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<blockquote data-quote="illini2002" data-source="post: 1324623" data-attributes="member: 593495"><p>I was reading ESPN and an article about Michigan came up, I thought it would be interesting to share. Apparently Michigan is a VERY young team as well. </p><p></p><p><a href="http://www.espn.com/college-football/story/_/id/20305034/michigan-wolverines-fully-built-jim-harbaugh-now-what" target="_blank">Read The Article</a></p><p></p><p>"We know it's important to fill the holes and play well because that's why we came here, to win championships," Hudson said.</p><p></p><p>And being this young and inexperienced won't be an excuse. That's been proved by the last three College Football Playoff national champions. Clemson, Alabama and Ohio State each had at least 22 true and redshirt freshmen who saw game action in their respective championship seasons.</p><p></p><p>Harbaugh has embraced the challenge that lies ahead. He hasn't looked at the youth as an excuse that lowers expectations, but rather as an opportunity for his players, the prospects he recruited, to get Michigan to the Big Ten title game and beyond.</p><p></p><p>"Really excited about it, because historically I have learned that the biggest jump you can make as a player in college, biggest single year, is going from that freshman year to that sophomore year," Harbaugh said. "Those 12 months that you have to train yourself, but also now everything they do from this moment on, the rest of this entire year, they've already done before. I don't have a study to show you, but experience has taught me that that's when you can make your biggest improvement in one year as a football player."</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="illini2002, post: 1324623, member: 593495"] I was reading ESPN and an article about Michigan came up, I thought it would be interesting to share. Apparently Michigan is a VERY young team as well. [URL="http://www.espn.com/college-football/story/_/id/20305034/michigan-wolverines-fully-built-jim-harbaugh-now-what"]Read The Article[/URL] "We know it's important to fill the holes and play well because that's why we came here, to win championships," Hudson said. And being this young and inexperienced won't be an excuse. That's been proved by the last three College Football Playoff national champions. Clemson, Alabama and Ohio State each had at least 22 true and redshirt freshmen who saw game action in their respective championship seasons. Harbaugh has embraced the challenge that lies ahead. He hasn't looked at the youth as an excuse that lowers expectations, but rather as an opportunity for his players, the prospects he recruited, to get Michigan to the Big Ten title game and beyond. "Really excited about it, because historically I have learned that the biggest jump you can make as a player in college, biggest single year, is going from that freshman year to that sophomore year," Harbaugh said. "Those 12 months that you have to train yourself, but also now everything they do from this moment on, the rest of this entire year, they've already done before. I don't have a study to show you, but experience has taught me that that's when you can make your biggest improvement in one year as a football player." [/QUOTE]
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