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Recruiting Board Update

My work will never be as extensive as MGoBlog’s, so just take it for what it is.

Current Commits: 12

Projected Scholarships: 17

Offense
QB 1 Commits Presumed Leans Prospects Longshots
John Weinke
Steven Threet (07)
RB 1-2 Sam McGuffie Jonas Gray Darrell Scott
Christian Wilson Covaughn Deboskie
OL 4-5 Dan O’Neill Zebrie Sanders
Elliott Mealer Kevin Zeitler
Kurt Wermers Zach Schlink
Rocko Khoury
WR 2-3 Daryll Stonum Fred Smith Jon Baldwin Michael Floyd
Vaughn Carraway
TE 1-2

Brandon Moore

Kevin Koger

Defense
DT 1-2 Mike Martin
DE 1-2 Nathaniel Williams Nick Perry Kavario Middleton
LB 2-3 Marcus Witherspoon J.B. Fitzgerald Jon Major
Shayne Hale Steve Filer
Brandon Beachum
S 1-2 Brandon Smith Will Hill
Spencer Adams
CB 1-2 Boubacar Cissoko Marc Anthony Robbie Green
Ath Cameron Saddler
Glenn Winston

Stonum and Koger have been moved to committed, and Middleton was dropped from TE recruiting (he will be pursued as a DE). Christian Wilson moved to presumed lean. Hale and Saddler moved to presumed leans (UM and WVU in top 2). With the addition of Threet to QB commits (though he is an ’07 recruit), all other prospects removed from the board, as Michigan is done at the position. Fred Smith moved to presumed lean.

McGuffie, a presumed lean, keeps having his announcement pushed back. Most recently, it was to be this coming Sunday night, but it has been pushed back again.

Posted under Recruiting

’08 Commit video

For lack of anything more interesting today, enjoy Boubacar Cissoko and Brandon Moore YouTube videos….

Cissoko

Moore

Posted under Video

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Varsity Blue

A few people have inquired in comments and e-mails, so heres the deal with the TV show:

Varsity Blue will return to the air the week before the season begins, with a season preview show. There will be a new episode every Monday (tentative, could be Sunday) through the end of the season.

As of right now, we are planning to only air in the dorms, but we will look into other distribution options (either local TV or internet) as the time draws near.

We are looking to change up the show, with some major improvements this year, which will be revealed over the summer so I have things to post about. We are NOT planning to shoot at Charley’s this year.

Posted under Blog News

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Ridiculously Early Conference Predictions

Is it September yet?

Tier 1
Michigan 12-0 (8-0)
Wisconsin 11-1 (7-1)
Penn State 10-2 (6-2)
Tier 1a
Ohio State 9-3 (5-3)
Tier 2
Illinois 7-5 (4-4)
Iowa 7-5 (4-4)
Purdue 6-6 (4-4)
Michigan State 6-6 (3-5)
Tier 3
Minnesota 6-6 (2-6)
Indiana 4-8 (1-7)
Northwestern 3-9 (0-8)

These are based on first look at the schedule, and things can still change over the summer, especially when we get a more clear idea of lineups.

Non-conference teams with more than one Big Ten opponent:
Syracuse (0-2)
Ball State (0-2)
Bowling Green (0-2)
Eastern Michigan (0-2)
Northern Illinois (0-2)
Western Michigan (1-1)
Notre Dame (1-3)

Posted under Analysis

Steve Threet to Michigan?

Steven Threet, a 4* quarterback from this past (2007) class, has announced that he intends to transfer from Georgia Tech. He was widely considered to be Michigan’s second choice if they did not land Ryan Mallett. Internetz (and fairly reliable sources, to go along with tons of not-so-reliable sources) say that Michigan is a likely destination.

Threet also considered Michigan State in his recruitment, so it is likely that they may be a factor in his transfer destination, especially since they lost their top recruit, Keith Nichol, to the Oklahoma Sooners after firing John L. Smith.

Whichever school lands Threet, he will have to redshirt the 2007 season, and have four years of eligibility, putting him a year behind Mallett, and a year ahead of Wienke, assuming he redshirts his freshman year. The results of his decision will be known in the next couple days.

Posted under Personnel

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On Adidas…

Originally, the announcement of the new Michigan apparel deal with Adidas rubbed me the wrong way. The tradition of Michigan being one of the original Nike schools, and the affinity I gained for Nike by virtue of their officially licensed UM gear really made me wish that Michigan would have stayed with the swoosh.

However, upon further reflection, I realized that these reasons weren’t good enough. If anything, they are actually criticisms of the athletic department by many Michigan fans: doing things the way they’ve always been done because that’s the way they’ve always been done, or because tradition mandates it. So in the end, while I’m sad to see something that has become somewhat of a tradition (being one of the original Nike schools) come to an end, it’s time.

There are also definite advantages of switching from Nike to Adidas as well. As mentioned by Brian, Nike has lately seen itself as the spectacle on display in sporting events, rather than just clothes worn during said events. The ugly Nike jerseys are no longer a threat to the aesthetics of the Michigan football team (for the record, I do not hate the piping on the away jerseys, though I’m apparently the only one). The Adidas deal also allows for slight redesigns to uniforms that may not have been possible staying with the same outfitter, allowing the Michigan look to maintain tradition without getting stale. And finally, the money factor. Michigan is making much more money out of the Adidas deal than they ever did from Nike, and the new contract has a clause guaranteeing Michigan preferred treatment from the clothier.

In the end, it’s sad to see one tradition end, but it opens the door for a new (and quote possibly better) one to begin.

Posted under Misc.

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Former Player Report: Dismissed Edition

Carson Butler and Chris Richards, dismissed from the football team for being monumentally stupid, have completed their trials in the St. Patrick’s Day assault case. Butler was found not guilty, whereas Richards was guilty of aggravated assault and assault and battery.

Though found not guilty in the court of law, Butler was still deemed a troublemaker by the Michigan football program, so don’t get your hopes up about a return to the Wolverines.

Coming Soon: My thoughts on the Nike/Adidas situation, though it’s nothing more than my opinion, and even that isn’t anything particularly original.

Posted under Personnel

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Venturing into the Wild World Web

In the Dark Ages before a strong, Michigan blogosphere developed, the only outlet online for a fan to see others’ opinion and voice his or her own were free, online message boards. Premium message boards and blogs have claimed the best posters from the ESPN.com message boards and left them a demolished wasteland with sticky caps-lock keys. I plan on venturing into these groups of partisan savages and report back with the most outlandish claims and back and forth claims of “OWNAGE!1”

In today’s edition we explore the rantings and ravings of a poster who goes by the handle WCD34. He is what the local refer to as a “troll.” A vagabond poster who travels from board to board bringing any intelligent discussion to halt.

In this thread he is defending Notre Dame and trying to justify his position of Michigan losing to Notre Dame. When someone mentioned that pretty much every Notre Dame offensive unit is worse than the corresponding Michigan unit, he (I assume) came back with this:

Moving on…Our RB situation is BY FAR MUCH BETTER than Michigan’s. Again, it’s young, but sick. Do you guys even pay attention?

Guys, we’re going to have so many RB’s, you’re not going to be able to keep up with which one is which. And ALL OF THEM are talented. I know plenty of Irish Fans who are happy that D. Walker chose the draft. I can’t wait to see the shocked looks on your faces when ND rushes for over 200 yds in Ann Arbor. :)

The dotted out section is a list of running backs who haven’t really played (except for a bit of Blue & Gold game action). So his argument is that their running backs by batallion composed of totally unproven players is better than Michigan’s give the ball to one of the premiere running backs in the country approach.

Let’s take a look at this…

Adding up the yards that all the running backs he mentioned gained last year we get… 241 yards. Michigan’s top returning back-up (Brandon Minor) has 249 yards. To get over the whole “Michigan runs more” argument, the Notre Dame running backs had 65 attempts while Brandon Minor had just 42.

So… with Michigan’s primary back-up posting better numbers than the entire field of Notre Dame backs AND having a preseason Doak Walker candidate, I really can’t see where he is coming from.

I understand being exciting about a good group of young studs, but to say that potential is better than a top-5 back, not to mention a few young guys with their fair share of potential, is just down right dumb. I guess that is why he’s cruising around ESPN message board, and maybe why he’s a Notre Dame fan (I kid…).

[Click here to see the thread]

Posted under Misc.

Wienke Wienke Wienke

John Wienke… What do we know about him? I found this video on youtube, and the username posting it was “mgoblog” but I found nothing about it posted on mgoblog itself, so pardon me if it’s a repost of Brian.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XcM81DaAEBI]

He is a left-handed quarterback who chose Michigan over Illinois and Iowa, with other offers including Colorado, Wyoming, New Mexico, Kentucky, Iowa State, and MAC teams.

He is a 6’6″ lefty, and was the MVP amongst the quarterbacks at Michigan’s summer camp, as well as the Nike camp at Colorado.

With his size and (presumed) mobility, he is a prototypical Michigan quarterback, aside from the whole lefty thing.

Wienke is ranked as low as he is (not at all! ZING!) mainly due to exposure, rather than because of his skills. I assum he’ll be a strong three or low four in the final rankings. He seems capable of serving as a capable backup for Mallett for a couple years, and likely won’t be the project that Cone was/is. With Mallett and Cone in the same class, Wienke will probably redshirt to get a year of separation, and be ready to start being the primary backup in ’09 (jesus, are we seriously talking about kids who won’t see the field for more than two years?). Wienke is more developed than the Navarre-esque Cone, but Cone will also have two years in the system before Wienke is actually a Wolverine.

The main issue with the kid is probably going to be the fact that he is left-handed. This changes a lot of things on the field, including the snap, the dropback, play action, even the spiral on the ball as wide receivers go to catch it (see: Lloyd bragging about Zoltan’s lefty spin on punts being harder to catch).

Posted under Recruiting

Recruiting Perspective

The Stonum commitment was expected, and he is gladly welcomed. The Weinke commitment wasn’t expected, but was certainly not a surprise, and he is welcomed as well.

Stonum is a high four-star player, and I’d be surprised if he doesn’t become a five-star player by the time the final Scout rankings come out. He is a tall(ish) receiver, around 6’2″, and speedy as well, with a 4.4 forty-yard time. The main area that it seems as though Stonum could improve is his strength, which will undoubtedly increase with some time in a college weight-training program. Stonum was in Michigan’s top tier of WR targets for the ’08 class, along with Jon Baldwin, so he was the guy the coaches want. With Baldwin reportedly favoring Notre Dame, Stonum’s commitment is huge for this recruiting class.

Weinke is a high-three or a four-star qurterback. He has been invited to this summer’s Elite 11 competition, so while his name may be a little unknown, his skills are nothing to sneeze at. He only recently appeared on the radar, but this was more likely due to exposure than the caliber of player that he is. Weinke was the best week-long camper at the quarterback position, and while he may not be the super that some fans want every year, he is not a sleeper, either. Weinke will probably redshirt his freshman year, putting him two classes behind Ryan Mallett. While he is more highly rated than David Cone (who will likely be Mallett’s backup), Cone will have spent two years under the tutelage of Scot Loeffler by the time he is serving as second-in-command.

Both of these players are quality pickups on the offensive side of the ball, leaving Michigan with only a couple more meeds there (RB (McGuffie?) HB(?) (C. Wilson?), maybe one more OT and TE). The rest of the recruiting efforts for the year will likely be spent on the defense, looking for an elite DE, maybe another DT, a couple more linebackers, and a host (hopefully 3-4) of defensive backs.

Posted under Recruiting

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