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Hello: Brian Jean-Mary (not Tank Wright), Bob Shoop Official Comment Count

Seth January 18th, 2020 at 1:30 PM

Harbaugh today announced two new assistants to their defensive staff, only one of which matches the news reported this week. Longtime Don Brown associate Bob Shoop, who coordinated top-two S&P+ defenses at Penn State and Mississippi State in the last five years, will indeed coach safeties. The surprise is linebackers coach Brian Jean-Mary, after many outlets, including ours, reported they were bumping S&C assistant Tenarious “Tank” Wright.

Michigan is also promoting running backs coach Jay Harbaugh to the special teams coordinator position previously held by Chris Partridge.

Brian Jean-Mary is a guy in his mid-40s from Apopka, Florida, a star linebacker for Appalachian State in the mid-‘90s. After coming up with Lou Holtz’s South Carolina teams, Jean-Mary spent the latter half of the aughts as linebackers coach under Chan Gailey and blitz fanatic Jon Tenuta at Georgia Tech. He’s since spent most of his career tagging along with Charlie Strong. BJM was Strong’s linebackers coach at Louisville and Texas, his defensive coordinator at USF, and the recruiting coordinator at all three stops. He was most recently interim coach at USF after Strong was let go at the end of the regular season.

Michigan is clearly trying to fill some of the big hole in recruiting left by Partridge, who was the assistant on staff most responsible for Michigan’s recent success at penetrating SEC territory and selling high schoolers on Michigan’s “40-year plan.” Jean-Mary has strong ties in Florida and Georgia, and from his time at Texas and Georgia Tech, is no stranger to selling top-notch degrees in talent-rich states. Recruiting at Texas, like USC, is hard to gauge because of the school’s natural footprint. Strong and Jean-Mary’s classes (14th in the transition year, 10th and 7th in 2015 and 2016 respectively) were on par with UT’s historical average, though well behind the rate Tom Herman’s been recruiting there. His USF classes were mostly under-the-radar guys in Georgia and Florida.

It’s notable that Shoop, a Yale alumnus who came up through the Northeast, and Jean-Mary cover the same recruiting ground as Campanile and Partridge did, respectively. Also notable, from an X’s and O’s standpoint, is that they’re both from (separate) zone blitz pressure schemes. Jean-Mary’s mentor Charlie Strong is one of the biggest names in 3-3-5 circles, and Jean-Mary cut his coaching teeth under pressure extremist TENUUUUTA!!!!. Shoop picks up alliterative nicknames with the word “Blitz” in them wherever he goes for his Cover 3/Cover 2 scheme that would be immediately recognizable to anyone who’s watched a Lloyd Carr defense. While the defense will remain the viceroyalty of Don Brown as long as he’s here, the dual hires signal Brown is looking for more experience running the kind of rush-heavy, 3-down-lineman systems these guys should know as much about as anyone in football.

It’s unclear what this means for Tank, who’s clearly an asset and growing out of his current role, not to mention defensive analyst Devin Bush Sr., but neither have Jean-Mary’s experience or recruiting pedigree.

As for Jay coaching special teams, the job Partridge did, especially on punt blocking, will be extremely hard to replicate, but Jay’s been involved with the special teams units going back to when Baxter was in charge. Losing the program’s all-time best punt gunner in Khaleke Hudson to graduation meant Michigan’s special teams were already due to take a hit.

Comments

bronxblue

January 18th, 2020 at 2:00 PM ^

Glad to see the two hires.  Hopefully they do keep Wright around considering they were apparently close to pulling the trigger on making him a coach.  

This feels like a nice recovery after losing two guys, and while I don't think Shoop sticks around long he'll hopefully be a steady influence on the defense along with Brown.  I'll be honest - I thought the safeties weren't great this year and with some question marks next year it might help having a really experienced guy at the helm.  As for BJM, seems like a decent recruiter and has coached defenses before, so that's always nice.  

Mr Miggle

January 19th, 2020 at 10:15 AM ^

I don't think that applies to someone like Shoop who already has a long career as a DC and had even worked for Brown in the past. I don't think it's realistic to expect him to stick around for a few years as a position coach.

If Brown had stepped down after the bowl game, Shoop would have been a logical candidate to replace him.

Hail_Yes

January 18th, 2020 at 2:10 PM ^

Brian wasting a day of work to type up a temper tantrum about Harbaugh low-balling potential candidates and Tank not being a good hire, all for it to be for naught, brings a little bit of a smile to my face.

Shop Smart Sho…

January 18th, 2020 at 2:25 PM ^

Am I missing something? None of those links were to other sites showing them reporting that Tank was getting promoted.

Also, what "40-year plan" is this? I did a quick search and there are 0 other references to it on the main page.

JFW

January 19th, 2020 at 5:51 PM ^

But, I’d argue our biggest advantage. It’s not bragging. Don’t we have the biggest alumni base? Aren’t we recognized as a top public university? 
 

come to Michigan and play football. If your good enough we can get you into the league. Maybe not as good as Bama but we can. 
 

and if you’re not, or something happens, you can get out of Um with at least a good undergrad, and maybe a masters. *then* when you go looking for a job you are a well known guy who can plug into that massive alumni base. 
 

That’s  not gloating, that’s reality.

Bodogblog

January 18th, 2020 at 2:52 PM ^

I hate to keep warring with this blog, but.. were they really "well behind the rate Tom Herman's been recruiting there"?  Herman's transition class was #25, then he went #3, #3, and #10 this year.  That's really good.  I don't see it being it being much better than #14, #10, #7, #7.  Simple average actually has Jean-Marie and Strong a bit higher.  Taking out the transition year gives an average #5 class to Herman, an average #8 class to Jean-Marie and Strong.  The former is better.  But is the latter "well behind"?  I don't think so.  Given variability in recruiting and the fact that coaches do have a hand in the transition class, I don't agree with that description.  That seems to be a BPONE tack on. 

bronxblue

January 18th, 2020 at 3:12 PM ^

Yeah, I don't think Texas has ever been particularly "bad" at recruiting, and the one thing Strong did do was recruit well.  And USF were 3rd and 5th in the AAC the past two years, which is about their historical average.  At the bare minimum, he seems like a solid recruiter who is used to the role at major universities and in talent-rich areas.  

 

FrozeMangoes

January 18th, 2020 at 11:07 PM ^

But he is talking about #3.  Herman has put together 2 number 3 classes.  You can't just average them out as if every class carries the same weight.  UT's class this year is only 10 because they have a small class.  They would be top 5 based on average ranking per player, higher than OSU even. 

Bodogblog

January 19th, 2020 at 1:55 PM ^

No he's actually talking about #2-#3 for Herman, which is completely incorrect because Herman has never had a #2 class at UT.  Then he's talking about #10-14 for Strong/BJM, which is also completely incorrect because they had two #7 classes.  So... Seth is not averaging for Herman, and just including his best classes, and then invoking a mythical #2 class that he's never achieved.  For Strong/BJM, he's ranging their two worst classes, and dropping out their two best classes?  And this is best case, i.e. removing the transition class, in which Stong/BJM managed much better than Herman.  This is bunk, and the best explanation - given the tenor of this blog for some time - is BPONE.  

AC1997

January 18th, 2020 at 2:52 PM ^

I suspect the Tank story came about because you're allowed to temporarily fill recruiting roles when coaches leave your staff.  Perhaps he will get an analyst job or something that would be a bit of a promotion. Or maybe there's a non coaching role on the recruiting staff that I am unfamiliar with.

Bush Sr. Is an interesting story.  People thought we gave him a job to help sign his kid and yet his kid is now in the NFL, he's still around, and he's still not an on field coach.  Maybe he likes what he's doing and it allows him to watch his son play on Sundays without having to work a 20 hour day like most on field assistants.  

 

Mr Miggle

January 18th, 2020 at 3:12 PM ^

I agree with how the Tank story likely came about.  I don't think analyst is the right job for Tank though. He sounds like a guy you want working directly with the players. Maybe he keeps the same job but starts sitting in on some film sessions and some meetings? Give him a bump in pay, let him do what he's already good at and gain some tools he'll need as an assistant coach.

Sparty Doesn't Know

January 18th, 2020 at 2:52 PM ^

I have been insufferably negative lately, but this looks pretty good to me.  These guys strike me as 2 that might hang for the long haul and can coach up and execute an aggressive defense.

Valiant

January 18th, 2020 at 3:08 PM ^

I really like these hires, but don't see how you can say Shoop will hang for the long haul.  More likely that he's a one-year rental.  Would be great if that's not the case.

Who knows, maybe DB Sr. will take over next year after spending another year learning from one of the best?  The future is hard to predict.

m9tt

January 18th, 2020 at 3:56 PM ^

Eh, a Charlie Strong disciple doesn't generate much excitement from me. Sure, he may have spent time in Texas and Florida, but Texas recruiting was at a 25 year low during the Strong era and its find much value of any kind associated with USF over the last few season. 

Muttley

January 18th, 2020 at 6:00 PM ^

For forty years and for an MGoPlan...
the draw is on our side
But will he stand, when the fans demand
his scheme and plans?
Will we dance, on the field, in the playoff round?

Charles Martel

January 19th, 2020 at 12:53 PM ^

Brian, Seth, thanks for the great work.  I don't even know what I'm having for lunch today, and people are asking you to tell us who's going to be standing on the sideline in September, who's going to be the starting lineup, and what's the first play called.   Just keep doing your job.  Criticism is like snowmen.  If there's any substance to it, it'll stay, but most of it will just eventually go away when the season changes.  (Insert Lloyd Carr's Pakenham Beatty quote here).