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Kyle Whittingham Isn’t Michigan’s Curt Cignetti | Deadspin.com

Kyle Whittingham Isn’t Michigan’s Curt Cignetti | Deadspin.com

When Indiana took a shot at hiring 62-year-old Curt Cignetti, it felt like a well-thought-out risk. Yes, Cignetti is older for a coach just breaking into the Power-Four ranks, but since leaving his coordinator position at Alabama, success has followed him to each of his stops.

Most importantly, while at James Madison, he led the Dukes to success at the FCS level and guided them through a seamless transition to FBS football. His ability to navigate a process that has been difficult for most teams is what really attracted Indiana to Cignetti. Of course, we all now know that Indiana crushed its hire of Cignetti and, in just two years, has turned Indiana from a basketball to a football school.

In the modern college football landscape, if a program has the proper resources, it doesn’t take long to turn a program around.

Michigan is hoping to return to its status as a national title contender quickly, but the road ahead is not as simple as it may seem. The Wolverines announced they are hiring former Utah head coach Kyle Whittingham to right their ship. It appears Michigan struck out on most of the coaches they were actually interested in, so landing Whittingham isn’t a horrible result after a tenuous hiring process.

Even though Whittingham might have a solid floor as a safe program builder, his ceiling feels very limited at Michigan. Utah doesn’t have elite resources, but it never felt like he was able to reach the highs at Utah that Urban Meyer had reached before him. He’s a guy who can keep Michigan relevant and appearing in top-25 rankings, but he doesn’t feel like a guy who will win you national titles.

He’s also four years older than Cignetti when he was hired at Indiana, so he isn’t some young gun; we know what Whittingham is at this point. Also, he ran his course at Utah. It doesn’t seem like his departure was a mutual parting of ways. It feels more like Utah pushed him out. I’m not sure a marquee program like Michigan should be bringing in a coach who was pushed out of a school like Utah.

Lastly, this might seem like nothing, but in a rivalry like Ohio State vs Michigan, the little things matter. Whittingham went to BYU and coached at Utah. When I see something like that, it doesn’t make me feel that a guy like that cares enough about his rivals as he should. One of the biggest knocks on Ryan Day is that he doesn’t care enough about The Game. If a guy went and coached for his biggest rival from his playing days, does that feel like a guy who’s going to be all in on The Game?

Only time will tell if Michigan found their guy, but if he’s not, it could be the continued downward spiral of the post-Jim Harbaugh era at Michigan.

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AZ Alkmaar delivered a dominant performance to win the Dutch ​Cup final on Sunday, hammering NEC ‌Nijmegen 5-1 at the Feyenoord Stadium ​in Rotterdam.

AZ took a deserved ⁠lead after 32 minutes as left back Mees de Wit netted from close range ‌after a mazy run to the byline from left wing ‌Ro-Zangelo Daal.

It added two more after ‌the ⁠break from Sven Mijnans in ⁠the 67th minute and Peer Koopmeiners six minutes after that.

NEC pulled one back in the ​78th minute through ‌Japanese striker Koki Ogawa.

Mijnans had the ball in the net again five minutes from time but it was ‌ruled out for offside in ​the build-up, but at the start of stoppage time, newly-⁠capped Dutch international Kees Smit chipped NEC goalkeeper Jasper Cillessen to make it ‌4-1.

There was still time for one more from Ireland international Troy Parrott five minutes into stoppage time, with his close-range shot taking a wicked deflection.

It was AZ’s fifth Dutch Cup ‌final victory but first in 13 years, ​while NEC has now lost all six finals it has appeared ⁠in.

Cup success means AZ qualifies for ⁠the league phase of next season’s Europa League. It was eliminated ‌last Thursday in the Conference League quarterfinal by Ukraine’s Shakhtar Donetsk.

Published on Apr 20, 2026

#Parrott #Koopmeiners #shine #Alkmaar #wins #KNVB #Cup #years">Parrott, Koopmeiners shine as AZ Alkmaar wins KNVB Cup after 13 years  AZ Alkmaar delivered a dominant performance to win the Dutch ​Cup final on Sunday, hammering NEC ‌Nijmegen 5-1 at the Feyenoord Stadium ​in Rotterdam.AZ took a deserved ⁠lead after 32 minutes as left back Mees de Wit netted from close range ‌after a mazy run to the byline from left wing ‌Ro-Zangelo Daal.It added two more after ‌the ⁠break from Sven Mijnans in ⁠the 67th minute and Peer Koopmeiners six minutes after that.NEC pulled one back in the ​78th minute through ‌Japanese striker Koki Ogawa.Mijnans had the ball in the net again five minutes from time but it was ‌ruled out for offside in ​the build-up, but at the start of stoppage time, newly-⁠capped Dutch international Kees Smit chipped NEC goalkeeper Jasper Cillessen to make it ‌4-1.There was still time for one more from Ireland international Troy Parrott five minutes into stoppage time, with his close-range shot taking a wicked deflection.It was AZ’s fifth Dutch Cup ‌final victory but first in 13 years, ​while NEC has now lost all six finals it has appeared ⁠in.Cup success means AZ qualifies for ⁠the league phase of next season’s Europa League. It was eliminated ‌last Thursday in the Conference League quarterfinal by Ukraine’s Shakhtar Donetsk.Published on Apr 20, 2026  #Parrott #Koopmeiners #shine #Alkmaar #wins #KNVB #Cup #years

Deadspin | Charlotte FC score late, edge New York City FC  Apr 18, 2026; New York, New York, USA; New York City FC midfielder Maximiliano Moralez (10) fights for the ball against Charlotte FC midfielder Ashley Westwood (8) during the first half at Citi Field. Mandatory Credit: Mark Smith-Imagn Images   Idan Toklomati and Kerwin Vargas scored second-half goals as Charlotte FC slipped past New York City FC 2-1 on Saturday night for their first road win in three tries this season.  Kristijan Kahlina had seven saves for Charlotte (4-2-2, 14 points), which avenged a three-match series loss to NYCFC in the opening round of the MLS playoffs last fall.  Charlotte FC, which has lost just once in their last six league matches, is tied for third place in the Eastern Conference.  Nicolas Fernandez scored in the third minute of stoppage time in the second half for slumping New York City (3-3-2, 11 points) which has not won in its last four games against MLS competition.  Matthew Freese had two saves for NYCFC, which has surrendered eight goals during their four-game skid.  After a scoreless first half, Charlotte struck in the 54th minute as Wilfried Zaha maneuvered through traffic in the middle of the field and created a window to send a pass downfield.  Harry Toffolo passed forward to an open Toklomati, who tapped a right-footed shot past the onrushing Freese.   It was the third goal this season for Toklomati and the third assist for Toffolo as Charlotte scored for just the second time this season in a road match after playing six straight games at home in all competitions.  Zaha was the missing piece for Charlotte on April 11 in a 2-1 loss to first-place Nashville SC as he was serving a red-card suspension.  The second goal for Charlotte came in the 90th minute as Pep Biel crossed to Vargas, who fired a left-footed shot inside the left post for his second goal this season.  New York City answered in stoppage time as Fernandez took a feed across the box from Hannes Wolf and scored with a left-footed blast from just outside the box to the top right corner.  NYCFC dominated the scoreless first half with its pressing defense and the creative, well-timed attacks of Maxi Moralez and Agustin Ojeada. While New York City fired 10 shots in the period, Charlotte took just one.  For the match, NYCFC outshot Charlotte 23-8, which gave 19-year-old forward Rodolfo Akolo his first MLS start.  –Field Level Media    #Deadspin #Charlotte #score #late #edge #York #CityApr 18, 2026; New York, New York, USA; New York City FC midfielder Maximiliano Moralez (10) fights for the ball against Charlotte FC midfielder Ashley Westwood (8) during the first half at Citi Field. Mandatory Credit: Mark Smith-Imagn Images

Idan Toklomati and Kerwin Vargas scored second-half goals as Charlotte FC slipped past New York City FC 2-1 on Saturday night for their first road win in three tries this season.

Kristijan Kahlina had seven saves for Charlotte (4-2-2, 14 points), which avenged a three-match series loss to NYCFC in the opening round of the MLS playoffs last fall.

Charlotte FC, which has lost just once in their last six league matches, is tied for third place in the Eastern Conference.

Nicolas Fernandez scored in the third minute of stoppage time in the second half for slumping New York City (3-3-2, 11 points) which has not won in its last four games against MLS competition.

Matthew Freese had two saves for NYCFC, which has surrendered eight goals during their four-game skid.

After a scoreless first half, Charlotte struck in the 54th minute as Wilfried Zaha maneuvered through traffic in the middle of the field and created a window to send a pass downfield.


Harry Toffolo passed forward to an open Toklomati, who tapped a right-footed shot past the onrushing Freese.

It was the third goal this season for Toklomati and the third assist for Toffolo as Charlotte scored for just the second time this season in a road match after playing six straight games at home in all competitions.

Zaha was the missing piece for Charlotte on April 11 in a 2-1 loss to first-place Nashville SC as he was serving a red-card suspension.

The second goal for Charlotte came in the 90th minute as Pep Biel crossed to Vargas, who fired a left-footed shot inside the left post for his second goal this season.

New York City answered in stoppage time as Fernandez took a feed across the box from Hannes Wolf and scored with a left-footed blast from just outside the box to the top right corner.

NYCFC dominated the scoreless first half with its pressing defense and the creative, well-timed attacks of Maxi Moralez and Agustin Ojeada. While New York City fired 10 shots in the period, Charlotte took just one.

For the match, NYCFC outshot Charlotte 23-8, which gave 19-year-old forward Rodolfo Akolo his first MLS start.


–Field Level Media

#Deadspin #Charlotte #score #late #edge #York #City">Deadspin | Charlotte FC score late, edge New York City FC  Apr 18, 2026; New York, New York, USA; New York City FC midfielder Maximiliano Moralez (10) fights for the ball against Charlotte FC midfielder Ashley Westwood (8) during the first half at Citi Field. Mandatory Credit: Mark Smith-Imagn Images   Idan Toklomati and Kerwin Vargas scored second-half goals as Charlotte FC slipped past New York City FC 2-1 on Saturday night for their first road win in three tries this season.  Kristijan Kahlina had seven saves for Charlotte (4-2-2, 14 points), which avenged a three-match series loss to NYCFC in the opening round of the MLS playoffs last fall.  Charlotte FC, which has lost just once in their last six league matches, is tied for third place in the Eastern Conference.  Nicolas Fernandez scored in the third minute of stoppage time in the second half for slumping New York City (3-3-2, 11 points) which has not won in its last four games against MLS competition.  Matthew Freese had two saves for NYCFC, which has surrendered eight goals during their four-game skid.  After a scoreless first half, Charlotte struck in the 54th minute as Wilfried Zaha maneuvered through traffic in the middle of the field and created a window to send a pass downfield.  Harry Toffolo passed forward to an open Toklomati, who tapped a right-footed shot past the onrushing Freese.   It was the third goal this season for Toklomati and the third assist for Toffolo as Charlotte scored for just the second time this season in a road match after playing six straight games at home in all competitions.  Zaha was the missing piece for Charlotte on April 11 in a 2-1 loss to first-place Nashville SC as he was serving a red-card suspension.  The second goal for Charlotte came in the 90th minute as Pep Biel crossed to Vargas, who fired a left-footed shot inside the left post for his second goal this season.  New York City answered in stoppage time as Fernandez took a feed across the box from Hannes Wolf and scored with a left-footed blast from just outside the box to the top right corner.  NYCFC dominated the scoreless first half with its pressing defense and the creative, well-timed attacks of Maxi Moralez and Agustin Ojeada. While New York City fired 10 shots in the period, Charlotte took just one.  For the match, NYCFC outshot Charlotte 23-8, which gave 19-year-old forward Rodolfo Akolo his first MLS start.  –Field Level Media    #Deadspin #Charlotte #score #late #edge #York #City

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