needs moar usage
craig roh
Upon Further Review 2011: Defense vs Michigan State
VIDEO OF THE WEEK: Thanks to the internet, I figured out what Michigan's uniforms were modeled after.
Formation notes: Michigan spent most of the day in the 4-3 under. They did not flip the line much—just a couple times. Michigan State had a few plays where they'd move their strength three(!) times that seemed designed to work this tendency, but M didn't bite.
When they went to nickel it was Avery, not Johnson, as M went for more of a pass-cover look. They also brought out the 46 bear D from time to time, mostly as a second-half adjustment.
Substitution notes: Nothing too unusual at this point. Woolfolk got his customary first series and then sat after letting Martin behind him and giving up the edge on an outside run; Countess replaced him.
The line rotation was a bit tighter in this game, probably because there weren't a lot of plays in the second half. Campbell, Black, and Brink rotated in.
Kovacs, Gordon, Ryan, and Demens were constants. I'm not sure but I think RVB was also on the field for every snap.
Show? Show.
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Rush | Play | Player | Yards | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| O37 | 1 | 10 | Ace twins | 4-3 under | Pass | N/A | Bubble screen | -- | Inc | ||||||||||
| Winged high. Looked like Woolfolk(+0.5) had this handled to the point where Kovacs could come in and make a tackle after a minimal gain. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O37 | 2 | 10 | I-Form | 4-3 under | Run | N/A | Inside zone | Ryan | 21 | ||||||||||
| Just a simple inside zone on which there is no edge because Ryan(-2) got cut to the ground massively; RVB(-1) gave too much ground on the outside and Demens(-1) also got cut; into the secondary. Gordon(-1, tackling -1) misses a tackle, giving up another five or so before Kovacs and Woolfolk can get there. | |||||||||||||||||||
| M42 | 1 | 10 | I-Form | 4-3 under | Pass | 6 | Fly | Woolfolk | Inc | ||||||||||
| Blitz gets Demens(+0.5, pressure +1) in unblocked but not quick enough to prevent a throw; Martin just outruns Woolfolk(-2, cover -2)—live it looked like he was in molasses—to the point where he's multiple yards behind when the ball gets there. Martin drops it. | |||||||||||||||||||
| M42 | 2 | 10 | Ace trips | Nickel press | Run | N/A | Inside zone | Van Bergen | 3 | ||||||||||
| Again trying the edge... at least I think. The cutback that develops here is pretty dangerous in its own right. Ryan(+1) keeps contain and forces the play away from the overloaded WR side; Martin(+0.5) is flowing down behind the play, forcing it yet further behind, and then there's just Van Bergen(+1), who beat a cut and is also coming down the line... and air. Hawthorne(-0.5) and Demens(-0.5) are getting blocked out of either side of the play here, so without RVB this is a big gainer. | |||||||||||||||||||
| M39 | 3 | 7 | Shotgun 3-wide | Nickel press | Pass | 5 | Out | Avery | 8 | ||||||||||
| Avery(-1, cover -1) beat on the out after Michigan showed man on the motion. No time for any pressure to get there. | |||||||||||||||||||
| M31 | 1 | 10 | Diamond screen | Nickel press | Pass | N/A | WR screen | Avery | 6 | ||||||||||
| Michigan still pointing to each other as the ball is snapped; not ready. Avery(-1) is picked up by Cunningham and basically chucked inside the hashes. A similarly slow-reacting Floyd(-1) is kicked inside and this nothing play gets a chunk. | |||||||||||||||||||
| M25 | 2 | 4 | Ace | 4-3 under | Run | N/A | Inside zone | Woolfolk | 12 | ||||||||||
| I was mad at Roh live but I don't think this is really his fault since they have Kovacs overhanging and the DL going under. He's doubled the whole play and eventually blown off the line, but he took two people. Cunningham cracks down on Kovacs, sealing the edge guy... except Woolfolk(-2, tackling -1) should be watching this develop, which he is. He does a terrible job of recognition, lets Baker outside of him, and gives up the first down. Marlin Jackson makes this a TFL. As soon as that WR motions inside he's giving it away, man, and if he's going on a pass route it's a drag away from you on a waggle. You have to be hard on the corner here. Also Hawthorne(-1) got absorbed and erased. They do not make plays like we see the MSU LBs making. | |||||||||||||||||||
| M13 | 1 | 10 | I-Form Big | 4-3 under | Run | N/A | Pitch sweep | Roh | 12 | ||||||||||
| Again telegraphed with motion, an offset FB, and Cunningham tight to the line—Michigan does not respond. Roh(-2) instantly sealed by the motioning TE, so there's no delay for the pullers. Hawthorne(-1) runs right into Cunningham; done. Demens(-1) trips over a prone guy who was trying to block Hawthorne; Kovacs(-1) runs out to the edge and gets chopped to the ground. Gordon comes over to tackle at the one. | |||||||||||||||||||
| M1 | 1 | G | Goal line | Goal line | Run | N/A | Iso | -- | 1 | ||||||||||
| They get it. Terrible camera angle and no replay so I can't really tell why this is so easy; I usually don't minus unsuccessful goal line plays anyway because the odds are so stacked against you. | |||||||||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Touchdown, 7-7, 5 min 1st Q | |||||||||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Rush | Play | Player | Yards | ||||||||||
| O32 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun trips bunch | 4-3 under | Pass | N/A | Flare screen | Van Bergen | 4 | ||||||||||
| Morgan in for Hawthorne, Countess for Woolfolk. Basically a replay of the diamond screen w/ the receiver arriving after the snap. RVB(+1) is playside; he reads the flare and the attempted cut block by the tackle and shoots out on the edge. Ryan(+1) gets the edge on Martin and drive him back a ways, forcing the cutback into Van Bergen. Martin can spin past the tackle because Demens(-0.5) went into a pass drop and got there late. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O36 | 2 | 6 | Ace | 4-3 under | Run | N/A | Inside zone | Morgan | 9 | ||||||||||
| Roh gets outside for force it back. Martin(-1) is single blocked effectively, getting shoved downfield by one guy... who is holding him pretty blatantly, but no call. Results based charting. Morgan(-1) runs up and gets cut to the ground by the TE; Martin falls over it. Demens can't get to the play because Martin was single blocked and gave ground. He manages to ankle tackle as Baker leaps Morgan. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O45 | 1 | 10 | I-Form twins | 4-3 under | Pass | 5 | PA Hitch | Countess | Inc | ||||||||||
| No pressure(-1) as Cousins can sit and survey; Cunningham open(cover -1) in front of Countess; dropped. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O45 | 2 | 10 | I-form | 4-3 under | Run | N/A | End around | Black | 6 | ||||||||||
| Cool play with the WR coming in motion, then orbiting back on the snap to take an end around snap after the RB runs a dive fake. Looks a lot like power as the backside G pulls but then he heads outside. This basically works; Black(-2) sucks inside, going after Cousins, and is out of the play. Kovacs(+1) avoids a cut and stays outside. Morgan(+1) reads the play and gets out to take on the pulling G's block; those two combine to force a cutback that should be for nothing but isn't because Black's not there. Morgan comes off to tackle; Black arrives later to help. | |||||||||||||||||||
| M49 | 3 | 4 | Shotgun trips bunch | Nickel press | Pass | N/A | Drag | Floyd | 3 | ||||||||||
| Michigan reveals both man and a blitz as Ryan goes in motion with the TE. Really wish they had checks for this—RR never ran motion because teams would screw with your head by having a check to another defense if you went in motion. Michigan just appears to run it. MSU runs mesh at man, and the two mesh WRs pick each other off. This bumps Cunningham off his route; still complete but Floyd(+1, tackling +1) takes advantage, tackling on the catch and only giving ground when an OL impacts him from behind. | |||||||||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Punt, 7-7, 1 min 1st Q | |||||||||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Rush | Play | Player | Yards | ||||||||||
| O10 | 1 | 10 | I-Form Big | 4-3 under | Run | N/A | Power off tackle | Martin | 4 | ||||||||||
| Again offset, again motioning the TE outside of Roh. This time MSU fans the TE; Roh(-0.5), conscious of the previous play on which he got killed, aggressively tries to get outside. The FB redirects outside to block him. Heininger(-1) is handled by a momentary double and Demens is again given no shot. Martin(+1) fights through his block to flow down the line and tackle, preventing this from breaking bigger. Hawthorne(+0.5) did a good job to hold up to his block and force the play back inside where Martin could tackle. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O14 | 2 | 6 | I-Form | 46 bear | Run | N/A | Inside zone | Heininger | -1 | ||||||||||
| Before MSU sets a TE lines up to one side, then shoots to the other side of the line. He sets; other TE goes in motion. The TE who originally moved now comes off the line and motions back to where he started. In short: MSU went from balanced to two TEs left to two TEs right, with the last motion into an offset FB. Michigan is trying to use that bear front and moves around a ton to get it set up. After all that, a TFL. Heininger(+2) and Roh(+2) get off the ball quickly, driving their blockers into the backfield. Heininger gets so deep Baker trips over his blocker; Roh is there to clean up in the backfield after the bounce necessitated by the penetration. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O13 | 3 | 7 | Shotgun empty | Nickel even | Pass | 4 | Slant | Hawthorne | 16 | ||||||||||
| Hawthorne(-1, cover -1) goes for a Cunningham head fake and hops outside, opening up the slant. Pressure was getting there, so if this is not there strong chance of issues in the backfield for State. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O29 | 1 | 10 | I-Form | 4-3 under | Run | N/A | Power off tackle | Demens | 4 | ||||||||||
| Brink in at SDE; MSU runs at him. He gives ground(-1) badly, ending up pancaked away from the POA. This erases Hawthorne. Martin(+2) runs through the center like he is not there, getting into the hole despite being down-blocked. This is not supposed to happen. If Demens(-0.5) can stand up the guard Baker has nowhere to go; he comes up hard to the outside and ends up getting pushed past the play. G falls forward and Baker goes with him as Martin tackles. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O33 | 2 | 6 | I-Form | 4-3 over | Run | N/A | Power off tackle | Hawthorne | 3 | ||||||||||
| Over because they shift the strength and Michigan doesn't flip all over the place. They run power again, this time at the weakside. Hawthorne does a better job with this than he has in the past—instead of moving directly at the LOS he appears to read the G pull and shuffles playside. Ryan is blitzing on the snap and pulls the FB block; Demens(+0.5) either reads it quickly or is also blitzing and peels off the pulling G; he maintains leverage. Hawthorne(+0.5) is in the right spot to tackle; he does so. Baker falls forward. RVB(+0.5) took a double without allowing someone to pop out on Hawthorne, thus providing the free hitter. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O36 | 3 | 3 | Shotgun 3-wide | Nickel press | Pass | 6 | Dumpoff | Kovacs | Inc | ||||||||||
| Michigan sends a couple delayed blitzers, one Kovacs from the S spot, one Demens. Demens is not relevant. Blitz gets Kovacs(+1, pressure/RPS +1) in alone, forcing Cousins to adjust because Floyd(+1, cover +1) is in Cunningham's pocket on the hitch he wants at the sticks. Plan B is a dumpoff to a releasing RB that would go a long way if complete but is high. I don't think it can be complete since Ryan(+1) is in the lane after chucking the guy and almost gets a hand on it despite it being way overthrown. Batted if accurate. | |||||||||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Punt, 7-7, 9 min 2nd Q | |||||||||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Rush | Play | Player | Yards | ||||||||||
| O5 | 1 | 10 | I-Form | 4-3 under | Penalty | N/A | False start | -- | -2 | ||||||||||
| Derp. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O3 | 1 | 12 | I-Form | 4-3 under | Run | N/A | Power off tackle | Morgan | 4 | ||||||||||
| Ryan(+1) does a good job of constricting the hole here; RVB(+0.5) is doubled and gives a little ground but not much. Demens(+0.5) hits the narrow hole, getting kicked outside by the pulling G; free hitter is Morgan(-1), who is late. His tackle is more of a catch, allowing Baker to fall forward when the rest of the line had set this up for no gain. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O7 | 2 | 8 | Ace | 4-3 under | Run | N/A | Zone stretch | Roh | 5 | ||||||||||
| Cunningham motions in to set the edge. Roh(+1) beats the TE outside, forcing Bell to cut up. Morgan(-1) runs down the line and gets cut to the ground. That mess causes Campbell to fall over the bodies; an overhanging Kovacs(+1) banged Cunningham in an attempt to get outside, read the cutback, and disconnects to tackle(+1). He gets run over but hangs on. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O12 | 3 | 3 | Shotgun empty | Nickel press | Penalty | N/A | Delay | -- | -5 | ||||||||||
| This was about to be nerve-wracking as M again put everyone within five yards of the LOS. Instead it's a friendly yellow flag. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O7 | 3 | 8 | Shotgun trips bunch | Nickel even | Pass | 4 | Flare screen | Avery | 3 | ||||||||||
| Yeah... screen. Avery(+2, cover +1, tackling +1) reads the flare and bugs out for the sideline, beating Cunningham to the spot and shooting past him. He's off balance from a bump but keeps his feet and tackles by himself; Countess comes up to help. | |||||||||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Punt, 7-7, 4 min 2nd Q. Next drive starts with 2:23 in half, so keep that in mind. | |||||||||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Rush | Play | Player | Yards | ||||||||||
| O5 | 1 | 10 | I-form Big | 4-3 under | Run | N/A | Power off tackle | Demens | 3 | ||||||||||
| Trying to pop it outside again; Ryan(+1) gets upfield and outside of the block from the TE—who may have set up too far inside—to force it back; with the puller headed way outside this is two for one. Demens(+1) is out on this play at the LOS well before the ball gets there; he takes on the FB block and makes an ankle tackle as Baker moves past the LOS; Gordon(+0.5) filled quickly to help. Hawthorne is back in; he was all backside despite the pulling G. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O8 | 2 | 7 | I-Form Big | 4-3 under | Run | N/A | Inside zone | Martin | 9 | ||||||||||
| Wow. Martin(-1) caved in by a double team. Heininger(-1) easily controlled by a single block; Hawthorne is the guy in the gap that forms but it's a real big gap and he's got a blocker coming into him; would be tough for him to do much here. Kovacs comes down to fill. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O17 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun empty | Nickel even | Pass | 4 | Out | Demens | 7 | ||||||||||
| Michigan playing soft as they try to bleed the clock down with a lot of yards to go. Demens lets this completion happen; he does tackle basically on the catch. Basically fine given the situation. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O24 | 2 | 3 | Shotgun 3-wide | Nickel even | Pass | 6 | Drag | -- | 11 | ||||||||||
| Demens over the center and Avery coming down to blitz. So here's a difference: two minute drill for MSU. Cousins signals for snap. Center head down, head up, Avery comes down... beat... snap. Hawthorne bugs out for the hash as Michigan sends six, MSU runs a little drag, wide open, first down. (Cover -1, RPS -1) | |||||||||||||||||||
| O35 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun 3-wide | Nickel even | Pass | 4 | Hitch | Countess | 9 | ||||||||||
| Countess(-0.5, cover -1) beaten too easily here, giving up nine yards and OOB, only able to shove the guy after the catch. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O44 | 2 | 1 | Shotgun 3-wide | Nickel even | Pass | 6 | Throaway | Avery | Inc | ||||||||||
| Bizarre: same exact play by M, same huge hole in the middle of the D. No one there to catch the drag so Cousins, spooked, chucks it OOB. Avery(+0.5) timed it a bit better and is flying across the LOS at the snap. (pressure +1) The stunting DE was getting in as Cousins threw; he didn't have time to let these routes develop. RPS +1. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O44 | 3 | 1 | Ace trips | Nickel even | Run | N/A | Broken play | -- | 0 | ||||||||||
| RB does not go the right way. Cousins tries to scramble for it and is hacked down. | |||||||||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Half, 7-7, EOH | |||||||||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Rush | Play | Player | Yards | ||||||||||
| O46 | 1 | 10 | Ace | 4-3 under | Run | N/A | Inside zone | Demens | 16 | ||||||||||
| Odd backside double of Heininger gets him off the ball but does not get anyone onto Hawthorne. Assuming this is meant to cut back; it does not because Martin(+1) blows up his block into the backfield; RVB(+0.5) also got his guy well back; Baker forced into a narrow gap between the two. Martin can't quite disconnect to tackle. And then... nothing. Demens(-2) sits and takes a block two yards downfield, failing to get outside and losing leverage. Hawthorne(-1) inexplicably slows up as he scrapes. Despite having a free hitter with no one on him Michigan gives up a gain because of very bad LB play. Countess(+0.5) comes up very well, making a tackle attempt four yards downfield; Baker runs through it. Ryan(-1, tackling -1) now has a shot to end the play but can't; Baker runs through that tackle as he gets shoved by an OL. | |||||||||||||||||||
| M38 | 1 | 10 | I-Form Big | 4-3 under | Run | N/A | Iso | Hawthorne | 4 | ||||||||||
| Again offset FB/narrow WR implying an outside run. M gets outside and MSU goes up the middle. Backside DL are going away from the playside; Martin(-1) gets sealed out of the hole and lets a guy out on Demens; Heininger(-1) gets single blocked. Big gap. LBs do well considering; Demens(+1) gets inside of his blocker, convincing Baker to cut to the backside of the Hawthorne(+1) block; Hawthorne disconnects to tackle(+1). Think Baker cost himself yards. RPS -1. | |||||||||||||||||||
| M34 | 2 | 6 | I-Form twins | 4-3 under | Run | N/A | Power off tackle | Heininger | 4 | ||||||||||
| Jet sweep end around threat. Heininger(+1) blasts past a downblock attempt and gets upfield into the pulling G. Forced cutback. Baker makes it smoothly. Martin(-0.5) got shoved by the C and then hit by a G, he is off balance as Baker hits it up and can't tackle. Hawthorne is free now because of the cutback and comes down to fill. He does a mediocre job. RVB(+0.5) is slanting down from the backside and still helps tackle. Actually, he initiates the tackle. RVB's best trait is it's impossible to get him on the ground. He does not fall over, ever. | |||||||||||||||||||
| M30 | 3 | 2 | Ace 3-wide | Nickel press | Run | N/A | End around | Gordon | 3 | ||||||||||
| This is just tough to defend in man; Floyd is hauling after Martin in motion but has no shot at getting there with all the traffic he has to deal with. So it's Cunningham and Nichol, seniors, blocking Countess(-0.5) and Avery(-0.5), and that works out about how you'd expect. Gordon(+1, tackling +1) fills really well but there's no way to hold this down. RPS -1. | |||||||||||||||||||
| M27 | 1 | 10 | Ace | 4-3 under | Pass | 4 | PA deep hitch | Countess | Inc | ||||||||||
| Ludicrously tight camera angle means we know none of the things. Four man rush gets nowhere near Cousins(pressure -2); I sympathize after all the running. On replay, Countess(+1, cover +1) does get a hand in and seems to help this incompletion. Wind probably gave him the time but he got there. | |||||||||||||||||||
| M27 | 2 | 10 | I-Form | 4-3 under | Run | N/A | Counter pitch | Countess | 20 | ||||||||||
| Power action with a counter toss gets Baker the edge. Black(-0.5) holds up and runs at it but runs too far upfield and doesn't string this as far as he could. Countess(-2) gets way too far inside and gives up the edge; he actually runs into Hawthorne, who's doing a decent job to set up and maybe be in position for a tackle at the numbers. Instead Countess is chucked into his legs. Gordon(-2, tackling -1) then misses at the sticks. Baker steps out at the 22; this is not called; it is reviewed and still left to stand. WTF? Refs -2. | |||||||||||||||||||
| M7 | 1 | G | I-Form | 46 bear | Run | N/A | Power off tackle | Roh | -3 | ||||||||||
| Hawthorne comes down to be the extra lineman in the 46. He takes on a TE block, but the key to the play is Roh(+2) shooting into the backfield, standing up the FB in the backfield, causing Bell to stop, and allowing Ryan(+0.5) to rumble in from behind to tackle. RPS +1. | |||||||||||||||||||
| M10 | 2 | G | I-Form Big | 4-3 under | Pass | 4 | PA throwaway | Roh | Inc | ||||||||||
| Play action on second and goal from the ten, okay. Michigan covers(+2) everyone and Roh(+1, pressure +1) releases as the TE releases him, getting in on Cousins after leaping to dissuade an early throw. Cousins sails one out of the endzone. | |||||||||||||||||||
| M10 | 3 | G | Shotgun 4-wide | 3-3-5 nickel | Pass | 3 | Hitch | Floyd | 10 | ||||||||||
| Michigan sets up a picket fence with just three rushers. Floyd(-2, tackling -2) manages to miss a tackle in this situation; Martin is about six inches inside the line as he turns upfield and barely manages to get the ball across the line as Hawthorne bangs him to the ground. Guh. | |||||||||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Touchdown, 7-14, 11 min 3rd Q. MSU gets the next drive at their 20 because this is the punt that's dying at the three when Furman takes it into the endzone. | |||||||||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Rush | Play | Player | Yards | ||||||||||
| O20 | 1 | 10 | I-Form Big | 4-3 under | Run | N/A | Pitch sweep | Roh | 15 | ||||||||||
| BWS picture paged this; it is all alignment. They run outside; down blocks on Roh and Morgan are hugely advantageous. Morgan(-1) is looking in the backfield instead of his blocker and gets blown up; Kovacs(-1) is cut to the ground too easily. Roh(-1) also sealed. Baker into the secondary, where Gordon(-1, tackling -1) basically whiffs but miraculously punches the football loose as Baker heads for paydirt. Turnover. | |||||||||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Fumble, 7-14, 6 min 3rd Q | |||||||||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Rush | Play | Player | Yards | ||||||||||
| O39 | 1 | 10 | I-Form Big | 4-3 under | Run | N/A | Pitch sweep | Roh | 2 | ||||||||||
| Same exact play. Roh(+1) strings it to the edge this time, eventually getting the second puller to the ground, two for one. Morgan finally getting out rapidly(+0.5). He ends up taking another two for one as one of the pullers cuts him as Cunningham cracks back on him after shoving Kovacs. This plus the Roh play means Kovacs(+0.5) is alone on the edge. He makes the tackle. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O41 | 2 | 8 | Diamond screen | Okie press? | Pass | N/A | Ref debacle | -- | Inc | ||||||||||
| Wow. This is OBVIOUSLY a backwards pass. It's not even close. Martin drops it and instead of calling the "free touchdown" the refs blow it dead. This is inexcusable. It is not close at all. I deleted fourteen swear words in this box. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O41 | 3 | 8 | Shotgun 3-wide | Nickel even | Pass | N/A | Drag | Ryan | 14 | ||||||||||
| All Ryan. Mattison has a great call on for what MSU is running: a triple blitz up the middle with both DEs falling back to ride the obvious mesh response to this play. Roh stares straight at the TE and rides him on his mesh; Ryan(-2, cover -2) looks in the backfield, lets Cunningham through free, and gives up the conversion because Cousins can hit his WR without the jam. Everyone else is in man; Ryan is in zone. The guy is a missed assignment factory. RPS +2; this was a fantastic call that would have gotten MSU off the field if executed. BWS picture pages. | |||||||||||||||||||
| M46 | 1 | 10 | Ace | 4-3 under | Pass | 4 | PA Fly | Gordon | Inc | ||||||||||
| All day on the PA (pressure -2); Coverage is spectacular (cover +3) and Cousins has no choice but to chuck it vaguely in the direction of a double-covered Cunningham. Gordon(+1) in better position that Cunningham if the ball is accurate; it's not. I assume this is a throwaway. | |||||||||||||||||||
| M46 | 2 | 10 | I-Form Big | 4-3 under | Run | N/A | Iso | Martin | 5 | ||||||||||
| Martin(-2) destroyed by a double, blown off the ball; he spins outside. Gross. RVB(+1) chucks his blocker to the ground; Morgan(+1) takes the MSU fullback and plants him backwards, forcing Baker back into the attacking RVB. Delayed, Baker is gang-tackled by Floyd and Demens. Wow... Martin not having a good game at all. | |||||||||||||||||||
| M41 | 3 | 5 | Shotgun 3-wide | Nickel even | Pass | 5 | Hitch | Floyd | 6 | ||||||||||
| Zone blitz sends five w/ Avery getting in clean (+0.5, pressure +1); Floyd(-0.5, cover -1) is too far off to prevent this completion. Maybe that's harsh; this is probably a route you can just complete all the time if you are good enough. | |||||||||||||||||||
| M35 | 1 | 10 | I-Form Big | 4-3 under | Run | N/A | Power off tackle | Demens | 5 | ||||||||||
| Same thing as the previous pitch sweep from a formation perspective; this shoots Roh way outside. Morgan(+0.5) reads the path of the RB and halts his outside move, picking off a blocker and constricting the hole; Heininger(+0.5) is blown back by a double but splits it when the other guy pops off on Demens. Demens pops the guy about two yards downfield; Bell falls forward for three more. Sort of got half-RPSed here; tough to blame the players on this. | |||||||||||||||||||
| M30 | 2 | 5 | Ace | 4-3 over | Pass | 5 | TE screen | -- | 15 | ||||||||||
| Michigan now flipping on MSU strength changes. This ends up with M in an over front with Kovacs coming down. MSU goes TE screen; live this looked like a block in the back on Kovacs but on replay this is legit. No angle shown gives an idea who might be responsible, but this was a big gain without an obvious way to prevent it: RPS -1. | |||||||||||||||||||
| M15 | 1 | 10 | I-Form | 46 bear | Run | N/A | Inside zone | Black | 2 | ||||||||||
| Because of the bear Black(+2) can flare out; he does. He gets outside of the TE, chucking him inside, and absorbs the FB block for a 2-for-1. This means no one is on Kovacs(-0.5); he attacks only to see his tackle(-1) run through; three yards later the cavalry arrives. RPS +1. | |||||||||||||||||||
| M13 | 2 | 8 | Shotgun trips TE | Nickel even | Pass | 4 | Flat | Floyd | 13 | ||||||||||
| Floyd in motion, revealing man; when Martin comes back the other way he reacts late and slows for no reason, making this ridiculously open. -2, cover -2, RPS -2, good lord. Even if he had played this well M was dead because they showed man. Floyd barely getting outside the tackle box by the time the ball was thrown was just the cherry on top. | |||||||||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Touchdown, 7-21, EO3Q. Awful call, bad play by Ryan, seeya. | |||||||||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Rush | Play | Player | Yards | ||||||||||
| O15 | 1 | 10 | I-Form | 46 bear | Run | N/A | Power off tackle | Demens | 6 (Pen -8) | ||||||||||
| Late move from Morgan to the bear spot. MSU runs power away from it. Heininger(-1) blown up by a double. Roh taken by pulling G; he restricts the hole but Heininger is gone. Since they're running weak and M has an extra guy in the box there is no one to block one LB. Demens(-1) is unblocked and flows but late; he contacts Baker three yards downfield and gives up a lot more as his tackle is run through. MSU G picks up a holding call for stupidly reaching his arms around Martin when he was not relevant to the play. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O8 | 1 | 17 | I-Form | 4-3 under | Run | N/A | Inside zone | Gordon | -1 | ||||||||||
| Michigan blitzes from the slot, getting Gordon(+0.5, RPS +1) in past the attempted block by Nichol; this cuts off the outside thanks to RVB(+1) thumping a double team backwards, pancaking the TE. Ryan runs up and gets cut to the ground again, but RB has to cut back because of the blitz. Heininger(+1) runs down the line and avoids a cut to tackle. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O7 | 2 | 18 | I-Form | 4-3 under | Pass | 4 | PA throwaway | -- | Inc | ||||||||||
| An extremely unconvincing fake to the FB leaves an unblocked Roh on the edge; Heininger also starts running up at Cousins. With coverage(+1) good after the weird fake, Cousins chucks it away. Stupid playcall. (RPS +1) | |||||||||||||||||||
| O7 | 3 | 18 | Ace | Nickel even | Pass | 4 | Sack | Martin | -1 | ||||||||||
| Heavy rush from Martin(+1) pushes a G back and forces Cousins to step up quickly; RVB spins away to pursue and Cousins falls. (Pressure +1) | |||||||||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Punt, 7-21, 10 min 4th Q | |||||||||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Rush | Play | Player | Yards | ||||||||||
| O21 | 1 | 10 | I-Form | 4-3 under | Run | N/A | End around | Floyd | 8 | ||||||||||
| Morgan(-1) sucks in on the dive fake; Gordon is blocked out of the play by Cunningham; Floyd(0) does not come up on the edge until Martin is already well downfield. He punches the ball out as he tackles so he gets his minus back. | |||||||||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Fumble, 14-21, 9 min 4th Q | |||||||||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | DForm | Type | Rush | Play | Player | Yards | ||||||||||
| O19 | 1 | 10 | I-Form | 4-3 under | Run | N/A | Power off tackle | Demens | 3 | ||||||||||
| End around fake to the other side of the line. RVB(+1) holds up okay against a double; Ryan(+1) constricts the hole and Demens(+1) hits the lead blocker at the LOS; there is no gap for Baker and Demens can tackle; Morgan(-1) sat and ate a block so if this is a bigger hole Michigan has problems. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O22 | 2 | 7 | I-Form | 46 bear | Run | N/A | Counter pitch | Roh | 3 | ||||||||||
| Roh(+1) reads the FB coming his way and manages to string the play out all the way to the sideline. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O25 | 3 | 4 | Shotgun empty | Nickel press | Pass | 4 | TE out | Van Bergen | Inc | ||||||||||
| Hey! We time the snap! RVB(+2, pressure +2) is moving as the ball goes as MSU's line just busts spectacularly, letting three guys in; RVB is the fastest and hits Cousins, forcing an inaccurate pass to an open TE out. | |||||||||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Punt, 14-21, 4 min 4th Q. Next MSU drive is running the clock out, EOChart. | |||||||||||||||||||
Well, at least the touchdowns weren't free.
Yeah. Woolfolk almost gave up a free one on the first drive and as BWS explained, the fumble that opened one of MSU's second-half drives was almost a free touchdown until Baker got the ball stripped on a tenuous, crappy tackle attempt by Gordon. But there's no comparison between this year and last. Wind had something to do with it; so did Greg Mattison.
How were they able to run outside so effectively?
For context we should look at the—
Chart.
Chart.
| Defensive Line | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Player | + | - | T | Notes |
| Van Bergen | 9 | 1 | 8 | Does not fall over. Needs to teach Ryan about cut blocks. |
| Martin | 5.5 | 6.5 | -1 | Blown off the ball by doubles multiple times. Sad face. |
| Roh | 8 | 3.5 | 4.5 | Adjusted well after initial problems getting outside. |
| Brink | - | 1 | -1 | Eh. |
| Heininger | 4.5 | 4 | 0.5 | Did okay; still single blocked effectively too many times. |
| Black | 2 | 2.5 | -0.5 | Didn't play much this week. |
| Campbell | - | - | - | Did not register. |
| TOTAL | 33 | 18.5 | 14.5 | Just an okay day. |
| Linebacker | ||||
| Player | + | - | T | Notes |
| C. Gordon | - | - | - | DNP |
| Demens | 4.5 | 6.5 | -2 | Michigan's linebackers are not nearly as reactive as MSU/ND, even Northwestern, and it costs them. |
| Herron | - | - | - | DNP |
| Ryan | 7.5 | 5 | 2.5 | Actually was not much of a problem after the first argh cut block. |
| Fitzgerald | - | - | - | DNP |
| Jones | - | - | - | DNP |
| Evans | - | - | - | DNP |
| Beyer | - | - | - | DNP |
| Hawthorne | 2 | 4.5 | -2.5 | Unable to use his speed effectively, pulled. |
| Morgan | 4 | 5 | -1 | Confused but more effective getting to the ball. |
| TOTAL | 18 | 21 | -3 | WLB an issue; Demens not doing as well as expected. |
| Secondary | ||||
| Player | + | - | T | Notes |
| Floyd | 2 | 6 | -4 | Missed tackle on third and goal a killer. |
| Avery | 3 | 2.5 | 0.5 | Okay. |
| Woolfolk | 0.5 | 4 | -3.5 | Two very bad plays on first drive and then bench. |
| Kovacs | 3.5 | 2.5 | 1 | Tough for him to tackle Baker; not pressed in coverage. |
| T. Gordon | 3 | 4 | -1 | No fumble plus this time because he whiffed a tackle and got lucky instead of taking a guy to the ground in such away the ball comes out. |
| Countess | 1.5 | 3 | -1.5 | Not Woodson yet. |
| Johnson | - | - | - | DNP |
| TOTAL | 13.5 | 22 | -8.5 | Chunks of running yards due to poor corner support. |
| Metrics | ||||
| Pressure | 8 | 5 | 3 | Not a lot of deep passes this week because of wind. |
| Coverage | 9 | 12 | -3 | That's not too bad against a senior QB. |
| Tackling | 5 | 8 | 38% | Baker Baker Baker (also Martin) |
| RPS | 8 | 6 | 2 | While MSU took advantage of M weakness I didn't think that was a structural issue. |
Our sanity check: MSU had just 333 yards but had a somewhat limited number of snaps (63), averaging 5.2 a shot. MSU averaged 5.5 YPC and their turnovers were only vaguely forced, so… yeah. The above seems about right. Michigan was a little disappointing on the line, a little disappointing at LB, and had major issues with members of the secondary tackling.
One surprise: neither Roh nor Ryan took the brunt. Both had decent days; the problems outside were often on corners, safeties, or linebackers. Roh got sealed a couple times but also did things like this:
I feel bad for taking a couple clips designed to show problems with Ryan when he was the only linebacker to finish positive.
…but you did take a couple clips.
Yeah. So caveats apply here. Problem one is the thing that makes me literally scream "AAARGH RYAN" during games when I see it happen. The guy takes cut blocks like Glass Joe takes a punch:
There are other problems on this play, most prominently Demens getting slashed to the ground just like Ryan does; RVB and Martin then tumble over the fallen OL. Gordon also does not make a swift fill. But if Ryan is on the edge here he can make a tackle attempt or force Baker further outside and give his D a chance to recover—Gordon is probably five yards closer to the LOS and in less space if the edge is held.
That's happened a half-dozen times or so and Michigan has gotten gashed outside because of it. He suffered this fate a couple more times but got away with it.
Problem two is just regular freshman stuff like running zone when everyone else is running man. BWS picture-paged this play for a fuller explanation*; here's the video:
That is a great playcall. Michigan blitzes up the middle, gets a free runner, and has two guys dropping off into mesh-annihilating inside man coverage; MSU runs mesh. This play perfectly beats MSU's; it's the definition of RPS+2. This should be an incompletion or a sack and a punt but Ryan runs zone coverage and Cunningham gets open.
I have a dream that someday Michigan will not have freshmen on the field. That day is 2013 at the earliest.
All that said, Ryan came out positive for constricting a bunch of power plays and not being exploitable on the edge after the first drive. That spot has come a long way from early in the season when Ryan and Beyer were taking turns being in the wrong place on power.
*[I strongly disagree with the conclusion there. The play is more about the dangers of freshmen than zone blitzing—it is clear that Roh and Ryan are supposed to get inside of presumed drag routes by the TE and Cunningham. Roh does this beautifully and if Ryan had done the same not-very-difficult thing Cousins has nowhere to go before Morgan annihilates him. The play is specifically designed to get Cousins looking at mesh—blitz up the middle—without opening it up.]
The outside running, then?
I don't think the guys on the line played egregiously.
Michigan got formation'd quite a bit. This was the setup on that Baker run that was a long gainer until he fumbled:
This screams outside run to the right: offset FB, TE lined up a couple yards outside the tackle, WR tight to the LOS. This makes it easy for the offense to seal Roh and Morgan by blocking down. It's up to the linebackers to recognize this and haul ass or slip blocks and then it's up to the secondary to come down hard on that; they didn't. On this play Morgan is looking at the backfield and gets blindsided by a WR; by the time Baker bursts up the line most of the DL is closer to the sideline than he is. This is a pitch, too, so Gordon needs to be reading this faster.
It's a combination of things but the primary thing is the linebackers are hesitant and that makes them late when plays go outside.
What's wrong with Martin?
I don't know. I saw him blown off the ball in this game several times, something that does not happen. That could be your toughness issue.
Why can't we jump snaps like MSU did?
There were a couple instances on which Michigan did but I think that's part of football. The frequency with which MSU got M is unusual. One difference I did notice is that Michigan's standard count was much quicker than MSU's. Here's a shotgun play on MSU's ultimately unsuccessful first-half two minute drill:
Head down, head up, pause, see LB lined up over your face, snap. Michigan tips the blitz and MSU hits them with an easy drag.
What is the deal with the linebackers?
They seem uncertain of themselves. While I keep moaning about over-aggressive opponent LBs that are exploitable if we hit them with play action—big if—that may be a perception magnified by Michigan's slow-ass LBs. I mean, what is this?
Demens lets the guy outside and an unblocked Hawthorne slows up as if a cutback is coming when a cutback is definitely not coming. We saw them similarly unable to read outside plays against Northwestern. WLB was always going to be a sore spot but I thought Demens would be more of a playmaker than he is. Maybe that's yet more hesitancy born of constantly changing systems.
Was that a lateral?
Holy hell, yes. It was a full yard backwards and there's a ref right there who blows it dead. That is a free touchdown on a drive that would end up in Michigan's endzone. That is the biggest, easiest, most awful call that's gone against Michigan in a long time.
Heroes?
It's hard to find anyone who played really well but Van Bergen was the best player on the day, consistently making good reads and staying on his feet.
Goats?
No one was awful, either, but Hawthorne played badly enough to get yanked for a similarly mediocre Morgan; Martin had his worst day that can't be blamed on an injury in a long, long time.
What does it mean for Purdue and beyond?
I don't think we learned a whole lot on a day when the wind and Michigan's offense made the opponent even more conservative than they usually are. There are obvious edge issues, but we knew that. Ryan is an erratic freshman slowly improving. Knew that. WLB weak spot, secondary vastly improved but still just okay, etc.
Two things on the line: Roh appears to have solidly reclaimed his starting spot from Black and Martin's play was a little disturbing considering the Iowa/Nebraska/OSU B1G MANBALL lineup coming later in the season.
Lizard Brain Tornado Apocalypse Derp Derp Derp
10/15/2011 – Michigan 14, Michigan State 28 – 10/15/2011, 6-1, 2-1 Big Ten
right via Melanie Maxwell/AnnArbor.com
WHAT THE HELL ARE YOU DOING THROWING 30 YARDS DOWNFIELD IN A CYCLONE
YOU'RE ASKING DENARD ROBINSON TO BE JOE MONTANA IN A TRASH TORNADO
YOU'RE COMING OUT FIVE WIDE
RUN THE FOOTBALL!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
-Brian Cook's brain channeling Mike Valenti, 3:07 PM 10/15/2011
---------------------
The now rapidly developing lizard brain theory of college football coaching states that there is a certain level of pressure above which rationality goes out the window and coaches revert to who they really are. It came to me in a horrible epiphany when Lloyd Carr punted in the 2005 Ohio State game less than a quarter after going for it on his side of the field. Coaches panic, go to their binkies, and then try to convince you otherwise in the post-game.
Different coaches have different levels. Ron Zook reverts to the lizard brain on the opening kickoff of every game. Kirk Ferentz makes it about five minutes in. We don't know about Tressel because he constructed his team such that the lizard brain was right. Les Miles exists on an entirely different axis with taffy on one end and victory on the other. He is the only one who escapes. The lizard brain is unavoidable.
Al Borges's lizard brain kicked in after Vincent Smith ran for two yards on Michigan's first offensive play of the second half. First and ten after that:
-
Robinson sacked for –9 yards
-
Smith rush for two yards
-
Gardner incomplete
-
Robinson incomplete
-
Offsides MSU
-
Gardner rush for four yards
-
Robinson rush for –1 yard
-
Robinson slant complete for 34 yard touchdown
-
Robinson sacked
-
Robinson rush for –1 yard
-
Robinson INT
While this doesn't paint a pretty picture for the run game, either, after halftime Michigan passed on 60% of its first downs, got one completion on a short route that turned into a big gain when Roundtree broke a tackle, and did nothing else.
For the game Michigan tried to pass at least 41 times*, averaging 2.8 yards per attempt and giving up a defensive touchdown.
TWO POINT EIGHT YARDS
DEFENSIVE TOUCHDOWN
RUN THE FOOTBALL!!!!
…
…
Sorry. Sorry.
Michigan tried to run the ball 26 times and averaged… oh, Jesus… 5.2 yards per carry. Fitzgerald Toussaint got two carries, Denard twelve.
I just realized this is what it's like to be Walter Sobchak.
MARK IT 2.8.
(This is not a threat against anyone's person. Do I look like Will Gholston?)
So, yeah. There is no way to put this without getting an email from some guy concerned about his eleven year old without resorting to Bloom County methods. That was the dumbest goddamned $%&*^-*$#*ing #&!$brained dip*&%$ mother*(%$ing horse_+$# goat-&^%t &%$*y-infested $%^&stick playcalling I have ever &*$ing seen in my life. I see you, Valenti. I get it now. I get it.
----------------------------
ON FOURTH AND ONE AL BORGES HAD THE QUARTERBACK, WHO IS THE MOST DANGEROUS RUNNING QUARTERBACK IN COLLEGE FOOTBALL, TURN HIS BACK TO THE LINE OF SCRIMMAGE AS IF EVERY DEFENSE EVER CONCEIVED AGAINST THE GUY DOESN'T HAVE EDGE CONTAIN OF HIM AS THEIR FIRST THREE PRIORITIES
----------------------------
ON FOURTH AND ONE AL BORGES HAD THE QUARTERBACK, WHO IS THE MOST DANGEROUS RUNNING QUARTERBACK IN COLLEGE FOOTBALL, TURN HIS BACK TO THE LINE OF SCRIMMAGE AS IF EVERY DEFENSE EVER CONCEIVED AGAINST THE GUY DOESN'T HAVE EDGE CONTAIN OF HIM AS THEIR FIRST THREE PRIORITIES
-----------------------------
THAT AGAIN
-----------------------------
Okay, okay… sorry. Sorry. I'm vented.
What we have to deal with now is the cold certainty that the honeymoon is over and our football coaches are football coaches, like they always are, and we cannot assume that everything will be honeydew and game theory from now on. Hoke punted on fourth and short-ish from inside the opponent 40. Borges did that above.
That's okay, really. Given the crapfest we endured on offense I almost can't blame Hoke for the punts. And in many other situations I prefer an offensive coordinator who wants to throw when he's in trouble to one who wants to go into a shell. The Morris/upperclass Gardner offense won't put the Ferrari in neutral until the second half. Recruit like they're recruiting and coach like it seems they can and eventually we'll get to a nice place to be.
In the near term, though, those happy thoughts over the first few weeks about Borges adjusting to Denard evaporated in a flurry of sacks after which you look at the receivers and there are three guys thirty yards downfield with no one between them and the carnage. You can fake it against defenses that can't play, but when it comes down to it the combination of Borges and Denard makes everyone wonder that bad old question about whether he should really play QB. IE: the worst-case scenario from the offseason.
A certain genre of Michigan fan will say this was always who Denard was, but last year he completed 58% of his passes for 9.3 YPA and a 12-9 TD:INT ratio in the Big Ten. Whatever his limitations were they seemed a lot less limiting last year, when Michigan stressed the defense to the edges and exploited the ruthless equation of the spread: a running quarterback means someone's open if you can just find him.
I don't blame Borges for that. You can't up and be someone else at the drop of a hat. If we are again pointing the finger of blame it's aiming at Rich Rodriguez for not deserving a fourth year. I do blame Borges for throwing almost two-thirds of the time when that should be inverted. The incoherent grab-bagginess of the offense is a natural effect of hiring a pro-style guy with a spread offense. Running Denard twelve times in a trash tornado is not.
So here we are, with football coaches instead of magical fairies who can do anything. That sucks. The honeymoon over, life re-asserts itself.
*[I'm not sure how many QB carries were scrambles. I counted the 8-yard Gallon scramble as a pass.]
Non-Bullets of I Wish They Were Real Bullets
Hurray clowniformz! So much for a one-time thing. It's as if they knew they would need to both play and look like Yakety Sax:
That's the third time this year we've had a uniform stunt, this one the ugliest and stupidest of them all*. It's like Dave Brandon took in the majesty that is the Spartan Stadium game experience and said "someday this will be mine." Chengelis's headline on the subject…
Spartans, Wolverines compete with fashion statements, too
…is even more evidence that Dave Brandon Gets It less than anyone has ever not Gotten It before.
I had a wow experience. Did you? Everyone looking forward to the analwowing in Dallas next year when we take our freshman defensive tackles and paper-thin offensive line into a game we are absolutely not prepared for? CEOs are psychopaths.
[Bonus: last time we did this was 1976, the very heart of the era when people lost their minds about fashion. We lost then, too.]
*[No, that guy on every message board who could spin Denard Robinson's arm being torn off by William Gholston as a positive for the program, they did not look good. A sane political system would prevent you from voting. You suck. I'm sure you've got a comment all lined up to complain about the complaining. Bring it, I've got an itchy trigger finger today.]
Obligatory personal foul section. Yeah, it was ugly. The truly sad thing was that band of morons getting away with 120 yards in penalties without losing. If we had a sane offensive plan and/or a plan to deal with snap jumping those personal fouls are only 10% enraging—the intent to injure bits—and 90% hilarious Sparty being Sparty. That's where we are as a program right now: we can play the stupidest 85 people ever assembled on one football team and still lose by two touchdowns.
Gholston should obviously be suspended at least two games for the helmet rip—as bad an intent-to-injure play as the Reynolds-Sorgi incident—and the punch, which has been established by the great Jonas Mouton Suspension Fiasco as a one-gamer. There was also a less obvious judo chop that forced Lewan out of the game for a few plays. I bet nothing happens, because that's the way life goes.
This is the second consecutive year a player has been knocked out late after the game is decided by a dirty hit. Look at Dantonio's jaw… you are feeling very sleepy… you cannot put together incidents to see a pattern forming… so much… fake… bible… Spock.
I guess targeting other football players is progress relative to beating up mechanical engineers en masse.
Edge destruction. Early candidates for big negative days in the defense UFR: Roh and Ryan, who were targeted by the MSU offensive coaching staff to good effect. MSU's first TD drive was a series of easy outside runs as those two got destroyed. They improved a bit as the day went on but were clearly a weak spot targeted effectively.
Woolfolk also got pulled after a series or two; he's obviously hurt. Avery was the nickel corner since MSU doesn't spread to run much.
Man, Baker. It kills me whenever I see a really good running back go against Michigan because the mind immediately plugs that guy into rotation at the RB spot post-Minor and groans. Baker is one of those guys, a leg-churning tackle-breaker who would turn a lot of Michigan's two yard runs into five or six or more.
Penetration. They had it. Michigan didn't. Why not?
One part: It's clear all these late-developing passing routes are exposing the Mark Huyge we saw trying and failing to block for Tate Forcier as a sophomore. After a year of being covered up by the spread 'n' shred he's back to allowing sacks on a three man rush.
But the interior line? I saw Molk ole guys. Molk! How is this year four of MSU using a simple parlor trick of slanting under at the snap without two different coaching staffs being able to do anything about it?
Old school punting. Positive of a sort: When asked to coffin-corner punts Will Hagerup does a pretty good job. Haven't seen that in 15 years—you know it's old school when Sap is referencing Harry Kipke when handing out helmet stickers.
Why "of a sort": if you can coffin-corner a punt you probably shouldn't be punting.
The Minnesota plays. Doesn't seem too smart to have run a zillion new things against Minnesota now, does it? Michigan brought out the sprint counter once and it got stuffed—would MSU have been prepared for it if they hadn't seen it against Minnesota? Since Michigan isn't running the QB stretch that motion was a tipoff the counter was coming and an expected counter is a dead counter.
Here
Inside the Box Score points out a huge swing play:
The refs did miss one backwards pass from Cousins, who clearly let go of the ball on state’s 37 and hit his receiver’s hands on the 36. The explanation was really lame, something along the lines of Michigan didn’t recover the football right away. The way I saw it, the ball hit the ground and the Michigan defender bent down and picked it up. What am I missing?
With no one around the ball except Wolverines if that's correctly called that is a potentially game-changing defensive score. This isn't a bad offsides penalty or uncalled false start, it's a touchdown being wiped off the board because the refs blew it dead too early. Very frustrating. I thought they were supposed to let it go if it was too close to be sure about now.
Also there is this:
Our leading tacklers were Gordon, Kovacs, Roh, and Countess, with 8, 6, 6, and 6, respectively. Do you notice what’s missing? Linebackers. Demens was the leading tackler among the linebackers with 5. I noticed this week that Touch the Banner was high on Demens for last week’s performance against NU, but Brian was critical of him in the UFRs. I think this game was the tie-breaker. I don’t think our LBs were productive enough. Baker gashed us all day long. His longest run was only 25 yards, yet he gained 167 yards on 26 carries. State was consistently able to pound the football against us.
How many times did MSU linebackers shoot out to the sideline on plays that looked like they were going to work and hold them down to a few yards, and how many times did Michigan linebackers do that? That's not always on the linebackers—could be on the M OL not getting out or DL not taking on doubles effectively—but given what we saw against Northwestern I'm betting some of the big chunk plays from Baker see linebacker minuses aplenty.
Hoke for Tomorrow is briefer. I would like to interject about this amongst the things learned:
That strong winds + Kirk Cousins > strong winds + Denard Robinson.
Cousins averaged 5 YPA and threw a backwards pass that should have been a disaster. Drops had a lot to do with it but it's possible the wind messed with both WR and QB, which is even more reason that throwing 41 times in the trash tornado was inexplicably dumb.
Elsewhere
Media, as in stuff. The official site valiantly found highlight-type-substances in the wreckage:
There are also postgame interviews if you'd like to watch everyone on Michigan's team refusing to answer questions about the personal fouls. Mike DeSimone collects pictures from across the world.
Blogs. Come on, Braves and Birds picture comparison. Come on. The Hoover Street Rag does something long and complicated that I don't understand. Parody of a bad NBC hour-long drama? Mathlete says Michigan underperformed expectations by 28 points, his worst number of the season for all of I-A. Various bullets from MVictors. Touch the Banner also has them.
BWS says something about little brother, which no offense whenever I hear the word "brother" in relation to Michigan State now my eyes glaze over. Holdin' the Rope recaps. MZone as well.
National variety from Doctor Saturday:
On seven trips into MSU territory after the opening possession, Michigan punted on five and turned it over on downs on a sixth.
Series by series, punt by punt, the sense of progress over the first half of the season dissolved into a disheveled mess. The running game stalled. The two-quarterback shuffle failed to gin up any semblance of a steady passing game, or a big play with Robinson lined up as a wide receiver. The pass protection broke down. In almost every aspect, it was Michigan's worst nightmare: At the exact point on the calendar that optimistic starts began to give way to collapse each of the last two years, the Wolverines looked like a team on the verge of collapse.
Newspapers. Michigan fell to 17th/18th in the polls. I did not find anything else of a newspapery variety that is open in my tabs.
Upon Further Review 2011: Defense vs Northwestern
Formation notes: Michigan spent the bulk of the first half in their nickel package with Ryan down on the line and Gordon and Johnson at nickel and safety, respectively. In the second half they took Johnson off in favor of using Ryan as a slot LB until Northwestern started their passing hurry-up on their fourth(!) drive.
Substitution notes: The usual defensive line substitutions, with Heininger and Black seeing frequent time, Campbell a little, and Washington maybe a snap or three. Michigan did briefly show Avery as the nickelback, but that only lasted a drive or two. Demens went the whole way; Morgan got a couple series late in the first half. Countess replaced Woolfolk in the second quarter and went the rest of the way.
Demens, Kovacs, Floyd, and Gordon didn't come off the field.
Show? Show.
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | DForm | Type | Rush | Play | Player | Yards | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| O20 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun 4-wide | Nickel even | Pass | 4 | Bubble screen | Floyd | 7 | ||||||||||
| Hawthorne starts flowing up into the playfake and there's no one to the short side, leaving the slot all alone; Floyd is playing ten yards off. With Hawthorne positioned like he is there is no way he's making this play anyway. RPS -1. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O27 | 2 | 3 | Shotgun trips | Nickel press | Pass | 4 | Out | Floyd | Inc | ||||||||||
| Floyd(+1, cover +1) is right there on the receiver's cut, forcing Persa to throw it perfectly—upfield and away from Floyd. He does so; WR has a shot at a decently tough catch and cannot make it. Rushing lane was opening up but Persa did not take it. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O27 | 3 | 3 | Shotgun trips bunch | Nickel press | Pass | 5 | Drag | Demens | Inc | ||||||||||
| Demens lines up right over the center and rushes, trying to take the center out of the play as Martin(+0.5) stunts around. This basically works; center slides off on Martin and Demens(+1) uses that opportunity to shoot up into the pocket. He's about to sack when an in the grasp Persa chucks it inaccurately in the vicinity of a receiver Hawthorne(+1, cover +1) is all over; may have a PBU if ball is accurate. Pressure +1, RPS +1. This is really close to a sack, BTW. | |||||||||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Punt, 0-0, 14 min 1st Q | |||||||||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Rush | Play | Player | Yards | ||||||||||
| O20 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun empty quad bunch | Nickel press | Pass | 5 | Drag | Van Bergen | Inc (Pen +15) | ||||||||||
| Avery in as the nickelback. NW has a tight bunch to the wide side of the field and motions the tailback outside of those guys. Michigan is confused, with Demens eventually heading out there to deal with him, but late. Doesn't end up mattering this time. Michigan runs a twist that gets Roh(+0.5) through thanks to Martin(+1) threatening to shoot past the C. He's screwed either way. Persa has to dump it; RVB(+1) reads Persa's eyes and starts moving into the throwing lane, batting it down. Hawthorne(-1, cover -1) got beaten by Ebert on this drag and would have been able to turn it up for big yardage. Pressure +2. Roh picks up a roughing the passer call that is horsecrap. That's one step and then hit. Awful call. Refs -2. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O35 | 1 | 10 | Pistol 2-back offset | Nickel even | Run | N/A | Veer triple option | Kovacs | 5 | ||||||||||
| Colter in at QB; Michigan seemingly misaligned with no reaction to the strong side and Kovacs lined up a couple yards behind the LBs. They do not comprehend Colter is in at QB. NW runs an option to the wide side. Both LBs and Roh(-2), the playside DE, suck up on the dive fake. Mattison said DE == QB so I'm –2ing every DE who tackles a dive guy or lets the QB outside. Even Kovacs hesitates; no one is tracking the pitch back at all. Roh does recover to string the play out a bit, and Kovacs flows hard, forcing a pitch a few yards downfield. Colter didn't make Kovacs take him, though, and he flows down to tackle, preventing this from becoming a big gain. I have no idea who's at fault here. Either Roh or Demens needs to get out on the pitch and Kovacs needs to do so as well. Kovacs(+1) for getting out as secondary support and making a tough tackle(+1). RPS -1. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O40 | 2 | 5 | Shotgun trips | Nickel even | Pass | N/A | Bubble screen | Woolfolk | 14 | ||||||||||
| Bler bler bler. Michigan has two guys to the wide side of the field that possesses three NW WRs. Those two guys are seven and ten yards off the LOS. Woolfolk(-1) then misses the tackle(-1) and turns this from seven into 13. RPS-1. | |||||||||||||||||||
| M46 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun 4-wide | Nickel even | Pass | 4 | Improv | Avery? | 27 | ||||||||||
| Black drops off into a zone before the play and Woolfolk blitzes from the other side. Unsurprisingly, this is picked up. Martin(+1) is coming through the line and is held; no call; Persa can flush outside of the pocket because Woolfolk got upfield. Outside of the pocket Persa is deadly; he finds a guy for a big gainer. Cover -1, Pressure -1, RPS -1. | |||||||||||||||||||
| M19 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun 4-wide | Nickel even | Pass | 4 | Dumpoff | Hawthorne | 4 | ||||||||||
| Yeesh, looks like Demens(-1) doesn't get enough of a drop and Johnson(-2) pulls up on a dig, leaving a post wide open for a touchdown (cover -2). Persa misses this and checks down. Hawthorne(+1, cover +1) with an immediate tackle. With Martin out and Campbell in there is no rush at all (pressure -2). | |||||||||||||||||||
| M15 | 2 | 6 | Shotgun trips 2back | Nickel even | Run | N/A | Veer triple option | Kovacs | 15 | ||||||||||
| Trips plus two backs equals a covered up WR, equals run, equals massive frustration that this catches Michigan off guard. Ryan(-2) crashes down on the dive fake; Demens and Hawthorne move forward despite this obviously being an option and get sealed away; Demens is playside so –1. Kovacs(-1) misses a tackle(-1) at the ten but that could be harsh since he is the only player on the edge against two other players. If he takes a more conservative angle Colter pitches and the RB walks into the endzone. At least Kovacs had a shot here. RPS -2. | |||||||||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Touchdown, 7-7, 8 min 1st Q | |||||||||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Rush | Play | Player | Yards | ||||||||||
| O37 | 1 | 10 | Pistol trips TE | Nickel even | Run | N/A | Speed option | Demens | 12 | ||||||||||
| RVB(+0.5) and Martin are coming at the QB hard, forcing a quick pitch. That should be advantage D since the DL are stringing the RB out quickly. Gordon(+0.5) comes up to maintain leverage, at which point... no one comes up to tackle. Demens(-2) had gone upfield around a blocker for no discernible reason and is late as a result. Martin can't quite make up for his mistake; Hawthorne(-0.5) is there seven yards downfield. His tackle(-1) is run through but does force the RB OOB. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O49 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun 4-wide | Nickel even | Pass | N/A | Flare screen | Van Bergen | 3 | ||||||||||
| Woolfolk(-0.5) is caught up in man coverage here and never realizes this is basically a run play; he ends up on his butt. Gordon(-0.5) has the same thing happen to him. Maybe that's harsh for press coverage. Demens(+1) and Van Bergen(+1) read the play and get out on it to hold it down, with RVB actually making the tackle. | |||||||||||||||||||
| M47 | 2 | 7 | Shotgun empty TE | Nickel even | Run | N/A | Shovel pass | Hawthorne | 2 | ||||||||||
| Yeah, technically a pass, but this is a run play in UFR's book. This is a variation on the Florida TE shovel this blog raved about the past couple years, with Persa running outside at first and taking Gordon with him, then shoveling inside to the pulling TE, who is actually WR Drake Dunsmore, as they run power. Ryan(-1) blown up and out. Big hole. One guy in space against Hawthorne; if Dunsmore cuts behind the block either Roh hacks him down or it's a big gain; instead he runs right into Hawthorne. I guess Hawthorne gets a +1, Demens a +0.5, as they tackle(+1) in space for a minimal gain, but we got lucky. | |||||||||||||||||||
| M45 | 3 | 5 | Shotgun trips bunch | Nickel press | Pass | 6 | Out | Gordon | 6 | ||||||||||
| Again with Demens lined up over the nose; Michigan sends the house. They don't get a free run and don't get a hurry (pressure -1) but they didn't give up anything big so no RPS -1. NW running some man-beater routes that force Gordon into an awkward path; this gets Ebert the step he needs to stab this pass one-handed and turn up the sideline for the first. Gordon was there to tackle so it's not like he did a bad job. | |||||||||||||||||||
| M39 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun trips | Nickel even | Pass | 3 | Scramble | Ryan | 5 | ||||||||||
| Tempoed, Michigan only has two down linemen at the snap (RPS -1). As a result, Ryan is lost in no-man's land. Coverage(+1) is good downfield; Persa takes off, diving as Ryan comes in on him. | |||||||||||||||||||
| M34 | 1 | 10 | Pistol 2-back offset | Nickel even | Run | N/A | Veer triple option | Hawthorne | 23 | ||||||||||
| Colter magical option formation, and they give despite again having Kovacs versus two guys on the edge. Maybe Colter was worried about Black. I'm not entirely sure about what goes wrong here but it seems to me like Campbell(+1) takes on a double and beats his man to the inside as the interior guy peels off, which means the RB has to go behind him and the C trying to get out on Hawthorne(-2) would have no angle if Hawthorne read this and made his NT right. Instead he and Demens are a foot away from each other and when the RB cuts behind Campbell there is no one there. | |||||||||||||||||||
| M11 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun 4-wide | Nickel even | Pass | 4 | Scramble | Hawthorne | 4 | ||||||||||
| Good coverage(+2) means Persa can't find anything despite having a long time (pressure -1). He eventually rolls out; Roh(+0.5) and Hawthorne(+0.5) remain on their receivers long enough to force a scramble and then come up quickly to hold it down. | |||||||||||||||||||
| M7 | 2 | 6 | Pistol trips TE | Nickel press | Run | N/A | Speed option | Johnson | 7 | ||||||||||
| Demens(-2) again heads too far upfield too fast and gets himself into a lineman who ends up cutting him to the ground after they run down the line for a while. This is a speed option! Get outside! RVB(+0.5) forced a pitch and flowed down the line to make it difficult for the RB; Carvin Johnson(-1, tackling -1) comes up hard around the LOS and whiffs entirely. He does force a cut upfield, but because Demens is on his stomach the cut is not a modest gain but a touchdown. | |||||||||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Touchdown, 7-14, 4 min 1st Q | |||||||||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Rush | Play | Player | Yards | ||||||||||
| O7 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun trips | Nickel even | Run | N/A | Zone read dive | Morgan | 2 | ||||||||||
| Morgan in for Hawthorne. Morgan(+1) bashes into the center at the LOS and drives him back on the dive; Martin(+1) fights through a double team, refusing to get sealed. When the G releases he's still playside of the T. With Heininger(+0.5) beating a single block there's nowhere to go. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O9 | 2 | 8 | ??? | ??? | Pass | 4 | Scramble | ??? | 6 | ||||||||||
| Good coverage(+1) causes a flush but because the DL split so badly that was kind of obvious; no second read here. (Pressure -2). Not sure who to minus specifically because tape is cutting out at the beginning of this play. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O15 | 3 | 2 | Shotgun trips | Nickel even | Run | N/A | Speed option? | ??? | 12 | ||||||||||
| Technical difficulties. We come back with the pitch already made. I am somewhat certain this is largely Demens's fault(-1), as he was lined up playside of Morgan presnap but when we come back Morgan is actually closer to the play. He then gets shot past the play. Morgan(-1) took a too-aggressive route around a WR and couldn't make the play; Johnson(+0.5) does come up to make a fill on a dangerous play, though his ankle tackle is maybe less than ideal. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O27 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun 4-wide | Nickel even | Pass | ??? | ??? | ??? | Inc | ||||||||||
| Apparently this is just a misthrow, but I don't know. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O27 | 2 | 10 | Shotgun trips | Nickel even | Pass | ??? | Sack | Demens | -2 | ||||||||||
| Oh, hell, BTN. I guess Demens(+1, pressure +1) is a minimum? | |||||||||||||||||||
| O24 | 3 | 13 | Shotgun trips bunch | Nickel press | Penalty | N/A | False start | -- | -5 | ||||||||||
| Derp | |||||||||||||||||||
| O19 | 3 | 18 | Shotgun trips | Nickel even | Run | N/A | Zone read dive | Black | 6 | ||||||||||
| Give up and punt. | |||||||||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Punt, 7-14, 11 min 2nd Q | |||||||||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Rush | Play | Player | Yards | ||||||||||
| M41 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun empty | Nickel even | Pass | 4 | Hitch | Martin | 7 | ||||||||||
| Zone blitz drops Roh and sends Morgan. Martin(+1) slants around the G and C to get a run at Persa(pressure +1) and bats the ball. The thing still finds its way to the receiver, but the delay allows an immediate tackle... that Demens(-1, tackling -1) does not make. | |||||||||||||||||||
| M34 | 2 | 3 | Shotgun trips | Nickel even | Run | N/A | Zone read stretch | Van Bergen | 2 | ||||||||||
| RVB(+2) shoves the playside OT back two yards, cutting off the outside and forcing a cutback. He disconnects when this happens and tackles himself for a minimal gain. Nice play; scary if he doesn't make this. Think he missed a check when Dunsmore motioned into play H-back, but he made up for it. | |||||||||||||||||||
| M32 | 3 | 1 | Shotgun 4-wide | Nickel even | Run | N/A | Zone read dive | Heininger | 1 | ||||||||||
| NW goes tempo. Heininger(+2) takes on a double and holds, going to his knees in the backfield and absorbing both guys without budging. Martin(+1) is single blocked. He stands his guy up and sheds inside to meet the RB a yard on the backfield. Momentum from him and a blitzing Morgan coming from behind gets the pile to the LOS but no farther. | |||||||||||||||||||
| M31 | 4 | In | Pistol 2-back offset big | 46 bear | Run | N/A | Speed option | Roh | -1 | ||||||||||
| Roh(+3) takes on the playside TE and sheds him to the outside, then shoots up on Persa, forcing the pitch. Getting a forced pitch from a blocked guy is clutch here. Before the snap, Kovacs motions to Morgan, who takes a step shortside and then starts flowing hard; he takes the leading fullback's block, leaving Kovacs(+2, tackling +1) alone on the corner with the pitchback, who he cuts to the ground in the backfield. Watch Kovacs take the lighting quick path to the ballcarrier after the pitch. Baller. Also make no mistake: this is Roh's play at its heart. | |||||||||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Turnover on downs, 7-14, 8 min 2nd Q | |||||||||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Rush | Play | Player | Yards | ||||||||||
| O18 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun 4-wide | Nickel even | Pass | N/A | Bubble screen | Floyd | 6 | ||||||||||
| There by alignment with no one on the the slot and Morgan reacting to the zone fake. Floyd does as well as he can to get into the blocker at about five yards but help can't converge for seven. RPS -1 | |||||||||||||||||||
| O24 | 2 | 4 | Shotgun trips | Nickel even | Pass | N/A | Bubble screen | Johnson | 9 | ||||||||||
| Another bubble by alignment; Gordon is over the slot but in these situations the guy grabs it and goes right up the hash, where there is no one. Johnson eventually fills and makes a dodgy tackle. RPS -1 | |||||||||||||||||||
| O33 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun trips | Nickel even | Pass | N/A | Bubble screen | Johnson | 7 | ||||||||||
| Exact same thing as NW goes tempo. RPS -1. Better tackle from Johnson. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O40 | 2 | 3 | Shotgun empty | Nickel even | Pass | 4 | Slant | Van Bergen | Inc | ||||||||||
| Morgan(-1, cover -1) is now paranoid about the bubble, though he's not aligned any better, and starts outside as NW runs actual patterns. Slant is wide open. Persa throws it; Van Bergen(+1, pressure +1) bats it down as he's come inside on a stunt. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O40 | 3 | 3 | Shotgun trips TE | Nickel even | Pass | 5 | Drag | Martin | 19 | ||||||||||
| Zone blitz sees Martin left in man coverage on Dunsmore on a drag. That goes about how you would expect. (Cover -1, RPS -1) | |||||||||||||||||||
| M41 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun trips | Nickel press | Pass | 4 | Fade | Countess | 39 | ||||||||||
| No pressure(-2); huge pocket for Persa to step into. Countess(-1, cover -1) gets flat beat on a go route and is a step and a half behind the WR; even though it's a little underthrown and definitely in the defeat-Michael-Floyd zone he cannot catch up and gives up the big completion. Does get a hand on an arm, but it's that half step that kills him. | |||||||||||||||||||
| M2 | 1 | G | Shotgun trips 2back | Nickel even | Run | N/A | Speed option | Gordon | 2 | ||||||||||
| Covered WR with Colter in. RB motions to the other side; Kovacs goes with him. Speed option to the plentiful WR side. Gordon(-1), Demens(-1), and Floyd(-1) get blown up and after Ryan forces the pitch the RB walks into the endzone. This is clever by NW: Kovacs is the guy with the pitchman so they get him out of the picture and exploit the LBs. RPS -1. | |||||||||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Touchdown,14-21, 2 min 2nd Q. This was pretty terrible on Mattison's part. Bubble bubble bubble Martin on drag no answer for option. | |||||||||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Rush | Play | Player | Yards | ||||||||||
| O48 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun empty | Nickel even | Pass | 4 | Drag | Roh | 16 | ||||||||||
| Martin(+1, pressure +1) goes right around the center and gets a hurry as Roh drops off and Morgan comes. Another zone blitz gets burned by the drag route as Roh cannot keep pace with Colter, RPS -1. | |||||||||||||||||||
| M36 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun trips | Nickel even | Pass | 4 | Comeback | -- | 13 | ||||||||||
| No pressure(-2); Persa has plenty of time to survey and find the deep comeback coming open. Gordon the nearest guy but not really on him. | |||||||||||||||||||
| M23 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun empty | Nickel even | Pass | 4 | Slant | Morgan | 16 | ||||||||||
| Morgan(-1, cover -1) beaten easily by Colter. Morgan(-1, tackling -1) then fails to tackle. Quick throw leaves little time for pressure but the lack of push from the DL is worrying. Why is Morgan in the game against a spread offense when you have Hawthorne available, especially on a two-minute drill? | |||||||||||||||||||
| M7 | 1 | G | Shotgun trips | Nickel even | Run | N/A | Zone read keeper | Demens | 4 | ||||||||||
| Black(-1) doesn't get upfield, causing a pull. If he was crashing on a scrape that's one thing. Here he's in no-man's land. Demens(+1) sets up a lineman, getting into him and then pushing out into the space Persa occupies; Gordon(+0.5) also flows down to help tackle, though he had an easy time of it because Colter didn't even bother blocking. | |||||||||||||||||||
| M3 | 2 | G | Shotgun 4-wide | Nickel press | Run | 5 | Snag | Woolfolk | Inc | ||||||||||
| Pick play designed to beat man coverage. It does so but Persa is late, allowing Woolfolk(+1, cover +1) to recover and knock the ball out as it arrives. Pressure(-1) not getting to Persa. | |||||||||||||||||||
| M3 | 3 | G | Shotgun trips | Nickel even | Pass | 3 | Post | Johnson | Inc | ||||||||||
| Three man rush gets nowhere (pressure -1); Johnson(-1, cover -1) gets outside and opens up the post. Persa hits him; dropped. | |||||||||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: FG, 14-24, EOH. Refs are idiots about the time either way here. | |||||||||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Rush | Play | Player | Yards | ||||||||||
| O40 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun trips TE | 4-3 under | Run | N/A | Speed option | Ryan | -1 | ||||||||||
| Ryan back at LB instead of DE and hanging out over the slot. They run a speed option; Ryan flies up on the edge. It kind of looks like he comes up on the QB and has just given the pitchman the edge but Persa doesn't think so, so we'll give him the benefit of the doubt. Ryan's(+2) excellent positioning prevents a pitch, forces Persa to cut it up, and results in nothing thanks to RVB(+1) and Martin(+0.5) flowing down the line well. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O39 | 2 | 11 | Shotgun 3-wide | 4-3 under | Pass | 4 | Sack | Martin | -5 | ||||||||||
| Persa apparently looking at a hitch Floyd(+1, cover +1) has covered; he hesitates and never gets a second read because Martin(+2) bull-rushed the center back into him and Roh(+2) came under the left tackle; the two combine to sack. (Pressure +2) Hawthorne appears to have the TE seam covered; Countess is way off the hitch on the other side of the field. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O34 | 3 | 6 | Shotgun 4-wide | Nickel press | Pass | 4 | Seam | Van Bergen | |||||||||||
| Van Bergen(+2, pressure +2) rips through the RG and gets immediate pressure up the center of the field. Persa fires too far in front of his receiver; Johnson nearly digs out the pick. Route was a seam or skinny post that Gordon(+1, cover +1) was in coverage on; incidental contact with the feet caused the WR to fall. He looked in pretty good position, FWIW. | |||||||||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Punt, 21-24, 9 min 3rd Q | |||||||||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Rush | Play | Player | Yards | ||||||||||
| O18 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun 4-wide | 4-3 under | Pass | N/A | Bubble screen | -- | 6 | ||||||||||
| Yay. Ryan is on the wide side slot but there's still no one over the short side, so they throw it. With Floyd playing very soft, no chance this doesn't pick up a pretty decent gain. Hawthorne does well to get out there and push him out before it's eight, I guess. RPS -1. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O24 | 2 | 4 | Shotgun empty | 4-3 under | Pass | 4 | Rollout | -- | 9 | ||||||||||
| No one on the edge (pressure -2) and Persa can run or throw for the first. He chooses the throw, hitting the second receiver, who's drifting outside of Demens's zone. (Cover -1) Countess makes a quick tackle. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O35 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun trips | 4-3 under | Pass | N/A | Bubble screen | -- | 6 | ||||||||||
| argh argh argh. Ryan blitzes off the corner; Persa sees this and immediately throws the bubble without a mesh point. Gordon(+1) is the only guy out there. He gets into the slot guy at the LOS, getting outside and forcing a cutback, then disconnects to tackle after just five. RPS -1. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O41 | 2 | 4 | Shotgun trips | 4-3 under | Pass | 5 | Drag | Hawthorne | Int | ||||||||||
| Michigan tempoed and not aligned at the snap. Zone blitz gets Demens in but Martin(-1) has vacated his lane and Demens can't do anything about it as Persa steps up into the pocket. Receiver is moving to give Persa an option; he throws it to him for what will be seven yards and a first down if it doesn't derp off the guy's pads, allowing Hawthorne(+1) to make a diving interception. | |||||||||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Interception, 28-24, 1 min 3rd Q. Dude... how was this not overturned? Poopin' magic yo. | |||||||||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Rush | Play | Player | Yards | ||||||||||
| O19 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun 4-wide | 4-3 even | Run | N/A | Inside zone | Martin | 6 | ||||||||||
| Michigan spread out with LBs shaded over the slots so NW hits them inside. Martin(-1) fights through a block way upfield and opens up a big hole in the middle. Demens(-0.5) and Ryan(-0.5) sit back and accept blocks but at least they combine to force the guy into a tackle. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O25 | 2 | 4 | Shotgun empty | 4-3 even | Pass | 4 | Hitch | Countess | 6 | ||||||||||
| Schmidt motions out; there is a bunch to the wide side and then the RB outside of them. Quick hitch to the RB that Van Bergen(+1, pressure +1) actually deflects, but the ball still goes right to the RB. Countess(-1, cover -1) is really soft, giving up the first down despite the ball taking a long time to get there because of the deflection. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O31 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun empty | Nickel even | Pass | 4 | Hitch | Floyd | 10 | ||||||||||
| Floyd(-1, cover -1) beaten pretty clean by Ebert; this is a five yard route on which Floyd is at the sticks on the catch. Ebert picks up the rest of the first down as a result. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O41 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun 4-wide | Nickel even | Run | N/A | Inside zone | Martin | 2 | ||||||||||
| Martin(+1) and Heininger(+1) hold up to blocks, closing off holes up the middle of the field. Mark manages to pick his way through little gaps for a few yards, but that will happen. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O43 | 2 | 8 | Shotgun empty | Nickel even | Pass | 5 | Fly | Floyd | Inc (Pen +15) | ||||||||||
| Floyd in press; Michigan zone blitzes behind it. Gordon gets in free (pressure +1, RPS +1); Persa throws it to the fly route without really knowing if it's open. Floyd is there, gets his head around, and seems to break up the pass... and gets flagged. On replay, yes, he got his hand on the shoulder pad and prevented the guy from jumping for the ball. I'll take that though, since it's subtle and you can miss it. I still have to (-1, cover -1) | |||||||||||||||||||
| M42 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun trips | 4-3 even | Pass | N/A | Bubble screen | Ryan | 4 | ||||||||||
| Finally something that looks like defense. Gordon(+0.5) flows up hard and Ryan gets outside of the slot blocker as Demens reads the throw and gets out there usefully. Ryan gets cut under; Gordon and Demens are there to tackle. As the WR is digging for an extra half yard Gordon(+3) strips the ball loose. | |||||||||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Fumble, 35-24, 12 min 4th Q. | |||||||||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Rush | Play | Player | Yards | ||||||||||
| O31 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun empty | Nickel even | Pass | 4 | Drag | Demens | 5 | ||||||||||
| M sitting back in an obvious four-man-rush zone as they work to not blow it; grades handed out with that in mind. Persa hits Colter underneath on a drag; Demens(+1, tackling +1) comes up to tackle immediately. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O36 | 2 | 5 | Shotgun trips | Nickel even | Pass | 4 | Slant | Hawthorne | 9 | ||||||||||
| Hawthorne(-0.5) comes up on a not very convincing run fake and opens the slant up for a first down. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O45 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun empty | Nickel even | Run | N/A | Jet sweep | Gordon | 6 | ||||||||||
| Glerb. M blitzes into the sweep and Gordon(-1) widens out to blow it up; he misses the tackle(-1). This makes good play from Hawthorne and Demens to get outside their blockers bad play and the DL, slanting away from this on the snap, cannot pursue fast enough to prevent a gain. | |||||||||||||||||||
| M49 | 2 | 4 | Shotgun empty | Nickel even | Pass | 4 | Circle | Floyd | 6 | ||||||||||
| Circle route high-lows the corner and Floyd sinks, opening up the short stuff. | |||||||||||||||||||
| M43 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun empty | Nickel even | Pass | 3 | Cross | Gordon | Inc | ||||||||||
| Line slants right and Black drops off into a short zone... I think one of the LBs forgot to blitz. This means Persa has acres of space; he steps up and zings it to Colter... behind him. First down otherwise. (Pressure -2, cover -1) | |||||||||||||||||||
| M43 | 2 | 10 | Shotgun trips | Nickel even | Pass | N/A | Bubble screen | Johnson | 5 | ||||||||||
| Late-arriving WR doesn't actually get into position so NW has five in the backfield. No call. These refs are idiots. NW throws the bubble and Michigan is finally playing it well. Gordon(+1) gets into the slot guy at the LOS in a good spot to force the WR upfield; Demens flows but misses; Johnson(+1) comes into finish with a good hit. | |||||||||||||||||||
| M38 | 3 | 5 | Shotgun trips | 3-3-5 press | Pass | 4 | Hitch | Countess | Inc | ||||||||||
| Michigan in tight man on the first down line; Persa's first read is Floyd(+1, cover +1), which is not a good idea. Second is Countess, still not a great idea but gotta throw it, so he does; Countess(+2, cover +1) breaks it up. | |||||||||||||||||||
| M38 | 4 | 5 | Shotgun trips bunch | 3-3-5 press | Pass | 5 | Sack | Kovacs | -10 | ||||||||||
| Mattison sends Kovacs on a crazy ninja blitz from way deep; at the snap he's hurtling at the LOS at full speed. The seas part. Kovacs goes too high, though, and Persa ducks under his tackle. Tackle attempt pulls the helmet off, though, and that's a sack. RPS +2, Pressure +3—this was instant. Kovacs... +1, results based charting. And well timed blitz. Also wag of the high tackle finger. Gordon(+1, cover +1) breaks up the desperate improv throw Persa gets off after the helmet incident. | |||||||||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Turnover on downs, 35-24, 7 min 4th Q. Northwestern's last drive is down 18 with 2 minutes left and is not charted. | |||||||||||||||||||
SECOND HALF DOMINANCE
Er. So. I don't really think so.
A WITCH
Yes, yes, probably, but the things that happened in the second half were:
- Three and out, one contained speed option, two incompletions thanks to DL pressure.
- Bubble, easy rollout hitch, bubble, drag route for first down that bounces off receiver's numbers to Hawthorne (sort of).
- Inside zone, hitch, hitch, Inside zone (defensed!), legit pass interference on deep ball, bubble leads to fumble.
- Hurry up pass mode w/ Michigan in soft zone, drive ends with Persa IN, five-yard bubble, and two good plays by the D.
So… the move to have Ryan in the slot didn't really slow down the bubbles, which went for 6, 6, 4, and 5 yards. This is better than the 8 they seemed to average in the first half, but it is not a thunderous shutdown of the spread.
There were three drives on which NW was actually running its offense. On one the adjustment got a speed option contained and then Michigan got some pressure. On two NW has just picked up its second easy first down if the WR doesn't bat it into the sky. On three they have second and six after picking up a couple first downs when Gordon yanks the ball loose. What happens if the WR doesn't DROPX the drag? If Ebert's knee is down? What is your confidence level that Michigan is going to stop Persa & Co. if these things don't happen?
VERY HIGH THANK YOU
Wait… are you Joe Paterno?
NO I AM YOUR FILTHY IRISH ALTER-EGO
I see. So… what I am saying is that the vaunted second half adjustments are little data being made big and what we saw in the first half was very frustrating to me. How do you stop a bubble aligned like this?
You don't. On Northwestern's final touchdown drive they ran three straight bubbles for 22 free yards. This is 2011. You should not have to adjust to the staple constraint play of the spread 'n' shred.
BUT MATTISON
Yes, well… I don't want to make too little data big again. I sure as hell don't know 10% of what he does and rushing to judgment about what Michigan's defense will look like once he's had them for three years is stupid. Mattison uber alles.
HOWEVA, it seemed like he was caught off guard by the spread 'n' shred. He's been in the NFL for three years but he was also the DC at Florida and Notre Dame over the increasingly spread-mad last decade of college football, so he should be familiar with it.
Were players not reacting appropriately? Maybe. Late the secondary did get more aggressive and helped hold the bubbles down. But that was the difference between 8 (or even 13) yards and 4-6. As I was UFRing this I was again thinking of Magee describing his philosophy, or rather WVU's defensive philosophy: they run the stack because it's built to stop the spread. Maybe Michigan needs a three-man-line package for games like this?
In any case, Mattison's admittedly hypothetical inability to deal with the spread 'n' shred in year one of his regime is a moot point. The remainder of Michigan's opponents are either pro-style (MSU, Iowa, sort of OSU), triple option (Illinois, Nebraska), or so incompetent it shouldn't matter (Purdue). I'm a bit worried that Fickell is installing a ton of bubbles right now, though.
DO YOU FIND THIS DEEPLY IRONIC
That Michigan can't defend a bubble but won't run a stretch because it's not preparing you for the Big Ten? Kinda. /ducks
I REQUIRE NOTES OF THE HUN
Chart?
| Defensive Line | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Player | + | - | T | Notes |
| Van Bergen | 10 | - | 10 | Pressure and PBUs. I enjoy his contributions. |
| Martin | 10 | 2 | 8 | Not as many plays as you might want but it's hard when everything goes outside. |
| Roh | 6 | 2 | 4 | Fourth down play; needs moar pass rush. |
| Brink | - | - | - | DNP |
| Heininger | 3.5 | - | 3.5 | No real problems, but not tested much. |
| Black | - | 1 | -1 | Not much PT. |
| Campbell | 1 | - | 1 | One play. |
| TOTAL | 30.5 | 5 | 25.5 | Step back from last couple weeks. |
| Linebacker | ||||
| Player | + | - | T | Notes |
| C. Gordon | - | - | - | DNP |
| Demens | 5.5 | 9.5 | -4 | Did not get outside even on speed options. |
| Herron | - | - | - | DNP |
| Ryan | 2 | 3.5 | -1.5 | Dodgy edge. |
| Fitzgerald | - | - | - | DNP |
| Jones | - | - | - | DNP |
| Evans | - | - | - | DNP |
| Beyer | - | - | - | DNP |
| Hawthorne | 4.5 | 4 | 0.5 | One big error on dive; good in coverage. |
| Morgan | 1 | 4 | -3 | Struggled, pulled. |
| TOTAL | 13 | 21 | -8 | Major problems containing. |
| Secondary | ||||
| Player | + | - | T | Notes |
| Floyd | 3 | 3 | 0 | Push is good against Persa. |
| Avery | - | - | - | Didn't register. |
| Woolfolk | 1 | 1.5 | -0.5 | Pulled. |
| Kovacs | 4 | 1 | 3 | Mostly neutralized because he had to try to tackle two dudes. |
| T. Gordon | 8.5 | 2.5 | 6 | Fumble half of the plus. |
| Countess | 2 | 2 | 0 | Beaten deep once, but also a push. |
| Johnson | 1.5 | 4 | -2.5 | Not as bad as you might have thought. |
| TOTAL | 20 | 14 | 6 | Wow. I mean, no long stuff, right? Except the one. |
| Metrics | ||||
| Pressure | 16 | 17 | -1 | Bipolar day. |
| Coverage | 13 | 15 | -2 | Not bad. Some issues getting RPSed. |
| Tackling | 4 | 6 | 40% | Not a good day; this is what the spread tries to do. |
| RPS | 4 | 15 | -11 | Killed by easy bubbles. |
So… I ended up thinking that it was crazy that none of the linebackers could contain on the outside and hardly tried. When people keep leverage and force the guy inside, as Johnson did and Kovacs did and Gordon did, and there is no one to clean up from the inside that is a problem with a linebacker, and that linebacker was more often than not Demens. An example from Blue Seoul:
Seoul says Gordon has to do a better job getting off the block but he forces this upfield at the numbers and there is no linebacker to clean up; backside guy Hawthorne is even with Demens.
Seoul also caught my complaint about Demens on one of the option touchdowns:
Okay, Johnson missed. He missed to the inside, at which point a good D rallies to tackle.
Here a slow-reacting Demens gets caught up in an OL and cut to the ground. This is not even a triple option, it's a speed option, so, like… go. I've been taunting other LBs for being too aggressive this year but this is the alternative.
Demens did have a good blitz or two, FWIW.
The rest of the chart is basically as expected. No safety got burned on the pass and the missed tackles from Johnson were not too bad; he is still a clear downgrade from the starters. Van Bergen and Martin are high quality players; Roh is doing better but we still need more pass rush from both defensive ends. The cornerbacks are much improved but still not outstanding. Michigan got about a push in both pressure (four sacks but also a number of plays on which Persa had a ton of time or broke contain) and cover, and Mattison was slayed dead on RPS.
What was with the option success?
If you were suspecting that Heiko was the guy who asked this of Mattison…
Northwestern ran the veer option with a lot of success against this defense, and there seemed to be some confusion with the assignments. For those plays, whose assignment is the quarterback, and who has the pitch man? “That’s why people run the veer option. And again, to play an option team, you have to be very very disciplined. You have to really feel confident in what you’re doing, and it’s happening really fast. There was a number of times where you might have seen Jake go down and hit the dive. Well, our ends had the quarterback all day, so right away you knew, ‘Uh oh,” and sure enough, now you have two guys on the dive and nobody on the quarterback, and that’s why people run that offense. It taxes young guys. It really does. So your next thought is to stunt it a little bit, move it a little bit, to try to make a play, and that quarterback was pretty good. Fortunately we settled down in the second half and the guys said, ‘Okay I got it now.’ Every guy that made a mistake like that during the game, they came out, they looked right at you, and they went, ‘I know.’ I said, ‘I know, too! That’s 20 yards down the field.’ But I was really proud of them.”
If you had to defend them again, who would be assigned to whom? “We do the same thing. The only thing we do differently, if we defended it again, is we would play it more honest like you’re supposed to and not cheat to take away one part of the game and not the other.”
Did Kovacs have the pitch man? “That was his job. When you’re playing the option and you’re playing man coverage, there’s a guy with a blocker on him. A guy who has man coverage and still is supposed to get off and try to make that play. Well if you’re stronger, better, faster, you can throw that guy away and make that play. So we had Jordan going through the alley, meaning he would go dive, quarterback, to pitch, and he made some good plays on it.”
…you are wise in the ways of how MGoBlog differs from other media. I wanted to know how Michigan planned to defend the option so I thought I'd have Heiko ask and Mattison gave a terrific, useful answer*. So now we know that…
…defensive ends were a big problem. QB outside of DE without pitching is a problem. Here Kovacs gets a 2-for-1 by forcing a pitch and still getting out on the RB, but Colter would learn from this and juke Kovacs on his first touchdown run. I don't blame Kovacs much, if at all, because he's on the edge against two guys. Forcing it back inside and getting any tackle attempt at all is better than letting the pitch guy walk in.
It wasn't all bad for Roh:
That is one of the plays of the game and it happens because he beats a block to force a pitch and allows Kovacs to do what Kovacs does best: take a great angle at speed.
Ryan had similar problems, and then there is the Demens complaining. So: better play from the DEs to force the play inside of them or at least force a quick pitch and getting those linebackers to the edge more quickly.
*[How much does everyone love the coordinator pressers? One million points worth, right? I mean, they give it to you straight and give you actual information and reassure you that the guys in charge are really smart.]
PUNTSHENANIGANS
Yes, again this week:
When those guys miss their tackles there is no one within 15 yards. Result: 20 yard return.
Heroes?
Martin, Van Bergen, and Gordon. Gordon's strip was a 100% player-generated turnover that is a reason to believe they are being coached on these things.
Goats?
Demens, and the inability to line up to defend a bubble.
What does it mean for Michigan State and beyond?
Well, I'll be extremely nervous when we come up against Nebraska and Ohio State since their mobile quarterbacks could force us into situations that will exploit the same things. I just watched that game and it doesn't seem like either team spends a lot of time threatening bubbles; both enjoyed themselves some pistol offset stuff with Nebraska having great success running the inverted veer out of that diamond formation becoming all the rage. Either could gameplan for the M game—Ohio State might well start preparing whatever package they think will beat M because it's not like they have anything else to play for.
As for this weekend, Michigan State is the opposite of Northwestern and the 4-3 under will be a much more comfortable fit against State's largely pro-style offense. HOWEVA, we have seen State prepare special packages for M since time immemorial and one of the recent ones was a trips-TE bubble package that exploited M in 2008 like whoah. If that's still on the shelf they might bring it out and force Michigan to line up against it. HOWEVA HOWEVA, that year they could run the ball; this year M might be able to defend it without giving up those pitches that killed them that year.
Other items:
- Michigan continued to prove the secondary is much improved and the safeties are for real, especially the starters.
- Heininger held up pretty well, caveats about limited tests included.
Upon Further Review 2011: Defense vs Minnesota
I'm pretty sure this is the shortest UFR table in a long time. Probably not forever since in the embryonic stages a lot of plays were described as "a big wad of bodies I can't figure out," full stop, but in a long time.
Substitution notes: Secondary was the usual; Countess came in in the second quarter for Woolfolk. He is clearly the #3 CB, with Johnson the #3 S. At LB it was Ryan/Demens/Hawthorne the whole way until garbage time. On the line the usual rotation with a bit less of the backups because there was no opportunity for the starters to get tired. Still no Cam Gordon.
Formation notes: Nothing we haven't seen before, and since Minnesota was so transparently bad I didn't bother to get a bunch of screenshots of certain plays.
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Rush | Play | Player | Yards | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| O20 | 1 | 10 | Pistol 3TE | 4-3 under | Run | N/A | Power off tackle | Hawthorne | 1 | ||||||||||
| Heininger(-1) blown off the ball by a double; this should provide a lane but Martin(+1) drove the center back, Roh(+0.5) held up on the outside, and Hawthorne (+1) hit a lead blocker on the LOS, holding up surprisingly well. With nowhere to go we have a wad play that Roh eventually ends by tackling the RB. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O21 | 2 | 9 | Shotgun 3-wide | Nickel even | Run | N/A | Inside zone | Roh | -1 | ||||||||||
| I think, anyway. No doubles from Minnesota as two guys release downfield into Gordon and Demens immediately. This means all of the DL are one on one and all of them end up controlling their guys, able to release on either side of them if the RB tries to hit a hole. RB tries to go outside where Roh(+1) is waiting and Gordon(+1) flows up to help; Demens(+1) had also beaten a block and was there. RVB and Martin pick up half points. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O20 | 3 | 10 | Shotgun 4-wide | Nickel even | Pass | 4 | Sack | Van Bergen | -5 | ||||||||||
| Stunt gets RVB(+2) through as the Gopher line busts; RVB tackles the relatively immobile Shortell before the Gophers can even finish their routes. (RPS +1, Pressure +2) | |||||||||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Punt, 7-0, 9 min 1st Q | |||||||||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Rush | Play | Player | Yards | ||||||||||
| O41 | 1 | 10 | Pistol 2TE | 4-3 under | Run | N/A | Power off tackle | Demens | 3 | ||||||||||
| Martin(+0.5) is doubled; while he does give a little ground it's not much and the pulling G doesn't have much room. Hawthorne(+0.5) hits him near the line, causing a cutback into Demens(+0.5), who is unblocked because of the double and scrapes into the backside hole to tackle. Heininger(+0.5) did a good job closing down the intended hole as well; he popped off a defender and had a shot to tackle if the RB didn't cut back. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O44 | 2 | 7 | Shotgun 3-wide | Nickel even | Pass | 4 | Out | Floyd | 5 | ||||||||||
| Delayed blitz does not get through; Minnesota throws a dinky route that Floyd lets happen; he tackles immediately. Fine. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O49 | 3 | 2 | Ace twin TE | 4-3 under | Run | N/A | Power off tackle | Kovacs | -1 | ||||||||||
| 2TE motions into an H-back spot; Kovacs rolls down into the box. H-back flares in an attempt to kick out Roh(+2), the EMLOS. Roh bowls him over backwards. This cannot happen on a power if you're ever going to gain any yards. There is no lane. Pulling G derps his way past everyone without blocking anyone; Kovacs(+1) is blitzing from the outside; untouched, he tackles for loss. Hawthorne(+0.5) had also blitzed right into the play, so three separate M players were in a position to stop this. Minnesota is not good. | |||||||||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Punt, 14-0, 4 min 1st Q | |||||||||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Rush | Play | Player | Yards | ||||||||||
| O6 | 1 | 10 | Pistol twins | 4-3 under | Pass | 5 | Out | Woolfolk | 12 | ||||||||||
| Minnesota successfully high-lows Woolfolk in zone. Not his fault as he's got a corner route coming from the inside and has to drop back into that; this naturally opens up an underneath receiver since there's no underneath help. (Cover/RPS -1) | |||||||||||||||||||
| O18 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun trips bunch | Nickel under | Run | N/A | Inside zone | Ryan | 9 | ||||||||||
| Martin(+1) fights a double team and gets enough penetration when the second guy releases into the linebackers to close off the hole himself. RB has to bounce and it looks like Ryan is about to read this and pop out on the edge to finish the play when he's yanked and seemingly ankle tackled by the OT. No call. Refs -1. Floyd(-0.5) did a kind of weak job on the edge, though the Ryan issue allowed a quick bounce so he had a tough job. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O27 | 2 | 1 | Shotgun 2TE | 4-3 under | Run | N/A | Inside zone | Heininger | 0 | ||||||||||
| Nowhere to go as Martin(+1) holds up to a double and Heininger(+1) a single block. Cutback from the RB; an unblocked Roh(+0.5) read the play and shuffled down the LOS before exploding to tackle at the line. Heininger gets his extra half point for getting control of his guy to the point where he can disengage to help tackle. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O27 | 3 | 1 | Pistol 2TE | 4-3 under | Pass | 4 | Sack | Ryan | -4 | ||||||||||
| I'm not entirely sure but Shortell appears to be looking for his TE on a tiny little hitch first but pulls it down because Black(+1, RPS +1) chucked him before going into his pass rush. This disrupts the timing and causes Shortell to move on. RVB(+1) gets in at this point, flushing the awkward Shortell out of the pocket, where Hawthorne(+0.5) and Ryan(+0.5) roar up to sack. (Pressure +1, cover +1) | |||||||||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Punt, 21-0, 12 min 2nd Q | |||||||||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Rush | Play | Player | Yards | ||||||||||
| O20 | 1 | 10 | Pistol 3-wide | Nickel even | Run | N/A | Inside zone | Demens | 7 | ||||||||||
| Michigan's line steps to the left on the snap. This doesn't seem like a full on slant, it's just a way to one-gap the D. I'm not sure if Heininger(+0.5) is playing this okay and just gets pushed past the play or if he got out of position. He does slice through two blockers, causing the C to attempt to peel back and forcing a cutback behind him—away from the blocking angles. Demens(-1) has a free run at the gap but reads it late and meets the RB a couple yards downfield when he can make a tackle at the LOS. Then some bad luck as a pursuing Black impacts the tackle from behind, knocking Demens to the ground and giving the RB some YAC. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O27 | 2 | 3 | Ace twins | 4-3 even | Pass | N/A | Sack | Ryan | -9 | ||||||||||
| Ryan is lined up over the slot and blitzes. Minnesota is trying a PA rollout to his side, pulling a backside OL around to give some edge protection. Ryan(+2) explodes upfield, getting into Shortell's feet and cutting off the outside. Shortell does manage to escape upfield, where Martin(+1) is tearing around blockers, coming from the inside. Shortell spins back to avoid that sack, whereupon the Red Sea caves in on him. (Pressure +3, RPS +1) | |||||||||||||||||||
| O18 | 3 | 12 | Shotgun 3-wide | Nickel even | Run | N/A | Inside zone | -- | 4 | ||||||||||
| Give up and punt. | |||||||||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Punt, 28-0, 7 min 2nd Q | |||||||||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Rush | Play | Player | Yards | ||||||||||
| O20 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun twins twin TE | 4-3 under | Pass | 4 | Rollout hitch | Countess | 8 | ||||||||||
| Countess in for Woolfolk. You can see Michigan checking when the TE motions across the formation; Gordon comes down into man on the slot receiver, implying that Ryan(-1) should come to the LOS to act as a 4-3 SLB. He doesn't, instead dropping into a redundant zone and opening up the corner (pressure -1). Shortell finds his hitch in front of Countess. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O28 | 2 | 2 | Shotgun twins twin TE | 4-3 under | Pass | 5 | PA Quick seam | Hawthorne | Inc (Pen +9) | ||||||||||
| TE motions to Ryan's side and this time he does creep down off the slot. He blitzes off the snap, getting picked off by a pulling pass protector after the PA fake. Michigan is zone blitzing and tips it by leaving Roh in a two point stance; he drops off in coverage over the TE. Hawthorne makes one of those back-to-QB zone drops across the field, and this zone seems perfectly designed to stop this route. Hawthorne(cover +1) gets over to the TE quick seam before the TE can get there; he slows up rather than run over Hawthorne and Shortell's wobbler goes well long. Demens(+1) timed his blitz excellently and got a free run, thumping Shortell as he threw(pressure +2) Hawthorne(-2) then gets an incredibly late, but legit PI call for grabbing the TE as he tried to cut inside. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O37 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun trips | Nickel even | Pass | N/A | Bubble screen | -- | Inc | ||||||||||
| Dropped. Strong possibility Hawthorne blows this up for little. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O37 | 2 | 10 | Shotgun twins twin TE | 4-3 under | Pass | N/A | Rollout hitch | Countess | 11 | ||||||||||
| Replay of the previous hitch except Ryan is on the edge this time, though he gets eliminated easily. (Pressure -1) Again in front of Countess(-1, cover -1) and I will ding him for not being there to challenge on the same route he just saw. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O48 | 1 | 10 | Ace | 4-3 under | Run | N/A | Inside zone | Demens | 0 | ||||||||||
| Martin(+1) takes on a double and wins, forcing his way into the gap to his left and preventing anyone from getting out on the LBs. Demens(+2) uses this to his advantage, seeing the gap open up behind Martin as he pushes playside. He shoots it and makes a tackle at the LOS after having removed the cutback lane. RVB(+0.5) held up well on the edge and helps tackle. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O48 | 2 | 10 | Shotgun twin TE | 46 front | Pass | 5 | Fly | Countess | Inc | ||||||||||
| Campbell(+2) runs over the center and comes right up the middle of the field (pressure +2), leveling Shortell. Shortell stands in and chucks one to a guy on a fly route. Countess was in press coverage and is step for step(+2, cover +2); he finds the underthrown ball and adjusts to it. He has a shot at an INT but it's a tough catch and he settles for the PBU. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O48 | 3 | 10 | Shotgun 3-wide | Nickel press | Pass | 6 | Hitch | Countess | 7 | ||||||||||
| Michigan sends the house and doesn't quite get there; Roh(+0.5) seems like he's coming around the corner fast enough to cause problems if Shortell has to wait another beat. Instead he throws a hitch route short of the sticks that Countess(+1, cover +1) allows to be completed but tackles immediately on. He pops the ball loose as he does so; Michigan recovers. | |||||||||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Fumble, 31-0, 3 min 2nd Q | |||||||||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Rush | Play | Player | Yards | ||||||||||
| O34 | 1 | 10 | Pistol 3-wide | Nickel press | Pass | 4 | Fade | Floyd | Inc | ||||||||||
| Testing the press w/ McKnight. Floyd is in good position and has pushed McKnight almost to the sideline but does not time his jump well; he gets his head around and then it seems like he fails to locate the ball. McKnight goes up to grab it but steps OOB on his way down. Given the position of McKnight this was circus all the way, so (+1, cover +1) | |||||||||||||||||||
| O34 | 2 | 10 | Shotgun trips | Nickel even | Run | N/A | Inside zone | Demens | 7 | ||||||||||
| Kovacs blitzes from the backside and gets upfield outside of the TE. That seems okay since he'd have to contain the QB. Roh is shuffling down the line on the inside zone and gets cut behind. This may be possible because instead of a mesh point the QB accidentally bats the snap right to the RB. The cut backside this should expose RB to unblocked Demens; Demens(-1) drops into a short zone and then lets the RB outside of him. Johnson has rolled down over the slot and does keep leverage; Demens tackles from behind. Partially one of those things—an actual mesh point and Demens/Roh probably have time to react better to this—but an unblocked LB should not let an RB outside of him. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O41 | 3 | 3 | Pistol 2TE | 4-3 under | Pass | 4 | Rollout TE Flat | Roh | 1 | ||||||||||
| Roh(+1) drops off into a short zone as Ryan blitzes. He gets cut; Heininger(+1) bumps the TE and then heads upfield between two befuddled Gopher blockers once that guy releases. He pressures(+1) and Shortell has to dump it off; Roh gets outside to tackle(+1) | |||||||||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Punt, 38-0, 14 min 3rd Q | |||||||||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Rush | Play | Player | Yards | ||||||||||
| O16 | 1 | 10 | Ace | 4-3 under | Pass | 5 | TE comeback | Ryan | Inc | ||||||||||
| Roh again in a two point stance, indicating he will drop; he drops. Ryan(+1) blitzes from the other side, beating the TE and flushing Shortell up into the pocket(pressure +1). Shortell manages to find the second he needs and finds a receiver, who happens to be the TE on a comeback in front of Roh. TE drops it. (Roh -1, cover -1) | |||||||||||||||||||
| O16 | 2 | 10 | Shotgun 3-wide | Nickel press | Run | N/A | Inside zone | Van Bergen | 2 | ||||||||||
| Michigan blitzing Ryan and Demens; Demens lines up right over the C and then twists outside. The C is convinced he's supposed to block Demens, which he doesn't; G releases downfield. This allows RVB(+1) a single block that he gets playside of and carries to the hole; Martin(+1) also closed off the frontside, leaving nowhere for the RB to go. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O18 | 3 | 8 | Shotgun trips | Nickel press | Pass | 6 | Fly | Johnson | Inc | ||||||||||
| Johnson backs out in to a deep zone late as Kovacs is sent on a blitz. Roh(+1) beats his blocker and is getting into Shortell's face (pressure +1) as Kovacs comes; Shortell bombs it deep. Gordon(-1) is beaten but Johnson(+2) is quick enough to get over and get a PBU as he arrives at the ball at the same time the WR does (cover +1, better thrown ball does find space). | |||||||||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Punt, 38-0, 10 min 3rd Q | |||||||||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Rush | Play | Player | Yards | ||||||||||
| O34 | 1 | 10 | Pistol 2TE | 46 front | Run | N/A | Power off tackle | Heininger | 2 | ||||||||||
| Heininger(+1) dives inside the OT trying to block down and comes around. Black(+1) has driven the OT back, giving the RB an awkward cut to make upfield. This allows Heininger to tackle from behind. Demens(-0.5) ended up running past the play as the pulling G got to him. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O36 | 2 | 8 | Shotgun twins twin TE | 4-3 under | Pass | 5 | Rollout TE Flat | Black | 9 | ||||||||||
| Again with the blitz and WDE dropping off into coverage. Minnesota runs a quasi-screen here, pumping to the left, then coming back to the little TE flare as the RB comes out of the backfield intent on blocking. This time Black(-1, cover -1) drops a ways and because the RB gets in his way he's not in position to tackle this on the catch, allowing the TE to turn it up for a first down. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O45 | 1 | 10 | Ace twin TE | 4-3 under | Run | N/A | Power off tackle | Heininger | 1 | ||||||||||
| Similar to the previous power on this drive. Minnesota flips the TEs, which doesn't make M flip the lines, they just move Hawthorne and Kovacs over. Hawthorne lines up right over the tackle. On the snap he takes a block and starts giving ground; Heininger(+2) bowls over this blocker as Black(+1) gets penetration that restricts the hole and prevents a bounce. Those two combine to tackle at the line as the RB just kind of falls over. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O46 | 2 | 9 | Shotgun 2TE | 4-3 even | Pass | 5 | Hitch | Avery | Inc | ||||||||||
| RVB(+2, pressure +2) slants inside a blocker and comes right up the center of the field to get a hurry; throw now or get sacked. Hitch is open in front of Avery(-0.5, cover -1) for near first down yardage; throw is upfield and dropped. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O46 | 3 | 9 | Shotgun 3-wide | Okie | Pass | 5 | Hitch | Avery | Inc | ||||||||||
| Good pocket(pressure -1); Shortell wings it well high. Avery(+0.5, cover +1) appears to have reacted quickly enough to make a play on the ball if there was one to be made. | |||||||||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Punt, 45-0, 6 min 3rd Q | |||||||||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Rush | Play | Player | Yards | ||||||||||
| O25 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun 3-wide | Nickel over | Run | N/A | QB power | Campbell | 0 | ||||||||||
| Hawthorne(+1) reads the QB's cut upfield and runs away from the blocking angle further outside; he and Campbell(+1), who beat a single block to show up in the hole, combine to tackle. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O25 | 2 | 10 | Shotgun trips | 4-3 under | Pass | 5 | Fade | Avery | 33 | ||||||||||
| Okay, Brink and Avery and Fitzgerald in. This game is not long for the charting. Shortell gets the corner (pressure -1) and has an easy deep throw to Avery's guy(-1, cover -1) as he's beaten so badly he cannot recover. | |||||||||||||||||||
| M42 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun trips | Nickel press | Run | N/A | Inside zone | Campbell | 3 | ||||||||||
| Wad o bodies as Minnesota can't move Campbell(+1) out of the playside hole with a double. He gets support from Heininger and Ryan(+0.5 each) and the RB runs up into the wad for little. | |||||||||||||||||||
| M39 | 2 | 7 | Pistol 2TE | 4-3 under | Run | N/A | Down G | Brink | -4 | ||||||||||
| Instead of blocking Brink(+2) the playside TE watches him run past and make a TFL. Minnesota: not good. | |||||||||||||||||||
| M43 | 3 | 11 | Shotgun 4-wide | Nickel press | Pass | 4 | Slant | Countess | Inc | ||||||||||
| Countess(+2, cover +2) fights the WR for position and makes a play on the ball as it arrives. | |||||||||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Punt, 48-0, 14 min 4th Q. Charting ceases. | |||||||||||||||||||
So, about that.
Yeah, not much you can take from that game.
But it's nice to be able to say that about a Big Ten team, right?
Sure. The last team Michigan made look that inept was Baby Seal U, and the last team before that was the 2007 Notre Dame outfit that was the absolute nadir of super-geniusdom. Last year's Purdue team may have been as bad on offense; with the help of a driving rainstorm Michigan held them to 256 yards, giving up a 61-yard field goal drive early. This edition of Michigan's defense was better against the 2011 equivalent.
But… yeah, the Purdue example is instructive. There is a level of offense that can make even last year's Michigan D seem competent. Minnesota is at that level of offense.
There is something we can take from this, though, I mean, right?
A little, sure. A couple years ago Michigan gave up 17 to EMU in the first half, ceding 179 rushing yards to that year's #116 total offense. Last year Michigan gave up 37 to I-AA UMass.
You can never tell anything good from a game like this, but you can receive an ominous message that causes you to stock up on survival gear. The failure to get one of those represents progress.
Also, I only caught one wacky misalignment in the above-charted plays, that a failure of Jake Ryan to come down to LB depth after Minnesota shifted a TE. That's significant improvement from the nonconference portion of the schedule. That first drive against Western where no one knew where to line up has receded almost entirely.
I suppose we should look at the chart.
Man, you are subdued.
I'm locked and loaded. Actin' like I've been there. Emulatin' Brady Hoke's cool sideline demeanor. Somewhat terrified about what happens after game five in Michigan football seasons.
Right. Chart.
Keep in mind that this is only 36 snaps, five of which were contested mostly by backups. If you had to reduce certain games last year to find reasonable numbers, for this game you need to almost double them to find a per-play average approximately in line with historical norms.
| Defensive Line | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Player | + | - | T | Notes |
| Van Bergen | 7 | - | 7 | Minnesota couldn't move him. |
| Martin | 7 | - | 7 | Or him. |
| Roh | 7.5 | 1 | 6.5 | Seems to have reclaimed the starting spot. |
| Brink | 2 | - | 2 | Thanks, lack of Minnesota blocking. |
| Heininger | 6.5 | 1 | 5.5 | Hard to move after first snap, too. |
| Black | 3 | 1 | 2 | Playing time reduced. |
| Campbell | 4 | - | 4 | "Get off me" |
| TOTAL | 37 | 3 | 34 | lol. +0.94 per snap |
| Linebacker | ||||
| Player | + | - | T | Notes |
| C. Gordon | - | - | - | DNP |
| Demens | 4.5 | 2.5 | 2 | Not many plays even got to him. |
| Herron | - | - | - | DNP |
| Ryan | 4 | 1 | 3 | Couple of explosive pass rush moves. |
| Fitzgerald | - | - | - | Nothing of note. |
| Jones | - | - | - | DNP |
| Evans | - | - | - | DNP |
| Beyer | - | - | - | PT in garbage time. |
| Hawthorne | 3.5 | 2 | 1.5 | Not giving his PT back. |
| Morgan | - | - | - | PT in garbage time |
| TOTAL | 12 | 5.5 | 6.5 | Enjoyed some tea as they watched the DL do the tackling for them. |
| Secondary | ||||
| Player | + | - | T | Notes |
| Floyd | 1 | 0.5 | 0.5 | Not tested(!) |
| Avery | 0.5 | 1.5 | -1 | Has obviously slid behind Countess. |
| Woolfolk | - | - | - | Rest this man. |
| Kovacs | 1 | - | 1 | Earl Grey, please |
| T. Gordon | 1 | 1 | 0 | I'll have chai |
| Countess | 5 | 1 | 4 | Think we may have something here. |
| Johnson | 2 | - | 2 | Roobios for me |
| TOTAL | 10.5 | 4 | 6 | Smashing, chaps |
| Metrics | ||||
| Pressure | 15 | 4 | 11 | NO BLOCKY FOR YOU |
| Coverage | 10 | 5 | 5 | Tony Gibson –6.02 x 10^23 |
| Tackling | - | - | - | Nothing even approached an open field tackle. |
| RPS | 3 | 1 | 2 | Whateva |
So… yeah. The defensive line annihilated the opposition to the point where nothing else really mattered. Can we take anything away from that? Eh… probably not. I'd love to live in a world where Will Heininger can flatten an opponent's interior OL, but I don't think that's the case.
We require some sort of crazy extrapolation to justify this piece.
Okay. We did get some depth chart clarity. Roh seems the clear starter at WDE, and Countess is #3 at CB and rising. Also we should now know who is redshirting and who is not. On defense:
- Burned: Countess, Brown, Taylor, Beyer, Clark, Morgan
- Redshirting: Carter, Hollowell, Heitzman, Rock, Poole
A couple of those do strike me as AAARGH burned redshirts: Brown and Clark. Brown is the #5 CB at best and Clark has two guys in front of him at WDE. Maybe the long-term plan is to slide Roh or Black to SDE next year, in which case I retract my argh.
Can we at least get a little Countess eeeeing?
Oh, all right: Countess had a couple of hitches completed on him but also acquired two PBUs, one of them another of the "too bad the QB didn't throw that more accurately" variety, the other a broken-up slant:
That looks like an exceptionally crappy route to me, but every little bit helps as we try to extrapolate young Countess into Charles Woodson. He also forced a fumble thanks to Mattison's new turnover-causing technique: tackling the opposition. That was a completion given up but it was also seven yards on third and ten, ie fine.
Was Minnesota really bad?
Oh, God yes. It was kind of marvelous. The best examples (on defense, anyway) I found were two separate incidents where Michigan defenders destroyed Minnesota OL. The first was Craig Roh taking a kickout block and turning it into total destruction:
That never happens.
And then there was Will Campbell using his sumo belly flop on someone other than Thomas Gordon:
After that it was a surprise Shortell didn't get up two-dimensional.
Minnesota is a bad football team.
Heroes?
Everyone but especially everyone on the defensive line.
Goats?
No one.
What does it mean for Northwestern and beyond?
It means we don't have a terrible, terrible defense but not much more.
Minnesota Postgame Presser Transcript: Players
Denard Robinson and Vincent Smith

Why was the passing game better today? Denard: “We just clicked. We worked on it in practice, and we just had to put it forward in games, and that’s what we did today.”
When the last time you had a rushing, receiving, and passing TD in the same game. Also, can you talk about the game plan that utilized you in a unique way? Smith: “I was just put in the right place at the right time. The coaches know what I’m capable of. What I have to do for the team to help them out.” Was it fun? “Real fun. And the last time I threw a pass was in high school, but not like three [TD’s] in one game.”
When did the 2-QB thingy arise? Denard: “We’ve been doing that in practice. We’ve been working on it. Coach said he’d throw it at us, and just be ready. And he called it, so we were ready.” Were you expecting it that early? “Oh yeah.”
That was an unorthodox offense today. Is that exciting for you? Denard: “Oh yeah … Just going out and having fun with my teammates.”
Denard, how comfortable did you feel in the passing game? You looked more comfortable. Denard: “Oh yeah. I mean, we’ve been practicing getting it down with the receivers, and we were just on the same page.” How much you looking forward to going on the road? “Both of us are looking forward to that.” Smith: “I mean it’s just another football game, and that’s what we love to do. We just love to come out to compete, and it’s another night game.”
You guys have been putting up a lot of points. How does the team feel about this new offense? Denard: “We’re confident. I mean, we’ve been playing [well], and we trust Coach Al to give us the right play and make things happen, because we have some playmakers.”
Are there other things we haven’t seen that you might show us? Denard: “We can’t tell them that …” Smith: “Not that I know of.”
(more after the jump)
Unverified Voracity Defeats A Virus
What was up with Roh. Mike Rothstein has more details on Craig Roh's fall camp malady:
Before Michigan's fall camp started, Craig Roh went back to Arizona and spent time with his family. His brothers had mononucleosis over the summer, but Craig returned to Michigan feeling fine.
Three days into camp that changed. He was tired. By the end of the day, he ended up in bed with the chills.
Was it possible? Could he have contracted it, too?
He didn't know. What he did know, his father, Fred, said, is he was in bed and uncomfortably sick. The next day, Craig woke up with fever of 102 degrees. He went to the doctor searching for answers, and received antibiotics. Doctors had diagnosed him not with mono but a respiratory infection.
He skipped one day of practice and began to feel a little better. Cleared by doctors, even though his energy level wasn't at 100 percent, Roh returned to practice of his own volition. The sickness, though, had done its damage.
Coaches started dogging him, Roh got down on himself when he didn't play that well the first couple games, but he had his epiphany and now he's picked it back up. Hopefully we see him hit the level of performance everyone was projecting before the season.
Hatchdate. Austin Hatch is a few days away from returning home:
Per Caterbury HS head coach (and close friend) Dan Kline… Michigan recruit Austin Hatch will come home Oct. 9. Kline said rehab went amazing.
FCOA costs. The Bylaw Blog breaks down the full cost for full cost of attendance scholarships:
Q: How much would it cost?
Because the proposal covers all sports, cost depends on how many sports an institution sponsors. Stanford’s associate AD of business strategy and revenue enhancement estimated it would cost the school $750,000. Stanford runs the largest athletic department in the country, so that number might be considered to be something of a maximum.
To figure out a rough estimate of cost, we need to figure out the average athletic department. The NCAA’s membership report has the average number of men’s and women’s sports sponsored by FBS, FCS, and non-football institutions. The NCAA’s sport sponsorship and participation report lists which sports are sponsored by the most institutions. So combining the two, we can figure out an “average” athletic department and estimate the costs based on scholarship limits. And those costs are:
- FBS: $504,400
- FCS: $436,400
- Non-Football: $282,400
Obvious in those figures is the effect of football. An FBS football team can expect an increased scholarship bill of up to $170,000 while an FCS program should set aside $126,000. The range for athletic departments that fully fund all their teams would probably be somewhere between $200,000 and $750,000.
Good by me; any schools sponsoring sports can hack a small amount out of administrative and coaching salaries to cover that. And if you can't, the rule is conference-based. Not everyone will have to adopt it. Those that do will have to do it for all athletes.
This won't have much of an impact for Michigan's bottom line or recruiting prospects in major sports since everyone they're recruiting against will immediately adopt the FCOA proposal. It will help a bit in hockey, especially if schools in the NCHC can't make that decision without making it for their entire athletic department. Is the MAC going FCOA? What about whatever conferences North Dakota and UMD are in?
BONUS: The Bylaw Blog shares my skepticism that the four-year scholarship proposal is anything more than window dressing unless the same restrictions on revoking scholarships mid-year are applied for the period.
Break even? I what aah? The Mathlete's numbers on the Hoke fourth and two:
Brian is in love with it, but how much was it worth? Punt from 48 gets to the 17. Team down 14 with the ball around the 17 with 2-3 minutes left in the first half win about 8.0% of the time. A successful conversion gives Michigan a 93.2% chance of victory where a failed attempt drops your chances to 88.2%. To break even, Michigan would need to have a confidence that they had about a 75% chance of conversion. National average on 3rd and 2 is about 58.5%. Michigan has been a top 25 level 3rd and short team so the decision was probably about a break even if you account for Michigan’s offense.
This case is a bit closer than I expected, but if you believe our offense was bound to score, which it obviously did, a 21 point half time lead is good for a 97.1% chance of victory. Even if Michigan can get a field goal and run out the clock, an average conversion rate makes the decision break even
If this seems like a weird result given the other Mathlete chart…
…it is an effect of being up 14-0. If the score was tied the win percentage effect would be a landslide in favor of going for it. If you're measuring by projected margin in the final score it's a large +EV decision, but if all you care about is having one more point than the other team it's about break-even for average teams going up against each other. At the time it seemed like the defense could fall apart at any time, which still swings the decision to an easy go-for-it to me.
You need to get another MBA. Angelique Chengelis put up a story on In The Big House, which everyone hates, that included this quote from our new Chief Marketing Officer:
"It's gaining traction," Lochmann said. "We know there are people who love it and some people who hate it, but our core customers — the players — they want to hear it."
This sentence displays a lack of knowledge about public relations, marketing, economics, taste, and common sense. The "core customers" are your customers, who hate In The Big House.
Meanwhile, the Defilement is hinted at further in a caption:
“We’d love to get into the Big House and play it,” says Pop Evil lead vocalist Leigh Kakaty, who grew up in Grand Rapids.
Let's murder our brand for WWE entrance music.
Yay. This debacle will go down as Dave Brandon's halo.
More Trouba. Local hockey expert Jim Lahey on Michigan's newest commit:
Trouba is a total package defenceman with elite ability. Looked like a man among boys in AAA, and that pretty much continues in the USHL. Has excellent size, will probably grow an inch or so and end up somewhere in the range of 6'2 215lbs as a pro.
Trouba makes a clean, smart first pass out of his zone and plays with perfect position on breakouts. Stays calm, never panics, and consistently loses the forechecker completely behind the net to create odd man rushes. This won't happen at the next level as often, but he shows the poise needed to create good breakouts at the next level.
Takes care of his own end, does not allow himself to get pushed around in front of or behind the net. Superb zone awareness.
And the United States of Hockey:
Jacob Trouba already has four assists on the young season. The recent University of Michigan commit is going to do very well against USHL competition thanks to his tremendous strength and toughness. The big test will come against the college teams where there’s going to be less time and space, forcing Trouba to make quicker decisions. The first major test for Trouba and his teammates comes right away as the U18s will take on Trouba’s future school Monday at Yost. The fellas from The Pipeline Show caught up with Trouba about his recent college commitment and the way he plays.
Another note on Trouba: TPS brought up that some have compared Trouba to former NTDP defenseman and current Anaheim Duck Cam Fowler. If you know me, you know I hate comparison scouting reports. While it may give people a basic picture of what a player might play like, they are often taken as gospel by those that read it and that’s pretty unfair to the prospect.
Trouba and Fowler are similar in these ways: They are American, played at the NTDP, are good offensive defensemen. That’s it. Trouba plays with an edge and brings an important physical element to his game. He has good offensive instincts and a powerful shot. Fowler is a heady defenseman that makes plays with his skills, defends with good positioning and is a pure puck mover. I’ve seen both play multiple times and I just don’t get the comparison. Jacob Trouba plays like Jacob Trouba. /dismount soap box.
Is it just me or does Michigan have a much better track record of reeling in elite, top-ten-pick defensemen than forwards? Michigan's last top ten pick at forward was Eric Nystrom, and even at the time people thought that was a huge reach. Trouba, JMFJ, and Mike Komisarek were all top ten picks.
Etc.: Hockey exhibition preview from somewhere in Canada mostly notable for naming the opponent the "UOIT Ridgebacks." We have declared Minesota a "Maize Out." RIP Maize Outs. Holdin' the Rope takes stock a third of the way through the season.
