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Commentary | college football: Rodriguez mess tells you plenty about him
Thursday, July 10, 2008 6:27 AM
By Michael Rosenberg

Finally, somebody at Michigan was embarrassed enough to settle West Virginia's lawsuit.

Not Rich Rodriguez. He is way too bullheaded. And not athletic director Bill Martin. He was never going to stand up to his football coach.

It took Mary Sue Coleman, the school president, to end this mess. Coleman was on the verge of being deposed, and she obviously didn't want to be dragged into it. Not so coincidentally, Rodriguez finally settled.

Predictably, Rodriguez got absolutely nothing out of this except embarrassment. His $4 million buyout did not go down a dime, but now Michigan will pay $2.5 million of it and Rodriguez only $1.5 million over three installments.

This whole thing could have, and should have, been settled long ago. But RichRod was determined to fight West Virginia to the bitter end. Anybody who has even driven past a law school knew he had no case, but that didn't matter to Rodriguez.

Martin should have told Rodriguez that this whole ordeal was embarrassing the university, and that the case was a lost cause. But Martin's legacy is in Rodriguez's hands, so he let his coach do whatever he wanted.

There are only two winners here. One is West Virginia, which will get the $4 million it is rightfully owed. The other is those of us who just wanted the truth.

We now know Rodriguez to be a serial job-shopper. His agent, Mike Brown, had pitched Rodriguez's services to Alabama, Arkansas and Louisiana State in recent years before pursuing Michigan.

We now know Rodriguez doesn't believe in contracts. He signed an amended contract with West Virginia just four months before he left. He then said that the signed contract was not as important as an oral agreement that preceded it -- a laughable legal argument.

Rodriguez said in December that he was fighting the buyout because "we have to do what we feel is right." He meant right for him, not the school.

Michigan is just a name to him. The school is just a platform for winning championships. This is evident in everything Rodriguez does, from his abandonment of a century-old captains tradition to his bristling at the notion that Michigan holds itself to a higher standard.

"The Michigan way is just the right way," he said in December, before adding that a lot of schools do it the right way.

Rodriguez can charm the media, which is nice. But those who have attended his practices say his staff uses some of the foulest, most degrading language imaginable. This is a big part of why offensive lineman Justin Boren of Pickerington left the team and is transferring to Ohio State. He felt his dignity was at stake.

When Rodriguez was hired, he and Martin spun the story well: Martin landed a premier coach, and Rodriguez, who loved West Virginia, couldn't turn down Michigan. The truth is not as simple, or as pretty.

On Dec. 6, Martin thought he had landed Rutgers coach Greg Schiano. But the next day, Schiano turned down Michigan. Schiano's financial adviser, Mike Wilcox, nudged Michigan in the direction of another of his clients, Rich Rodriguez.

Rodriguez wanted a chance to compete for national championships. Martin saw a chance to hire a big name. They were in love with each other's names -- so much so that they failed to do their due diligence.

Martin met with Wilcox before he ever talked to Rodriguez. When Martin finally met Rodriguez at Wilcox's office in Toledo, he brought Coleman with him.

Martin and Coleman did not go to Toledo to interview Rodriguez. They went there to hire him.

At Rodriguez's introductory news conference, he was still selling the line that he was in Toledo to meet with his financial adviser. You know, like they were discussing tech stocks and all of a sudden the president and athletic director at Michigan magically appeared in the room.

Rodriguez might win big at Michigan. But if he does, and he demands a big raise every year, or flirts with other employers, or ignores his contracts, or refuses to put the school's interests ahead of his own, then Michigan fans should not be surprised. As we have seen in the last few months, this is who he is.


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I don't think he likes Rich.

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Quote:

I don't think he likes Rich.




Not surprised. The Detroit Free Press has slowly turned in to the Spartan Daily. It's a bunch of guys (some of whom went to MSU) who seem to have been hiding in the woods, waiting for the chance to pounce on any story they could.

A few months back they tried to report on an "academic scandal" at Michigan that consisted of a repot (this is such a shocker) that said general studies was a more frequent major for athletes vs. non-athletes. Really?

Was this somewhat of a mess? Sure, it was but for a writer to think that RR would be in control is pretty naive. When the university has given it's blessing to foot almost the entire 4 million dollar buyout, the court battle is over when the AD says it is. They probably gave him (RR) a time table to try and work out a lower dollar figure (as it would save the school money) and they have now reached that deadline and UM said to shut it down. Not really a big story. When there's 4 million dollars involved, legal proceedings take time.

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Sorry Nas, I've defended Michigan before on here... but I'm seeing more and more national news which is unbiased, that thinks Rodriquez is an ass. I don't fault the guy for wanting to win championships, that's what all coaches want... to get to the highest level and win championships. I fault him for not knowing what was in his contract and then trying to fight it or negotiate it away after he found out he didn't like it.

I think colleges should start putting $20 million buyout clauses in the contracts of their big time coaches. I personally am tired of hearing how badly a coach wants to be somewhere, then a week later finding out they left for more money or a more high profile program.


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Quote:

I don't think he likes Rich.




ROFL.. Me neither. Personally, I think the whole mess is hilarious.


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Nas most of the U of M folks I talk to (when we aren't throwing things at each other) are taking a wait and see approach with him. They aren't sold on him either. You seem to be in the minority that I can tell. (disclaimer...........I only actually talk to 4 fans of them regularly but come across others sometimes.)

I saw on the news that OSU has won every game since 2002?????????? Made me laugh out loud!

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Quote:

Nas most of the U of M folks I talk to (when we aren't throwing things at each other) are taking a wait and see approach with him. They aren't sold on him either. You seem to be in the minority that I can tell. (disclaimer...........I only actually talk to 4 fans of them regularly but come across others sometimes.)

I saw on the news that OSU has won every game since 2002?????????? Made me laugh out loud!




Well, I think there's two different types of people who follow UM football. The old regime who would dig Bo up out of his grave if they could and those who consistently follow the changing climate of college football (and are open to change). To be honest, there are still a large portion of Michigan fans who think it's 1975.

A lot of the people who were opposed to RR cited him not having ties to U of M as the big sticking point. It was Les Miles or bust and even today, many people are incredibly unhappy that a "Non-Michigan Man" took the reigns of college footballs winningest program. Personally, I think these are the types that can't see the forest for the trees.

Michigan's program has been stale for some time now. They consistently reeled in top 5 and top 10 recruiting classes but weren't yielding comparable results on the field. They were severely underachieving through both in-game coaching and on field play. The capital one bowl is a perfect example. Michigan turned the ball over TWICE inside the red-zone, marching in for TD's and still handled a damn good Florida team in what was essentially a road bowl game. A team doesn't magically go from losing to Appalachian State to controlling an SEC power without some mismanagement (across the board). That was the most frustrating part about the end of Carr's regime. It wasn't that Michigan couldn't win, it was more so that decisions being made by those in charge (from preparation, to play calling, to personnel) were handicapping the team.

Çollege coaches are far from angels and anyone who thinks otherwise is kidding themselves. RR may be an ass but he's not going to let Michigan's players/program be fat and lazy anymore. Les Miles would have been the same way. He would have been busting heads. Why? Because Michigan's entire team (and program) had gone soft.

Change can be pretty painful but college football is big business. Win and you stay, lose and you go. Good coaches aren't always saints. In a perfect world you'd have Mr. Rogers as your coach but we all know that's pretty unlikely. Argue all you want about how like-able the guy is. I'd be more concerned if people didn't care about RR. Bitterness doesn't arise from the party who got the better end of the deal. If the guy couldn't coach, no one would give a damn what he was doing.

The bottom line is there's three things that really matter: win, don't embarrass yourself/university (i.e. DUI, etc) and run a clean program. Aside from that, no one needs a pastor for a coach.

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Ok, I see where you are coming from. Still don't understand the loyalty to someone who hasn't yet shown you any, but time will tell.. Thanks for the reply!

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I just don't get it. The man hasn't even coached a game yet. He's a different sort of coach, so what? Everything from his practices to his offensive gameplan is different than the norm-this doesn't mean that he's a jerk. Let's see what happens after he has coached for 3 years, then form an opinion. Whether he's arrogant or not won't matter if he's winning Big Ten titles, and National Championships.

- Of course, as an Ohio State fan, I hope he wins nothing

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Quote:

Of course, as an Ohio State fan, I hope he wins nothing




Yay!


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Quote:

To be honest, there are still a large portion of Michigan fans who think it's 1932




There, I fixed that for you.

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Sounds like Rich should fit right in at Michigan. His next job will be coaching Soccer in California.

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