Michigan football's Jim Harbaugh silent on NFL rumors, calls J.J. McCarthy 'NFL ready'
ANAHEIM, Calif. — Going into a third straight offseason, Michigan football coach Jim Harbaugh's name is being linked to current and potential NFL head coaching positions.
When he spoke with a group of reporters, however, Wednesday afternoon at Disneyland to preview the College Football Playoff semifinal in the Rose Bowl between No. 1 Michigan (13-0) and No. 4 Alabama (12-1), Harbaugh barely acknowledged the rumors — even when asked about them directly — and instead turned back to one of his oft-used phrases to describe his mentality.
“One-track mind,” Harbaugh said shortly after his carriage ride as a part of the Rose Bowl welcoming festivities. “That's the way we've gone about things. Literally, whatever day we're in, we're going to get the most out of it, dominate the day. Go to sleep tonight, wake up tomorrow and see if we can't dominate that day.
"It's a single-minded group, just very focused on taking care of business.”
[ MUST LISTEN: Make "Hail Yes!" your go-to Michigan Wolverines podcast, available anywhere you listen to podcasts (Apple, Spotify) ]
MAGIC KINGDOM: U-M kicks off Rose Bowl week at Disney with 'one-track mind' on Bama
This isn't Harbaugh's first time dealing with NFL rumors.
It happened following the 2021 season — after he led the Wolverines to their first College Football Playoff appearance — when he interviewed for the Minnesota Vikings job opening. He flew to Minneapolis on national signing day but ultimately did not land the position and returned to Ann Arbor.
He followed with another College Football Playoff appearance in 2022, but after the semifinal loss to TCU, Harbaugh had discussions with both the Denver Broncos and Carolina Panthers about their job openings.
For the second time in as many years, Harbaugh returned to Ann Arbor and led the Wolverines to another undefeated regular season.
But what would make this year particularly interesting, should he choose to take interviews, is that it comes after Harbaugh has reportedly been offered a contract extension that would make him the highest paid coach in the Big Ten.
Harbaugh, 60, is in his ninth season at U-M; he still has three years remaining on his contract, which pays him at least $7 million per year. He has already topped $10 million this year with bonuses.
"You want to be somewhere where you're wanted," he said earlier this fall when asked about contract negotiations.
LOCAL TALENT: How Will Johnson, Semaj Morgan became latest homegrown stars
The response from the players who joined Harbaugh at Wednesday's event — senior running back Blake Corum, senior defensive tackle Kris Jenkins and graduate defensive back Mike Sainristil — matched what U-M's coach said about their focus.
Sainristil said he "didn't even know that was a thing" when asked about the latest batch of rumors.
[ MUST LISTEN: Make "Hail Yes!" your go-to Michigan Wolverines podcast, available anywhere you listen to podcasts (Apple, Spotify) ]
Jenkins told reporters Harbaugh was like a "father figure" to the team and that just Harbaugh supports his players making the decision that's best for them, the same is true in reverse.
“He’s a Michigan man from the start to the end of time," Jenkins said. "We know he’s always going to bleed that maize and blue regardless.”
Corum said the team has dealt with the uncertainty of not knowing if its head coach would return in recent seasons, but also additional adversity this season.
Harbaugh received two three-game suspensions this season — first by the university at the start of the regular season, then by the Big Ten at the end of the conference schedule — as the result of separate investigations.
RAINER SABIN: How ex-Michigan assistant George Helow became an obstacle of Harbaugh's making
“It’s happened a couple times — we don’t really pay much attention to it,” Corum said. “Maybe it’s just people trying to distract you, putting this stuff into the media. It’s happened all year — so we don’t really pay attention to it.”
Harbaugh deems McCarthy 'NFL ready'
While he stopped well short of pushing his star quarterback out the door, Harbaugh couldn't dance his way around the question of J.J. McCarthy's NFL acumen.
All season long, Harbaugh has praised the man the team calls "9." He has compared him to NFL stars Patrick Mahomes and Josh Allen, anointed him the best U-M quarterback ever and even said he was the top signal-caller in the NCAA.
MITCH ALBOM: How J.J. McCarthy, Michigan's star QB, found key to his own success, peace
It's one reason he approached McCarthy earlier this month to see if he wanted to discuss the future But the junior told his coach he wanted to stay locked in on Alabama and not focus on anything else.
"Like he said, he wanted to play the game," Harbaugh said. "Single-track mind, one-track mind, love it."
But Harbaugh was asked what the advice will be, when the time comes.
McCarthy completed 74.2% (213-for-287) of his passes for 2,630 yards, 19 touchdowns and four interceptions as he finished No. 3 in the nation in QBR (89.7) and has been said to be clocked below 4.5 seconds in his 40-yard dash. He also rushed for three TDs.
Harbaugh has said he would advise his entire team to emulate what McCarthy does both on and off the field, saying he would tell his players to "follow him anywhere he leads." What if that path leads to the NFL?
"What's the advice I will give him?" Harbaugh asked rhetorically. "One-track mind right now, just stay in the here and now, see if you can't dominate this day.
"But I can't lie and say I don't think he's NFL-ready. I very much think he's NFL-ready."
Contact Tony Garcia: apgarcia@freepress.com. Follow him at @realtonygarcia.
This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: Jim Harbaugh silent on own NFL talk, but J.J. McCarthy is 'NFL ready'