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He's the assistant AD.He has a huge loyalty to OSU as well. Isnt his wife a professor there and hes still some sort of an advisor to them I believe..
He's the assistant AD.He has a huge loyalty to OSU as well. Isnt his wife a professor there and hes still some sort of an advisor to them I believe..
Still one of the funniest stories I've ever read.Lloyd Car can thank Gary for bringing in the talent that helped Michigan to a part of 1997 title. Lloyd Car was a notch above Coker. Dude was given the keys to a Ferrari and he ran it into the ground.
Gary just loved to booze too much
At first glance, I like your idea. But I also think Bienemy prefers a pro job. He was OC at Colorado for two years and they were god awful. He's a good coach when he has the players.Eric Bieniemy is who. Michigan can give him a talented day one roster and a HUGE come be a college coach contract. He won’t take a college HC job unless it’s an elite one for all the money. It is and they have it. Get him before he’s gone. That’s my number one choice for them. They’re not smart enough to get him....
What's the obsession with Don Brown on this board? He's not terrible, but he's a big-time retread. I prefer a younger coach, like Freeman or Barry Odom. Why Odom never gets discussed on this board is beyond me.DC Don Brown gone be lookin' for job come the late December. Worth kickin'
the tires on? How much of the blame does he shoulder for Michigan's performance? The wolverines HC looks like Mork in 2018, Zombified.
He’s absolutely headed for the pros. He’s better suited for the pro game too. He, like everyone else, needs talent to win. He’d have that at Michigan.At first glance, I like your idea. But I also think Bienemy prefers a pro job. He was OC at Colorado for two years and they were god awful. He's a good coach when he has the players.
Maybe he'd be better than Baugh at Michigan, but more than likely, this is their program ceiling.
A lot of the handwringing about Michigan is this mystique that exists in people's minds from the 1990s. Then, Michigan was a very good- but not dominant- program. The big difference between 1990s Michigan and Harbaugh's Michigan is that they beat Ohio's Taint regularly (and in absolutely devastating fashion) in the 90s.
Michigan has to go out of state to get its best players. It's a major disadvantage vis-a-vis O$U.
They are the same thing they've been since forever (with the exception of down years under Brady Burger and Rich Rod), except that they used to beat Ohio State and finish 9-3.People act like Michigan is some heavyweight but the fact is they haven’t been this century. Lloyd Carr consistently was 9-3 losing the only three losable games on the schedule, and now Harbaugh is doing the same **** thing (although this year is a train wreck).
Leonhard is a WI kid, one of the famed walk-on to All-American stories at UW, 10 year pro, now a young up and coming coach.Or Jim Leonard the DC from Wisky who i think is waiting to become the head man there when Chryst retires
Why not?. If you were trying to duplicate Alabama's offensive line, then you'd have a near impossible task of getting top recruits at evey position. That is not the case for Wisconsin as they get mostly 3-star recruits. Any program can duplicate their philosophy, recruitment, and development. It's just a willingness to learn from them and do so. They've built a culture.What they do can’t be duplicated everywhere
The theory of Manny's defense is difficult to deal with a Wisc. Its a complete mismatch.Is it possible for us to do something similar to that long term? I can’t see us getting past Clemson without doing something about our offensive line play. Wisconsin has dominated us both times they’ve played us.
That being all said we got one of the highest amount of OL in the nfl currently. We just dont sell that..but we surely need to. WWe are getting guys there...i was shocked to realize Tyreee St Louis and KC MCdermott are collecting nfl checksAgree to disagree. Some of it can be duplicated. But some definitely can’t.
Miami might need to double its student body in order to have more bodies to pull from.
Miami would need to make a walk-on program that recruits, coaches, and trains as if the guys were scholarship players.
Miami would have to overpay for a proven offensive line coach to stay long term.
Miami would have to overpay for a proven offensive line recruiter to stay long term.
Miami would have to sit incoming OL recruits for 3 years and the guys actually stay.
Miami might have stop playing a spread offense and install an offense that showcases the offensive line like Wisconsin does.
Miami would have to install a culture nearly the polar opposite of the turnover chain or of the South Florida “all ‘bout me” Instagram warrior dawgs.
Miami would have to have winning seasons consistently.
Miami would have to consistently put some of these OL in the NFL and have them succeed there.
The odds of Miami implementing anywhere close to everything I listed above is very close to zero.
People act like Michigan is some heavyweight but the fact is they haven’t been this century. Lloyd Carr consistently was 9-3 losing the only three losable games on the schedule, and now Harbaugh is doing the same **** thing (although this year is a train wreck).
Well under your a analogy we should have a dominant offensive line next year and beyond because all of our starters will have been in the program 3-4 years.They are able to redshirt guys and usually start a ghroup of 4th and 5th year players who have been around for awhile. Its been years of that and most schools dont have that luxury. Look at us...All 3 of our interior guys would be on fg units there.
If your able to shirt and keep guys there for 5 years with the right pedigree then you would be able to always field solid units.
You say it can't, but it can. You give no reason to support your position. In fact l, you make mine. As you said, "it's not rocket science"It’s not exactly rocket science though. They have one of the best walk-on cultures in football. They make guys sit and learn and develop. They bring in athletes who fit their profile and develop them long term. it also doesn’t hurt that for hundreds of miles every hulking brute wants to play for them. It also doesn’t hurt that at this point if you are an offensive lineman with aspirations you know when they offer you take the offer. Just like LSU and receivers and Miami with tight ends.
The culture, evaluation, and coaching aspect is probably a huge portion of the secret sauce that can’t be duplicated.
Well under your a analogy we should have a dominant offensive line next year and beyond because all of our starters will have been in the program 3-4 years.
Years in a program is a factor, but Wisconsin is not the outlier. Otherwise, any 4th or 5th year P5 offensive lineman would become an NFL player. That's not the case. Wisconsin develops their lineman into top draft picks. So, the keys are recruitment, development, and scheme.
They are able to redshirt guys and usually start a ghroup of 4th and 5th year players who have been around for awhile. Its been years of that and most schools dont have that luxury. Look at us...All 3 of our interior guys would be on fg units there.
If your able to shirt and keep guys there for 5 years with the right pedigree then you would be able to always field solid units.
Not true. Their offensice line play in the NFL and are top draft picks.Saban brought that style to LSU & Alabama, now He's spread...and He accomplished the transition from Pro-Style to Spread without a bunch of O-Linemen from the midwest.
TBH, I'd rather have our shortcomings than theirs, Wisky & UofM's O-Linemen are just good for run blocking. I watched UofM play Alabama in the bowl game last year, and the difference in speed wasn't even close.
You say it can't, but it can. You give no reason to support your position. In fact l, you make mine. As you said, "it's not rocket science"
1. Figure out their evaluation system. Easy to do. Look at the history of their top linemen. Look at their testing numbers. Did they play multiple sports? What kind of player are they mentally? Etc. All researchable. All gettable because these are not the top rated or recruited players. They are mostly 3-star recruits. You need the guys with the Wisconsin traits.
2. Meet with their staff and see how they develop players. Coaching is a fraternity. they share information.
3. Change your culture. This is the hardest part, but if you recruit to "the Wisconsin offensive line culture", you will turn the program in 3 years.
If you can uave the national champion Clemson coaches meeting with Iowa State coaches to learn and implement their scheme, then you can have a Miami coaching staff meeting with Wisconsin to learn and implement their offensive line system.