This Week's Obsession: A Moment in Endzone Comment Count

Seth

The Question:

Now that we have all read it, what for you was the most jaw-dropping moment of Brandon's Lasting Lessons?

The Warning:

We're going to spoiler this. If you haven't read it yet you should go do that.

The Responses:

Brian: There are many jaw-dropping things. The whole book is cause to walk around Ann Arbor drooling, from Lochdogg's inability to parse data to Brandon cutting down the nets to all of the infinite firings. But I was most stunned by this:

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Also the ellipsis.

That's the welcome plaque outside Brandon's house. It is quite something, and then you get to "the Brandon's." WHO DOESN'T CHECK A PLAQUE THAT IS GOING ON THEIR HOUSE CALLED "HAPPILY EVER AFTER"?! Even leaving aside the crazy rich person vibe the whole thing gives off, this is one metal object that Brandon clearly intends for generations to come and marvel at, and it isn't even proofread. Says somethin' about somethin', that.

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Seth: It has to be "Firing Fridays," and the massive turnover inside the athletic department. Throw a football down Granger and chances are it will be caught by someone sitting on the porch of a modest home with an "M" flag. That person probably had many opportunities through the years to take a job somewhere else that would afford a far larger and newer home, probably with a big yard and PVC pipes. So many of these people were pushed out, scared off, or straight-up let go that I even know a few of them.

In some cases, e.g. football coach, directing a money cannon at a proven professional is warranted. But Brandon took this to an extreme, bringing in two six-figure outsiders to replace every longtime $45k family member, then firing the family on the flimsiest of pretenses—often just voicing disagreement with Brandon—at such a rate that "Firing Fridays" was a thing. In a few short years those remnants from the Canham-Schembechler-Martin department were surrounded by a certain archetype of in-it-for-the-money young professional who knows nobody in town, owes everything to Dave Brandon, and knows little about college athletics except not to disagree with the boss.

Reading the quotes from former marketing and event presentation director Ryan Duey was the point when I got so angry at Brandon that even after getting up and stomping around the house for 20 minutes I had to get up and stomp around again like one sentence later. My page 297 is smudged and stained and has water wrinkles because it took me a day and multiple rooms to get through without throwing a tantrum in front of the kid.

The damage from that is irreparable. The people Brandon brought in are hardly worthless—they earned that payday by being excellent at what they do—but it will take 30 or 50 years for the kind of community and institutional knowledge Michigan used to have to grow back. Even talking about it now—three times in writing this response I've had to put down the keyboard and take a stomping tour around the living room. In fact here comes the fourth.

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[After the jump: you may want to make sure there's nothing throwable in reach]

David Nasternak: I have to admit that I'm only just over half way through BLL, currently. Shockingly, the progression of football season has severely cut into my free time for things like...reading.

The most gut-wrenching theme that unfortunately has repeated itself throughout the chapters I've read so far is Brandon's seeming ease with which he either fired people (with not much valid reasoning) or threw them under the bus, concerning whatever specific situation. Previously, I'd heard stories regarding that happening to a handful of employees, but I never realized how commonplace and widespread it actually was.

Reading that over and over just gave me a sick-to-my-stomach feel that I almost had to take a break a few different times. Now, I understand that people do get fired and upgrades happen in business -especially in the sports industry; however, the rate at which it happened and certain coaching positions that it happened to were downright baffling. Additionally, someone who can just cut ties with that amount of people -many of whom had quite a dedicated loyalty to Michigan that went above and beyond a paycheck- just for disagreeing or questioning some of the other changes/processes really makes me angry. Money and success are important; however, so are character and integrity...and those are qualities that money or success will never be able to grant. As the book goes along, I'm noticing that Brandon generally valued himself over others and would not hesitate to remove people if they became a hindrance to his agenda or publicly blame them in order to save himself from ridicule. I just believe there is no tolerance for behavior like that, especially in a leader.

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Adam Schnepp: The most jaw-dropping moment for me came during Brandon's meeting with four University leaders on Wednesday, October 29, 2014. As Bacon relays it, everyone in that meeting saw a new side of Brandon; he listened, he took responsibility for mistakes, and he seemed to genuinely want to know what could be done to mend some of the fences he'd broken. After reading a detailed chronological history of burned bridges and unimaginable arrogance, this new version of Brandon was hard for me to believe. The first few pages of this account painted Brandon as sincere, and that's a word that could only be used to describe his adherence to his own ideas and methods in the face of logic to that point.

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Warning: revelations in this book may
turn your mind to goo.

As the meeting wore on, though, Brandon maintained his new, vulnerable exterior while asking in different and subtle ways for the four other people in the room to tell him he had done a good job. He was looking for personal validation and for others to essentially agree that it was outside forces conspiring against him, not his own mistakes, that had put him in a position where he was holding onto his job by a thread. Again, my jaw hit the floor. Here's Brandon acting as though he's made this sweeping change to who he is, and when it comes down to it he again showed concern for little other than his own ego. His personality was to the best of his ability, and he didn't fix it.

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Ace: Perhaps because my focus is mainly on the revenue sports, I never fully realized how much coaching turnover there was across the athletic department until I started doing research for the book. Putting together the numbers was jaw-dropping: only one coaching staff Brandon inherited, consisting of all of two people, remained completely intact during his tenure. Despite Brandon's meddling, Michigan's performance in the Director's Cup got worse.

On top of that, Brandon treated the coaches he inherited like dirt, to the point it became obvious in the book he planned to oust several of them all along, almost regardless of performance. Few quotes stand out like the one he delivered to the men's soccer team at the team banquet after one of the most successful seasons in school history, when they won the Big Ten title and made the NCAA Final Four: "Do you know what happens when you make it to the Final Four? We expect you to do it again." He said this to the whole team! At a celebratory banquet! Is there a stronger term for "tone-deaf"?

Coach Steve Burns, who'd been successful at Michigan for a long time, didn't get a raise or an extension, and when his team had a down year the following season—after losing 98% of their goal-scoring from the Final Four squad—he "resigned"; Brandon replaced him with Chaka Daley, who got paid a whole lot more (with a guaranteed contract, no less) for worse performance. Brandon wanted his people in the department, he went to extreme lengths to make that happen, and to top it off, his vision for the department only worked in his head.

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Proppe (left) and Dishell (right). Patrick Barron|when he was with the Daily

Seth: What do you mean I already went? That was Angry Seth. Also somebody had to speak for the best moment of the book.

Bacon is a journalist, and I mean that in the "he sticks to the real story and what he can prove" sense. That makes some of his writing a bit dry, since he won't deviate from the facts for the sake of drama.

But in the Proppe-Dishell story he didn't have to, because the way that unfolded was plot development so good my Creating Writing professor would be nodding along almost as approvingly as Michael Proppe's statistics teacher.

You meet Proppe and Dishell after they've won their election to a mostly useless job on a technicality. Then they take on this real job and run circles around Brandon and Loch-dogg, who are dead set on ignoring CSG and shoving this policy down the students' throats. As the story develops the heroes get more heroic, and the villains get more villainous.

Everything builds up to that meeting before the faculty when Proppe gives a drop-mic performance, then the faculty turn to Lochmann and are like "so…are you changing this policy?" and he's like "I guess we'll have to" and everybody high-fives. But guess what: Brandon welches, and by the next meeting Lochmann is right back to patronizingly telling the students to do something anatomically impossible.

If this was a Ken Follett book at that point you'd be like "okay, I shoulda seen that coming since there's still 45% of pages left in this thing and this is what Ken Follett villains do." When you're reading a Bacon book and real people are acting like every Ken Follett bad guy ever, your mind is just blown.

How did nobody bring up M-Hacks?

Comments

maracle

September 23rd, 2015 at 5:35 PM ^

Most of the errors were more due to editing than proofreading.  I think they were still putting the book together and had to put it to press.  Once the book is totally edited you'd normally need some number of weeks to proofread it, and it sounds like they ran out of time.

Olaf

September 23rd, 2015 at 1:40 PM ^

The M Hack incident made me put down the book in order to go grab a beer. I was appalled that the athletic deparment would mask that much of a charge with a "TBD". If the cost was going to be that much then they already knew about it and it shouldn't have been listed as "TBD".

 

 

DM2009

September 23rd, 2015 at 1:41 PM ^

Mine was forcing the lettermen to buy season tickets if they wanted to attend games. That one really irked me. Is it really hard to keep a supply of ~100 tickets for lettermen available for each game so they can use them? Forcing them to buy season tickets to attend games is just ridiculous. Way to treat people who literally gave sweat, blood, and tears towards the program like some random customers off the street.

victoriaed90

September 23rd, 2015 at 2:29 PM ^

I was disturbed by this too. Most players don't go onto the NFL and make a ton of money so the VERY LEAST you can do for these guys who put their bodies on the line every Saturday while they were here is a ticket to a game when they wanna go.

And sending a goddamn form letter with a link to stubhub?! That's adding insult to injury.

leu2500

September 23rd, 2015 at 2:46 PM ^

That was shitty, but we had heard stuff like that about Brandon before the book. 

Bus Brandon is a business man.  And the contract with Adidas gave them 8 (I think that's the number) good tickets at the final 4.  Brandon used them for his family and scattered the Adidas people in lesser seats. 

 

matty blue

September 23rd, 2015 at 1:42 PM ^

shit, i got pissed off reading the original post, and now i'm getting pissed off all over again reading the comments.  i shouldn't have clicked in the first place, i knew it was going to bring up feels.

anyway, 2 things illustrated the essential dave brandon to me.

  1. the 17-hour meeting regarding shane morris' concussion.  nobody on earth, except a business school "management expert" douchetard (and yes, i kinda am one and work with a gigantic steaming pile of them) would ever do this.
  2. the grammar gacking on the 'ever after' sign is bad, yes, but i would let it go if not for the simple fact that he named his fucking house.  nobody normal has ever done this.

die in a fire, dickhead, you did significant, longterm and possibly irreparable damage to something that is really important to hundreds of thousands of people.  prick.

Yostal

September 23rd, 2015 at 1:54 PM ^

The most jaw-dropping thing to me was how the saga of the tennis coach Bruce Berque, who is now at Texas as a volunteer assistant.  It serves as a microcosm of the Brandon era, demanding "accountability" from non-revenue coaches while not fully understanding the nature of how each indivudual sport works while sitting there and being the "smartest guy in the room."  That chapter upset me more because it was a clean story of the whole of the AD under Brandon.

Yostal

September 23rd, 2015 at 1:54 PM ^

The most jaw-dropping thing to me was how the saga of the tennis coach Bruce Berque, who is now at Texas as a volunteer assistant.  It serves as a microcosm of the Brandon era, demanding "accountability" from non-revenue coaches while not fully understanding the nature of how each indivudual sport works while sitting there and being the "smartest guy in the room."  That chapter upset me more because it was a clean story of the whole of the AD under Brandon.

Harbaugh Very Much

September 23rd, 2015 at 1:57 PM ^

there were so many moments, but one that stuck out was how Brandon insisted Bill Martin and Stephen Ross be treated when they went on the field.  For his immediate predecessor and major booster who was pretty popular and the largest donor in Michigan athletic history to not be safe from the power vortex, it was pretty astonishing.  And Martin's response was classic--up yours, keep the field passes, and he got on there with Ross anyway. 

Also, maybe I am the only one, but openly talking about how made-up at times our attendance numbers are was surprising. Overall, a masterpiece. 

BlueFish

September 23rd, 2015 at 2:19 PM ^

Martin didn't like being told he couldn't go somewhere in the stadium, or not being immediately recognized as the AD by every usher:

LINK

But on the whole, I gained more appreciation for Martin after reading this book.  I was reminded that he did more than just bungle the RichRod hire.

And I would've done the same thing.  "Fuck [Brandon] and his passes."

M-Dog

September 24th, 2015 at 1:52 AM ^

He did not "bungle" the Rich Rod hire.

He had no intention of hiring Miles, so that was never on the table.  When he got Rich Rod we were all excited about it.  Peanut Butter Jelly TIme excited.

We were being mauled by spread teams from Oreegon to App State.  Our own offense could not keep up and our defense could not stop it.  And who do we get as our coach?  The guy that freaking invented the spread.

We were going to be mid-2000's WVU with better recruiting.  The sky was the limit.

We only know now that it did not work out.  But saying it was a "bungled" hire at the time it occurred is pure revisionist history. 

 

BlueFish

September 24th, 2015 at 11:42 AM ^

His handling of "the process" at the time was embarrassing.  Whether he intended to hire Miles or not, he made himself unavailable when Miles tried to contact him.

Things got leaked into the media, which then blew up any chance of hiring Miles, which led to LSU's AD basically thumbing his nose at U-M and bragging that not even Miles' alma mater is good enough to lure him away.  Whether Martin had intention or not, it made U-M look bad, and very publicly.

Offering the job to Schiano (of all people), seemingly on a whim (did anyone see that coming?), and then having Schiano very publicly turn him down...another hit to the mighty Michigan program.

So we ended up with, at best, our second choice.  Were we happy about it?  I imagine most of were, and that wasn't the point of my post.  Many would argue (and have) there were at least two better candidates ahead of RichRod (Harbaugh and Miles), so in that sense, we got our 3rd or 4th choice.  RichRod fell into Martin's lap only because of his very recent falling-out at WVU and the consternation over losing to Pitt.

I didn't read Three And Out, so I'm going on my own read of events from the press, but I'm not revising history.  The entire "process" was embarrassing to the University, in my opinion.  It made the U-M coaching job look undesirable.  The fact that we ended up with a "hot" coach at the time doesn't change that.

And I'm not the only one who felt that way:

"Michigan's chances at landing Miles are now much weaker than they were a week ago, and it's because Martin blew the most important decision in Michigan athletics since 1969. Because he was on a damn boat too busy to return a phone call."

He has a chance to make good with an excellent hire; anything short of that and he should be run out of town on a rail.

And this:

This search no longer has a public direction, which is an improvement from a public fiasco but, given the whole fiasco thing, unsettling. If the search had been dark from day one, we could sit and wait and trust in Martin's ability to acquire Beilein and hold onto Rich Maloney and get the stadium renovation through. But Michigan has been exposed as prancing jackanapes

And this:

Michigan has prissily narrowed the field of acceptable candidates considerably, alienated the most natural fit, and is left without options. The fanbase and football alumni are outraged. And it's because Sailboat Bill is either totally incompetent or duplicitous. Does it matter which?

I'm sure I could find more to prove I'm not revising history, but do I need to?

KRK

September 23rd, 2015 at 1:59 PM ^

The section about only giving Bill Martin and Ross sideline passes if they were escorted into and off of the field immediately made me stop and retread the section. How you could tell that to your former AD and largest donor is amazing.



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LetMicahDown

September 23rd, 2015 at 1:59 PM ^

Just finished the book on Sunday. There were many jaw-dropping moments throughout the Brandon Era depicted in Endzone, and I have to confess that there were many mentioned in these comments that I forgot about. The M-Hacks event represents, to me, an AD prioritizing his department at the expense of essentially the rest of the university he claims to love.

But that didn't surprise me.

What sent me through the roof, that I had not known before, was the tour Brandon gave to Rich and Rita Rodriguez, Joe Parker, and Kurt Gulbrand, of Brandon's home just outside of Scottsdale, AZ.

I get that the home is nice. Brandon, if it wasn't obvious, is certanly used to a level of oppulence that might rub some Michigan faithful the wrong way (grammatical errors aside).

But then he made his guests guess what he had named the house.

"Camp David!"

Then we're told of towels, tumblers, coasters, doorknobs, etc., all monogrammed with "CD."

Of course, the home in and of itself is more or less harmless, even if the name is offputting. But am I alone here in thinking how obnoxious this whole episode was?

kzoomgr

September 23rd, 2015 at 2:00 PM ^

... might be, What would be the consensus opinion of, and status of Dave Brandon be had the football team been sucessful under Brady Hoke?  Being an arrogant tool doesn't lose you the AD job if your high profile teams are doing well.  It's cathartic to highlight all the ways in which he screwed up, and to quantify why most people outside the walls of Michigan athletics at best were uneasy with him, but I have to believe that even with the money grabs, alienating long-timers and students, Morris incident, etc he'd still be AD if we had some version of OSU/MSU/Wisky's records in football post Rich Rod.  Makes my stomach turn a bit knowing all the crap that went on behind the curtain.

Connecticut Wo…

September 23rd, 2015 at 2:14 PM ^

Does the book say anything about Beilein's support for Brandon?  I have trouble reconciling why Beilein would have publicly endorsed Brandon as late as October 2014 if all these terribly things were going on around him (like seeing his peer coaches get fired).

JamieH

September 23rd, 2015 at 2:16 PM ^

Beilein is probably 100% focused on Basketball and what is going on in his program.  Brandon was funnelling truckloads of cash into the basketball program, and Beilein has complete job security, so Beilein would have no reason to have any beef with him.

Connecticut Wo…

September 23rd, 2015 at 2:22 PM ^

I don't believe his actions require any defense, JB's integrity seems to be second to none.  I'm just trying to figure out why he would support him.  Your point is one that I'd thought of.......I just don't know why he would have gone to the trouble of publicly supporting him in such a dark hour.

JamieH

September 23rd, 2015 at 2:14 PM ^

I think the most jaw-dropping revelation of the book is that going in, I thought Brandon was one of the biggest a-holes in Michigan history.  After reading the book, I think he's actually ten times WORSE than I thought he was.  I can't believe the book makes him out to be worse than I thought he was, because I didn't think that was even possible.