Ty's Men's' College Basketball Preview

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Much to my surprise, and I apologize to my readers that look forward to my preseason sports previews, the men's college basketball season started today. In fact, as I write this, Michigan is set to tip off in 15 minutes.

This will not be my typical preview because the pandemic has halted and postponed and put everything into question. I still find it irresponsible that these kids are playing for no money, risking their lives and risking their futures. But they are playing. There are games scheduled. There is room within schedules to make up games, and they are going to try and bring March Madness back. If you all remember, March Madness was the first big sporting event to be cancelled in March. That was when the world completely changed. This season feels rushed, it feels like it should have been pushed back, and I think they will run into postponements and cancellations, much like college football. But, I still want to do a preview, it will just look different. I'm not going conference by conference, no award predictions, none of my usual stuff, because this is not a usual year. There have already been games postponed in fact. Duke had to push their opener to another day because the team they were supposed to play had an outbreak. This is going to happen everywhere. But, let me try my best to preview the year.

Gonzaga is the number one team in the country according to the NCAA's website. They are no longer a Cinderella team. They are up there with Duke and Kentucky. They are a perennial power, and I am sure they will get bounced earlier than they should from the tournament, if the tournament gets played this year.

Baylor is the number two team in the country, but they already had to pull out of an early season tournament because their coach has COVID. Get used to that happening right now. Lots of teams will miss games because of COVID.

Villanova and Virginia are next, but I know nothing about those teams. I assume they are good because they are always good.

Iowa is number five, and they are the highest ranked Big Ten team. The Big Ten has seven teams in the top 25, and three in the top 10. With Iowa in the top 10, we have Wisconsin at seven and Illinois at eight. The Big Ten appears to be loaded. MSU is thirteen, and the University of Ohio State, Rutgers and Michigan close out the top at twenty-three, twenty-four and twenty-five respectively. I guess the Big Ten will be the best conference, get the most teams in a possible tournament and be hard fought all year. I am stunned at the number of teams from the Big Ten, seven of them, half the league, but hey, I guess the games will be fun and competitive.

Outside that we have the usual suspects in the top 25. Kentucky is ten, Duke is nine, Kansas is six, UNC sixteen and UCLA at twenty-two. I'm sure Duke and Kentucky reloaded with stud, five star freshman. Kansas always has some veteran depth and stud recruits. UNC will assuredly bounce back from last year, and UCLA seems to be returning to a little bit of their glory from the 90's.

I was surprised to see Creigthon so high, at eleven, but hey, I forgot they are in the Big East now.

I'm sure there will be bumps and bruises along the way that aren't involved with COVID. These kids haven't had a real offseason, they haven't had real, traditional practices, they have to be extra, extra cautious with this pandemic, and it is simply going to be a weird, weird season. Honestly I have no idea who will be in the Final Four, and who will win it all, or if there even will be a tournament. I cannot imagine two years without a college basketball season, but it could definitely happen again. I hope it doesn't, I hope they find a way to pull this way, but I will watch with caution. There is so much that can gum up this season. I hope no one gets sick, I hope there is a tournament and I hope they pull it off. I will be watching, and hoping, all season long.

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing, the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast, and the greatest basketball writer on the internet.

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Dabo Swinney is a Dumbass

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I noticed this past weekend that Clemson's game against Florida State was canceled. I assumed it was COVID related, and reading up on it that morning confirmed my assumption. Apparently Clemson had a lineman that tested positive travel on the plane with them to the game. This is against all the new protocols, this is morally wrong and it was a tremendous oversight by the adults in charge at Clemson. After finding out the news, FSU's medical staff thought it wasn't safe to play the game, and they had it canceled, or maybe postponed. Either way, Clemson-FSU didn't happen on Saturday.

I am not one to side with FSU often, I do not like that program at all, but on this topic, I one hundred percent think they made the right call. Who knows who could have been exposed to it, who knows how many people the player interacted with, it is too dangerous a situation to go out and play a college football game. After the cancellation, I thought nothing of it, this is happening every weekend in college football, these kids probably shouldn't be playing right now and I didn't think it would be brought up again. I was wrong because Dabo Swinney is a holier than thou moron that doesn't know when to keep his goddamn mouth shut.

I am not a Dabo fan at all. I dislike him as much as FSU football. He is too rah rah, way too Jesusy and just gets on my nerves. But what he said yesterday was truly astonishing and appalling. He claimed that FSU made up the COVID incident so they wouldn't have to play. I'm sure he said it in other ways, but the gist, at least to me, was he was calling FSU a bunch of babies and wimps. Keep in mind, Clemson had a COVID positive player on a flight with the rest of the team. That doesn't seem to matter to Swinney, who thinks that a D1 college would make up a story so they wouldn't have to play a football game.

This is an outrageous claim by a guy who is getting way, way too big for his britches. I think he thinks he is college football. I think he thinks that people come out to watch him coach, not to see the players play. I think he thinks he is bigger than the game and he can call people and other universities out because he has won a few titles. No other coach has made this claim during this COVID filled college football season. Brian Kelly didn't say anything when Notre Dame had to close down operations for two weeks. Alabama's game against LSU was canceled for COVID last weekend, and I didn't see Nick Saban saying Ed Oregeron was too afraid to take the field. Ryan Day wasn't all up in arms when the University of Ohio State's game two weeks ago against Maryland was canceled because of an outbreak within the Maryland program. None of the coaches of the top teams in football have made this claim this year. But leave it to good old boy Dabo Swinney to throw a fit because he allowed a player with a highly contagious virus to fly on a plane, and blame the other school and call them scared.

This is nonsense, and more so, it is dangerous. These kids, that we know of, do not get paid to play college football. They go to these schools in hopes of furthering their careers. But in reality, most don't make it to the pros. But Swinney, and a whole lot of other college football coaches, make more money than anyone else in their respective states. So to him, not playing a game is a missed paycheck, and less money in his pocket. Instead of taking this pandemic as seriously as he should be, we all should be, he uses bullying and name calling. This is a despicable act, and I am shocked that no one has really called him out for this behavior. This is something a child would do. Swinney, with this comment, really showed me that he does not care about the safety and well-being of any college athlete, including the ones on his own team. I am deeply disturbed he took this route, and it made me lose any respect I may have had for him.

Dabo Swinney may be a good coach, but he is not a good person, especially if this is the route he is going to take when games get canceled because there is a deadly pandemic currently ravaging our country. I am stunned by his words.

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing and the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast.

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Thoughts on the 2020 NBA Draft

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I wrote about my top prospects, my busts and sleepers prior to the draft last night, and now I am here to talk about what I liked, and disliked from the draft. I do want to say, every player I talked about yesterday was picked. That might be a first for me. I hope the ones I considered a "bust" prove me wrong, and some of my sleepers went way before I thought they would.

With that being said, I have some thoughts. The top three went as expected. Edwards was one, Wiseman two and Ball three. Two of these guys I had in my "busts" category. But, if you remember, I said if the Warriors drafted Wiseman my point was moot. That was exactly what happened, I think it is for the best for Wiseman, and even with the unfortunate news about Klay Thompson today, he tore his ACL again, Wiseman will still get to play on a very good team, and he won't be asked to be the star. This is the perfect situation for him. Ball to the Hornets may be what is best for him too. He is in a small market, not many people will be entirely focused on what he is doing and now Michael Jordan can beat his dad's ass in one on one. He still has some things to work on, but being out of the limelight might be best for him. Edwards is in a fine position too. He goes to a team with two all stars, they won't be expected to make the playoffs, and he will be able to display his athleticism without having to be the reason to watch the Timberwolves. These three kids ended up in probably the best case scenarios they could. That was nice to see.

Outside the top three, the draft went kind of off the rails. I do not like the Bulls taking the big from FSU, Patrick Williams. He is raw, he is also athletic, but he has a ton of work to do. Hopefully Billy Donovan will bring him along slow. The Cavs took the Okoro kid from Auburn, and I don't know much about him. The Hawks, who I thought were trying to make a trade, took the Okongwu kid from USC. I think he will fit in nice for the youth, but he won't turn many heads. The Pistons appear to still be in tank mode taking Killian Hayes at seven. They now have him and Blake Griffin. They will be lucky to win 20 games this year. The Knicks did the best thing, in my opinion, last night when they snatched Obi Toppin. He gets to pair up with Mitchell Robinson in the front court, and the two of them can make the Knicks relevant again. I loved this pick, and I texted RD to tell him how much I liked it, and that the Knicks better now screw this kid up. This was great. Then we had the Tel Aviv kid go to Wahsington, solid pick, the Suns got another hard working big in Jalen Smith, the Spurs took another young shooter in Devin Vassell, although I think they might make some moves, the Pelicans got a steal in Kira Lewis Jr and the lottery wrapped with Aaron Nesmith going to Boston, where I think he will see little to no playing time.

Outside the lottery, I love Cole Anthony to Orlando. He should start over Markelle Fultz from day one. The Heat got a solid three or four in Precious Achiuwa. I really like the Jazz taking Adoka Uzobuike. He will be a great backup to Gobert, if he stays. I wasn't so high on the Celtics taking Payton Pritchard. He is a college guy who just won't translate to the NBA. That was a reach. I wasn't too crazy about the Bucks taking RJ Hampton. Now that the Bogdanovic trade has fallen through, I thought they would go after a shooter, but they took a middling point guard instead. And I don't get the Thunder trading Ricky Rubio back to the Timberwolves for more picks. They have all the picks seemingly, but they could have used Rubio next to SGA.

The second round went faster, and I love that the Grizzlies took Xavier Tillman. He was another guy I didn't like in college, because he abused Michigan, but he will be good next to Jaren Jackson Jr, and he will be a nice spark off the bench. The Knicks hit another home run when they took Daniel Oturu. He will be a great bench player for them, and he adds depth and size. Cassius Winston didn't go until very late, pick 53, but he ended up with the Wizards, and I think he will be an exceptional backup to John Wall, and Bradley Beal will adore him. Nico Mannion may finally learn to shoot properly in Golden State, but I don't think he will see the floor much. And as for the Duke players, some got picked, and may be okay. But they won't be counted on to do much of anything.

This was a weird draft, but a fun draft. If I had to pick a team that "won", I'd actually go with the Knicks. They got my top prospect, and added one of my favorite sleepers. I also appreciate that the Warriors took Wiseman. Now I want to see how these players do in their first season, and I wish them nothing but the best.

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing, the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast, and the greatest basketball writer on the internet.

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Ty's 2020 NBA Draft Preview

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The NBA draft is on tonight.

I know it feels like the season just ended, and that is because it basically just did. If you have been under a rock, the NBA had to stop play for three months, then finish up the 2019-20 season in the Orlando bubble. The season concluded in, I believe, late September. Then the NBA announced they were going to do a 72 game sprint season, with no all star game or festivities, and that the season would start on December 22nd. They have now let teams make trades, the draft is tonight, free agency starts on Friday and training camps and preseason start in early December. It has all been a whirlwind, but I am happy to know that I will be watching NBA games in just over one month. It's like a late birthday gift for me. I did my take on trades yesterday, and today I want to do my version of a draft preview.

I don't like doing mock drafts either. I feel like they are a waste of time. What I do like doing is picking five prospects I really like, five I think will "bust" and five sleepers. I usually give the players a sentence or two on why I have them where I do, and then it is on to the next one. Also, I'm not a big fan of calling these kids "busts". They are about to become pro basketball players, something I only ever dreamed of. But until I can find a better word for it, I guess I will have to use "bust".

Let's do the five prospects I really like in this draft. As you all know, I am not a big fan of the "one and done" thing, and I am not particularly high on teams that draft a 19 year old over a 22 year old because they think the 22 year old is "too old". That will be reflected in my five favorite prospects.

Number one for me is Obi Toppin. I love this kid's game. I actually saw him live before the world went to hell. I saw SLU almost beat Dayton in fact. But it was Toppin who wouldn't let his team lose. He is long, athletic, can shoot the three a bit, is a great, and smart offensive player and will get better on defense. I would take him number one overall. He did play three years of college ball, but who cares. This kid is the real deal, and he is my favorite player in the draft.

My number two prospect is Tyrese Haliburton from Iowa State. I know he missed a chunk of the year, but when he played he shot the hell out of the ball, and he is the best passer in the draft. He has two years of college basketball behind him, and he seems to have a natural feel. He will have to fix his release point, it is a bit low right now, but he will come in right away and be a top notch passer in the NBA.

At number three I have Anthony Edwards. I know he has gotten flak for kind of disappearing in games and practices, but this kid is built, can score from anywhere and he has an NBA body. He is a freshman, and he will struggle, but with gifts like he has on the offensive end, I think he will instantly be better than guys like RJ Barrett or Colin Sexton. He is ready to score.

At number four I have Kira Lewis Jr from Alabama. I didn't know much about him early in the season, but I watched him play Kentucky one afternoon, and I was blown away. He is an excellent ball handler, a pass first guard and has the size to match up with almost any other guard in the league. If he gets put in the right spot, he could be a future all star.

My number five prospect I like is Sadiiq Bey from Villanova. To me he is the Draymond Green of this draft, except a better shooter. He isn't the most athletic, or the best ball handler, but the kid can score, he can spot up and shoot and he plays defense. He may be a guy who tumbles a bit, but he will make the teams that pass him regret it. He has the tools to be a very good modern small lineup "big" type player.

Now to the "busts".

At number one I have LaMelo Ball. Now, I know I have written in the past how much I dislike the father, but this is not me dunking on this kid. I think he is too entitled, doesn't have a solid shot and won't thrive when he is asked to be the do it all man. I think he is an excellent passer and has a good feel, but I just think whatever team takes him in the top three will ask him to be the star, and he is not ready for that. That will take years, and NBA teams don't give players the time anymore.

At number two, and this is really hard for me because I want this kid to succeed so much, is James Wiseman. If he gets drafted by the Warriors, my point is moot. That would be perfect. But if any other team takes him, it is just like Ball. He will be asked to do it all, to be the reason fans, when allowed, come to watch the game. He hasn't played a real game in over a year, and the pressure just seems too much. I hope the Warriors take him, but if they don't, it will be tough sledding.

At number three I have Killian Hayes. Some people love this kid, but his shooting percentages are not good, his turnovers are way too high, he struggled on an average team overseas, it just doesn't add up to me. I could see him falling way down in the draft, which might be the best thing for him. But for some people to have him as the top prospect, or a top five guy, I just don't see it.

At number four, give me any Duke player that declared for the draft this year. They did not have one of the greatest freshman classes of the past. There is no Zion or Barrett or Jahlil Okafor or Jabari Parker. But the majority of that team declared for the draft, and I wouldn't be surprised if none of them were first round picks.

At number five I have Nico Mannion. This kid was the talk of the town going into last season, and he did absolutely nothing to move the needle in my opinion. He is a worse version of Nik Stauskas if you ask me. He's a spotty shooter, not much of a passer or ball handler, and he will get abused on the defensive end of the floor. Hopefully he can prove me wrong, but I just don't see it at all with him.

Now for the sleepers.

I don't watch much international basketball, and when I do it is usually clips on YouTube, but Deni Avdija from Maccabi Tel Aviv is legit. It may seem ridiculous that I have him as a sleeper, most mocks have him top five, but for me he is a sleeper. I didn't know who he was a month ago, and now I watch his highlights as much as I did Giannis and Thon Maker's when they were coming up. Hopefully he finds a middle ground between those two, but he is going to be solid.

My number two sleeper is Cassius Winston from Michigan State. I do not like watching this kid, and he carved up Michigan for four years. But I have seen him play so much, and I am stunned he isn't a first round lock. The kid can score, he can shoot from anywhere, he attacks the rim and he orchestrated a very complex offense in college to a T. He is also a very solid defender. If he falls to a contender in the late first or early second round, that would be a gift for that team. He is ready to contribute right away, and he will have a very solid NBA career.

At number three I have Cole Anthony. This kid went to UNC with a ton of fanfare, then got hurt, then UNC had a very bad year and I think people forgot about him. He is a prototype point guard, he is strong and he will be a much better NBA player than he was a college player because he feels like the type of player that thrives when playing better competition. I think teams will really regret passing on him. I look at him a lot the way I looked at Ben Simmons. And while Anthony is no Simmons, their college careers were similar, and they both just wanted to get to the league. I like Cole Anthony a lot.

At number four I have Daniel Oturu from Minnesota. Yeah it is my second Big Ten guy, but that is the conference I watch. This kid is big and athletic and will be a solid rotation guy on a good team. If he could fall to someone like Dallas or the Clippers, he will be a much needed punch off the bench. He will probably be a second round pick, but he is a first round talent.

My final sleeper, at number five I have Udoka Azubuike from Kansas. This kid is big, strong and not afraid of anyone. Think Montrezl Harrell, but 3 inches taller. He will be a great rim protector, a good old fashioned center and will be a very solid spot minutes guy until he lands as a sixth or seventh man on a playoff team.

There you have it, my fifteen players in three categories to look out for tonight during the draft. I know I left a ton of guys out, but college basketball ended abruptly, these kids haven't played real games in close to a year and these are the guys I remember most, good and bad. I am pumped for the draft tonight. The NBA offseason is in full swing people. This is great.

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing, the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast, and the greatest basketball writer on the internet.

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The NBA Trade Season is Off to a Bang

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The NBA trade season officially started yesterday afternoon. There were some moves early in the day, Dennis Schroeder was traded to the Lakers and Bruce Brown went to the Nets. I thought this would kind of be what day one was going to be, but by noon my time, things had ratcheted up big time.

As I was sitting down to write about Michigan football, Chris Paul was traded to the Suns. I've got to say, I heard rumors about him to the Suns, but I didn't think it was going to happen. I figured he would go back to the Clippers, maybe the Bucks or maybe even the Knicks. But, he ended up in Phoenix, and I like the trade for both teams. Chris Paul makes the Suns infinitely better. He is a better point guard than anyone they have on their roster, they didn't have to give up too much and he is now paired with Devin Booker in the Suns backcourt. Booker has been clamoring for a player who can push them to the playoffs, and I think Paul is that guy. Look what he did with the Thunder roster last year, and the Suns roster is similar, if not better. Booker is an all star, Deandre Ayton has the makings of a very solid modern big, Dario Saric seemed to find some renewed confidence in the bubble and Mikail Bridges seemed to get better and better during his rookie year. Add Chris Paul to that, and the Suns have the look of a 6 or 7 seed to me.

In return, the Thunder got more picks, they seem to have them all throughout 2026, and they added Ricky Rubio, Kelly Oubre Jr and Jalen Lecque. The Thunder just got way younger, which I think they want, and they have some fun dudes to pair with Shai Gilgeous Alexander. I kind of like the backcourt of him and Ricky Rubio. Throw in Oubre Jr as a three, and this team will fly. They were also able to keep Lou Dort, who was a defensive revelation in the bubble. The Thunder will crash back down to Earth this season, but they will be fun as hell to watch on League Pass.

This was just the start of what ended up being a big day one. Later in the day some more vets for vets trades happened. The Rockets traded Robert Covington to the Blazers for Trevor Ariza and picks, DeMar DeRozan and Andre Drummond picked up their options, and Anthony Davis, Kentavious Caldwell Pope and Rajon Rondo all opted out of their contracts. I figured the Paul trade and the opting in and out would be it for the day, but around 10:30pm my time, two more big trades happened, both involving the Bucks.

First the Bucks got Jrue Holiday. I was shocked when I read this. I didn't even know that Holiday and the Bucks were an option. I had no idea that they were even talking. But this trade is an absolute home run for both teams. This is almost identical, to me, as the Paul to the Suns trade. The Bucks needed a better point guard, a two way guard that won't shrink in big games, and they got him. And they were able to get off Eric Bledsoe's deal, and they added George Hill. Losing Hill will be a bummer for the second group. but when the Bucks saw a chance to get Jrue Holiday, they jumped on it. I should also mention they added three future first round picks and 2 pick swaps. I think it was absolutely worth it. If the Bucks want to Keep Giannis, to get him to sign the super max, they needed to do a deal like this. I like Eric Bledsoe, but Jrue Holiday is a better player, full stop. Pairing him up with Giannis will make them so much more lethal in pick and roll, and on defense, my goodness they may be better than the Clippers now. Those two guys alone can stop three to four players at once. This was great.

I mentioned the players and the picks the Pelicans got in return. I am sure they will release George Hill, and I wouldn't be shocked if they do the same with Bledsoe. If they keep those guys though, they will be nice vets to have on a team that is very talented, but also very, very young. Bledsoe and Hill have put in the work and they deserve to be the veteran presence a young team needs. And the Pelicans have almost as many picks as the Thunder now. I feel like the draft, after this season, will just be the Pelicans and Thunder picking players and building their teams.

When I thought the Bucks had already won the night by adding Holiday, they went out and got one of the better shooters on the market this offseason, trading for Bogdan Bogdanovic. It was a sign and trade too. The Bucks lacked consistent shooters, that is what killed them in the playoffs in the last two years. But now they have added a defensive minded, pass first point guard that can shoot, and now they have a lethal outside shooter in Bogdanovic. He proved last year in Sacramento that he can stroke it from distance. Now Holiday has a guy he can kick to when people clog the lane for Giannis, and Giannis also has two guys he can go to when he is double and tripled teamed, and he can count on them. He hasn't really had that yet in Milwaukee. But after last night, the Bucks decided they were going to do whatever they could to entice him to stay, and that is exactly what they should do. The Bucks didn't have to give up nearly as much to get Bogdanovic either. They traded DJ Wilson, former Michigan Wolverine, but not much of a player in the NBA, Donte DiVincenzo, who has been more down than up so far in his career, and Ersan Ilyasova, who is a journeyman. They got a young, legit top tier shooter, and they only had to give up unproven, or on the end of their career players. Sacramento is going to do something else, they always do on draft night, but they didn't get much in return for Bogdanovic.

The Bucks are clearly trying to show Giannis that they are all in, and they want him to stay, and I think these moves prove that tenfold. While they gave up five players and five future picks to a pair of teams, and only got two players in return, they got the better of both trades in my opinion.

If day one was any indication of how this offseason is going to go, which I expected to be nuts, we are on the right track. I'm curious to see what else happens, especially since Harden says he wants out of Houston now, and I am excited. I like this part of the NBA offseason, and it truly started off with a bang.

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing, the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast, and the greatest basketball writer on the internet.

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Michigan Football is Terrible This Season

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NBA trade season, free agency and the draft are all this week, but first I have to touch on my Wolverines yet again.

I know I talked about them last Monday, and kind of gave a state of where I think the program currently is. But today is different. Watching them get absolutely hammered on Saturday night was a sobering reality of how bad this team really is right now. And it is everywhere. This team is not very talented, or the talent hasn't been developed yet, the coaching is at the bottom of the barrel, and while I still do not want anyone to get fired because of this COVID season, I feel like Saturday night was the deathblow for this staff. I don't think there should be changes, and this is pure speculation on my part, but I just don't see this team improving much, if at all, and I think Harbaugh and Michigan will end up having a "mutual parting of ways" at the end of the season. When I looked at the remaining schedule last week, I thought I saw one, maybe two more wins. Now, after what Wisconsin was able to do, and how thoroughly they pummeled them, I truly do not see another win on this schedule. I fully believe that they will finish 1-7, and definitely miss out on a bowl game, and be at the bottom of the Big Ten. The Wisconsin game was my last ditch effort to really see what this team was made of. This was the game where they would either show me they had some life, or if they have already given up. It was pretty clear, after the second interception, they gave up. From that second pick, and Wisconsin scoring pretty much right away, to push the lead to 14-0, Michigan just quit. I have not seen a team quit like that since Rich Rodriguez was the coach, and his teams were far less talented, at least on paper, than the one I watched on Saturday.

It was a deflating loss, it was a brutal loss, and my dad and I were left wondering, where do they go from here? We both agreed that what we were watching is fully on the coaches. Yes, the players have to play and make plays. But, coaches have to scheme a game plan that works, and works with the players who get the bulk of the playing time. This Michigan defense just seems lost. They over pursue. They get beat to the outside in the run and pass game. The corners are not good. They commit far too many penalties. The D line cannot get pressure, and they got gashed in the run game Saturday night. I understand that they are missing Aiden Hutchinson and Kwity Paye, but Michigan recruits and gets top flight players every year. Injured players are not a viable excuse anymore. The linebackers seem like the only players worth a darn, but even they get beat in the pass game, and their tackling, outside Cam McGrone, is not good. The offense is just as lost, if not more so than the defense. The O line, since the opener at Minnesota, has totally regressed. Again, you can claim injuries, but when they had Steuber and Mayfield they weren't opening any holes. They are not very good in pass protection either. The receivers are getting zero separation, and when they are put out wide for screens, they are too slow to make much of anything happen. The running backs don't get a chance to ever get going, and when they do get carries, they dance and bounce and are usually brought down by the first tackler. I still believe that Joe Milton is the guy. He is, for me, the lone bright spot. Some Wolverine fans may read that and chastise me and tell me to go watch Cade McNamara's TD drive. That was one drive against Wisconsin's backups when the game was totally out of hand. Milton was going to have ups and downs, I have been saying that from the start. But his upside is so much greater than any other QB on that roster right now. I say let him play through this and learn, let him get through this year, and let him develop.

Again though, this all comes back to coaching. These kids don't seem to have a sense of urgency or pride. That is on the coaches. The players seem to think that they will win just because they are Michigan. That's on the coaches. The players never seem prepared or ready, and have fallen behind early in every game this year. That is on the coaches. When the MSU game happened, I thought that was a one time thing. This team has been that same team for three weeks now. The team we have seen against MSU, Indiana and Wisconsin is who they really are. The Minnesota game was a mirage, and Minnesota isn't that good either.

I do still think the coaches should be retained. I don't want them to get rid of everyone for a myriad of reasons. I don't think they will get anyone that will excite the fanbase like Harbaugh did in 2014, and I don't think the NFL is banging down his door to be a head coach. Don Brown has had some great, great defenses since taking over, but his scheme is not working with these kids, and he doesn't have the talent. His refusal to change is also kind of alarming. Michigan is still getting beat with crossing patterns with ease. And I don't think Josh Gattis has been given full responsibility to run the offense. I still think Harabugh is influencing his play calling. But, as I said before, I feel like there will be changes. I think the way Wisconsin beat them was too much to ignore for the boosters and the more rabid fans. I also think that a change will put this team behind the eight ball for another four or five years. Michigan is not in a place to go out and get a top flight coach, and there will be attrition and transfers. They will have to start all over again. As much as I don't want to see it happen, it just seems inevitable at this point.

I will still watch Michigan football every Saturday, as I have done since I was a teenager, and I will root them on with all of my heart. But there is no two ways about it, this team is not very good, and they are poorly coached.

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing and the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast.

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Where Should Russell Westbrook Play Next Season

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Russell Westbrook said the other day that he wants out of Houston.

This felt inevitable to me. He seemed to like playing with James Harden, but his role was so diminished, he isn't a very good shooter, remember I love Russ, and when he got hurt and the pandemic hit, it felt like his time with the Rockets was going to end sooner rather than later. They got blasted by the Lakers in the second round of the playoffs, Russ didn't do much, and then Mike D'Antoni decided to leave, and it just seemed like it was going to be a full reset around Harden. That is all well and good, and it works for a player like Harden, but Russ is also an alpha, and I just couldn't really see him taking another year where he isn't the top guy on the team. He even said as much when he said he wanted out of Houston. He wants the ball in his hands like he did when he was with OKC. I totally get it. This thing in Houston felt like a one, maybe two year thing from the start. They didn't win a title, so now he wants to move on.

I have already seen some spots that people are saying he will go to. Some I think might work, others, no way it would work. For instance, the Clippers came up. I do not like this fit at all. Russ wants to be the alpha, but the Clippers already have Kawhi and Paul George. Kawhi Leonard is one of the best two way players in the game, and when George and Russ were teammates in OKC, George came up bigger when they needed it most. It sounds nice on paper, three superstars, but these three just don't mesh. I kind of think George and Kawhi don't mesh well yet either. I think they will figure it out this year, but if they added Russ, that would throw a wrench in all of that. Russ is an exceptional basketball talent, but the Clippers would have to give up way too much, and I just don't think the three stars would fit. Similarly, I do not like the Clippers for Russ at all.

I have also heard the Knicks are a spot he might like to go. This, in theory, makes a ton of sense. But I do not like this fit either. He would be the alpha immediately. He would get every touch and every big shot and he would be in the biggest market. He could put up a triple double every night with insane numbers in New York. I think, when fans are allowed, they would love him there too. But, why I don't like this fit, the Knicks are going to be terrible for a while. Russ could put up all the numbers he wanted, but at the end of the day, the Knicks are, at best, a 20 win team next year if they sign Russ, and more like a 15 win team without him. They would have him and Mitchell Robinson, and not much else. I haven't given up on RJ Barrett yet, but he was very up and down last year. But Kevin Knox and Frank Knilitina, guys like that, I have given up on. The Knicks would also have to totally rehaul their roster to acquire Russ, and I think Houston would most want Mitchell Robinson. The Knicks need to keep him because he is really good, really young and getting better. He is a building block player. I also don't think Russ would be happy being on a lottery team.

The most recent team I heard, and I shockingly to myself really like, is Charlotte. The Hornets are not a very good team, but they are young, they could use a guy like Russ, who demands so much attention, and they play in the East. I think if they could find a way to get Russ, and keep their young core, he could vault them to the playoffs. I think if Charlotte could get off by only giving up picks, and a guy like Nic Batum or Terry Rozier or Malik Monk, they should absolutely do it. They could pair Russ in the backcourt with Devante Graham, and then they have hyper athletic front court guys like Miles Bridges and PJ Washington. And then they have Tyler Zeller, who is a very poor man's Steven Adams, whom Russ thrived with. I don't think this move would vault the Hornets to the top of the East, not by a mile, but I think it would put them ahead of teams like Orlando or Indiana, if they trade Oladipo. It would also make them instantly better than Atlanta, Cleveland and Detroit. I also think Russ thrives when he is in a smaller market. He won an MVP in OKC. He carried that team. Then he had to go play in a bigger market with a bigger star, and it just didn't work. I like Charlotte the most for him for so many reasons. He is also a Jordan guy, so it doesn't hurt that the team is owned by Michael Jordan himself. I think they should pull the trigger and make a trade for Russ, and I think he should accept it. It would be weird to see him in a Hornets jersey at first, but I think he would make them a 40 win team, and that could put them in the 6,7 or 8 spot in the East. They want to make the playoffs, and Russell Westbrook could help get them there.

We will see how this all plays out.

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing, the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast, and the greatest basketball writer on the internet.

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Michigan Football is Not Very Good

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Yesterday's blog was much more fun to write, and I am still kind of on a high from the results. But today, for personal and sports related reasons, today's blog won't be as much fun. Today I want to talk about my Michigan Wolverines football team.

Right off the bat, they are not a very good football team right now, and their schedule is only going to get much, much harder. Right now, if they get to play this weekend, they have Wisconsin, who has a great QB, a much better Rutgers team, Penn State, who will be going all out the rest of the season, a totally revamped and potent Maryland team and they end at the University of Ohio State. There is, maybe, two more wins there. I said when I did my preseason Big Ten thing, that Michigan was at best a 5-3 team, but more likely a 4-4 team. If the schedule plays out like I think, they will either be 2-6 or 3-5, and that feels right, even if it is not very good. This team is very young. This team has been exposed in the last two weeks. They are getting out played and out coached. The O line can't create holes, and the D line cannot get pressure. The running backs situation is almost too much. They are trying to get too many guys touches. The receivers aren't getting separation and, in the short pass game, they get tackled right away.

The only positive I have seen on the offensive side of the ball is Joe Milton. I expected him to have ups and downs all season. This is his first real playing time in major college football, and he was extremely raw coming in. But he has been good. I don't care about the picks last week, and the lack of running, he has a tremendous arm, good pocket presence and looks like he will be just fine if given proper time.

The defense is bad. Flat out. As mentioned before, the D line gets no push and no pressure, and with Aiden Hutchinson and Kwity Paye getting hurt last week, that doesn't appear to be changing anytime soon. The D line also has no discipline. They jumped offside about a million times last week. The secondary is worse. I knew it would be a transition, and that they would be the weakest link, but not this weak. They get beat on a regular basis, they interfere more times than not and they are not good tacklers. The only guy who is worth his weight in the secondary is Daxton Hill. He is good, he is just surrounded by players not close to his level. The linebackers are okay, but they can't cover either, and when they get to the QB, it is too late. They are getting exposed on run pass option plays too. They are committing too hard. Even the special teams is bad. Giles Jackson tries to house every kickoff, but usually ends up at the 15 yard line. The punters hold and hold and hold onto the ball before kicking. And field goal kicking is a mess.

This team is simply not that good. But, I do not think many changes need to be made. I'll get to the coaches in a minute, but I think the players on the field need to take their wounds and learn. Milton needs to realize how tough the Big Ten is. The running backs need to figure out how to manufacture positive gains. The receivers and tight ends need to work on making catches and then running. The defense needs to find a way to get pressure, like they always have under Don Brown, and let the linebackers fly all over the field. The only position I would look at making changes is cornerback. I think Gemon Green is fine. He made a few plays last week after settling down. But Vincent Gray just isn't cutting it. He either gets beat, or commits a penalty. They should let one of their high recruits come in and play. I also think the kids on the field need to stop pressing and just play. That was the clear difference in last week's game against Indiana. Indiana was having fun and Michigan looked miserable.

At 1-2, and with the upcoming schedule, they should just play like they have nothing to lose because they do. They won't be in a bowl game, they won't be playing for a Big Ten title, just go out there and play hard for guys like Kwity Paye and Ronnie Bell, but also have fun doing it. Football is a game. Games are supposed to be fun.

As for the coaching staff, I do not think changes should be made at the end of the year. I know Harbaugh has said, or is has been reported, that he is willing to return to the NFL. That is all well and good, but I don't think he will leave to be an assistant, and the same people that reported he was willing to return have said that there won't be much, if any, of a market for him as a head coach. He also basically gets to do what he wants at Michigan, and he is paid handsomely to do so. Also, who would Michigan go out and get that would bring the excitement that Harbaugh brought in 2014. I know it hasn't been as expected, but is Luke Fickell or Brent Venables or David Shaw or Matt Campbell going to return Michigan to glory? I don't think so. I think if they have a split, Michigan will be back to a full on rebuild akin to when Lloyd Carr retired. As for the coordinators, I think they should retain their jobs as well. Josh Gattis is only on the second year of his job, and he still hasn't gotten carte blanche. Michigan may say he has, but it is clear that he has three or four guys in his ear at any time. This team needs to spread it out more, but they tend to still lean on the run. When they let it fly, when Milton gets his shot, the offense has potential. Gattis deserves the opportunity to fully run his offense. And Don Brown is the topic of many a conversation about letting him go. I like Don Brown, and while his defense needs tweaks, they have been in the top ten ever since he has been at Michigan. They won't be this year, but this year is different. He should make adjustments, and I am sure he will, but I still appreciate his attacking style, and I want him to stick around to help mold the young players he has right now. I do not think coaching changes are the answer.

Finally, this football season has been bizarre and filled with far too many issues. These kids are playing games after having no true practices. We are in the midst of a pandemic. The players are risking their lives to play football for free. I will never put any kind of real stock into this season because there have been so many weird things that have happened. And they are only going to play, at best, nine games in the Big Ten. This football season doesn't feel real to me. So for the people who make the choices, I have to imagine they have that in the back of their minds. So, while Michigan is a bad football team right now, I would only make a few tweaks and changes, and I would not get rid of any coaches. They need to play free and have fun with the rest of the year, and then we take next season, and that is the season where we see what this team is really made of. That is what I think they should do.

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing and the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast.

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Thoughts on the Upcoming NBA Season

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Still no final results yet in the election. There are still lots of ballots to be counted, and we will have to wait, as hard as it may be for a lot of us right now. Just let them count all the votes and try your best to stay calm. But, we do have news in the NBA world as of last night. Let’s talk about that.

The NBA decided to start the 2020-21 season next month on December 22nd. This had been in the works for a while, and it only seemed like a matter of time until it was official. I think this definitely has pros and cons. It also means that we are a mere month and a half away from more NBA basketball, which I love. I believe training camps will start on December 1st, the draft is two weeks away, set for November 11th, and then free agency will ramp up. Basically a lot of stuff is going to happen in the next month. There is going to be a flurry of movement, draft picks and teams getting ready to go. They have also cut the schedule down to 72 games, and there is less travel. There will be more back to backs, but less travel, which is a good thing in this COVID world.

As far as what I don't like about this news, there are a few things. One, I do not think there was enough time for the four teams that made it to the conference finals, and especially the two finals teams. Those teams are going to have to recover from any nagging injuries, and they're going to have to gel with the new players quickly. They also may not be fully into the season until maybe January. I saw LeBron said that he might coast the first month, as he should. He just played a ton of basketball in the bubble, and he is older than other players. He needs to let his body rest. I also think this will cause a ton of players to use "load management" as an excuse just to get a break. I also think this is going to really water down the upcoming draft. I think the lottery teams will know who they want, but a lot of other teams are going to be trying to make moves to get vets in so they feel more prepared for the fast approaching season. I also think more guys will come in a bit more out of shape. There just hasn't been as much time, even for the teams that only played the eight seeding games.

On the good side, I am pumped for NBA guys. I love that there is going to be so many deals made between now and December. I like to see how trades are made and how players feel about it, and especially in such a short amount of time. I'm curious to see how the draft goes down too. I think it will look like the NFL draft, but I bet there will be a plethora of moves on draft day. I also like that teams that didn't get invited to the bubble will be able to play basketball sooner rather than having to wait even longer. I'm especially excited to see Golden State. They have everyone back, minus KD, and they have the second overall pick. Speaking of KD, I am kind of excited to see the Nets. KD is back, Kyrie should be healthy and they have a whole new coaching staff. I'm curious to see how Giannis comes out after winning his second MVP award. And I love that they will still have their Christmas day games. That is a tradition that I adore.

All in all I'm happy that the NBA is coming back. They showed how well they can handle the pandemic, but this will be a whole other animal. They will have to deal with travel, little to no fans in arenas, and I'm sure some positive COVID tests. But I have faith that the NBA will do the right, and best thing for the players and teams. This is some good sports news, and that is much needed given how rough football has been so far. It will be good to be watching NBA games next month. I know that much.

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing, the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast, and the greatest basketball writer on the internet.

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Green Bay Did Nothing at the Trade Deadline. That is Not Good

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Since we have no final results yet on the election last night, I am going to write about sports. In fact, I'm going to go full bore back into all pop culture right after we have some kind of resolution to this election. It has been wild and crazy, and seems like it will continue to be for quite some time, so sit back, find something else to occupy your mind, and try to relax. I know that is what I'm going to try and do.

Anyway, the NFL trade deadline came and went, and nothing really happened. This whole season has been weird. There are no fans, teams seem to come in and out of seriousness, players that don't get COVID seem to injure themselves and it has been a very, very down year, as I expected. What I didn't expect though, was the Packers not getting another receiver to help out Aaron Rodgers and Davante Adams.

I had been hearing and reading, I have barely watched any games this year, that Green Bay was in the market for a wideout. I thought they could have drafted one, but with the deadline approaching the other day, it seemed like they had some deals in place, or at the very least, talked to some teams about making a trade. The Packers have parts too. They can trade assets, they could give up draft picks. they have younger guys that could see the field on other teams, they have options is what I am getting at. And they wouldn't have to tear apart the core that has them sitting at 5-2 right now. But they didn't pull the trigger. They didn't make any moves. The deadline came and went, and they stood pat. This seems like a Mike McCarthy style move. I thought they were past that. I thought, with Matt LaFleur being this young "offensive guru", that they would try and put players that could work in his system. They didn't.

I'm not knocking the current guys. I love Davante Adams. I like Aaron Jones and Jamall Williams. I think the O line is great. And I knew they weren't going to get a guy like AJ Green, or go out and sign Dez Bryant or even try and lure a player from a contender, like Allen Robinson. But I thought they could get someone. I was actually really hoping that the Will Fuller trade was going to happen. He is on a bad team, he doesn't get targets, he seems like he wants out and wants to go to a good team, and Green Bay could have really used him opposite Adams. If they were able to swing a deal, and get two upper tier wideouts, why not go for it? This could have really helped out the entire offense. Teams would have had to gameplan for what could have been an even more explosive offense. When healthy, you put Rodgers out there with Adams and Fuller at wide out, that O line and Aaron Jones in the backfield, they could have been dynamite. They would have been a problem. They have been a problem for most of the season, and Jones has been hurt, and teams try to double Adams, and it isn't working for them. Bringing in Fuller would have made them that much more powerful. They would have taken over the field when on offense. Teams would have to pick and choose who they would double cover. Aaron Jones and Jamall Williams would have gaping holes to run through, and lots of field with the secondary being focused on two really good receivers. But they just didn't do it. And then they made excuses, claiming that they "never wanted to make a trade". If that's true, that is a bummer. But I don't think it is true, I think Green Bay, as they have always done, didn't get exactly what they wanted, or if they did they asked for more, and the Texans said no thanks.

Oh well, I guess they are happy going 11-5 and winning a playoff game before being ousted by a younger, better team. They should have, and definitely could have made this trade. Why they didn't, I don't think I'll ever understand.

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing and the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast.

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Everything That is Wrong With Trevor Lawernce's COVID-19 Diagnosis

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Earlier this week the Big Ten had to cancel a game due to a COVID outbreak, and yesterday, Trevor Lawrence tested positive and will miss Clemson's game against Boston College tomorrow.

This is not the trend that the NCAA was hoping for when they pushed ahead for a season this fall. I have mentioned how they could survive if it were smaller schools having to push games around, or outright cancel them, and how if the players weren't "stars", it wouldn't really be a problem. But now the NCAA is having to deal with big name schools and prospects. Notre Dame and Florida have had to postpone games due to outbreaks. Wisconsin is now added to that list, and I am sure there are a good number of more high profile schools coming down the pipe. And while these schools have had to pause their seasons, no real super duper star player has tested positive. Notre Dame's QB didn’t test positive, that we know. Wisconsin's freshman QB did, but he isn't a top tier guy yet. Florida didn't release the names of the players that tested positive, so that means we don't know if their QB or stud tight end got it. And with coaches getting it, like Dan Mullen and Paul Chryst, I do not count Nick Saban because that whole situation is fishy to me, that doesn't really matter because they have so many assistant coaches that can take over if needed. But when a player of Trevor Lawrence's caliber gets it, and has to miss a guy, that should frighten everyone involved with college football. He is the Heisman front runner. He is the star player of the number one team in the country. He was very vocal about wanting to play. He has been on fire. And he is, if he leaves Clemson after this year, going to be the number one pick in the 2021 NFL draft. So the fact that he tested positive twice, that Clemson couldn't find some way to keep it quiet or cover it up, that he is missing a nationally televised game, this is all big news, and it is not good news.

Clemson will most likely beat Boston College tomorrow. They have a backup that was a highly rated recruit, and he does have game snaps due to all the blowouts, but that will not be the topic of conversation going into the game tomorrow. It will all be about Lawrence. I'm sure they will try and figure out how he got it, when he got it and how soon he will be able to return. The return, I bet, will be the biggest topic on all the pregame shows. The ACC has a ten day sit out policy for any kid that tests positive. And you may read this and say, okay, he will miss two games, but it is Clemson, they should roll. Again, I'm sure they will with BC, but they have the game of the week, and season, next Saturday when they face Notre Dame.

At the time I'm writing this those are the 1st and 3rd rated teams in the country. It will almost assuredly be a primetime night game. It will have as many eyeballs on it as possible. But, if Lawrence tested positive on Wednesday, and then again on Thursday, that would mean that the tenth day would fall on the night of that game. What will TV and the NCAA do if he isn't better? What if his "mild symptoms" get worse during the week? What if he tests positive again? What if he breaks quarantine because he thinks he feels okay enough to go out? Or what if Clemson's game this weekend is too close for comfort, and Dabo wants his prize recruit to come back before he is healthy and ready?

That, and the TV stuff, is what scares me most. Nick Saban wasn't supposed to coach last weekend against Georgia, but by some miracle, he tested negative when he needed to. This meant CBS could run their regular show and Alabama fans could see their coach on the sidelines, and everyone forgot about it. Again, he is a coach, and he has no other prospects. He is the GOAT college coach and he clearly doesn't want to return to the NFL. His career is set. Trevor Lawrence is about to get seriously paid, he is about to be in the NFL, and while he hasn't really needed for anything in his life, he won't have to ever again after he is drafted. But what if this lingers? How will that affect him in the long? What about how the coaches handle this? Dabo Swinney is all about winning, and doing it at any cost. I wouldn't be shocked at all if he rushes Lawrence back for their next game.

This is all very bad. And I fear it will be handled even worse by every adult in the room. This was my biggest worry for a college football season, and NFL for that matter, that these star players would get COVID and miss time, and possibly damage their future. It sucks way more for college kids because, for the naïve, they don't get paid a dime. I hope Clemson and Trevor Lawrence and the NCAA do the right thing, but they have shown too many times before that they won't, and that they don't care about these kids. This was the worst thing that could have happened for Clemson and college football, and I am curious and pessimistic that they will handle it the right way. This is a real bummer.

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing and the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast.

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The Big Ten is Screwed

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I was going to write about the season five premiere of "The Eric Andre Show" today, but it will have to wait another day due to some sports news I saw this afternoon.

The Big Ten, after one week of games being played, already have to cancel a game. I read at the beginning of the week that the Wisconsin freshman QB, who looked dynamite against Illinois last Friday, tested positive twice for COVID. The backup QB did too. Then today Wisconsin confirmed that twelve people within the program, including the head coach, have tested positive. They now have to pause all activities for at least seven days, and the players who tested positive may have to sit upwards of twenty-one days.

The Big Ten was very stringent in the protocols to follow if/when positive tests came out, and the players are hit hardest by this. The rule was stated at the beginning that, if a player tests positive more than once, they have to sit out three weeks. It makes sense to me, it seems like that was a big deal in the restart of the season and we all knew it would come to this, just maybe not this early. But, with the Big Ten waiting so long to start its fall season, this leaves no room for making the game up. The Big Ten has a strict eight week conference only schedule, with the ninth week having the top two teams from each division playing for the Big Ten title, and the rest of the teams playing an extra game for bowl positioning. The caveat, for the time being, Wisconsin and Nebraska will only play eight games, at the most. The rest of the conference, if there are no more outbreaks, I doubt it, will all play one extra game.

Nebraska didn't really have a shot at the CFP, but Wisconsin might have. Nebraska got crushed last week, and they were more than likely going to get beat this Saturday after seeing what Wisconsin did to Illinois, whose defense is much better than Nebraska's. They were staring down an 0-2 start. But I do feel a little bad for Nebraska because they were one of the first schools in the conference to push back against the original cancellation of the season. They were so primed to play that they took a case to court, and they had ideas to play as an independent for this season. Now they have to miss a game because Wisconsin has an outbreak. That seems unfair to them. But this is what the Big Ten will look like all year. The more outbreaks amongst the conference, the more cancellations. They have a set date to finish the year, December 12th, and they are sticking to it. That may mean that some teams will play 7, 8 or 9 games. Or, at this rate, some teams may only play 5 or 6 games.

As for Wisconsin, this stinks on so many levels for them, as a football team. This freshman QB looks like the real deal. He only had one incompletion. He and Justin Fields, who is a legit Heisman contender, had almost identical stats. Now he has COVID, as does his backup and upwards of ten or eleven more players. That is brutal. First of all, this virus has proven it is rough, add on the missed games and practices, and it is like a lost season for these kids. As for the team, this is even more brutal because, as I said, Wisconsin had some real playoff aspirations. They looked like they had opened the offense. The defense shut down Illinois. They pretty much had this Nebraska game in the bag, and more than likely they would have been heading to Ann Arbor in two weeks 3-0, and probably favored in that game. Now they have to miss a full game. The players who have COVID will have to miss, at least, two games. The coaches are going to miss a full week, at the very least, of practice during the season.

This is a blow to the program for this very odd season. But, and I say this again and again and again, how did the players and coaches get COVID, and were they not following safety protocols? I know the University of Wisconsin has seen a surge in positive COVID cases due to parties on campus. Were these players at said parties? Were they not wearing masks? Were they not social distancing? No one knows except the people involved. But more likely than not, if I were a betting man, I'd say that they were going to parties because they are young college athletes who are always the big men on campus. Wisconsin loves their football, and the players are treated like royalty. So the dumb actions of a few are screwing this team and their chances at playing in a big bowl game, or even the CFP.

I fear that this is just the start. I know some universities have already had outbreaks. The university of Ohio State, Rutgers, Michigan State and Penn State all had to pause football activities once already due to outbreaks. Iowa did as well, and they have the whole racial injustice issue going on. The University of Michigan currently has its dormitory residents on stay at home orders. It just feels like things will get much worse before they get better. I would hope that this will be a wake up call for the other members of the Big Ten because any stoppage screws these teams from any major bowl games or the playoff. I wish that were the case, but time will tell. Again, these are young kids that are treated better, and they get invited to everything. If there were ever a season or a year to skip those parties, and just hang out at home, this is the year and the season.

The Big Ten better wake up and take this seriously, or else they will be shut out of any important postseason play. 

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing and the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast.

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How Should I Feel About Michigan Football Being Back

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I watched the entirety of my first college football game this past Saturday night. I haven't been watching much because of the pandemic, the use of these kids as pawns for the universities, the fact that the NCAA is corrupt, that there are no fans and it is eerie and because the Big Ten had not started.

Well that changed on Saturday. The Big Ten kicked off their shortened season. I am surprised that I only watched one full game, and the end of another, waiting for the Michigan game. I figured I would tune in to the other Big Ten games, but I really didn't. I did other things. I hung out with my family in the morning. I ran to the store to get some essentials. I went for a run by myself. I did what I have been doing all fall pretty much. But I knew that Michigan was going to kick off at 6:30pm my time, and I knew I would watch. I also knew that my mom and dad would come over, they have been a part of our little bubble this whole pandemic, and that my dad and I cannot resist watching Michigan. So, we tuned in to the end of the PSU-Indiana game, which was, given the circumstances, a pretty exciting game, and waited for Michigan to start. Before the game I did not have the usual feelings I have had every year since I became obsessed with the Wolverines. I wasn't waiting all day, I found things to do. My mind wasn't focused on who was going to play, and what the team may look like. I didn't have that usual pit in my stomach right before kickoff. I was relaxed enough to eat eight big chicken wings and a full size salad we ordered from a local pizza joint. That never really happened before for me. And I should be happy about that. I should feel like there has been some kind of growth and maturity that has come with age. But really, it was the fact that this season is, and will continue to be, so very weird.

The pregame ramp up seemed familiar, and when I saw the Wolverines warming up, it looked normal enough. There is hardly anyone in the stadium an hour prior to most games, so it didn't seem different at first. But then the game started. This was when it felt odd. There were less than 600 fans in attendance. This is a good thing too. I'm not complaining, or comparing it to a Marlins game. The Big Ten has strict fan attendance rules, and they are only allowing certain people to watch the games live. But this meant you could hear everything that was being said on the field. I could hear QB's make checks, players talk to one another and the hits were crisp. It was surreal. Usually the crowd drowns that out, but not on Saturday night. I will say, the fans in attendance were fully masked, and seemed to be following the proper safety protocols. The coaches were as well. There were only a few times I said aloud, "why isn't that coach wearing his mask?". Both head coaches were masked the whole game, only flipping it off to bark out instructions, which I thought was good. As for the game on the field, both teams were missing starters, Minnesota was missing more, but it was not what I expected. I thought this was going to be a hard nosed, low scoring defensive affair. It was not. Minnesota blocked a punt and scored in under 3 minutes. Michigan answered with a 70 yard TD run on the very next play. Then Michigan got a strip sack for a score right after that. From there on out, it was an offensive battle. Michigan had 35 points at half, which was wild. Joe Milton looked solid and in control, the run game was good and very, very deep, the young receivers and skill players did well and it was clear that Minnesota missed their starters much more than Michigan did.

When it was all said and done, Michigan won 49-24. They got a solid road win against a ranked opponent when a lot of people picked against Michigan. It was nice to see them play again too. I had resigned myself to the fact that I wasn't going to see them play until next fall, and this was a nice surprise. And I did have times where I cheered long runs and defensive stops and was happy that they won going away. But it was weird. I felt icky at times watching the game. I am worried for the kids and I hope they continue to follow proper protocols. I will continue to watch because I love Michigan, but this is going to be as weird a season as I have ever witnessed. I'm glad they won, and I hope they get to play with few, possibly no, postponements, but time will tell. Either way, glad they won, but it was a very bizarre experience. This is like nothing I have seen, or even my dad for that matter.

This will be an odd year for sure.

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing and the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast.

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Ty's 2020 Big Ten Football Preview

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The Big Ten starts, I believe, their fall football season tonight.

I am pretty conflicted about this. I haven't watched much college football, even less NFL, and with COVID cases surging in the Midwest right now, I don't think it is the safest thing to do. But they are barreling ahead and getting it started. They are doing an eight game abbreviated season, with the possibility of a ninth game. This affords them the chance to make the playoff, if they have little to no problems finishing the season. I think they will run into problems, every conference playing currently has had stops and cancellations and postponements, and the NFL has been even worse. But, I will watch, at the very least, Michigan. I am an addict, I love their football team and, while it is easy for me to skip a Clemson or Alabama game, I just can't do that with the Wolverines. And to be fully transparent, I will watch other Big Ten games. This is the conference I have grown up with, and I watch it more than any other. I will miss the freedom I have found myself having on Saturday's now, at least for the next eight Saturday's, but I know I will tune in when Michigan is on. That is who I am.

With all this being said, I am going to do a 2020 version of my preseason preview of the Big Ten. I will not go through each team, and give them sentences and where I think they will fall. I will give you all a general view of how I see the Big Ten season unfolding, and end it with some predictions, including the conference champ. Let's get to it. Right off the bat, I do think the Big Ten will run into issues with postponements. Some of the teams, if not all, will have some kind of outbreak, and they will have to shut it down for a week or two. We have seen it at small programs, and much bigger ones, namely Notre Dame and Florida. It is definitely going to happen in the Big Ten. That is how this has worked all college football season so far, and the Big Ten is not immune.

The university of Ohio State should roll. They have the easiest schedule in the conference. I'm not joking. They do not play anyone tough, at all. You can throw out Penn State or Michigan at me, and I'd counter with, PSU is missing their top running back and best defender, and Michigan has almost an entire new offense, and secondary. If the university of Ohio State doesn't go undefeated, it would be a major, major letdown from them. They have the best players in the league, and they were given as cupcake a schedule as a team can get in this weird season.

I think Michigan will be mediocre, but I do love that they are starting Joe Milton at QB. My dad has been high on him since day one, and I have become a fan over the past year. He is going to be good, but he will have some not so good moments. They also have an entire new receiving corps, save for Ronnie Bell. They also have four new offensive line starters. They also have an entire new secondary. The players are good, they just haven't played much, and Michigan has one of the harder schedules in the conference. I think, at best they are a 5-3 team, but they look more like 4-4 to me. I also think this is the time that Michigan fans should get really worried that Harbaugh might jump back to the NFL. I hope he doesn't, but you never really know what he is going to do. He is a great coach, he has made the Wolverines so much better than they were prior to him, and I'd hope he would stay because he is the king in Ann Arbor, but I just have this odd feeling he will seriously consider jumping.

Wisconsin and Penn State will be solid six or seven win teams, but they will not compete for the playoff. PSU doesn't have their top back, best defensive player, and they really kind of tumbled near the end of last season. I don't trust their pass game, and I think the odd season we have will hamper their offense. Wisconsin will plug in some other running back that will go for 1200 to 1500 yards, and their O line will be solid, but their passing game is super suspect, and I think they lost a good chunk of their defense.

Minnesota will be solid. They lost a ton, but they have their QB and one of their best receivers back. I am curious to see if last year was an anomaly, or a sign of things to come. There is always a team that explodes for one season, then crashes back to Earth. I think Minnesota is good enough to be an upper tier Big Ten team, but I want to see it first. They should have an explosive offense though.

Iowa has so many problems within the program that I don't see how that doesn't affect them on the field. Former players are calling for Kirk Ferentz to be fired. That has got to weigh on them. By the way, if all the stories coming out of Iowa are true, he has to be fired immediately. That is some heinous stuff.

Outside those teams, it is all kind of blended. Purdue was helped with Rondale Moore opting back in, but who else do they have? Northwestern has more stories about kids opting out than playing. What is going on in Lincoln? Is Scott Frost a good coach? Are they going to figure it out defensively? Who knows. Michigan State has a new coach and a whole new system, and they have problems within their program as well. Indiana will always be a tough out because that is the nature of their team. And the rest, Illinois, Maryland and Rutgers, they all have holes, but also some good guys and will play some fun games, but probably not win too many of them.

I think it goes without saying that I have the university of Ohio State winning the conference again, and they should do it going away. I also think Justin Fields will be the Big Ten player of the season. They should dominate. Outside of that, I am excited to see Joe Milton, Minnesota will be pretty good and PSU and Wisconsin will be better than average. Let's get to it, I guess. 

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing and the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast.

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Is Le'Veon Bell Still Worth the Attention

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Yesterday, a few days after being released by the Jets, Le’Veon Bell signed with the Chiefs.

On paper this is a solid signing. He is a decent enough back still, doesn't have as many miles on him as he maybe should, and he wanted out of a bad situation and ended up in a great situation. This also adds, in theory, a ton more firepower to an already loaded offense. I don't exactly know how Bell will fit in, and the rookie they have, Clyde Edwards-Helaire, has been really solid so far, but if you can get Bell on a deal like the Chiefs did, why not take a half a year chance on him. So kudos to the Chiefs for taking a chance on a guy that can make them even more lethal than they already are. But, has anyone in a long time had further of a fall than Bell did after sitting out a whole year due to contract stuff?

For those that may not know, Bell sat out an entire year because he felt he was underpaid and overused. In both cases he was right, at the time. And, I agreed with his decision. He was making the best decision for himself, the team was essentially abusing him and running backs' shelf lives in the NFL are so short now, why not get paid the most you can when you can? Bell made the correct financial decision. But, was it the right career move? That is a loaded question. Bell did get paid, eventually. He also sat out a whole year of his prime. This was good and bad. It was good because it helped him preserve his body and possibly prolong his career. It hurt because he was one of the best, if not the best overall back in the league at the time, and he took off a full season. He just sat there and waited. Pittsburgh was never going to trade him or pay him that year, and they found a suitable player to take over, James Connor. The Steelers called his bluff, and unfortunately for Bell, he did not win. They eventually traded him to the Jets, and the Jets paid him. They gave him pretty much what he wanted, and it all seemed rosy at first. I remember people praising the deal, and people saying this was going to put them over the top, and that they could contend soon. I even liked the move at the time.

Then the Jets hired Adam Gase as head coach, and it all went down from there. The two of them did not get along. They constantly butted heads and aired stuff publicly. Gase told the media that everyone except Sam Darnold was available for trades last year, and this rubbed Bell the wrong way. And then Bell's play on the field suffered. He did nothing, at all, for the Jets. I don't know if it was play calling, if he lost a step, if he didn't try because he disliked the coach and already got paid, but the Jets version of Le’Veon Bell was so far removed from the Pittsburgh version. He was a forgettable player. I honestly forgot he was still playing until the Jets released him. I did see that they were trying to trade him, but they couldn't even get a 7th round pick for him. Then he had a list of teams that he would play for, but some, including the 49ers, said stuff like, "we are good with our guys". Bell wasn't even wanted now. And whenever a player puts out a list of teams they will play for, that is a sign to me that they are grasping at straws, trying to stay relevant. When Bell whittled his "list" to three teams, some reporter noted it was the Jets next three opponents. That is such a childish move in my book. And now that he has signed with the Chiefs, I just kind of shrug my shoulders.

I know it looks good on paper, but what really is he going to bring them? He isn't the runner he used to be, he is not as good a pass catcher, and the Chiefs already have better, younger talent at the position. This kind of feels like late Lesean McCoy. McCoy was supposed to be the "guy" for Buffalo, but he just kind of faded. The Bills went with the younger players, and they were better, and stayed healthy. I kind of see that happening with Bell. I think he will come in this season, not do much, Edwards-Helaire will cement his spot as the number one back and Bell will be gone as soon as the season is over, looking for another new team.

I feel for Bell because I fully supported and understood why he sat out a year. But his bluff was called, and more than answered, and now he is a nomadic, has been running back. He had those early good years, but now, he just seems like a guy that will take one year deals, until he is out of the league in the next two to three years. At least he got his though. That cannot be taken away from him. 

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing and the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast.

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Tom Herman is the Problem at Texas

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I know it may seem trite and gripey and me just flat out complaining, and also pointless given where we are as a country, a complete and utter mess, but why are no people in the sports media right now thrashing Tom Herman for underachieving at Texas?

Ever since Herman took over for Charlie Strong, who is a fine coach and never got a fair shot there, everyone expected him to bring Texas football back. He was supposed to be the savior. He was a successful coordinator at the University of Ohio State, he did a wonderful job at, I believe it was Houston, and he parlayed that into becoming the head coach at a major, historic football university. But every year since he has been there he has, for all intents and purposes, not done any better than Charlie Strong did. Texas always seems to show up in the preseason top 10 since Herman took over, and they always seem to be totally out of the top 25, or in the mid 20's after four weeks. I fully understand that this year is way, way different than any other college football season in over 100 years, and there are many excuses to go around, but this happened last year at Texas. It also happened the year before that. And Herman's first year, they struggled to make a bowl, and barely beat Missouri. Herman has not been the savior.

I get that these things take time too. He has to recruit his players, install his system and get players and boosters to buy in. But that all seemed to happen, at least behind the scenes. But every year Texas loses early on to a team that has no real business being on the same field with them. The past two seasons it was Maryland. Maryland is a middling Big Ten team, but they put it on Texas two years in a row, one of the games being in Texas. Texas also got beat by LSU, also in Texas, last season. Now, LSU did go on to win the title, and Joe Burrow won the Heisman, but this was before we knew what LSU was to become last year. Then this year they have struggled mightily in their last three games. They needed overtime to beat a not very good Texas Tech school. They also gave up 56 points to Tech. Tech only scored 17 last week at Iowa State. Then TCU beat them. TCU is okay, but they aren't the world beaters they were a few years back. And last weekend they needed a miracle comeback, aided by refs miscues, just to get to overtime with a 1-2 Oklahoma team, and they still got beat in the 4th overtime, again surrendering over 50 points. Texas now sits at 2-2 and out of the rankings yet again. But when I check sports news, which is the only way I am currently keeping my sanity, no one is calling for Herman to be fired, calling him a bad coach, saying he isn't fit for the job. It seems like most people are making excuses for him still, in year four.

Now, I am a tried and true Michigan fan and the media has been trashing Jim Harbaugh from day one. Maybe I notice this more because I read mostly Big Ten sites and news, but even on a ESPN or Bleacher Report of Sports Illustrated, Harbaugh is always dragged through the mud when the Wolverines play like Texas does. So why does a guy like Herman get a pass, but Harbaugh gets roasted constantly? Herman isn't quiet. He is quite loud and quite the trash talker. But the big media outlets call him "fiery" for this. Harbaugh does the same thing, and he is labeled "crazy". I don't get it. Also, Harbaugh took over a much worse off Michigan team, and has turned them into an okay team. They have won 10 games three times, 8 another and 9 last year. Texas was better off than Michigan when Herman took over. Charlie Strong may not have won enough games to keep his job and make the boosters happy, but he could recruit. And they were still going to bowl games. Herman had a team, he just had to mold it. Harbaugh had a defense, but he had to totally retool an offense that had zero identity. But when the Wolverines and Harbaugh needed overtime to beat Army last year, the media dragged him and Shea Patterson. Texas needed overtime to beat a much worse Tech team this year, and the media called it "gutsy". Michigan hasn't beaten the University of Ohio State in a decade, and the media never lets me or the rest of the Michigan fanbase forget that. But how many times has Texas beat Oklahoma in that time? Three times, only once under Herman, and all three were considered "upsets". But because Oklahoma doesn't blow them out, the media seems to give Herman a pass. All the while, people like Paul Finebaum and Lee Corso go on TV and roast the hell out of Harbaugh every year. I know this sounds whiny and I'm being a huge fan boy right now, but the media, especially the big time companies, are supposed to be unbiased and rip everyone equally. The fact that Herman gets a pass, but Harbaugh gets dragged is so far beyond me. I would much, much rather have Jim Harbaugh as my team's head coach, and I wasn't fully on board when they hired him. But at least he has made Michigan semi relevant, if not a title contender.

Texas is, quite possibly, the most overrated college football team in the country, and I think a lot of that has to do with the media's unrequited love for Tom Herman. I don't know, it just seems a little ridiculous that Herman gets a pass and Harbaugh doesn't. That's my opinion. 

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing and the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast.

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Congrats to the Lakers and the NBA

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The NBA proved they could finish the season during a global pandemic, and they did it perfectly.

The Lakers wrapped up their 17th title, although some of those came when they were in Minneapolis, but whatever, with a dominant game six win last night. From the second quarter on, the Lakers left no doubt that they were the best team in the NBA this year. I will fully eat crow and admit I was completely wrong about them. When I did my preseason ratings, which seems like decades ago, I had them as the number seven seed in the West. Then during the restart, I picked them to make the West Finals, but I had the Clippers winning. I wasn't high on their bench, I thought that Anthony Davis wouldn't stay healthy all season, I thought Frank Vogel was a lame duck hire and I thought, very stupidly, that LeBron had lost a step. Now, he is still not, nor will he ever be as great as Michael Jordan, but he is firmly the second greatest player of all time. I have Jordan ahead of him because he never left or formed any "super team". The guys he played with were better because of Jordan, and grew with Jordan. Dennis Rodman isn't Anthony Davis or even Kevin Love. Scottie Pippen isn't as great as Davis, and Dwyane Wade was a better offensive player. Jordan did it himself. He wanted to beat the best, not play with the best. But I was very wrong on LeBron being a step slow this season. He came out on fire, played committed defense most of the year and really handled the duties of a point guard perfectly. He orchestrated their offense great. And AD, he is a truly athletic unicorn. He is as smooth as KD, blocks shots like Hakeem and cuts to the rim like Barkley. AD is awesome. He is James best teammate ever, full stop. He was great in this series too. Some people were griping about his lack of scoring, but he more than made up for it on defense. He got into the Heat's heads, and he made these guys take extremely hard shots. He was amazing. The bench, mainly Rajon Rondo, showed up when they needed to. Rondo was outstanding everywhere. He did all the things in the playoffs that make him a great player, dare I say a hall of fame player. Alex Caruso was doing the little things. He plays solid defense and he cuts when he needs to. Danny Green may have missed a big shot in game five, and wasn't shooting good at all during the playoffs, played good defense and made solid plays when he passed the ball. Kentavious Caldwell-Pope played D and hit threes. Even Dwight Howard did all the little things asked of him to help this team win. And while I know that Erik Spoelstra is a far better coach, Frank Vogel did a solid job of letting his stars do their thing. He stayed out of the way, and that is exactly what he needed to do. He was a figurehead, and that is it. The Lakers won, and they deserved to win. They were the best team this year, they proved it time and time again, and they are the rightful champs.

As for the NBA, and the "bubble", this literally couldn't have gone any better. They had 22 teams show up right in the midst of a global pandemic in a hotspot in Florida. They had some teams there for a month, others for two and the final four teams spent four months there. They provided entertainment, they provided food, they had dedicated staff, doctors, trainers and hotel employees, they had COVID testers, they had a solid set of rules, and it all worked. There were zero positive COVID tests the whole time the teams and players and staff were there. That is truly amazing. Look at what the MLB, and now college football and NFL are going through. They can't go a week without a positive test. The NBA lasted over three months without one. It worked and it paid off. The basketball didn't suffer at all. The games were competitive, they were fast paced, the scores were high, it was way better than I thought. If you didn't know, you would have no idea that these guys were in limbo for almost three months, not knowing if they were going to play again or not.

Then we had the police brutality issue, where a white police officer shot another unarmed black man who was doing nothing wrong. I will say it forever, defund the police. The shooting of Jacob Blake almost stopped all of the playoffs. There was a league wide strike. Some teams, including the Lakers, were ready to go home that night. But Adam Silver listened to the players, met their demands and made a plan, and they were able to continue. They were able to finish. I loved in the bubble that the players were able to speak their minds, and talk about social and political things. I adore that players used their platforms to talk about such things, and not focus on solely basketball. That was so awesome and so great and prolific. That was, outside of the games, my favorite thing about the bubble. I love that players spoke their minds, urged people to vote, told people in their team's hometown to make changes. Hopefully this continues the movement in our country that I feel is happening now. We are fed up, and the NBA players in the bubble echoed that sentiment. I have always loved the NBA, and I always will. But what they did in Orlando, how they pulled it off and how they used the platform, it has made me even more of a fan. I am so happy to call myself an NBA fan. I am so happy they achieved their goal. I am happy that they let their voices be heard. I'm happy no one got COVID. And I am happy that the best team, in the end, won the title.

Congrats to the Lakers, to LeBron, to AD, to Adam Silver and to the NBA. This was a historic finish to a very odd and long 2019-20 NBA season. You guys did it, and you did it the best. I am more proud to be an NBA fan than I am to be an American., The NBA is a much better place than our country, and the bubble proved that. Congrats to all involved. You guys did it. 

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing, the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast, and the greatest basketball writer on the internet.

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Ty's Favorite Michigan Football Games: October 27th, 2019

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It’s Friday, so that means yet another classic Michigan Wolverines football fave from me. I’ve skewed with some “older” games lately. I will go back to that when I get closer to the end of the college football season, whenever that may be this year. But today I’m going back to last year.

Last season Michigan was supposed to be great. They were supposed to be a playoff contender. They were supposed to be the team to beat in the Big Ten. They had everyone back and they hired Josh Gattis to get the offense to play fast and loose. Well, that didn’t happen, at least until this game. Michigan started slow. They trailed in their first game against Middle Tennessee, before pulling away late. They needed trick plays and overtime to beat Army. They got crushed when they went up to Madison to play Wisconsin, and before making it a game late, Penn State dominated most of that game on their way to a 7 point win. Michigan struggled coming into this game.

The date was October 27th, it was last year and their opponent was Notre Dame. Notre Dame was higher ranked, their one loss was to a very good Georgia team, they had a more explosive offense, and they had all the momentum. Michigan, as I mentioned before, was struggling. They definitely showed signs of life late in the PSU game, and I hoped it was a sign of things to come. But still, they hadn’t looked right on offense, the defense was on the field too much and Shea Patterson was not playing well. Notre Dame was even favored in this game, and it was in Ann Arbor. Pretty much every show and publication and website picked Notre Dame to win. I remember vividly the guys on CBS laughing at the thought that Michigan could win this game. And right as the game was going to start, a night game mind you, rain started to pour down. This made me even more nervous than normal. This meant Michigan was going to have to run, and not fumble chances away, which was a problem. It also meant that any of the confidence Patterson gained at the end of the PSU game throwing the ball was all but gone. The rain was so heavy that I’m sure the ball felt like a greased pig. I was left to myself to watch the game as well. My wife doesn’t like watching Michigan games with me, and my dad was on a plane flying home from California with my mom. So it was just me.

I sat down for kickoff, and what I watched was so surprising, but in a good way. Michigan came out like a house on fire on offense, and it was all the run game. The O line was making humongous holes, and Zach Charbonnet and Hassan Haskins were gouging Notre Dame’s defense with long runs. The score was only 3-0 going into the second quarter, but Michigan seemed so damn determined to prove everyone wrong. They scored two TD’s in the second quarter, both on the ground. The run game couldn’t be stopped. As for Michigan’s defense, they came to play as well. They were forcing so many three and outs. They pressured the QB all half. They would not let them run the ball. It was glorious. But, I was still a little leery because it was such a dominant half, but they only led by 17. Notre Dame was then gifted a TD when it appeared the QB was intercepted, but the refs called a phantom pass interference to overturn the pick. This was the only time I was really worried. Notre Dame cut the lead to 10, the rain was letting up, and to this point, Michigan had trouble keeping leads. I was also yelling at the TV loud enough that my wife has to tell me to calm down. That all went away pretty quick. Michigan got the ball back and went right down the field to push the lead back to 17. The defense and run game totally took over from here. Notre Dame did score one more useless TD, but not before Michigan scored 21 more points. Michigan totally took over. Hassan Haskins ripped his way through the Notre Dame defense for 149 yards on 20 carries, 7 yards a carry. Charbonnet had 74 yards on 15 carries and 2 TD’s. Tru Wilson went for 40 plus rush yards and a TD. Even Christian Turner got some run in, gaining 31 yards on 4 carries. All told, Michigan gained 303 yards on 53 carries. That’s exactly what I want in a game with weather like they had. They controlled the ball and ran for a ton of yards. Michigan did throw two TD’s, but they only attempted fourteen total passes. As a team they were 8 of 14 for 134 passing yards. Not great, but needed in bad weather. On the other side, Michigan’s defense dominated. Notre Dame attempted 29 passes, completing 11 of them for 133 yards. One less than Michigan on more than double the attempts. On the ground, Notre Dame ran for 47 net yards on 31 attempts. Michigan ran for nearly 8 times as many yards. But the most important thing, and crucial thing in bad weather games, Notre Dame lost 2 fumbles, where Michigan had 0 turnovers. They protected the ball all night in heavy rain and wind. That was nice.

At the end of the night, after Michigan won 45-14, it was great for me to see all these “experts” have to eat crow. Michigan dominated this game and proved that Notre Dame was not a top 10 team, and not the playoff contender many thought they were. This was a great watch for me because Michigan won, won big and beat a big time rival. It was one of those cleansing games I’ve mentioned before. This was a nice recent memory of a great, and big, Michigan win for me. This one was nice for many reasons, but mainly because it reminded me that Michigan, and Jim Harbaugh, can win big games from time to time, and they can do it in an old school way if the weather makes it necessary. This was a good one.

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing and the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast.

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The Texans Finally Did the Right Thing

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The Texans finally did it. All it took was a plethora of terrible trades, mostly bad draft decisions, star players turning on him and an 0-4 start, but they finally fired Bill O’Brien. In fact they relived him of all duties he held, effective immediately. When they fired him, they made sure it was well known that it was then and there. No waiting until the end of the year, no third or fourth chance, nothing. He, as of last night, is unemployed.

Now, as far as O’Brien’s on field coaching, he’s not good, but he’s not terrible. The Texans did make the playoffs pretty regularly, and they even won a game in the playoffs once in awhile. Yes, the division is not good, the Colts had to deal with Andrew Luck suddenly retiring and Jacksonville’s epic collapse after an AFC title appearance. O’Brien also had a hand in drafting Deshaun Watson. Yes, he mortgaged the future by trading many, many picks, but still, they got Watson. As far as the on field play, it wasn’t too bad. Watson masked a lot of the problems, but still, they had an okay enough offense to win nine games a season. But everything kind of came to a head this off-season. They traded Deandre Hopkins for peanuts. Apparently Hopkins and O’Brien didn’t get along, and since he had GM responsibilities, O’Brien chose himself and his priority over what was best for his team. He offloaded his young star QB’s best weapon because they didn’t like one another. There’s been so many of these stories in the past, star player doesn’t like coach, but it usually solves itself, or the coach goes. It’s almost never coach over player. But most coaches don’t have GM authority, or if they do, it doesn’t work. O’Brien was clearly in the latter. Beside the Hopkins trade, O’Brien had many mishaps. He did get Watson, but mortgaged the future of the team. He never drafted or developed O line to help the franchise QB. They took on too many “project” players. They never really added to the defense. They let Jadaveon Clowney leave in free agency.

This is all on O’Brien. He can be blamed for this. Back to the Hopkins trade. As I said, they got peanuts. They got some late round picks and David Johnson. No disrespect to Johnson, but he was a one season wonder, and then his leg exploded the following season. He’s not the guy he was that one year, and he will never be again. Hopkins on the other hand is young and awesome. He is currently crushing it in Arizona. The Cardinals may not be the best team, but they’re better than the Texans currently. But with all the turnover, the fights and the mishandling in the front office, it just felt like a matter of when, not if, O’Brien would be fired.

Then the Texans started the year the way they’ve started it. They’ve looked anemic on offense. They can’t protect Watson, the receivers get zero separation and the run game is non existent. The defense, it’s below average. JJ Watt is overrated and always hurt. Whitney Mercilus is hurt. They haven’t replaced Clowney. Their secondary is shotty. And again, this can all be placed on O’Brien. He took on all these extra roles, and when you take on too much, it’s hard to do any of them adequately. He made bad decisions as a GM, and the on field play was starting to really suffer from his poor play calling. He also let his feelings get involved, and that cannot happen in the NFL.

O’Brien has struck me as a guy that has failed up. He was on a good staff in New England when he got the Penn State job. He was fine there, but they were never a true threat. He then got this Texans job, and soon enough he became the GM, as well as the head coach and was given full authority for the most part. He didn’t do that good enough, and now he’s out of all of those jobs. I don’t know where he goes from here. I mean, he had all this power, so what will he look for in a new job if he’s offered one? I don’t think an NFL team will hire him, at least not as a head coach. He could get a coordinator job, but not a head coaching job. He should not get a front office or GM job ever again. This was where he messed up the most. As far as college, will he go back? Will he take less money? Will he go to a lower tier school? I don’t know. I don’t think a big time program will hire him. He wasn’t hyper competitive at PSU. He didn’t win any titles wasn’t in contention. I don’t know how many big schools will have an opening either. This is tricky because of the pandemic, and how rough this last image of him is going to be. If I had to guess, I’d say he takes a coordinator job. I don’t think he’ll want to go back to college, but I don’t think an NFL team will give him the top job.

Hey, at least Texans fans don’t have to deal with O’Brien’s idiocy anymore. That’s their silver lining.

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing and the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast.

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Is Philly the Right Spot for Doc Rivers?

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Doc Rivers wasn't unemployed very long. Last week he took the head coach opening in Philly, and will try and right the ship for the 76ers.

I am kind of on the fence about this hire. Rivers is an okay coach, a great person, and has won with a super star team. But, he couldn't get the job done in Orlando, he struggled in Boston until they acquired Kevin Garnett and Ray Allen, and we all saw both meltdowns in LA while he was coaching the Clippers. He does have the one ring, and I fully agree with his political and emotional statements he has made recently, but he is, for the most part, when it comes to strictly basketball, an underachieving head coach. Orlando was not going to work for him. They never had guys that were going to lead that team any further than the first round of the playoffs. Boston was a mess until they got two stars. They were the first of the new era "super teams", and they only won one Finals, while going to two. Then he just could not get the Clippers over the edge. He has had some very talented rosters, except Orlando, but he only has one championship. Guys like Phil Jackson have had more star power, at least at the top, but never the bench players that Rivers had, and Jackson won two handfuls of rings. Greg Poppovich has built a culture in San Antonio, had stars, had role players and has coached them to five titles, while appearing in, I think, seven Finals. Erik Spoelstra is proving right now that he is a top tier head coach. He had the super team, with Wade, LeBron and Chris Bosh, and went to four Finals and won two. Now he has a team led by Jimmy Butler and a cast of dudes, old and young, and they have a chance to make this Finals a real series on Tuesday. Mike Brown was coach of the Cavs, and yes he had LeBron, but the rest of that team was very blah, and he led them to a Finals. Ty Lue had a super team, not as well rounded as what Rivers had in Boston, but he has as many rings as Rivers. Rivers is a solid manager of stars, and he will get you to the playoffs, and even make the team seem like a threat, but nothing more. His teams have, more often than not, stumbled in the playoffs.

Now Rivers is going to take over a 76ers team that has a load of talent at the top, but they have flamed out of the playoffs, especially being swept out of the first round this year. They also have two stars that, if you listen to reputable NBA journalists, don't like one another. They also have a great, great big man, who has modernized his game, but doesn't always seem to give one hundred percent. And their other star gets hurt far too often, and is terrified to shoot jumpers. I'm curious to see how Rivers handles these two guys, Embiid and Simmons, and how he deals with the rest of the roster. He has, alongside Embiid and Simmons, Tobias Harris, Matisse Thybulle, Jason Richardson, Al Horford and some other dudes. So, Rivers does have stars, but not the level star that Paul George, Kawhi Leonard, Paul Pierce, Ray Allen and Kevin Garnett were, and are currently. He also has guys that should be good defenders, at least on paper. They are big and long and mean and stingy. But, will he get them to buy in? Will Embiid be the Kawhi or KG type that gets these guys to buy into playing defense? I don't know, and I don't know if Embiid truly wants to be a top tier defender, and I love Embiid. He just doesn't always give it his all. And as far as going East, it seems good, but that was until I watched the playoffs this year. The East isn't nearly as tough as the West, but the top is solid. If Milwaukee keeps Giannis, they will still be the top team. Boston has shown that they are up and coming and just about there. I think Toronto has one more year in them with this group, and I do think that Pascal Siakim can be the next star to lead a team. Miami is currently in the Finals, and outside Butler, that team is young and in sync. The East is getting better, and Philly looks a bit slow compared to the other teams.

I knew Rivers would get a job, and I assumed it would be during the off season. I am a little surprised he took the 76ers job, but maybe they gave him the best offer. I know Chicago already filled their vacancy, but I would have liked to see him there instead of Billy Donovan. I also think he could have fit in well in Houston. They have the offense, and he would have brought the defensive mentality that the team needs to get to the next level. Even New Orleans seemed like a better fit to me because he could have molded that roster in his image. But, in Philly all he has to do is coach. No front office stuff to deal with, no draft to deal with, just coach. But, he has to get this team to do some things their young stars have been reluctant to do, or have just decided they won't do it. I hope Rivers does well because I truly like him, but I feel like the 76ers were the toughest roster for him to work with. We will see it come next season. 

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing, the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast, and the greatest basketball writer on the internet.

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