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The Weekly Update at WolverineNation is a sneak peak inside Michigan recruiting.

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Amanda ChidesterCourtesy University of Michigan AthleticsThe bat of Amanda Chidester needs to get hot if Michigan is to advance to the WCWS.
ANN ARBOR, Mich. -- It was a season where so much of Michigan softball was an unknown.

Over the past two seasons, Michigan graduated the majority of its lineup, most of its power and saw All-American pitcher Jordan Taylor run out of eligibility after last season.

Unlike the previous two Michigan softball teams that slaughtered competition during the regular season only to have postseason failure when facing other top teams, this season’s team has had the opposite happen entering Thursday’s Super Regional at No. 3 Alabama (53-7).

For the first time since 2001, the Wolverines didn’t host a regional. They were in a race for the Big Ten championship, which they won or shared for the fifth straight season, until the last weekend of the year.

In prior seasons they relied on a litter of All-Americans in the lineup and the circle. This season has been nothing like that. While the Wolverines have a lot of talent, they rely more on contributions from every spot in the lineup.

While it was tiring during the season, those experiences helped Michigan now.

“Our defense has moved a lot and you have a freshman battery," senior first baseman Amanda Chidester said. "There’s been a lot of different changes. Our leadership roles have shifted and it was a little rough at the beginning.

“The things we were faced with at the beginning and even in the middle of the season have helped us grow and helped us work together better. We’ve been through everything. We’ve been through losses, been through wins, come back. In the past years, we had never been through everything because we just dominated everyone .”

This is Michigan-relative, of course, since the Wolverines are still 42-15. Consider, though, the Wolverines lost more than 10 games just once in the previous four seasons -- coincidentally the last time Michigan reached the Women’s College World Series. Before this season Michigan hadn’t lost 15 games in a year since 2006.

Michigan also lost two straight series in the Big Ten -- at Minnesota and at home to Illinois -- compared to the past eight seasons where the Wolverines lost four games or less in the Big Ten all year.

This season’s team, though, has embraced the message coach Carol Hutchins has preached throughout her 28 seasons at Michigan: “Everyone do her part.” To win, this season’s team has actually needed to do that.

“In previous years, we probably depended more on our All-American pitchers and big hitters and now it is spread out through the whole team and that is making us better,’ senior center fielder Bree Evans said. “We’re not dependent on just one person. Like everyone in the lineup can get a hit at that one moment."

One other thing has given Michigan confidence during this season of transition: An unlikely star freshman pitcher.

After splitting games with fellow freshman Sara Driesenga early in the season, the Wolverines have turned to Haylie Wagner for most of their big games down the stretch. She won all three games in last weekend’s Louisville regional and has won her last 10 decisions. Against Louisville in the regional final Sunday, Wagner set Michigan’s freshman record for wins, breaking the record of the pitcher she replaced, Jordan Taylor.

“We just, more than anything, try to take the pressure off her,” Hutchins said. “We are encouraging her to just do her part and that she can’t do all of it."

WolverineNation mailbag 

May, 23, 2012
May 23
12:21
PM ET
Just when we thought sporting excitement would be over for Michigan fans until September, the softball teams goes and upsets No. 9 Louisville and advances to the NCAA Super Regional.

We didn't get any softball questions this week, but if you have some lingering thoughts on the season, please send them in next week because we love hearing from our readers!

Mike will be taking care of next week's mailbag so email (michaelrothsteinespn@gmail.com) or tweet (@mikerothstein) your questions to him! But now, on to this week's questions…

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FORT WAYNE, Ind. -- The last name instantly catches attention. So, too, does his game.

Eron Gordon (Indianapolis/North Central) isn’t in high school yet, but his game is already mature far beyond its years. The younger brother of NBA player Eric Gordon already has picked up an offer from Indiana, and others around the Midwest are starting to notice.

Never mind his recruitment has barely started and he has yet to take a high school class.

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FORT WAYNE, Ind. -- He is already taller than many of his peers, has better handle and can run the floor like a point guard.

Luke Kennard (Franklin, Ohio/Franklin) has three years before he’ll enter college, but the sophomore-to-be is already attracting major attention from schools around the Midwest. There was some surprise at first from the amount of notice he received from big-time programs, including Michigan, but it hasn’t been overwhelming for the Class of 2015 guard.

“It’s hard to explain,” Kennard said. “Just the amount of colleges that have been interested surprised me, but I’m glad it’s happening so I’ll have a chance to play at the next level.”

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Michigan is looking for a new baseball coach.

After 10 seasons in charge, Rich Maloney and Michigan "mutually agreed" Tuesday that it was time for the program to go in a different direction.

"Rich had several significant accomplishments during his Michigan career, but we agreed a coaching change at this time was in the best interest of the program,” Michigan athletic director Dave Brandon said in a statement. “We appreciate Rich’s contributions and wish him well as he transitions to his next career endeavor.”

Maloney led Michigan to eight winning seasons and a 341-244 record over his time at the school. However, the Wolverines finished their second straight losing season last weekend, finishing with a 22-34 record.

Maloney took Michigan to four NCAA tournaments and was named the 2007 and 2008 Big Ten coach of the year. He also helped with getting the school's baseball stadium, Ray Fisher Stadium, renovated.

"I would like to thank all of the baseball alumni and donors that played an integral role in the stadium project,” Maloney said in a statement “This is one of the top highlights on my list of Michigan memories and I appreciate their commitment to Michigan baseball.”
The Michigan football staff begins its recruitment in the Midwest, hoping to target players within four to five hours of Ann Arbor. But when they find a player from farther away with ties to the area, that's just as good.

Cornerback Nick Watkins (Dallas/Bishop Dunne) is one of those prospects. His father is former Detroit Lions cornerback Bobby Watkins Jr., and Nick's mother’s side of the family still lives in the Detroit area.

That connection, coupled with Watkins' skill set, made him the most recent offer in the Wolverines' 2014 class. Michigan has 25 offers out for that year, with six in the secondary.

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Yost-Rockne rivalry featured genuine dislike

May, 22, 2012
May 22
9:27
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Senior college football writer Ivan Maisel examines the heated rivalry between legendary coaches Fielding Yost of Michigan and Knute Rockne of Notre Dame.

There have been plenty of coaching feuds since, but this one changed the course of college football.
In their first year at the helm of the Wolverines, Michigan football coach Brady Hoke and his staff reeled in the No. 7 recruiting class in the nation. Now, in their second year, with top commits such as Shane Morris, Gareon Conley and David Dawson, the Wolverines look to be pushing for the best 2013 recruiting class in the country.

Offensive coordinator Al Borges said it’s because of one simple reason.

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Al Borges
Icon SMIOffensive coordinator Al Borges says Brady Hoke's earnest approach makes Michigan's recruiting efforts work.
“It’s Michigan -- that’s the bottom line,” Borges said. “We’re going to make people understand the advantages of coming to this university, and they go way beyond playing football. We just completely embrace that concept as a staff, and I think it resonates with the kids.”

Several recruits have said that unlike other schools, there is no “sales pitch” with the Wolverines and that they appreciate that honesty from the coaching staff.

“Brady is an exceptional guy in that what you see is what you get,” Borges said. “There’s no pretense, no stuffed shirts, none of that stuff. He’s a football coach who cares about the players and the players come first. We’re going to try to win for Michigan.”

However, there are several things that have attracted top recruits. The stadium and facilities are always important (both of which have received recent upgrades), and games like last season’s Notre Dame Under the Lights game and the 2012 season opener against Alabama draw in top recruits who dream of playing in marquee matchups.

And the recent fad in college football with uniform upgrades and changes also has hit the Wolverines, who sported legacy uniforms in both the Notre Dame and Michigan State games in 2011.

Borges wasn’t sure about jersey changes being a pull for recruits, joking that his wife would have a better idea of whether those fashion choices can aid recruitment.

“I’m an old-school guy,” Borges said. “I love how we look every game. … I’ll say this, though, the uniforms we wore for Notre Dame were pretty cool. There might be something to it, but I have no idea.”

Whether it’s the uniforms, night games, campus life or other, the Wolverines continue to sell Michigan the best way they know how. And for them, that seems to be working well.

“I love recruiting here,” said Borges, who has coached at Auburn, UCLA, Indiana and Oregon, among others. “Because it’s the best sell of any place I’ve ever coached.”

Big Ten schools like Josh Malone 

May, 22, 2012
May 22
9:16
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Another Big Ten school has offered Josh Malone.

Ohio State is the latest to join rival Michigan in the race to land the 2014 receiver prospect from Gallatin (Tenn.) Station Camp.

"I like them and I know that they are always a contender," Malone said via text message to ESPN.

In addition to his seven other scholarship offers, Malone has seen recent interest from Clemson, Virginia, North Carolina, Alabama, Stanford, Baylor and Kentucky. All of those schools have visited Station Camp during the spring evaluation period.

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Michigan hosted 2014 offensive lineman Nathaniel Devers (Ravenna, Ohio/Southeast) this weekend. The 6-foot-3, 265-pound lineman took the visit to Ann Arbor despite having grown up in enemy territory.

"I was raised to hate Michigan," he said laughing. "But I'm starting to really like it."

Much like most of the other prospects who have gotten the chance to meet the coaching staff in person, Devers says the best part of his visit was sitting down and talking with head coach Brady Hoke.

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Four-star safety Leon McQuay III (Seffner, Fla./Armwood), ranked No. 34 in the ESPN 150, took a visit to Michigan this weekend with his father, and both came away with favorable reviews.

"When Michigan first started they were really behind because we already started visiting schools," said the father, Leon McQuay Jr. "They asked if they could make up the difference, and I said anything is possible. From my mind, what we saw, it made up the difference. I just want him to be happy in the major he's looking for.

"We found out they have his major, music production. The music department is on the other end, but he got to see the public studio for the students, which was great."

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ANN ARBOR, Mich. -- Starting in 2015, Michigan’s football schedule will have rivals as bookends.

The Wolverines will travel to Michigan State for their Big Ten opener on Oct. 3, 2015 and then close that regular season by playing host to Ohio State on Nov. 28, 2015. The next year, Michigan State will go to Michigan on Oct. 1, 2016 and the Buckeyes will play host to Michigan on Nov. 26, 2016.

This is all part of the Big Ten’s 2015 and 2016 football schedules, which were released Monday.

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Marlin JacksonDrew Hallowell/Getty ImagesFormer Wolverine Marlin Jackson wants to help athletes transition from college to the NFL.
When former Michigan safety Marlin Jackson reached the NFL as a first-round pick in 2005, there was no one there to help him with the process of going from a broke college athlete to a 22-year-old millionaire.

But now, seven years later, Jackson and former Michigan teammate Tim Massaquoi (a seventh-round draft pick that same year) have begun to form a business they hope will help rookies shift into the NFL lifestyle. They’ve called it PTS -- Prepare to Succeed.

“That’s where it all comes from -- some of the mistakes that me and Tim made ourselves and mistakes the majority of guys around the league make because you really have no clue as to what all goes into being a professional athlete,” Jackson said Friday at the Mott Takeover radiothon at WTKA radio. “You’re really just almost being thrown to the wolves and you have to learn on the run, but we’re trying to prevent that.”

For the past year and a half, Jackson and Massaquoi have been making plans for PTS, which Jackson described as a “career transition program for collegiate athletes going into the NFL.”

“It’s preparation for the lifestyle and the different things you’ll encounter becoming a professional athlete,” Jackson said. “As far as the agents, financial advisors, CPAs, responsibilities.”

The two are hoping to start small with a pilot program that’d work with some Michigan graduates, but eventually they’d like it to be a program implemented by the NCAA to help ease the stressful and often overwhelming process for many players.

Jackson said when he spoke with a few Michigan football players about what to expect upon entering the NFL that several were unaware of the financial responsibilities and troubles that they could encounter during their first few years. He said that most athletes only focus on the football aspect rather than seeing it as their job, which is why some football players find themselves broke shortly after leaving the league.

“In high school and college everyone is telling you you’re the greatest and this and that and everything is being done for you,” Jackson said. “And once you’re on your own it’s your responsibility to handle all these things and guys don’t know how to handle these simple responsibilities.”
ANN ARBOR, Mich. -- Contact with players is minimal during the summer and since he can’t go on the road to recruit, Michigan football coach Brady Hoke is taking time to evaluate.

As the second-year coach begins to put together his plan for August’s preseason practice, he is looking at what worked and didn’t from last year’s 11-2 season that ended in a 23-20 win over Virginia Tech in the Allstate Sugar Bowl.

“You start with a big template of what you did a year ago,” Hoke said before the Griese/Hutchinson/Woodson golf outing Sunday. “There’s always changes in the course of that year. You go back and you write everything down and you look at it and say did it help you win and did it help you develop your team or didn’t it. You’re always looking for new ideas.”

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