Here is a
trick question: How many Michigan quarterbacks are starters this year? The answer is at least
three. There is, of course, the fabulous Denard Robinson. But Steven Threet
(speaking of three), who left Michigan after being a starter some of the
time in Rich Rodriguez’s first year if memory serves, starts for the Arizona
State team that just defeated Iowa, and the strong armed Ryan Mallett,
who left Michigan as soon as Rodriguez was named its coach, starts for
the Arkansas team that just defeated Georgia. Their presence on these
other teams is a tribute to the havoc caused by Rodriguez when he took
over Michigan. (Some major lineman whose name escapes me also left and became
a starter for Ohio State - not exactly a small time team.)
But so what, you say. It took Rodriguez awhile to
recruit his kind of players, now he has done so, and look at the results.
Well, the results are a marvelous offense, at least so far, and
I would think that success likely to continue even when Michigan starts playing Big Ten teams. But the defense, oh my God, the defense. Perhaps the best way
to describe the defense is to ask, what defense? Not to mention what appears
to be the complete absence of any kickers whatever.
The defense has been awful ever since Rodriguez
began at Michigan, and it remains
awful. One has to believe that, notwithstanding its offense, Michigan is going to lose a number - even a lot
- of Big 10 games because of the sheer horribleness of its defense. Even
given the likely continued excellence of the offense, how can Michigan beat, say, Iowa, Ohio State, Wisconsin, Penn State or perhaps Michigan State, with a defense that stops
nobody. And what if, heaven forefend, Denard Robinson were to be injured and unable to play, so
that there might be little offense because his backups are not nearly
as capable as he, at least not at this point and maybe never. If that
were to happen, Michigan might be lucky to win any Big Ten
games.
And who did Rodriguez hire to run his defense? Greg
Robinson, a guy who compiled such a bad record as head coach at Syracuse that he got fired after four years there. Now the defense
is in its second year under Robinson and should have learned something,
but apparently is worse than ever.
If you want to really grasp the unbelievable coaching
ineptitude of the guy hired to run Michigan’s defense,
listen to this: Robinson was the head coach at Syracuse
from 2005-2008. His wins and losses, and the points scored by and against
Syracuse, are posted on the Syracuse Athletic Department’s
website from 2005-2007. (For some reason 2008 is not posted but we found
the 2008 won/lost record elsewhere.) Robinson’s record was one win and
ten losses in 2005, four and eight in 2006, two and ten in 2007, and three
and nine in 2008, for a total of ten wins and 37 losses. Equally
to the point since this coach with such a terrible record was hired to
be Michigan’s defensive coach was the record
of points scored by Syracuse compared to the points scored against it. Here, the totals
from the website in 2005, 2006, and 2007 respectively were 152 by Syracuse
and 295 (almost double) against in 2005, 219 by Syracuse and 285 against
in 2006, 197 by Syracuse and 418 (more than double) against in
2007, and 217 points scored by Syracuse and 392 scored against
it in 2008. And Robinson is the guy who is in charge of Michigan’s
defense? Oh, my God!!
A few years ago, when the underperforming Lloyd
Carr was still head coach, I heard the panelists on ESPN’s college football
show - particularly the highly accomplished ex-coach Lou Holtz - do something
that such panelists rarely do. I heard them criticizing a head coach,
in this case Carr. But that may have been as nothing compared to what
Holtz and the adroit Mark May (didn’t he play at Notre Dame?) said about
Michigan’s defense this Sunday,
right after the UMass game. They both savaged Michigan’s defense, which they found abominable, with Holtz saying,
among other things, that this is not the Michigan defense he used to warn his teams about. And it was May, I
believe, who specifically blamed Greg Robinson for the problem, saying
he had installed a new defense - if, as I say, Michigan’s defense can even be given that name. (Maybe it should be
called “Michigan’s non defense,” or “Michigan’s
porous”).
And who is it that hired Robinson after he was fired
at Syracuse because he had performed so ineptly - and had so many more
points score against his team than it scored - and who is it that
put him in charge of the Michigan defense? Well, it was the West Virginia genius, Rich Rodriguez, who now has
a great offense but no defense - and is likely to pay the price in the
Big Ten for having only half a team in his third year. And
who allowed Rodriguez to hire Greg Robinson? Why the Michigan athletic department, of course, thereby showing no sign of
competent thinking.
So Michigan’s football future does not look too
bright in the Big Ten this year, unless a miracle happens and Greg Robinson
somehow teaches Michigan’s porous to play defense within, say, less than
two weeks, when Michigan plays Michigan State.
And lest one forgets, let me reiterate that Michigan has no kickers. It simply cannot make
field goals and, perhaps with some exaggeration, I would say it seems
hard pressed to kick kick-offs more than two thirds of the way to the
end zone. How could Rodriguez have failed in three years to recruit even
one player who can kick off and kick field goals? You can bet your sweet
bippy, as I think Artie Johnson or somebody or other used
to say on Laugh-In forty years ago, that in the Big Ten Michigan will
pay the price for this ineptitude at kicking.
Humorously enough, Michigan’s
best kicking play of the season was a pooch kick on a punt, (not, of course,
on a kick off or field goal attempt) that ended up on the opponent’s five
or seven yard line if I remember correctly. Although, few media personnel
commented on this marvelous play in view of his running and passing, will
it surprise you to learn that the pooch punter was Denard
Robinson? He must be Michigan’s
best all around player since Tom Harmon (or at least Ron Kramer or Charles
Woodson).
So, considering everything, it has to be said that
Rich Rodriguez has thus far proven himself the one dimensional man, or
maybe the two dimensional man. In his first two years he proved that he
excels at losing. Michigan never before had a coach so successful
at losing, not even Chalmers (Bump) Elliot, God help us. Now he’s proven
that, given time, he can build a terrific offense, at least if he gets
a smashingly great running and passing quarterback like Pat White at West
Virginia or Denard Robinson at Michigan. But
so far at least, he also has shown that he knows nothing about and cares
not a whit about defense, kicking or hiring competent assistants. And
all he ever seems able to come up with when reporters ask him about his
team’s deficiencies on television is “We have to work harder.”
Oh boy. It could end up being another long season
for Michigan fans.
BlackCommentator.com Columnist, Lawrence
R. Velvel, JD, is the Dean of Massachusetts
School of Law. He is the author of Blogs From the Liberal Standpoint: 2004-2005
(Doukathsan Press, 2006). Click here
to contact Dean Velvel, or you may, post your comment on his website,
VelvelOnNationalAffairs.com.
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