[Bryan Fuller]

Unverified Voracity Was Pissing Jalen McMillan Off Comment Count

Brian March 8th, 2024 at 4:10 PM

Defensive coaches announced; Hart outgoing. Michigan has finally finished asking every one of their new defensive hires if they have ever run a vacuum refurbishment company with many negative reviews and officially announced them:

Moore's first staff is led by Don "Wink" Martindale, U-M's Matt and Nicole Lester Family Defensive Coordinator, who brings 19 years of NFL coaching experience to the program. Martindale was the architect of the defensive scheme that Michigan has run for the past three seasons and will continue to utilize as the framework for its 2024 unit.

The staff includes defensive line coach Greg Scruggs, linebackers coach/run game coordinator Brian Jean-Mary and defensive backs coach/pass game coordinator LaMar Morgan. The Wolverines have also added former defensive back Brad Hawkins as a graduate assistant coach.

There has been some chatter online about how Martindale didn't quite run the Ravens Defense as Michigan fans understand it via the lens of Mike Macdonald and Jesse Minter—he was much more blitz heavy and ran more man defense—so the explicit statement that Martindale is here to change nothing is interesting. Reassuring? I don't know.

Also in "change nothing, do the same thing," LaMar Morgan is here largely on the recommendation of one guy:

"LaMar is someone that I have enjoyed getting to know through this process. He came highly recommended by Jesse Minter and I saw why he is respected as an top notch defensive backs coach during our conversations. He is an excellent teacher and communicator, and his passion for football and for helping young men achieve their goals showed through in his interview. I am excited to have LaMar mentoring our defensive secondary and coordinating the passing game."

Minter-recommended G5 DC becoming secondary coach: okay.

Unfortunately, Angelique Chengelis is reporting that Mike Hart will not return as a running backs coach next year. Hart does not have an instant landing spot elsewhere, and it's well past the usual coaching carousel, so it seems like this was a decision from Moore. There had been rumors about a lot of conflict between Harbaugh and Hart… but there are rumors about conflict between Harbaugh and everyone. 

[After THE JUMP: squeeze the money tree until it withers]

Private equity, the sport. If you were wondering what the Big Ten and SEC were getting together to talk about, it was the usual: screwing everyone else in the name of more money. Ross Dellenger:

 

In a proposal socialized with administrators this week, the Big Ten and SEC would combine to earn about 58% of the CFP’s base distribution — a figure that will certainly grow in participation distribution as their individual schools earn more revenue for qualifying and advancing through the playoffs. The figure would greatly exceed the ACC and Big 12’s combined distribution number, which is expected to be around 31%. The remaining amount (roughly 10%) will be distributed to Notre Dame and the 64 Group of Five teams.

The way this has worked with the basketball tournament is that teams—conferences really—get more money based on the number of games their teams play in the tourney. That model makes sense and is more or less fair. Here the two major conferences want to bake in a revenue advantage they were always going to have anyway. The Big SEC wasn't satisfied with ripping apart a 100-year-old conference; the strip-mining must continue until there's nothing left.

Apparently there's been enough anger at the idea of the two byes being reserved for the Big Ten and SEC champions to table that proposal. Not that a conference champion in a league with 18 teams and 9 games is particularly easy to determine. And the pending implosion of the ACC whenever their grant of rights expires or is successfully wrangled by the lawyers means the Big Ten and SEC will balloon to 20, 22, or 24 teams, rendering any idea of a conference championship completely ludicrous.

I guess at that point you can have 12-team divisions and a conference championship at the Rose Bowl, or something.

Cease your coaching wishlists? Sam Webb has said as much but here's CBS's Matt Norlander on the state of Juwan Howard's job:

Michigan. A job a lot of people in the industry believe should open, but one that seems more likely than not to remain Juwan Howard's. Wolverines AD Warde Manuel has vocalized support for Howard who, somehow, only has an eight-win team five days into March. Michigan's record since Howard became coach is 87-70 with a 49-46 Big Ten mark. I also wonder if chief assistant Phil Martelli, who turns 70 this year and has been an important presence, is looking to potentially retire.

Like everyone else, I am completely flabbergasted that Howard could keep his job after this season. Not only is Michigan going to finish last in the Big Ten for the first time in living memory (non-Craig Ross edition), they're going to finish last by four or five games. On top of that, there is almost nothing that could happen next year to get Michigan to a spot where Howard wouldn't be fired. If you assume Dug McDaniel is hitting the portal, the best-case list of returning contributors is Tarris Reed, Nimari Burnett, and Will Tschetter. The end.

It is close to inconceivable that a recruiting class with one top-50 wing and a couple of PGs ranked around 100th plus a second-year George Washington will be enough to close the gap between Michigan and .500, let alone the tournament. The portal can only do so much. Unfortunately I can't find this tweet but I seent it: teams that had 7+ transfers on their team this year top out at .500-ish. Transfers are great when you can punch in Chaundee Brown into a three-and-D role but too many and your team looks disjointed. Like Michigan, except not 183rd in defensive efficiency. Even mercenaries have more dignity than that.

JJ is flying up boards. It has been a delightful offseason on sports twitter, where Michigan State and Ohio State fans alternate between "Michigan lost EVERYONE, it's OVER" and "all these guys suck and should not be drafted." Between this year's Michigan draft class and Connor Stallions it has never been clearer that the vast majority of _SU fans know about as much ball as a hedgehog.

Anyway, Twitter has been awash in draft analysts sitting down to watch JJ McCarthy's film and saying "guys… guys… GUYS" ever more frantically. Here's Dan Orlovsky:

There's talk about McCarthy leaping past Jayden Daniels:

J.J. McCarthy may be QB3.

It is smoke-screen season, and I very well may be getting hooked by it. But in Indianapolis, I heard significantly more interest and excitement for how high Michigan QB J.J. McCarthy might go relative to how high LSU QB Jayden Daniels might go.

My sense is that Daniels is not locked into an early draft slot and that the league has turned its attention elsewhere. McCarthy is a strong candidate to go before Daniels in April.

Hell, Mel Kiper just had a segment where he said that between Drake Maye and McCarthy for the #2 spot, "I'm talking this morning to people before the show and all I hear is J.J. McCarthy."

Other combine stuff. A lot of Michigan players didn't test, preferring to wait for Michigan's pro day. One guy who did was Mike Sainristil:

Mike Sainristil, CB, Michigan: The 5-foot-9, 182-pound Sainristil is at the top of that nickel cornerback group. He solidified himself as a late-Day 2 prospect on Friday, jumping 40 inches in the vertical, jumping 10-foot-11 in the broad and running a 4.47-second 40-yard dash. For a converted receiver, his ball skills and change-of-direction ability really stand out; he had six interceptions in 2023. Teams that are looking for an immediate starter at nickel have to be excited about Sainristil's workout. – Reid

Sainristil is looked at as the top nickel in a year with a ton of nickels:

This is the year to get a nickel corner.

You’ve probably already heard that it’s a great class for offensive linemen (it is utterly amazing) and wide receivers (it’s great, but probably a little gassed at this point). The third position that I think is both rich and deep? Slot cornerback.

The headliner is Michigan’s Mike Sainristil. A two-way player in college who initially landed at Michigan as a receiver, Sainristil switched to defense only in 2022 after the departure of Dax Hill, a first-rounder in that year’s draft selected by the Bengals. At 5-foot-9 and 182 pounds, Sainristil is pretty much limited to the slot on an NFL defense—but he’s quick as a wink, super explosive, and has the ball skills expected of an ex–wide receiver. Only one player ran a quicker short shuttle than Sainristil (4.01 seconds), and he looked smooth as butter in the gauntlet drill.

Also:

• Michigan nickel Mike Sainristil has been a Wolverines fan favorite for his uncanny knack for making huge plays. He’s a favorite of NFL coaches, who rave about his smarts and instincts.

“He’s super smart and was the leader of a team that had a lot of great leaders and then won a national title,” an NFL coach said. “What’s not to love? Well, aside from his size, but the guy just keeps showing up on film.”

His size is a concern at 5-9, 182 pounds, but no one doubts his toughness, and he tested well, running a 4.47-second 40 with a 40-inch vertical and a 10-11 broad jump. He will make an impact wherever he goes.

And there was this quote from Washington WR Jalen McMillan:

“He was pissing me off all game,” McMillan said. “He was calling out formations, calling out routes we were gonna run, lining up in zone — when, in reality, he was in man — and lining up in man … while in zone. He’s a great player.”

My main worry about next year's defense is what happens without Sainristil. Aside from all the plays he made there were all the plays other teams did not make because Sainristil got Michigan in the right defense.

Etc: Donor fatigue is going to set in. Revenue sharing ASAP, please. Louis Riddick on ball-knowers. Details of how Alabama sniped DeBoer in two days.

Comments

MichiganiaMan

March 8th, 2024 at 7:12 PM ^

I’m buying JJ draft momentum, but also think Daniels’ stock is sinking. Aside from the poor news cycles, I saw the rumblings about his frame/weight being the real reason he skipped doing measurements at the combine. Glad to see JJ assuaged the concerns about his own frame.

Quailman

March 8th, 2024 at 7:21 PM ^

"Unfortunately, Angelique Chengelis is reporting that Mike Hart will not return as a running backs coach next year...so it seems like this was a decision from Moore."

I don't get how this is the conclusion gathered here.

So Sherrone didn't want Hart back but waited months to officially move on, seemingly hasn't been looking for a replacement during this time, and missed the window of available coaches?

Or Sherrone gave Mike time to figure things (or health) out and either Mike or the two of them together realized it wasn't tenable. This seems more likely, idk.

MaynardST

March 8th, 2024 at 7:29 PM ^

Michigan legends like Howard shouldn't be fired.  They should be kicked upstairs.  One classic case was Bump Elliott, a great running back but a mediocre coach.  He knew he wasn't a successful enough coach to meet Michigan's standards (even though he had one Rose Bowl win) and he agreed to be eased out to become associate athletic director under the great Don Canham.  He did that for two years and then found his true calling when he became a very good athletic director at Iowa.  You never know.   Fritz Crisler was a great coach and a mediocre athletic director.  Bump was sort of the opposite. Bo Schembechler was hired to replace Bump, and the rest is history. Michigan certainly has more than enough money to do this.  It did in1968. Other great Michigan athletes like Harry Kipke and Benny Oosterbaan whose coaching careers did not end with success were also treated very well by Michigan after coaching.  That's quite a bit of precedent. It might be part of a larger pattern. One reason Michigan was considered exceptional years ago is how well so many of its athletes did after graduation (who did not have pro careers) and at least some of that had to do with connections made with successful alumni.

MaynardST

March 9th, 2024 at 2:04 AM ^

Everything is a lot more expensive now, but Michigan couldn't even fill the stadium before Bo unless the other team was MSU or OSU.  Canham was hired in part to increase revenue, something that was a skill of his.  In fact, his company, while he was track and field coach, supplemented the income of a number of Michigan coaches, I believe. I don't think the AD now has to worry about money much, except to join the BIG push for more through media rights. It's one of the very few athletic departments that has enough to donate to the university's academic programs. In fact, the whole school is rich, ranking about ninth in endowments.  Last I looked the endowment was larger than that of the entire University of California system in the aggregate including UCLA, Cal Berkeley and all eight of the others.

Hensons Mobile…

March 8th, 2024 at 8:24 PM ^

UW fired their basketball coach earlier today. I guess the strategy now is fire Juwan in the middle of next year so we can get a jump on next year's coaching carousel. Yeah, that's it.

meeashagin

March 8th, 2024 at 8:33 PM ^

When we lost Dax everyone said Michigan will never be able to replace him. Not only did we but Mikey was better at pretty much everything which is saying a lot because Dax was excellent too.

Mikey was special.

ShadowStorm33

March 9th, 2024 at 2:13 AM ^

I wouldn't necessarily say Mikey was better at everything; Dax's athleticism was off the charts (he was a first rounder for a reason), and he may have been slightly better in coverage. But importantly, don't forget that Dax was a safety. He played nickel corner in 2021 because that was what was better for our defense (we had solid safety depth but an out of position Dax was still one of the three best corners), but it's not entirely fair to compare Mikey to someone moonlighting at a different position.

Mikey's intelligence, leadership and intangibles are off the charts though.

Stuck in Lansing

March 8th, 2024 at 9:23 PM ^

It hurts to say this, but honestly the worst case scenario after a coaching change is that the program barely wins any games and finishes last in the conference by a mile, so why not make a change because that is exactly what we are looking at now.

Brian Ellerbe never finished in last place.

matty blue

March 9th, 2024 at 11:37 AM ^

Big Ten and SEC will balloon to 20, 22, or 24 teams…at that point you can have 12-team divisions and a conference championship at the Rose Bowl, or something.

i absolutely guarantee you that a 24 team “conference” (lol) will consist of four six-team divisions and a four-team conference championship tournament. 

this sport will cease to exist as anything but a crappy version of the nfl by 2034.  it’s practically there already.

HollywoodHokeHogan

March 9th, 2024 at 5:37 PM ^

So did Mike actually have a “personal issue” or was that bullshit and what he really had was beef with Sherrone?  Because it would be weird if we were all offering our thoughts and support for his  hard times and the it turned out he was just pissed he didn’t get to be OC.  

Romeo50

March 10th, 2024 at 8:56 AM ^

Surprised academic bastions would foster an economic approach Gordon Gecko (sp?) would approve of. 

Some can’t see their reflection.