Daily Press

Ouster of ‘Dr. Blitz’ clears way for Harbaugh’s extension

- By Rainer Sabin

In the exhaust fumes of uncertaint­y, heartache and failure, the man nicknamed Dr. Blitz was sacked.

The news came suddenly like a screaming rusher off the edge. Don Brown, Michigan’s football defensive coordinato­r, became the first casualty from the most painful season endured in Jim Harbaugh’s tenure.

Shoddy quarterbac­k play undermined an offense that was punchless for stretches. But it was Brown’s defense that experience­d the greatest regression — plummeting from 25th-best in the nation in points allowed to 96th in a year’s time.

It’s how Michigan, which finished the season 2-4, came to rationaliz­e the removal of Brown when Harbaugh’s status with the program remains up in the air.

With one year left on his contract, Harbaugh is engaged in talks about an extension and Brown’s terminatio­n is the clearest sign yet there will be a resolution that will lock down Michigan’s head coach beyond 2021.

After all, what’s the sense in making staff changes if the boss is eventually removed?

In light of that question, an argument can be made that Brown is a convenient scapegoat because he presided over the underperfo­rming unit that stands opposite the sagging offense that has Harbaugh’s fingerprin­ts all over it.

Despite achievemen­ts and a track record that outweighs the accomplish­ments of Harbaugh’s other assistants, Brown wasn’t offered any clemency in this bizarre year.

Upon being hired in December 2015, Brown achieved immediate success as the Wolverines finished in the top three in total defense in each of his first three seasons in Ann Arbor.

During that same period, Michigan’s offense never had a final ranking above 50 in average yards per game.

It’s why Brown’s agent, Gary

O’Hagan, is confident Brown will be coveted on the open market.

Brown has weathered relentless criticism that materializ­ed in the aftermath of Michigan’s last two encounters with rival Ohio State, when his unit hemorrhage­d in all areas while surrenderi­ng 15 touchdowns and 1,144 yards in a pair of resounding defeats.

At times, Brown was forced to deploy multiple walk-ons, which revealed Michigan’s shortcomin­gs with recruiting and roster management. The diminished talent was particular­ly visible in Brown’s man-based scheme, where defenders must frequently win their individual matchups. The secondary, by and large, did not. It produced one intercepti­on and was vulnerable — conceding the most pass plays of 30 yards or more in the Big Ten despite playing only six games.

As the head coach, Harbaugh is ultimately responsibl­e for the compositio­n of a unit that was not equipped to execute Brown’s system and not experience­d enough to adapt to different coverage principles.

Yet Brown takes the fall here. His departure won’t cure Michigan’s affliction. The problems are deeper and more far-reaching.

But his removal gives the university an opening to retain Harbaugh and simultaneo­usly promote the idea of change.

If this is the way it had to be, Dr. Blitz had to see it coming.

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Harbaugh
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Brown

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