Current:Home > ContactJim Harbaugh leaves his alma mater on top of college football. Will Michigan stay there? -Legacy Profit Partners
Jim Harbaugh leaves his alma mater on top of college football. Will Michigan stay there?
View
Date:2025-04-13 03:04:02
Jim Harbaugh’s long-anticipated departure to the NFL may be the most amicable divorce in the history of college sports. He came to Michigan as the savior, restored his alma mater’s prominence and left on the heels of its first national championship in decades.
He stayed nine years – longer than most thought he would. He leaves as a hero because he did the job he was supposed to do.
Now it’s up to Michigan to make sure his work isn’t wasted. Truth is, that may prove more difficult than anyone understands.
No matter what happens next – and the strong likelihood is that offensive coordinator Sherrone Moore will be elevated to replace Harbaugh – the next handful of years probably isn’t going to look like the last handful.
Because what made Michigan great wasn’t really about the program. It was mostly about Harbaugh: Unquestionably one of the great college coaches of the modern era.
NFL STATS CENTRAL: The latest NFL scores, schedules, odds, stats and more.
Yes, Michigan is technically the winningest program in the history of college football, a designation it cherishes and promotes proudly. It has the Big House, the fight song everyone remembers, the iconic uniforms and a long list of alums that includes some of the greatest football players of all-time.
But it is not a top-tier college football powerhouse in the same way that Alabama or Ohio State has been. Before this season, it owned half of a national title since the sport was integrated. It doesn’t have a massive amount of in-state talent that it can draw from to churn out top-10 recruiting classes. And it’s a place where, as we’ve seen, things can go wrong pretty easily.
Between Gary Moeller and Lloyd Carr, the two coaches who followed Bo Schembechler, there were some pretty good seasons and quite a few mediocre ones. Rich Rodriguez was flat-out lousy in his three years. Brady Hoke, who somehow lasted four, was something even less than that.
When Hoke was fired following the 2014 season, all the speculation focused on Harbaugh, who by that point had proven himself to be a special head coach. He had gone 22-2 in his last two seasons at University of San Diego, completely turned around one of the worst programs in FBS at Stanford and taken the San Francisco 49ers to three NFC championship games (and one Super Bowl appearance) in four seasons.
More:Winners and losers of Jim Harbaugh's decision to return to NFL as coach of Chargers
At one of the lowest points in the history of the program, Harbaugh was the only can’t-miss guy Michigan could have hired. They made it happen with a historic contract, and in return he made it happen – even if it took a little longer than they expected with a couple rocky years in the middle.
Michigan football should never be as bad as it was under Rodriguez and Hoke. But if you look at the history of the program, what happened under Harbaugh the last three years was special. It was rare. It isn’t going to be easy to repeat under any coach, much less a 37-year-old who has never run his own program.
We don’t know much yet about Moore, but we do know this: He’s not Harbaugh. That automatically makes it less likely Michigan’s success at the highest level is going to continue. That’s no knock on Moore, it’s just reality – and yet the situation for Michigan almost demands that Moore gets the job.
And he deserves the opportunity. He’s been a key part of Harbaugh’s staff since 2018, had a lot of success as the co-offensive coordinator starting in 2021 and showed real coaching chops against Penn State and Ohio State late last season when Harbaugh was serving a three-game suspension.
Those are good data points, but realistically they don’t tell us a lot about how Moore is going to handle the head-coaching chair. The decisions about which players to recruit, which assistants to hire and how to deal with the constant public-facing demands of the job will now all fall to him.
He may knock it out of the park. He may fall flat on his face. We just don’t know.
There’s also the sticky matter of NCAA penalties that will be coming from two separate investigations – one into improper recruiting during the COVID-19 dead period and one from the Connor Stalions-led sign-stealing scandal.
These things are difficult to predict, but the likelihood is that Moore – if he gets the job – will be navigating some type of handicap in his first couple seasons.
The bottom line is it won’t be easy for anyone to sustain what Harbaugh built at a program that has proven over time not to be a plug-and-play powerhouse. Even Harbaugh, one of the great coaching winners, found it difficult until he hit his groove in 2021.
Harbaugh was afforded every opportunity to get it right not only because he was a well-known alum with an incredible track record but because Michigan had a ton invested in him – not just in money but pride. If Harbaugh didn’t work, where do you even go after that?
Neither Moore nor anyone else will be given the same grace. As Harbaugh makes an exit bathed in glory, the next coach will have to overcome all the same issues with a fraction of the cachet. More likely than not, the reality of Michigan football is about to set in – and as history has shown, that reality is often ugly. Good luck to everyone involved.
Follow USA TODAY Sports columnist Dan Wolken on social media @DanWolken
veryGood! (4)
Related
- Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
- Soldiers' drawings — including depiction of possible hanging of Napoleon — found on 18th century castle door
- Effort to ID thousands of bones found in Indiana pushes late businessman’s presumed victims to 13
- Rangers recover the body of a Japanese climber who died on North America’s tallest peak
- Federal Spending Freeze Could Have Widespread Impact on Environment, Emergency Management
- Lauryn Hill’s classic ‘Miseducation’ album tops Apple Music’s list of best albums of all time
- Barry Bonds, former manager Jim Leyland part of Pittsburgh Pirates' 2024 Hall of Fame class
- Family says Alaska photographer killed in moose attack knew the risks, died doing what he loved
- Average rate on 30
- Sites with radioactive material more vulnerable as climate change increases wildfire, flood risks
Ranking
- $73.5M beach replenishment project starts in January at Jersey Shore
- A Minnesota city will rewrite an anti-crime law seen as harming mentally ill residents
- Hunter Biden seeks delay in federal tax trial set to begin in Los Angeles next month
- Mississippi’s 2024 recreational red snapper season opens Friday
- Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
- Adele, Jay-Z, Dr. Dre, Fleetwood Mac: Latest artists on Apple Music's 100 Best Albums
- How 2 debunked accounts of sexual violence on Oct. 7 fueled a global dispute over Israel-Hamas war
- Stock market today: Asian shares edge lower after Wall Street sets more records
Recommendation
'Most Whopper
Russian attacks on Ukraine power grid touch Kyiv with blackouts ahead of peak demand
Ex-South African leader Zuma, now a ruling party critic, is disqualified from next week’s election
South Africa election: How Mandela’s once revered ANC lost its way with infighting and scandals
EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
Average US vehicle age hits record 12.6 years as high prices force people to keep them longer
Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs accused of 2003 sexual assault in lawsuit
Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs accused of 2003 sexual assault in lawsuit