LOOK: New Michigan Nike shoes about to be released

Find out more about the shoe as well as when they’ll be released.

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Mark your calendars, Michigan fans. On Thursday, Aug. 20, there will be some new maize and blue merchandise made available.

Ever since the Wolverines made the wholesale switch to Jordan brand and Nike in 2016, the shoes have been something of a hot ticket item. Limited quantities are generally made available, and when they are, they tend to fly off the shelves.

Soon, Nike proper is set to release the Zoom Pegasus 37 running shoe for a variety of schools, with Michigan included.

Via Nike.com:

Crush your miles while repping the Wolverines in the Nike College Zoom Pegasus 37 (Michigan). Delivering the same fit and feel that runners love, the shoe has an all-new forefoot cushioning unit and foam for optimal responsiveness. The result is a durable, lightweight trainer designed for everyday running.

We have to admit, they’re awfully sharp-looking.

The shoes will be available via order on Nike.com (where you can get a closer look via several different angles) or at MDen.com starting at 10 a.m. on Aug. 20.

2020 Michigan Wolverines football schedule: downloadable wallpaper

Never miss a game in 2020. Get your Michigan football downloadable wallpaper right from WolverinesWire today!

Never miss a game this season with our College Wire downloadable 2020 Michigan Wolverines football schedule — updated with the newly-released Big Ten conference-only fall slate. Use as wallpaper for your lock screen on your smart phone.

Download 2020 Michigan football schedule here

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NCAA to allow players to support causes on jerseys

The NCAA is allowing a broad change allowing players to customize their jerseys.

 

It’s a nouveau trend in sports, where athletes are able to express themselves beyond the usual. Where in the professional ranks, shoes and the like are easily customizable — such as in the NFL with the “My Cause, My Cleats” initiative — we’ve seen the NBA take it to another level, allowing its players to add social justice messages via patches in the wake of the killing of George Floyd and the further emergence of the Black Lives Matter movement.

Now could we see something similar in the college ranks?

That looks to be the case as the NCAA will now allow players across all sports not to just wear patches, but to change their nameplates to honor people, events or social justice causes.

So should football and basketball happen this fall, you very well could see a very different looking maize and blue crew, in the sense that assuredly there will be many who take up the mantle for Black Lives Matter, but other causes as well.

Your turn

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Michigan contingent on Big Ten Anti-Hate and Anti-Racism Coalition announced

The Wolverines contingent who will take part of the conference’s new coalition to fight racism has been revealed.

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Earlier this month, in the wake of the George Floyd killing at the hands of the police, the subsequent protests and rise to prominence of the Black Lives Matter movement, the Big Ten announced that it was formulating the ‘Anti-Hate and Anti-Racism Coalition.’

As described by Commissioner Kevin Warren:

I have made the decision to create the Big Ten Conference Anti-Hate and Anti-Racism Coalition and invite student-athletes, coaches, athletic directors, chancellors, presidents and others to join me.  I have already received powerful notes of support and interest in joining this coalition and look forward to partnering with the existing diversity councils on our various campuses. It is critical that our student-athletes possess their rights to free speech, their rights to peaceful protest and we will work to empower them in creating meaningful change.

We must listen to our young people. Our children and future generations deserve better. We are either part of the problem or part of the solution. The Big Ten Conference will be part of the solution as we actively and constructively combat racism and hate in our country.

On Monday, those representing the Michigan contingent were revealed, as well as those from the other thirteen member schools.

While some of the names are of the household variety, there are also several others from either behind-the-scenes or non-revenue sports, and it includes those from varying levels of prominence, as well as from different races and backgrounds.

Here are all of the Michigan representatives that will be participating and advocating in the group:

University of Michigan

Dr. Mark Schlissel – President

Athletic Department

Warde Manuel – Athletic Director

Abigail Eiler – Assistant Director of Athletic Counseling

Elizabeth Heinrich – Executive Senior Associate AD and Chief Student Development and Compliance Officer

Kenneth O. Miles – Executive Senior Associate Athletic Director

Football

Jim Harbaugh – Head Coach

Hunter Reynolds – senior defensive back

Adam Shibley – senior linebacker

Basketball

Juwan Howard – Head Coach

Men’s Soccer

Chaka Daley – Head Coach

Track & Field

James Henry – Head Coach (men’s and women’s)

Brianna Nelson – fifth-year senior, women’s track and field

Joyce Wilson-Eder – former student-athlete, Advisory Commission

Volleyball

Mark Rosen – Head Coach

Read the full Big Ten release below:

ROSEMONT, ILL. – The Big Ten Conference formally announced today the members of the Big Ten Anti-Hate and Anti-Racism Coalition, which includes student-athletes, coaches, athletic directors, chancellors, presidents and other members of the Big Ten family representing all 14 member institutions. In addition, the Big Ten Conference formally launched a Voter Registration Initiative that has been in the planning stages since February of 2020.

“The events in our country and around the world during the past few months have strengthened my fundamental belief in our need to develop tangible and actionable efforts in a collective manner and provide viable solutions addressing the issues of hate and racism in our society,” said Big Ten Commissioner Kevin Warren. “We have the distinct opportunity and responsibility through our Coalition to continually encourage, educate and empower our student-athletes as we embrace transparent and much-needed dialogue regarding meaningful issues that have impacted race relations for many years.”

“The Big Ten Conference Voter Registration Initiative is a natural extension of the conversation within the Coalition. An election year provides the opportunity to educate our student-athletes in a non-partisan fashion regarding the importance of exercising their civic right to clearly understand the political process, register to vote, cast a vote during the upcoming election, and provide adequate support to combat voter suppression. We are at an inflection point in our country. Empowering our student-athletes by encouraging them to use their voices illustrates how we can collectively work together to build a better future.”

The Coalition was first announced in an open letter from Commissioner Warren on June 1, 2020 following the death of George Floyd. The goal of the Coalition is to seek tangible ways to actively and constructively combat racism and hate around the world while also empowering student-athletes to express their rights to free speech and peaceful protest.

“I am grateful to have the opportunity to use my platform as a student-athlete to combat hate and racism in our country,” said Savanna Spears, a Coalition member and a junior on the Indiana women’s swimming and diving team. “It is so important that we go out and vote so that all our voices can be heard.”

“I am thankful to have been nominated for such an incredible union,” said Coalition member and Illinois football student-athlete Ra’Von Bonner. “I am an agent of change and will use my platform to create real change in this country. I am very motivated and dedicated to progressing my people, BLACK people.”

The Coalition will leverage, support and complement the extraordinary efforts already taking place across the Big Ten Conference through initiatives on our campuses, as well as through existing conference-wide organizations like the Big Ten Advisory Commission. Established in 1972 in the midst of a period of significant social unrest in our nation, the Advisory Commission will have direct representation on the Coalition.

The Big Ten Conference Voter Registration Initiative is a Conference-wide collaboration that encourages student-athletes to take part in the electoral process. The non-partisan Initiative is coordinated by a Voter Registration Committee that includes representatives from all 14 Big Ten institutions. This initiative was activated in February 2020, and hosts three subcommittees to address: Timeline, Outreach and Rollout; Technology and Data; and Education and Programming.

Monthly educational programming will begin in July and continue through the general election on November 3, 2020. This programming will be designed to inform and educate student-athletes on the importance of civic engagement and how to register to vote and submit a ballot, in person or absentee.

The Voter Registration Committee will also partner with the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law to develop educational programming, create outreach tools, foster open and honest dialogue with law enforcement and collaborate with other established civic platforms. In partnership with Election Protection, the nation’s largest and longest-running non-partisan, voter protection program, led by the Lawyers’ Committee, the Big Ten Conference will work to ensure that all voters have an equal opportunity to register, vote and have that vote counted. The Big Ten Conference will encourage use of the Election Protection helpline, 866-OUR-VOTE or 866-687-8683, which is available 365 days a year to support anyone with voting-related questions.

“The right to vote is the most important right in our democracy,” said Kristen Clarke, president and executive director of the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law. “Student-athletes have unique platforms that can be used to educate and activate students all across the country. I am excited to partner with Commissioner Kevin Warren and the Big Ten Conference Anti-Hate and Anti-Racism Coalition to help promote civic participation and ensure that the voices of all student voters are heard this election season.”

“I commend Commissioner Warren and the Big Ten Conference for taking action and being part of the solution,” said Coalition member and Maryland football head coach Michael Locksley. “I am honored to be part of this Coalition and look forward to having tough conversations that lead to significant change. Our student-athletes at Maryland have taken it upon themselves to make an impact by not only registering themselves to vote, but also getting out into our community to encourage voter registration and participation on election days. It gives me great pride to see the Big Ten also institute a Voter Registration Initiative that I strongly believe can have a lasting impact.”

Members of the Big Ten Anti-Hate and Anti-Racism Coalition and the Voter Registration Committee can be found here.

Barack Obama praises Jim Harbaugh for protest participation

The former President of the United States gave a shoutout to the Wolverines head coach after he marched along with protesters in Ann Arbor.

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Black Lives Matter, at least in its current iteration, shouldn’t be a partisan issue, yet at times it has been.

It’s understandable that there’s been some consternation and anger over those protests that have eventually turned into riots with looting, but that’s not what’s been at the heart of the civil unrest in the United States over the last week.

Citizens from all over the country have taken to the streets peacefully to protest the killing of George Floyd by Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin — who has since been arrested and is being charged for second-degree murder after the initial charges brought against him were third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter. Those protests have even happened in Ann Arbor — again, peacefully — and Michigan head coach Jim Harbaugh was one of many participants from the football program on Tuesday morning.

And that’s not only gotten national attention, it got a shoutout from the nation’s 44th president, Barack Obama, who addressed the nation on Wednesday.

“I know we saw Jim Harbaugh — I’m sorry, I know we have the Ohio State contingent here — you got Jim Harbaugh, the coach of Michigan football, marching today,” Obama said. “That’s not something that was happening five, six years ago. Although Jim I know, and he’s been on the right side of this issue for quite some time.

“You have unlikely participants because all of you have all worked so hard to raise awareness. That’s the progress that has been made — it doesn’t mean that it’s been solved.”

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Watch the video below:

WolverinesWire joins The Michigan Insider to discuss recent protest

WolverinesWire publisher Isaiah Hole joined Sam Webb and Ira Weintraub on WTKA to discuss Michigan football at the Black Lives Matter march.

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On Tuesday, I marched in the ‘Justice for George Floyd’ protest in Ann Arbor, a peaceful gathering of people who seek answers for police brutality and the abolition of racism in this country.

I did so apolitically and I famously shy away from being vocal about social issues, but as a bi-racial man who’s experienced my fair share of racism in my lifetime, I’ve felt like it’s been time to get involved.

I was surprised when I arrived at the corner of S. State Street and S. University on Tuesday morning when I started seeing so many familiar faces, as many on the football team, including staff and coaches, joined to make their voices and support heard. I wrote about it here, in case you missed it.

On Wednesday morning, I joined Sam Webb and Ira Weintraub on The Michigan Insider on WTKA 1270 AM to discuss not only the Michigan contingent and the player reaction (you can read my exclusive with defensive end Luiji Vilain here), but why I didn’t join the protest for political reasons, also why I didn’t cover it the way that I would cover other Michigan-related events. Also, I spoke on why I’ve tried to be more thought provoking and have avoided the left vs. right battle when it comes to social issues, including this one.

Listen to the entire conversation below:

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Jim Harbaugh ‘very upset’ by George Floyd murder

The Wolverines head coach shared with Rich Eisen how upset he is over the unfolding events.

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It’s been an upsetting moment the past few days in the country, as white Minneapolis police officers appeared on video to murder African American George Floyd over a non-violent crime.

Protests have taken to the streets to decry the brutality and apparent racism involved as much of America has galvanized behind the issue, while more have spoken out on whatever platforms they have — whether it be social media or the media at-large.

That includes Michigan head coach Jim Harbaugh, who shared his disdain for the event on The Rich Eisen Show on Thursday.

“Today, I’ll tell you what: I’m really very, very upset about the George Floyd death,” Harbaugh said. “It’s kinda got me preoccupied today. And (it’s) horrendous.

“I’m just watching right now and I’m looking forward to there being an investigation. Waiting for that – charges. That’s completely outrageous.”

From there, Eisen asked Harbaugh about Colin Kaepernick, his former quarterback with the San Francisco 49ers, who became something of a controversial figure after he started kneeling during the national anthem in protest of police brutality against the black community.

In the aftermath of Floyd’s apparent murder, non-comical memes started circulating, tying Kaepernick’s resolve to this exact situation.

Harbaugh notes that he’s spoken relatively recently with Kaepernick and continued to stand in his corner, elucidating that this was the reason the former NFL quarterback felt he needed to do something to draw attention to this issue.

“(I spoke to him) a few weeks ago,” Harbaugh said. “We texted. Every now and then we text. I think – there was a graphic, I saw that, too. It’s why he knelt. Was it LeBron James who tweeted that? If you didn’t know then, you know now. That spoke volumes, I thought.”

Watch the entire interview here:

LOOK: Tom Brady rebounds with hole-out from fairway

After a rough start, the G.O.A.T. sank an incredible shot off the fairway.

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Don’t call it a comeback. Actually, scratch that — it’s kind of Tom Brady’s thing.

The former Michigan quarterback seems to have taken up his sense of urgency a notch, after a terrible early showing in The Match — a golf charity event pairing Brady with Phil Mickelson and Peyton Manning with Tiger Woods to raise money for coronavirus relief. Avid viewers went from relentlessly making fun (while relating) to Brady’s rough start, but like being down 28-3 to Atlanta, he found his stroke late.

And he showed that off by sinking a shot from the fairway — like the G.O.A.T. he is.

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Take a look:

So, in short, never count Tom Brady out.

Tom Brady: Apparently not the G.O.A.T. at everything

While we love the G.O.A.T. in football, we had to laugh at some of the reactions he got as he struggled playing golf on the national stage.

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Well, I guess Tom Brady is just the G.O.A.T. at football.

Sports fans finally got some respite from a sport less world created courtesy of COVID-19 in the form of golf. But it wasn’t a typical golf event, as Brady teamed up with Phil Mickelson while their respective rivals, Peyton Manning and Tiger Woods, faced off against them.

Normally, we wouldn’t highlight a moment when one of Michigan’s most prolific stars has a rare moment of playing not so well on the national stage. However, given that it’s golf and not football, we were certainly able to find the humor in the situation. Especially given that it’s a charitable event that’s raising $10 million for COVID-19 relief.

So, at last, we can finally say: Tom Brady — mortal, just like us. At least at one very specific thing.

Nonetheless, while many have their laughs, it’s all in good fun and for a good cause.

Tom Brady gets into another incident down in Tampa

The former Wolverines team captain accidentally barged into the wrong house down in Tampa.

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It seems the former Michigan quarterback has a had a tough go of things down in Tampa already.

Earlier this week, Tom Brady, the former Wolverines team captain and new quarterback for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, went to a public park in Tampa to work out as no gyms are open due to COVID-19 social distancing mitigation. While he didn’t find himself in any actual trouble, it still made the news (and initial claims were that he was cited by a police officer, which were later debunked).

The scofflaw was none other than new Tampa resident Tom Brady, according to Mayor Jane Castor. And, yes, the superstar quarterback was sighted (not cited), she said.

Park staff came across Brady while patrolling a downtown park, Castor said Monday during a joint news briefing with St. Petersburg Mayor Rick Kriseman.”I got to tell you this story, too. Now, I always tell people, I’m not one to gossip so you didn’t hear this from me,” Castor said.

“Our parks are closed down; and so a lot of our parks staff they patrol around just to make sure that people aren’t doing contact sports and things like that, and saw an individual working out in one of our downtown parks,” Castor said.

“And she went over to tell him that it was closed and it was Tom Brady.”

But on Thursday came another story.

On April 7, when Brady first got to town, he appeared to be staying with Buccaneers offensive coordinator Byron Leftwich. He left the house, but it turns out it looks awfully similar to the one next door.

Thus, when Brady returned, he initially barged into the wrong house.

Brady had a little fun with the story on Twitter as a result.

In less than a month, Brady has made the news twice for non-football reasons. What will be the next?