Unverified Voracity Isn't Saying That It's Zombie Apocalypse Time, But… Comment Count

Brian

Football Booklet Cover

IT'S MADE OF PAPER UNKNOWN TO MANKIND. The Daily has a book that compiles all their Harbaugh stuff, Harbaugh-related stuff, and Harbaugh-tangential stuff from the past year. You can order it for $5 plus shipping, or skip the shipping and pick it up from the Student Publications building on Maynard. Proceeds help the Daily keep running so they can continue to pump out epic features. Someone's got to write COLUMNS that don't make you want to die.

If this is the start of the zombie apocalypse I'm going to be upset. Gotta give me at least five years of Harbaugh before the end of the world.

Apparently most of the swimming and diving team is sick and they're checking the pool for something that turns you into a flesh-eating, non-verbal lumbering horror. Sounds like they should check the press box, not the pool.

Marge_vs._the_Monorail_(promo_card)monorailcolorWATER-410x600

Also please not before the MONORAIL. True story: one of the first Every Three Weekly articles ever was about an outlandish plan to join Central Campus to North Campus with a monorail. (In it, Tom Goss projected it would make money thanks to monorailgoblue.com, because Michigan had just launched mgoblue.com. Also it was on paper. I am old.) Well, IT'S HAPPENING DOT MONORAIL:

Schlissel, city envision monorail to unite North and Central campuses

Tuesday, University of Michigan President Mark Schlissel reintroduced the idea of creating a rapid transit system between Central and North Campuses, a project that has essentially been dormant since 2013.

Would I ride this just to ride it? Definitely. Let's put our town on the map.

Yes, thank you sane person. Man, has it been hard to keep the fisk in the garage after the latest and dumbest hot take explosion about Harbaugh. The main reason I haven't opened both barrels is indecision about whether I should go after Mitch Albom, Drew Sharp, or Tony Barnhart, all of whom put the literary equivalent of Skyline chili on the internet in response to Harbaugh's plan to visit IMG. Nothing has been as dumb as this, though:

image

I mean… I can't put it past a guy whose version of the "Art of the Deal" will be titled "Chasing Rutgers," but cumong man. Put down the Confederate flag bong and sober up.

I may break down pretty soon here and call someone horseface, but for now Andy Staples is keeping me sane:

The Power Five leagues, including Sankey's SEC, got autonomy legislation passed so they could loosen some restrictions that other Division I schools wanted to keep tight. The new attitude in major college sports was supposed to be this: If you want to do it, do it. If you don't, don't. That lasted until several millionaire coaches got mad at another millionaire coach trying to mitigate their competitive advantage.

I'm so so done with being Meatloaf The Football Program: I'll do anything to win but I won't do that. Staples does mention that Harbaugh getting up in his players' spring break might come up during the infinite lawsuits the NCAA is fighting, but since a bunch of spring sports already do that it's likely a moot point. And as I always point out, Michigan fans should be hoping amateurism dies swiftly and comprehensively for the same reason the Yankees don't want a salary cap. I don't think Harbaugh is consciously attempting to point out the hypocrisy, but I'd support him if he was.

Meanwhile in attempts to negative recruit based on the above. Michael Dwumfour opens up about his recruitment process, detailing an ill-fated Penn State trip:

The Penn State coaching staff knew the competition it was up against. According to Dwumfour, the Lions poked fun at Jim Harbaugh’s recruiting techniques.

That didn’t sit well.

“When I was at Penn State, I heard jokes about Harbaugh and stuff like that,” Dwumfour said. “In the back of my head, I’m thinking ‘What he’s doing is working, obviously. Instead of criticizing him, you might want to take some of his techniques to try and help yourself out and get some recruits.’”

The prospect of Penn State coaches making fun of Harbaugh's sleepovers boggles the mind, but I put nothing that is bogglingly dumb past James Franklin.

Status of Bush the elder. Devin Bush Sr was long rumored to be on the verge of a Michigan job, something that he was openly hoping for in an interview with Brandon Brown:

“For me, if I was to get an opportunity, because I would love to coach at the next level, I never wanted to put it out there because I didn’t want to move my kids while they were in high school. If you get into that world you could be moving every eight to ten months. Once my son graduated, now I would be open for an opportunity because I don’t have to worry about moving kids, it’s just my wife and I.”

That sounds like a guy who is waiting for the Ts to get crossed and Is dotted. And now that Michigan's down Greg Jackson they might look at him for that job as well; Bush's profile isn't that far away from Jackson's: former NFL safety, little high-level experience. Harbaugh grabbed Jackson when he was an assistant DBs coach with Wisconsin.

Who doesn't these days? Tom Brady's agent wants to blow up the NCAA, and he's likely correct about how the edifice comes tumbling down:

This is the promise of [Don] Yee's advocacy. He is a football insider with firsthand knowledge of how a business works and the credibility to make people listen. He is exhausted, he says, by talk without much action and has reached the point of arguing for revolution: Blow up the system. Start over. Build anew. "This generation of players has more tools at its disposal than any other to be heard and to organize," he says. "If they adopted a Twitter hashtag of #disruptthefinalfour for the NCAA tournament, they would at least start a discussion. And significant change typically happens through some discussion that is too large to ignore."

All it would take is two basketball teams deciding to delay a Final Four game and amateurism is all over but the shouting. They don't even have to refuse to play. All they have to do is agree to start the game 15 minutes late, and there will be no illusions as to where the power actually resides. Yee:

"Nothing will change for the players unless they take the responsibility of becoming something more than willing victims to this system," Yee says. "At some point, you have to look in the mirror and ask yourself, 'Who am I? What am I doing? What's going on, and what am I doing about it?' These players, they have all the power -- they simply don't realize it."

That is correct. Someone's going to be the NCAA's Curt Flood, and pretty soon. Related: Sonny Vaccaro talks to the NYT, says the same things Vaccaro usually does.

I guess he's a Walverine. Michigan fans have this odd conversation about whether it's okay to be a Michigan fan without having attended the school. They do this largely because MSU fans are livid that nobody who doesn't go to MSU gives a damn about the Spartans and project this anger all around them. Meanwhile 95% of Alabamans are either Auburn or Alabama fans, and… uh… let's just stipulate that more than 5% of Alabamans do not have a degree from either institution. (Ace, at home, just screamed "BAN BOOKLARNIN'" again.)

It is good to have Michigan fans scattered about with no other connection to the school. One of them just joined the recruiting class:

“Honestly I’ve been a Michigan fan since I was little,” [Dylan] McCaffrey said. “My grandma is a big Michigan fan. She has a house about 40 minutes away [from Ann Arbor], so I don’t know why, but I just ended up loving them. I could’ve always seen myself going there, and in the end I just went back to how I felt about Michigan as a kid.”

Another person who was a Michigan fan for no particular reason: Jabrill Peppers. Let all who want to root for winged helmets do so irrespective of their degrees, and let MSU fans stew about it.

More on "floor seats". Everyone hated it. Especially people who have televisions. ESPN trotted out some poor damn spokesperson, who immediately torpedoed any sympathy I might have for her with a statement so inane it bordered on Dave Brandon Hire:

ESPN was built on trying new things and taking risks, and tonight is just another example of that.

ESPN was built on showing people athletics contests, not utterly failing to do so.

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[Eric Upchurch]

Austin Davis is looking rather different these days. Many people thought taking Davis was questionable at best when Michigan did, and it is going to be strange next year when Michigan has up to six post players on the roster (Doyle, Donnal, Wagner, Wilson, Davis, and Jon Teske). But Davis has done everything he can to prep himself:

635908046831956828-AUSTIN-020816-KD-12[1]While he was 6-10 a year ago, he was also 265 pounds. Today he is a svelte 235 and his game has benefited immeasurably.

“The big thing is I changed my diet around; I changed it pretty drastically,” he said. “And then I got on a new weight program.” …

A year ago, Davis was more of a plodder as he moved up and down the court. His teammates often had to wait for him to join them before they could run their offense.

That, more than anything, is why no major college offered him a scholarship — and U-M coach John Beilein made Davis aware of that fact.

“We had a directive,” said Eric Davis, Austin’s dad. “Coach Beilein really wanted to see him start moving better and running the court better.”

He has, and he now looks like a college post. Whether he'll still look like one in college is unknown; his 79% shooting percentage is indicative of both his talent and his competition level.

Who runs Big Ten hockey? The equivalent of Tom Anastos. Tom Anastos, hockey coach, not Tom Anastos, CCHA commissioner. Because Anastos was all right at the latter before being thrust into a role he had no frame of reference for. Ditto the folks running Big Ten hockey:

“Coming from a non-hockey background, it’s kind of hard for me to imagine a fan in the state of Minnesota who wouldn’t be excited to see a Michigan or a Michigan State come in to play,” he said. “I recognize and acknowledge that significant rivalries developed over the years in the previous leagues, and that’s fine."

Minnesota fans did not like this interview with Brad Traviolia, not one bit. I'm not much of a fan either. Nobody comes to the Big Ten hockey tournament because most fans are very far away from said tournament no matter where it is.

There is no possible solution to this problem. A neutral site Big Ten tournament is never going to draw. I have had season tickets for a decade now and I have no plans to ever go to a neutral site Big Ten Tournament, because that product sucks. It sucks being in a big empty building where hockey is going on. I am barely willing to put up with it for an NCAA tournament game. A Big Ten tourney where everyone makes it in doesn't even come close to moving the needle.

The only solution is to go to series on home ice, which four of the six schools should support since they have dedicated rinks. If Wisconsin or Ohio State don't want to host because of high school sports, they don't have to. Quit letting two schools that clearly don't care about hockey dictate to the 3.5 that do.

Hockey tourney status: don't collapse. Jim Dahl's excellent Pairwise projection site is reaching peak utility as hockey comes down the stretch here. Michigan is in barring a spectacular collapse:

michigan

Even 2-5 likely sees them sitting in a pretty secure at-large spot, though they'd definitely want to win a game in the Big Ten tournament. Three wins and they would be all but a lock going into that tourney unless results elsewhere conspired against them; 4-3 and they're 100% in.

A one seed would require Michigan to absolutely sprint down the stretch; even a 6-1 finish most likely sees them still a 2 going into the BTT.

I have no idea how good this goalie is. The Daily's Jason Rubinstein on Michigan's poor, bombarded goalie:

After three and a half years, Racine is playing the best hockey he ever has in a Michigan uniform. Berenson named him the team’s bona fide starter more than three months ago. For his last six games, he boasts a .931 save percentage, a career high for any stretch over five games that he has played.

And this past weekend, he was the only reason Michigan managed to escape Madison with five points, rather than three. In Saturday’s contest against Wisconsin, the Wolverines won in a shootout, despite surrendering four goals.

“You should’ve seen him at Wisconsin,” Berenson said. “He stood on his head, and we had no business winning the game based on the chances we gave up.

“That was his best game of the year.”

This has got to be the strangest year for hockey since I've been paying attention. They give up four goals to a very bad Wisconsin team only because their goalie stands on his head; they are on pace for a two-seed.

Etc.: Barry Alvarez apologizes for saying innocuous, accurate thing about UW hockey. Bob Miller on incoming goalie Jack LaFontaine. Jim Harbaugh adopts a kitten. PWO Anthony Kay profiled. Incoming hockeyist Nick Pastujov also profiled.

Comments

readyourguard

February 17th, 2016 at 5:02 PM ^

I will never understand or support the outsiders trying to end amateurism.  Is the system screwed up?  Yep.  The adults allowed it to run away and eveyone who could take advantage of it, did. There's 1000 things that need fixing.   But to the players, football is just football.  It's a game they've played virtually their whole lives, and they got so good at it, it brought them to the big time: Divison 1 college football

I don't have all the answers.  I don't even know all the questions.  But I know one thing:  allowing the adults who f'ed it up in the first place to try and recreate the whole system will result in complete and utter failure.

I'm gonna get negged to bolivia, but talk to the players.  Get their opinion.  Find out if they feel like they're getting screwed.  Aside from a couple who are probably more bitter about their lack of playing time, kids want to play football, have some fun, get laid occasionally, and move on with their lives.  For most, playing college football was their lifelone dream. 

Autostocks

February 17th, 2016 at 7:54 PM ^

Thank you.  I am so tired of hearing about how the athletes are victims.  Let me show you the hole in my wallet after sending my two kids to Michigan, and try to tell me that student athletes on scholarship aren't already paid a goodly sum.  And that for doing what they love, while getting prepared for a professional career in sports or something else.

mgoblue98

February 18th, 2016 at 12:04 AM ^

agree with you.  I dislike the NCAA a lot, but allowing the same people to create a new system will result in something just as bad or worse.  

One of the changes I would like to see is that players can sell any of their stuff (bowl game stuff and what not) that they want to anytime they want to as long as they own it.  They should also be allowed to make money from the sale of athletic apparel with their name on it or anything with their likeness on it.

 

readyourguard

February 18th, 2016 at 9:16 AM ^

Financial stipend?  You mean aside from the $200,000 in tuition?  Ok, how about....

-an endless river of swag including shoes, clothes, hats, and bags

-better food than any other student on campus

-a private academic facility with resources not available to non-athletes

-cash per diem on road trips

-bowl trips - which brings more swag, food, experiences

-a spring trip to Florida - a new benefit

-connections to a very selective and influential network group

-literally a lifetime of events which provides even more swag, food, and drink.

 

Does all that factor in or naw?

 

 

harmon98

February 18th, 2016 at 12:44 PM ^

I'm honestly not financially or emotionally invested in this topic. I didn't play ball but witnessed the D1 student athlete's time/diet/training/studying schedule first-hand: lived with a wrestler and a football player late 80s early 90s. The rules/benefits may have changed for the better since then. I honestly don't know.

Like I said, grant-in-aid is a good place to start. Those amenities are really good as you've pointed out.

I'm simply of the opinion I'd like to see a modest stipend beyond that.

 

B-Nut-GoBlue

February 17th, 2016 at 5:16 PM ^

Fuck ESPN and any big entity that just can't admit fault that they screwed up.  They're going to keep riding this excuse that they're all about the cutting edge and things like last night were a good idea...and probably we're just too inept and plebian to understand it.

JUST SAY YOU WERE FUCKING WRONG.

 

AND DON'T DO IT AGAIN!!!

ST3

February 17th, 2016 at 5:22 PM ^

How big is UofM's endowment? Problem solved.

If California can waste $70B on high speed rail between LA and San Fran, Ann Arbor should be able to find $60M for the monorail.  (I'm actually for this because I traveled on a high speed rail in France. 200+ MPH trains are awesome.)

Regarding ESPN, it sounds like they didn't learn the lesson of the XFL. (The overhead camera so common in today's TV broadcasts was pioneered in the XFL, and that actually worked. ESPN, failing to live up to XFL standards.)

ST3

February 17th, 2016 at 7:03 PM ^

I did a quick google search on University monorails and got 523,000 hits. I did another search on "University monorails" and only got 9 hits. WVU, ODU, and UNLV all have monorails or monorail proposals. Interestingly, the University of Findlay and Illinois State University had articles about building monorails on April 1, 2014 and April 1, 2015, respectively. Hey people, monorails are no joking matter! If you ever were squeezed onto one of those damn blue M busses going from central campus to north campus or vice versa, or missed a weekend bus and had to wait an hour for the next one, you'll understand my desire for a Monorail. It even starts with the right letter. Why can't we have a monorail measuring contest with the Harvards of the world.

Wolvie3758

February 17th, 2016 at 7:49 PM ^

for your service !!! It matters not whether one went to UM or is just a fan we are all wolverine nation.

 

Speaking of Marines I am in San Diego right now working and our evening function is a Miramar which this client bought out a Hangar where occasionally special events are done Im really pumped to get to go out there tonight

MGoBender

February 17th, 2016 at 9:01 PM ^

I know we can get into huge "How should we spend the endowment" arguments, but I feel people don't understand this basic premise:

The endowment is a fund that the University takes a % out of every year (a % lower than expected interest gain).  If they take 1.5% out of a 5B endowment, that means they essentially are "getting" $75M of operating/scholarship/grant money per year.  The bigger the endowment, the more money they get to spend on student aid and other things.  It continues to grow because you take out a small percent and it serves as a true emergency fund.

I believe the upcoming (current?) capital campaign will be aimed at increasing student aid and grants, meaning greatly growing the endowment and raising the yearly amount they throw at aid.

champswest

February 17th, 2016 at 5:21 PM ^

this kid gets here. From everything I have read, he is quite a young man. Four plus academic record, gym rat, changed his diet as a high school junior because Beilein suggested it, and loves Michigan. Look forward to seeing him in the maize and blue.

Rasmus

February 18th, 2016 at 11:37 AM ^

Nobody is reading this now, but here's my 2¢. I had completely forgotten why I started reading this thread -- to comment on Austin Davis.

Certainly it would be sweet if he develops into a solid B1G player, or better. There's no doubt Beilein saw something there, underlying the obvious problems that kept everyone else away.

Jon Horford leaving hurt Beilein's recruiting, I think. I seem to remember not-good things being said by his family, if not him. Certainly the team needed him to stay.

Beilein needs one the four actual tall guys on next year's team to develop. There's a role for Donnal, but not starting at center. My guess is that next year it will be Wilson. There's something there and next year will be his third in the program. He seems well-respected and liked -- I can see it happening.

Teske feels like a redshirt to me -- he won't be needed. But I'd love to see Davis play -- he seems like possibly a very good defender -- big, strong, and smart. Wagner too, but I'm not sure "strong" will ever really apply to him. Regardless, Beilein seems headed toward having an array of quality bigs to throw in the game, with 20 or more fouls between them.

mdsgoblue

February 17th, 2016 at 5:25 PM ^

Proud Walverine here! My life took me in a direction, looking back due to my own stupidity, that didn't include college. Instead I had the opportunity to serve my country as a Marine and I did it proudly. I have made the most of it and enjoy being able to join the screaming throng of Michigan fans at the big house every year! Go Bue!!

Brendan71388

February 18th, 2016 at 11:59 AM ^

First of all, that's ls for your service.

Second, your case makes for a great point against anybody that would argue you can only root for your alma mater.

What about all the people who didn't go to college, including many of our servicemen and women?

I went to a tiny Christian college in Lansing. Am I only allowed to root for their crappy teams and leave D1 sports to the people who went to those schools? Gimme a break.



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SalvatoreQuattro

February 17th, 2016 at 5:35 PM ^

While other little boys  sat transfixed by fall Saturday morning cartoons I sat desperately wanting those same cartoons to end so I could watch my Wolverines play. The moment the CBS college football theme started to play sent me into a frenzy.

Every in early June I would walk up to the Sav-Mor pharmacy store in Saline to purchase twizzlers, pop, and all of the college football preview magazines.Such simple and splendid times they were.

lilpenny1316

February 17th, 2016 at 5:44 PM ^

You should be able to root for whoever you want, even if you didn't go to the school.  I ended up liking Michigan and eventually going there because my dad liked the school, athletically and academically.  But he wasn't an alum.  

But I do believe there is a certain respect that should be paid towards the alumni though.  I don't like Sparty fans up in my face when they didn't go to State.  I just feel like the emotional attachment is different.  It's like growing up in Michigan but being a Yankee fan.  I believe the emotional attachment is different for someone growing up in one of the NY burroughs.  

Either way, fans should be able to root for teams and have a civil dislike for their rivals.

snarling wolverine

February 17th, 2016 at 7:12 PM ^

I think it's fantastic that we have a huge network of non-alumni fans.   I understand that for many people going to school here is not an option for one reason or another, and I don't begrudge anyone for not attending.  The only thing I ask of non-alumni fans is that they respect the university in addition to its sports teams.

I was annoyed by the guy who wrote a column for EDSBS last season about the Michigan fan experience.  He had this "I didn't go there, and I'm glad I didn't" attitude, and seemed to have a chip on his shoulder towards alumni.  If that's your attitude, you shouldn't be nominating yourself to be the spokesperson for our fanbase.  Don't be a fan of the sports teams and dog the university.  

 

 

   

1VaBlue1

February 17th, 2016 at 8:22 PM ^

Far different, yes.  Absolutely.  Far deeper?  Nope, not buying that.  Your four years (or however many) bought you some lifetime memories and feelings that I'll never have as 'just a fan'.  No arguement with that.  But you don't get to monopolize a deep relation when I've had 50 years of my own memories.  I grew up with everything Michigan - exulting with Dennis Franklin; the 10-Year War before ESPN popularized it; pheasant hunting with Bob Ufer; a bball NC through a pirated signal on a submarine in the North Sea; a million others that shaped my lifetime love for all things UM.  No, you don't get to monopolize 'deep feelings'.

Rasmus

February 18th, 2016 at 12:09 PM ^

Current students, the peers of the current team, obviously have a special connection to what's going on right now.

Not to mention professors and other career employees -- the actual "University" -- who watch the Bandos come and go and try to teach them something while they're here. That's a different sort of connection. Does the team represent them, or just the students?

Alumni are in a position to maintain a relationship with the University, and to become part of that larger effort, which really they're not when they are students. Many choose to do so, which is wonderful.

But it's short-sighted to think that your connection as a former student is somehow the deepest sort of connection one can have with a University that is all about people -- the people who work there, who dedicate their lives to it, who pay for it, who make it the great place to be a student that it is. There are all kinds of people, with all kinds of connections to the University. Yours is one of them, one that was special, back when you were a student. No longer. Get over it. When it comes to the sports teams, you're a fan now, like everyone else who is a fan.

I'd argue the only people who have a special connection to the current team are current students. That's why they get their own section in the stadium. Everybody else sits elsewhere. Join the club!

lilpenny1316

February 18th, 2016 at 10:56 AM ^

Because of all the ways the school can impact you, from attending here to being affected by the hospital or some other extension of the University, we have a far greater reach than most other universities.  That's what the whole Michigan Difference is all about.

 

Rabbit21

February 17th, 2016 at 10:28 PM ^

A) non alums likely do realize this. I've been a UCLA fan all my life, but I am not an alum and am well aware my brother in laws and grandparents experience with UCLA is deeper than mine, doesn't mean I feel any need to apologize for it or that I am any less of a fan.
B) why in all the hells does it matter in the slightest? The more people cheering for Michigan the better and the deeper they feel that connection the better.
C) What possible good do you see coming out of trying to engage in a measuring contest of "I love Michigan more than you do."?



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UMHockeyFan

February 17th, 2016 at 5:46 PM ^

Larry Page, co-founder of Google and current CEO of Google's parent company, Alphabet, originally proposed a UM monorail in 1994 when he was president of the UM EECS Fraternity:

Link to article in the Michigan Daily:

Also, link to article in the Michigan Alumnus discussing his proposal.

So, did the ETW get its start by mocking the future inventor of Google?!?!