The last GLI: 2019. [James Coller]

Unverified Voracity Reopens Conferences.xlsm Comment Count

Seth July 29th, 2021 at 2:35 PM

29 HOURS TO GO: If you haven’t gotten in on the Kickstarter for HTTV 2021 do so now! Friday night it ends. One guy said he’s buying it just for my writing (which, there’s a lot of it), so whatever excuse you come up with for why you want to have this, it’s definitely not the worst one.

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I am printing only a limited amount this year and expect to sell out before they get to any shelves. Yes, I’ll have a Kindle version but that won’t be ready until mid-August. I wrote my piece this morning, not counting the Table of Contents and the title page. The covers have already been printed. Buy ‘em up!

RELEASE THE SPREADSHEETS: Texas got sick of carrying the league they thought they would dominate and Oklahoma did until Iowa State upset everybody. The wheels are now set in motion for the Sooners and Longhorns to join the SEC when the Big 12’s TV deal expires in 2025. At that point the Longhorn Network will become part of the Mouse, Texas A&M goes back to being the Michigan State of a larger state, and the SEC will become the super-conference (more of a league) that will finally be as strong as they incessantly tell people they are.

Here is the best take:

The Big Ten is preparing its borders by letting it be known that only refugees with valid AAU membership cards will even be considered.

…unless, of course, you’re rich.

It’s also set the college football anthill into a frenzy. The people who like neat and same-sized columns are busy working on their justifications why jamming regionally and culturally affiliated institutions into their specific 16-team boxes is right and good. The guy who’s got a source willing to admit that Michigan and Ohio State once got asked out by someone who knows Alabama is going to have his day circulated among pretend media until a critical mass of brains have rejected it as goofy.

The Big 12 has more existential concerns, like do they exist? Commissioner Bob Bowlsby sent ESPN a cease and desist letter accusing the network of trying lure 3-5 members to the AAC to get the Big 12 to dissolve. Why?

"It's not so much about the taking of the members, what it does — and what it's intended to do — is destabilize the Big 12 so that it implodes, thus absolving OU and Texas of their grant of rights obligations and their exit fee obligations. If the Big 12 fails to exist as an entity, they can move quicker and they can do so for less money.”

That’s fair, but as Mathlete recently pointed out, the Big 12 has some Monty Python vibes right now.

[After THE JUMP: What do we do?]

Meanwhile the Big Ten has to decide how to respond. It could:

  1. Go banging on doors of USC/Washington/Clemson/whoever’s left to see if they can superconf up as well.
  2. Find two loose Power 5 schools to add so it looks like they’ve done something and added new markets.
  3. Form a Big-Pac federation that changes little except they share TV rights, hold crossover games early in the season, and play a championship in the Rose Bowl before the playoffs.
  4. Join the remainder of the Power 5 conferences to break away from the NCAA and form a super-duper league where everybody gets to more or less do things how they want, negotiates a national TV package that streams every game, moves the baseball season back to summer, holds its own playoffs that locks out the SEC, signs players to contracts, then asks Texas and Oklahoma if they want to come too.
  5. The above but then be like “lol, j/k.”
  6. Something even wilder.
  7. Do nothing, trusting the parochial nature of college football fans to keep them as stinking rich as they are right now while they see how Texas and Oklahoma are assimilated into the SEC superstructure.
  8. That but come up with a playoff plan that hurts the superleague, and pass it while everybody’s mad.

Everything is on the table, just like it was a month ago when the Big 12 could come apart at any time, or two years ago when the Big 12 could come apart at any time. The other conferences are going to be looking for crazy ideas too. The ACC will try to lock down Notre Dame.

Until it affects Michigan’s schedule I’m happy to popcorn through this one, but I would like to see if the Pac is amenable to #3. Is it basically going back to the structure of college football in the 1990s? Yes. Do people have to know this? No.

BIG TEN MEDIA DAYS BITS. It was a tame one. One reporter said “Go Blue” before asking Harbaugh whether he was concerned about Macdonald being a first-time coordinator, and this was a news cycle among objective media professionals who would never show bias for the team they cover.

I did not look to see if Crowley Sullivan said anything, because I have enough blood pressure. Scott Frost’s new boss sticking around long after there was anything for him to do was another news cycle.

But we learned a few things about the team. Mazi Smith was the unanimous breakout player named by Harbaugh and the players when asked for three. David Ojabo and freshman Andrel Anthony were other picks. Jess Speight and Chris Hinton, but not Donovan Jeter, were named the other two of “three solid inside guys” by Harbaugh. Josh Ross sounds comfortable in the new system.

PFF ON AIDAN HUTCHINSON. He was #4 on their best DEs of college football watch list:

Hutchinson played only three games in 2020 before suffering a season-ending leg injury, but the Wolverine seemed to be on his way to taking that next step forward on a mere 149 snaps (82.5 PFF grade). With a clean bill of health, he is quite easily one of the best all-around defensive linemen in college football.

The 6-foot-6, 269-pounder is versatile, has incredible power behind his hands and is one of the more polished players at the position. Hutchinson produced an 83.6 run-defense grade and 27 run stops along with a 76.0 pass-rush grade and 46 total pressures in 2019. He never really put together a dominant performance from start to finish in 2019 like others on this list, but he was consistently good throughout the year. We need to see more elite outings in 2021, and Hutchinson easily has the potential to make that happen.

Don’t scroll down unless you want to see two Buckeyes.

BUCKEYE BREAKDOWN OF RADICAL HOOSIER DEFENSE. If you too are a dispassionate consumer of objective football knowledge, you may enjoy this Foe Film discussion of the things Indiana has been doing to remain sound against the pass despite their Oprah Winfrey approach to selecting who gets to blitz:

Against the Buckeyes, Allen and Wommack added a new wrinkle, following the second linebacker with a safety through the same gap. Even if the center picked up the first linebacker and the running back picked up the second, no one would be there to pick up the safety as the rest of the offensive line looked toward defensive ends who were dropping in coverage.

The Ravens had a similar philosophy, if “maybe we could do this worse than Indiana” will entice you to take a link to Eleven Warriors.

SHOULDA NAMED IT THE NCAA VIRUS: Then we could be united in taking it down instead of growing bored with the big fight and turning to petty squabbles like how much peer pressure to get the vaccine is too much.

Wazzu head coach Nick Rolovich participated in Pac-12 Media Days Bob Shoop-style, i.e. via videoconference, because the conference had a vaccination mandate for coaches, staff, and players, and he isn’t getting it. Rolovich did not explain why, citing a “personal decision.” At least he’s not telling others to make life easier on Covid:

The second-year coach said about 75% of Washington State's roster has been fully vaccinated or soon will be, and he praised both the state and the university for their efforts in getting residents and students vaccinated.

"I'm not against vaccinations, and I wholeheartedly support those who choose to get vaccinated, including our players," Rolovich said. "I urge everyone to consider being vaccinated."

It’s extra awkward since Wazzu is one the many schools mandating all students, faculty, and staff get vaccinated by fall. Rolovich clarified he intends to follow whatever protocols are put in place.

It’s harder to believe the “personal decision” is actually a sound one because Rolovich booted a player last year for choosing to sit out the Covid season:

A quick Twitter stalk of Rolovich’s likes makes me pretty certain his decision isn’t a medical one. Wazzu fans seem to have come to the same conclusion and want him gone. For what it’s worth, one NFL team already took that step with a top assistant.

My take is beating Covid-19 is more important than whether millionaire coaches can be forced to take a vaccine by the mega-millionaire operations they work for. I have no concern that Rolovich and Dennison can get jobs after this; even Art Briles got another job in football. Fortunately there’s been a corresponding rise in vaccinations where outbreaks are occurring. If you haven’t yet, please do. If we lose you to this damned virus before I can get you your copy of HTTV, I swear by Denard I will track down your loved ones and make them hopeful for this season of Michigan football.

GLI AT HOME, NOT ON YOUR SEASON TICKETS

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[James Coller]

They’re bringing back a sorta-Great Lakes Invitational at the end of the year as a pair of home games for Michigan and MSU. Michigan will get Tech at Yost on 12/29 while MSU plays WMU at Munn, then get the other mid-major the next night.

This would be a neat way to brand a pair of in-state nonconference home games in late December when the full event still isn’t a good idea. Except they realized the branding is an excuse to create two home games that season ticket holders have to buy extra:

The two games at Yost Ice Arena will not be a part of the U-M season ticket package. Ticket pricing, sales dates and other information on the GLI at Yost will be announced at a later date.

It was irksome to hockey season ticket holders a couple of years ago when Michigan agreed to move a home game against MSU off-campus and did not think to refund the season ticket holders. As nice as “we’re keeping the GLI alive” plays in a press release, those same fans are going to be pretty annoyed when they find two Michigan games at Yost in December aren’t included because of branding.

MENTAL HEALTH MATTERS, ESPECIALLY WHEN IT CAN CAUSE YOU TO FORGET WHAT YOU’RE DOING MID-AIR. Simone Biles, unquestionably the greatest gymnast in the world, removed herself from competition at the Olympics. For people having a hard time understanding this, here’s a gymnastics coach explaining exactly why this was really a life and death decision:

It’s hard not to draw comparisons between responses to Biles giving up a chance at an individual accomplishment because of a high likelihood of permanent injury or death, versus those for certain coaches who got out-big boyed by my four-year-old this week.

WOLVERINE MEDALISTS: Softball alumna Amanda Chidester and the Americans took silver, losing to host Japan 2-0 in the gold medal game. She went down swinging:

Chidester, who produced a pair of game-winning hits in opening-round play, went 0-for-3 in the gold-medal contest but was robbed in the sixth inning when, with runners on first and second, her hot shot to third ricocheted off the Japanese third baseman and right into the glove of the shortstop, who completed the double play to second base to end the inning -- and Team USA's last great chance to score.

Swimmer Maggie MacNeil (Canada) won a gold and silver. Swim alumna Siobahn Haughey (Hong Kong) earned a silver, which is Hong Kong’s first-ever swimming medal and her classmate Catie DeLoof was part of the relay team that took a bronze for USA. Michael Hixon, our grad assistant diving coach, and his diving partner won silver again.

ETC. Ace on Franz Wagner, who could go 7th, as high as 4th. I also got him on board with Haskins. Jake Butt retiresStaff shuffling for Track & Field/Cross Country after Jerry Clayton went to LSU. Ohio State’s first-world problems. Get your BIG D1CKINSON ENERGY on.

Comments

The Deer Hunter

July 29th, 2021 at 5:25 PM ^

  1. Go banging on doors of USC/Washington/Clemson/whoever’s left to see if they can superconf up as well.

This is the only viable option plus the fact there are a good amount of attractive doors to bang on. Only other option I see is for the the 4 or 5 top revenue schools along with Michigan and OSU also going the SEC. This would be particular intriguing as this new conference would become the new NCAA and run the whole shabang as a 30 or so Superconference. 

DonAZ

July 29th, 2021 at 8:43 PM ^

The SEC appears serious about building out a football conference.  With Alabama, LSU, Florida, Georgia, Texas A&M, and now Texas and Oklahoma, it's hard to argue.  If the B1G limits itself to AAU schools and picks up two or more Purdue / Northwestern football equivalents, it will be hard for the B1G to compete with the SEC.  They have to go as big and bold as they can. 

CLord

July 30th, 2021 at 11:18 AM ^

Disagree.  Our interest should not be what is best for the Big Ten, but what is best for Michigan. 

We need to focus on any realignment/addition that undermines Ohio State, Penn State and Wisconsin. Simple as that.  This is a chance to chip away at their unobstructed, unilateral in-state hold on recruiting their state.  Forget big and bold, and give me schools like Cincinnati, Marquette, Pitt and others WITHIN those states. 

Only right that they suffer the same fate schools like Michigan and Illinois have suffered at the hands of annoying inferior in-state opponents like Northwestern and Michigan State, who have proven not only to be able to chip away at local recruits, but have helped tank the more storied programs for long stretches, sometimes enjoying long periods where they are even the dominant in-state program.

That would be my only focus.

Rasmus

July 29th, 2021 at 5:36 PM ^

Has got to be #2, and the reality-based list is damn short if AAU is a requirement. Basically just Virginia, Pittsburgh, Kansas, and Iowa State.

The SEC will do pods, which is the only way to do it. My preference would be Virginia and Pittsburgh, because it makes for the best pod for Michigan:

Rutgers, Penn State, Maryland, Virginia

Michigan, Michigan State, Ohio State, Pittsburgh 

Illinois, Northwestern, Indiana, Purdue

Minnesota, Wisconsin, Iowa, Nebraska

umumum

July 29th, 2021 at 5:40 PM ^

We can't go back to business and sports as usual until we reach herd immunity, which means far more people need to get the vaccine. If you care about eating out, going to gatherings and sitting among 110,000 people, do it.  And if you were genuinely skeptical before, math has proven IT WORKS.

jg2112

July 30th, 2021 at 8:27 AM ^

I get the sense America is broken. Everything is a mess, even the "order" we all enjoyed with college football prior to 2020. 

Everything has descended into chaos and "partisanship," and the only thing that matters is money. It's quite a sad spectacle.

CLord

July 30th, 2021 at 11:00 AM ^

This is the rare opportunity for the Big Ten to finally even out the play field against schools who dominate simply by being the only Big Ten school in their state, by adding some local competition to their recruiting efforts.
OSU?  Let's add Cincinnati.  It's about time OSU had some state level competition for recruits.
PSU? Let's add Pitt.  See above.
Wisconsin?  Let's add Marquette.  See above.

Yes, all inferior programs, but they would be bolstered by their move to the Big Ten and they would chip away at some recruits, much as Northwestern has done to Illinois.

I'm sick and tired of splitting the recruiting scraps in a sub-par football recruiting state with Michigan State while OSU has a far better recruiting state all to themselves.  I dream of a world where all of those annoying Bulloughs were Wolverines because Michigan had the same in-state set up Ohio State has...

And for all those saying "yadda yadda Michigan and Ohio State recruit nationally" that may be true, but it does not counter the fact that schools like PSU, OSU and Wisconsin consistently get much of the top talent from their own state out of state allegiance and proximity.

GET OFF YOUR H…

July 30th, 2021 at 11:50 AM ^

Adding Cincinnati does nothing to OSU.  The city of Cincinnati is highly split on their fandom and where money goes.  There are as many OSU/UK fans in Cincinnati each than there are UC fans.  Pair that with their 40K seat stadium, small TV market, they would have to basically start from scratch and rebuild their program to get to the point that they will compete with OSU.

12-0 UC in the AAC is 6-6 UC in the B1G when PSU, UM, Wisky, etc are all having good seasons.  That's not going to ignite a fire in their fan base to have the money pouring in to be able to pull top recruits out of Ohio that are being courted by OSU.  It happens here and there, but it's the exception, not the rule.

Wish I Could H…

August 1st, 2021 at 11:40 PM ^

Well…as a long time reader this is it for me. This is a sports blog, yet the author continues to promote his views on personal vaccination decisions. 

 

This is a recurring theme on the blog. The absence of an editor to control this outrageous writing has deteriorated the quality of this publication. It’s not worth it anymore to glean UM knowledge while being beaten over the head to take a non approved, side effect ridden drug JUST BECAUSE you say so SETH!

 

And all you other readers wake up…it’s not the stress or Brian that is deteriorating the content, is this “vax up” non sense.

I have seen perfectly healthy people be severely affected by the “vax”, so spare us Seth.

 

Its a disgrace to all Brian worked for to have you ruin this blog with your constant off topic “pushes” to vaccinate  Good luck with your blog and the 100 people left reading it.  And maybe time to step up/ grow up and loose the kick starter.

 

Hard to take medical advice from a guy who can’t run a real LLC… 

 

 

Cc2010

August 3rd, 2021 at 7:35 AM ^

Sooooo, no politics but we can all jump on and tell everyone our horror stories about covid?  Like the same damn thing we did last year when there was seemingly gonna be no sports.  What is amazing is that so many smart people both on this blog and elsewhere have swallowed the vaccine kool-aid as the be all and end all of this virus.  They are even telling those who have HAD the virus to get the vaccine and totally ignoring the real science of naturally acquired immunity vs artificially acquired immunity.