This Week's Obsession: What Could Possibly Go Wrong? Comment Count

Seth

NCF_100929_PlaybookGregDavis

Greg Davis is drawing up a zone read, so he can't be a candidate at least

The Question:

Seth: How does Michigan screw this one up?

Adam:

greg-schiano-kickoff
(via midwestsportsfans)

or

Screen_Shot_2014-01-09_at_7.05.38_PM
(via sbnation)

Either of those would be a swift kick to the searchbits; otherwise I'm optimistic about the search (both process and outcome). This may lead to me posting a bunch of Gob Bluth clips on Twitter, but I don't think Michigan screws this up.

[After the jump: more all too realistic scenarios in which Michigan decides we need more mediocrity and stupid.]

--------------------------------

BiSB: The path to another Process is pretty clear. Michigan thinks it has a really good shot at Harbaugh, so they wait until the NFL season wraps up. It's the beginning of January before the Jets or the Raiders manage to snatch Harbaugh away. By that time, any top tier head coaches who are currently employed have leveraged their "interest" in Michigan into a renewal and a pay raise, including a prohibitive buyout. Hot assistant names like Tom Herman have either done likewise, or have been snatched up by Oregon State-level jobs, or they just don't want to take the risk of having to assemble a rushed transition and a first recruiting class in three weeks. Michigan is left with the unemployed (Schiano), the mediocre but accessible (Addazio), or the uninspiring NFL types (Jay Gruden, Teryl Austin).

And that's why I don't buy this "Harbaugh has already told Michigan 'no' and Michigan has moved on" mumbo jumbo. I have no idea what the odds are that Harbaugh lands in Ann Arbor, but this search looks VERY different if Michigan's primary candidate is available right now as opposed to, say, December 29th.

--------------------------------

Seth: This is Michigan and a coaching search.

1. A bad hire. Once they're into the second tier of candidates whose voice gets heard? They've got Mike DeBord in the room, and names leaking out have had a DeBordian flavor. You're worried Tom Herman gets snatched up; I'm worried Michigan won't even look at him.

I doubt DeBord is looking for the same things I am. [Lon Horwedel, Ann Arbor News, 2006 spring practice]

I really don't care if Michigan hires a spread guy; I want success and the greatest offensive innovation since timing routes to a quarterback's footwork is having most of it in college football right now. The reason I keep banging this drum is I'm terrified that Michigan has a religious problem with it. The few folks on the search committee whose opinions are known seem to think Rodriguez failed at Michigan because his approach to scoring was evil, not because his staff feuded, or because he hired GERG to run a defense he doesn't know, or because he thought he could get Dorsey in, or because he was being hatcheted from inside.

2. An ugly transition. The football bust showed a lot of love for Brady Hoke and I'm reminded of what a great job he did walking in without Rodriguez's guys walking out.

3. They could screw up the assistants. This was the big failure of the last two hires; have they learned? Rodriguez needed a defensive coordinator like Casteel who got along with his staff, and whom he trusted. And he could have definitely used a Carr guy on the defensive staff to smooth out the transition. Hoke doomed himself by hiring Borges and committing to an unnecessary offensive transition. Do not repeat competencies again.

--------------------------------

Brian:

1. Michigan could hire a guy with zero resume because he's a pro-style coach. With guys like Marcus Ray on the "search committee" you have dyed-in-the-wool luddites giving their opinion—Ray recently said that the spread was for warm weather schools, apparently ignorant of Urban Meyer's existence. Names like Schiano and Addazio only get brought up by people who are insistent that football ended in 1997. Either would be a very poor idea.

2. Michigan could hire a guy with zero resume because he's been to Ann Arbor before. Teryl Austin, Harold Goodwin, Mike Trgovac: all names no one would ever bring up if they did not have a connection to Michigan. If Michigan had a shot at hypothetical versions of Jim Harbaugh or Les Miles with no M connections, you would still be interested. First-year coordinators and NFL position coaches would not merit a look. That would be the ultimate failure: repeating the same process that led to hiring Brady Hoke. 

Screen-Shot-2014-08-17-at-9.31.51-AM
Not a great idea.

3. Michigan could hire Les Miles. "He's a young 61!"

/shoots self

Look: we want to get away from factionalism. We want to have everyone pulling in the same direction. Les Miles is and will be divisive. There will be people looking to torpedo him at the first sign of weakness. That sucks, but it's true. Imagine if people had legitimate beefs with Rich Rodriguez. Yeah.

Miles's success at LSU is not likely to translate to Michigan; it's built off of insane local talent that makes his defenses crazy good every year without a whole lot of Narduzzi-style scheming. His offenses have mostly been poop, and he's won an inordinate number of games with crazy Mad Hatter stuff. His clock management is atrocious; his "roster management" is worse. The way he wins at LSU is by ignoring their copious bagmen—goodbye, Jai Eugene—and tapping a local talent base that almost any coach could.

And if Michigan hired him you're not getting that guy who won a lot of SEC games anyway. You're getting an aging version of him. The upside is a few 9-3 years and then retirement; the downside is another wasted transition featuring Michigan people sniping at each other in private, then public. There is only one Bill Snyder, and when the petals come off the Miles rose it's going to be ugly.

I know I'm in the minority here. I strongly prefer catching someone on the upside to trying to squeeze out a few decent years from a guy heading towards social security.

Comments

Louie C

December 10th, 2014 at 1:48 PM ^

I honestly think that hatred stems from the fact that they can't get over the fact that since that seminal game 's Northwestern in 2000, Michigan has been torched by spread teams time and time again.

matty blue

December 10th, 2014 at 1:56 PM ^

...and the 'because they've been to ann arbor' qualification.

i would submit (and wrote it at the time) that that was and is brady hoke's only qualification for this job, or at least it was the only one that mattered.  look how that turned out.

Space Coyote

December 10th, 2014 at 1:59 PM ^

If people were confused about the backlash that Rich Rod got, it would be just about double for Miles. If people were angry at Hoke for clock managment issues, now you'll watch someone just at negligent - but while eating grass.

I don't think Miles is a bad coach, per se, in the "he wins football games" sort of way. But all the baggage that he brings with him, the way he handles press conferences, the way he acts, the way he recruits, his personality in general, people will quickly turn on him. Particularly Michigan people. I personally think winning is only one part of the equation, probably the biggest one. Miles may fit that (though, again, I think Brian has some valid points), but he certainly won't fit the other important aspects for a Michigan football coach.

And I still disagree with Seth that Hoke doomed himself because he didn't stick with a spread guy to specifically fit what Rich Rod built. 

Also, to clarify one thing about the spread and weather: there are aspects of the spread offense that you need to be cognizant of the weather. Meyer's spread is specifically well suited for cold weather (relative to other spreads) because it is a between the tackles offense, downhill, that doesn't require as complicated ball handling and quick 90 degree cuts. But some passing spreads they are based on specific timing and quick cuts would struggle in cold weather. Certain option offenses that rely on great ball handling could struggle in cold weather. I personally don't think Rich Rod's offense was particularly well suited for cold weather. That's not to say it couldn't work, and there are worse offenses than his, but it certainly makes it a bit harder than some other offenses.

And that all gets back to part of the issue I have with B1G teams having to play in the south all bowl season. These southern schools often times only need to play based on one set of conditions: 50+ degree weather, maybe rain. B1G schools have to balance an offense that works in cold, snow, rain, wind, and 90 degree heat. So playing in the cold is home field advantage for B1G teams because they practice and prepare for that sort of thing, while southern teams would have to work to add that on to their preperation.

bronxblue

December 10th, 2014 at 2:01 PM ^

It continues to amaze me that Michigan the school can be so progressive, innovative, and cutting-edge while its football team seems mired in the most luddite, archaic views of the sport.

It sadly doesn't surprise me that Marcus Ray thinks the spread offense is a gimmick, since all of those Carr-era guys never understood how it worked, which is why Oregon, App. St., Purdue, NW, etc. always gave them problems.  Any flavor of spread goes against their moral fibers apparently, and so Michigan will continue to look for the few remaining dodo birds that fit their model and run the offense they like.

 

howmuch

December 10th, 2014 at 2:43 PM ^

No need to beat a dead horse, enough pro Miles comments here already.

I'll just say that after 1A and 1B Harbaughs, Miles is my #2 guy. However, I think he won't be coach for the background issues he carries.

Stoops would be a great hire if possible, but I don't see it happening.

jsquigg

December 10th, 2014 at 3:18 PM ^

I maintain that Les Miles is not the worst you could do, but that doesn't make him a top tier hire.  Maybe UM would rejuvenate him, but to me he's already peaked as a coach. 

winged wolverine

December 10th, 2014 at 3:18 PM ^

Is the primary reason I wouldn't want Miles at Michigan. Looking at all the LSU players in the NFL that are doing well at RB/WR while LSU struggled to score points while they were on campus would be a major concern to me. 

Hoops McCann

December 10th, 2014 at 4:08 PM ^

I would favor Jim H coming back too but here we are debating the merits of Michigan Men again. Miles is long in the tooth and Harbaugh is a flight risk even if he decides to accept. I have been a lurker on this  site for years and the only reason I signed up was to voice my opinion in the head coaching search. Tom Herman is a no brainer for me for several reasons.

1. Where did that Bo guy come from again?

2. Look at what he did with QBS this year..

3. He is a hell of a recruiter.

4. Every successful Head Coach has had to get a start somewhere. 

5. Who knows the strengths and weakness of OSU more than Herman.

6 He comes cheaper and Michigan can use money to assemble a top shelf Coaching Staff.

7 I wish Mr Hackett luck because he is gonna need it with Harbaugh..................

 

chewieblue

December 10th, 2014 at 5:13 PM ^

(And thank you Brian, for at least giving it some measure of validity) Marcus Ray is a dufus.
Let's put him that special category of former players that we love for their allegiance, but cringe at when their mouths open and sounds begin to come out. I'm looking at you Braylon.

M-Dog

December 10th, 2014 at 5:29 PM ^

Miles is the opposite of Hoke in this sense:  
 
If Hoke had no prior connections to Michigan, there is no way we would consider him for Michigan's coach.  If Miles had no prior connections to Michigan, there is no way we would not consider him for Michigan's coach.
 
If we hire Miles, we're more afraid of what we will do than what Miles will do.