has run Clemson as an extended, (unofficially) Christian summer camp at which recruits are judged on whether they hold doors open for the people behind them and assistant coaches are encouraged-slash-pressured to stay forever, Nick Saban sells Alabama to recruits as the premier pre-NFL training academy and treats assistants and schemes as interchangeable so long as they serve the purpose of winning. Lane Kiffin and Kirk Ferentz personify opposing viewpoints about offensive strategy and public demeanor, and both of their programs won ten games this year. A head coach has a recursive job: If he can persuade people his way of doing things is a winning one, it probably will be. The question 2021 Michigan posed was whether Harbaugh could persuade anyone besides Manuel.

Could he ever! It turned out that a certain kind of Football Guy still appreciated the chance to work with him. For one, a coach’s credibility erodes more slowly among other coaches, apparently, than with the media and public. The Harbaugh family has something like a combined 98 years of experience in the business and, in retrospect, it should be unsurprising that Jim Harbaugh’s 2020 did not outweigh the rest of them in the estimation of collaborators like Mike MacDonald and (quarterbacks coach) Matt Weiss. “Jim is a winner,” former assistant and current Ole Miss defensive coordinator Chris Partridge told me with matter-of-fact patience in August, as I doubted him internally, like an idiot. “He's always been a winner and he still is a winner.” (Partridge added immediately afterward, in a way that testified to the enduring power of Harbaugh’s “on the field and in the community” worldview, that “he develops the program, and does the right thing, and guides the kids such that, when they leave his program, their parents can be happy about what he's created.”)

There are also some who find Harbaugh’s transparent single-mindedness refreshing. Offensive tackle turned graduate assistant Grant Newsome told me that players sometimes discuss the distinction between the “recruiting coach” who meets parents in living rooms and the “actual coach” who runs practice. Said Newsome, “They're one guy when they're trying to get you, when you're not bound to be there, and then as soon as you get there, they're a different kind of person.” His point was that this is not a concern anyone has, for better or for worse, about his current boss.

imageNewsome thinks Harbaugh’s authenticity doesn’t translate well through a media ecosystem built to exalt phonies, but the players recognize it.[Patrick Barron]

Harbaugh-era Stanford offensive lineman Ben Muth, now a writer for Football Outsiders, put it in a similar way: “He's almost such a cliché of a football coach he seems kind of full of shit at first. I think the longer you're around him, it's like oh no, this is who he is. He comes in and he talks a big game about what he's going to do and what we're going to do as a team, then he backs it up. He lives it. I don't think he's ever said something that he didn't really believe and truly believe. He’s just incredibly passionate for it. I think the most recent thing I heard was ‘beat Ohio State or die trying.’ I 100 percent believe that's how Jim Harbaugh feels. He would stay at Michigan until he beats Ohio State or dies.”

Our conversation took place before this season, and Muth told me that he believed if Harbaugh did leave Michigan, he would take the next best available job coaching, and if he left that he’d take another one, and down the line, to the point that “It would not shock me if Jim Harbaugh ends up 85 years old coaching some small Catholic school in whatever town he happens to be living in.” (Muth also said he believed Harbaugh’s restrained public presence in recent years was a function of on-field results rather than a loss of passion, and that “if Michigan goes 11-1 this year and beats Ohio State, he will let people know that it was a job well done.” One for one on that prediction!)

The media focus on Harbaugh’s quirks is understandable; he’s a singular person who made about the same base salary this year as Bret Bielema. What it obscures is that perhaps his greatest asset as a coach—and certainly what revived his career this year—is the network of collaborators that he’s able to click with and listen to. In fact, Muth told me Stanford’s adoption of the original “manball” running game, featuring many pulling guards and tackles, was the result of a meeting Harbaugh had with Stanford’s offensive line after his first season, when the team’s offense had been built on “West Coast” timing passes and zone runs. “He's like, all right, I think this is one of the better units on our team. What do we do? He literally just asked us what we wanted to run more. That's what it was.” A source who’s been around the program told me he believed that part of the reason Don Brown was dismissed was that he didn’t take enough input from other coaches. Harbaugh’s own take on what made this Michigan team better than previous ones, filtered in aggregate from a year of press conference coachspeak, is Pete Carroll-like: It’s led by mutually committed players and coaches whose talents and ideas are flowing back and forth.

But even if the roster and staff are vibrating with Harbaugh Guys and Gals, he’s not what the team and program ultimately revolve around. That would be Michigan itself. Contra fan anxieties about a losing-related irrelevance spiral, the university still has the same hold on some that it did on a younger Jim Harbaugh when he was, perhaps (amateur psychoanalysis incoming), looking for an institution to attach himself to that would provide outside validation of his worth relative to an older brother who moves through the world with more ease than he does. (John went to Miami of Ohio.)

The Michigan football program is unnecessarily inscrutable—after inquiring earlier this year about the possibility of observing an event involving players, I was told by a team spokesman that “we do not have availabilities open to the public, game week or otherwise”—in a way that obscures how comically simple, relatable, and renewable of a resource it runs on, which is that being invited to attend a well-regarded university in a diverse, culturally bustling town that’s pleasant to walk around is an opportunity that appeals to people and makes them feel good about themselves.

According to Carlo Kemp, for instance, he was interested in Michigan because his mom always told him that “school always comes before sports.” Donovan Peoples-Jones’ mother Roslyn told me with pride that her son routinely beats her at Jeopardy and then reminds her that he has a Michigan education. Josh Metellus wanted to challenge himself, to thrive somewhere that was dissimilar to the towns in southeast Florida where he grew up. Jon Jansen, the son of two teachers, said that when he was initially recruited by the school for football “all I could think about was what it would mean for me to have a degree from the University of Michigan.”

image
Kemp and Metellus are two players who found the program’s academics mission much more than pretentious bluster. [Barron]

Many people learn to be embarrassed by these kinds of cheesy thoughts and ideals. But people are embarrassed by the things that mean the most to them, because so much of themselves is at stake. Moreover, a theme that kept coming up in my conversations with people in the academic and college football communities outside Michigan was that Michigan fans who feel burdened and self-conscious about the school’s insistence that it cares about “more than just sports” should be careful what they wish for. There are worse fates than having donors who have never been to a football game, or than having a coach who is unlikely to become the subject of a New York Times series about hiding evidence from law enforcement.

When a college football team is losing, its community sees the worst of itself in the program and hears the worst about itself from everyone else in the country. Michigan fans have had many self-loathing Decembers in which to ruminate on the relationship between pride, tradition, delusion, and terminal decline. (A major reason for the team’s success this season is that its committed individuals, flowing in harmony, manifested values like attitude and toughness that tradition demands without perpetuating the stubbornness and predictability with which it has often been confused.)

But from time to time—maybe only once every 18 years—fans might have the opportunity to congratulate themselves. They may enjoy the chance to feel good about being part of an institution that brings interesting people from around the country and world together in a charming, overpriced town to celebrate the ideals of learning and shop for expensive cheese. It may have been proven that enough interesting, highly motivated people who also play or coach football exist, and are willing to work with someone who just took a huge public pay cut to make an 1890s-era point about merit, to give a college football team a decent shot at winning a national championship in 2021. Who knew? The Michigan Men did. May God help us all.

Comments

Don

December 13th, 2021 at 12:53 PM ^

a rival school that may have signed its own coach to a 10-year, $75 million extension during its team’s second straight year of having a losing record in conference.

Didn't realize till now that PSU went 4-5 in the conference. Oooof.

Nice write-up, Ben.

bsand2053

December 13th, 2021 at 10:31 PM ^

A lot of Penn State fans were openly rooting for him to take the USC job and for good reason.  Also, his only OSU win was a total fluke and IIRC that was the year we beat their ass to a pulp and he was on his way to getting fired.

I spent a decent part of the coaching carousel being worried that they’d let Frames leave and pick up Fickel  

McSomething

December 14th, 2021 at 7:58 AM ^

I wonder if Harbaugh finally beating Ohio State and winning the B1G championship will take some shine off Frames. It was the one thing people could/would hold up as proof of Frames being a top end coach; the Ohio State/B1G championship wins. Frames had them, and Harbaugh did not. Didn't matter how they were won, or how long ago. His trophy case had more hardware. Well, that's no longer the case, and PSU doesn't have a stellar record in a lot of categories since the 2017 season kicked off.

jmstranger

December 13th, 2021 at 12:56 PM ^

"But people are embarrassed by the things that mean the most to them, because so much of themselves is at stake." - this line is really making me think this morning. 

jmblue

December 13th, 2021 at 4:22 PM ^

I remember some thread a few months ago that was praising some of our players for doing well in the classroom, and someone made a comment like "This is what Reddit posters make fun of Michigan for."   I guess some posters here feel peer pressure from fans of other schools to downplay anything we do well?

UMinSF

December 13th, 2021 at 3:01 PM ^

The dude takes the time to interview (among others) a regent, a former player from a previous job, an ex-assistant coach now in Mississippi, former players and PARENTS of former players...he completely revises his original thesis based on an extraordinary turn of events - sorry, that's not a puff piece.

This is a well-researched, well thought-out, detailed and well-written piece - it just happens to be overwhelmingly positive.

amedema

December 13th, 2021 at 1:10 PM ^

It feels great to win. It feels even better to win doing things the way that we all want, with a man who loves the University as much as we all do. I'm so happy for Jim and the players. What a season it's been. 

UMLaw1997

December 13th, 2021 at 1:13 PM ^

This is outstanding.  I've always thought I was an outlier (and I am) for thinking that programs that do the right thing vis-a-via academics and foreign trips and scholarships etc. were important regardless of success on the field.  Also, of course, those programs regularly churn out NBA and NFL players and are routinely in the Top 25 and go to good bowls and the NCAA Tournament as well.

1VaBlue1

December 13th, 2021 at 1:22 PM ^

This was a very interesting article to read, and I'm glad I did!  It's nice to hear that alumni and football veterans understand things that we don't, and don't lose faith in 'things' as quickly as the average fan does.

I'm one of the guys that was more iffy about a replacement, as I thought it had all hit rock bottom.  I wasn't one of the vocal asshats that shit on everything, but I didn't defend him, either.  I would have been happy with whoever (there are no sure things - only the best you can find), and willing to start over.  When he was extended, I saw a path to success: 

  1. Staff changes to improve on-field coaching and decision making
  2. Improved effort (I saw a LOT of players quit during the late 2019 and 2020 seasons)
  3. No W-L predictions, but I wanted to see competitive games - especially against OSU into the 4th quarter

I'm pretty sure the program has checked those boxes emphatically.  In the end, I believe that Manuel made an informed choice between his two options (replace and start over, or extend) that has worked out quite well.

Thanks for giving us a look at why he might have made that choice...

yossarians tree

December 13th, 2021 at 1:22 PM ^

Fantastic article. Let's hear more from Ben!

This should be required reading for a huge chunk of the fanbase has no real understanding of the university as a whole. For those who "get" Michigan in its entirety, there really is nobody right now who comes close to checking off the myriad boxes, and only one of those is winning championships, as Jim Harbaugh. Fortunately the people who do make these decisions understand this.

In this day and age it is damn near impossible to meet all the requirements of the head coach at Michigan and also win championships. Now he has the Big Ten and a great shot at the Natty all without sacrificing one iota of the rigorous standards of Michigan, many of which are imposed by people who view the football team as a mild annoyance. The guy deserves this moment. I hope Harbaugh and his coaches and players win it all more for them than for me.

Dablue1

December 13th, 2021 at 1:25 PM ^

Thank you for this well-written, insightful piece. I especially liked this point, which I think well encapsulates M’s struggle, from about 2005ish on, to find its place in the modern world of CFB:

This puts a tradition-obsessed institution like Michigan, whose self-conception involves meritocracy and rule-following, but also being the best at everything, in a tough spot.

Juxtaposed with this:

A major reason for the team’s success this season is that its committed individuals, flowing in harmony, manifested values like attitude and toughness that tradition demands without perpetuating the stubbornness and predictability with which it has often been confused

Does this imply that Harbaugh found the answer in 2021 to be a top program in CFB while maintaining Michigan’s values? Or is it just that this is the once in 18 years that the stars aligned, some usual suspects (OSU, OU, Clemson) faltered, allowing an old school team with some special individuals and a dash of innovation to rise to the top? 

I hope it’s the former; only time will tell. But if nothing else, I’ll take this blog’s publication of this article as an indication that it’s time to feel good about exactly who and where we are as a football program right at this moment.

Tex_Ind_Blue

December 13th, 2021 at 2:37 PM ^

It's always a mix of both or all of those. Not only Michigan got a tremendous leader back from 2020 (Hutchinson, duh!), rest of the team responded and stood up as well. Some of the usual suspects laid a few eggs. and Michigan was able to hold serve when it mattered. Think of 2016 or 2018 when they had opportunities but had to depend on others to keep them open. This year they took care of business at their end, thus relegating "help from others" to a minimum. 

I am enjoying this. I am not worrying about what will happen in 2022. I am glad to finish at the top in 2021. 

Go Blue!

TIMMMAAY

December 13th, 2021 at 4:14 PM ^

This was a great piece, for sure. However, nobody, and I mean nobody, should need indication from an outside source, that our program is in a good place. Just use your own common sense, look at things critically, and most important just be intellectually honest no matter what. Don't let emotion dictate. Look at evidence, not cherry picked "data" that gets tossed around here (or did, until recently). 

Sorry, I just get annoyed thinking about just how many people were shitting on him the past two years, now they're real quiet, or just jumped back on the wagon. 

East Quad

December 13th, 2021 at 1:32 PM ^

This piece is just wonderful.  It embodies the pride in excellence we learned at UM.  Jim Harbaugh is the ultimate Michigan Man and leader and teacher of leadership for young athletes.  If you want a shortcut to success in life, you need not apply.

bluebrains98

December 13th, 2021 at 1:34 PM ^

The sheer importance of your characterization of the contrast between our program and Alabama and Clemson cannot be overstated. Having this kind of transparency with recruits will not only draw Michigan men to our university, but makes high school kids really evaluate what they are looking for in a college and in life.

The fact that I sound like our Coach even typing this says it all.

Michigan4Harbaugh

December 13th, 2021 at 1:43 PM ^

Very well done, Ben. One of the best I've seen written on this site. Looking forward to seeing more from you, sir. 

Njia

December 13th, 2021 at 1:47 PM ^

Put another way: Jim Harbaugh is the living embodiment of the famous quote from Fielding H. Yost:

My heart is so full at this moment, I fear I could say little else. But do let me reiterate the Spirit of Michigan. It is based on a deathless loyalty to Michigan and all her ways.  An enthusiasm that makes it second nature for Michigan Men to spread the gospel of their university to the world’s distant outposts. And a conviction that nowhere, is there a better university, in any way, than this Michigan of ours.

grumbler

December 14th, 2021 at 9:44 PM ^

Even better, he is the living embodiment of Jerry Hanlon, his quarterbacks coach.  On the eve of the 1984 season, Harbaugh asked Hanlon how good Hanlon thought the team would be.  Hanlon said that it was too early to tell.  Harbaugh pressed, and, as he told it, learned "the secret of Michigan football."

"When you guys come back 15, 20 years from now, and we know what kind of men you are, and we know what kind of husbands you become, what kind of fathers you become, then we'll know how good this football team is."