The OFFICIAL MICHIGAN TEAM 144 THREAD: "We’re gonna win the national championship and go down in history. That’s all I got. GO BLUE!” - BLAKE CORUM

As of the making of this thread Ohio State had not beaten Michigan in 1,128 days


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ROMULUS, Mich. — Jim Harbaugh returned Thursday night from southern California no longer in his Michigan maize and blue but wearing a powder blue sweater with a sunshine gold Los Angeles Chargers lightning bolt.

Harbaugh made his way into the terminal at Detroit Metro Airport, fans occasionally stopping to ask for a photo with him, to congratulate him on Michigan’s national championship or to wish him well in his new role as the Chargers head coach.

After nine seasons as head coach of the Wolverines, Harbaugh, 60, officially became the Chargers' coach on Wednesday, 16 days after he led Michigan to a national championship. On Friday, he will address the Michigan team for one last time.

“I know how it’s going to be. It’s not goodbye,” Harbaugh told The Detroit News Thursday night. “One thing I hope for is that Michigan and the Chargers will be like one team. These are lasting, trusting relationships, so goodbye is not even a word that resonates.”

Harbaugh considered a contract extension from Michigan of six years and $11.5 million annually that would have made him the nation’s highest-paid college football coach. Harbaugh interviewed with the Chargers a week after the 15-0 Wolverines won the national championship on Jan. 8. He had a second interview on Wednesday before accepting the Chargers’ offer to return to the NFL. Harbaugh had spent four seasons coaching the San Francisco 49ers before taking over at Michigan, his alma mater.

He led the Michigan program to an 89-25 record, including 40-3 the last three seasons when they won three straight Big Ten championships and three straight College Football Playoff semifinal appearances. Michigan lost in both of its first two semifinals before beating Alabama in the Rose Bowl on New Year’s Day and then Washington for the national title. During Harbaugh’s nine seasons, he led Michigan to six seasons with 10-plus victories and the last three with 12-plus: 12-2 in 2021, 13-1 in 2022 and 15-0 in 2023 — a program best, making Michigan one of four teams in college football to achieve that record.

“Tough,” Harbaugh said when asked how challenging it was to make the decision to leave Michigan. “Tackled it, wrestled it to the ground. Like any good decision, it’s thought out well, thought out the best you can. I love Michigan, and I also love the NFL. Sarah (his wife) was torn, I was torn, the kids torn.”

Harbaugh said he will speak to the Michigan players Friday and then will head to Baltimore to watch his older brother, John, coach the Baltimore Ravens in the AFC Championship game.

“And Monday, head back (to Los Angeles) for good,” he said.

He said that every coaching decision he has made through the years has involved an “emotional connection.” His bond with Michigan transcends, he said, all the others.

“It was one of those deep, personal and as meaningful as it gets,” Harbaugh said. “Coaching here has been the love of my life outside of the family. Just our team, everything we did, everything they did, everything the players did, the coaches, the staff. To go from pillar to post and be successful, forever proud to be a part of that.

“And (at the Chargers), I was there in the building, people were still there who were there when I was still playing (1999-2000). They were good to me then, they’re good to me now and good to me through the years. Just felt like they left the light on for me.”

Harbaugh does leave Michigan with two unresolved NCAA investigations, the first stemming in part from impermissible recruiting visits led to Harbaugh missing the first three games as part of a school-imposed suspension, and he missed the final three regular-season games because of a Big Ten suspension relating to an NCAA investigation into an illegal scouting/sign-stealing scheme.

Harbaugh faces a Level I violation, the NCAA’s harshest, for the first investigation and a hearing before the Committee on Infractions is expected in the spring. He could faced additional suspension and other penalties. Regarding the second investigation, Harbaugh has denied knowledge an illegal sign-stealing scheme.

Harbaugh said the NCAA allegations and the outside noise did not wear on him.

“Nah, never did,” he said. “I can account for myself, and I can account for the players that they were always innocent, and I was innocent. You walk strong and tall and innocent. Didn’t mind the priceless motivation. Didn’t hurt.”

He also made a pointed reference to rumors and the proliferation of misinformation.

“I know I was wanted (at Michigan),” he said. “In the sixth grade, my English teacher introduced the concept of critical reading. This concept of believing everything you hear or everything you read … it’s all good. And you know what? The proof was in the pudding.

“There is no villain. I’ve long thought this: When a coach leaves, the only way everybody’s happy is if that coach dies. They're either mad at him for leaving, or he’s mad at them for firing him. Glad I’ve got a future. Glad I’m alive. What I’m sad that I’m not going to be a part of is this passing of the torch from, for example, J.J. (McCarthy) to Jayden Denegal or Alex Orji. The day J.J. declared, out on the field were Jayden Denegal and Alex Orji, and they’re throwing to Kendrick Bell, and I walked by, and I was like, ‘Yeah, that’s beautiful.’”


Harbaugh believes the players returning have big things ahead at Michigan.

“Imagine how you feel as a player: You just declared, and now others, now it’s my time,” Harbaugh said. “All the other players who are in that position are great, and they’re gonna be great. You know it when you see it. You’ve been to that movie hundreds of times. When I was talking about that last week, that’s what I was referring to, the passing of the baton from player to player.”

As for whether Harbaugh will be taking any members of his last coaching staff at Michigan with him to the Chargers, he was not definitive. His son, Jay Harbaugh, has been with him at Michigan since his first season in 2015 and is a likely candidate, as are strength coach Ben Herbert and defensive coordinator Jesse Minter.

“We’ve got decisions to be made, what’s personally and professionally best as they see it,” Harbaugh said. “But the cool thing is everybody’s gonna be where they’re at or better. Two teams. There’s no question I’m gonna want to make an all-star team there, and there’s an all-star team right here.”

As Harbaugh headed toward the terminal exit, with a few fans gathering nearby, he let out a cheer for the local professional football team. The Lions are preparing to face the 49ers for the NFC championship.

“Let’s go Lions! Let’s go Lions!” Harbaugh said out loud, offering a few fist pumps before making a qualification. “Up until they play my brother.”

Harbaugh then smiled as he turned to head home.

“I’ve got one word, gratitude,” he said. “That’s my word.”
 

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:wow: :mjcry::salute:
 

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Initial challenges

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The initial challenge is how Moore is going to fill out his staff. Michigan should have money to throw around. One of Jim Harbaugh's biggest strengths was a high hit rate in his assistant coaching hires. Two huge reasons for this: an ability to simply identify the right guys and having a multitude of contacts in both the pro and college game to give him as much information as possible. Defensive coordinator, provided they cannot hang onto Jesse Minter, is likely to be the first big hire for Moore. Who he hires and what routes he takes to get to the hire will be something to watch.

- Keeping the current roster as together as possible is also another hurdle to clear. A deeply ingrained locker room culture and a popular in-house hiring should mitigate an Alabama-like situation where the Tide have had 30 (!!!) players enter the transfer portal this offseason. Michigan will have to fend off programs who have probably already been reaching out to current players who have not entered the portal. With the NCAA making literally no effort to stop tampering, the onus will be on Moore and his staff to keep things intact.

- Michigan now has a week to hit the road on the recruiting trail with a new head coach. It's not so much a challenge as it is a potential chance for Moore to make a first impression with recruits and targets he's not personally familiar with. We'll be keeping an eye on where he stops. Not only will we learn about first impressions, but we may get an idea of the general approach Moore is looking to take on the trail; it shouldn't take long.

What changes?

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There's no scoop necessary to opine that Moore is going to very likely modernize Michigan's recruiting approach a bit. That being said, Michigan got here by identifying/developing talent and building the most impressive culture in the sport (in my opinion). Does modernize simply mean 'expand'? Michigan's weaknesses on the recruiting trail have oftentimes been due to a perceived lack of effort in certain instances and some archaic approaches. The aforementioned strengths are huge though; Moore should look to find a balance between the two. They can modernize and/or expand their operations without losing the identity that just won them a national championship.

- Those whining about NIL are not referring to actual 'NIL'. Those references are for a 'pay to play' where a prospect is being paid up front to commit and sign with a given program; literally zero to do with their name, image or likeness. The NCAA has taken no approach in enforcing these rules, opening the door for multiple programs to go this route. Do I foresee Michigan changing directions and getting into literal bidding wars for elite recruits? I don't. It's my strong belief that the primary reason for this is more about maintaining the culture and foundation the program has worked hard to build than anything else.

I do think there will be a more hands-on effort to embolden and expand current *actual* NIL efforts, however.

- I expect Michigan to simply be more aggressive in working the recruiting trail. Moore's ability to connect and recruit was one of the major reasons Harbaugh hired him in the first place. There are a multitude of ways they can do this. My instinct says we may hear 'Michigan' a lot more when prospects are asked who is recruiting them the hardest. This is a good to great thing.

- Perhaps the biggest change is that the offseason instability surrounding Jim Harbaugh that has crippled the program's recruiting efforts in recent seasons will no longer exist. To his credit, Harbaugh did not hide his interest in the NFL. It didn't do them any favors in the last three Januarys though. That will no longer be a distraction and Michigan can finally pitch program stability as one of the biggest strengths for prospective recruits.

What stays the same?

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I think Moore's coaching style is going to be relatively similar to Harbaugh's. He's outwardly friendly and is a player's coach but also coaches his players really hard. I think it's one major carryover from Harbaugh we expect to continue.

- My initial thought is that media relations will be relatively similar. I do not envision open practices (media) or anything along those lines.
 
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