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imagine thinking tsun is a top 10-15 program.
Maize and Luke
December 26th, 2020 at 3:44 PM ^
Anyone else worried that this guy has been a HC at a couple D1 schools and after a good season or two with UM he’ll bolt for first decent HC that comes along?
In reply to Anyone else worried that… by Maize and Luke
DTOW
December 26th, 2020 at 3:52 PM ^
Such is life as a top 10-15 program.
Truth be told, anything with the capability to block out the Sun should rightly be called "notable".Found this on Muschamp's wikipedia page.
View attachment 27993
Unsure who is hitting rock-bottom here. Xichigan, or Xuschamp?
Bashing Our New England Recruiting Is Lazy
Submitted by Snazzy_McDazzy on December 28th, 2020 at 9:17 AM
I am amazed and dumbfounded at the continuous bashing of our efforts to recruit in New England. No one disputes the fact that Michigan needs to recruit better. But someone please tell me why New England in particular has been a problem. Let's take a look at the results thus far:
Sean McKeon (2016) - He may not have been flashy but he did end up being our best option at TE prior to graduating. Hard to call him a miss.
Kwity Paye (2017) - No explanation needed. Will be a 1st round pick in the upcoming draft.
Tarik Black (2017) - Remember, he was clearly a better player than DPJ and Nico Collins as a true freshman. Injuries are the only reason he isn't considered a success.
Andrew Stueber (2017) - He's been a valuable contributor on the offensive line.
Ben Mason (2017) - Can't say Michigan didn't get what was expected from him.
Luke Schoonmaker (2018) - A quintessential project whose story is still being written.
Mike Sainristil (2019) - Valuable contributor early on.
Cornelius Johnson (2019) - Our second best WR this season as a redshirt freshman.
Jack Stewart (2019) - Too early to tell.
Zak Zinter (2020) - Against all odds given the nature of true freshman OL and the depth chart, Zinter still earned quite a bit of playing time this season.
Kalel Mullings (2020) - Most everyone was interested in Mullings out of HS. High level recruit.
Eamonn Dennis (2020) - A project at a position of need who also happens to be one of the best athletes on the team.
Seriously, what am I missing? Given the very hit and miss nature of recruiting, I think any neutral observer would have to conclude that Michigan has been fortunate to have these 12 recruits from the New England area. We've had our share of shortcomings in the recruiting department but this hasn't been one of them.
So basically, Kwity Paye and Tarik Black, whom they under-developed, and ten bums.
https://www.mgoblog.com/mgoboard/bashing-our-new-england-recruiting-lazy
DFBIA in defense of recruiting the hell out of the north east
https://www.mgoblog.com/mgoboard/bashing-our-new-england-recruiting-lazy
DFBIA in defense of recruiting the hell out of the north east
Sean McKeon (2016) - He may not have been flashy but he did end up being our best option at TE prior to graduating. Hard to call him a miss.
When the criticism is an overall lack of recruiting success, a three-star ending up being a starter isn’t a defense of said recruiting.So basically, Kwity Paye and Tarik Black, whom they under-developed, and ten bums.
Ben Mason (2017) - Can't say Michigan didn't get what was expected from him.
I don't think he thought this through very well.I think any neutral observer would have to conclude that Michigan has been fortunate to have these 12 recruits from the New England area
You know what you get when you have a team full of "solid contributors", guys who "saw a lot of snaps" and "quintessential projects"?
2-4 and no bowl game invitation.
McKeon's career stats: 40 games, 60 receptions, 668 yards, 16.7 yards per game, 6 TDs. Okay, I know it's hard to do, but I'm calling him a miss.Sean McKeon (2016) - He may not have been flashy but he did end up being our best option at TE prior to graduating. Hard to call him a miss.
If you expected 119 yards from scrimmage in 45 games, well you got it!Ben Mason (2017) - Can't say Michigan didn't get what was expected from him.
Sophomore, actually. Johnson's 2020 stats: 6 games, 16 receptions, 254 yards, 42.3 yards per game, 3 TDs. Pretty "meh" numbers for a WR2.Cornelius Johnson (2019) - Our second best WR this season as a redshirt freshman.
Remember when DFBIA was blowing their collective wad over this chump? Anyway, this "valuable contributor" has 15 receptions and 227 yards ... for his career.Mike Sainristil (2019) - Valuable contributor early on.
They equate "doing nothing" with "having lots of potential" ... we equate "doing nothing" with "being a bust." Fundamental difference in philosophy.DFBIA is constantly mistaking "we have a lot of players" for being a good thing.
So, if you made the line up because there was nothing better sitting on the bench of a 2 - 4 team you were a "good recruiting catch." Got it.When the criticism is an overall lack of recruiting success, a three-star ending up being a starter isn’t a defense of said recruiting.
Kwity Paye (2017) - No explanation needed. Will be a 1st round pick in the upcoming draft.
Even the headliner is overrated, if you're going by consistent, on-field production in college, as opposed to possible draft position. He reportedly has great physical measurables, and may be a high draft pick on that basis. But, at Michigan, has he consistently been a high impact player, or a pretty good player?