Unverified Voracity Grows Bananas Comment Count

Brian

The most interesting man in the world, part XXXVI. Since Harbaugh's tweeting about the organic bananas Miguel grew today this seems like a good time to note that there's a 50-minute-long documentary on Harbaugh conquering South America on vimeo. I can't embed it, but, like

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I hope to name something they do this fall "peruball."

Yet more complaints from the NFL. The spread is such a good offensive system that a collection of French six year olds could probably go 6-6 with it, according to Seahawks assistant Tom Cable:

“Unfortunately, I think we’re doing a huge disservice to offensive football players — other than a receiver — that come out of these spread systems,” Cable continued. “The runners aren’t as good. They aren’t taught how to run. The blockers aren’t as good. The quarterbacks aren’t as good. They don’t know how to read coverage and throw progressions. They have no idea.”

Nobody is taught anything. You show up in college and they're just all like "put that hat on, the one with the bars on it, I think the bars go in front, hooray we just had practice."

There is nothing funnier than NFL coaches having little stomp fits that their QBs can't take a three step drop when they are making the same transition college is, just slightly slower. As of 2011, 38% of NFL snaps were from the gun. That shot up to 58%(!) by 2014. The NFL is going to hit the theoretical maximum by the time Tom Cable gets done talking.

Harbaugh angle on the above. It'll be interesting to see what Harbaugh does given the above environment. It's a stretch to call his Stanford offense "pro style" for a lot of reasons. It was both far more spread-friendly and far more caveman than that term implies. Andrew Luck ran his share of zone read and the Cardinal had an affection for shotgun runs on third and not quite short (IE, 3 or 4). Meanwhile they'd happily roll out a goal line formation on first and ten from their own 30.

Harbaugh was similarly extreme in both directions as an NFL coach. His first two years in San Francisco his team used fewer wide receivers per play than any other team in the league. At the same time they were introducing Colin Kaepernick as a college-ish run threat.

So the spread is dominant because people who have never seen a football can run it. At the same time you can't poke an NFL coach without that guy giving the public perception of your weird-ass offense a recruiting boost. Harbs gonna Harbs without thinking about what other people will say, of course, but I wonder if the shape of what he does is going to look significantly different than it did at Stanford.

On baseball. We had a mailbag Q that asked how Big Ten had gotten rathergood at baseball that I couldn't answer particularly well, but our former baseball writer Formerly Anonymous had an excellent comment that tackles that topic:

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RPI has changed drastically to emphasize road wins.  It's helped the northern teams quite a bit.  As an example, the Missouri Valley conference is one of the strongest conferences in RPI this year by playing tough teams in the non-conference on the road.  The top 25 in RPI includes Dallas Baptist (who I've seen and know are good), Missouri State, Radford, and Bradley.  What the hell is a Radford or a Bradley?

Add that Nebraska and Maryland were two very solid adds in the last few years.  The B1G has had several big wins over big name programs this year. 

  • Illinois has wins over Coastal Carolina, and series wins over Oklahoma State and South Florida.  
  • Ohio State has a signature victory over ACC leader Louisville in the midweek.
  • Indiana took 2/3 from Stanford, split 2 with College of Charleston, swept Cal State Fullerton, and beat Louisville in the midweek.
  • Nebraska split with Fullerton as well and swept Florida Gulf Coast. 

All of those are pretty damn impressive wins.

The big kicker though is how down the Big12 is.  They are looking at only having 2 tourney teams this year.  Texas is way down leaving just TCU and Oklahoma State in the running.  Tech has an outside shot, but its borderline.  Part of that is losing Texas A&M and Mizzou (granted they added TCU after that loss).  Baylor is down, Oklahoma is down.  They just aren't up there at the moment.

There's some structural disadvantages yes, but the amount of money put into programs like Iowa, Illinois, Michigan, Minnesota, or anyone else in the B1G the last few years, the B1G is definitely showing some major improvements.  We've been a 2-3 bid league for a while, we're taking advantage of a down Big12 to grab another, and our recent success in facilities/adding good teams has lead to some better recruiting.

For more in depth coverage, I suggest d1baseball.com.  They've amassed every major college baseball writer I have read over the last 15 years into one site.  Aaron Fitt (formerly of Baseball America), Eric Sorenson (ESPN/CBS), Kendall Rogers (Yahoo!), Mark Ethridge (SEBaseball), and Michael Baumann (Grantland) are just a few .  "O.M.G., it's amazing" is probably the best way to describe it.  They do regular features of different areas of the country along with national storylines. 

For B1G fans, I'd suggest starting right here for a take from that site. There's also a season update from about a month ago and an early season/preseason article about how B1G has spent big on baseball.

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Michigan can help out the league and their cause this weekend in an odd home series with #13 Oklahoma State that closes their season. Yesterday's game was a 12-2 hammering by the Cowboys, so Michigan probably has to win both tonight and tomorrow to give themselves even a faint chance of an at-large bid. The very idea a 14-10 Big Ten outfit would be on the fringe of the fringe of the bubble is a ton of progress.

Softballin'. Angelique Chengelis profiles Michigan catcher Lauren Sweet. The Wolverine softballists kick off their NCAA tournament tonight at 6 PM at Alumni Field. It's on ESPNU as well.

Etc.: In news that is, in retrospect, not surprising, Iowa and Tennessee drank every drop of liquor at their bowl game. Brendan Quinn joins the ranks of people who just don't want to hear about the Fab Five anymore. Bielfeldt to Nebrasketball? AFC Ann Arbor in the Daily. Haven't had a bread photoshop in a while. Point guard acquisition matrix. Against a 30-second shot clock.

Of local interest: there's a Barry Sanders charity raffle going on. You could play golf with him and discuss whether abruptly retiring from the Lions was a good idea or the best idea.

Comments

Lanknows

May 15th, 2015 at 12:55 PM ^

Yawn indeed.  Quinn's column is about how he isn't interested in something -- how the Fab 5 should stay out of the media, they aren't worth media attention, etc. 

Since everyone decided their feelings about the Fab 5 a decade ago, we can skip that conversation and discuss the value of teaching irony in journalism school.

ijohnb

May 15th, 2015 at 1:40 PM ^

not a great column but I don't think it is garbage.  It tries to get at something but stops short of getting to the heart of the matter due specifically to his lack of interest in the topic.  The real story is that now, 20 years later, Rose and Webber are essentially the same two people who called Grant Hill a "bitch."  They have to degrade to bolster themselves.  They seem to form their entire identity based on their opinion of the shortcomings of others.  Now they just have each other in their cross hairs because nobody else really cares anymore.  Webber did not have to really comment on the documentary, he could have just said it was interesting to look back on things.  Rose did not have to respond, and certainly did not have to include "the timeout" in his tirade (but his inclusion of this pure "mistake" by Webber with the other insults directed at his character indicate to me that Rose has unresolved resentment toward Webber over something that was purely accidental).  Both are acting childish and neither are good ambassadors for the Michigan basketball program. 

Lanknows

May 15th, 2015 at 2:18 PM ^

to the obvious observations.  Everybody immediately thinks it's petty and disappointing and everyone is aware that these guys' time in the spotlight is in the past (except for Rose and Webber being major NBA media figures). Quinn's big contribution is to say he doesn't care about the subject he is electing to write about.

Writing a column about something you think doesn't deserve attention is either stupid or dishonest.

As for my opinion: Webber, again, has chosen poorly. He's took another careless/half-hearted stab at making the case for 'his side' but once again it is incomplete, poorly stated, seems to exude petulance and resentment and, overall, is not in the least convincing. True for the Ed Martin scandal true for the documentary melodrama.  At least he admitted it's his fault for not getting his book out. Rose, IMO, is justified in responding, even if he could have been a little more classy about it. When you're a public figure: your name is your name.

But as I said above, most people already have an opinion on each of these guys which the recent spat probably just affirms those. 80% of people who were Michigan fans during the Fab 5 run love the Fab 5. 80% of people who weren't, don't.  But both are on TV for a reason - people find them personable and worth listing to.  If you don't - no one has a gun to your head to pay attention to these guys, especially if you hate the NBA anyway.

 

Red_Lee

May 15th, 2015 at 1:03 PM ^

I am unnecessarily angry at the photographers in that Breaston photo. WHAT ARE THEY LOOKING AT AND WHY AREN'T THEY PHOTOGRAPHING A VERY RARE (/weeps) MICHIGAN RETURN TD.

 

I am very tempted to photoshop those photographers so it looks like they actually know what they are doing. 

Bakers and Best

May 15th, 2015 at 1:16 PM ^

when I was editing the photo, especially the guy smiling behind Breaston with a massive lens pointed the opposite direction.  I almost went with another picture because of it, but liked the way this one worked out.

Edit: Also worth noting that I think this picture was from a 50 yd TD reception, not a return TD.  But it was three plays after Breaston had returned the ball back to the 50. 

UMQuadz05

May 15th, 2015 at 1:22 PM ^

Smdh at NFL guys who bitch about college football. As in, the free minor league that actually earns you money because your players are stars before they even step on the field.

If it is such a terrible setup then by all means go make your own league.



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KBuck

May 15th, 2015 at 1:27 PM ^

My boss is going to be so mad....

I couldn't stop watching Peruball.

Inspiring that Harbaugh brings that passion to every aspect of his life. Excited to see how this translates on the field.

TheCool

May 15th, 2015 at 1:40 PM ^

Those point guard videos are intriguing. I have no problem with Cassius Winston, but (from the tiny amount of film I watched) I like Quentin Goodin and Bruce Brown. There's not much showing Brown as a PG though I trust the coaches. That kid is explosive and plays with a temper as if someone just stole his bike.

Goodin is long and seems to show the most PG skill as a passer. He sees the court great and does remind me of Darius Morris. Also, Goodin has a more natural, smooth release in his jump shot and seems to be a better shooter than Winston. Also, he's 6'3''.

MichiganMAN47

May 15th, 2015 at 2:41 PM ^

The more I hear about Harbaugh, the more I am convinced he is Super Man. He must be hiding his cape somewhere, but he's probably got a Block M instead of an S. 

Saves people from car accidents 
Saves dismal football teams 
Saves kids from poverty 
Defeats super-villains Mark Dantonio and Urban Meyer 
Sticks it to the NCAA and SEC 

The guy is operating on a completely different level. 

CLord

May 15th, 2015 at 3:33 PM ^

Gotta love journalists.  They'll rip athletes for staying mum on things and depriving those very same journalists of the juice that fuels their livelihood, then they turn around and rip them to shreds when they do open up.  If the Rose/Webber was such a yawnfest, why'd you think it merited your writing a column about it being so Quinn?  Laughable.