Your 2015 Harbaugh Staff Comment Count

Brian

WELP. You know, you schedule a thing in Cleveland right after OSU loses to Virginia Tech and you think two things: 1) OSU is definitely not going to be winning the national title that night and 2) Michigan's not going to be finalizing its assistant coaches after hiring Jim Freakin' Harbaugh. I've been playing catchup this week.

BUT ANYWAY. Your assistant coaches.

OFFENSIVE COORDINATOR/OFFENSIVE LINE

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TIM DREVNO. I'm mostly through his hello post. Upshot: Harbaugh vet with OC experience under him at San Diego who coached TEs and OL at Stanford (yes please) before following Harbaugh to San Francisco, where the OL's performance was highly variable. Drevno left last year to go to USC, where he had excellent results with an extremely young (as in three true freshman starters) Trojan line.

Drevno's a good fit with Harbaugh specifically and appears to be the most qualified OL coach Michigan's had in forever. USC fans were super pissed about losing him.

QUESTIONS. Is OC/OL too much for one plate? How are his recruiting chops?

SOMEWHAT UNFAIR GRADE. A-. Lack of big-time OC experience the one drawback; tons to offset that.

RUNNING BACKS

TYRONE WHEATLEY. You know Wheat. Even if you are a pup, there is Wolverine Historian for you. Michigan legend, quick-riser once he hung up the spurs, driven to be a head coach. Should be a killer recruiter and guy who tells guys to run at the holes.

QUESTIONS. Is there enough of a difference in RB coaches to matter, or is vision un-salvageable?

SOMEWHAT UNFAIR GRADE. A. Excellent trajectory, is Ty Freaking Wheately.

WIDE RECEIVERS

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JEDD FISCH. Former OC at Minnesota, Miami, and with the Jaguars was dumped after two years in Jacksonville during which he was provided not much talent and a ton of rookies. Two-year tenure at Miami was highly encouraging, featuring a big turnaround from Jacory Harris and the development of pretty-good Stephen Morris.

Fisch's WR experience is somewhat limited. He didn't play football and hasn't had a WR job since 2008.

QUESTIONS. What exactly will he do as a passing coordinator? How much does his relative lack of WR background hurt?

SOMEWHAT UNFAIR GRADE. B+. Recruiting questions due to his relatively short tenure in college, awkward fit at WR, but also a position coach who is 38 with 5 years of OC experience behind him.

TIGHT ENDS

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woo! suck it, dad! via MGoVideo

JAY HARBAUGH, son of Jim. Yeah, nepotism hire. The younger Harbaugh at least resisted the call when it was offered to him earlier:

With a coaching vacancy to fill this offseason, 49ers coach Jim Harbaugh zeroed in on a promising young member of his brother John's Baltimore Ravens staff. John reluctantly granted permission, and Jim proceeded to woo the up-and-comer.

But his pitch wasn't good enough -- not this time, at least.

"It's a dream to one day work for my dad, and hopefully the opportunity will come," said Harbaugh's son, Jay. "He understood where I was coming from."

Jay is the first Michigan coach who's appallingly younger than me—25—and should have Michigan on the cutting edge of the Facebooks and Instagrams and swipe-right-to-commit websites; he necessarily has zero track record.

I'd rather have a guy with one of those, but if that's the cost of Harbaugh whatever man. Also, let's look back that the Harbaugh coaching tree… okay. I mean:

"One time, I asked, 'Do guys give you a hard time about working for your uncle, automatically look at that as the reason you got the job?' His response was: 'It's my responsibility to not give them the opportunity to confirm that suspicion.'"

QUESTIONS. Is he actually a good coach? Will having a 25-year-old on staff help with the insta-twitter-snap-tinder-cruiting?

SOMEWHAT UNFAIR GRADE. C. Zero track record. Shades of JayPa, but Harbaugh isn't the OC. Harbaugh name rescues it—there is obviously a heritage there.

DEFENSIVE COORDINATOR/LINEBACKERS

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DJ DURKIN. Mattison/Harbaugh/Muschamp protégé has experienced meteoric rise in the coaching profession, to the point where he's taking his second DC job at a prestige program at the tender age of 37. (It's his birthday. Happy birthday.) Called plays for Florida's kickass D the past two years, has three years of Harbaugh experience as the DE coach at Stanford.

Should be a dynamic recruiter both in Florida, where he has four years of experience, and in Ohio, where he grew up and played college football at Bowling Green. Was pursued heavily by A&M and UNC, the former of which "settled" for throwing a walrus of money at LSU DC John Chavis.

QUESTIONS. How much of the Florida D was Muschamp and how much was him? How long will he stick around before getting a head coach gig? Does he know Mike Judge and can he get him my movie script?

SOMEWHAT UNFAIR GRADE. A. An up-and-comer with a terrific track record who immediately piqued the interest of a half-dozen recruits in SEC territory when he took the job.

DEFENSIVE LINE

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[Eric Upchurch]

GREG MATTISON. Michigan retained its DC as a position coach, and he was pretty good to excellent as  defensive coordinator. Also, he's regarded as a terrific recruiter and provides continuity to help ease transition costs and prevent too many transfers. Pretty pretty good. Good fit, as well—Mattison's known various Harbaughs for 40 years and had Durkin as a GA when both were at Notre Dame. He's not going to butt heads with Michigan's new DC, but rather help him ease into being the man in charge of his own D.

Yeah, he's expensive for a position coach, but that contract was already signed.

QUESTIONS. How long does he stick around?

SOMEWHAT UNFAIR GRADE. A. Or five swag Mattisons.

CORNERBACKS(?)

MIKE ZORDICH. Twelve-year NFL vet has a decade-long coaching career that is mostly on lower levels save for a short stint with the Eagles. Should know everything about coverages given playing experience; Youngstown dude who went to Penn State should be able to hit Ohio and Pittsburgh hard.

QUESTIONS. Can he recruit at a big-time level? What happened with Philly and why did he get stuck at YSU?

SOMEWHAT UNFAIR GRADE: B-. NFL pedigree is nice, track record lacking, does bring a presumed set of recruiting chops that should be highly useful in PA.

SAFETIES

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GREG JACKSON. Another guy with a decade-plus career as an NFL safety; hooked on with Harbaugh after a few years at small schools and one at Wisconsin, whereupon his DBs were statistically lights-out. LSU alum who will likely focus on recruiting the south.

QUESTIONS. Was he a driving force behind the kickass 49ers DBs or was that either a statistical fluke or just a fortunate confluence of talent? Can he overcome the extreme gravitational pull of the South—and especially Louisiana—in recruiting?

SOMEWHAT UNFAIR GRADE: A-. Track record a little short, but dang man.

SPECIAL TEAMS

JOHN BAXTER. Thirteen-year career at Fresno State saw Bulldogs block a stunning 84 punts and kicks and return a bunch of the unblocked ones for touchdowns; upon his hire at USC was an immediate success with the Trojans. Left out after Kiffin firing when Sarkisian brought in his own guys, took a year off, was pursued by Texas and Pac-12 schools this time around and chose Michigan.

Also has 15 years of experience as an associate head coach and touts his "Academic Gameplan," which helped drag Fresno State out of the depths of schoolwork purgatory.

QUESTIONS. Spread punts?!?!?!?! (Yes.) How's his recruiting?

SOMEWHAT UNFAIR GRADE. A. Should be a massive upgrade on Michigan's dismal Hoke-era special teams.

A BRIEF COMPARISON TO THE PREVIOUS STAFF(s)

As in how good of an idea they seemed like when hired, not now. Otherwise these grades would be worse.

Borges: C. Had been out of football, not much success since first year at Auburn. Did have a good year with Lindley in second year at SDSU.
Doug Nussmeier. B+. Pretty clear he was getting chased from 'Bama so Lane Kiffin could enter, but a guy with an impressive track record who's still respected enough to get the Florida OC job even after last year.

Fred Jackson: C. Had been losing his fastball for a while. In-state recruiting successes offset by wildly inaccurate talent evaluations, and how hard is it for Michigan to recruit in-state anyway?
Jeff Hecklinski: B. Long time Hoke assistant did do a nice job with SDSU WRs, both of whom went in the third round after Heck's departure for M.
Darrell Funk: C. Pre-Hoke experience topped out as OL coach at Colorado State. Seemed plausible as an up-and-comer.
Dan Ferrigno: D. Had bombed out of college coaching in 2008 and was back in HS when Hoke picked him up; aging; no thought of upward mobility.

Greg Mattison: A. Big time college coordinator coming straight from the NFL.

Jerry Montgomery. B. Iowa alum and up-and-comer who Michigan yoinked away from Indiana mere weeks after he agreed to move there. Trajectory was borne out when Oklahoma came in with a big offer and stole him away.
Mark Smith: D. Had been with Hoke forever after moving from Indiana State, failed DC at Ball State, no track record of success recruiting or coaching. Also no thought of upward mobility.
Roy Manning (CB): C. Awkward fit in secondary, but young go-getter good on the trail. Would have been a grade higher if left in the defensive front seven.
Curt Mallory: C. Longtime DBs coach who had bounced around the Big Ten for a while; was coming off three years as Illinois co-DC and one as Akron's DC, albeit with little success.

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All you have to do to measure relative attractiveness of Hoke's last staff is where they're landing. Borges and Ferrigno are supposedly headed to San Jose State; Jackson retired; Mallory went to Wyoming. Nussmeier is the exception, and he was only around for one year. Nobody else has an announced destination yet, and it's hard to see anyone other than Manning and Hecklinski getting a good Power 5 job—and even that's somewhat doubtful.

Notably, the biggest jobs many of Hoke's assistants had before coming into Hoke's orbit were not real big. A hypothetical Hoke-Harbaugh "impressive job not related to you or Michigan" challenge starts out with a couple of pushes and then is a blowout:

HOKE COACH PRIOR CEILING HARBAUGH COACH PRIOR CEILING
Mattison Ravens DC Mattison Ravens DC
Borges Auburn OC Durkin Florida DC
Hecklinski Arizona QB/pass game Fisch Jaguars OC
Mallory Illinois co-DC Drevno USC OL/run game
Ferrigno Oregon WR G. Jackson Wisconsin DB
Smith Indiana State DC Baxter USC ST
F. Jackson Vandy RB Zordich Eagles DB
Funk Colorado State OL Wheatley Bills RB
Manning Cincinnati RB Harbaugh Ravens QC

[Fred Jackson is a weird outlier, admittedly.]

Calibrate your preference between Borges and Durkin as you will; to me there's no question which guy I'd rather have at the time they were hired. Ditto Ferrigno versus Jackson since Jackson had been very impressive with Harbaugh. And this staff is very, very young. By my reckoning everyone on it save Baxter, Zordich, and Mattison is hungry to move up—and capable of doing so. I'm not sure you could say that about anyone on Hoke's staff.

Hooray, then? I think so.

Comments

carlos spicywiener

January 15th, 2015 at 1:10 PM ^

I don't like the hire of Harbaugh's son; literally everyone else is excellent. This is the best staff Michigan- backwards, insular Michigan - has ever had and it's not vaguely close. 

This is, in my opinion, the best collection of talent in college football. It is majestic. Magnificent. Mind-blowing. I'm not sure how to process it. It's kind of like cashing a winning lottery ticket after 17 years of crippling debt. I don't expect them to walk on water, but it's gonna be a damn sight better than anything we've seen in almost two decades.

This much coaching and recruiting acumen in one spot cannot fail.

The Wolverines are going to be fearsome. And soon.

Don

January 15th, 2015 at 1:19 PM ^

Maybe we should wait to see us play a few game first before we start anointing them kings of the football universe, let alone the best staff in Michigan history.

The 1980 staff included Lloyd Carr, Jerry Hanlon, Bill McCartney, Les Miles, and Gary Moeller. That's three national championship head coaches, a guy who coached Michigan's first Heisman Trophy winner in over 50 years, and one of the best offensive line coaches in the history of college football.

petered0518

January 15th, 2015 at 1:41 PM ^

I wouldn't be so quick to take the loss. Don is looking at the coaches retrospectively and not their attractiveness at the time of hire, which is unfair. I would say from that perspective this staff compares favorably with that one. It is quite possible Drevno, Durkin, Wheatley, and Harbaugh the younger go on to have glorious NC winning careers.

schreibee

January 15th, 2015 at 2:21 PM ^

Also, what was recruiting then? I mean, someone found AC in Fla before the internet & twitter were invented, and convinced him that if he came up to Michigan Bo would totally start throwing the ball - but what were the recruiting duties of each of those great coaches on Bo's staffs?

This staff is exciting (with the "potential" to be comparable to that staff) and we know they can coach AND cruit. We certainly learned over the past 4 years which of those 2 abilities is the more important - but if ya can do BOTH....?!

Cmon Down!!!

Farnn

January 15th, 2015 at 1:11 PM ^

The coaches Durkin has worked for is really impressive.  Head coaches Meyer and Harbaugh and defensive coordinators Charlie Strong, Teryl Austin and Dan Quinn.  And if you're worried that the defense at Florida was all Muschamp, look at what Durkin's predecessor at DC, Dan Quinn, went and did.  Florida 2011-2012 was Quinn's first DC job and he went on from there to coach the last 2 years of the Seattle defense.  So either he was a great defensive coach and was responsible for the good Florida defenses or Muschamp taught him a lot.  Either one is a pretty good sign for Durkin.

maizenbluedevil

January 15th, 2015 at 1:13 PM ^

Brian - in regards to Jay Harbaugh you missed the crucial point that his presence is key in establishing the Harbaugh Line of Sucession, which will lead to Harbaugh H. Harbaugh the eigth being the coach 300 years from now, as foretold in Coach Schiano's Post of all Posts.



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M Fanfare

January 15th, 2015 at 1:15 PM ^

"A walrus of money" has now entered my personal lexicon. The one thing we need to get used to is staff turnover. If Michigan is doing well after a few seasons and players are being developed well and going high in the draft, other schools will come after our coaches. And that's ok, that means our coaches will be kick-ass coaches. Bo's staff had frequent turnover because his coordinators got head coaching jobs, and his position coaches got coordinator jobs.

Brodie

January 16th, 2015 at 1:53 AM ^

There's more to it than money, I imagine. It's partially down to Harbaugh's philosophy being exceedingly NFL oriented... his staffs at San Diego and Stanford, ones we could have easily replicated in financial terms, were also loaded with ex-NFL coaches (albeit not to this degree... only two guys on our staff have no NFL coaching experience, with designated recruiter JayHarbz having a Super Bowl ring to toss around).

CooperLily21

January 15th, 2015 at 1:20 PM ^

For those of you smarter than me out there:  Has there ever been a more impressive staff assembled than this one at least as far as previous coaching experience?  Have any new head coaches hired in the last few years brought in such talent?

Also, any idea what kind of money these guys are making?  It'll be interesting to see the AD spend on coaches this year compared to last....

Mr Miggle

January 15th, 2015 at 1:23 PM ^

Give Fred J. some credit. It was a lot harder than it should have been during the RR years. That's not taking away from your question of how valuable he was going to be for Hoke.

93Grad

January 15th, 2015 at 1:24 PM ^

I thnk his track record merits a C at best.  His best ability seems to be in getting promotions.  Other than that he had little success on the field except for a brief stint at Miami, not obvious recruiting pedigree and no playing experience.  Thankfully, he is just a WR coach. 

UMaD

January 15th, 2015 at 1:55 PM ^

for the last 6 years and he was still JUST the Broncos WR coach.  Would that be better?

On that team Jay Cutler threw for 4,500 yards with WRs named Eddie Royal, Brandon Stockley, and Brandon Marshall (who was 24 at the time) and Tony Scheffler at TE.

So, I'd say that makes him qualified, personally.

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HE IS A WR COACH!  We're talking about a guy whose rise was on par with Derkins until the Jacksonville flop.  I can't even name the WRs coaches very far back.  Did Soup Campbell make or break anybody or was his job mostly about recruiting?

Because he has job hopped so much we can't establish much in the way of data points but clearly a lot of different coaches have been impressed by him.

This is a smart, ambitious, and energetic young coach who will be bouncing ideas in meetings off Harbaugh and Drevno. He has no previous ties to Harbaugh so he was pulled in on merit. BY HARBAUGH -- a guy well established as having a a good eye for coaching talent.

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Not saying he's THE BEST hire on the entire staff but, like Mattison, if he was your head coordinator you wouldn't even be THAT mad, you'd just be a little bummed out.  As a position coach this is an A or A+ IMO.

If our QB next year has a good season after the '14 debacle, Fisch will be out of here to take an OC job at another school.

UMaD

January 15th, 2015 at 11:36 PM ^

But there's almost no doubt that improvement you mentioned will happen.  Even with NO coach, the WR corps return in tact except for Funchess.  Just due to age, maturity, and residual Harbaughing, they'll get better.

Fisch could suck at his job completely and they'll still get better.