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2013 TSUN Football News

jwinslow;2292782; said:
Five in two years isn't excessive at all, especially with a true frosh that looks like a major talent. You should probably sign two more next year just to be safe. Scholarship limits are silly talk.

Only fools ride into battle with three elite tight ends within one year of each other.
I can't decide if I want to go with the Jerry Sandusky joke here or not...

decisions decisions...

Oh.. hell... I was going to say something about Tight Ends being lined up 5 wide...

Insert your own joke(s).
 
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jwinslow;2292782; said:
Five in two years isn't excessive at all, especially with a true frosh that looks like a major talent. You should probably sign two more next year just to be safe. Scholarship limits are silly talk.

Only fools ride into battle with three elite tight ends within one year of each other.

Don't confuse the fact I see where they are going with all the TE's for me being gun ho about it. Borgess completely mismanaged Funchess after his breakout game. Until he can prove he knows what to do with a TE, I think we have plenty of already.
 
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WolverineMike;2292693; said:
*sigh*


let's see, Michigan had tons of success in the 90's with both blocking style TE's like Mark Campbell and Derrick Walker, as well as pass catching extraordinaires like Jay Reimersma, Jeremy Tuman, and Bennie Joppru. So when I say "play action to the TE is so 1990's," it's a direct reference to the success Michigan had with this style of pro offense and I can understand the want for multiple talented TE's going forward in a pro style offense.



Hope that was clear enough for you, since the other comment sailed over your head.



Actually, I think we got that..."tons of success" from the TSUN fans' perspective = 9-3 average for the decade.


13_spor_UI_Michigan_FBC_dh_2.JPG



The disastrous Cooper decade of the 1990s from the Buckeye fans' perspective = 9-3 average for the decade.

542042_10151305064434799_576844271_n.jpg
 
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WolverineMike;2292693; said:
Hope that was clear enough for you, since the other comment sailed over your head.

Nope, I got the comment. The TE position isn't the same as it was 10 - 15 years ago. The NFL is looking for more Kellen Winslow (SENIOR) types now.

Besides - this is the same school that had Hairlice as their starting QB for 3 1/2 seasons (who shared the backfield with this guy):

forcier-021009_300.jpg
 
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rady Hoke has said Michigan's 8-5 season was disappointing.

Speaking to a few hundred Michigan high school football coaches Friday in Kalamazoo, he had another word for it. A naughty one.

"We had a s****y season, to be honest with you," Hoke said at the MHSFA's Winner?s Circle Clinic. "Bad year, to be honest. Proud of the kids, how they kept moving forward, but it wasn't the year Michigan deserves."
Yes it was.

So much for the "our losses were to better teams" rallying cry...

http://www.mlive.com/wolverines/index.ssf/2013/01/michigans_brady_hoke_we_had_a.html
 
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NFBuck;2294007; said:
So much for the "our losses were to better teams" rallying cry...

I'm not familiar with that rallying cry. I assume it was put in place to perpetuate the Michigan Man myth that their coach isn't just a fat obnoxious goober with an extremely mediocre ceiling as a head coach?

[tsun fan]our coach isn't spectacularly average, we just don't have the talent on the team yet! as an aside, have I mentioned how much we don't need a guy like Laquon Treadwell recently? yes, we lost too many games this year, but that was only because they had better talent than us, damn you Rodriguez! once the talent gets here look out![/tsun fan]

Am I in the ballpark?
 
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Michigan goes big in receiver recruiting, says speed is 'overrated'
Kyle Meinke | [email protected] By Kyle Meinke | [email protected]
on February 11, 2013

ANN ARBOR -- Michigan signed three receivers last week, none of whom ranks better than a three star.

They seem to be big on size, but lack elite speed.

That doesn't concern receivers coach Jeff Hecklinski.

"Speed is overrated," he said last week. "Obviously, it's something we have to have. But speed is overrated. How can you truly judge the speed of a high school kid on the perimeter when maybe he touches the ball three times a game?

"If you can't catch, we have issues, right? All of our guys, if you watch them on high school film, they have great hands, they extend, they adjust to the ball, they track the ball very well up in the air -- they go up and they catch it. We can judge that on film. So, let's get the best hand-eye coordination guys -- guys that can go catch the football -- and let's bring 'em in here and then lets develop different areas."

Michigan's receiver class includes Da'Mario Jones of Westland John Glenn High School; Csont'e York of Harper Woods Chandler Park Academy; and Jaron Dukes of Columbus, Ohio.

None is known for his speed, and none is ranked among the nation's 50 best receivers according to Rivals. Dukes is considered the best wideout in the class, ranked 60th in the country.

But the Wolverines think they still found some good ones who fit their mold: Big guys who are strong in the air.

Jones is 6-foot-2, York is 6-3 and Dukes is 6-5. Include 2012 receiver signees Amara Darboh (6-2) and Jehu Chesson (6-2), and Michigan has added five wideouts the past two years who each stand at least 6-2.

And that's no accident.

"When he walks through that door, he should look like a Michigan wide receiver," Hecklinski said of Michigan's philosophy on recruiting receivers. "That thought, when a kid walks in and you say, 'Does he look like a Michigan Man?' That's important to us. That's very important to us because he represents us."

Hecklinski said Michigan will continue to recruit size at the position, citing former wideout Junior Hemingway as the archetype -- a 6-2 player who didn't have blazing speed, but was tremendous in beating defensive backs in the air.

If a recruit has those skills, the Wolverines believe they can teach the rest.

"It's an undercoached position in high school football -- not by anyone's fault, it's just the nature of the beast at receiver right now," Hecklinski said. "Let us coach technique, let us coach what we want. But if you can catch the ball, there's a place for you. Drew Dileo, Jeremy Gallon, they're not tall. But what do they do? They catch the ball."

http://www.mlive.com/wolverines/index.ssf/2013/02/speed_is_overrated_in_receiver.html
 
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