Packers hire Jason Rebrovich to replace Mike Smith at OLBs coach

The Packers replaced Mike Smith at OLBs coach with Jason Rebrovich, who spent four seasons in Buffalo and four seasons in Jacksonville prior to coming to Green Bay.

Jason Rebrovich will be Mike Smith’s replacement as the Green Bay Packers outside linebackers coach. The team announced the hiring on Friday.

Smith, who spent three seasons with the Packers, is leaving Green Bay to pursue other opportunities.

Rebrovich has eight seasons of experience at the NFL level. He spent four seasons with the Jacksonville Jaguars; two as the assistant defensive line coach (2017-18), and two more as the defensive line coach (2019-20). Before coaching in Jacksonville, he spent four seasons with the Buffalo Bills; one as a defensive quality control coach (2013), one as the assistant defensive line coach (2014), one as the outside linebackers coach (2015), and one as the defensive line coach (2016).

Rebrovich was in Jacksonville as first-round pick Josh Allen developed into a quality edge rusher. He also worked with the likes of Calais Campbell, Yannick Ngakoue, Malik Jackson and Dante Fowler. In Buffalo, he coached veteran rushers such as Mario Williams, Jerry Hughes and Lorenzo Alexander.

In Green Bay, Rebrovich will take over a position group featuring Rashan Gary, Preston Smith and Za’Darius Smith, although both Smiths have uncertain futures entering the offseason. The trio has combined for 67.5 sacks over the last three seasons.

Former Packers defensive coordinator Mike Pettine was on staff with Rebrovich in Buffalo. So was former Packers offensive coordinator Nathaniel Hackett.

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Packers losing OLB coach Mike Smith from Matt LaFleur’s coaching staff

Mike Smith, the Packers OLBs coach since 2019, is leaving the team to pursue other opportunities, per Rob Demovsky of ESPN.

The Green Bay Packers won’t be retaining the coach responsible for one of the best position groups on the team over the last three seasons.

According to Rob Demovsky of ESPN, outside linebackers coach Mike Smith is leaving the team to pursue other opportunities this offseason.

The Packers hired Smith as the outside linebackers coach in January of 2019. Over his three seasons, Smith helped maximize the production of veteran free-agent additions Za’Darius Smith and Preston Smith while also developing first-round pick Rashan Gary into one of the NFL’s premier young edge rushers.

Between 2019 and 2021, the two Smiths and Gary combined for 67.5 sacks. All three set new career-highs in sacks under Smith’s guidance.

Once Smith departs, the Packers will need to hire a replacement for Joe Barry’s defensive staff.

It’s possible Smith could be leaving Green Bay to join Mike Pettine in Minnesota. Smith and Pettine are close, and Pettine just joined Kevin O’Connell’s staff with the Vikings.

The Packers also officially announced the hiring of new quarterbacks coach Tom Clements on Friday. He was the last major hire required on the offensive staff for 2022.

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Packers OLB coach thinks Tipa Galeai can be ‘damn good player’

Packers OLB coach Mike Smith thinks Tipa Galeai will be a “damn good player” if he can figure out special teams and put on 10 more pounds.

Green Bay Packers outside linebacker coach Mike Smith knows exactly what it’ll take for second-year edge rusher Tipa Galeai to make the team and become a contributor as a rusher.

Special teams, and adding weight and power.

“Damn good football player,” Smith said of Galeai, an undrafted free agent entering Year 2 in Green Bay. “He’s another one that needs to get the special teams rolling.”

The Packers have an opening at the fourth edge rusher spot after losing Randy Ramsey to a significant left ankle injury. The door is wide open for Galeai, who has all the tools of a disruptive pass-rusher but also needs to add weight and become more powerful to take the next step.

“If that joker can put on 10 more pounds, he’s a demon now,” Smith said. “He plays hard. Very smooth, quick. Great chop and spin, great counter, great get off to beat you on the edge. Gotta get better with his power. He’s learning that’s all they’ll do. They’ll set you soft and wait for you. You have to threaten. A guy with a great get off, he should have great power, because they are going to open up on you early. You have to threaten them with that. If he puts some weight on, he’ll be a damn good player.”

Galeai’s pass-rushing potential was never in question coming out of Utah State, but he lacked the size and strength needed to survive as an edge rusher at NFL level. As Smith noted, offensive tackles can play “soft” against an athletic rusher like Galeai who doesn’t present the threat of overpowering with size and strength, negating much of his athletic advantage.

The Packers list Galeai at 6-5 and 229 pounds. He is long and lanky but lacks mass. Note: the average weight of Za’Darius Smith, Preston Smith and Rashan Gary is 271 pounds. Even getting into the 240- or 250-pound range would put Galeai well under the three veteran edge rushers.

But Galeai, who spent the entire 2020 season on the team’s practice squad, is a different type of rusher, with a game built around explosiveness and flexibility.

Smith knows adding the weight and the power would give Galeai another important pass-rushing tool and make offensive tackles think twice about their blocking plan, opening up chances to use his speed and counter moves.

In the end, special teams may determine his fate in 2021. The fourth outside linebacker has to be able to contribute consistently on special teams. Ramsey played on several different special teams groups and was one of the team’s best on special teams to end the 2020 season.

Can Galeai carve out a role on special teams while continuing to add weight as he develops as a rusher? The opportunity is there. His coach believes in the potential. It’s on Galeai to make it happen over the next few weeks.

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Mike Smith announces for 2021 NBA draft

The Michigan basketball point guard’s one year in Ann Arbor will apparently be his last.

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There has been a lot of question about who could return for Michigan basketball, given that the NCAA declared that the 2020-21 season was something of a free year. That means that players who had normally exhausted their eligibility could suit up for one more season.

With several candidates for a potential return, one that some thought could see one more season is point guard Mike Smith, especially considering that he was relegated more to being a floor general in Ann Arbor instead of being a primary scorer, as he was at Columbia.

However, Smith threw some cold water on that theory as he announced on Wednesday that he’s declaring for the NBA draft.

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Smith only averaged 9 points-per-game at Michigan, but was putting up 22 points every outing in his fourth year at Columbia. But, in Ann Arbor, he posted career highs in his assist average as well as his 3-point shooting average.

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In first NCAA Tournament game, Mike Smith leads way for Wolverines

How the Michigan basketball PG, the former Columbia transfer, reacted to his first time leading the Wolverines in the NCAA Tournament.

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Advancing to the Round of 32 of the NCAA Tournament, the one-seeded Michigan Wolverines led from start to finish in their 82-66 victory over the 16-seeded Texas Southern Tigers on Saturday at Mackey Arena in West Lafayette.

Possessing a cushion as large as 24 points, four of the Wolverines’ five starters finished the game in double-figures, headed by redshirt senior point guard Mike Smith’s 18 points.

Transferring to Michigan in April 2020 after four seasons in the Ivy League with the Columbia Lions, during which the program never won more than 11 games, Saturday represented Smith’s first taste of postseason action.

While he admitted having some nerves in the minutes leading up to the tip, he certainly did not let it impact his play, as the Fenwick High School (Oak Park, Illinois) product added five assists and four rebounds in his 38 minutes on the floor.

“Personally, I was a little nervous at first,” Smith said. “I’ve never been here, I’ve watched it all my life, and to finally be a part of this was surreal during tipoff. But after that, I don’t think anybody else was nervous. Me, being the oldest on the team, I was the most nervous, but it was a feeling I’ll never forget and, obviously, the job’s not done, we have to lock-in and get ready for the next game.”

Along with Smith, senior Eli Brooks, freshman Hunter Dickinson, and sophomore Franz Wagner are names Michigan fans are accustomed to seeing provide the scoring, but the Wolverines received an unexpected boost in the first half as freshman guard Zeb Jackson knocked down two 3-pointers off the bench.

“Zeb is a tremendous hard-worker, he wants to be out there and help us,” Smith said. “Each and every day he wakes up at like 8 a.m., 7 a.m., and gets shots up and that just kind of shows the character of Zeb. He’s going to be a tremendous player for Michigan, I believe it, I’m saying it now, and I’m going to stick with it. Today, he just showed a little bit of what he has to his game and came out there and did a great job.”

Thrust into a starting role with the right foot injury to senior forward Isaiah Livers, junior Brandon Johns, Jr. is another Wolverine who has taken his game to new heights, tallying 11 points and two rebounds in 25 minutes in the clash with Texas Southern.

“He’s (Johns, Jr.) playing a lot more aggressive,” Smith said. “He has more minutes, and me and coach (Juwan Howard) and everybody has been telling him he has to be more aggressive. He’s a talent that not a lot of people really know about, if you’re a huge Michigan fan, you know how good Brandon Johns is, he can play. He’s stepped up for us the last couple of games and I’m going to keep instilling confidence in him because he’s a great player and we could use that.”

Saturday’s victory improved the Wolverines’ 2020-21 record to 21-4 and the program will battle the eighth-seeded LSU Tigers, who defeated the ninth-seeded St. Bonaventure Bonnies, in the Round of 32 on Monday.

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The good, the bad, and the MVP: Michigan basketball defeats Maryland

What was good, not so good and who was the MVP for Michigan basketball in the Big Ten Tournament against the Maryland Terrapins.

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The Wolverines defeated Maryland, 79-66, in their first game in the Big Ten tournament, and it was an emotional game, to say the least.

Michigan got off to a slow start — per usual as of late — but thanks to an unlikely cast of characters, the role players, the Wolverines carved a 16-2 run late in the first half to go up 40-38 at halftime. The maize and blue had 21 bench points in the first half, and they had Chaundee Brown, Brandon Johns and Austin Davis to thank.

The second half was just as thrilling as the first thanks to a number of things. The backcourt of Eli Brooks and Mike Smith played at an extremely high level — the best of the season bar none — and coach Juwan Howard got ejected after a scrum with the Maryland bench during a timeout.

The Wolverines went to war for their coach and didn’t allow Maryland to get back into the game. Even when the Terrapins hit a 3, Michigan hit two of its own to extend the lead.

We’re now going to talk about the good, the bad, and the MVP from Friday’s win.

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In tricky road game, Mike Smith comes through for Wolverines

It appears the Michigan basketball point guard is getting going as conference play is in full swing.

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Maintaining their status as the conference’s lone unbeaten team, the No. 16 Michigan Wolverines (8-0, 3-0 Big Ten) defeated the Maryland Terrapins, 84-73, on Thursday at the Xfinity Center in College Park.

Maryland, who upset the No. 6 Wisconsin Badgers in Madison on Monday, fell to 6-4 (1-3 Big Ten).

Standout center Hunter Dickinson, fresh off receiving Big Ten Freshman of the Week honors for the third time on Monday, led the way for the Wolverines with 26 points and 11 rebounds, his third double-double of the young campaign.

On the opposite end of the experience spectrum, redshirt senior point guard Mike Smith was a driving force behind Michigan pulling away in the second half. Tying a Wolverine career-high with 16 points, the graduate transfer from the Columbia Lions also dished out six assists, pulled down six rebounds and played 38 minutes, further establishing himself as head coach Juwan Howard’s preferred floor general.

After scoring no more than eight points in a three-game span from Dec. 6-13, Smith has now reached double-figures in back-to-back contests, a sign he is beginning to feel more comfortable in his role as Michigan ventures through the ultra-competitive Big Ten.

“I’m new. Coach is still trying to figure me out, I’m trying to figure him out, I’m trying to figure out everybody’s tendencies in-game,” he said. “I think today I definitely felt more comfortable and the last two games, for sure. As the days go on, and I start to get to know everybody, and coach starts to get to know how I play and the tendencies that I have, I think I’m feeling more comfortable, for sure.”

With the Wolverines’ regular season nearly one-third complete, Smith is averaging 5.1 assists-per-game, 1.3 more than his closest teammate, senior Eli Brooks.

He spoke about how having a target like Dickinson makes his job easier and helps him reach this total.

“He’s 7-foot-1, it’s just that simple,” he said with a smile. “He’s 7-foot-1, big body, and likes to score the ball. It makes my job so much easier, just give him the ball and get out of the way.

“And he loves to pass, you know what I mean? He’s a great passer, too. So, it’s just easy, just give him the ball and get out of the way and he’s going to give me that assist. I’m going to give him the ball because he’s shooting a high percentage, over 70 percent, for sure. Give him the ball and I for sure know he’s going to give me my assist, and score for the team.”

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Recording seven 30-point games as a Lion and twice earning second-team All-Ivy League recognition, Smith is no stranger to individual accolades. Team success, however, has been a different story, as Columbia never won more than 11 games during his four years with the program.

Playing for a first-place team and likely headed to the NCAA Tournament for the first time, Smith is enjoying every minute of being a member of a winning program but knows there is still plenty of work to be done.

“It’s been great. To start 8-0, I never, like, thought it was possible, but it is,” he said. “I’m happy to be part of this team and continue to work to be more than just 8-0, to be hopefully 32-0, whatever it is, to get to the national championship and never lose a game.

“It’s going to take us continuing to work hard in practice and continuing to apply what coach is teaching us in the game.”

With the Maryland win wrapping up a two-game road swing, Smith and his teammates will return to the Crisler Center to battle the Northwestern Wildcats (6-2, 3-1 Big Ten) on Sunday at 7:30 p.m. EST on the Big Ten Network.

Ranked No. 19, Northwestern’s lone conference loss came at the hands of the No. 10 Iowa Hawkeyes on Tuesday, and the program boasts wins over the No. 17 Michigan State Spartans and No. 25 Ohio State Buckeyes.

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The good, the bad and the MVP: Michigan basketball vs. Toledo

Deciphering what happened in Michigan basketball’s 91-71 win over the Toledo Rockets.

Well, if anyone thought that Toledo was going to give Michigan all they wanted in Wednesday’s (possible) last non-conference matchup of the season, they learned rather quickly that wasn’t going to happen.

The Wolverines found themselves with a 11-point lead halfway through the first half, and never really looked back. Michigan ended the first half on a pair of Wagner free throws to take a 44-26 lead.

Toledo tried to make it interesting when the second half started, by going on a quick 10-3 run, but the Wolverines tightened defensively, and hit a couple big three-pointers by Chaundee Brown and Mike Smith to take back control of the ball game.

The maize and blue went on to rout the Rockets by a final score of 91-71 to move to 5-0 on the season.

The Wolverines had five players in double figure-scoring tonight – C Hunter Dickinson led the team with 18 points, F Isaiah Livers had 16 points, G Franz Wagner and G Eli Brooks both had 14 points, and C Austin Davis finished with 12 points.

We are going to dive into the good, the bad, and talk about the MVP from the game.

RELATED: 5 takeaways from Michigan’s blowout win over Toledo

RELATED: Everything Juwan Howard said in his postgame presser after the win over Toledo

What Mike Smith sees in freshman G Zeb Jackson

The true freshman point guard is coming along, according to Michigan basketball senior Mike Smith.

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ANN ARBOR, Mich. — Michigan freshman guard Zeb Jackson has just three points through three games thus far, and all have been free throws. But his time is coming.

We’ve seen the Maumee, Ohio native get important minutes in each of the Wolverines’ three games thus far, as he’s played 21 minutes total. But those haven’t been late in games — he’s come in early in the first half, even in a rotation vs. Ball State where he was playing alongside fellow PG Mike Smith as well as Chaundee Brown, Brandon Johns Jr. and Hunter Dickinson.

While he might not have lit up the court just yet, Smith says that he’s biding his time, and he has all the attributes necessary to be successful at the college level.

“Zeb is really talented — a really talented kid,” Smith said. “Really athletic, 6-3 guard, point guard. He’s staying the course. Obviously, it’s really hard coming in and not playing as much as he wanted to. But I think that he understands that his time will come and he’s just staying with the course.

“He’s really talented and when he gets his opportunity, I think he’s taken advantage of it. He’s going to show his true attributes and abilities once he gains a little bit more confidence out there, for sure.”

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Jackson could play either the point or shooting guard — which is where he was listed at as a recruit. Though he got his start at Maumee, he transferred to Florida’s prestigious Montverde Academy for his senior year. He was the No. 90 recruit overall, regardless of position, in the 2020 recruiting class, according to the 247Sports Composite.

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Led by Eli Brooks, Michigan putting a premium on defense

The senior guard is helping the Michigan basketball team forge its overall identity as it strives to be better on defense.

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ANN ARBOR, Mich. — In recent years for Michigan basketball, it’s been the defense that’s led the way. However, through three games in the 2020-21 season, it’s been the offense — rated No. 10 in the country in that metric via KenPom.

The defense is rated 42nd overall at this juncture, and it needs to not only get better, but it’s what some say the identity — or core value — of this Wolverines team should be.

“I think defense — I think we need to get better at defense,” senior point guard Mike Smith said. “I think our personality should be get a stop — one stop at a time. And if we get one stop, I think our offense will speak for itself. I think we score a lot of points. But we need to limit the other team’s points, for sure, and get stops and be on the same page on defense, because if we can do that, I think our offense will speak for itself.”

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But when it comes to the defensive side of the floor, Michigan does have something of a shining star in fellow guard Eli Brooks.

Brooks isn’t lighting up the stat sheet by any metric thus far through three games, nor does he have a ton of steals or blocks that you can point to signifying his defensive presence. But he’s the guy tasked with stopping or stalling the No. 1 scorer in the opposing team’s backcourt most nights, and he’s proven himself efficient in that regard.

So what makes him so good defensively? Smith says that Brooks has something of a quickness to go along with superior length that aids him in stalling offensive players.

“It’s weird, because he’s always in the right spot at the right time,” Smith said. “I would beat him off a ball screen, and somehow he just appears — right — right next to me or in front of me. He’s quick — he’s like a cat. If I had to use an analogy or use an animal, I think he’s quick as a cat. He’s always there. It doesn’t matter, he’s always fighting. Coach always talks about how his legs are moving consistently, even through a ball screen. And he always contests the shot — he has really long arms. He’s 6-1, but his arms are like 6-4, so he contests everything and it’s really hard to get by.

“And he’s a competitor. I think that’s one thing you can really see out there in the game. He may be undersized, but he’s gonna fight like he’s 6-5, 6-6 and guard the 6-5 player like he’s 6-5, 6-6. And he’s gonna go out there and compete every day. He’s always talked about how his dad told him that ‘defense wins games and defense keeps you on the floor. You can see that out there in practice and games, for sure.”

For Brooks, he credits his time on task in the film room, starting back to when defensive guru assistant Luke Yaklich was on the team under John Beilein, as what aided him putting a premium on being stout defensively.

But it’s more than that — it’s a willingness to play defense that’s helped him the most. And it’s something he says anyone could do if they focus on it.

“I think just technique,” Brooks said. “Learning the different ball screen coverages and being familiar with that. In high school, it’s just motion offense, usually, so you don’t have to guard ball screens that much. And then just people taking the time and studying film with me. Coach Yak my freshman year sitting down with me and showing me the different positions where people should be.

“Honestly, I think anybody could play defense. It’s mindset. I think the mindset of wanting to play defense and being willing to do so.”

Though mild-mannered, Brooks becomes another animal — not just cat-like — when it comes to being on that side of the court.

Smith says that Brooks is a vocal leader, making sure everyone is aligned properly, and that his energy on that front is contagious — making the rest of his teammates that much more eager to work harder on the defensive end of the court.

“He’s probably one of the loudest people on the court at the time on defense,” Smith said. “When you have somebody like that, it kind of trickles through the team. It makes everybody else wanna speak.

“I don’t do this, but if a teacher allows you to cheat in class, talk to all your peers during a test, why don’t you use it? That’s like an analogy on defense. So why doesn’t everybody talk on defense? Because potentially it’s like having another person on defense. It’s like having six people. He’s the head of the snake — he and Austin Davis, for sure, are the two loudest. And that brings me, Isaiah and Franz — the starting five — to want to talk more on defense and be there, because it’s kind of leaving them out to dry if we don’t.”

As of current, Michigan is holding its opponents to just 36.4% shooting offensively. The Wolverines will have their next opportunity come Sunday when they host UCF at Crisler Center.

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