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Scathing Sports Illustrated article on culture at Michigan under Harbaugh

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Jim Harbaugh is the embodiment of his coach, Bo Schembechler, and at his core, Harbaugh preaches two of Schembechler's maxims: "The Team, The Team, The Team" and "Those Who Stay Will Be Champions." But those two phrases are hardly recognizable around the Michigan program these days. Consider:

• In December 2018, multiple players, including captains Karan Higdon and Devin Bush announce they will sit out the Peach Bowl to protect their NFL futures.

• A respected insider on TheWolverine.com posts about Harbaugh and his staff weeding out a sense of "entitlement within the program" and guys that "aren't all in for the team" suggesting changes in recruiting philosophy and leadership to better assess players that will be selfless in their commitment to Michigan football.

• In January 2019, Michigan loses two assistant coaches to Ohio State. Assistants move on all the time, and one can't fault coaches or a program when a promotion is at stake, but long-time Wolverine Greg Mattison, a 13-year U-M veteran, leaves Ann Arbor for the Maize and Blue's rival, pulling a 180 on everything his career had been about for the previous eight seasons.

Linebackers coach Al Washington, a rising star in the profession, regarded as a dynamic recruiter, departs after one season for a lateral move to OSU. Even with ties to the Buckeye program, it's a surprise and another huge coup for Michigan's rival.

• In the August of 2019, first-year offensive coordinator Josh Gattis jokingly references his starting quarterback spending too much time on the golf course during the summer, a comment that carried much more serious undertones behind the scenes. In fact, the players send a message, not electing senior Shea Patterson captain.

"There wasn't a lot we could do because Shea was our starting quarterback, but we wanted to let him and our coaches know we weren't happy with his work in the summer - both Joe [Milton] and Dylan [McCaffrey] outworked him, and then Coach immediately went against our decision and named him a captain," a recent departure shared. "Guys weren't happy."

As a former player noted the beginning of the end for the Brady Hoke regime was when Hoke and his staff began playing favorites and giving leeway to certain players, including Devin Funchess, that they didn't give to the entire team.

"He'd let Funchess get away with stuff in practice and in games ... he wasn't held accountable, and that created a lot of locker room issues," the player shared.

• Within days of the captain announcement, facing speculation in the media and among the fan base of discontent within the ranks, Harbaugh named Patterson and senior safety Josh Metellus alternate captains.

"From the moment Shea arrived, he was treated differently, like he could never do anything wrong," another recent exiting player shared with WolverineDigest.com. "Wilton [Speight], John [O'Korn], Brandon [Peters] would all get chewed out for things that they just looked the other way with when it came to Shea."

• From Aug. 1-present, eight players have entered the transfer portal, including five four-star recruits. That alone is not unique in today's college football, but out of 56 signees in the 2016-17 classes, Michigan has lost 24 to transfer so far (42.9 percent). For the same two classes, Penn State has seen a departure of 31.7 percent of its enrollees and Ohio State saw 26.7 percent of its 2016-17 enrollees transfer.

• U-M loses three underclassmen to the NFL Draft, again not unexpected, but according to a friend of wide receiver Donovan Peoples-Jones, the DPJ camp was worried Michigan would not "put him in the best position to showcase his talent, just like they did with Jabrill Peppers and Rashan Gary."

According to the friend, those guys got drafted because of their freak athleticism and potential, as Peoples-Jones will, and not because the staff utilized them in a way that allowed NFL scouts to see what they're capable of.

• In November, Michigan gets beat by first-year and first-time Ohio State head coach Ryan Day by a greater margin at home than Urban Meyer achieved in 2018 in Columbus.

• After U-M's fourth straight bowl loss, rising senior cornerback Ambry Thomas gives an interview to Michigan's official network that the Wolverines did not do a good enough job in 2019 holding players accountable and that in 2020, there will be greater accountability among the team.

• Insiders on both TheWolverine.com and TheMichiganInsider.com once again discuss "entitlement" and "playing favorites" and Harbaugh's desire to craft a program in his image, building a culture that greater reflects the Schembechler way.

• Just a few weeks ago, famed recruiting guru and special teams coach Chris Partridge, who had been selling the 40-year plan to Michigan prospects - the idea of a first-rate education, winning with integrity and setting a young man up for life with a degree that will do more than football alone - leaves for Ole Miss and Lane Kiffin, a program and coach with poor reputations for doing things above board.

• Yesterday, position coach Anthony Campanile reverses course and signs a contract with the Miami Dolphins, reportedly 48 hours after Michigan pulled out all the stops to court him away from gigs at Rutgers and Boston College, willing to give him a raise that will severely limit the program's ability to sign another top assistant to fill Partridge's vacant position.

Every one of these bullet points can be explained away. It's the new normal. Coaches leave all the time. Ohio State was more talented than Michigan. There is a me-first attitude prevalent throughout college football. But going into Year 6, Harbaugh has failed to instill the "the team, the team, the team" culture among his players and his coaches, and one has to seriously ask if he ever will be able to.
 
“• Just a few weeks ago, famed recruiting guru and special teams coach Chris Partridge, who had been selling the 40-year plan to Michigan prospects - the idea of a first-rate education, winning with integrity and setting a young man up for life with a degree that will do more than football alone - leaves for Ole Miss and Lane Kiffin, a program and coach with poor reputations for doing things above board.”

That’s pretty funny.

It’s a shame with Penn State’s Success With Honor that our guys make such lousy 40.-YEAR. DECISIONS. :eek: . :(
 
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IMO, that article is representative of all of college football. You can replace Michigan and Harbaugh with just about any other school or coach and come up with the same story. Unfortunately, it's the football world we live in.
 
SI rag buried PSU unfairly with a bunch of sensationalist crap. Not sure why we would believe anything in it.

"From the moment Shea arrived, he was treated differently, like he could never do anything wrong," another recent exiting player shared with WolverineDigest.com. "Wilton [Speight], John [O'Korn], Brandon [Peters] would all get chewed out for things that they just looked the other way with when it came to Shea."

After U-M's fourth straight bowl loss, rising senior cornerback Ambry Thomas gives an interview to Michigan's official network that the Wolverines did not do a good enough job in 2019 holding players accountable and that in 2020, there will be greater accountability among the team.
 
MGoBlog posters, fwiw

bighouse1979

January 16th, 2020 at 5:04 PM ^

I’ll get negged into Bolivia for this, but this is 100% the truth. I know players on the team and Shea was always treated differently. I won’t get into the academic piece but a lot of SHADY stuff went on with Shea. I won’t post anything publicly because it’s a look that I don’t care for. There are issues with JH and the way he treats players. There is not a meritocracy on this team PERIOD. JH sold his soul to get Shea and got burned.


gasbro

January 16th, 2020 at 7:49 PM ^

I know a very successful high school football coach who has sent players to multiple schools including Michigan with a former player currently on the team.

He has told me multiple times something very similar - no meritocracy, in fact favored players with NFL futures get special treatment in such a way that it hurts team morale and undermines team efforts to work hard and achieve
 
Peppers was a Heisman candidate and Gary was mentioned akin to being the next Clowney.

Poor choices for the DPJ camp, but hey, maybe they didn't say anything and it's just fluff. I think Saquon had less Heisman hype than Peppers... Let that sink in.
 
Harbaugh just seems to be very strange, doesn't seem to connect with his players very effectively, very poor interpersonal skills. Trying to recreate the Schembechler way, a hopelessly outdated, anachronistic method of program building. Hope he stays at scUM.

Can't remember if I posted about it on this board, but Steve Wiltfong, the national recruiting reporter for 247, on his B1G podcast spoke about how poorly organized the recruiting effort is at Michigan. Very few recruiting meetings, it's all on the assistants to identify and pursue prospects. Harbaugh is barely involved in the process. It's all starting to unwind over there. Very interesting time with only two years left on his deal. They HAVE to extend him, right? Don't see how they are going to be able to recruit until they do.
 
I don't think this report is all that surprising or "scathing," that said, this is the kind of article that gets written about a coach before he is in serious trouble with job security. The fact that Harbs, a celebrated QB guru, continues to find transfer QB's instead of developing his own is amazing to me. Sure, its worked at a few places with high level QB transfers, Fields/Burrow, etc. But on a team building towards something more than 3rd in the division, it's just strange that is the path he has taken. Once these little articles become more common, you will know Harbs is in trouble. A lot of times the schools and players start to leak messages of dysfunction to the media to expedite a change.
 
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Wouldn't surprise me that the starting QB on many teams gets treated differently.
 
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I don't think this report is all that surprising or "scathing," that said, this is the kind of article that gets written about a coach before he is in serious trouble with job security. The fact that Harbs, a celebrated QB guru, continues to find transfer QB's instead of developing his own is amazing to me. Sure, its worked at a few places with high level QB transfers, Fields/Burrow, etc. But on a team building towards something more than 3rd in the division, it's just strange that is the path he has taken. Once these little articles become more common, you will know Harbs is in trouble. A lot of times the schools and players start to leak messages of dysfunction to the media to expedite a change.

It's not 'scathing' in the traditional sense but it paints a picture of a disorganized sh*t show (for lack of a better word) of a program with an aloof goofball of a head coach who plays favorites. At Michigan, this shouldn't be the case and the fact that it is has to be totally embarrassing for them. They went all in on JH and firing or not extending him would sting for a long, long time. The good news is this helps us - a lot.
 
It's not 'scathing' in the traditional sense but it paints a picture of a disorganized sh*t show (for lack of a better word) of a program with an aloof goofball of a head coach who plays favorites. At Michigan, this shouldn't be the case and the fact that it is has to be totally embarrassing for them. They went all in on JH and firing or not extending him would sting for a long, long time. The good news is this helps us - a lot.

I don't disagree with any of that, but its a fine line, we have certainly been in the news as of late and I don't trust the media. What this article synthesis down to is a few coaches leaving and some disgruntled players regarding favoritism. That said, you are right, something below the surface at Michigan isn't working and hopefully we can be the beneficiary of it. A road win in Ann Arbor would be fantastic next year.
 
If he can't find his way to Indianapolis, how is he going to find his way to Pasadena?
Hey PSU almost did just that this year, right?
So it is possible :)
If we'd beat Minn I assume we would have gone to Pasadena, as I don't thein we'd have gotten into CFP
 
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IMO, that article is representative of all of college football. You can replace Michigan and Harbaugh with just about any other school or coach and come up with the same story. Unfortunately, it's the football world we live in.

Totally agree. I read nothing in this other than the click-bait of Harbaugh's name.
 
I hate Michigan as much as the next guy, but these hit pieces are getting really old. You could write something like this literally about any program out there. And when you look, Penn State, Ohio State, and Michigan have all been hit recently. But never see much on the SEC or Big 12, wonder why? Harbaugh is loony bins and bad for college football, put just tired of these hit pieces with an agenda. If you are going to expose a program, then go after more than just one.
 
Wouldn't surprise me that the starting QB on many teams gets treated differently.

Right. That is more of an NFL mentality though. And from a football perspective you have to treat your starting QB differently. He gets the most reps and attention from the coaches. The distinction to be made is in the area of discipline. Your QB can not be held to a lesser standard than the rest of the team. It creates chaos and bad feelings which is apparently the situation at Michigan.
 
I've always wondered if recruiting was part of the problem with Michigan -- predating Harbaugh.

Michigan attracts all these 4 star and 5 star players from around the country but they always seem to produce teams that are less than the sum of their parts. Their teams seem kind of brittle -- they lose to Ohio State and then kind of give up.

Meanwhile, Michigan State recruits mostly 3 stars but (at least when Dantonio has them playing well) they play their asses off and produce teams that are better than Michigan's best teams.

Really PSU has the same potential issue as Michigan. You attract all these high 4 star national recruits but you also need a culture where they play for the team, not for themselves and their NFL career. Ohio State has somehow managed to do both -- recruit at the highest level and also have teams that play their asses off and bounce back when they're down.
 
It's just pure Communist propaganda and BS. Some people will do anything to tear down the WINNINGEST and no. 1 program of all time. Jim is straight-forward and honest and some people just can't handle the truth. 2020 will be the Year of the Wolverine !
 
Oh JHC, PS lost to scUM something like 9 times in ten years. We've been 500 with them since 2016. Sure, PS can do better in the Outhouse but don't whine like a Michigan Man.

I was at the Beav the night we finally ended that string. Combination of some bad officiating over the years and frankly Floyd had Joe's number.
 
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