Saturday, April 30, 2011

First Glance: Oregon, in search of its next high

An absurdly premature assessment of the 2011 Ducks.

? Previously On… Where the rest of the Pac-10 was concerned, watching film on Oregon last fall must have felt like watching the latest installment of the Saw series, where the bizarrely-outfitted villain cruelly toys with his victims before leaving them scattered across the premises in a gory mess. The Ducks blazed through the first perfect regular season in school history at the absurd clip of 47 points on 531 yards per game, both unmatched by any other offense nationally, and hung double-digit defeats on every regular season opponent except one. With sophomores Darron Thomas and LaMichael James filling the roles of predecessors Dennis Dixon and Jonathan Stewart, it was the ultimate fulfillment of the broken promise of Chip Kelly's first season as offensive coordinator, way back in 2007, in his second as head coach.

Frankly, on the heels of a Rose Bowl run in 2009, they looked that good on paper even before the season began: All five starters were back from the '09 offensive line, along with the leading rusher, the top three wide receivers and eight of the top nine tacklers on defense. In the end, all that was missing was the follow-through. Even in their BCS Championship loss to Auburn, where they were held to 19 points and visibly struggled with the Tigers' front seven on defense, the Ducks managed to rack up 449 yards in total offense —�much of which went for naught on six separate drives that fizzled in Auburn territory.

? The Big Change. The image of Oregon is of a lot of fast guys playing as fast as they can in sleek 23rd Century uniforms determined to make them look even faster. But the fact is that the Ducks' success started with their senior-led ownership of the line of scrimmage — more�obviously on offense, but quietly on defense, too, where they led the Pac-10 in tackles for loss and both rushing yards and touchdowns allowed in conference games. Certainly the mass exodus hits just as hard on both sides: Along with three senior offensive linemen (Jordan Holmes, C.E. Kaiser and Bo Thran) who combined for nearly 100 starts over the last three seasons, Oregon is also bidding sayonara to its leading tackler (Casey Matthews), its best pass rusher (Kenny Rowe), its best interior run-stuffer (Brandon Bair) and a three-year starter at linebacker (Spencer Paysinger) who finished as one of the team's top two or three tacklers all three years. That's kind of a lot.

?The Least You Should Know About...

Oregon
?? In 2010
12-1 (9-0 Pac-10, 1st place); Lost BCS Championship Game.
?? Past Five Years
2006-10: 48-17 (33-12 Pac-10); Back-to-back Pac-10 championships.
?? Five-Year Recruiting Rankings*
2007-11:11 ?�19 ? 32 ? 13 ? 9.
?? Best Player

Around this time last year, LaMichael James' season was beginning to look like a rumor, at least until the Pac-10's reigning Freshman of the Year figured out how to get back on campus in the wake of a domestic abuse arrest that had already earned him a suspension for the season opener in the fall. Once the ball actually found its way into his hands in September, though, it was all over: The sophomore blur zipped over 100 total yards in every regular season game, led the nation in rushing, yards from scrimmage and touchdowns and finished third in Heisman voting. With two full seasons of eligibility still in front of him, James is 19 yards of the school's career rushing record.
?? Best Year Ever

What's your crier? By any measure, the 2010 Ducks cemented their place on the national scene with new school records for scoring and wins, ran the table in the Pac-10 for the first time since joining the conference in 1968, hit No. 1 in the AP poll for the first time ever and came within a few minutes of Oregon's first national championship.
?? Best Case
Par for the course offensively; smooth transition on the offensive line; continued opportunism by a rebuilding defense. 12-1, Pac-12 champion, Rose Bowl. A return to the BCS Championship is within reach, but only with a loss: Running the table two years in a row with six new starters on defense is too tall.
?? Worst Case
Running game takes a minor step back behind the rebuilding line; passing game takes a minor step back with less fearsome running game and no go-to receiver; defense takes a large step back in the process of replacing five starters along the front seven. 8-4, Holiday Bowl.
* Based on Rivals' national rankings (top 50 only)

There's no threat of imminent collapse on offense with vets Mark Asper and Carson York en tow for their third year together as full-time starters, and the defense isn't completely starting over thanks to defensive end Terrell Turner and linebacker Josh Kaddu. Unlike the offense, though, the front seven on defense is clearly losing its most consistent playmakers —�neither Turner nor Kaddu even finished among the team's top ten tacklers, or among the top five in sacks or tackles for loss —�with no obvious candidates to replace them. The voids at middle and weakside linebacker leave an immediate opening for incoming freshman Colt Lyerla, a local five-star drawing explicit comparisons to Brian Urlacher, but both defensive tackle spots remain an utter mystery.

? Big Men On Campus. As for the fast guys on offense, well, yes, that part is still true. In fact, with second-year blazer Lache Seastrunk shedding his redshirt and diminutive true freshmen De'Anthony Thomas and Tacoi Sumler joining track teammates LaMichael James and Kenjon Barner in the fall, the backfield will look even more like a day-glo electron cloud. Darron Thomas can run a little bit, too.

Of course, there's still only one ball to go around, which means either a) Another relatively quiet year for Barner and the rest of the backfield with James hogging most of the carries as one of the most called-upon workhorses in the nation, or b) A frustrated Heisman campaign for James as coaches go out of their way to spread the wealth. James logged at least 25 carries in six different games last year that the Ducks won by at least 17 points, which doesn't seem like the most efficient use of a 180-pound superstar.

? Open Casting. The embarrassment of riches in the backfield is one reason to keep the ball on the ground. The other is the absence of any really compelling target in the passing game sans leading receivers Jeff Maehl and Drew Davis. Maehl was Thomas' favorite receiver by far —in the Pac-10,�only Arizona's Juron Criner was targeted more often, and he played in a much pass-happier offense.

The search for a new go-to guy begins with senior Lavasier Tuinei, but only because he's the default "returning starter" in the corps. Actually, he seems more likely to remain in his existing role as the sturdy (6-foot-5, 220 pounds) possession receiver, which hasn't given him much opportunity to emulate Maehl's threat downfield. Tight end David Paulson and freshman Josh Huff seemed more suited to that role last year, and none of the three incoming receivers pegged as four-star prospects by Rivals are going to find a very long line of succession between them and the field.

? Overly optimistic spring narrative. The offense is the offense. At this point, there are no further questions about Chip Kelly's system or whether he has the talent on hand to gun it into the national elite. His brand of the up-tempo zone-read/spread option attack has generated consistent success with three very different players at quarterback — the short, essentially un-recruited Jeremiah Masoli, initially a fifth-stringer, couldn't have fallen much further from the tree that produced Dixon and Thomas, yet all three have captained the highest-scoring attack the Pac-10 each of the last four years. The same system has also churned out four different 1,000-yard rushers in the same span, from backs as diverse as oversized, NFL-bound thumpers Jonathan Stewart and LeGarrette Blount to James, a diminutive speedster.

If you take into account Blount's immediate suspension in 2009, Thomas and James will be the first quarterback-tailback combo with a second season together in Kelly's scheme, which is frankly terrifying —�especially for Thomas, a relatively unsung revelation as a first-year starter. If he was good enough to fuel defensive coordinators' nightmares last year, he may be on the verge of becoming Freddy Krueger as an upperclassman. (This may also be the place to mention that All-American Cliff Harris' presence as a punt returner already has the same effect on special teams.)

? The Big Question: Can the revamped offensive line keep the offense moving at full throttle?.
The departure of 60 percent of an extremely well-oiled front isn't nearly enough to threaten that track record or keep the Ducks from competing for the first Pac-12 title. But with a vulnerable defense and heavy challenges from fellow contenders LSU and Stanford — both outside of the friendly confines of Autzen Stadium — among the usual land mines of the expanded conference gauntlet, the offense will likely have to be even better than it was during last year's BCS run to engineer a return. That's not impossible with the talent and experience that does return, but the margin of error leaves no room for growing pains.

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Other premature assessments (in alphabetical order): Arkansas. … Central Michigan. … Georgia Tech. … Iowa State. … Louisiana-Lafayette. … Marshall. … Nebraska. … Ole Miss. … Pittsburgh. … Nevada. … South Florida. … Syracuse. … Utah.

Matt Hinton is on Twitter: Follow him @DrSaturday.

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Fundraiser marks Bruce Pearl’s return to Thompson-Boling Arena

Whereas ex-Tennessee football coach Lane Kiffin was practically chased out of Knoxville by revenge-seeking Vols fans two years ago, fired basketball coach Bruce Pearl still calls the city home.

Pearl's even comfortable making a public appearance at Tennessee less than two months after losing his job as a result of a series of rules violations that landed the program in the NCAA's crosshairs.

On Saturday, Pearl and his wife Brandy will return to Thompson-Boling Arena to co-chair a black-tie fundraiser benefiting the Cancer Institute at the University of Tennessee Medical Center. The cause has been important to Pearl since former guard Chris Lofton beat testicular cancer after being diagnosed with it in 2007 prior to his senior season.

Asked during a radio interview this week if he considered ceding responsibility for the fundraiser in the wake of his firing, Pearl told WNML-AM that never crossed his mind. He has tried to stay out of the limelight the past month out of deference to new coach Cuonzo Martin, but he and his wife felt a responsibility to do what he could to fight cancer.

"This is not about me," Pearl said. "This is about my wife Brandy. This has been Brandy's project for the last year. She and I are chairs for the event. That night we're going to have about 400 UT students involved in dancing, singing, drama. We're going to show off some of UT's best and brightest students."

The subject of the interview inevitably turned to Tennessee basketball, and Pearl was very complimentary of Martin. He expressed hope that some of this past year's role players may flourish under Martin as a result of the opportunities created by graduation and by the possible departures of early-entry candidates Tobias Harris and Scotty Hopson.�

"Sometimes coaching change can be very uplifting to a returning player," Pearl said. "Particularly a returning player that may not have flourished or been presented with the type of role they may have wanted."

What's next for Pearl? He said working as a TV analyst is "certainly a possibility."

"But you know right now, we've got to get through the hearing in front of the committee of infractions coming up in June," Pearl said. "When we get through that we'll take a look at what our options are."

(Thanks, College Basketball Nation)

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Arizona finds itself in a scholarship crunch


The Arizona basketball team is hoping at least one more player decides to leave the team before the new school year.

Freshman guard Daniel Bejarano announced Monday he was transferring, which drops the Wildcats scholarships to 13. Unfortunately for coach Sean Miller, the program only has 12 to give because of NCAA sanctions.

The school has already promised scholarships to recruits Josiah Turner, Nick Johnson, Sidiki Johnson and Angelo Chol, which brings the number to 13.

According to the Arizona Daily Star, the Wildcats do have some options. Junior center Alex Jacobson is supposed to graduate at the end of this semester and could finish his career at another institution while completing grad school. Fellow sophomore center Kyryl Natyazhko has an opportunity to play overseas.

Or, of course, Miller could flip a coin and ask a seldom used player to find another bench to sit on.

Certainly, Arizona's situation is not unique. Usually around this time of year coaches find themselves balancing scholarships while anticipating player defections and moves to the NBA and bringing in a new recruiting class.

Arizona may have overestimated the number of defections from its team at the end of the year with relation to four new recruits. The Wildcats had just one senior on this year's roster and sophomore Derrick Williams decided to leave school early for the NBA.

The goal for Sean Miller and his staff now is to make sure that no matter how the extra scholarship room is made, the program doesn't take a publicity hit like New Mexico did a year ago.

Last May, New Mexico sophomore Will Brown sensed he was on the outs with the program to make room for Tennessee transfer Emmanuel Negedu, so he penned a letter to the Albuquerque Journal pleading fans to take up his fight and keep him on the team and more importantly on scholarship.

Brown's pleas were all for not. The school announced that Brown would not be returning for the 2010-11 season due to "repeated violations of team policy." He had had some off-court issues, which made him an easy choice. The ironic thing about it is that Negedu played just 10 games last season and was ultimately ruled medically ineligible to participate and forced to retire.

Coach John Calipari did something similar when when he took over at Kentucky and seven players transferred from former coach Billy Gillespie's team, and former Missouri coach Mike Anderson told Tyler Stone and Miguel Paul to find another place to play to make room for a couple junior college transfers.

Arizona can only hope that it doesn't have to run anyone off to fix its scholarship dilemma; that Jacobson can pursue his basketball and education somewhere else or that Natyazhko can make a career overseas. Otherwise it's going to find itself among a host of schools that haven't honored their scholarship commitments.

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Butler in search of a new lead recruiter

The loss of Butler assistant Micah Shrewsberry, who left the Bulldogs to become an assistant with Purdue on Tuesday, puts Butler coach Brad Stevens in the precarious position of having to find a new lead recruiter.

Like any program, recruiting has been the backbone of Butler's success, but finding the right combination of talent is what has made the Bulldogs so successful and given them back-to-back national championship appearances.

Currently, every assistant on Stevens' staff has served as the director of basketball operations and ultimately been promoted. Shrewsberry was the director of operations in 2007 before being promoted to assistant in 2008. Darnell Archey is the current coordinator and has the credentials to move up to assistant -- he's been the head coach Columbus North High and Park Tudor High. But is he ready to be the team's top recruiter?

Associate head coach Matthew Graves, who took the reins of the team when Stevens missed time with an eye infection late in the year, is also a primary recruiter along with Stevens and could be the logical choice to fill that role. The only other choice would be assistant Terry Johnson.

If history repeats itself, Archey likely will fill the assistant coaching role and Butler will look for another director of basketball operations, probably within the high school ranks.

The Big Ten has found some success nabbing coaches from Butler. Former head coach Thad Matta and assistant Brandon Miller are at Ohio State and former head coach Todd Lickliter and assistant Joel Cornette were at Iowa until the staff was fired last year. Assistants LaVall Jordan and Jeff Meyer is at Michigan.

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Vancouver Canucks Could Win the 2011 Hart, Selke, Vezina and Jack Adams Awards

While the Vancouver Canucks are currently battling with the Nashville Predators in the second round of the playoffs, this seems like a good time to look back at their impressive regular season.

Over the last week, the NHL announced the finalists for all the regular season major awards and trophies. The winners will be announced at the 2011 NHL Awards ceremony in Las Vegas on June 22nd.

The Canucks have already won a few trophies: Daniel Sedin already clinched the Art Ross Trophy by leading the NHL in regular season scoring; goaltenders Roberto Luongo and Cory Schneider will have their names of the Jennings Trophy for allowing the fewest goals against in the NHL; and as a team, the Canucks also won the President's Trophy for having the best regular season record in the NHL at 54-19-9.

The Canucks are also seemingly sending half their roster to Las Vegas for the Awards ceremony.

Sedin has been nominated for the Hart Trophy as the league's MVP, while Ryan Kesler has been given a nod as a finalist for the Selke Trophy as the NHL's best defensive forward. Roberto Luongo is up for the Vezina Trophy as the NHL's best goalie. Head coach Alain Vigneault is also in on the list of nominees, making the shortlist for the Jack Adams Award as coach of the year.

With the President's Trophy and two major awards already in the bag, plus the potential for four more to be won, the Canucks have been recognized by the NHL for one of the most statistically dominant seasons in the modern era.

However, to a man, those Canucks revealed this week as finalists downplayed the awards.

"It's nice, obviously, being nominated again, but in saying that, there is only one trophy on my mind right now," Kesler stated in an interview with the Vancouver Sun after the Selke finalists were announced. 

That is a healthy attitude because as, Henrik Sedin (last year's winner of both the Hart and the Art Ross) can attest, individual awards are a weak consolation prize if you don't get it done in the playoffs.

Before Henrik's double win last year, the Canucks had only won a major award for a player twice in the 40 year history of the franchise (Pavel Bure's Calder in 1992 and Markus Naslund's Pearson in 2003).

Hopefully they can break another 40-year drought this spring as well.

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Headlinin’: Economists lobby feds to join the anti-BCS fight

Making the morning rounds.

? Good luck, fellas. Twenty-one law and economics professors from around the country have signed a letter urging the Justice Department to investigate the BCS as an illegal cartel. Specifically, the letter argues that the BCS violates antitrust laws because its rules:

? "Shield Preferred Schools from Competition"
? "Provide Preferred Schools with a Fixed Share," and
? "Injure Non-Preferred Schools and Ultimately Harm Consumers"

If that sounds familiar, we are on well-trod territory: Utah senator Orrin Hatch called for a DOJ probe on antitrust grounds in 2009, and the attorney general's office promised to look into it in January 2010. Still, somehow the department hasn't quite gotten around to the BCS, as if there was anything else going on in the last 14 months.

Read the latest letter here, along with the list of signatories, including influential University of Chicago economist Richard Thaler, leading sports economist Andrew Zimbalist and not one but two professors from SEC schools. [Wall Street Journal, Playoff PAC, OSKR, LLC]

? Calloway speaks. Alabama signee Brent Calloway, the prized running back/linebacker recruit at the center of a concerted effort by AuburnSports.com to prove recruiting violations by the Crimson Tide, told TideSports.com Tuesday that he backed out of a commitment to Auburn in part because he felt "that home-type feel" at Alabama on a trip to Tuscaloosa the weekend before signing day in February, and in part because the Tigers broke a promise not to add another running back to their incoming class: "On top of that, Auburn signed three other running backs before I even signed [with Alabama]. They were misleading me. Very misleading."

A family friend, Darren Woodruff ?�the central figure in charges that Calloway was either bought or otherwise influenced to sign with the Crimson Tide ? also�told the Birmingham News that running back depth was a factor in the switch. [TideSports.com, Birmingham News]

? In the works. Michigan athletic director Dave Brandon told an alumni group in south Florida Monday that he's had "some preliminary discussions" with Miami Dolphins owner Stephen Ross, a Michigan alum, about playing a neutral site game at Sun Life Stadium. "We don't have anything scheduled," Brandon said, "but that's something we'd consider because this is an important recruiting area for us as well." The Wolverines are already on tap for a big neutral-site affair next year, when they open the season against Alabama in Dallas. [Naples Daily News]

? Opening the door. Ole Miss linebacker D.T. Shackelford, the vocal/emotional leader of an attrition-ravaged defense coming off an awful campaign in 2010, is likely out for the season with an ACL tear he suffered in Monday's practice. His likely replacement on the strong side: True freshman C.J. Johnson, five-star headliner of the Rebels' incoming recruiting class. [Clarion-Ledger]

? It's just business. The pilot who flew the "31-7 GO NOLES!" banner over Florida's spring game last weekend?

Turns out he's a Florida fan. "We're actually big Gator fans because our headquarters is right here [in Williston, Fla.]," said Patrick Walsh, president of AirSign. "One of our sales people sold this thing. We're a standard company. We can't be discriminatory. Most of our other pilots didn't want to fly it. … I was getting all these hate text messages from people that we know. I was counting down the seconds until the hour was over." On the bright side, at least the rumors about him losing his pilot's license appear to be entirely unfounded. [Orlando Sentinel]

Quickly… The publisher of the Arizona Republic resigns from the Fiesta Bowl's board of directors. … Colorado officially names senior incumbent Tyler Hansen its starting quarterback, and picks up a former QB from Georgia. … N.C. State running back Mustafa Greene undergoes foot surgery that will keep him out for the rest of the spring. … Lane Kiffin isn't giving up on Markeith Ambles just yet. … Trinton Sturdivant has some decision to make after his third major knee injury in four years. … Oregon looks at Lavasier Tuinei as its next go-to- receiver. … Terrelle Pryor works around his bum foot to get in a few practice throws. … Texas might move a 2012 home date to make room for Austin's first Formula One race. … Politicians in Mark Ingram's native Michigan haven't given up on the Mark V. Ingram II Freeway. … Penn State's annual schedule cards are going old school for the 125th anniversary of the first football team on campus. … And Illinois' Memorial Stadium is losing 2,200 bleacher seats installed on a temporary basis in 1982.

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Matt Hinton is on Twitter: Follow him @DrSaturday.

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2011 NFL Draft Grades: Report Card for Detroit Lions' First 3 Rounds

So, skill positions, then.

Remember when drafting skill position players early on gave a feeling of impending doom?

Sure glad those days are over.

Titus Young and Mikel Leshoure became the newest Detroit Lions Friday night, and both are likely to pull mixed reviews.

I've already given my grades on Young and Leshoure individually. You can find them here.

Click here for Young's grade.

Click here for Leshoure's grade.

And in case you missed it, you can also click here for my Day 1 grade.

Read those first, because they were written in reactionary fashion, where this one is an overall perspective coming after the dust (and my mind) settles.

What has happened here in this draft is Martin Mayhew and Jim Schwartz have sent a message about their defense.

Namely, that they like the majority of it. And it's honestly no wonder why.

While most fans were clamoring for a stub linebacker or cornerback, the Lions' front office calmly sat back and said, "Maybe. It depends how well we like him."

Because that, really, has been the story of the draft for Detroit so far.

Here is the checklist for Lions draft prospects as it has been to this point:

Do we like this guy? Is there anyone we like better?

Can we use him immediately?

Why isn't his name already on the card yet?

In truth, the Lions have been drafting players in areas where they weren't supposed to have great need. But in doing so, they've taken three "strong" positions (DT, WR, RB) and made them "complete."

Coming into the draft, those three positions were somewhere between acceptable and good. Now all three are beyond improvement.

Seriously, with their current construction, how do you improve those positions now? They are all young, productive, and versatile.

The counter-argument to all this is, "what about the needs? Sure, maybe they're set in those positions, but what about linebacker and cornerback?"

The biggest current problem with the Lions' back seven is that it's extremely young and mostly unproven. How exactly does getting younger and more unproven fix it?

What you're getting from Detroit here is one of two things. Either they're confident they can fill needs in free agency, or they're confident they can win with what they have.

And why couldn't they? The Lions' linebackers weren't an All-Pro unit last year, certainly not the most rangy group of guys. But late in the season, Ashlee Palmer stepped up huge and Bobby Carpenter started coming into his own.

In the secondary, Alphonso Smith looked like one of the more opportunistic corners in Detroit since Dre' Bly before he was injured.

Aaron Berry was a stud in the preseason and training camp, but didn't even get to show up for a whole game.

Amari Spievey could move back to corner as safety depth has been established with Louis Delmas and Erik Coleman, with Randy Phillips in reserve.

Almost every one of those secondary players is within their first three years of NFL play. Nathan Vasher provides a safe veteran presence, and even he played well down the stretch last year (remember the tackle at Miami?).

Maybe we didn't notice it, but maybe Mayhew and Schwartz have the secondary in exactly the position they want it, and they're just waiting for it to develop?

Just about every player in Detroit's back seven is either too young to have scratched the surface of their potential, or getting into a scheme that fits their skills better than their last one.

Could it be that Mayhew and Schwartz know something we don't? Is the Lions' defense about to take a huge step forward, just because of development and experience?

Maybe, and maybe not. I can't speak to the needs that haven't been filled.

What I can say is that every Detroit pick to this point is confounding through one lens (that would be the "need-based" lens) and genius through another.

Nick Fairley doesn't fill a major need, but he was the best football player Detroit could possibly have gotten there.

Titus Young fills a small need, but his speed should make a big impact.

Mikel Leshoure cost an extra pick on the trade up, but he brings some much-needed thunder to the Lions' backfield (and completely justifies the release of Kevin Smith).

All three picks so far have been cataclysmic at first glance, and increasingly intelligent the more you think about them.

And I've had lots of time to think about them.

 

Overall Grade for Days 1 and 2: A-

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Pete Carroll advises Steve Sarkisian on breaking quarterback news

Steve Sarkisian's been on his own as a head coach for two full, mostly successful seasons now at Washington, but in some respects he's still learning on the job. This spring, for example, he's overseeing his first quarterback battle after two years with undisputed leader Jake Locker at the controls of the offense, and may be close to naming sophomore Keith Price the starter over redshirt freshman Nick "Yes That Montana" Montana after Price owned the Huskies' second spring scrimmage on Saturday. Per ESPN's Ivan Maisel, though, he still felt compelled to call a former mentor about how to break the news to the team:

Washington coach Steve Sarkisian, trying to decide when to name sophomore Keith Price or redshirt freshman Nick Montana as the replacement for quarterback Jake Locker, made a crosstown phone call Monday to his former boss at USC. Sarkisian asked Seahawks coach Pete Carroll about how and when to tell the team. "I know what I feel. I know what I want," Sarkisian said. "How do you get it all across?"

One hint regarding timing: Sarkisian recalled 2003, when Carroll waited until after spring practice ended to name Matt Leinart as the starter over Matt Cassel.

Waiting until the end of spring drills is one way to go about it. Based on Carroll's history with quarterbacks and quarterback controversies, though, his advice more likely boiled down to a five-pronged test:

1. Is either of your quarterbacks named 'Matt'?
If yes: Immediately name Matt the starter and tell the team, "I'm totally jacked to introduce your new quarterback: Matt."
If no: Next question.

2. Does either of your quarterbacks project as a possible first-round draft pick?
If yes: Name him the starter, but tell the team and the media that he will never make it in the NFL.
If no: Next question.

3. Were you more or less determined to name one quarterback or the other the starter no matter what you see in practice?
If yes: Wait until the other quarterback takes a quick break from practice for water or to deal with a minor equipment issue, name your guy the starter, then tell the other QB when he comes back, "Sorry, we just couldn't afford to wait on you."
If no: Next question.

4. Does either of your quarterbacks have a sense of humor?
If yes: Secretly tell the funnier of the two that he's the starter. Then, hold him out of the next practice, pretend you don't know where he is, hire a stunt double who looks like your new starter ascend the tallest building in sight and —�with the entire team watching — hurl himself from the roof onto a trampoline or padded mat the team can't see, while screaming "I'll never hold a clipboard!" While everyone rushes to the scene, quickly remove the trampoline/mat and have your new starter (already waiting below) lie motionless on the ground. Then, just as the players arrive at the "mangled corpse" of their teammate, arrange for an ambulance to pull up with a pair of paramedics who rush to your new starter, hover over him for a minute or two, then declare there's nothing they can do. He's … gone.

At just that moment, arrange for a second ambulance to arrive carrying actor/comedian Will Ferrell, who leaps out of the back and proceeds to theatrically administer CPR and defibrillator paddles to the "critically injured" player while screaming "Don't you die on me!" until your new starter "comes to." At which point Ferrell calmly tells the stupefied audience, "He made it, everybody. Your new starting quarterback made it."
If no: Next question.

5. In your heart, are you truly jacked about either quarterback?
If yes: Name him the starter and tell the team, "I am so jacked to have this kid as our starting QB."
If no: Consider finding a new job.

Don't kid yourself, Sark: If the spark isn't there, there are always tealer pastures somewhere.

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Matt Hinton is on Twitter: Follow him @DrSaturday.

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NBA Playoffs 2011: Can Memphis Grizzlies Continue Playoff Run Against Thunder?

The Memphis Grizzlies shocked the world with their first round upset win over the heavily favored San Antonio Spurs. Apparently the Grizzlies knew something nobody else did, as they intentionally rested players in the final games of the regular season when they still had the chance to move up from the No. 8 spot to No. 7 and even No. 6.  They wanted the Spurs and they showed why.

There is no doubt Memphis is a talented team and surely their series win was not as mind blowing as the Warriors over the Mavericks a few seasons ago. The question is, can Memphis upset the Thunder, a team many believe is the favorite to come out of the West?

Outside of Tennessee, no one is likely giving Memphis much of a chance at taking down the Thunder. However, during the regular season, the Grizzlies did take three out of four from the Thunder. All four games were decided by an average of just six points per game, including one that went to overtime.

The key to the series will be Zach Randolph. Randolph was unstoppable in the fourth quarter of the series clincher against the Spurs and during the regular season against Oklahoma, he averaged 27 points per game, including two 31-point outbursts. Not only did Randolph light up the scoreboard, he did it on 58 percent shooting.

So, can the Grizzlies really beat the Thunder in a seven game series? The answer is yes, but Randolph will have to continue his torrid pace, and the Grizzlies will have to find a way to slow down either Kevin Durant or Russell Westbrook.

Series Prediction: Thunder in 7.

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Headlinin’: The Fiesta Bowl justifies its BCS existence

Making the morning rounds.

? We'll take a look and get back to you. Fiesta Bowl officials were in Chicago for the weekend to plead their case to a seven-member BCS "task force," assembled in response to the self-disclosed scandal drop that put the bowl's privileged status on the BCS food chain in the crosshairs last month. Fiesta reps argued that they'd weeded out the bad seed, free-spending CEO John Junker, and "personally impressed" the task force's chairman, Penn State president Graham Spanier, with the "depths of their presentation" and "sincerity of their efforts" at reform. But the verdict on the game's place in the BCS rotation is still weeks away, after the task force's report goes in front of two more committees, by which time the NCAA may have decided whether or not it will allow the bowl to exist at all. [Arizona Republic, Associated Press]

? The Rap Sheet. Florida cornerback Janoris Jenkins — still enjoying the campus scene after passing on a first-round grade in this week's NFL Draft — was arrested early Saturday morning for misdemeanor marijuana possession in downtown Gainesville, his second weed-related arrest of 2011 and third in his Gator career. Combined with charges against teammates Chris Martin and Kedric Johnson, it also gives Florida four weed-related arrests in Will Muchamp's first four months as head coach. [Gainesville Sun, Palm Beach Post]

? Take it, new kid. Ohio State fans got exactly what they wanted to see Saturday when hyped true freshman Braxton Miller led three touchdown drives in four possessions —�including a 92-yard march — in the Buckeyes' spring game, putting him in the thick of the race to take over the starting QB role while Terrelle Pryor serves a five-game suspension this fall. Of course, Miller was working a) With an extremely "simplified" playbook, b) Entirely behind the starting offensive line, and c) Against mostly non-starters on defense, and all four quarterbacks in the competition finished the game with a touchdown pass. But don't let the details ruin a perfectly good "The Future Is Now" narrative this summer. [Columbus Dispatch]

Elsewhere in Big Ten quarterback derbies, Wisconsin has officially ruled out junior Curt Phillips, who'll miss the entire regular season with lingering effects of multiple knee injuries that cost him almost all of 2010. As for the three Badger quarterbacks on display in Saturday's spring game, well, at least one of them can play the piano. [Wisconsin State Journal, Associated Press]

? Get well soon. Northern Illinois linebacker Devon Butler said Friday he's at least six months away from beginning physical therapy and will miss the entire 2011 season in recovery from a gunshot wound that left him in critical condition earlier this month. Butler was released from the hospital last week with a collapsed lung; bond for both NIU students suspected in the shooting has been set at $1 million. [Associated Press]

? Cool your jets, Hoosier. Indiana has suspended its leading returning rusher, Darius Willis, for at least one game this fall for "conduct detrimental to the team," almost certainly related to an allegation of domestic violence last month. Willis led IU in rushing as a true freshman in 2010 but missed of 2011 with a knee injury; if the suspension remains at one game, it will likely be the Hoosiers' opener against Ball State. [Indianapolis Star]

Quickly… Ardmore, Okla., celebrated "Justin Blackmon Day" in honor of its favorite son. … Kansas State plans to install the latest brand of super turf. … In defense of Dan Beebe. … Florida receiver Chris Dunkley is likely headed for South Florida. … Brady Hoke shows up at Ball State's spring game. … Remembering Atavus Stone, the man who didn't break the Orange Bowl color barrier. … A tree falls in Bristol. … And he may be just another hayseed attorney general, but Mark Shurtleff's aimin' to take down them city-slickin' BCS types a notch or two.

- - -
Matt Hinton is on Twitter: Follow him @DrSaturday.

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Early entries may leave next year’s Pac-10 without an elite team

If the consensus had been that the 2011-12 college basketball season appeared likely to be a bounce-back year for the beleaguered Pac-12, the past three weeks have surely dimmed that optimism.

In a year in which Ohio State's Jared Sullinger, Baylor's Perry Jones and North Carolina's John Henson and Tyler Zeller have all passed up NBA riches and returned to school, the Pac-12 has not been so fortunate. More Pac-12 underclassmen have declared for the draft and hired an agent than any other league thus far, greatly diminishing the chances that the conference will produce an elite team next season.

The departure of Arizona star Derrick Williams on Wednesday ensured that at least six of the 10 members of the 2010-11 all-Pac-10 team won't return next season. Washington senior Matthew Bryan-Amaning will graduate, underclassmen Williams, Isaiah Thomas, Tyler Honeycutt, Malcolm Lee and Nikola Vucevic are turning pro and Washington State junior Klay Thompson could join them in a matter of days.

Even the Pac-12's two newest members have not been able to escape the attrition. Utah's leading scorer Will Clyburn transferred to Iowa State after the firing of coach Jim Boylen, while Colorado will definitely say goodbye to double-digit scorers Cory Higgins, Levi Knutson and Marcus Relphorde as a result of graduation and may lose all-Big 12 sophomore Alec Burks to the draft.

The result is a conference that certainly isn't anywhere near as talent-starved as it was two years ago, yet may not place a team in most preseason top 25s.

UCLA will have one of the nation's deepest and most formidable frontcourts, yet the point guard position was already a question mark and the departure of Lee and Honeycutt robs the Bruins of their two top wings.

Washington has elite recruit Tony Wroten coming in to help replace Thomas in the backcourt, but the Huskies don't have a back-to-the-basket scorer to fill Bryan-Amaning's void unless 7-footer Aziz N'Diaye develops quicker than expected.

Then there's Arizona, which returns an array of 3-point shooters and adds the conference's best recruiting class featuring guards Nick Johnson and Josiah Turner. It's possible the Wildcats could be elite by the end of the season, but everything Arizona did offensively ran through Williams this past season and it remains to be seen whether the 3-point shooters will get as many open looks without him.

It's possible one of this past season's also-rans could make a big leap, especially if both Thompson and top big man DeAngelo Casto return and Washington State keeps its entire roster intact. Thompson is reportedly leaning toward leaving for the NBA, while coach Ken Bone said last month that Casto may not return for his senior season.

In addition to Washington State, lower-division teams Cal, Stanford and Oregon also could be much improved. The Bears seem the most likely to make a big jump with the core of an NIT team back including all-conference guard Jorge Gutierrez, versatile forward Harper Camp and last year's Pac-10 freshman of the year Allen Crabbe.

There's no doubt that the Pac-12 still is in better shape than it was a couple years ago when coaching instability and early entries to the NBA draft left the conference at its weakest level in decades.

Still the departure of so many of this past season's stars will hurt. Every team appears to have major question marks entering the offseason, and it will be up to some new players to try to answer those.

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Friday, April 29, 2011

Eight interesting figures from the NCAA’s attendance report

Skim through the NCAA's attendance report for the 2010-11 college basketball season, and you may notice some similarities from previous years.

For the sixth straight season and 15th time in 16 years, Kentucky led the nation in average home attendance at 23,603 fans per game. Syracuse and Louisville were second and third, just as they were a year ago.

Overall attendance for 2010-11 was down about one-half percent from the previous year but still ranked fifth all-time. Here's a look at some other attendance figures that stood out from the NCAA's report:

? Highest per game attendance: 1. Kentucky (23,603), 2. Syracuse (22,312), 3. Louisville (21,832)

? Lowest per game attendance: 1. New Orleans (322), 2. New Jersey Institute of Technology (455), 3. Centenary (531)

? Highest per-game attendance among non-BCS schools: 1. Brigham Young (18,714), 2. Memphis (16,768), 3. New Mexico (14,570)

? Lowest per-game attendance among BCS-conference schools: 1. South Florida (4,230), 2. USC (4,691), 3. Miami (4,763)

? Highest per-game attendance among non-Division I schools: 1. Northern State (3,016), 2. Hope (2,818), 3. Benedict (2,785)

? Largest average attendance increase from last year: 1. Brigham Young (+4,685), 2. San Diego State (+4,441), 3. Louisville (+2,435)

? Best average attendance per conference: 1. Big Ten (12,826), 2. Big East (11,323), 3. Southeastern (11,187)

? Best average attendance per non-BCS conference: 1. Mountain West (9,122), 2. Missouri Valley (7,187), 3. Conference USA (5,679)

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Eight stay-or-go decisions that are still up for debate

With the NBA draft's deadline for early entrants to announce their intentions having now passed, there are some decisions that are likely to be second-guessed for the next calendar year.

The jury is still out for these eight …

Perry Jones III, freshman forward, Baylor ? Returning to school

Jones is ready to go to the next level, and in this draft, he's all but a guaranteed lottery pick. Scouts have thought this of him for more than a year now. His decision to come back, though, is not nearly the same as that of Ohio State's Jared Sullinger, who heads up a team pegged already as a national championship contender. Baylor is off of an underwhelming 18-13 season, and will again have a thin backcourt in 2011-12. It's tough to tell how much ?�if anything ? Jones stands to gain by going back to Waco.

Josh Selby, freshman guard, Kansas ?�Entered draft, hired agent

It's sad, actually, how much Selby was hurt by the rule in place forcing top prep seniors to wait a year before heading to the NBA. A year ago, he would have been a Top-10 pick, but his one year at Kansas did more damage than good. After being suspended by the NCAA for the season's first nine games, he got off to a hot start before suffering a foot injury. He'd miss three games while healing, then disappear the rest of the way. He could rebuild himself into a lottery pick with a healthy, productive sophomore year at Kansas, but now is hoping just to hang on to a spot somewhere in the first round with guaranteed money attached to it.

Ashton Gibbs, junior guard, Pitt ? Entered draft, hasn't hired agent

This one wouldn't be so iffy if Gibbs was just simply testing the NBA draft waters, but it seems a bit rushed that he's insisting he will stay in the draft. Gibbs could certainly improve his stock with another year at Pitt. Turning pro would simply be a risky roll of the dice.

Harrison Barnes, freshman guard, North Carolina ? Returning to school

Barnes was shouldered with unfair expectations coming into the season, being voted as a preseason AP All-American before ever stepping on a collegiate floor. He struggled to live up to them until mid-way through ACC play, and by coming back is leaving millions of dollars on the table. There's minimal worry that he'll struggle that badly again next season, but if he has a tough time handling preseason hype for a second time, it could be a red flag for the NBA folks already looking at him as a future franchise cornerstone.

Jereme Richmond, freshman guard, Illinois ?�Entered draft, hired agent

Richmond's decision is a flat-out head-scratcher. He was as heralded of a recruit as Illinois has had in a while, but his freshman season was filled with frustration. Between inconsistent play, mid-season transfer rumors and a mysterious benching for both of the team's NCAA tournament games, his case to be a successful one-and-done took plenty of hits along the way. He could have been a special player for the Illini, but now we'll never know for sure.

Tyler Honeycutt, sophomore guard, UCLA ? Entered draft, hired agent

Like Gibbs, declaring and hiring an agent right off of the bat is puzzling for Honeycutt.� He posted decent numbers as a sophomore for the Bruins, but was both turnover-prone and far from a lock-down defender. He'll have to really impress some people over the next few weeks to avoid scrapping for a roster spot next fall.

Malcolm Lee, junior guard, UCLA ? Entered draft, hired agent

This case is even more baffling than Honeycutt's. Lee had a tough time running the point consistently for UCLA, and is not a strong enough shooter to play off of the ball in the NBA. He can defend with the best of them and score on the break, but is that enough to land him a job? It's another case of a guy who probably should have tested the waters first.

Greg Smith, sophomore forward, Fresno State ?�Entered draft, hired agent

Smith averaged 11.7 points and 8.1 rebounds on a below-average Fresno State team and is now hoping to follow the path of former Bulldogs teammate Paul George, who left after his sophomore campaign last season and was a lottery pick of the Indiana Pacers. Don't expect a similar fate here. Smith could have dominated the WAC for another year or two and built up more of a profile, but instead is taking a very questionable leap of faith.

Ryan Greene also covers UNLV and the Mountain West Conference for the Las Vegas Sun. Read his Rebels coverage and follow him on Twitter.

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2011 NFL Draft Grades: Jake Locker Is Ready to Lead the Tennessee Titans

The NFL analysts were shocked to see the announcement.  They were discussing how fortunate the Tennessee Titans were to have Blaine Gabbert fall in the lap of the QB-needy franchise, and were just positive the Tennessee Titans were going to select the Missouri signal caller.

I wasn't right about much with my draft day predictions.  I did slate Tyron Smith to the Dallas Cowboys back in February.  I also said the Cardinals would select Patrick Peterson, as Gabbert didn't fit their system.  There were a few other little picks as well.  But I missed on the first, feeling the Panthers would trade out of the top choice in favor of Marcell Dareus.

Then there was the big, bold prediction...that Blaine Gabbert would go No. 10 and be the third QB taken in this year's draft, as the Titans would grab the QB that not only best fits their system, but that will likely end up being the best QB in this year's draft.

Don't fret, Titans fans.  As much as the media attempted to tell us that Jake Locker is inaccurate, he really isn't.  Despite the assurances that Gabbert is the most pro-ready option, he isn’t. 

Locker did suffer a low completion percentage, coming in last amongst the top 10 QBs in this year's draft class.  However, there are two major factors with Locker that don't show up in the stat line...dropped passes and balls that were thrown away.

Had Locker managed 15 more pass completions, he would have a completion percentage in the 60s and this conversation wouldn't exist (for that matter, the two games vs. Nebraska, where his receivers couldn’t get open, dropped his completion rate from 59% to 55%).  More aptly, if his receivers had of caught 15 of the balls they dropped, we'd be talking about how the Titans just landed the perfect QB for their system.  We will get there, though.

But first, a few comments on Locker and an observation on Gabbert.  In analyzing Locker this offseason, I sat down with his senior year games vs. Oregon State and Stanford, as they were on different ends of the success spectrum.  I was very impressed with how Locker distributed the ball against the Beavers and how he fought back through pressure, eventually leading the team to a 2OT win.

There was a particular play that caught my attention, along with a pattern that deserves mention.

The throw came against Oregon State.  Locker was off-balance and threw off one foot while on the move to his right.  He threw a perfect pass and hit his receiver in stride on the goal line for a TD.  While that may not seem that out of the ordinary, Locker was on his team’s side of the 50 yard line.  There are a slew of QBs in the NFL that can't make that play.

The pattern I saw developing were dropped balls, and there were five dropped passes in the game against Oregon State.  One of them was a difficult over the shoulder catch, and the perfectly thrown ball fell through D’Andre Goodwin’s hands.  But the other four were right in the receivers' hands and just dropped.  Some may counter that isn't that many dropped passes, but it wasn’t five dropped in the game.  They were all dropped in one drive...the final drive in regulation to tie the game.  Yes, Locker overcame the dropped passes and led his team to a TD and then the win that helped make them bowl-eligible.

The game vs. Stanford wasn't nearly so pretty for Locker.  In fact, he only threw 14 passes, as Stanford's defensive pressure never allowed the team to mount a proper attack.  Locker was hit consistently, and had to simply throw away four of the seven incomplete passes.

Locker ran a different offense his last two years at Washington, as the new coaching staff converted them to a pro style offense.  While there were obviously some screens involved, most of the passing attack was down-filed.  He completed more passes beyond the 10 yard mark than inside of it.  

This is a huge divergence from Gabbert.  He completed most of his passes within five yards of the line of scrimmage, but struggled with the throws more than 10 yards from the line.  That will not create success in the NFL.  

Gabbert had a high completion percentage, but Locker still had a better yards per attempt.  Of particular note, when charting games for Gabbert I had to start over and add a new column...dump-off passes on third down that were well short of the first down marker.

Gabbert also struggled to find the end zone through the air.  His 16 TDs passes were last amongst the top 10 QB prospects.  Add in the 24 as a sophomore, and you have one more than the 39 passing TDs Chase Daniel had in his senior year in the same offense.

The Titans will be pleased with what Locker brings to their team.  He has experience in a pro style offense, but still needs to work on making solid progressions when his primary receiver isn't open.  Too often at UW he would tuck the ball and run, as his offensive line didn't allow him much time to throw.  

Pairing Locker's abilities with the Titan's rushing attack will create a potent offense.  He can gain yards on the ground, similar to Vince Young, but Locker will be a better passer.

Most important, Locker has a solid head on his shoulders and will be most interested in making the team successful.

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Wednesday Recruitin' Comes in Pairs

You can find the 2012 offer board here.

AJ Williams and Devin Funchess Go Blue

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Brady Hoke's coaching staff seems to only accept a commitment if they're able to get another commitment at the same position within a couple days (or minutes). This time, it's a pair of tight ends as Devin Funchess and AJ Williams committed back-to-back last week.

Funchess talks about how he turned into a bigtime football prospect:

"I started caring more. I used to just be out there lackadaisical. I started caring more, got bigger in the weight room and started to get better." ... "Devin has always had great potential, but the maturity between his sophomore and junior year was really amazing," [Harrison coach John] Herrington said.

Go Blue Michigan Wolverine breaks down Devin's abilities:

He runs very well for a player his size. Devin also jumps well and times his jump well catching the ball at its highest point. As pointed out, Devin uses his size and athletic ability to make difficult catches. With his length and long arms, he makes an excellent red zone target. Devin has the ability to make a difficult catch look easy.

The Wolverine Blog newcomer Jack Slice goes into awesome detail about what Funchess will do in Ann Arbor:

Funchess’ main asset on the field is his versatility, and the staff has a plan to utilize his skills... They’ll slide him in motion and have him plowing holes in the middle of the line as a fullback. They’ll use him in a traditional H-Back role. They’ll split him out wide and create mismatches with his size. Funchess (and other U Tight Ends) will be the ultimate utility player.

Tom talked to Funchess's teammate, MI DE Mario Ojemudia:

It depends on what [Devin] says to me. We've talked about playing together, but that's not the main reason I would choose to go to a college. I pretty much knew [Devin] was going to Michigan, I just didn't know when he was going to commit.

For the record, the Wolverines are in his top 3 ($, info in header).

Local commitment article for AJ Williams says that Michigan is definitely looking at him as a tight end first, tackle second. Go Blue Michigan Wolverine talks about AJ's game:

AJ is a huge high school tight end who could play either tight end or offensive tackle at Michigan. At spring camps he demonstrated excellent measuables, including a sub 5.00 second forty and recorded a 30-inch vertical. AJ also tested well in the squat and bench.

Magnus talks class fit on Touch the Banner:

The high number of offers to tight ends in this class suggests that Michigan would like to take at least two players at the position, and the skill sets of those offers tell me that they would like at least one blocking tight end and one pass receiving threat at the position. Williams is the blocking variety and has stated that the coaches want to use him to pave the way at the point of attack.

Every fanbase has "that guy," and this Arkansas messageboarder DOES NOT UNDERSTAND why any skill position player with an Arkansas offer would commit to any other school, unless they're getting paid.

For the rest of the details on Devin and AJ, check out their commitment posts.

Quarterbackin'

KY QB Zeke Pike selected Auburn over Michigan last week, so the Wovlerines have a hole to fill at quarterback in this class. There are a few uncommitted prospects remaining that hold Michigan offers:

  • IN QB Gunner Kiel. One of the nation's top QBs, Michigan seems like a longshot. With Pike off the table, do they turn up the heat?
  • FL QB Bennie Coney. Michigan currently in his top 5, trailing his top 2 of Notre Dame and Florida State.
  • OH QB Maty Mauk. Though he wants to play in a spread offense, he has the size and skills to play in a pro-style. Michigan is in his top group.
  • CA QB Jake Rodrigues. Hasn't been mentioned much, but holds a Michigan offer.
  • NJ QB/Ath Devin Fuller. Not the prototypical pro-style QB, but Michigan's coaches have said he could get a shot at the position.

There are a couple as-yet unoffered QBs that may get a shot as well:

  • OH QB Austin Appleby. Not terribly mobile, but he can throw it.
  • OH QB Tyler O'Connor. O'Connor seems to be ahead of Appleby in the offer LINE, and he thinks he'll be getting one soon. A Michigan offer would put them among his favorites, and he wants to decide by the first week of his senior season. Michigan's coaches are in his school today.
  • MI QB Brian Blackburn. His interest seems to be picking up, but he's still a little way down the list.
  • IL QB Wes Lunt. Recently picked up a Wisconsin offer.

With instate phenom Shane Morris in the 2013 class, an elite signal-caller isn't an absolute necessity this year.

Assume the Position: Linebacker

Space was tight in last week's recruiting post, what with two commitments and all, so it's time to delve into linebacker recruiting going forward. Michigan currently has commitments from Scout's #2 and #9 middle linebackers (though I think Jenkins-Stone is more likely to be a SAM at the next level), and are in good position with at least a couple other guys.

How many linebackers will they take in the 2012 class? They had a pretty big haul last year, with Frank Clark, Antonio Poole, Keith Heitzman, Kellen Jones, Desmond Morgan, and Brennen Beyer. OK, that's beyond a "pretty big haul," but it's also likely that some of these guys end up at other positions. For example, Clark can play TE, Heitzman is probably a TE or DE, Beyer is almost certainly a DE, and Morgan could even play fullback.

IMG_2850.JPGIt's clear that the staff wants at least one more LB in this class, and depending on who they can land, I think they'd take two. The most obvious candidate to land in the class is OH LB Joe Bolden, who likes Michigan a lot, is "still a major priority" ($, info in header), and could decide "at any time." He was the focus of last week's Sam Webb column in the Detroit News:

Colerain headman Tom Bolden: "Speaking as a head coach, he is a phenomenal player. He can play inside and he can play outside at the linebacker position. He covers a lot of ground, he is smart, and he can make the checks. He is a thumper. When he gets there he makes an impact. When he tackles kids, they stay tackled. Plus he carries a 3.9 GPA and is a great man off the field. I think all that makes him a great football player and a great young man."

Good lookin' out, uncle Tom. Scout's Allen Trieu:

"He has very good size, and he's a tough, hard-nosed football player," Trieu stated. "He's a classic, throwback type linebacker, but he's not just a run stuffer. He runs well and shows good ability in coverage. I think he can be an every-down linebacker and that's why so many schools are after him... Put that all together and he has a shot at playing early and often."

Ohio State hasn't offered (and apparently won't), and that means good things if he eventually suits up for the maize-and-blue:

"To me, if you didn't recruit me — and I don't like to be arrogant and full of myself — I like to prove people wrong," Bolden admitted. "I love doing it. I love talking, but also backing it up. If you've ever been in that situation, it makes it sweeter. It would definitely feel good."

I think the staff would probably also take a commitment from MI LB James Ross or PA LB Deaysean Rippy. Beyond those guys, it's tough to see any mutually-interested options.

IL LB Antonio Morrison visited Michigan for the spring game ($, info in header), and has picked up a Florida offer. MI LB Tyler Goble has visited Ann Arbor, but I have to think his best bet is a preferred walkon spot at this point. OH LB Mason Monheim was recently on campus.

Etc.

In the "who might be next" department, MI DE Matt Godin will announce a decision on May 12th. He's a lifelong Michigan fan, and the Wolverines are in his final three along with Michigan State and Wisconsin.

Michigan will offer IL CB Anthony Standifer if he performs well at Michigan's camp. He's a big CB, and what he might lack in elite speed, he makes up for with ball skills:

Michigan was the first non-MAC school to show bigtime interest, and Charles Woodson is his favorite corner.

MN OL Jonah Pirsig gets the local fluff treatment from the Pioneer Press. The way the article is written, Jerry Kill might commit seppuku if he doesn't land Pirsig. The kid currently favors Iowa.

OH DE Tom Strobel will play in the Army All-American game.

MI CB Terry Richardson has set a firm decision date ($, info in header).

OK RB Donovan Roberts holds a Michigan offer and he will decide today ($, info in header). I'd be shocked if Michigan is the selection.

Michigan seems like a longshot for MD WR Stefon Diggs, a teammate of 2011 signee Blake Countess.

OH RB Bri'Onte Dunn, currently an Ohio State commit, has softened that commitment, and may visit Ann Arbor soon.

PA RB Greg Garmon plans to visit Ann Arbor.

OH DE Pharoah Brown is making a return visit to Ann Arbor soon.

NJ S Brandon Napoleon will visit in May.

A couple new(ish) offers:

2013

Michigan has offered OH RB Dymonte Thomas.

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