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"LLLLLLL"oyd Carr (officialllllll thread)

Lloyd Carr - Love him or hate him?

  • Love Him

    Votes: 64 21.1%
  • Hate him

    Votes: 84 27.7%
  • Stupidest poll ever

    Votes: 155 51.2%

  • Total voters
    303
I might actually miss the grumpy bastage

This is obviously Lloyd's Last Year ... either because of another whoopin at the hands of the Buckeyes, or health concerns, or both.

I love to hate this guy. I might actually miss him when he's gone. I said might. I just hope Michigan doesn't hire a great coach to replace him. We know they'll get a good one, but I hope he (she?) is nothing special.

By the way... a good fantasy football team name ... "Lloyd's Last Year." ... Or "LLLLLoyd's Last Year" if you are really feeling abnoxious and want to pay homage to each loss to Tressel.

LLY is a great name, especially if you have a Michigan fan in your league like my $100 league. The Cooper jokes are "so last century."
 
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Losing in-state talent doesn't help Carr's case
August 11, 2006
Something's going on in the state of Michigan that should be of interest to fans of the Big Ten. The mighty Michigan Wolverines are struggling to keep top talent at home. The big question is, does it really matter?
This is the best year for talent in the state of Michigan in at least a decade and major programs, some in the Big Ten and some not, are swooping into the state and grabbing recruits as easily as a hawk plucks a rabbit out of a field. Nine of the top 10 players in the state this year are ranked among the nation's top 250 and none of them are going to Ann Arbor, at least not yet. Six of the top 10 already have made their verbal commitments and have decided to head to Michigan State or out of state altogether.
On Wednesday of this week, Michigan took a double hit. St. Mary's High School teammates Dionte Allen and Taurian Washington both committed to out-of-state programs, Allen off to Florida State and Washington to rival Ohio State. Allen is a shutdown cornerback, and Washington is a polished wide receiver. They join quarterback Keith Nichol and athlete Quincy Landingham (Michigan State), offensive lineman Darris Sawtelle (Tennessee) and linebacker Chris Colasanti (Penn State) as top 10 Michigan high school studs who already have committed elsewhere.
That leaves four players, defensive tackle Joseph Barksdale (No. 1), defensive back Ronald Johnson (No. 2), athlete Cedric Everson (No. 7) and wideout Mark Dell (No. 9). Of those four, Michigan leads for only Johnson. Barksdale favors Texas and Ohio State; Everson favors Georgia Tech; and Dell favors Michigan State.
Last recruiting year Michigan reeled in only two of the top 10, linebackers Brandon Graham (No. 1) and Quintin Patilla (No. 6), in a typically average year for talent in-state. If Barksdale, Everson and Dell pick their favorites and Johnson lands in Ann Arbor, Michigan will have signed only three of the top 20 prospects in the Wolverine State over the last two years. And if they don't get Johnson? Michigan fans don't want to go there.
So what's going on in the land of Maize and Blue?
Many think it's the unsure status of head coach Lloyd Carr. Carr is 61 years old and is hearing many of the whispers Joe Paterno heard for the last few years before Penn State's turnaround last year. Carr is too stubborn, they say. He's not imaginative, they say. He can't relate to young prospects, they say. But like I said before, does it really matter?
Think of the great Michigan players over the last decade or so. How many of them were actually Michigan high school players? Braylon Edwards comes to mind, but not many others. Charles Woodson? Ohio. Steve Hutchinson? Florida. Tom Brady? California. Ty Law? Pennsylvania. Chris Perry? North Carolina. The A-Train? Louisiana. David Terrell? Virginia. Amani Toomer? California. Michigan current studs Chad Henne, Mike Hart and Mario Manningham? Pennsylvania, New York and Ohio. Michigan's three Heisman Trophy winners? Indiana, Ohio, Ohio in order.
So does Michigan really need to land home-state players to win football games? It appears that they don't, but keep this in mind. Much of their reliance on out-of-state players is due to an overall lack of high school talent in Michigan. But this year is different, with at least five or six players who are potential All Americans in college playing their high school ball in-state. And it's not like the Wolverines don't want these players. The only one they didn't offer was Nichols, and that was only because he committed to Michigan State before the end of his junior season and Michigan targeted Texas stud Ryan Mallett, who later committed to Carr and company. The rest? Strike three.
A lack of results on the field usually leads to a lack of success off the field, but Michigan pulled in a top-15 recruiting class last season despite a very down year. Michigan has 10 commitments so far for 2007 but only two of them are ranked four stars or above, but they're only halfway done filling the class. If Lloyd Carr can turn his team around and have a successful season, the Wolverines will close strong on the recruiting trail as expected and no one will care that the in-state kids left.
Recruiting success, when it comes to this year's talented locals, would be a nice buffer if Michigan failed to reach expectations on the field once again and would help quiet the whispers about Carr. Losing local recruits and football games? That's a deadly combination and could be the downfall of Carr in the end. Stay tuned.
 
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Michigan's Carr, Wolverines brass say he's here to stay

LARRY LAGE

Associated Press

<!-- begin body-content --> ANN ARBOR, Mich. - Lloyd Carr squinted into the morning sun during a staff picture.
It's good he's used to the glare.
Carr is entering his 12th season as coach at Michigan - the winningest college football program - and he's been on the staff since then-head coach Bo Schembechler hired him in 1980.
He's experienced exhilarating rushes from the 1997 national championship, five Big Ten titles, four straight bowl victories and a .750-winning percentage that trails just four active Division I-A coaches.
Carr also has lived with the stress that comes with a 1-4 record against Ohio State coach Jim Tressel, losing four of his last five bowl games and at least three games the past six years at a school where that makes fans restless.
After the Wolverines went 7-5 last season - their worst since 1984 - the buzz around campus and across the country about Carr's future picked up momentum.
Will this season or next year be his last?
The 61-year-old Carr hears the talk on the recruiting trail and from reporters he's known for years, and he told The Associated Press that understands it.
"When you get to be my age, it becomes a topic that is going to be out there," Carr said in his office that is packed with Michigan memorabilia from floor to ceiling. "I would rather not talk about me, but I will say I have great excitement and passion because I think we have a chance to have an outstanding year.
"Joe Paterno and Bobby Bowden have gone through this for years. I can remember Bo dealing with it and talking about his experiences with Bear Bryant."
Schembechler recently recalled a chat he had with Bryant toward the end of the famed Alabama coach's career - and life - that shaped his coaching exit at Michigan.
Before an East-West Shrine Game, Bryant confided in Schembechler that he wanted to retire. Schembechler said he grabbed a telephone, put it in front of Bryant and told him to call his school president. Bryant angrily replied that he couldn't because dozens of people he hired could lose their job if he left, Schembechler said.
"Bear went back, had an average year (in 1982) and died about a month later," Schembechler said. "His loyalty really hit me. That's why I made myself AD because I knew that would be the only way I could name my successor. I told Gary Moeller that he could have my job provided he didn't mess with anybody's job because if he did, I was going to get him."
In the football facility that bears his name, Schembechler has an office down the hall from Carr's that overlooks the practice fields. The mentor is not shy about giving his opinion about his protege.
"He's too young to retire and he's got too many families depending on him," Schembechler said. "I tell him he can plan for it, but he can't do it because he's not ready - and we need him."
Carr is certainly not going to be fired, no matter what some Web sites advocate or talk-show callers clamor, athletic director Bill Martin said.
Carr can coach at Michigan as long as he likes, according to Martin, who insisted he hasn't even thought about the process the school will follow to hire his eventual successor.
"I'm focused on doing what I can to support Lloyd, and that includes building a new practice facility and renovating Michigan Stadium," Martin said. "Whenever he would like to move on, I would love to see him stay here in a senior-level capacity."
Two years ago, Carr had a news conference to announce he was healthy and intended to continue coaching despite rumors he said were generated by rival coaches and the Internet during the winter recruiting season.
The talk hasn't gone away, and Carr, who said his health is good, addresses the issue with recruits and their parents.
"I tell them that there's as good a chance that I will be here in four years as there is of any other coach saying he'll be at the same school in four years," he said. "There is constant movement in this profession. Guys leave for other jobs, at other schools and in the NFL. Some get fired. Some retire."
Even though he hasn't played for Michigan since 2000, Detroit Lions offensive tackle Jeff Backus says he hopes Carr doesn't move on any time soon. Carr was demanding and nurturing when Backus was in college but has become more of a friend and confidant since he graduated.
"He's an incredible coach and an incredible man," Backus said. "You want him leading your team, and leading men because he teaches life skills.
"Yeah, it is college football, but it's also a college - a place guys have to learn. There's more to it than just winning ball games."
Carr has done much of that.
He is 102-34 overall and 68-20 in the Big Ten. Against ranked teams, he's 38-21 - including a 15-6 mark against Top 10 opponents.
His nay sayers point to his 7-7 record dating back to the loss two years ago against Ohio State, as well as a 9-9 mark against rivals Ohio State and Notre Dame.
"As a player, you want to prove his critics wrong because he's a really good coach and a good man," senior linebacker LaMarr Woodley said. "He can't play the game for us. He can only get us prepared and he does that for games - and for life."
Carr challenges himself to focus on the day-to-day grind of his job while keeping the big picture in mind.
When he's pushed to talk about his future, he bristles before acknowledging there is not a perfect way for him to end his coaching career.
"I can't say that I know the answer, and I don't have control over that," Carr said. "But when I do step down, I want this program to be better than it was when I took over. What I want to do is give my best effort every day so that the day it happens, I can feel great about the future of this program."
 
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Ignore the babble—Carr must deliver big
August 14, 2006
So, Michigan's brass boldly states that Lloyd Carr is "here to stay."
What did you expect the guys sitting in the high-back leather chairs to utter in August? That Carr was on the hot seat? That Carr had to win the Big Ten this year -- or he would be fired?
Yeah, right. It's just more blabber from the Ann Arbor ivory tower.
I have an idea: Let's not quote the Michigan bigwigs until the final gun sounds after the Ohio State game on Nov. 18, OK? Good.
No doubt, Carr isn't in an enviable position. The bratty Wolverine fan base -- meet Big Blue Boy -- demands a big delivery every season. But that's difficult to do.
Then again, how difficult can it be at a place like Michigan? Just remember: To whom much is given, much is expected. And few have as much as Carr. The guy has his pick of recruits, tremendous facilities, a big budget and an overflowing stadium. How could Carr go 7-5 last year?
This is about the time Big Blue Boy starts reciting Carr's resume: five Big Ten titles, one national championship. The guy is gold, Big Blue Boy huffs and puffs.
I love history as much as Big Blue Boy. But recent events stick with me better. And here's one that sticks a pin in the hot air emanating from the Michigan executive suites -- and from Big Blue Boy: Carr is 1-4 vs. Jim Tressel.
Ah, Big Blue Boy has a retort. He always does. OK, speak up, Big Blue Boy: Carr runs a clean program.
Big Blue Boy clutches his diploma a little tighter to his chest when he says this, as if an employer is gonna give two rips about whether his alma mater runs a clean program.
OK. Sit down, Big Blue Boy -- and wipe the spittle off your face. Now, it's my turn.
If Carr doesn't like the heat, he can go coach Utah State. I hear 7-5 plays really well in Logan, Utah. Carr didn't create the Michigan beast, but he knew what it all was about when he signed on as coach.
Do I feel sorry for Carr? No flipping way. It's like asking me if I feel sorry for Bill Gates when his stock portfolio drops 3 percentage points.
The 2006 is this simple for Carr: He needs to deliver pretty big following what was the school's worst season since 1984. How big? I'd say anything less than a Big Ten title -- or an at-large BCS bowl berth -- sounds about right.
What do you think, Big Blue Boy?
 
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Michigan coach keeps doing what he wants to do



By Gene Wojciechowski
ESPN.com
Archive



CHICAGO -- I have some bad news for the webmasters of FireLloydCarr.com, FireLloydCarrNow.com, FireLloydandTommy.blogspot.com: Carr isn't going anywhere, except to work tomorrow. He'd rather dot the i on Script Ohio than walk away -- or be told to walk away -- from the only college head coaching job he has ever known.
At least one of his Big Ten peers, Minnesota's Glen Mason, says he's never seen Carr so stressed out. But the reporters who cover Michigan football on a daily basis say Carr has been his usual cheery preseason self. It isn't until the Wolverines begin training camp and inch closer to their season opener that Carr goes into lockdown mode. That's when you need Van Helsing.

Michigan players stand behind Lloyd Carr. Some of his critics don't.


The Carr who arrived fashionably late for the league's annual interview sessions didn't look stressed out to me. He sipped on a cup of Starbucks, apologized for not wearing a tie with his navy blue suit, and only once stared a small hole into the forehead of a Detroit reporter who asked him a question (legitimate, by the way) that Carr didn't like. It wasn't the best 90 minutes of his life, but it beat cleaning the basement.
Michigan is only seven months removed from its lowest win total and first unranked season since 1984. Included in that 7-5 record is the Alamo Bowl loss to unranked Nebraska (in Carr's defense, the crew working the game couldn't have officiated a Punt, Pass and Kick competition), and yet another defeat to Mr. Sweater-Vest, Ohio State's Jim Tressel.
Wolverine followers maybe could have chugged enough Pepto Bismol to stomach the five losses, but only if one of those defeats hadn't been administered by the despised Buckeyes. Carr is now 1-4 against Tressel, which explains why some of these U-of-M bloggers need distemper shots.
Carr feels your pain. He lives it. Hears it. He just doesn't want to see it.
After reading a book by University of Southern California president Steven B. Sample (he read a Pac-10 author?), "The Contrarian's Guide To Leadership," Carr decided to quit looking at newspapers for six months. He still doesn't read them, except on Sundays -- and only then to have a working knowledge of world events. Otherwise, he depends on selected press clippings provided to him by the school's sports information department.
Wait. There is one writer Carr does read on a regular basis: Rudyard Kipling. As he gets hammered in chat room after chat room, in the Letters to the Editor, in blogs, in his own Big House, Carr leans on those opening lines of Kipling's poem, "If."
  • "If you can keep your head when all about you
    Are losing theirs and blaming it on you;
    If you can trust yourself when all men doubt you,
    But make allowance for their doubting too."
Michigan Men (and Women) are blaming Carr for all sorts of things these days. He doesn't beat Ohio State enough (6-5 overall). He doesn't win national championships enough (one title, 1997). He doesn't win bowl games enough (5-6, including losses in four of his last five postseason games). And because of those numbers, as well as last year's mess, Carr's game-day wardrobe now includes asbestos khakis.
This isn't entirely new. Carr has butt burns from previous turns on the hot seat. But another loss to the Buckeyes, or another win total in the mid-single digits, or another year out of the top 25 and Carr will need more than a fireproof wardrobe. It doesn't seem to matter that he's averaged more than nine wins per season, that he's won 75 percent of his games, that his players usually leave Ann Arbor carrying footballs and diplomas.
w_carr_65.jpg
"I'm going to do what I want to do. The hell with anybody else, what they think. So that's where it all begins with me. I love the game. I love the competition. I love the relationship with the players and the ability to have some kind of positive impact as they try to pursue a degree and play this game." Lloyd Carr

So I ask him why he still coaches. Why endure the FireLloyd.coms, the criticism, the expectations, the pressure?
"I will say this to you," says Carr in a slow, measured, serious tone, "first of all, I have a choice that I can do what I want to do with my life. So that's where I begin. I'm going to do what I want to do. The hell with anybody else, what they think. So that's where it all begins with me. I love the game. I love the competition. I love the relationship with the players and the ability to have some kind of positive impact as they try to pursue a degree and play this game.
"So, I don't know if that answers your question."
Answer it? In 64 seconds' time -- which is how long it took Carr to choose those words -- the Michigan coach did what any coach worth his rollover contract should do: He made allowances for his critics' doubting, and then he told them to stick it.
You can't coach in fear. You can't obsess about what might happen. If Carr is going to oversee the winningest Division I-A football program in history, then he's going to do it on his terms, not yours. You got a problem with that? Tough.
"You don't have much time to dwell on the past in this business," he says.
Several days after Carr was named interim coach in May 1996, the legendary Bo Schembechler, who hired Carr as his assistant 16 years earlier, stopped by the football offices.
"Can I talk to you for a minute?" Schembechler said.
Carr invited him in.
"Look," said the former Michigan coach, "there's going to be times when you doubt yourself. The reason I know that is that I had doubts about myself. What I want to tell you is this: When you have those doubts, just get rid of them. You're prepared. You know what it takes. Just go do it."
The words still resonate with Carr.
"Here's the greatest football coach ever to coach at Michigan, and one of the greatest coaches that ever coached the game -- and he's telling me he had doubts," says Carr.
Carr has had them too. Still does. He's just not going to let you or his team see them.
"When you lose a game, it's like a black cloud," he says. "God, are we ever going to win another game?"
Nobody understands the mentality of Michigan fans better than Carr. This will be his 27th season in Ann Arbor, so he's seen even the great Schembechler get ripped. Now it's his turn, which causes his players to do a slow burn.
"Coach Carr, all he does, he coaches," says senior defensive end LaMarr Woodley. "He can't go out there and play football for us."
"He's one of the smartest men I know," says Jake Long, a senior offensive tackle. "He'll give you the coat off his back."
They see this Carr; we don't. We don't see the Carr who treats his former players like family, swapping stories over a cold brew. We don't see the Carr who sends personalized notes to retiring Big Ten officials, thanking them for their years of service.
"This I can guarantee you," says Dave Parry, the league's supervisor of officials. "He cares deeply about the game, the integrity of the game and the character of the game. That is a fact."
It is also fact that 7-5 at a place such as Michigan can cause severe discomfort. Maybe that's why, when asked what he would tell a new DI-A coach these days, Carr didn't hesitate.
"First of all, you understand you have to win if you want to stay," he says. "That's fair. That's the way it should be."
Carr wants to stay. Now, despite that 102-34 record at Michigan, he still has to prove he deserves to stay.
Nothing fair about that.
 
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FoxSports.com

8/24/06


Five college coaches on the hot seat

1. Lloyd Carr, Michigan


Carr's hot-seat status is up for intense debate in Ann Arbor, and just about anywhere else that cares. After all, this is Michigan, and if you can't exactly be Bo, then you'd better beat Ohio State and not lose 3-5 games in a season. With every loss to Wisconsin, Minnesota, and even the Buckeyes, Jeremy Piven on HBO's Entourage isn't the only one around that can be frantically screaming "LLOYD!!!". Talented offensive skill players, and im-pressive upperclassmen on defense should put Michigan near the top of the Big Ten in 2006. If not, the future doesn't look bright for the last coach that led the Wolverines to their last National Championship.
 
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Coach Carr talks U-M football

By Nick Brandon, Heritage Newspapers
PUBLISHED: August 31, 2006
There's one thing for sure about Lloyd Carr and his 2006 University of Michigan football team: They've heard the numbers 7 and 5 enough in the past few months to last a lifetime.
And Michigan fans, if you don't approve of that record, which the team garnered a year ago, imagine how the players and coaches feel. But '06 is a new year with a few new faces — and, rest assured, the familiar names are hungry as ever to compete for a championship once again.
Some of those known players — quarterback Chad Henne, running back Mike Hart, defensive end LaMarr Woodley and offensive tackle Jake Long — are back in the winged helmet to avenge last year's struggles. Combined with the experience are two major coaching changes: the promotions of Offensive Coordinator Mike DeBord and Defensive Coordinator Ron English, who, combined with some key newcomers on the field, will give this edition an energetic, fresh vibe.
Michigan opens its 2006 campaign against Vanderbilt this Saturday, and Nick Brandon spoke with Carr to preview, perhaps, the maize and blue's most imperative season in years.
NB: You've spent enough time around these guys to get an idea of your team, but haven't seen them in game action. Considering that, tell me what the identity of this team is shaping up to be at this point.
LC: We have a strong core of veteran guys. It's one of the larger fifth-year senior groups that we've had, so, I think at this stage, what I've seen is excellent leadership. We've had a very intense camp thus far. We've had wonderful work ethic, excellent intensity, and it's been a very physical camp. There's a grind that goes with training camp — you're meeting, practicing, meeting, practicing, with meals in between. What you always find out about a team at this stage is their ability to come back day in and day out and handle that grind.
The best teams respond to it; I've been very pleased with the progress we've made. In every phase of the game, I expect us to be better then we were a year ago.
NB: I think you've heard the numbers 7 and 5 in the last nine months more than you wished. But there is one number I want to touch on: 9, where you guys finished in the conference in rushing. How do you hope to reverse that this year?
LC: When you look back on a season, there's always lessons to be learned regardless of your success or lack of success. My own evaluation of that season is when you finish ninth in the Big Ten in rushing, that speaks clearly to our record. When you can't run the football effectively, it leads to all kinds of negative things. It makes passing the football easier, because you're in better down and distance situations, and it's easier to protect the passer. Just as importantly, it keeps the other team, offensively, off the field, and we played a number of very talented offensive teams. And because we couldn't run the football — particularly at the end of those games — we left our defense out there and we weren't good enough on defense, either.
It all starts with an offensive line, and we've made significant changes in what we're doing. So I'm confident that we're going to be a much more effective team running the football this season — which will have a great impact on our ability to win and compete for the (Big Ten) championship.
NB: There's no doubt, though, injuries played a part last year. Going into this year, is there a player you'll have back full time that you're most looking forward to seeing grow this season?
LC: There's no question that we were a team that was hit hard by injuries, particularly in the offensive line and running back. Jake Long is, potentially, one of the finest offensive linemen we've had; I think he'll make a major difference. Mike Hart is healthy, and bigger and stronger. (Wide receiver) Mario Manningham, who had a very good year for a true freshman, is bigger, stronger and faster. And I think the return of (wide receiver) Adrian Arrington, who is a very good football player.
NB: Earlier, you mentioned this team's identity is intensity. With Mike DeBord back, and certainly with Ron English, I can believe those things are very true. What do each of them bring to the table for this team?
LC: Mike DeBord brings an outstanding knowledge, and outstanding ability to teach and great passion to the game. I think our team has really responded positively to his leadership, and I think he's going to make a big difference. Ron English is a bright young coach who's got tremendous leadership skills; he's passionate about the game. I think our players have really related to his energy and enthusiasm. But an offensive and defensive coordinator, it's still a team game in terms of coaching. I think we have an outstanding staff; our coordinators have wonderful people around them. I'm very excited about this coaching staff.
NB: One other thing I wouldn't be surprised if you're excited about is the defensive line this year: Woodley and Alan Branch and a couple other guys that have a lot of promise.
LC: I think, potentially, this is the best front we've had at Michigan in a long, long time. The ability to rush four and create pressure almost always leads to outstanding defense. Tim Jamison and Rondell Biggs are fighting for one defensive end position. Jamison is an extremely talented young player who came on very strong late in the season. We've got a guy named Will Johnson who is an inside player. Terrence Taylor is a very, very talented sophomore who's had a good camp, and we've got a kid named Brandon Graham who's had an excellent fall. I think he'll be a factor in there, and Marques Walton has made drastic improvements. So we have a nucleus there, inside and outside, that (is) going to give us the kind of mobility that gives us a chance to have a good defense.
NB: You mentioned guys that came on strong last year. When people talk about Chad Henne having a sophomore jinx, or whatever, I don't know what Chad Henne they were watching. But junior years are interesting, especially for a four-year starter. How is he going to go to that next level this year, and help the team achieve its goals?
LC: He'll go into the season with great confidence, because he's been in every situation. He's been in big games on the road, the Rose Bowl, Notre Dame Stadium as well as Columbus. Physically, he has really matured. He showed, late in the season, an ability to take the ball and make something happen with his feet. From a passing standpoint, there's certain throws he's worked extremely hard on during the off-season. He's ready to do the things great quarterbacks do. A year ago, I think he took an inordinate amount of criticism, which is exactly what happens when a team isn't successful. He learned a lot a year ago, but, with his experience and with his wonderful ability, I think he's ready to take the next step.
NB: It's an interesting group he's going to throw to. It seems like a very deep group. How is a guy like Carl Tabb going to play into it? He's been underrated to this point. He's helped the team a lot. How do you view this group?
LC: It's a very talented group. When you take Steve Breaston, who was never completely healthy a year ago, he's had a great spring and fall. Of course, Adrian Arrington is going to be a big factor in our offense. He's a big guy that is tough, and can make some plays. Carl Tabb has been an underrated player, because he's very consistent. He's not a flashy guy, but he's a guy that you can always depend on. Because of his intelligence and experience, he'll play a very important role on our team. We've moved Alijah Bradley from tailback to wide receiver. Alijah is going to make a very good contribution, because he's always been a guy that can do some things with the football. He's made some real strides this fall. We have another red shirt freshman named LaTerryal Savoy, who will compete in there, and a freshman named Greg Mathews who's had an outstanding pre-season camp. He's going to play, and he's one of those guys that has special talent.
NB: Earlier when we were talking about Chad, you talked about those two road trips you have to take to Notre Dame and Ohio State. Coach, I've been to both — I'm intimidated when I walk in there, just as a fan. There's a lot to do between now and then, but they're tough places to take a team. How do you feel about having to tackle both of those venues in one year?
LC: There's a limited number of things you can do before the first time they play in there. There's always guys on a football team who are going into those types of places for the first time, and they just have to learn from their teammates. As coaches, you do some things with crowd noise. You show some film of television copies where they get a sense of the energy that's always present. But I think the thing you love as a coach, when you go in with veteran guys who have been there before, there's nothing like experience to prepare you for the next time. Henne did some great things down there as a true freshman, and so did Mike Hart.
So the thing that's most important is that you have the kind of people who love those kind of pressure situations. Certainly, we have a lot of guys on this football team who embrace the pressure of playing on the road in front of hostile crowds. It's a great challenge, but it's also one of the really fun parts of competing.
 
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Michigan's Carr voices changes for college football

By Teddy Greenstein
Chicago Tribune
(MCT)
CHICAGO - Michigan coach Lloyd Carr called down-in-the-dumps Michigan State an "outstanding football team" Tuesday, so it's hard to take anything he says seriously.
But it's also hard to ignore Carr's vision for a college football playoff, which he outlined during the Big Ten's weekly conference call.
For years Carr bemoaned the concept, saying in 2003, "I've never been in favor of a playoff system because it just adds to the number of games these kids are being asked to play. That impacts academics, no matter what anybody says. The entire issue at the NCAA level is do a better job in terms of graduation rates, but here we are, we're going to add games."
But once the NCAA did allow teams to add a 12th regular-season game, Carr essentially threw his hands up. Now it's unclear what, if anything, he believes in.
Asked about a scheduling issue Tuesday, Carr said he advocates starting the season a week earlier so teams can have a week off. He also said he's "very much opposed to extending the season past Thanksgiving. I think that's unfair to our players."
Then he said college football "needs" a 16-team playoff because he doesn't like "this idea of allowing coaches and members of the media, we all have our biases, to choose two teams at the end of the season (for a championship game)."
His plan?
"You take the top 16 teams and play the first round with the top eight teams having home-field advantage," he said. "You could do that in early December."
Hmmm ... so the season would extend past Thanksgiving. And some teams would play as many as 16 games?
"There would be two extra games to 14," Carr said.
That didn't make sense, unless Carr is advocating a 10-game schedule for those not in the final 16.
Asked to elaborate, Carr replied, "I gave my answer."
Purdue coach Joe Tiller offered a dissenting view, noting a 16-team playoff would threaten the low- and mid-level bowl games that give hundreds of student-athletes an opportunity to experience postseason play, thus widening the gap between the haves and have-nots.
Plus it would de-emphasize the regular season.
"It's kind of like the NBA playoffs," Tiller said. "Not many people get real excited until the playoffs start, and it would be the same in college football."
A quick trip through the conference standings with arrows to indicate a team's momentum:
Ohio State (5-0, 2-0): How will coach Jim Tressel keep his players focused Saturday against Bowling Green? He will put them on upset watch. "Just pick up the paper every Sunday morning," he said. "Somebody has beaten someone that raises an eyebrow." Ohio State's only bad news Saturday was a season-ending knee injury to starting safety Anderson Russell. Sophomore Jamario O'Neal, a former Parade All-American, will replace him.
Michigan (5-0, 2-0): Saturday's opponent, Michigan State, is hardly outstanding. But Wolverines defensive end Rondell Biggs said he believes the Spartans can be "dangerous" because of the in-state rivalry. Michigan, which has won eight of the last 10 in the series, might be without starting tight end Tyler Ecker (ankle).
Purdue (4-1, 1-0): Against Notre Dame, the Boilermakers didn't put pressure on quarterback Brady Quinn until it was too late. If they let Iowa quarterback Drew Tate survey the field Saturday, the Boilermakers will be in trouble. "Tate's an experienced guy with a complete command of the offense," Tiller said.
Iowa (4-1, 1-1): A Hawkeye hangover would be understandable after Saturday's 21-point loss to Ohio State, but coach Kirk Ferentz said it better not last with Purdue in town Saturday for Homecoming. "You go through a period where you're not feeling great, and that's natural because everybody invested a lot," he said. "But you can't feel like that too long."
Wisconsin (4-1, 1-1): Like Rex Grossman, Badgers QB John Stocco came into the season earning only marginal respect as a passer. And like Grossman, he flourished last weekend, throwing for 250 yards in the first half at Indiana. Badgers coach Bret Bielema said part of the credit should go to the play-calling of offensive coordinator Paul Chryst and part to an improved receiving corps. Wisconsin plays host to Northwestern on Saturday.
Penn State (3-2, 1-1): Observers believe Butkus Award winner Paul Posluszny has his speed and tenacity back after being slowed by the effects of surgery on his right knee. He had a team-high 10 tackles Saturday for Penn State, which visits Minnesota this weekend.
Illinois (2-3, 1-1): Heading into Saturday's game against Indiana, coach Ron Zook is wary of putting too much pressure on freshman quarterback Juice Williams: "There are so many things on his plate now with football, school, papers, tests, game plans and now media. You really have to be careful that he doesn't get overloaded."
Michigan State (3-2, 0-1): After his team blew a 37-21 lead against Notre Dame and then was stunned by Illinois, beleaguered coach John L. Smith got a pick-me-up. "A kid I coached at Montana more than 30 years ago e-mailed me ... `Coach, you're the greatest,'
" Smith said. "In times like this, you can count your true friends on one hand."
Northwestern (2-3, 0-1): Coach Pat Fitzgerald said quarterbacks Mike Kafka and Andrew Brewer are so supportive of one another "you would think they're brothers." Fitzgerald apparently hasn't decided which brother will get the call Saturday at Wisconsin.
Indiana (2-3, 0-1): Which Hoosiers unit needs to improve the most? "Three weeks ago I would have said defense. Two weeks ago, the offense. Last week I would have said everything," coach Terry Hoeppner said. "We need to shore up in a lot of areas, and it starts with the coaching staff."
Minnesota (2-3, 0-2): In losing to Michigan on Saturday, the Gophers' consolation prize was Amir Pinnix's 98-yard rushing effort against the nation's top-ranked run defense.
 
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Lloyd Carr just got arrested

CALGARY, Alberta (Reuters) - A top anti-addiction official in the western Canadian province of Alberta skimmed nearly half a million dollars from his employer to feed his own gambling habit, the province's top auditor said on Friday.

Auditor General Fred Dunn alleged in a report that Lloyd Carr, who ran the tobacco-reduction unit of the Alberta Alcohol and Drug Abuse Commission, used five false contracts to scam C$441,298 ($390,000) from the government agency, which funds programs and treatment services for alcohol, drug and gambling addictions.

The auditor's report said Carr, who could not be reached for comment, had admitted to misappropriating the funds and using part of the cash to put a downpayment on a house, pay household expenses and repay a vehicle loan.

About C$116,000 was said to have been withdrawn from automatic teller machines in casinos.

Carr was fired in September. Criminal charges have not been filed, although police have been notified.

($1=$1.13 Canadian)

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I thought it was funny to see his name in it. I thought you might get a kick out of it.

-Found on Stadium and Main-


 
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