Michigan and Texas A&M are both so bad because they have stubborn coaches that refuse to adapt their schemes to their personnel. It's not stubborn in Michigan's case. It's instilling a new offensive system. Everyone knew Michigan was basically punting this year to get the personnel used to running the spread. Obviously the players at key positions aren't suited for the spread, but by the time we get people who can play it well, the rest of the program will have already had a year of experience running it. Would they not be better running a different system? Why not recruit for a new system and install it when the players can actually run it? Michigan has too much talent -- even this year -- to "punt" a season. It's not what's best for this year's team. It's stubborn in my book. I can see your side, but I really don't mind at all. They hired a coach who is known for running the spread. It takes time for a team to completely shift its offensive philosophies. Maybe the QB or the WRs might not be there for years 2 and 3, but the coaches might, a guard might, I know the RBs might be there. With Lloyd Carr leaving, and a large class of players leaving, it was the perfect time to strip down and start anew. Jim Tressel did the same thing when he took over OSU, and it worked out well for him. I just don't like seeing Michigan bottom out. Nor do I think a whole lot of Rich Rodriguez. Oh I don't like it either. I feel like Michigan sports in general is fading away. Basketball used to be relevant almost every year, and now its embarrassingly bad. Seriously, no NCAA tournament appearances since 97-98? Now football is "bottoming out". I'm just worried that the Michigan name will be tarnished and Rodriguez won't be able to recruit the talent we need to dominate again, and we'll end up being Notre Dame in 5-10 years. At the same time, I'm willing to give this a chance before panning it. I really wish we would have stolen Les Miles though.