shetuck;1352378; said:
Great memory. Pete Johnson had thighs bigger than my waist. He was a beast. The entire game, the Buckeyes could not get it going and then, bang, 21-14 we win in Ann Arbor.
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shetuck;1352378; said:
Exactly seven years ago, Rich Rodriguez sifted through the aftermath of his inaugural season at West Virginia. Nobody knew what the future held. Rodriguez tried to explain that things would get better and there were things to be encouraged about going into his second year. Still, his 3-8 record would define him for nine, long months. He went to work on his first full recruiting class. These were the guys his coaching career would live or die with. The West Virginia football program had fallen on hard times so the Mountaineer-brand didn?t go as far with recruits. Nonetheless, he had faith in his system and knew the type of athletes that complemented it. After months on the road seeking out every lead, he signed the 37th recruiting class in the country. That number was inflated by a massive tow of 33 recruits. On a per recruit basis, the class falls to 65th. The next season, Rodriguez would go 9-4 orchestrating the greatest one-year turnaround in Big East history. Those recruits would go 47-16 with five bowl appearances and a victory over Georgia in the Sugar Bowl.
Fast-forward seven years. Following his inaugural season at Michigan, Rodriguez is sifting through the aftermath. He has tried to explain to anyone who would listen that things will get better and that there are things he is encouraged about going into next year. Still, his 3-9 record will define him for the next nine months. He is busy working on his first full recruiting class. His coaching career will live or die with those players. Sound familiar?
There are two reasons why people have railed against Rodriguez: either they?re too ignorant to know what?s coming or they simply like to hit a man when he?s down. Neither is acceptable. The former is unfortunate but the latter is reprehensible. Critics love to ignore the facts and hope that nobody remembers their reckless stupidity. Most of the time, it works. However, this time, I am going to hold these people responsible. I want all of the Rich Rodriguez critics to go down in infamy because two years from now, they?re going to be penning essays on Michigan?s rise to dominance like it was their idea in the first place. The easiest job in the world is for a pasty, old sportswriter with questionable social skills to sit back under the protection of the internet and ridicule someone going through a situation that would be difficult for anyone to handle. The Gregg Easterbrooks of the world are documented morons. Unfortunately, though, their stupidity influences people who don?t know any better. Next year or the year after or whenever Rodriguez starts beating Sparty by 35 points, nobody is going to remember how idiotic Gregg Easterbrook was. Nobody is going to remember that Michael Rosenberg lacked the patience of a two-year old. Nobody is going to remember Gary Danielson saying that Rodriguez is doomed to fail because the spread is a thing of the past in the same year that two spread teams?and two of the greatest offenses in the history of college football?are playing in the National Championship Game. I?ll be there to remind everyone that these phonies were the first to pile on when a man was down. In the meantime, I?ll quickly recap why Michigan?s pending dominance should be obvious to everyone with even a sliver of competence.
Critics love to argue that Michigan?s success is no guarantee because, ?Rodriguez is at Michigan now, not West Virginia.? Exactly. West Virginia isn?t anything like Michigan. West Virginia doesn?t have the history, tradition, or resources. Most importantly, it doesn?t have the recruiting prowess. Tell me how Rodriguez is going to screw this up?
He currently has the 7th rated recruiting class in the country. He has 13 four-star recruits committed and that number will likely rise by at least two. Five-star defensive tackle William Campbell is expected to end up blue. Four stars Pernell McPhee and Quinton Washington also have serious interest in Michigan. Some folks might remember that Rodriguez hauled in 17 four-star recruits last season on his way to a top-ten recruiting class. What you might not know is that one of the more talented players of that group was a two-star offensive tackle from Ohio (Patrick Omameh). Rodriguez knows what to look for. His recruiting style is one that takes unfinished products and turns them into packaged beasts. He takes big safeties and turns them into linebackers. He takes big linebackers and turns them into defensive ends. He seeks out athletic linemen who have room to grow. It?s not just the four-star recruits?and there are a lot of them? that you have to worry about. They all have the potential to excel in Rodriguez?s system. This style represents a stark change from the way Michigan used to recruit. Gone are the days of wondering where all the talent went. People will now wonder where all the talent came from. Michigan has a purpose on the recruiting trail and that purpose is to turn Michigan into a juggernaut. When the weather man points to the radar and shows you that a hurricane is coming, you don?t tell him he?s wrong. This is no different.
It should scare the amygdala out of ?M? opponents that Rodriguez is going into Florida and taking its best players. Michigan currently has commitments from six Florida players and that number figures to rise next year. If all goes well, this class will finish in the top five nationally. ?M? currently has commitments from 10 of the Rivals250. That number could go as high as 12. ?M? has commitments from players in ten different states. No place is off-limits. That means Michigan is drawing from a pool much larger than any of its rivals. If a top five class signs up for a 3-8 program, what kind of class might sign up for a 10-2 program? If you really don?t think that Michigan is about to lay the smackdown on the college football world, then you haven?t been paying attention. If you really think that Rodriguez isn?t going to have more success with the #7 recruiting class in the country than he did with the #37 class, then you might want to check your alcohol intake. It?s easy to avoid reality when you can just sit back and look the other way. That?s what many of ?M?s critics are doing right now. The problem with that is that one day, you?re going to look like a fool.
There are only two things that matter in college football: recruiting and coaching. They are equally important. You can build a decent program with either. Pittsburgh wins primarily with recruiting success. Texas Tech wins primarily with coaching success. Florida, Oklahoma, and USC own college football by excelling in both. Rich Rodriguez is universally considered one of the best coaches in college football. That would seem to satisfy the coaching portion of the equation. Michigan is killing it in recruiting. That would seem to satisfy the recruiting portion of the equation. How some people don?t arrive to ?superior recruiting + superior coaching= superiority? is a mystery. The writing is on the wall. It would take a massive level of stupidity to miss all of the clues. My message cannot be clearer. Michigan is about to devastate the college football landscape. Critics can choose to have their head in the sand but when the day of reckoning comes, don?t say I didn?t warn you because I?ll remind you that I did.
NFBuck;1357524; said:Motown Sports Revival: Spin This
Hahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahaahahahahahahahhahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahhahahahhahahahahahahhahahahahahahahahhahahha *cough* *gasp* hahahahahaahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahhahahahahahahahahahhahahahahahhahahahahhahahahahahahhahahahahahahhahahhahahahahhahahahaha *gasp* ahahahhahahahahahhahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha......*thud*
I thought they are WINS and LOSSES.There are only two things that matter in college football:
West Virginia had 11-1-0 seasons in both 1988 and 1993, and went to "national championship" games both years ... under Don Nehlen. That's better "history" than RichRod had at West Virginia. Hell, that's better "history" than Michigan has had since 1988 ... take out UM's fluke season in 1997, and they haven't been serious national title contenders since the early 1970's. Basically, Michigan is now on the same level as Georgia Tech, Colorado, Washington, Pitt, and BYU - teams that lucked into a national championship one time, but are otherwise irrelevant. Unless you want to go back over 100 years to talk about "tradition"....Motown Sports said:Critics love to argue that Michigan?s success is no guarantee because, ?Rodriguez is at Michigan now, not West Virginia.? Exactly. West Virginia isn?t anything like Michigan. West Virginia doesn?t have the history, tradition, or resources. Most importantly, it doesn?t have the recruiting prowess. Tell me how Rodriguez is going to screw this up?
Game Day sign idea for next year ...shetuck;1352378; said:
Per scout:He currently has the 7th rated recruiting class in the country
That's not TT's Mike Leach, that's former scUM QB Rick Leach.Oneshot;1361489; said:Sucks that Leach is such a supporter.
I really like Leach.
...and he has 70's pornstar hair.Buckeyeskickbuttocks;1361564; said:Mike Leach's eyes are too close together for my liking.