We’ve been subjected to varying degrees of outrage, calls for stricter or lesser punishment depending on rooting interest, and peeks behind the curtain related to sportsmanship and coaching practices. We’ve heard endless yammering about due process and legal challenges and NCAA overreach and temporary injunctions – a sampling of the elements that make sports a magical draw for so many. The fact that it’s major-college, high-dollar athletics adds layers of passion and gasbaggery beyond reasonable measure.
Harbaugh sat out the first game of his three-game suspension last Saturday at Penn State when Michigan Big Hats were unable to arrange an immediate hearing in hopes of getting the punishment overturned or at least delayed. The Wolverines dedicated their performance to their absent leader and afterward some reacted as if Harbaugh had perished while rescuing nuns from a burning convent.
Harbaugh remains with the program each week. He is barred from the stadium for four hours during the final three regular season games, the last of which is the annual blood feud versus Ohio State. He returns to the sideline if the Wolverines make the Big Ten championship game and the College Football Playoff.
This has been characterized as “unfair” and “extreme” and as much as “irreparable harm” by the Maize and Blue crowd, while others think the punishment insufficient for the transgression revealed. A hearing is scheduled Friday, which figures to be at least a one-ring circus, particularly if Harbaugh testifies.
But again, if I may, isn’t it within the Big Ten’s purview to impose discipline or punish people and institutions as it sees fit?
It’s not as cut-and-dried as some perceived offense at Microsoft or McDonald’s and granted, Harbaugh isn’t an “employee” of the Big Ten. He’s employed by Michigan. Which agrees to certain guidelines and conditions as a member of the conference, one being ‘don’t play us and make us look like feebs.’
Attorneys both credentialed and armchair have gone all pro bono and talked up the points of lack of due process and fair practices in the Big Ten’s suspension. But this isn’t a criminal case. Heck, it’s barely an NCAA case at this point, only the notice of an investigation and some preliminary findings. This situation strikes less as due process and more about the expectation that the Big Ten should cut the membership some slack.
Part of Michigan’s defense is: everybody does it, an extension of the old NASCAR credo, “If you ain’t cheatin’, you ain’t tryin’.” It seems that many programs do indeed attempt to steal signs, but using electronics to relay signals to coaches and players is forbidden, and in-person scouting and attempted sign-stealing has been an NCAA violation since 1994.
Another component is that Harbaugh himself supposedly was unaware of the assistant’s sign-stealing M.O., his visits to various stadia and upcoming opponents to videotape their sidelines. The Big Ten looked at the preponderance of examples of the assistant, Connor Stalions, purchasing tickets at different venues and cozying up to Wolverines’ coordinators and determined that the practice was ongoing and systemic. That other Big Ten schools called out Michigan for its sign stealing methods didn’t bolster its defense.
The Big Ten stopped short of saying Harbaugh knew, though someone who famously micro-manages his program being completely unaware over an extended period stretches credibility. The conference was careful to say that it was punishing Michigan and not Harbaugh. Jumping ugly on an expendable second-tier assistant coach wasn’t sufficient, however, hence the call to suspend the CEO.
Certainly, it may be ham-handed or poor timing or hastily considered, or all the above. It hardly needs pointing out that corporations and governing bodies are as entitled to questionable decisions as those they oversee, and they happen to wield the hammer (Here I should point out that I welcome the G:TB Legal Dept., or those in the audience who aren’t self-employed, weighing in to tell me if I’m missing something).
Michigan’s athletic director was predictably huffy after the suspension, saying in effect: “You’re happy that they banged us? That just means they can come for you, too.” A mite short on the contrition scale, and unfortunately permits them to focus on the process and punishment, and not the violation. No telling what will come from Friday’s hearing. Regardless, the Big Ten offices will want to scrutinize incoming holiday packages. Food tasters may not be a bad idea, either.
31 comments:
yoooge day at the comment factory. labor just rubbing management's nose in it.
With regard to the Big 10 coaches, the lady doth protests too much, methinks.
i despise thanksgiving food and i especially hate mashed potatoes. while I like the drinking and the football, the food makes me wish the native Americans sent the colonists packing.
but then there would be no football. just baggataway.
Connor “Wyld” Stalions has made a most excellent mess
I think the last two posts have proven that many Gheorghies grew up in homes with shitty cooks.
I think Mark and I should host a Gheorghegiving party and cook traditional dishes in non-shitty ways. We will smoke the turkey.
basic cooks, for sure. my mom cooked most of our meals, and she came from folk who thought pepper was exotic. i made grilled tomatoes with parmesan for my maternal grandpa once, and he thought it was witchcraft. count me in for the gheorghegiving.
My mother is English Irish Scottish and Dutch. Arguably the worlds worst cuisines. She boils everything and uses no seasoning other than salt and butter.
tribe took air force to overtime and lost. baby steps.
coach prime needs to focus on the prime and get some dudes who can coach
harrisonburg showing out this morning
one of my daughter's high school teammates getting some screen time on gameday. big season for former tuscarora high school cheer athletes.
I heartily enjoy Thanksgiving food, and we often end up doing a turkey at home soonafter if we do the holiday at my parents house.
Related to this post, the bartender at the spot my wife and I ate last weekend said she liked Jim Harbaugh. First time anyone's volunteered that type of thing to me. I didn't ask.
excellent photo on the socials of danimal, coco, jp, and ronald.
dukes are playing like dogshit. trying to make all of us that got their backs look like mooks.
Gheorgegiving is a must. It’s the best version of Friendsgiving. And Marls is right, a lot of y’all were raised with shitty cooks. I was too. My mom can bake but she can’t cook for shit, My Dad kills it though.
Dan picked quite a day to go back to JMU.
i’m going to be in jax for spring break next year. we could do a gheaster feast.
Send the dates, Rob.
it’s the week of march 25
iowa, you glorious point-fearing bastards
Weird way to score 15.
William & Mary football doesn’t get much play here, but we played rival Richmond yesterday. Apparently we would have tied the game with a PAT with no time remaining in regulation but went for two and failed, losing 27-26. Isn’t conventional wisdom to go OT at home??
Tough loss for the dukes but well worth the visit. As to the loss, I’m pretty good at practicing self-preservation. Went into the expecting to lose. Comes in handy.
Game
Tribe hoops lost to a school called Lindenwood?
peckerwood?
Jacksonville blowing the #1 pick and not taking Aidan Hutchinson will haunt them for a decade
at least the tribe women are 0-4
FWIW, Lindenwood is W&M-sized private school in a town northwest of St. Louis. Picked to finish 10th of 11 teams in Ohio Valley Conference. So, today's result not good.
I’ll be bummed when OBX Daxe completes his G:TB internship.
Just kidding, buddy. Please keep the good shit coming.
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