The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Tuesday, February 8, 2011- 7 The Mchign Daly -michgandilyco TuedayFebrary{,.201.-. Hoke did all he could recruiting Brady Hoke was stuck at the starting line, waiting. The gunshot was long gone. The foot race started a while ago. And Michigan's competition was well on its way to finishing the race. How frus- trating that must have been. There were three years of mediocre football on the TIM field to deal ROHAN while rumors and specula- tion surroundingthe coach's status weighed on the program off of it. Instead of having six weeks to hand pick his first recruiting class, Hoke had three weeks from the day he was hired. Considering everything stacked up against him, Hoke's first recruiting class is all he could ask for. All Michigan could ask for. He hauled in six four-star recruits and 13 three-star recruits, according to Rivals.com. The Wol- verines couldn't secure a five-star, but, for reference, Ohio State only nabbed one. According to the coaching staff, Michigan's haul included a running back tailor-made for the offense (Thomas Rawls), a tight end who can step on the field immediately (Chris Barnett) and 12 defensive players who can add depth and maybe push for playing time - former coach Rich Rodri- guez was troubled throughout the season with his defense's lack of quality reserves. Michigan's assistant coaches were on the road for eight days making recruiting visits to con- struct this 20-person class. Michi- gan recruiting coordinator Chris Singletary woke up some days wondering what city he was in and what time of day it was. The hard work paid off The Wolverines reaffirmed some of Rodriguez's commits and gener- ated a respectable foundation for the future Hoke is building - one with a 4-3 defense and pro-style offense. But that's the story before any of them puton a winged hel- met. It's easyto criticize a class, compared to those schoolswith head starts, and one that doesn't include a single five-star recruit. But one thing we can point to dur- ing the Rodriguez tenure and say is that nothing is guaranteed; that includes top recruits. Five-stars can barely see the field. And four-stars can be the centerpiece of an explosive offense. Hoke had to scratch and claw to get those players to come to Ann Arbor. Now, it's his job to coach them up. "They're going to have to (have an impact), they're not really going to have a choice," said Mike Far- rell, a national recruiting analyst for Rivals.com. "They're going to be thrown in there, especially the defensive guys, and they're going to have to playa little bit over their heads. "I can tell you that a few of these kids who are ranked three- stars will be much better than that. And then a few of these three-stars, you'll never hear from them. They'll never see the field. They'll never crack the two-deep. Or they'll simply be depth play- ers that will not make an impact at all." The mark of a good coach is one who can drive and teach and mold his players into much more. It's nice to have a solid talent pool to work with, though. Aren't you curious what could've happened if Hoke had more time to sell Michigan? Michigan wide receivers coach Jeff Hecklinski said it was easy to sell the school - the academics, the block "M." It'llbe even easier if the win- ning returns. Then the higher- Could', Bryan Hogan b IeBlue's saving grace? MARISSA MCCLAIN/Daily Michigan coach Brady Hoke had just three weeks to form his recruiting class. profile recruits will come too, especially with two more years of national exposure thanks to Denard Robinson highlights and big matchups on a national stage (see: Notre Dame night game in 2011 and Alabama at Cowboys' Stadium in 2012). The barricade is easyto under- stand. Michigan Athletic Director Dave Brandon didn't fire Rodri- guez until four days after the Gator Bowl. Coaches like Randy Shannon at Miami (Fla.) were let go back in November. And his replacement, Al Golden, had plenty of time to salvage a recruiting class. We don't know how much the Wolverines' 52-14 Gator Bowl loss factored into Brandon's decision. But he wasn't doing Rodriguez any favors by keepingthe coach around while rumors swirled. The next guy was goingto be stuck there atthe starting line, anxiously waiting. Brandon said he made the decision withthe currentplayers in mind, so that they had the best chance to win the team's first bowl game in three years. It was noble of Brandon to con- sider the current players' needs before the future of the program - there are few athletic directors who would do that. But well see if it comes back to haunt the begin- ning of Hoke's tenure. Hindsight is 20-20. Michigan was embarrassed in the Gator Bowl and its next coach had a dis- advantage in recruiting. Atthat point, all you could expect from Hoke is what we got - the No. 21 recruiting class in the country, according to Rivals.com. Not spectacular, notcterrible --just okay. The whole process is cyclical - recruit, coach, win. Repeat. Michigan won't have anything substantial holding it back next year, unless Hoke's first season in Ann Arbor goes as poorly as Rodri- guez's did. Then, Hoke and the defense-wiz, Greg Mattison, will have a legitimate shot at re-filling the cupboard. The barricades will fade. And Hoke will have his chance to be the front-runner, leaving every- one else in the dust. -Some of Rohan's friends think they're six-star recruits. But they're not. You can reach him at trohan umich.edu Y9u saw the headline - go ahead, roll your eyes. Look at the headline, now back at me. Now back at the headline, now back to me. You've probably never had a negative thought about senior goalie Shawn Hunwick. STEPHEN J. In fact, you NESBITT didn't even think about him during his first two-and-a- half years on campus. He was just a second or third-string option who only had dreamed of seeing the ice. But last March, Hunwick enraptured you, capturing the collective heart of Wolverine nation. A fan base that was dev- astated when its starting goal- tender went down with a groin injury in the first period against Notre Dame was introduced to its most unlikely hero - a goalie whose mask barely peeked above the crossbar in goal. And after Hunwick spear- headed Michigan's drive to the NCAA regional semifinal, you didn't want to wake from the fairytale story unfolding before you. You wanted Hunwick to take the nation by storm in his senior season and claim the starting goaltending position from the get-go - in the back of your mind, you felt indebted to him for the special run. Perhaps more impressive than Hunwick's acrobatics in goal was the way the Wol- verine defense rallied around him. Michigan had nothingto lose - its top goaltender was gone right before the CCHA tournament, which was the only opportunity for the fledgling Wolverines to advance to their 20th consecutive NCAA Tour- nament. And while Hunwick trumped all expectations, he was the first to admit that it took a full-team effort to shut down ranked opponents like Michigan State, Northern Michigan, Miami (Ohio) and Bemidji State. The consensus entering the 2010-11 season was that it was Hunwick's job to lose. But re-enter Bryan Hogan. The senior groomed to be the Wolverines' starting goaltender back as a freshman wasnow the, * unfamiliar goalie. With Hogan healthy again for his senior sea- son, Michigan coach Red Beren- son elected to platoon the pair, naming no starter, but rather a 1A, 1B rotation. See NESBITT, Page 8 Think you're smart? Solve a real business problem. 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