Big Ten Report – Week #07 (02/13/2012)

Standings

Here are the current Big Ten standings:

Team

Big Ten

Overall

Wins

Losses

Percent

Wins

Losses

Percent

#3 Ohio State

9

3

0.750

21

4

0.840

#11 Michigan State

9

3

0.750

20

5

0.800

#22 Michigan

9

4

0.692

19

7

0.731

#21 Wisconsin

8

4

0.667

19

6

0.760

#23 Indiana

7

6

0.538

19

6

0.760

Purdue

6

6

0.500

16

9

0.640

Minnesota

5

7

0.417

17

8

0.680

Illinois

5

7

0.417

16

9

0.640

Northwestern

5

7

0.417

15

9

0.625

Iowa

5

7

0.417

13

12

0.520

Nebraska

3

10

0.231

11

13

0.458

Penn State

3

10

0.231

11

15

0.423

Continue reading “Big Ten Report – Week #07 (02/13/2012)”

Nothing But ‘Net – Week #15 – 02/06/2012 – Oh Well…

The (#23) University of Michigan men’s basketball team played two games last week, one at home and one on the road, and they won one and lost one.  On Wednesday (02/01/2012) they beat (#20) Indiana 68-56 in Crisler Arena, then on Sunday (02/05/2012) they lost at (#9) Michigan State 64-54.  This brings Michigan’s record to 17-7 (7-4 in the Big Ten).

This was another good news/bad news kind of week.  The good news (obviously) was that UM beat a Top-25 team, and kept their perfect (13-0) record in Crisler Arena.  The bad news was that they got overpowered in the MSU game.  MSU led for the entire game, and UM never really threatened them in the 2nd half.  The final margin of defeat was reasonable, so UM didn’t get embarrassed, but they didn’t get the win either.  The loss to MSU snaps a nice 3-game winning streak against the Farmers Spartans.

Continue reading “Nothing But ‘Net – Week #15 – 02/06/2012 – Oh Well…”

Big Ten Report – Week #06 (02/06/2012)

Standings

Here are the current Big Ten standings:

Team

Big Ten

Overall

Wins

Losses

Percent

Wins

Losses

Percent

#3 Ohio State

8

2

0.800

20

3

0.870

#9 Michigan State

7

3

0.700

18

5

0.783

#19 Wisconsin

7

4

0.636

18

6

0.750

#23 Michigan

7

4

0.636

17

7

0.708

#20 Indiana

6

6

0.500

18

6

0.750

Illinois

5

5

0.500

16

7

0.696

Purdue

5

5

0.500

15

8

0.652

Minnesota

5

6

0.455

17

7

0.708

Iowa

5

6

0.455

13

11

0.542

Northwestern

4

6

0.400

14

8

0.636

Nebraska

3

8

0.273

11

11

0.500

Penn State

2

9

0.182

10

14

0.417

Continue reading “Big Ten Report – Week #06 (02/06/2012)”

Remembering Tom Brady- A Story You Haven’t Heard

How most people remember Tony Brady's time at Michigan.
How most people remember Tom Brady’s time at Michigan.

To many Tom Brady was merely a stopgap falling in the shadow of Brian Griese (who led Michigan to a National Championship) and Drew Henson who was destined to lead the Wolverines to 3 or 4 National Championships, while leading the Yankees to World Championships during the football off-season.

No disrespect to Drew Henson but the hype surrounding him was completely out of control. The spotlight on Henson obscured Brady and many fans couldn’t wait for him to make way for Henson.

While Brady was technically the starter, Lloyd Carr employed the dreaded dual QB system giving Henson ample to time to challenge. At the time it seemed like a concession to keep Henson from bolting and playing baseball full time.

But Brady held on as the starter for two seasons and capped his career with an OT win over Alabama in the 2000 Orange Bowl.

During his time at Michigan no one could have predicted the success he’d have in the NFL.

I always thought that Brady would be successful at something– he had that air about him. A quiet determination and confidence. No matter how obnoxious fans would be, “Hey Tom, how long until Drew takes your job?” he stayed calm, cool, and collected.

Only later did we learn how close he came to transferring.

Brady liked this photo because it included his teammates

But there was one indication of his character. I took this picture during the 1998 season and was determined to get all three players who were featured prominently to autograph it.  At 1999 Media Day fans had an opportunity to meet the players and I quickly tracked down center Steve Frazier (#64) tight end end Aaron Shea (#36) but couldn’t find Brady anywhere.

I went from line to line looking for him. Finally, I tracked him standing practically alone near the sideline. When I showed him the photo his first reaction was to ask how I took it (from my seats) and how cool it was that it showed all three players together in the same shot. I found out later that Aaron Shea was one of his best friends in college which helps explain why he liked the photo so much.

He signed the photo and said, “Go Blue!” and thanked me for taking the picture.

It always struck how classy he was. At the time there was a huge line of people waiting for Drew Henson’s autograph while Brady, the starter, stood by watching.

A lesser man may have been resentful, but Brady was a Michigan Man.

I wondered how he felt when he found himself drafted by the Patriots and was again overshadowed by  another quarterback phenom named Drew (Bledsoe).

I have no doubt that he handled himself with the same class he showed at Michigan.

And his hard work and dedication have made him one of the best quarterbacks in NFL history.