

Michigan football: Michigan athletics' 'wait and see' approach to problems is a costly pattern Schembechler's Twitter timeline reportedly included “likes” of insensitive posts, including several suggesting slavery and Jim Crow had the positive effect of strengthening Black individuals and families.

Michigan athletic director Warde Manuel and coach Jim Harbaugh released a statement Saturday that said, in part: “We are aware of some comments and likes on social media that have caused concern and pain for individuals in our community.” Rob Oller: Is CJ Stroud 'smart' criticism legit or just a smokescreen for interested NFL GMs? Upper Arlington resident Glenn “Shemy” Schembechler, son of legendary Wolverines coach Bo Schembechler, resigned from his UM assistant recruiting position Saturday after three days on the job following the fallout from racist social media “likes.” The hits just keep coming for Michigan football, with the latest gut punch landing close to Columbus. Rob Oller: Second Thoughts: Talking ESPN windbags, NFL draft lottery and greedy CFP Ray Corbett recently retired as Grandview’s boys basketball coach. Hartley football coach Brad Burchfield was a fine Division III football player but will tell you he had no shot at playing on Sundays. That just doesn’t happen in the NFL, NBA or NHL. The beauty of golf is that something like this can happen, that a working-class dude can dial it up against the best in the world. This kind of feel-good stuff happens only in books, movies and sports. He also was extended an invitation into this week’s PGA Tour event in Fort Worth, Texas. Block, 46, built himself into a legend by first making the cut at Oak Hill Country Club, then making a hole-in-one Sunday while playing with Rory McIlroy, and finally by draining a par putt on the 72nd hole that tied him for 15th and qualified him for next year’s PGA Championship in Kentucky.
#GRANDVIEW FOOTBALL PRO#
Michael Block is the club pro at a California public golf course who stole the show over the weekend at the PGA Championship in Rochester, New York. The latest too-good-to-be-true sports story turned out to be both exceptionally good and absolutely true when a golfing Everyman put a lump in the throat of hardened hackers who prefer their beer wet and eyes dry.
