home jobs contact us
Our Clients:
Browse by Sport
Find us on ASAP sports on Facebook ASAP sports on Twitter
ASAP Sports RSS Subscribe to RSS
Click to go to
Asaptext.com
ASAPtext.com
ASAP Sports e-Brochure View our
e-Brochure

UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN MEDIA CONFERENCE


December 30, 2014


Jim Harbaugh


JIM HACKETT:  As you hear of my head selection for head coach you'll hear I broke one of the cardinal rules in negotiation.  I fell in love with the other guy on the other side his name is John Denison and he played an enormous part in bringing the coach home.  This part of the program is really what it's about, being at Michigan.  We recognize the team first.
On December3rd I asked you to be patient with me as we started this search.  And we pledged to you a deliberate nature of our work and we discussed how broadly we were going to search for this coach.  We did that.
We went through a deep think phase that led to our point of view today.  Many fans, alumni, past players, they took the time to give me input.  I even talked to our current team twice about this decision.
Safe to say I heard from lots of people.  So today I'm very pleased and proud to announce the 20th head football coach of the University of Michigan, Jim Harbaugh.
The real talent in the family is Sarah Harbaugh.  She's here with her children, Addi, Katie, Jack and Jimmy and Grace and Jim's brother‑in‑law John and niece Kennedy are here.  Welcome to all of them.
And a special welcome to Jack and Jackie Harbaugh.  Jack was a coach here at Michigan for a number of years, and his wife Jackie, they were both incredible assets to our Michigan family as they were building what seemed to be a cadre of exceptional leaders in athletics.
Now, Jack was a coach when I played here and as I told Jim, he never had a bad day.  He was such a positive influence and I'm glad he's back around our program.  Thanks, Jack.
I mentioned I talked to lots of people.  One particularly famous pro coach who had done broadcasting for many years told me this:  You know, Jim Hackett, you didn't just get a great coach, you got the best coach in football today.  College or pro, in Jim Harbaugh.  There are a lot of great coaches out here.  He has a brother who is one.
We have many of them on our list.  But when you ask how many of these coaches won at all levels, college and pro, it's hard to find someone to compare with.  In my upbringing I remember my dad talking about Paul Brown.  Because he excelled at all levels.
This guy is just like that.  I could go on about him.  He won 49 games in four years with the San Francisco 49ers, just amazing.  And considering that he has really strong competitors in that league, including another one with the initials JH, he faced a lot of competition in the pros and amassed a fantastic record.
I think that Jim was likely, no, surely, was a candidate for any of these pro jobs that opened yesterday.  And yet, he chose to come home.  At Michigan, Jim will make the same salary he was paid at the Niners.  Jim has signed a seven‑year deal.  In a year from now I'll review the football program's progress and the university will determine an appropriate deferred compensation arrangement, which I have to take into account market conditions at that time.
As you know, there's a lot of opportunity out there for talent like this.  I don't plan on talking more about pay because I'm totally at peace with the fact that we have a win‑win deal here.  We thought about a way to signal Jim's coming home, and I looked around campus and realized that maize is everywhere.  I'm wearing a maize watch and I've gifted these to family and friends as a reminder of this very special day, our guy came home.  Please join me in welcoming Jim to his first press conference as the J. Ira and Nicki Harris family head coach of the University of Michigan, Jim Harbaugh.
(Applause).
COACH HARBAUGH:  Thank you.  Thank you very much.  Apologize for my voice.  They dumped Gatorade over me Sunday after our ballgame and I've lost my vocal cords a little bit.  And my selfie trip on the way in.  Anybody see that?  A lesser athlete would have gone down.  (Laughter).
That's all I have to say about that.  There are very special words that are in the English language that we all embrace.  There's family.  There's friends.  There's teammates.  There's victory.
I was reminded of another very special word when I was driving into Ann Arbor this morning, and that word is homecoming.  Our family's had three homecomings to Ann Arbor, Michigan in my lifetime.
The first was in 1973, when my dad was hired to coach the secondary at the University of Michigan.  We came in in March, early March, and we had nowhere to live.  Bo Schembechler told Bob Sutton, who was a graduate assistant at the time, that the Harbaughs were going to move into his apartment which was in the basement of the golf course.
Now, this was one heck of a deal, because there was a blizzard that hit Ann Arbor at that time and the city was shut down and everything was shut down.
But my brother and I, John, we had the run of the golf course.  There was a basement that had putting greens, sand boxes and baseball batting cages and for three weeks it was heaven on earth.  Then in 1982 I was recruited to Michigan as a student‑athlete to play for the legendary Bo Schembechler and coach Jerry Hanlon, I see over here sitting with my quarterback coach Gary Moeller and Lloyd Carr were on that staff as well.  And my first team meeting I was ten minutes late to the first team meeting.
Coach Schembechler told me I would never play a single down at the University of Michigan my entire career.  And then now, 2014, to come back as football coach at the University of Michigan.  I have to tell you that I have thought about that, dreamed about that since the time I was a young lad, nine, 10 years old, and throughout my adult life, dreamed about coaching at Michigan and now it's time to live that.
I have no other words to really describe how that feels except to tell you I have great excitement about the challenge of serving the University of Michigan as your football coach.
I want to introduce my family.  This is my wife Sarah, Sarah Harbaugh.
(Applause).
She's holding young Jack Harbaugh named after his grandfather.  I call him Mighty Jack the Quarterback.  Two years old.  This is Addi Harbaugh, who is six years old.  John Feuerborn my brother‑in‑law, very close friend.  My son Jimmy Harbaugh.  18 years old.  He's getting ready to graduate from high school and looking to start college in the fall himself.  Katie Harbaugh is four.  She's in the bathroom.  (Laughter) and my mom and dad, Jack and Jackie Harbaugh.
(Applause).
I'll go down the line.  I want to introduce my daughter, Grace Harbaugh, 12 years old, tremendous water polo player and student, and Kennedy Feuerborn, John Feuerborn's daughter and my niece.
I also want to thank some very important people.  The board of regents at the University of Michigan.  I want to thank President Schlissel.  I want to thank the athletic director Jim Hackett for having the confidence in me to‑‑ the confidence he's shown in me to bring me here to the University of Michigan.
Also want to thank Brady and Laura Hoke, my very good friends for their outstanding service at the University of Michigan.  They have honored the University of Michigan football program and I'm pleased to have such a tremendous foundation to stand on.
And that foundation was built by Brady, by Lloyd Carr, by Gary Moeller, by Bo Schembechler.  By Jerry Hanlon, by John Falk, by the men and women who have served the University of Michigan for over a century, for more than a century they've been playing football at the University of Michigan.
And all the former players, their families.  I feel like I'm standing on this foundation that is so rock solid.  I feel like I'm standing on the shoulders of tall, tall men and I can't thank you enough.  I can't thank the alumni enough.
The students, the faculty, for the enthusiasm that you've all shown, to my family and I.  Top to bottom Michigan is about excellence, is about greatness, and you have my pledge that I will carry forward the excellence of the University of Michigan football program.  Thank you very much.
(Applause).

Q.  To follow up on Fred's question, there are so many people who see you and all your success in how quickly some other coaches have done it in college football.  How quickly do you think winning in Ann Arbor will be the norm, Big Ten championships, National Championships, et cetera?
COACH HARBAUGH:  As I said, we have great expectations for the first week, really great expectations for the first day of practice, the first team meeting.  And I don't have any guarantee for you if that's what you're looking for or prediction.

Q.  Financially, you're going to get paid the same you were in San Francisco.  Could have gotten more money in the NFL.  Was it important to you?  What's the reasoning behind all that?
COACH HARBAUGH:  Some people asked me that.  I don't have that list.  I didn't make a pros and cons list.  I really made a decision that from the heart which I thought was best for myself and our family and very excited about it.  Very challenged by it.

Q.  If the man who coached you here was able to be standing here today, what do you think he'd say to you?
COACH HARBAUGH:  That's a great question.  Steve (indiscernible) already asked me that question.  And what I told him was I feel like he is here.
I feel like when I'm standing next to Lloyd Carr and Gary Moeller and my dad and Jerry Hanlon and Jon Falk, to me that is the same, that's the same people, that's the same feeling.  And they said they're happy to have me here.
And also that they would be willing to do anything to help, which I will be taking you up on, Lloyd.  I will be taking you up on, Moe.  Appreciate that.

Q.  How are you going to be able to sell the program that's been down in the dumps the last couple of years to future players that you're going out to meet?
COACH HARBAUGH:  Michigan's always been great.  It's always been great.  I always believe in it.  What's the best thing you could possibly in terms of selling something you're selling something that you believe in in your core.
To everything that you know and like you know your name, I know Michigan football and believe in Michigan football.  And that will not be a hard job.

Q.  I want to say actually I interviewed your dad at Western Michigan, he was the very first interview I ever did when I worked at the sports information department there.  So this is exciting to have another Harbaugh to interview.  I'm curious to know the way that Michigan has been roughed up against the rivals over the past years, if you have any guarantees or perhaps anything about Ohio State and Michigan State that you can lend here today to the fan base?
COACH HARBAUGH:  They're outstanding programs.  No, I make no guarantees.  I made a guarantee a long time ago.  And I've learned from that.  I've grown.  (Laughter) I understand that you don't make guarantees.

Q.  When did Jim Hackett first approach you, and when did he offer you the job and how quickly did you accept?  How quickly was this deal made?
COACH HARBAUGH:  Pretty quick.  It was a very quick process.

Q.  Can you say when he first contacted you?
COACH HARBAUGH:  I don't remember the exact day.  It was in the last couple of weeks.

Q.  When did you accept?
COACH HARBAUGH:  Yesterday.  (Laughter) I signed on and flew out here yesterday.

Q.  There were some comments you made a few years ago, critical of the academics here at Michigan and how things were handled.  How has that changed in your mind?  Are you going to be instrumental in any further change moving forward and how might your stance on that have changed over the years?
COACH HARBAUGH:  That's a good question.  That was another thing that I didn't understand at the time and didn't fully understand and made the mistake of not knowing that you don't compare things.  You don't compare, especially you don't compare great to great.
And that's what I did and that was a mistake.  I've since learned that you don't compare, compare one thing to another or one person to another or two great institutions compared to each other, because somebody always gets diminished when you do that.  So that's another lesson I have learned since eight years ago.

Q.  Where are you at as far as finding assistant coaches and what sort of criteria are you looking for in that?
COACH HARBAUGH:  The best.  And we're in the process right now and can't tell you that it's going to move fast or slow.  But hopefully it will move right.  And that's what we'll strive for.  Measure twice and cut once.

Q.  You obviously have a history of, quote/unquote, turnaround projects, San Diego, Stanford, San Francisco, looks like a turnaround situation here.  How do you attack that and you've done it in the past obviously experience‑wise, what do you think you need to attack most quickly here to get Michigan turned around?
COACH HARBAUGH:  Like any team‑‑ I'm not agreeing that it's a turnaround, this is Michigan, there's no turnarounds in Michigan.  This is greatness, long tradition of it.
But the important thing is the relationships as a team.  Getting to know the players.  I'm getting to know us as coaches.  And ultimately that's what a team is.  It's a group of relationships that is focused on achieving a goal together and that's the most important thing that I truly believe.

Q.  Just from a distance, how much did it pain you to watch Michigan struggle the last six, seven years?
COACH HARBAUGH:  I didn't see the struggles you're talking about.

Q.  You don't want to make any guarantees about Michigan State or Ohio State but can you talk about how you'll approach it you played in great rivalry games, your approach in the pros with the Seahawks.  What are you going to tell your guys about how will you approach the intensity they have to have?
COACH HARBAUGH:  First understanding what their intent is, what our team's intent is going to be and you've got to be willing to work for that, got to be willing to earn that.
That's why I'm so excited for the first week of winter conditioning, to get that started.  Find out exactly what our intent is.

Q.  Your emotions flying here, your emotions walking in here, knowing you were going to be the head football coach of the University of Michigan last night and today.
COACH HARBAUGH:  As I said, very excited, very challenged.

Q.  Nothing more than that?
COACH HARBAUGH:  Yeah, as I said it's very special.  This is a homecoming.  That would be the top of the list.

Q.  Given your fiery personality, the way that you approach the game, do you feel like maybe you're going to be able to connect better with back in the college game than maybe at the professional ranks, how do you feel your personality translates to the college game, again?
COACH HARBAUGH:  I feel like it's the only personality I have.  (Laughter) the other ones were all taken.  So I got this one.
But we all had a great desire‑‑ it's a human agency to be a part of a team, to be part of something great.  To be a part of something that you're bigger than yourself.  And I have that great desire and I couldn't be more excited, honored, humbled to be a part of, to this great team.  Very excited about that.

Q.  You talked to the team earlier today.  What was your message with them?
COACH HARBAUGH:  I told them, I said it's a little bit uncomfortable.  I've never talked to a team through a little speakerphone.  I was talking to Coach Carr and Coach Moeller earlier, I said, Give me your thoughts, what would you say to a speaker?  But basically told them that we'll see them back here in a few days, the 5th or 6th, we'll schedule a meeting and we'll get to work on our winter conditioning.

Q.  I hear you saying that you've mellowed with age, right, you've mellowed with age.  Let's say that you have a young, brash, cocky, confident player who steps to the microphone and he offers a guarantee, how do you handle that?
COACH HARBAUGH:  If you do that then you gotta back it up, yeah.

Q.  Wanted to ask you, there's a lot of people saying that you would never leave the NFL and that you were too competitive and wanted to be at the highest level.  Can you talk about the decision, did you look at college and NFL differently?  Was it just because of Michigan, why did you decide to leave the NFL and come back to college?
COACH HARBAUGH:  As I said earlier, it was a decision I basically made without a list, without a pros and cons approach to it.  And something that I've dreamed about.  I felt it was time to live, felt it was a decision I ultimately made with my heart for myself and my family.

FastScripts Transcript by ASAP Sports




About ASAP SportsFastScripts ArchiveRecent InterviewsCaptioningUpcoming EventsContact Us
FastScripts | Events Covered | Our Clients | Other Services | ASAP in the News | Site Map | Job Opportunities | Links
ASAP Sports, Inc. | T: 1.212 385 0297