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

Harbaugh to Chargers Comment Count

Seth January 24th, 2024 at 7:27 PM

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

…as seemingly confirmed by the Chargers.

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

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

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

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

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

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[Barron]

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

University of Michigan President Santa Ono Statement

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

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

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

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University of Michigan Athletic Director Warde Manuel Statement

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

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

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

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

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

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

#GoBlue

Comments

BananaRepublic

January 25th, 2024 at 10:02 AM ^

There is no coach on earth who could turn a team into a perrenial powerhouse in perpetuity after his departure. Harbaugh took a Michigan team struggling to scrape 3rd or 4th in its division on a yearly basis and turned them into 3 peat conference champs and capped it with a national title. That's restoration because Michigan has never been here in the modern era.

1WhoStayed

January 25th, 2024 at 12:33 PM ^

Boomer - The Natty is icing in the cake. Three (3!) straight victories over OSU. Three straight outright Big Ten championship. Three straight CFO appearances. There’s your “restored” program. FFS man, whether it remains on top is not the question. We’re at the top NOW and have been for the last THREE YEARS!

Navy Wolverine

January 24th, 2024 at 8:59 PM ^

Yeah, not gonna lie I’m pretty fucking disappointed. The NCAA and B1G wanted to take down Harbaugh and they succeeded. College football is a complete mess right now and they just lost their two best and highest profile coaches this off season. Congrats to you Warde. You are now a worse AD than Brandon. Nice try with that face saving leak this afternoon with that improved offer. 
 

If you would have told me in 2014 that Jim would coach at Michigan for nine years, win a national championship and then go back to the NFL, I would have taken it happily then but I’m disappointed with him now. He had a chance to cement his legacy as the greatest coach in Michigan history and build an enduring juggernaut but instead chooses to go to the…..Chargers? Honestly I don’t really care if he succeeds there or not. I don’t think many other people will care either.

I’ll give Sherrone all my support. The players will love him. He may end up a better recruiter? That would be nice. Hope he can pull in high quality assistants like Jim could and hope he can put together a game plan like Jim as well. I hope he has as much pull with the U-M administration to do what is needed to win in an NIL world but not that optimistic.

Kind of sucks to see this era coke to an end.

RobSk

January 24th, 2024 at 7:50 PM ^

The “next man” is a guy with nothing like the qualifications to do the job. This is a choice based on emotion, like the Howard hire. 

Michigan is not an entry level job.

Maybe it works, but it’s impossible to be optimistic given the challenges and problems faced here. Moore is not being born on third.

DelhiWolverine

January 25th, 2024 at 7:02 AM ^

Not sure why you’re getting downvoted here. Harbaugh was a clear level above Carr and his worst years in terms of overall record were comparable to Lloyd’s best years. Lloyd just felt more successful because he regularly beat Cooper-coached OSU teams. Once he ran into Tressell, he really struggled. 
This is nothing against Carr, who was a good coach, but let’s not pretend that he was one of the greats. 

greymarch

January 24th, 2024 at 7:56 PM ^

At the beginning of this season, everyone thought UM's O would be better than UM's D.  The opposite was the case.  Minter is a better coach than Sherrone.  

 

I guarantee part of Harbaugh's deal with the Chargers is to offer Minter so much $$$ he's definitely going to leave with Harbaugh.  Take Minter off the table, as much as that hurts.

 

Michigan proved it can pay any amount it wants to hire the best possible coach in the country.  Sherrone should not be a coronation.  Sherrone should be at the top or near the top of the list.  However, it's Warde's due diligence to find THE BEST COACH IN THE COUNTRY for UM's HC.

BananaRepublic

January 25th, 2024 at 10:06 AM ^

This is what I'm hoping for. He's a great OLine guy and does very good with scripted drives but his in-game Xs and Os were...not great and he literally did get bailed out by legendary defense in every single one of our most improtant games this year....including maryland. But I get the feeling he's a great glue guy and culture guy so hopefully he can elevate whichever OC was helping him with the scripted drives the most and not miss too much. But I fear there will be a significant, steady decline.

Phaedrus

January 24th, 2024 at 10:16 PM ^

I would agree that Minter is a better coordinator than Moore, but too often we conflate the talents of a coordinator with the talents of a head coach. Minter seems like the type of football savant who will make a great head coach some day (probably in the NFL), but Moore has demonstrated that he's the man for this moment.

Jim has been prepping him for it for years. We thought it was crazy when Jim fired our old OL coach for "untested" Moore and look what happened. Why was Moore such a better OL coach? From everything we've heard, it's because the players love him and they work their asses off for him.

You can do a wide coaching search but there's only one coach in America who was specifically trained for this job.

DelhiWolverine

January 25th, 2024 at 7:18 AM ^

If Michigan wants Fisch, I think they could make him an offer he couldn’t refuse, even at this point in time. But I don’t think this will happen. Look at all the current and former players who are vocally supporting Sherrone on social media. I have to believe that all that’s happening right now is dotting the i’s and crossing the t’s on Sherrone’s head coaching contract and both sides doing a legal review of it. 

BananaRepublic

January 25th, 2024 at 10:08 AM ^

Yea, this isn't Mel Tucker. I think Sherrone is getting a shot because he's very well respected by the current staff and players and has performed very well when asked, even if he maybe turtled way too much in those first few games. But those were literally his first games as an HC and he's up against PSU in penn state and then Ohio State. I kinda get it. I think that in order to keep the program together as it is and stabilize it, he's probably a totally fine hire. He could turn out awful but so too could anyone.

greymarch

January 24th, 2024 at 7:58 PM ^

Agreed.  Harbaugh's constant dancing with the NFL, especially this off-season is really hurting UM.  No kids from the transfer portal because the kids didnt know who UM's coach would be.

 

2024 recruiting around #16?  With a coach everyone knew was gonna be around for 2024, UM would have recruited better players.

 

 

Ernis

January 24th, 2024 at 8:22 PM ^

Here’s the thing with Manuel: one could reasonably argue that both NCAA issues are things which a competently managed AD could/should have either prevented, mitigated, and/or self-reported proactively, and that Harbaugh was effectively hung out to dry by a combination of 1) incompetent management and 2) gutless responses to NCAA saber-rattling

Picktown GoBlue

January 24th, 2024 at 8:52 PM ^

But but but the guys on Columbus sports radio just said a big hammer is coming down on Michigan [edit] for all of the issues and Sherrone and crew will have a hard time because of the NCAA sanctions….and Michigan is just like the Astros who showed that cheating gets championships. Ugh. Gotta switch the car audio to Bluetooth. A nice winter of gloating is going to be a pain in Columbus yet again…for all the loser Buckeye butthurt fans seeing my champion gear. Can’t take it away.