...talks about how UConn hasn't been in contact and how they're out. (HT: UMHoops)
mike williams
Preview 2010: Five Questions, Five Answers On Defense
Previously: The story, the secondary, the linebackers, the defensive line, the quarterbacks, the running backs, the receivers, the offensive line, special teams, the conference, offensive questions answered(?).
1. What is it?
I keep trying to reconcile quotes like this from Rich Rodriguez…
How have some of the guys responded to the new 3-3-5?
“It is not a true 3-3-5. Again, there is as much as we were doing last year as there is new stuff from the spring. We’ve tried to keep things a little simpler, added a few new things simply because of the youth on defense and we need to play a little faster. ”
…with views of the defense in spring and fall in which Craig Roh hardly ever plays with his hand down. A quick review of Devin Gardner's time in the spring game—which I picked since it was mostly against the first team defense shows 17 snaps on which there's a three man line (a couple of these do have Roh as a standup DE, FWIW) and just six on which he is in a three-point stance, two of those plays where the offense is backed up on their own goal line and the D is expecting a run. In more open play the ratio is a striking 17/21. It certainly looks like Craig Roh is a linebacker who moonlights at defensive end a la Shawn Crable. It looks like a 3-3-5.
Maybe that's an artifact of playing a spread offense and in games against beefy, power-heavy teams Michigan will go to more of a traditional look, but I don't think that'll happen either. Michigan deployed a formation USC calls "Double Eagle" more and more as the year wore on, debuting it against Iowa and deploying it extensively against Ohio State:
This was responsible for Michigan's excellent interior run defense when Ohio State did it's usual DAVE SMASH plays. It was also fundamentally unsound when OSU went unbalanced, but hopefully they fixed that. Either way, only Ohio State has the ability to run it down your throat and switch to a spread n shred—the other beef machine teams in the Big Ten feature pocket passing QBs.
With Ryan Van Bergen and the Sagesse/Banks platoon at defensive end, Michigan's line is four guys who would or could be 4-3 defensive tackles. It seems natural to tuck people inside and and run this thing you've clearly been installing for over a year.
The verdict: it's a 3-3-5 base with four-man lines a "multiple" look Michigan will run for a curveball. The coaches can say it's not a "true" 3-3-5, but to everyone but a football coach it will look like one. Craig Roh is a linebacker, mostly, and Jordan Kovacs is a tiny linebacker. I expect three-man lines to be present on 60-70% of Michigan's snaps this year.
2. Why is the personnel still so doomy?
This is not actually a surprise. The ugly bit about Misopogon's Decimated Defense series—other than all of it—was how little matters were scheduled to improve this year:
…last year was very thin – one or two guys recruited at each level. All told, 11 recruits, meaning if everybody played up to their hype (which never ever happens), we would have had an upperclassman team with some really good players and some really mediocre players. This year, there's a little more play but it's not all that different. Specifically, the tradeoff in upperclass talent is a likely Brandon Graham (6.1) and Renaldo Sagesse (5.6) for two likely Ryan Van Bergens (5.8) and an Obi Ezeh (5.5).
Straight-up, it's probably not a difference, meaning the performance level that Michigan's defense gets from its upperclassmen in 2010 will probably be about what it got from its upperclassmen in 2009. It is still well below that of Ohio State, and like last year, is drawing from a significantly smaller but significantly more talented pool than Michigan State.
Put another way by diarist Jokewood in November:
Comparing Michigan's defensive upperclassmen not only to Ohio State, Penn State, and Notre Dame, but to the rest of the conference as well...
Ohio State - 22
Northwestern - 21
Indiana - 19
Illinois - 19
Michigan State - 19
Penn State - 19
Iowa - 18
Wisconsin - 18
Minnesota - 17
Purdue - 15
Notre Dame - 15
Michigan - 12The rest of the Big Ten averages 50% more upperclassmen on defense. We are dead last in the conference by a wide margin in terms of experienced defensive players.
Michigan's number in 2010 was scheduled to be a still really crappy 14 before Brandon Smith transferred (and subsequently washed out at Temple), Donovan Warren entered the draft, and Troy Woolfolk exploded. Michigan is down to 11 upperclass defenders, 12 if you count James Rogers, 13 if you count Steve Watson. They've gone nowhere.
The sudden fall attrition has hurt matters, especially since it's been concentrated at the position at which Michigan was most vulnerable, but this was always going to happen.
3. Is there any way the secondary is not a giant flaming disaster area?
operates both as solace and a thousand words on the position
The solitary hope is that Michigan was so bad at safety last year that even though they've lost two competent cornerbacks and replaced them with green players they will improve simply by playing bend-don't-break and forcing opponents to put together touchdown drives instead of touchdown plays. That could make the secondary a rickety cart balanced on the edge of a volcano, which sounds pretty good right about now.
How realistic is that? Somewhat, actually. After last season, Jon Chait had a post at the Wolverine with evidence the Woolfolk move backfired badly:
Michigan played six games with Woolfolk at safety -- Western Michigan, Notre Dame, Eastern Michigan, Indiana, Michigan State, and Ohio State. (I'm ignoring the Delaware State game because the competition level was so abnormal.) Michigan played five games with Woolfolk at cornerback, which forced Michael Williams into the starting lineup and Jordan Kovacs to move out of his more comfortable position. In those five games, Michigan played Iowa, Penn State, Purdue, Illinois and Wisconsin.
You can probably figure out where I'm going with this. In the six Woolfolk-at-safety games, Michigan's opponents gained 380 yards per game. Those six opponents averaged 374 yards on the season overall, which means that Michigan allowed its opponents to gain just a bit more than they did against the remainder of their schedule. This is a poor result, though not an absolutely horrendous one.
But in the five Woolfolk-at-corner games, Michigan gave up 445 yards per game, against opponents who gained 382 yards per game on the season overall. That is a horrendous result. That is a sieve of a defense.
The scoring numbers are even more stark: Michigan went from giving up 23 points a game to 37. Is it really possible that bringing in Mike Williams and moving Jordan Kovacs deep resulted in two extra touchdowns ceded per game?
Well… not quite. The Woolfolk-at-safety games include two MAC opponents, three approximately .500 teams, and Ohio State. The Woolfolk-elsewhere games are much tougher on average because the bulk of the MAC stats were racked up against other MAC teams. If you hack those out this is what it looks like:
| FS: Woolfolk | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Opponent | Ydg | Scoring | M Ydg | M Score | |
| #1 | Notre Dame | 452 | 30.1 | 490 | 34 |
| #2 | Indiana | 365 | 23.5 | 467 | 36 |
| #3 | Michigan State | 406.2 | 29.7 | 393 | 20 |
| #4 | Ohio State | 369 | 29 | 318 | 21 |
| TOTALS | 398.05 | 28.075 | 417 | 27.75 | |
[Note: MSU's overtime period was removed to keep everything even.]
Against teams that didn't play a segregated, much easier schedule Michigan was about 20 yards worse than average in yardage and even on scoring. So moving Woolfolk only cost Michigan about 40 yards and nine points a game. That still overstates the effect since MSU did score a touchdown in their overtime period and Ohio State was Tresselballin' it like a mofo, only putting Pryor in the shotgun once Michigan became vaguely threatening. So let's knock our estimate down to 30 yards a game.
What's thirty yards a game in terms of national averages? Kind of a big deal. Michigan would have leapt from 82nd in total defense to 57th—basically average—if they'd just maintained their Woolfolk-at-safety pace.
Plugging the enormous hole at safety would be great, but even if you make the reasonable assumption that Gordon/Kovacs/Robinson is going to be way better than Williams/Kovacs, the massive downgrade at corner means you're probably just treading water. Treading horrible, polluted, razor-blade-filled, despair-laden water.
4. GERG: Brilliant? Terrible? What's Going On?
THAT WAY GO THAT WAY OH GOD OH GOD
Punt. Punt punt punt. I have a tendency to get bitchy about coordinators doing things I see as strategically weird and slammed Scott Shafer over the course of the '08 UFRs for transparently nonsensical decisions like hardly ever playing senior nickelback Brandon Harrison (even against spread teams! In favor of Johnny Thompson!) and pulling one of his senior defensive tackles on downs like third and one. The end result:
The picture painted by the above is, in retrospect, one of huge incompetence. Last year Michigan regularly removed functional veteran players in favor of crappy ones that made no sense given the down and distance situations or the offense on the field, and those things only got fixed (-ish) once Shafer was removed from the decision-making process. It's not like the position guys covered themselves in glory with that 3-3-5 against Purdue but at least they pulled their heads out of their butts afterwards and put in the defense Michigan should have been running from day one against spread teams.
I didn't find that kind of complaining much when I went back over the UFRs for '09. The worst thing I found was after the Penn State game:
Why are you such a grump? Iowa put up 30 points and 367 yards of offense to Penn State's 35 and 396 , and Michigan managed to escape that game with way better numbers.
I think it was that all the stuff Penn State was doing came so easy. The Zug touchdowns, the Quarless touchdown, all the long handoffs: all of those plays required nothing more than Penn State not screwing up with wide open receivers. To Clark's credit, he hit all those guys. He then laughed about the primitive defense that Michigan was running, and on review I totally agree: Michigan telegraphed their now-predictable third and long redzone blitzes and got killed. They showed the long handoff was there and got killed. They put Obi Ezeh in man coverage on the edge against Evan Royster and got killed.
That's what the big minus in RPS is there for: I think Robinson got owned by Penn State's offensive brain trust (which is Galen Hall, not Jaypa). This game was slightly reminiscent of the Purdue game a year ago where Michigan switched to a new system and got their brains beaten in by it.
This was mitigated by the situation, obviously:
I don't know. I am sort of mad at Robinson for making it easy by not breaking tendencies with two weeks to prepare. But when you've got Kovacs as your deep safety, what can you do? Kid's smart and can be an effective player in the box but obviously lacks the athleticism to be a deep safety in the Big Ten.
Tactical complaining is absent in other UFRs, though if I'd actually manned up and done the Ohio State one I would have cited the Buckeye Football Analysis link above, in which the guy said he was surprised at how fundamentally unsound Michigan's scheme was, as another negative.
On the other hand, I've been pumping up GERG's work with Roh and Brown constantly and citing his move to linebackers coach as an indication the rest of the staff thinks he's the best option to undo the damage wrought over the past couple years. And, really, what can you do when you're handed the material he was given last year? This has been documented incessantly: given the personnel situation it is totally unsurprising Michigan's defense cratered last year.
So I punt. I'll be looking at the development of Roh and Mouton and seeing if the defense can get off the mat somewhat despite facing down a personnel situation that isn't much better, if it's better at all, than last year's. We'll have a much better idea about Greg Robinson in November.
5. Well?
There were many complaints when I started the preview series off with the secondary and linebackers. People were depressed. They found me depressing. Someone posted something on the message board wondering if I was okay. People of Earth: it is not my fault the back seven on defense is depressing. It just is.
Is there hope? Is there anything resembling it? Maybe. After the Iowa game this is how I diagnosed the D:
On the podcast this week I called the defense "competition-invariant": they have talent and do well when they use it but when they make an error it is so huge that even Indiana can exploit it ruthlessly, so the defense kind of plays the same against everyone.
Maybe GERG can reduce that tendency. Maybe Cam Gordon will 1-0-1 the season. Maybe the linebackers will get less frustrating, and maybe Michigan will give up an annoying number of long drives but not so many awful, really short ones. But here's the greater-thans and less-thans:
BETTER
- Junior Mike Martin > Mike Martin
- Sophomore Craig Roh >> freshman Craig Roh
- Senior Jonas Mouton with competent coaching > Junior Jonas Mouton with headless chicken tendencies.
- Sophomore Kovacs >> freshman Kovacs/Williams/Smith
- Cam Gordon > Kovacs/Woolfolk/Williams
SAME
- Mark Moundros/Obi Ezeh == Obi Ezeh
WORSE
- Ryan Van Bergen <<< Brandon Graham
- Sagesse/Banks < Ryan Van Bergen
- Carvin Johnson < Stevie Brown
- JT Floyd << Donovan Warren
- Whoever < Woolfolk/Cissoko/Floyd
It's going to be rough. Tony Gibson:
"If we get any more simple, I don't know what we're going to be able to do," Gibson said. "We can't just play one coverage and do that kind of thing.
"These other teams we're playing, they have scholarship kids. They're not going to say, 'OK, Michigan's young back there, we're not going to throw at them.'
I actually think the defense will improve simply by virtue of having some continuity and knowledge of the players, but not by much. Shootouts beckon.
Last Year's Stupid Predictions
- I didn't do any for some reason, and that was the best prediction of all.
This Year's Stupid Predictions
- Fumbles recovered double to ten.
- The secondary is actually better than last year's secondary because long touchdowns are less frequent. It will still be very bad.
- Mouton is much better, leads the team in TFLs and sacks, and is still incredibly frustrating.
- Mike Martin is great and should get first-team Big Ten recognition, though he probably won't.
- Mark Moundros holds on to the starting MLB job all season.
- Michigan manages a modest improvement in yards allowed, getting up to the 60-70 range nationally.
- Pain.
Preview 2010: Linebackers
Previously: The story and the secondary.
A note before we start: this preview relies heavily on the defensive UFRs of last year because there’s a convenient numerical system that does a decent job of summing up a defensive player’s contributions. One caveat: the system is generous to defensive linemen and harsh to defensive backs, especially cornerbacks. A +4 for a defensive end is just okay; for a cornerback it’s outstanding.
Linebackers
Rating: 2.
| WLB | Yr. | MLB | Yr. | SLB/Spur | Yr. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jonas Mouton | Sr.* | Mark Moundros | Sr.*# | Carvin Johnson | Fr. |
| Mike Jones | So. | Obi Ezeh | Sr.* | Thomas Gordon | Fr.* |
| Kevin Leach | Jr.* | Kenny Demens | So.* | Mike Williams | Jr.* |
As far as massive disappointments go, linebacker outstripped even last year's secondary (which was clearly in trouble from the word go) and the series finale of Battlestar Galactica. With two returning starters entering their redshirt junior years and a hyped senior recruit moving away from the safety spot he could not manage, I was torn between a 3 and 4 last year. As the season progressed and both starters were replaced by their backups only to see those backups flail and the starters re-enter it became clear that something was drastically wrong.
Actually, it didn't even take that long. Even though Michigan won the Notre Dame game the linebacking corps came in for a hiding afterwards:
Words cannot describe how bad Obi Ezeh was in this game. It was a disaster, and this is a guy who's in his third year starting. Maybe the double switch of defensive coordinators has him behind the times for a third-year starter but that doesn't go much towards explaining a –8.5 that would have been worse if he hadn't been turned loose on a couple blitzes. Meanwhile, Jonas Mouton has been negative in both games so far after a promising finish to last year.
And the something didn't seem that mysterious:
Mouton and Ezeh belong to Jay Hopson, and the inside backers are the only guys who belong to Jay Hopson, and they're playing terribly. … Unless the two inside guys get radically better over the rest of the season, I wouldn't be surprised if Hopson was replaced.
The hope is that Hopson's coaching was as ineffectual as it appears—Mouton went decidedly backwards last year after a promising end to 2008 and Ezeh's gone nowhere in two years—and that the move of Greg Robinson to linebackers coach can adequately triage the two years of damage done.
Middle Linebackers
Rating: 2.
This covers the middle and weakside linebackers since they seem close to interchangeable. Spurs are handled after; the bandit was classified a safety and handled in the secondary preview, the deathbacker is still a defensive lineman.
When The Sporting News's Dave Curtis published an article in early August declaring that converted walk-on Mark Moundros was the player on Michigan's team that needed to "step up" more than any other, that claim was met with derision on the message board. This was well and just because obviously that was insane. A few weeks later, Moundros is the projected starter at middle linebacker and one of Michigan's two permanent captains. Score: Dave Curtis one million, Everyone Else zero.
Moundros is a walk-on and spent last year playing mostly fullback, but his rise into the starting lineup has gone from probable motivational tactic to just plain probable as fall has gone along and Michigan's scrimmages have approached game conditions. In the semi-public fall scrimmage, Jonas Mouton was held out with a minor injury, leaving Moundros to start at MLB as Obi Ezeh tried out WLB. In Michigan's "Beanie Bowl" ones-vs-ones fall run-through, you can see Moundros paired with a healthy Mouton at around 2:00 minutes in the official site's highlight reel. It's too late for his prominence to mean anything other than a likely start on Saturday even if he is listed next to Obi Ezeh with an OR. He's some Rodriguez talking to confirm:
Rodriguez said he was initially opposed to fullback Mark Moundros making the move, but he came around quickly. "I told him I didn't think it made sense, but he said, 'I think I can bring something there'—and he has. It's not only learning the defense and the physical presence, but his leadership. He's going to compete and will be right in the mix based on spring."
This is a fantastic story but also a worrying one. The single clip I've got on Moundros from last year is a nice block on a linebacker in the Illinois game, which you'll note doesn't involve playing, you know, defense. One of this blog's primary heuristics for determining whether you can expect a position group to be good is the "position switch starter," which proclaims that any position group where a guy who played one thing last year is in position to start at another thing the next is always scrambling to control the damage as best they can. [Ed: Holy pants, I forgot about this in re: Cam Gordon, though that move was more foreordained than panicked.]
This comes in varying levels of severity: moving a weakside linebacker to the middle is not a big deal. Flopping sides of the ball is. For example, in 2008 when Michigan moved defensive tackle John Ferrara to guard and started him that was a definitive sign the offensive line was in shambles. In this context, "sparsely deployed walk-on fullback to starting middle linebacker" is as much of a flashing sign that says DOOM as anything I've ever seen.
On the other hand, during the Illinois game last year Ezeh actually ran out of a hole Juice Williams was about to enter with the ball so he could chase after a running back. It looked insane, causing me to dig out the "run away" bit of "Janie's Got A Gun" and the fake Magic card you see at right. By the end of the year whatever hope remained for Ezeh was vestigial indeed; merely having options other than him could maybe possibly hopefully slightly improve matters?
This is admittedly a faint hope, but merely going from whatever that was last year to okay would be a major step forward. Moundros is seriously pushing Ezeh at least gives the defense another bullet in the chamber. For what it's worth, I talked to a just-graduated walk-on in NYC would called Moundros a "beast" and thought he was at least physically capable of the job. Production from this spot should improve; Ezeh won't get worse and anyone who replaces him will be better since he's still around.
On the weakside, Jonas Mouton returns for his third season as a starter. In 2008 he started off wobbly (he actually spent the Utah game backing up Marell Evans, who is now playing for Hampton) but found his feet in the Big Ten season and looked for all the world like a guy ready to blow up. Last year's season preview approvingly cited his UFR chart—solidly positive in every Big Ten game save Michigan State—and proclaimed him "easily Michigan's best linebacker," "an excellent, explosive blitzer," and even "surprisingly stout when it comes to taking on fullbacks and even guards" before predicting a breakout season.
That didn't happen. Mouton's '09 via the lens of UFR:
| Opponent | + | - | T | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| WMU | 2.5 | 4 | -1.5 | Seemed irresponsible. |
| Notre Dame | 3 | 8 | -5 | Major regression from last year; often went into pass drops without bothering to see if it was a run. |
| Indiana | 7 | 8 | -1 | Surprised he came out this close to even. Major culprit on a few big plays. |
| Michigan State | 7 | 8 | -1 | Exact same numbers from last week as he alternates great plays with killer mistakes. |
| Iowa | 6 | 9 | -3 | Three weeks in a row: alternates great plays with killer mistakes. |
| Penn State | 4.5 | 8.5 | -4 | Ugh. |
| Illinois | 5.5 | 9 | -3.5 | The usual at this point. Excellent athlete, many mental mistakes. |
| Purdue | - | 6 | -6 | Did this in like a quarter of playing time. |
| Wisconsin | 6.5 | 11 | -4.5 | Jonas Mouton: big positive, bigger negative. |
Instead of breaking out, Mouton regressed. His '08 numbers were the inverse of the above, usually a hair above zero with the occasional big positive. He was lethal in the Fandom Endurance III game against Northwestern; the only times he was lethal in '09 were to his own team. By the Iowa game the pattern was established, with Mouton turning in a series of excellent plays unfortunately outstripped by his tendency to run himself out of plays and get lost in zone drops.
This kept happening until Mouton, like Ezeh, found himself on the bench after taking a series of angles so bad they were immediately apparent even to the dedicated amateur. There was this one against Indiana, but even that can't live up to whatever this was:
|
JONAS MOUTON |
| OVERRUNS EVERYTHING |
| opens up cutback lane |
| desperate diving tackle |
| way too far inside |
| fails to get outside |
| COVERAGE ERRATIC |
| first enormous bust |
| wide open receiver |
| ride the TEs downfield |
| digs out a tough INT |
| GOOD VERTICALLY |
| into the backfield |
| screaming downhill at this |
| blows through his blocker |
| slashes past |
It was around that point that JB Fitzgerald started getting more time, if only so the coaches could get in a proper row with Mouton on the sideline. Fitzgerald quickly proved himself just as liable to bust and Mouton got his job back, but only by default.
Unlike the situation at middle linebacker, it seems within the realm of possibility Mouton's light goes on and the talent he's flashed the past couple years turns into an All Big Ten kind of season. To deploy a cliche, he is the X factor, the guy with the greatest possible variance in his play on the defense. I'd settle for a return to his 2008 level; he is capable of more. There's a 25% chance he's awesome, a 50% chance he's okay, and a 25% chance he gets benched.
The hope here is for the Bennie Joppru.
Backups
Obi Ezeh came in for quite a bit of discussion above by way of figuring out how Moundros could possibly ascend to the top of the depth chart, so this won't be much of a surprise: wow, he was bad last year. This is my (least?) favorite demonstration:
I admit that when it comes to my knowledge of football, linebacker play remains an intricate mystery that I'm probably wrong about more than anything else, but whatever your scheme it ain't right when your middle linebacker doesn't move forward—like, ever—on a running play.
That Wisconsin game was the defense's nadir. The Badgers punted once en route to racking up 45 points and did this mainly by exploiting the linebacking. The sheer incompetence of it all, especially Ezeh's –10 on the day, prompted this response:
You rage, contrary to the above statement, seems particularly well-focused.
…you know the story: Mouton and Ezeh. Wisconsin's passing game was almost exclusively zingers over the middle to incredibly open receivers 20 or even 30 yards downfield. On every damn one both MLBs were vastly out of position and the throws were easy. The pair was also very poor in run support: Graham and Martin combined for 21 tackles. They combined for eight!
These are returning starters and redshirt juniors. They have gotten so much worse this year, and it's obvious to everyone from Bret Bielema to stupid bloggers with charts.
Ezeh hadn't developed one bit from the previous season and Hopson wasn't long for Michigan. Where Mouton has held onto his job and manages to enter his senior season with at some tattered hype dragging behind him, Ezeh's apparently lost his job to a walk-on, and not even the same one he was benched for last year.
With Moundros unlikely to nail down every snap, Ezeh will find himself on the field frequently. I'm not expecting a whole lot of improvement. But I think I am expecting some, for the reasons listed above: Greg Robinson in charge, another year of experience, a defensive coordinator who knows his name.
Demens left, Fitzgerald right
The enigmatic Kenny Demens is third string in the middle; after a seemingly productive spring he dropped off the map and has generated zero fall mentions as Moundros climbs the depth chart. He played sparingly in the fall scrimmage; last year he was passed over for walk-on Kevin Leach when it came time to replace Ezeh temporarily. He's spinning his wheels, seemingly on track to watch this year. Next year both of the guys above him will be gone and he'll get one last chance to step forward; the tea leaves are not encouraging at the moment.
|
JB FITZGERALD |
| WHY HE DIDN'T START |
| epically bad angle |
| runs out of position |
| angle way too far upfield |
| no idea what he's doing |
| HOPE |
| zipping up in a small crease |
| recognizes the play |
| flipped the line |
JB Fitzgerald is now the third string at what this site dubbed "deathbacker" a year ago; since he's behind Roh and Herron at a spot that's at least half defensive end he'll get some further discussion in the defensive line section. But if he plays he'll probably play as a true linebacker; Rodriguez has called him a "swing" guy they can play at any of the two and a half linebacker spots.
Can he play well? That's the question. He didn't play well when the Jonas Mouton Suspension Fiasco forced him into the lineup against Eastern Michigan, committing some of the same sins Mouton does above. On the other hand, his most extensive experience outside of that game was a start against Purdue during which he got a 3-4-negative 1 line and I said he was preferable to other options because he "didn't make me want to die more than once or twice," which woo linebackers.
I may be reading too much into this, but after the fall scrimmage Rodriguez was specifically asked about Demens and Fitzgerald and rambled this out:
They have played a lot of special teams. They’ve had good camps. JB is a guy that we really like because we can swing him. He’s knows our defense, so we can put him at a couple of different linebacker positions and he’s had a good camp. Kenny Demens has had a pretty solid camp. So I think we’re going to have more linebackers to play, but the veterans, Obi Ezeh, Mark Moundros, even though he is new at linebacker, Jonas Mouton, those veterans are going to be the biggest key because usually when you’re a senior you’re going to have your best year, or at least that is what you hope.
That reads like "yeah, they're not going to play unless Ezeh, Moundros, and Mouton can't."
Jones burning his redshirt left, Leach tackling an unstoppable 500-foot-tall robot right
On the weakside, sophomore Mike Jones is listed as the backup to Jonas Mouton. Jones spent last year taking a Carr redshirt by playing on special teams and driving me crazy about not having the option of bringing back a fifth year senior in the near future; he spent fall and spring lighting up opponents and building some real buzz for himself. He, too, was held out of the fall scrimmage with a minor injury; before that he was flying around like his recruiting profile suggested he might. The key passage from ESPN:
Exceptional edge blitzer that has great timing and quickness; speed rushes by the offensive tackle before he can get set. Offensive backs can't or won't block him when blitzing off the edge; really creates havoc in the backfield. Does a great job of using his hands to shed blockers in order to get to the ball carrier.
In his profile everyone from Jones to his coach to the gurus say "this kid loves to hit," a description that's being borne out by practice chatter. He's still pretty slight at 210 pounds, so a starting role is probably not in the offing. When Michigan's "multiple" defense phases into a 4-3 under, though, the weakside linebacker is a guy who doesn't usually have to take on linemen and can be a smaller, speedier defender. If Mouton's angles are still ugly and his are better he can find himself in a platoon role; he'll probably have to settle for providing breathers in anticipation of starting in 2011.
Walk-on Kevin Leach is third string here and should see his playing time restricted to special teams. It's a testament to something that Michigan's best option after Ezeh last year was a 205-pound sophomore walk-on. Leach actually got mixed reviews in UFR save the one "enormous bust" per game in his two starts against Illinois and Purdue, but at his weight he's not a long term solution at MLB and he obviously lacks the athleticism required at WLB.
Spur
Rating: 2.
both Johnson (left) and Gordon (right) rocked the #1 in high school
It's too bad the official depth chart had to go and upstage the prediction here that after Carvin Johnson's "Beanie Bowl" audition for the starting job at spur would be a successful one sooner rather than later. Rodriguez did hedge a bit in Monday's press conference by saying that position was "not set" and there could have been an OR there, but they didn't.
So it's his job. Despite Johnson's status as a true freshman, in some ways this is the more experienced player winning out. Johnson was 100% safety at Rummel, the "heart and soul" of the crushing defense that took his team all the way to the state final. A multi-year starter, Johnson's recruiting profile is full of praise for his football smarts and advanced technique. When Rivals bothered to rank him after his Michigan commit they were pleasantly surprised by what they saw:
Johnson is a fantastic tackler. He can tackle in the open field or fill the alley. He brings a pop at the point of contact and always has the ball carrier falling backwards. Johnson is a smart safety in the run game, picking his spots to make an impact and not overpursuing or being too aggressive.
The only negative mentioned was a "lack of elite straight-line speed," something that shouldn't be a problem at spur. There he'll be tasked with covering the flats in zone and riding tight ends into the deep seam. His recruiting profile picked him out as a true sleeper likely to exceed his relatively modest rankings based on local praise and late SEC offers, and while my usual heuristics lead me to be skeptical about a true freshman beating out a redshirt freshman with nary a fourth star to be seen, I've just got that feeling—what's it called—you know—optimism. Optimism enough to throw this position a 2, anyway. While two less-than-touted freshmen are not likely to be average Big Ten players in year one, I don't think we'll be looking back at 2010 and saying "oh God, what about that mess at spur."
Backups
Though Thomas Gordon has been on campus for a year, before he toured Michigan and Michigan State's camps before his senior year of high school he was strictly a quarterback. It was only the prospect of securing a D-I scholarship as a defensive back that saw him switch to defense, and that move was often restricted to passing downs by a hamstring injury. That combined with his status as the lowest-ranked member of Michigan's '09 class made his redshirt a fait accompli; that accomplished, he ascended to the starting job at spur in spring before Johnson's arrival put his job under fire.
Since Gordon hasn't played and I didn't pick up a word of practice buzz good or bad on him in his apprentice year—odd for a guy who was slated to start—I can't offer much more than what's in his recruiting profile. If I had to guess I'd say he's more athletic than Johnson since Rodriguez dubbed him "Prison Abs" and he played quarterback in high school, so if the two platoon for any reason other than keeping the two fresh, Gordon might be a passing-down substitution. More likely the PT he sees is in response to Johnson errors or long drives on which he gets tired.
Walk-on Floyd Simmons is third on the depth chart; he saw time on special teams last year and will again. Since he's a walk-on with scant playing time information on him is limited to his height (six foot) and weight (200 pounds).
|
MIKE WILLIAMS |
| GOOD? |
| into the backfield |
| NOT REALLY |
| just a huge bust |
| a killer touchdown |
| first enormous bust |
| way too far inside |
| overruns play |
Venturing into the wooly depths beyond the sanctioned two-deep we find Mike Williams, erstwhile free safety starter from last year. It looked for a second like he was being auditioned for that two-deep when he got plenty of playing time in the fall scrimmage, but now that he's still behind the guys he was behind in spring and the newly ordained starter, that looks more like an attempt to see whether or not Williams can contribute outside of special teams at all. The answer for a redshirt junior on the fourth string behind a walk-on is "no."
I won't belabor the point made in this space with DELICATELY PHRASED QUESTIONS during the season, but the video to the right should provide plenty of evidence as to why this is the case. That he's fallen so far down the depth chart after starting at the most critical position on defense goes a long way to explaining '09 and providing hope for 2010: Michigan may be losing crazy outlier Brandon Graham but they're also losing a crazy outlier in the opposite direction, too.
Spring Position Battles: Defense
Roh is certain. Everything else is chaos.
This is going to be extensive. It would be much, much quicker to rattle off a list of positions we know are set this fall:
- Craig Roh at quick defensive end.
That is literally all. We do know that a few other guys are guaranteed starters, but Ryan Van Bergen, Mike Martin, and Troy Woolfolk could all switch positions. I should have thought of that before I did the offense. Now I'm stuck with this format.
Anyway. On with show:
Not Brandon Graham
The Departed
Three defensive line starters return, but the best defensive lineman in the country does not. Normally you'd be looking at Brandon Graham's platoon of ready-to-go backups for an inadequate but functional replacement. Since this is the 2009 Michigan defense we're talking about that platoon is walk-on Will Heininger. The other options at his spot are freshmen.
So it's time to get creative, maybe…
The Candidates
Count me amongst the chorus suggesting that Ryan Van Bergen might move outside. Dubbing this position "Not Brandon Graham" is a clever way to not write "Ryan Van Bergen might move" at three different spots.
Michigan has three veteran backups at defensive tackle in sophomore Will Campbell and seniors Renaldo Sagesse and Greg Banks. All played last year, the latter two decently. Campbell was raw as hell but was one of them OMG SHIRTLESS recruits and can be expected to make a major jump his sophomore year. Putting one of those guys in the starting lineup seems less likely to result in disaster than dropping an underweight freshman into the starting lineup. Craig Roh did okay last year, but Michigan isn't bringing in anyone as touted as Roh was this time around. Also, Mike Martin is more of a penetrating three-technique tackle than a leviathan space-eater and moving him to RVB's old spot figures to get more production out of him.
If RVB doesn't move, then you're going to choose from Heininger, redshirt junior Brandon Herron,—Roh's backup at quick last year—redshirt freshman Anthony LaLota, or true freshmen. Herron was a linebacker a year ago and is likely to still be undersized and LaLota showed up two inches and thirty pounds lighter than people expected him to. He probably needs another year.
The thing to watch for this spring is the RVB move. Past that, the developmental paths of Campbell, Roh, and LaLota are the main points of interest.
Hoping for… as the guy that is not Brandon Graham? Will Campbell. This assumes RVB ends up at DE and Martin moves over to RVBs spot. Moving RVB gets a bunch of veterans and a five-star sophomore more playing time. It puts Mike Martin in a position to be seriously disruptive. And it doesn't force a freshman into the starting lineup. So this is a hope for the move and a hope for Campbell to explode.
Expecting… RVB moves, Sagesse and Campbell platoon. I was puzzled by Michigan's periodic attempts to give Campbell playing time over Sagesse last year. Campbell got sealed on a number of successful runs against Iowa; Sagesse wasn't Alan Branch but usually ended up with a +1 in UFR. I assume Campbell will show considerable progress but I'm also betting that Sagesse is basically a co-starter.
Spinner
The Departed
Over the course of a year, Stevie Brown went from whipping boy to reliable outpost on a defense of chaos. Was it a position move? Greg Robinson's Just For Men magic?
The Candidates
They're young but they're not totally green. Michigan got both Brandin Hawthorne and Mike Jones in early last year and put them through their paces; by the UConn game next year they'll have been on campus for almost two years. Both saw special teams action only. Hawthorne will apply for a medical redshirt. Jones played too much for one. That's him burning his redshirt on the right.
Those two will be the main competitors in spring since I believe Isaiah Bell, who redshirted, is moving inside to ROL. This fall brings crazy athletic Josh Furman into the mix. He of the 4.3 electronic 40 is probably even faster than Brown and could press for playing time later in the season if Hawthorne and Jones aren't working out. He's unlikely to win the job outright immediately.
Hoping for… Hawthorne or Jones doesn't seem like it makes a difference since they have near-identical recruiting profiles and experience. I guess I'm pulling for Hawthorne since he's got a redshirt on him and I like the Pahokee kids.
Expecting… Again, Hawthorne and Jones have almost nothing separating them. One of those guys.
Regular Ol' Linebacker
The Departed
No one.
The Candidates
These two positions are here despite featuring two fifth-year seniors returning for their third years of starting because both Obi Ezeh and Jonas Mouton were yanked for performance reasons late last season. Indecision ruled the day:
No… seriously.
Mouton was pulled for JB Fitzgerald, a touted recruit entering his third year in the program. Ezeh was pulled for Kevin Leach, another walk-on. Both eventually won their jobs back when the replacements weren't much better.
Jay Hopson left to become the defensive coordinator at Memphis, and whether it was voluntary or not it's welcome. Ezeh went nowhere in two years under Hopson's tutelage and Mouton went backwards. If Greg Robinson can pull the same career revival magic he did with Stevie Brown on the two inside guys, he'll put to rest a large chunk of the skepticism at his hire and go a long way towards making the defense respectable again.
If he can't, then Fitzgerald and Leach will figure into the plans again, with potential assists from Kenny Demens and various freshmen. Demens hasn't gotten off special teams in his time at Michigan and got passed by a walk-on. That seems like a kiss of death there.
Ezeh and Mouton will be the main focus here.
Hoping for… I'd like Fitzgerald to emerge as a starter but in the place of Ezeh; last year the guy replacing Ezeh was Leach. Really I'd just like whoever plays at linebacker to look like he's got a clue. Obi-Wan Greg Robinson, you're our only hope.
Expecting… Ezeh and Mouton. They'll be better. Linebackers are the guys most screwed by Michigan's revolving door of defensive coordinators because they are almost always reading a play and executing a complicated assignment based on that. Also they've got a new coach who happens to be the defensive coordinator and thus knows exactly what he wants the guys to be doing.
Cornerback
The Departed
Donovan Warren took his budding skills and five-star hype to the middle rounds of the NFL draft. Boubacar Cissoko couldn't keep it together off the field and is no longer on the team.
The Candidates
I'm assuming both spots are open because of the possibility Troy Woolfolk moves back to deep safety in spring. The defense started imploding for serious once he was moved to corner and Michigan's safety tandem became Kovacs and Williams
Outside of Woolfolk, the one guy with any experience is JT Floyd. Floyd was the guy the coaching staff turned to to replace Cissoko when he proved dreadful early in the year. He wasn't much better and Woolfolk eventually had to move despite the other options at safety being a freshman student-body walk-on and Mike Williams. In his brief time as a starter, Floyd played ten yards off wide receivers and looked totally overmatched. Maybe that's a mental thing, but he seemed just too slow for the Big Ten.
So… yeah. It's more freshmen, then. Super-hyped recruit Justin Turner got in late because of some difficulties with the Ohio Graduation Test and ended up out of shape and unprepared to play. He redshirted. Even if he came in looking like Will Campbell, if Turner couldn't play in that secondary by the end of the year people are right to be at least slightly concerned he may not pan out.
And then there's the flood of true freshmen. With Demar Dorsey starting out at corner, Michigan has four in the 2010 class: Dorsey, Courtney Avery, Cullen Christian, and Terry Talbott. None enrolled early—unfortunately, all of Michigan's early enrollees were on the offensive side of the ball—and they will be just rumors this spring.
We won't get a read on this position at all unless walk-on Floyd Simmons is ahead of someone on the depth chart. We will get a first look at Turner, the team's most important redshirt freshman.
Hoping for… Justin Turner and either Dorsey or Christian. No Woolfolk == considerably reduced panic at safety. One freshman is as good as any other at the other spot, I guess, but I'd rather have the higher-rated guys off to fast starts. No offense to Floyd, but he obviously wasn't ready last year and I'd be surprised if he was this year. Maybe 2011.
Expecting… Turner and Woolfolk.
Box Safety
The Departed
Brandon Smith transferred to Temple.
The Candidates
It's clear that this is going to be another hybrid safety/LB type player. Early in the year, it was Mike Williams. A little later it was Jordan Kovacs. When Woolfolk moved to corner it was Williams again, and when Williams played poorly Michigan moved Brandon Smith and threw him in the starting lineup; Smith liked it so much he immediately transferred.
Of the two returners, Kovacs was by far the superior option despite being a walk-on. He's got the proverbial nose for the ball and was the only guy at the spot last year to turn in enough good plays to offset his poor ones. And he did this as a freshman walk-on. (He was technically a redshirt freshman but since he was not on the team last year he is much closer to a true freshman.) He showed himself way too slow to play deep safety, but the grit fantastic he is possession of should keep him in the mix despite a couple of athletes pushing him hard.
Athlete the first is incoming freshman Marvin Robinson, who everyone thinks is destined for linebacker except Robinson. At Michigan he may be a linebacker in spirit if not in name. This is a spot he's a superior fit for athletically but it may require some adjustment.
Athlete the second is hypothetical, but Rodriguez mentioned in a Signing Day press conference: they're looking at moving wide receiver Cam Gordon to defense, but to safety. [Update: YEAH THAT HAPPENED.] That's another indicator that Michigan's base set is going to be an eight-man front, as Gordon is a strapping 6'2" fellow who everyone expected would end up at… wait for it… linebacker. If Gordon makes the move it will give Kovacs and Williams some competition from an NFL-sized guy right away.
This is also where Carvin Johnson goes, but I'm guessing he'll redshirt.
Hoping for… I don't really know, actually. I guess I'd like Robinson to win the starting job, but a true freshman over Kovacs and Gordon could bode unwell for immediate production. Maybe Kovacs to start and eventually giving way to Robinson.
Expecting… I have no idea. Truly.
Deep Safety
The Departed
No one.
The Candidates
As discussed above, if this is Kovacs Michigan is at least kind of screwed. I mean no offense to the guy, but…
…he is not a deep safety*. In an ideal world, two of the young corners would establish themselves quickly enough for Michigan to boot Troy Woolfolk back here. That world is much easier to envision if any of those guys had enrolled early.
If Woolfolk doesn't make the move back, Michigan has a couple options not fresh off the turnip truck. Vlad Emilien and Thomas Gordon are redshirt freshmen who will be given a shot at the job. Emilien was more highly touted and actually held the starting free safety job in spring until late, when Woolfolk took over and he was relegated to backup duty. He saw some special teams time in fall but will apply for an injury redshirt. Gordon was primarily a high school quarterback at Cass Tech—he only started playing DB as a senior-year audition for a Michigan scholarship—and never threatened to see the field last year.
Freshman Ray Vinopal will reinforce in fall, but as the lowest-rated player in the class he will probably redshirt.
Hoping for… Woolfolk. I'd rather have the freshmen playing at corner, where Woolfolk can tackle their mistakes.
Expecting… Emilien. I'm a little hesitant about him since he enrolled early last year and still wasn't good enough to crack last year's secondary, but maybe he had a lingering injury issue.
*(RVB owned up to a botched line check on that touchdown but it was a lack of footspeed from Kovacs and, more disturbingly, Floyd, that turned that play from 20 yards into 90.)
Others
What others? Apparently Teric Jones might stick on defense, apparently at box safety. I think I've mentioned every other scholarship defensive player on campus except Steve Watson and James Rogers.
Upon Further Review: Defense vs Illinois
Video note: Unfortunately my computer rebooted itself after applying an "important update" last night, which obliterated a 14-hour process via which I convert the torrent into something clippable. So no video today. I will go back in an add it later, and I'll revisit the key points in a couple of Picture Pages posts.
Personnel notes: Leach replaced Ezeh until very late; Ezeh and Kenny Demens were part of the goal line package, though, with Leach apparently relegated to the bench because he's slight. The rest of it was as per usual, thought it seemed like the starting DL got more time than usual.
Michigan did continue its passing down substitution package, replacing Williams with JT Floyd.
Formation notes: This is what I'm calling "4-3 under split" based on an earlier Steve Sharik post:
Both outside linebackers are on the LOS with Leach a single middle linebacker. Michigan went to this frequently against 2TE formations.
And this is what I'm calling "nickel even":
It's not really a nickel package, with Brown on the slot receiver, but it functions more like a nickel package than a standard 4-3 as Michigan would play two deep behind it unless Williams rolled up into the box. Note the position of the DTs right on top of each other, with both guys playing 1-techs over the center. This was probably an adjustment to what Illinois runs more than anything else.
Possibly annoying terminology note: I tried to call Juice Williams "Juice" because if I call him Williams sometimes Williams does something to Williams and that gets confusing.
On with the show:
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Play | Player | Yards | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| O18 | 1 | 10 | Ace 4-wide | 4-3 under | Run | Inside zone | Roh | 0 | ||||
| Roh(+2) shoots inside the tackle at the snap into the intended hole, is held blatantly, and is basically tackled, but still manages to force the RB back behind the play and tackles with help from Mouton, who didn't have to do much other than clean up with Leshoure already going down by the time he arrives. (tackling +1) | ||||||||||||
| O18 | 2 | 10 | Shotgun 2-back Twins | 4-3 under | Run | Triple option veer | Graham | 27 | ||||
| Uncalled illegal formation as Illinois only has six on the line. It's hard to hand out minuses here because I'm not sure who's got which assignment. Graham crashes down on the dive fake and tackles it; Mouton hangs inside and gets blocked by a guy who should not have an angle on him. I definitely blame Mouton(-1) for sucking in; even if this was a dive he was going to get obliterated by the tackle for not knowing WTF was going on; Warren comes up to support on the pitch guy but with no one on Williams it's an easy big gain. I also blame Graham(-2), though, because this dive was stuffed anyway and if he had stayed out Illinois had nowhere to go. Good job by Leach to hop into the appropriate hole, FWIW. | ||||||||||||
| O45 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun trips | 4-3 nickel even | Run | QB counter trap | Mouton | 6 | ||||
| Both the backside T and G pull around as the rest of the line blocks down; Juice fakes a handoff to Leshoure that holds Graham outside. Roh(+1) actually does a good job of reading it and getting inside of the puling G, but Williams(-1) and Mouton(-1) run themselves into blocks passively; here the pulling OT has to route around the Roh-based disruption and he still gets a good block on Williams. Result: six yards. | ||||||||||||
| M49 | 2 | 4 | Shotgun 3-wide | 4-3 under | Pass | Flare | -- | 14 | ||||
| Williams rolls up to the LOS and blitzes; no one gets out on the tailback rolling out of the backfield on a flare route and he's wide open(cover -2) for plenty of yards. I don't know if this is on anyone specifically; sometimes you have a blitz read that changes if you see the RB head out of the backfield like that, sometimes you don't. (RPS -1) | ||||||||||||
| M35 | 1 | 10 | I-Form | 4-3 under | Pass | Scramble | -- | 4 | ||||
| Busted play. Illinois wants to throw a long handoff to Benn but Benn runs a route. Juice improvises for a few yards; Leach did a decent job of reading it and coming to tackle. | ||||||||||||
| M31 | 2 | 6 | Shotgun 2TE | 4-4 under | Pass | Long handoff | Warren | 12 | ||||
| Warren(-1) playing in the parking lot and giving this to Illinois (RPS -1, cover -1). He then misses a tackle(-1), adding several yards. | ||||||||||||
| M19 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun 3-wide | 4-3 nickel even | Pass | Long handoff | Warren | 4 | ||||
| Man, Warren keeps bailing into three deep at the snap here and Illinois is looking for it; they get it again here but Warren and Williams do manage to hold it down to four yards. A small victory. | ||||||||||||
| M15 | 2 | 6 | Shotgun 4-wide | 4-3 under | Run | Speed option | Williams | 5 | ||||
| Benn goes in motion and Kovacs immediately signals for Williams to attack the LOS. Looks like Michigan has this scouted and expects Illinois to run a speed option to the now-overloaded short side. They do. Williams(-1) gets crushed by the TE and driven back; Warren is bailing out into cover-three and can't help on the edge. | ||||||||||||
| M10 | 3 | 1 | Shotgun 2-back 2TE | 4-4 under | Run | Zone stretch(?) | Brown | 4 | ||||
| Illinois confuses Michigan by shooting one RB past Juice and using the other one as a lead blocker for him; Brown(-1) ends up sitting back the whole play, sucking inside when Williams does his draw fake and giving up the corner for the RB instead of following his assignment and getting out on the edge to hold this down. He was not blocked at all and could have crushed this since Graham absorbed a double team and no one was out on him. | ||||||||||||
| M6 | 1 | G | Ace Twins | 4-3 under split | Run | Inside zone | Leach | 1 | ||||
| Think this is just Michigan beating the Illinois playcall with this split formation. Playside TE is taken upfield by OLB Mouton; DE Roh slants inside, taking the tackle with him, and Leach(+1) reads the direction of the play, shooting into the hole to tackle with help from Williams. (RPS +1) | ||||||||||||
| M5 | 2 | G | Shotgun 3-wide | 4-3 nickel even | Run | QB zone stretch | Leach | 2 | ||||
| Roh(-0.5) is flowing down the line okay when he trips and hits the ground, opening up some space. Leach(+1) reads the direction of the play, flows outside too quickly for a guard getting a free release to get an angle on him, takes on the lead block from the RB, sheds, it, and tackles(+1). Very good play from him. | ||||||||||||
| M3 | 3 | G | Power I | ??? | Run | Power off tackle | Williams | 3 | ||||
| 2TE, I-form, Benn lined up next to the fullback. You tell me what to call this. [Update: it's the power I.] Illinois runs a version of a power o; Williams(-1) is blitzing and gets in unmolested but goes inside of the fullback and fails to string the play out enough because Mouton got slightly chopped by a linebacker. Mouton keeps his feet but is off balance and in no shape to hold up to the RB's lead block. Warren makes a valiant effort to get out on the edge; Benn leaps over him for a score. | ||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Touchdown, 7-0, 9 min 1st Q. | ||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Play | Player | Yards | ||||
| O19 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun 4-wide | 4-3 nickel even | Run | Speed option keeper | Roh | 2 | ||||
| Roh(+1) gets into the DE, refuses to get sealed, and strings this out to the sideline, cutting off the room and forcing Juice OOB basically by himself. Leach had also flowed down the LOS and was there to assist on the escort. | ||||||||||||
| O21 | 2 | 8 | I-Form Twins | 4-3 under | Run | Pitch sweep | Mouton | 6 | ||||
| Ford, the FB, motions out; Warren is in zone and follows. Play is a pitch sweep with pulling linemen on which Graham(+1) shoots into the backfield, taking out a pulling guard and absorbing two blockers. This leaves Mouton(-1) totally unblocked; he overruns the play and is fortunate to grab the RB as he passes; this could have been two yards and was six because of Mouton. | ||||||||||||
| O27 | 3 | 2 | Shotgun 3-wide | 4-3 nickel split | Run | Zone read stretch | Van Bergen | -1 | ||||
| Backside of the line just doesn't get blocked as Martin(+0.5) and Graham(+0.5) slice up, but the key is RVB(+1) coming upfield of an attempted double despite another blatant hold and getting in the running lane, forcing a cutback into doom. I don't know if this was a technically sound play by RVB, who ended up attempting to shove his back into the RB, but it worked. James notes that Williams is totally irresponsible on the read here, and this will bite Michigan later. | ||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Punt, 7-7, 2 min 2nd Q. Michigan muffs the punt. | ||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Play | Player | Yards | ||||
| M41 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun trips | 4-3 nickel even | Run | QB counter trap | Williams | 14 | ||||
| Same play as earlier, with the backside tackle and guard pulling around to the backside as the RB makes a fake out to the edge. Juice keeps it, following his lead blockers. Roh heads inside, drawing a blocker; Mouton(-1) also dives inside even though any tailback handoff is something he's not going to be able to get to; he's run himself out of the play despite a bleeding obvious double pull from the OL. This leaves Williams(-1) on the edge with an OL. He compounds matters by losing leverage and letting Juice outside of him. Even if Mouton had played this correctly, it wouldn't have helped. Juice breaks outside for good yardage. | ||||||||||||
| M27 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun 4-wide | 4-3 nickel even | Pass | PA seam | Williams | Inc | ||||
| Play action gets Michigan sucking up, with Williams(-1) reduced to an ineffectual chuck on Benn as he realizes he's not about to get blocked into next week but is instead going to give up a wide open route(cover -1). Juice turfs it. Mouton(+0.5) did a pretty good job of avoiding the RB's block to get some pressure. | ||||||||||||
| M27 | 2 | 10 | I-Form | 4-4 under | Run | Speed option | Warren | 6 | ||||
| Michigan drops back into a two-deep look as Benn comes across the formation with Warren dropping into a second deep safety slot; Illinois runs at the vacated area. Graham forces a pitch; FB crushes Williams(-0.5) back; he has no chance to do anything once he guy locks on. Warren(-0.5) reacts late and can only undercut the RB as he nears five yards; he cartwheels forward for more. (RPS -1) | ||||||||||||
| M21 | 3 | 4 | Shotgun 2TE Twins | 4-3 under split | Pass | Hitch | Brown | Inc | ||||
| RB motions out and Leach goes with him in man. Michigan sends six, with Brown(+1) coming unblocked to hit Williams as he throws (pressure +1), which might be the reason this hitch is thrown wide of the receiver. Might be just Juice, too. (RPS +1) | ||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Missed FG(38), 1 min 1st Q. | ||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Play | Player | Yards | ||||
| O10 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun 4-wide | 4-3 under split | Run | Zone veer handoff | Mouton | -3 | ||||
| If this is a read, Juice made the wrong one, because he hands off to the back when Mouton(+2, tackling +1) is coming up on him hard and it seems like an up-the-middle keeper is called for. This is impressive change of direction and tackling from Mouton. | ||||||||||||
| O7 | 2 | 13 | Shotgun 2-back | 4-3 under | Run | Triple option dive | Brown | 8 | ||||
| This isn't so much a dive as an off tackle but eh that's life. Brown(-2) ends up totally unblocked in the hole as he crashes down from the slot receiver but whiffs a tackle(-1), turning zero yards into eight. Leach cleans up; I'm impressed Leach read the play well enough to get over to tackle. He's played well so far. | ||||||||||||
| O15 | 3 | 5 | Shotgun 3-wide | 4-3 nickel even | Pass | Sack | Martin | -9 | ||||
| DTs twist and Michigan blitzes two linebackers, causing Martin(+2) to slant into the backfield past the center and the guard, who have other problems, as the Michigan blitz causes Illinois to bust a pickup. (RPS +1) Martin gets there first and forces Juice to pull the ball down; RVB(+1) follows it up to crush Williams for a big loss. (Pressure +2) | ||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Punt, 7-7, 11 min 2nd Q. | ||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Play | Player | Yards | ||||
| O27 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun 4-wide | 4-3 under | Run | Zone read keeper | Mouton | 5 (Pen -10) | ||||
| Given future events this is scary: Illinois runs a read intended to shoot the right between the backside tackle and DT and should have a huge gainer, but Juice keeps it. I mean, really, if this is a handoff it could be a 70 yard touchdown. Juice keeps it and fakes a bubble, which is also there since Mouton(-1) has failed to cover either the handoff or the bubble or the keeper, and Williams picks up five before the other Williams tackles him. Holding brings it back. | ||||||||||||
| O17 | 1 | 20 | I-Form | 4-4 under | Run | Speed option | Williams | 3 | ||||
| Usual course of events: Illinois doesn't block Graham and forces him to force a pitch; this time Williams(+1) gets to the outside shoulder of his blocker and drives him upfield, forcing the pitch man to the sidelines and making this a minimal gain. (RPS +1) Good blitz call. | ||||||||||||
| O20 | 2 | 17 | I-Form | 4-4 under | Run | Inside zone | Roh | -1 | ||||
| Roh(+1) on a slant, he steps inside of the guard(!) and gets upfield into the path of the run, forcing the play to the backside. He gets a hand on the RB's thigh, slowing him and allowing Williams to finish with an easy tackle. (RPS +1) | ||||||||||||
| O19 | 3 | 18 | Shotgun 2TE Twins | Nickel | Pass | Sack | Graham | -9 | ||||
| Williams pulled for Floyd; M drops seven guys off into deep coverage but it doesn't matter much because Graham(+3) murders the freshman RT and crushes Williams almost before he can set up in the pocket (pressure +2) | ||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Punt, 10-7, 5 min 2nd Q. | ||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Play | Player | Yards | ||||
| O29 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun 4-wide | 4-3 under | Run | Zone read keeper | Graham | 1 | ||||
| Graham(+1) stays home, drifting slightly inside. Juice pulls it out and Graham gets out on him as he passes, grabbing Juice from behind and tackling with help from Williams (+0.5), who makes the easy fill given Graham's presence all over Juice's back. | ||||||||||||
| O30 | 2 | 9 | Shotgun 4-wide | 4-3 under | Run | Speed option | Williams | 3 | ||||
| Williams(+1) reacts quickly and fills to the short side of the field. Unblocked, he tackles(+1) for a minimal gain. | ||||||||||||
| O33 | 3 | 6 | Shotgun 3-wide | 4-3 under | Pass | Sack | Leach | -9 | ||||
| First read is a hitch that Roh(+1, cover +1) has dropped out on and covers; Juice probably has a slant against Woolfolk but can't find it before Leach(+2), who's looped around on a delayed blitz, gets in on Williams and forces him to take evasive action. Leach comes in under control and reads Juice's planned scramble, securing a solid tackle against a guy considerably more athletic than him. Very nice play; I've seen so many guys overrun this. (Pressure +1, RPS +1) | ||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Punt, 13-7, 30 sec 2nd Q. Rodriguez doesn't call timeout with a minute left in the half. They go after the punt, but don't get it. | ||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Play | Player | Yards | ||||
| O1 | 1 | 10 | Ace | 4-3 under | Run | QB sneak | -- | 2 | ||||
| Eh. | ||||||||||||
| O3 | 2 | 8 | Ace Twins | 4-3 under | Run | Zone stretch | Roh | 5 | ||||
| Frontside jammed up by Graham(+0.5) and Martin(+0.5), forcing a cutback into Roh(+1), who has zipped into the backfield. Ford ends up carrying Roh, though—he used power—a couple yards downfield, at which point Williams(-1) lays a wicked hit on... Roh. Leshore gets another three yards out of it. (Tackling -1) | ||||||||||||
| O8 | 3 | 3 | Shotgun 4-wide | 4-3 under | Run | Speed option | -- | 4 | ||||
| Illinois motions Benn to the short side of the field for a trips look and run their speed option. Michigan is slanting away from it, which means Graham sucks in and is blocked by the line as Mouton shoots upfield unblocked; Juice pitches outside, where there is no support. Would rather see Michigan force Juice to take the ball here, but that's not how they've been playing it. (RPS -1) Williams does come up through blockers to lay a pop on the RB as he reaches the sticks, but the RB wins that battle and gets the yard he needs. | ||||||||||||
| O12 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun 2TE | 4-3 under | Run | Draw? | Brown | 1 | ||||
| Illinois OL sets up to pass block, sliding the line one way and then handing the ball off the other way. Handoff is awkward and almost fumbled but I don't think it would matter because Michigan's slant + RVB stunt leaves no holes and gets three guys in unblocked on the tailback. He goes nowhere. (RPS +1) I guess Brown (+0.5) for keeping contain. | ||||||||||||
| O13 | 2 | 9 | Shotgun 2TE | 4-4 under | Pass | Hitch | Mouton | 17 | ||||
| Same setup as the previous play except Juice keeps it. TE Cumberland runs a good hitch route but Juice is a little late and Mouton has a shot at making a play here; he fails(-1), diving over the top without getting the ball and giving this guy another 7 YAC. (Tackling -1) | ||||||||||||
| O30 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun 4-wide | Nickel under | Run | Zone read dive | Leach | 70 | ||||
| I don't know who's issue this is. Michigan is in a pure two-deep with Mouton rolled up the LOS and Brown over one of the slot guys, with Leach the only real MLB aligned like that. On the snap, Michigan's DL slides a bit and Roh gets kicked out by single blocking, opening up a hole here. Roh's not really defending Juice or the dive, so he gets a -1. Then: Mouton backs out and appears to be spying on Juice on a potential keeper, and Williams is sucking up as Benn runs a bubble route. Reasonable. However, Leach(-3) runs himself way out of the play in anticipation of a stretch that Illinois doesn't really run much; they run this all the time. He then compounds the error by not freaking out and running back downfield away from a releasing C; he gets blocked out of the play. Kovacs(-2) is dropping into a deep zone and does not come up soon enough to get an angle to slow the RB down, and he runs for a long way. Oh, and hell, Mouton(-2) had no idea who had the ball way too long and failed to close down either Juice or the RB. | ||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Touchdown,13-14, 9 min 3rd Q. | ||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Play | Player | Yards | ||||
| O21 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun 4-wide | 4-3 under | Run | Triple option dive | Williams | 27 | ||||
| Ugh, ugh, ugh. Illinois motions a guy into the backfield for a two-back look and Williams is keying on this so he flies to the LOS. Illinois runs a triple option look off of it; Williams(-2) blitzes into the backfield and has this dive dead to rights, but comes in way too hard and gets back-juked. Freakin' disaster. Opposite of what Leach did earlier. Guy now has a huge cutback lane since the linebackers are to the playside and Roh(-1) got his ass kicked and let himself get shoved out of the hole. Probably wouldn't have mattered much but might have held it down if Roh could provide some delay here. (Tackling -2) | ||||||||||||
| O48 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun 2TE | 4-4 under | Pass | TE Wheel | -- | 34 | ||||
| Michigan in a two-deep zone that Williams cannot get out onto his guy on because he's picked by Benn and rode down the field. Probably should be offensive PI but they never call that. Can't really blame Williams here; he can't run through a dude. Result is an open bomb that Michigan can't do anything about. Pocket was great for Juice, too. (Pressure -1, cover -2, RPS -1) | ||||||||||||
| M18 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun 2TE Twins | 4-3 under | Run | Zone read keeper | Brown | 2 | ||||
| Michigan slants so hard that the backside TE and OT have no one to block and can just roll downfield. Herron crashes down on the RB, causing Juice to pull it. Mouton(+1) came up to the line, read the RB's path, and hopped playside of the C's attempted block, which lets him flow down the line past the guys who released downfield, and Brown is unblocked coming in from the edge. This makes the bubble pretty open but it works. Brown(+1) sets up and makes a good open field tackle(+1). | ||||||||||||
| M16 | 2 | 8 | Shotgun 2-back | 3-4 nickel | Pass | Wheel | Brown | Inc (Pen + 14) | ||||
| Brown(-2) is decent position on this play but never turns around to look for the ball and ends up pushing this receiver before the ball gets there because it's underthrown. I hate these calls, which reward the offense for being inept more than anything else. Pressure was coming, possibly resulting in a marginal throw. I keep watching this and I hate this call so much. It's ridiculous. Guy is in position and trying to make a play and should have a right to his momentum; instead he gets a call. | ||||||||||||
| M2 | 1 | G | Power I | Goal line | Pass | Waggle flat | Ezeh | 2 | ||||
| All eleven players freak out assuming it'll be the same Benn sweep, leaving both TEs wide, wide open. Ezeh(-1) and Mouton(-1) and cover -2. | ||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Touchdown, 13-21, 5 min 3rd Q. aaaargh | ||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Play | Player | Yards | ||||
| M45 | 1 | 10 | Ace 4-wide | 4-3 under | Run | Inside zone | Sagesse | 5 | ||||
| Blocking the backside DE here and shoving Sagesse(-1) way down the line opens up a hole that Mouton can't fill fast enough despite reading the play quickly and getting to the ball as fast as you can reasonably expect. Hole too big and Sagesse moving too far out of it in anticipation of a stretch. | ||||||||||||
| M40 | 2 | 5 | Shotgun 2-back Twins | 4-3 under | Run | Triple option dive | Banks? | 7 | ||||
| This really should go nowhere as the two backup DTs get some push and Brown gets past the slot receiver to sit unblocked in the hole. But Sagesse bulling his way into the back of the LT doesn't prevent the LG from getting out on Leach and when the RB tries to cut back into the mess that is the four guys in the middle of the line he somehow squirts through for first-down yardage. I'm not sure who, if anyone, is to blame here other than bloody-minded fate. I'm going to -0.5 Banks for getting kicked out of the hole eventually, I think. | ||||||||||||
| M33 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun 2TE Twins | 4-3 under split | Pass | Sack | Brown | -8 | ||||
| OLBs flanking the LOS here on this two TE package and both are sent on a blitz. RB has the pickup on Brown(+2), who sets up inside then bursts upfield of his blocker, sacking Juice when he tries to move up in the pocket only to hit his own RB. Graham(+1) was driving the RG back into the pocket, creating the restricted space in which Juice had few scrambling options. (Pressure +2) | ||||||||||||
| M41 | 2 | 18 | Shotgun 4-wide | 4-3 under | Pass | Fade | Woolfolk | 37 | ||||
| Of course. Michigan sends four with Herron backing out into a short zone and Graham(+1) immediately crushes the guard attempting to block him, hitting Juice as he throws what's basically and arm-punt, Juice Williams gets nailed as he throws. Juice Williams. His throw? Perfect. Woolfolk(-1) was beat deep in man press (cover -1), but not that badly and the receiver made a spectacular catch. I mean... Christ. | ||||||||||||
| M4 | 1 | G | Ace Twins | 4-3 under split | Run | Inside zone | Martin | 1 | ||||
| Martin(+1) back in; he drives playside of his blocker and forces a cutback into Herron(+0.5), who is one-on-one in some space with the TB and holds him to basically no YAC. Maybe one before the cavalry arrives. | ||||||||||||
| M3 | 2 | G | Shotgun 2-back TE | 4-3 under split | Pass | Zone read keeper | Williams | 3 | ||||
| Williams(-2), the contain guy, completely overruns the play and Juice takes it in for an easy touchdown. | ||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Touchdown,13-28, 1 min 3rd Q. Here's to you, worst third quarter ever. | ||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Play | Player | Yards | ||||
| O21 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun trips | 4-3 nickel even | Run | Veer handoff | Martin | -6 | ||||
| Play Illinois has run earlier with a veer outside look paired with the backside guard and tackle pulling around. This time Juice hands it off... for some reason. This doesn't seem like it can be a real read because it just doesn't block two guys on the frontside of this play, and Martin(+1) and Graham proceed to crush this guy in the backfield. No idea how this handoff ever works. | ||||||||||||
| O15 | 2 | 16 | I-Form | 4-3 under | Run | Pitch sweep | Mouton | 4 | ||||
| FB motions out for three-wide look and Illinois runs a down G scheme with a pitchout, pulling the playside G around as the down-block Graham. Mouton(+1) gets outside of the pulling guard and upfield, forcing the play back inside to Leach, who tackles(+1) a couple yards downfield with help from Williams. Graham also did a good job of flowing down the line and preventing the other pulling OL from getting out on Leach. | ||||||||||||
| O19 | 3 | 12 | Shotgun 4-wide | 4-3 under split | Run | QB draw | Graham | 26 | ||||
| Oh, right. This. This looks like a scramble at first blush but there are linemen releasing downfield, it's a called run. Graham(-1) comes too hard inside and vacates a passing lane. Martin(-1) is doubled and blasted way out of the center of the field; Leach(-1) ends up way overrunning Juice's cutback lane, and the safeties are nowhere to be found. (RPS -1) | ||||||||||||
| O47 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun 4-wide | 4-3 under | Run | Zone read dive | Leach | 5 | ||||
| Martin(+1) and Graham do a good job of cutting off any potential frontside holes and there's nowhere to go there; there's a cutback from the RB into unblocked linebackers since Martin absorbed a double. Leach(-1) does not read it quickly and ends up taking a hit from the RB two yards downfield, getting bowled over for another 3 YAC. Should have/could have reacted more quickly to hold this down. | ||||||||||||
| M48 | 2 | 5 | Shotgun 2TE Twins | 4-3 under split | Run | Zone read dive | Kovacs | 22 | ||||
| Same play. Michigan is stunting, which ends up seeing RVB run outside and out of the play, opening up a crease. This time Leach(-1), who can't win, has delayed waiting for a cutback to the Martin/Graham side and gets sucked into a mess. Herron(-1) could not hold the POA on his stunt and gets blown back, which doesn't help matters. Kovacs(-1) then misses a tackle(-1) and turns this from a first down into lots of yards. | ||||||||||||
| M26 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun 2TE Twins | 3-4 Base | Run | Zone read keeper | Williams | 23 | ||||
| is this on Williams or Mouton? Williams blitzes off the snap and can be thought of as a crashing backside DE. Is Michigan supposed to scrape here, then? That would make sense to contain this, as Williams has the dive dead to rights and Mouton could scrape out to contain Juice. I don't know which it is. I originally gave Williams minus two billion because I'm just fed up with him, but I think this might be on Mouton, who lord knows has had some serious mental issues this year. One of these two guys gets a negative two billion. I tentatively assign them to Williams. | ||||||||||||
| M3 | 1 | G | Power I | Goal line | Run | Speed option | Ezeh | 1 | ||||
| Brown pops up on the QB, forcing a pitch, and Ezeh(+1) manages to get outside the lead blocks from the FB and TE to force the play back inside where Demens and Graham are; RB falls, possibly because of Graham, for no gain. | ||||||||||||
| M2 | 2 | G | Power I | Goal line | Run | Iso | Martin | -4 | ||||
| Absolutely nowhere to go as Martin(+1) wins the battle with his guy and Graham dives forward, creating an impenetrable pile of bodies. Campbell(+1) cuts through a block on the backside and grabs the RB's foot, causing him to fumble. (For a loose definition of "caused".) Illinois gets it back, though a few yards short of the LOS. | ||||||||||||
| M6 | 3 | G | Shotgun 2TE offset | Goal line | Pass | PA TE corner | Williams | Inc | ||||
| Unbalanced formation with both Ts on the same side of the line; this is an attempt to fool Michigan into leaving the RT—actually a TE—uncovered. That doesn't quite work but Williams(-1) gets beat by Cumberland and Juice can hit him for a TD; it glances off his fingertips. Brown was applying pressure on the corner. Bonus: Cumberland was covered up on the LOS and that went uncalled. Woo Big Ten refs. | ||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: FG(23), 13-31, 9 min 3rd Q. | ||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Play | Player | Yards | ||||
| O11 | 1 | 10 | Ace | 4-3 under | Run | Inside zone | Watson | 8 | ||||
| For some reason, Steve Watson is in at deathbacker. Watson(-1) falls to the ground as Michigan flows down the line against the zone blocking, opening up a cutback lane the RB hits. Ezeh's in and gets blocked; Williams(-1) basically whiffs a tackle but the RB falls as he cuts behind it. | ||||||||||||
| O19 | 2 | 2 | Shotgun 2-back Twins | 4-3 under | Run | Busted play | -- | -2 | ||||
| Juice fumbles the snap. | ||||||||||||
| O17 | 3 | 4 | Shotgun 4-wide | 4-3 under | Run | Speed option | Watson | 6 | ||||
| There is no one on the edge as Watson(-1) drops off into a zone, weirdly, and Mouton gets caught up in the wash of the WR blocking the hell out of Watson. Juice has an easy time moving up for the first down. (RPS –1) | ||||||||||||
| O23 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun 2TE Twins | 4-3 under | Run | Zone read keeper | Watson | 1 | ||||
| WOOO THE DRIVE OF WATSON. Here Watson(+2) does a great job as the unblocked DE, convincing Juice to keep the ball by coming down a little bit on the RB, then hopping out to contain him. Forced back inside, Juice is tackled by Watson from behind. | ||||||||||||
| O24 | 2 | 9 | Shotgun 4-wide | 4-3 under | Run | Zone veer keeper | Ezeh | 11 | ||||
| Here's why Ezeh's lost his job. Michigan slants and shifts Ezeh right over the hole where this Illinois veer play goes if Juice keeps the ball. Mouton has shot upfield to erase the potential handoff, leaving Ezeh(-2) alone in the hole with one assignment: Williams. Ezeh, of course, decides to run out and try to tackle the tailback. Who Mouton has owned. And doesn't have the ball. | ||||||||||||
| O35 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun 4-wide | 4-3 nickel even | Run | Inside zone | Mouton | 3 | ||||
| Good by the DTs to hold the POA and Mouton(+1) attacks quickly, swallowing the RB in the backfield when he hesitates. | ||||||||||||
| O38 | 2 | 7 | Shotgun 2TE | 3-4 Base | Pass | Long handoff | -- | Inc | ||||
| Behind the receiver and incomplete. | ||||||||||||
| O38 | 3 | 7 | Shotgun 3-wide | 4-3 under | Pass | Cross | Brown | 5 | ||||
| Dumpoff short of the sticks. | ||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Punt, 13-31, 4 min 4th Q. Charting stops. I would have stopped it already if I had known Watson was in. Graham(+3) blocks the punt. | ||||||||||||
What's this coming out of my eyes?
It looks like ichor of some variety.
Gross. Are you sure it's not blood?
I didn't think tentacled Cthulu-beasts had blood.
I thought I was Boubacar Cissoko.
Fine: tiny tentacled Cthulu-beasts with poor ability to model the future.
I think a chart might focus the pain emanating from my eyesockets into one white-hot point. I heard people undergoing torture do stuff like that Chart?
Chart.
| Defensive Line | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Player | + | - | T | Notes |
| Graham | 11 | 3 | 8 | Not quite up to the usual standard as I think he got suckered on a couple of runs, but still pretty good. |
| Heininger | - | - | - | Didn't record anything. |
| Watson | 2 | 2 | 0 | Replacing Patterson because he got on the field late. |
| Roh | 7 | 2.5 | 4.5 | Effective slanting all day; not great in pass rush yet. |
| Herron | 1.5 | 1 | 0.5 | Eh. |
| Martin | 7 | 1 | 6 | No frontside creases all day; too bad about the linebackers. |
| Van Bergen | 2 | - | 2 | Not a major factor. |
| Banks | - | 0.5 | -0.5 | Played less. |
| Sagesse | - | 1 | -1 | Meh. |
| Campbell | 1 | - | 1 | Good play on the goal line. |
| TOTAL | 31.5 | 11 | 20.5 | Same total number as against Penn State, weirdly. |
| Linebacker | ||||
| Player | + | - | T | Notes |
| Ezeh | 1 | 3 | -2 | Managed to do this on like five plays. |
| Mouton | 5.5 | 9 | -3.5 | The usual at this point. Excellent athlete, many mental mistakes. |
| Brown | 4.5 | 5 | -0.5 | He's okay. |
| Fitzgerald | - | - | - | DNP |
| Leach | 4 | 6 | -2 | Better than Ezeh, and did okay, with half of his minuses coming on the big play. |
| TOTAL | 14 | 23 | -9 | Also the exact same total as against Penn State. |
| Secondary | ||||
| Player | + | - | T | Notes |
| Warren | - | 1.5 | -1.5 | Not tested. |
| Cissoko | - | - | - | Happy trails. |
| Floyd | - | - | - | DNP. |
| Turner | - | - | - | DNP. |
| Woolfolk | - | 1 | -1 | The one bomb, otherwise not tested. |
| Williams | 2.5 | 14.5 | -12 | DELICATELY PHRASED STATEMENT. |
| Emilien | - | - | - | DNP |
| Kovacs | - | 3 | -3 | Again burned as a deep half safety. |
| TOTAL | 2.5 | 20 | -17.5 | Blar. |
| Metrics | ||||
| Pressure | 9 | 1 | 8 | Poor BG. |
| Coverage | 1 | 9 | -8 | Argh. |
| Tackling | 5 | 7 | -2 | First negative tackling day. |
| RPS | 8 | 7 | 1 | Scheme seemed fine. |
[A reminder: RPS is "rock, paper, scissors." Michigan gets a + when they call a play that makes it very easy for them to defend the opponent, like getting a free blitzer. They get a – when they call a play that makes it very difficult for them to defend the opponent, like showing a seven-man blitz and having Penn State get easy touchdowns twice.]
That appears to be a huge negative number next to Mike Williams's name.
Yeah. First a disclaimer: it is possible some of those minuses should migrate over to other folks on the defense because Williams wasn't actually the guy who was supposed to have contain as Michigan was running a scrape exchange. I watched the plays a lot, though, and think there's only one instance where that is a serious possibility. On the others it seemed obvious that Williams was irresponsible.
This is not a surprise. Williams was –6 against Iowa and –4 against Penn State, and the Penn State numbers were generous. It was evident Michigan was trying to use him to defend the long handoffs, which he could not do for whatever reason. Against Illinois he had a huge problems.
So… yeah. He's the reason—or at least, the emblem of the reason—Misopogon spent the last week of his life composing a master's thesis about Michigan's defensive recruiting and retention relative to its rivals. He's a weak link, probably the weakest, and Michigan has no alternative the rest of this year. Next year they'll have to hope he gets better or that one of the freshmen passes him. I can't see him getting any better after the last three games.
In an SAT analogy:
2009 Michigan Football : Mike Williams :: _______ : ________
A. 2008 Michigan Football : Nick Sheridan
B. Notre Dame Football : South Bend, Indiana
C. MAC Football Programs : Former Lloyd Carr Assistants
D. Life : Entropy
E. All Of The Above
Next year Williams will either be much better or on the bench.
Aren't those sorts of errors on plays Michigan practices against every damn day?
Uh… yeah. I do think it's a bad sign that Williams is making really basic errors that no one should make. "Hey, you have QB contain" is not a thing that should be dependent on which coordinator you're playing for. "Do not let the QB outside of you." Not hard. Apparently, Robinson has taken over coaching the safeties. Eventually he'll be the everything-except-DL coach.
So how was Kevin Leach?
He was okay. There were a lot of plays I thought he did well on that did not rise to the level of a + given the standards I've set for them over the past few years, and the mistakes he made were less mindboggling than the ones Ezeh did in his brief time on the field. Ezeh's main contributions were leaving an Illinois TE vastly wide open on first and goal and running out of a hole that Juice was in when he had the ball. It looked like he though Juice was the Killer Rabbit of Caerbannog.
Er. Check that.
Leach did not remind me of any scenes from Monty Python. He didn't do anything that made me want to hit my head against a wall. There was the one big error on the 70-yard touchdown where he sucked out of position because he was keying on the OL instead of the backfield, but that error was shared by at least four other people.
After a game of Leach I do think he's better than Ezeh, which is a mindboggling statement in a thousand different ways. Redshirt sophomore walk-on > scholarship third-year starting linebacker (and Butkis semifinalist!). Is that a failure to develop talent or just an indictment of Carr's ability to recruit the right sorts of guys late in his career? I hate 'em both.
Should we be grumbling about Robinson? If not, who should we be grumbling about?
I can't imagine the defensive coordinator who can mash these parts together and come up with something good. I have been saying this since the start of the year, though: the linebacker play has been consistently terrible despite experienced players returning and at least some continuity at coaching the position. Maybe it's just that Michigan picked up a bunch of duds, but Mouton's stunning regression is a black mark from any angle.
Other than that, read the masters thesis. We dead, and we aren't going to be in a position to be good next year. Better? If not, heads will start rolling in earnest. Good? No.
Heroes?
Graham and Martin both played very well.
Goats?
See SAT analogy above.
Also, Jordan Kovacs was much better in the quasi-LB role than he is as a deep safety. This is not really his fault.
What does it mean for Purdue and the future?
Oh, hell. It seems likely that one of these days Michigan is going to have a game in which they do not have huge screwups that yield long touchdowns for the opposition and everyone moaning about it is going to have to take a step back, but that day seems likely to come in 2010 at the earliest. The safeties are just totally inadequate, the linebackers remain subpar even after the Ezeh-Leach switch, and the DL is making a valiant effort only to see huge cutback runs and ridiculous lost contain submarine all their efforts.
As for Purdue, they picked up 140 yards last week, so there's a chance if we catch them on one of their bad Boiler days, but this is an offense designed to tear up the middle of the field with short passes and Michigan is uniquely positioned to not stop this sort of offense. The defense will remain terrible until 2010.
Upon Further Review: Defense vs Penn State
Personnel notes: As noted Monday, Michigan had an actual substitution package: on passing downs Williams would be replaced by Cissoko. For obvious reasons, that's unlikely to continue down the road. The rest of it was as usual, with the line rotating regularly and no one else coming out ever. One exception: late in the game Obi Ezeh was yanked twice, first for a play and then for the rest of a drive, in favor of Fitzgerald. Each time he got to the sidelines an exasperated Jay Hopson tried to explain something to him.
Formation notes. My lingo is probably all screwed up now but Michigan did this a lot:
I called this "4-4 under" but here I think this one is an over shift—the line is actually moved towards the TE side of the formation—and that Michigan was not playing this based on where Penn State was but where the ball was. Steve notes that Michigan shifted the line to "field"—the wide side—over 80% of the time in the first half. So under-over is not really the distinction. Michigan is lining up shifted to the wide side of the field with both the LBs and line, relying on the idea that Graham will obliterate Poti so badly that Penn State won't even try to run that direction. This was basically correct.
This eight-man front with Warren playing off allows Michigan to play man or zone with Warren part of your two-deep. This is an obvious response to Iowa's third and 24 conversion: freak out and try to get away with Warren as a part-time safety. This formation was the one in which all the ARGH long handoffs occurred. Burgeoning Wolverine Star picture-paged one of these happening and Steve noted it too: the responsibility on the long handoffs is Williams's, and he kept getting chewed out for the screwups here. On the play linked above Williams looks into the backfield instead of hauling ass for the receiver, but on later plays he just hauls ass and doesn't get there. Maybe this works if you're Taylor Mays, but Mike Williams was evidently incapable of pulling off this assignment. Steve blames Williams; as you'll see below I just think this is unworkable with the personnel Michigan has and go all RPS* –1 on Robinson.
Play ID note: a helpful high school coach illuminated the difference between the "Power O" and the "Down G"; on Power O a backside guard pulls around, usually into a hole between a kickout block from a tackle or TE and the interior down block. On Down G a playside guard pulls around and the play goes further outside, with the guy who's kicking out on a Power O down-blocking instead.
On with show.
*(Rock, Paper, Scissors.)
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Play | Player | Yards | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| O37 | 1 | 10 | Ace 4-wide | 4-3 over | Pass | PA deep hitch | Warren | 14 | ||||
| Michigan actually shifted to the strength of the formation here. [ed: as noted above, it will become clear why only later.] PSU goes play action, sucking two guys (Mouton and Williams) up into Quarless, but it doesn't really matter since they're going to this comeback route against Warren, which is open(cover -1); immediate tackle afterwards. TE was wide open, too, with Ezeh trailing ineffectually (cover –1). | ||||||||||||
| M49 | 1 | 10 | Ace 4-wide | 4-3 under | Run | Inside zone | Williams | 41 | ||||
| Michigan shows a true two-deep, not the border-field alignment. Martin is doubled and shoved back on a play that's clearly designed to go inside, but he splits the double team(+1) after they push him back a couple yards, causing Royster to shift his tactics. Mouton(-1) has gotten way too far inside and given up a huge cutback lane that should never be there; Williams(-3) comes up way, way too far inside, losing “leverage” on the ball—i.e. letting the dude outside of him—and turning eight yards into 41. It is possible that Graham(-1) had the responsibility here on the outside and it wasn't Mouton's screwup on the first level. | ||||||||||||
| M8 | 1 | G | I-Form | 4-4 under | Run | Iso(?) | Mouton | -2 | ||||
| Apparently a straight ahead, man-blocked run designed to go right off tackle. Graham(+1) blows through his blocker, forcing Royster outside; Mouton(+1) has shot into the hole and takes on the fullback two yards in the backfield, tumbling over him and tackling inadvertently; Ezeh(+1) avoided an OL and zooms up to make sure there's no way Royster can keep going if he keeps his feet. | ||||||||||||
| M10 | 2 | G | Shotgun 3-wide | 4-3 under split | Pass | Corner | Brown | 10 | ||||
| Michigan shows one deep safety and runs man coverage; this is the sort of thing that Clark was talking about when he said M didn't disguise coverages. No late shifts or anything, so this is really obvious that Brown is not going to be able to cover(-1) Zug on this, given his inside leverage on the guy. He's inside of the player, has no support, and is just going to lose this matchup no matter who he is. Very poor from Robinson(RPS -1). | ||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Touchdown, 7-7, 9 min 1st Q. | ||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Play | Player | Yards | ||||
| O35 | 1 | 10 | Ace 3-wide | 4-4 under | Pass | PA Out | Brown | 17 | ||||
| Again going to the slot receiver, who is in man coverage against Kovacs(-2, cover -2). Kovacs just bails and bails and has no chance of coming up on this. Kovacs as a deep safety is just not going to work in this sort of coverage, but it's pick your poison. Ezeh(-0.5) could have helped but got sucked up by the play action. Martin(+1) had busted past his guy and clobbered Clark as he threw (pressure +1). | ||||||||||||
| M48 | 1 | 10 | Ace Twins Twin TE | 4-3 under | Run | Inside zone | Graham | 5 | ||||
| Graham(+1) slants inside the TE, beating both blocks and forcing a cutback behind; Mouton's run himself out of the play but that's understandable; Williams(-1) fills late despite having no responsibilities deep because both TEs are clearly blocking Graham, turning this cutback from zero into four. | ||||||||||||
| M43 | 2 | 5 | I-Form | 4-3 under | Pass | Scramble | Ezeh | 9 | ||||
| Zone blitz sees Roh drop off as Ezeh and Brown come and Graham/Martin stunt around. This is sufficiently confusing to the OL that both guys get through, basically, but Ezeh(-1) has failed to get to the correct side of his blocker and thus does not maintain his rush lane, opening up an avenue for Clark to escape what would otherwise be a sure sack. I mean, Ezeh is clearly setting up to go around the other way as Graham stunts free behind him and then he just loses his mind, attempting to go up the same hole Graham does. Fail. Just fail. I've got this set up for a Picture Pages tomorrow. | ||||||||||||
| M34 | 1 | 10 | I-Form Twins | 4-4 under | Run | Power O | Mouton | 7 | ||||
| This is never going to be an I-form, with the two RBs lined up right next to each other. Michigan doesn't read it and when Royster motions out, Ezeh(?!?!) follows him instead of Brown, the obvious choice, after significant confusion. Van Bergen(-0.5) gets downblocked, opening up a hole. Brown is trying to take on a pulling guard and can't do much other than get blocked; Mouton(-0.5) failed to read the play until it was a bit too late and ends up making contact five yards downfield with a guy in his face; the pile falls the wrong way. Michigan got beat by the playcall here, fooled into sucking Ezeh out into space against Royster instead of sending Brown, the logical guy, out there. (RPS -1) | ||||||||||||
| M27 | 2 | 3 | Ace Twins Twin TE | 4-3 under | Run | Down G | Mouton | 4 | ||||
| Downblock on Graham(-1) by a tight end ends up pancaking him; Mouton(-1) accepts a block from Quarless and can't do anything to prevent this play from hitting it up for the first down. | ||||||||||||
| M23 | 1 | 10 | Ace | 4-3 under | Run | Inside zone | Graham | -2 | ||||
| Graham(+2) slants right by Quarless on the snap, exploding into the backfield and crushing Royster without assistance from anyone else. RVB(+1) also beat his guy and was there to vaguely assist on the tackle. | ||||||||||||
| M25 | 2 | 12 | Shotgun 3-wide | 4-4 under | Pass | Jailbreak screen | Warren | 8 | ||||
| Royster motions out for an empty backfield. Well executed by Penn State, but Warren is playing ten yards off and wandering back at the snap, which means he meets Moye 6 yards downfield and gets bashed; the first instance of M just giving PSU yards at the snap. (Cover -1) Not sure if Warren or Williams deserves a ding here. –0.5 for both. | ||||||||||||
| M17 | 3 | 4 | Ace 3-wide | Nickel even | Pass | Fade | Warren | Inc | ||||
| Michigan sends both MLBs up the middle and don't get there; Michigan tips this, I think, with the position of the safeties, so Clark knows he has this over Warren, in press coverage. Moye has a step and the size to go over Warren if this is accurate, but Clark overthrows it. I won't cover -1 this, because it was okay. I thought about RPS -1 here, too. | ||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Field goal(34), 7-10, 3 min 1st Q. Penn State's kicker has an enormous head. | ||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Play | Player | Yards | ||||
| O37 | 1 | 10 | I-Form | 4-4 under | Pass | Long handoff | Warren | 8 | ||||
| I don't know if this is Warren's fault or not, which I'll explain later. [ed: or earlier, as the case may be.] In any case, Warren's playing forever off (cover -1) and has no chance of holding this down. RPS -1. This was the first of these. | ||||||||||||
| O45 | 2 | 2 | Shotgun 4-wide | 4-3 under | Pass | Bubble screen | -- | 8 | ||||
| Wide open from the start; don't know if Mouton has responsibility here or not but they've got bubbles on both sides and neither is really covered. (cover -1, RPS -1) | ||||||||||||
| M47 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun 3-wide | 4-4 under | Pass | PA Deep post | Warren | Inc | ||||
| Play action zone read on which Clark keeps it, fakes the keeper, and then backs out to pass. Herron eventually looses himself after he realizes it's a pass and hits Clark as he throws; Clark had decent time. The eventual throw is into double coverage that Kovacs is in okay position on, but help from Warren(+1 cover +1) makes this covered; receiver falls of his own volition. Warren in a deep half here, you'll note, and in way better position to actually help on the play than Kovacs. | ||||||||||||
| M47 | 2 | 10 | Ace Twins Twin TE | 4-3 under | Pass | Scramble | -- | 1 | ||||
| Clark looks for the bubble but the receiver is trying to block; busted play. Clark scrambles for a yard. | ||||||||||||
| M46 | 3 | 9 | Shotgun 3-wide | 4-3 under split | Pass | Screen | Van Bergen | 1 | ||||
| Michigan shows and brings the DEATH BLITZ of seven guys, except RVB and Martin back out, with RVB(+2) making a fantastic play by reading the screen, darting past two blockers and seeing the third take a futile stab at blocking him, and tackling(+1) at the LOS. Warren was coming up and this would have remained short even without the tackle from RVB since he'd killed the blocking, but he didn't even chance it. (RPS +1) | ||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Punt, 7-10, 14 min 2nd Q. | ||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Play | Player | Yards | ||||
| O27 | 1 | 10 | I-Form | 4-4 under | Pass | Long handoff | -- | 8 | ||||
| I don't understand this. Warren is ten yards off, basically another safety, and Michigan expects to defend this by shooting Williams into the flat, which might work if Williams immediately runs out there, but he doesn't. (RPS -1, cover -1) Free yards. BWS picture-paged this. | ||||||||||||
| O35 | 2 | 2 | I-Form Twins | 4-3 under | Pass | Fade | Kovacs | Inc | ||||
| Royster motions out; this time it's zone so Warren moves out. Woolfolk(-1) jumps up on the little out route, which opens up a deeper fade route run by Moye. It's open(cover -1), but Moye falls down and the ball ends up hitting him in the foot. | ||||||||||||
| O35 | 3 | 2 | Ace | 4-4 under | Run | End-around | Mouton | 11 | ||||
| TE pulls across the formation to act as a lead blocker; Williams is out there providing some contain but can do little but force the play inside. He does, where no one picks him up because Mouton(-2) sucked inside. It's bad when your linebackers' suckiness is part of the gameplan. | ||||||||||||
| O46 | 1 | 10 | Ace 4-wide | 4-3 under | Run | Inside zone | -- | 4 | ||||
| Martin(-1) gets blown back by a double, allowing Royster to hit it up behind him; Ezeh(+0.5) reads the play and comes under the blocker attempting to get out on him, tackling with help from Mouton(+0.5) and making this an eh gain. | ||||||||||||
| 50 | 2 | 6 | Ace | 4-4 under | Run | Inside zone | Graham | -5 | ||||
| Michigan must have called the right thing to murder this play because Graham(+2, RPS +1) shoots into the backfield right by a PSU OL and Martin isn't far behind. Graham meets Royster four yards in the backfield; he escapes but Roh and Martin clean up. | ||||||||||||
| O45 | 1 | 10 | Ace 3-wide | 4-3 under | Pass | Sack | Roh | -3 | ||||
| Roh(+2) is excellent on the stunt here, selling the outside move and then shooting inside with spectacular speed to dart through the gap Van Bergen(+1) makes. Roh is in on Clark and sacks him, albeit tenuously. If Clark escaped he was dead meat anyway with Martin closing in and linebackers close enough to prevent a long run. (Pressure +2.) | ||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Punt, 7-10, 9 min 2nd Q. | ||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Play | Player | Yards | ||||
| M40 | 1 | 10 | Ace Twins | 4-3 under | Pass | Waggle comeback | Kovacs | Inc | ||||
| Again working on Kovacs(-1), who gives the receiver a ton of time and space (cover -1) as Clark gets the edge without anyone in the vicinity (pressure -1). Clark leaves the throw short and the receiver can't dig out a semi-tough catch (a 2, if you're wondering). | ||||||||||||
| M40 | 2 | 10 | I-Form | 4-4 under | Pass | Long handoff | -- | 7 | ||||
| Here Williams takes off to the short side of the field immediately and still doesn't close it down; I don't know WTF this scheme is supposed to be but it just doesn't work. (Cover -1, RPS -1). This was also picture-paged by BWS. | ||||||||||||
| M33 | 3 | 3 | Shotgun 4-wide | Nickel even | Pass | Circle | -- | Inc | ||||
| Michigan rushes... two. This works, I guess, as the DTs drop off into the hitches(cover +1) and cause Clark to delay. The DEs are closing in, though Clark can just slip up in the pocket to buy more time and doesn't, causing a throw. It's a bit low and dropped as one of the hitches turns his route into a circle. Warren was drawing up to hit the receiver... maybe not a first down if completed. But maybe yes a first down. The third and final picture-paged play from BWS. (RPS +1) | ||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Punt(!!!), 7-10, 5 min 2nd Q. I know it worked. That does not make it right. Penn State sucked out. | ||||||||||||
| O40 | 1 | 10 | Ace 3-wide | 4-4 under | Pass | TE Seam | -- | 60 | ||||
| This is just a straight release downfield with Ezeh in man against a guy he can't cover. There is no safety help, because Michigan is in this weird split package they'd run all game that gets people open short for long handoffs and open deep for easy touchdowns. Things and people to blame: Herron –2 for not getting a chuck on the TE. This is something Michigan's done all year and this is just a bust. Ezeh –1 for getting smoked on the coverage. And Kovacs –2 for not getting into his deep half despite not having another deep threat anywhere. (Cover -3) | ||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Touchdown, 7-19, 4 min 2nd Q. | ||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Play | Player | Yards | ||||
| O18 | 1 | 10 | I-Form Twins | 4-3 under | Penalty | False start | -- | -5 | ||||
| Royster motions out; Warren out there on him. Not that it matters. | ||||||||||||
| M13 | 1 | 15 | I-Form | 4-4 under | Run | Down G | Roh | 1 | ||||
| Roh(+1) reads the pull and doesn't let the TE seal him, which forces the play outside; Ezeh(+1) blasts into the lead blockers, also forcing the play back inside; Royster's already tripping over Roh when Graham's pursuit engulfs him. | ||||||||||||
| M14 | 2 | 14 | I-Form | 4-4 under | Penalty | False start | -- | -5 | ||||
| Oops. | ||||||||||||
| M9 | 2 | 19 | I-Form | 4-4 under | Run | Delay | Graham | 2 | ||||
| Fake the long handoff then give it inside to Beachum; Graham(+1) has penetrated, shoving the OL back three yards and forcing Beachum to cut behind him, where a bunch of Michigan players, some drawn by the PA fake, converge. | ||||||||||||
| M11 | 3 | 17 | Ace 3-wide | Nickel even | Run | Delay | -- | 4 | ||||
| Give up and punt. | ||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Punt, 7-19, 2 min 2nd Q. End of half, big kickoff return afterwards. | ||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Play | Player | Yards | ||||
| M43 | 1 | 10 | I-Form Twins | 4-3 under | Pass | Corner | Williams | 31 | ||||
| I don't understand this coverage that gets Warren sucked up, covering no one in what appears to be man zero coverage. Quarless beats it easily to the outside, Clark finds him, and it's a big gain. (Cover -2, RPS -1). | ||||||||||||
| M12 | 1 | 10 | Ace Twins Twin TE | 4-4 under | Run | Inside zone | Williams | 0 | ||||
| Williams sent on a blitz that gets him through totally unblocked as Quarless, who motioned to one side, comes back to block the other. Royster runs right into him and this could be a four-yard loss, but Williams can't wrap up and Royster bounces to the original LOS. (RPS +1) | ||||||||||||
| M12 | 2 | 10 | Shotgun empty | 4-3 under split | Run | QB draw | Graham | 2 | ||||
| Mouton blitzing from the outside so Graham(+1) has a rush lane more inside of that; he reads the draw, beats the tackle to the inside, and tackles just as Clark reaches the line. | ||||||||||||
| M10 | 3 | 8 | Shotgun 3-wide | Nickel even | Pass | Corner | -- | 10 | ||||
| Michigan brings the safeties up to the line, showing a blitz well before the snap; Clark checks and Michigan does not check in response. Zug just runs a rounded out in the endzone that Clark knows will be there. Brown, lined up inside, can't get there, and Clark hits him as Michigan blitzes seven (cover -2, RPS -2). Same play as the earlier TD. | ||||||||||||
| M3 | 2pt | G | Shotgun empty | Nickel even | Pass | Slant | Banks | Inc | ||||
| A zone blitz from Michigan sees both DTs drop into coverage again, which cuts off Clark's first read on the slant (cover +1). Blitz is about to get home so Clark chucks it anyway to a covered(+1) Moye; Woolfolk(+1) there. | ||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Touchdown(2pt failed) 7-25, 12 min 3rd Q. Clark was right about the coverages. It's clear he knows exactly what Michigan is going to run before the snap and Michigan's personnel can't make up for it. All Zug has to do is run a really easy route against a guy lined up inside of him and woop touchdown. | ||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Play | Player | Yards | ||||
| O25 | 1 | 10 | Ace 3-wide | 4-4 under | Run | Inside zone | Graham | 13 | ||||
| Starts off in Penn State's fake I-form with Royster motioning out, Ezeh goes with him. Failure (RPS -1). Graham(-2) runs himself upfield and out of the play when Williams is blitzing, which means two guys are just running past the backside and there's a huge cutback lane. | ||||||||||||
| O38 | 1 | 10 | I-Form | 4-3 over | Pass | Dumpoff | -- | Inc | ||||
| Clark has some time but not a ton before Graham and Martin get past blockers and start converging; with options downfield covered(+1) he comes to a checkdown; ball is dropped by the FB. | ||||||||||||
| O38 | 2 | 10 | Ace 3-wide | 4-4 under | Pass | Slant | Ezeh | 23 | ||||
| Fake I-form, again Ezeh(RPS -1) attempts to go out and cover. His coverage is terrible(-2), as you might expect, as he gives Royster so much room he's not there to tackle on the catch, and then he misses a tackle(-1, Ezeh -1); Kovacs(-1, tackle -1) then misses another one. | ||||||||||||
| M39 | 1 | 10 | Ace Twins Twin TE | 4-3 over | Pass | Bubble screen | Woolfolk | Inc | ||||
| Pass ends up dropped but Woolfolk(+1) had beaten his blocker cleanly and was probably going to tackle this for a minimal gain(cover +1). | ||||||||||||
| M39 | 2 | 10 | Ace | 4-3 under | Run | Inside zone | Ezeh | 2 | ||||
| Ezeh(+1) shoots into the backfield—blitzing—and gets in on Beachum; he misses the tackle(-1), turning a loss into a decent gain. | ||||||||||||
| M39 | 3 | 8 | Shotgun 3-wide | 4-3 under | Pass | Sack | Graham | -8 | ||||
| Graham is lined up way, way outside of even the TE. TE releases, Graham(+3) bursts past the tackle's feeble attempt to block him, and sacks Clark with some help from Van Bergen. (Pressure +2) | ||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Punt, 7-25, 9 min 3rd Q.This is the dangerous play that should not happen. | ||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Play | Player | Yards | ||||
| M22 | 1 | 10 | Ace Twins | 4-4 under | Run | Down G | Brown | 5 | ||||
| Center and playside guard pull around as PSU downblocks RVB and creases the line. Mouton(+1) does a good job of getting to one of the lead blockers and closing down the space but Brown(-1) is hesitant, perhaps expecting the TE to release—although he waits way too long after it's clear he won't—and provides a crease outside of Mouton, away from the pursuing Ezeh. Ezeh does continue to flow down the line and tackles(+1) well. | ||||||||||||
| M17 | 2 | 5 | I-Form | 4-4 under | Pass | Post | Warren | 17 | ||||
| Warren(-1) in man coverage against Moye. He turns his hips upfield in anticipation of a fade, does it way too early, and leaves this wide open(-2) for a touchdown. | ||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Touchdown, 10-32, 7 min 3rd Q. | ||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Play | Player | Yards | ||||
| O25 | 1 | 10 | I-Form | 4-3 under | Run | Zone stretch | Ezeh | 6 | ||||
| Banks(-1) gets sealed on this play but the LBs are both flowing down hill very quickly, which means Mouton(+1) doesn't get blocked by the first OL and absorbs the G releasing into the second level. He does a pretty decent job of avoiding the block and being a pest. Ezeh(-1), totally unblocked, sets up outside and lets Royster crease the two LBs. (Tackling -1) | ||||||||||||
| O31 | 2 | 4 | Ace 3-wide | 4-3 under | Run | Power O | Heininger | 1 | ||||
| Heininger(+2)(!) is slanting on this play and gets right past the backside tackle into the gap that the pulling guard has vacated. He slants right into Royster and tackles(+1) despite having an OT on his back. Another outside blitz from Williams plus a DE, this time Roh, getting too far upfield, would have given Royster plenty of room had Heininger not made this play. | ||||||||||||
| O32 | 3 | 3 | Ace 3-wide | Nickel under | Pass | Fade | Warren | Inc | ||||
| Warren(+1) in excellent coverage(+1) so Penn State tries to throw it to the back shoulder of the WR, which is tough, especially when Moye's kind of clunky. Pass is well short and inside and incomplete. Six rushers on this play forced an early throw; Michigan fortunate PSU wasn't looking at a freakin' wide open Quarless on a little hitch. | ||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Punt, 10-32, 5 min 3rd Q. Graham(+3) blocks a punt. | ||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Play | Player | Yards | ||||
| O20 | 1 | 10 | Ace Twin TE | 4-4 under | Run | Inside zone | Sagesse | 7 | ||||
| Coupled with an end-around fake; DL does a decent job but Sagesse(-0.5) spins only half way, allowing Royster to hit it up in a small crease; Ezeh(-0.5) and Mouton(-0.5) passively accept blocks and aren't much help except as traffic cones. | ||||||||||||
| O27 | 2 | 3 | Ace 3-wide | 4-4 under | Run | Power O | Graham | -2 | ||||
| Fake I-form; this time Mouton goes out on Royster. Finally. Ezeh has been yanked for Fitzgerald. Graham(+2) blasts into the backfield like a shot, dominating Poti and actually getting into a guard pulling away from him; he then attempts to tackle Royster with two guys draped on him. Can't quite do it but Brown is unblocked in the hole and happy to clean up. | ||||||||||||
| O25 | 3 | 5 | I-Form | 4-3 under | Pass | Screen | Mouton | 2 | ||||
| Jebus, Graham(+1) is actually a guy they're trying to block and he still almost kills Clark on a screen. Michigan has made the DTs passive, so they're in position to absorb blockers; Mouton(+1), in a short zone, reads the play and forces it back into Martin. (RPS +1, cover +1) | ||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Punt, 10-32, 2 min 3rd Q. | ||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Play | Player | Yards | ||||
| O20 | 1 | 10 | Ace Twins Twin TE | 4-4 under | Pass | Waggle deep post | Kovacs | Inc | ||||
| Play action rollout on which Roh(+1, pressure +1) gets to the outside on, forcing Clark to pull up and threatening to sack. Clark decides to bomb it deep into double coverage(+1), with Kovacs(+1) in better position to bring this in than the receiver. | ||||||||||||
| O20 | 2 | 10 | I-Form Twins | 4-4 under | Run | Zone stretch(?) | Van Bergen | 8 | ||||
| I don't recognize this blocking scheme. It appears the playside OT and C get to block players lined up away from them, which is like the opposite of a reach block, and get their guys. Graham avoids a cut on the backside and should kill any cutback but for Van Bergen(-1) getting seriously owned by the LG. Brown(-1) accepts a block, delaying everyone, and Mouton(-1) overruns the play, opening up a cutback lane for Royster. Graham(+0.5) does recover to tackle from behind. | ||||||||||||
| O28 | 3 | 2 | Ace Twin TE | 4-4 under | Run | Inside zone | Graham | 2 | ||||
| Graham(+1) again beats his blocker well to the inside and would crush this play if he wasn't tackled by the LT. Very frustrating. As it is, there's a couple guys on the ground where doom would have been otherwise and Royster manages to burrow through it and a couple other guys for a first down. | ||||||||||||
| O30 | 1 | 10 | I-Form Twins | 4-3 under | Run | Down G | Williams | 5 | ||||
| Graham(+1) beats a blocker and is into the backfield, forcing Beachum to delay as he passes. Mouton(-0.5) ends up cut by the fullback and passed by; Williams(-1) whiffs a tackle(-1) and turns two into five. | ||||||||||||
| O35 | 2 | 5 | Ace Twins Twin TE | 4-4 under | Run | Inside zone | Van Bergen | 11 | ||||
| Michigan really selling out on the front side of the play; Van Bergen(-1) is chopped to the ground and opens up a cutback lane. Ezeh(-1) has run himself out of the play after Brown went to cover the TE in motion, and is so out of position he can't even tackle after a gain. Beachum falls before Kovacs can attempt a tackle. | ||||||||||||
| O46 | 1 | 10 | I-Form | 4-4 under | Pass | Long handoff | Warren | 3 | ||||
| Warren(+1, tackling +1). | ||||||||||||
| O49 | 2 | 7 | Ace 4-wide | 4-3 under split | Run | Delay | Roh | 6 | ||||
| Not exactly sure who or what to blame here. Martin takes a scoop from the C and the backside G so I think this is supposed to go in a gap between Martin and Graham; Martin and Fitzgerald do a good job of closing that hole off, so it's Roh(-1) who fails to close down the backside gap, and Martin(-0.5) who gives a little too much ground, allowing Beachum to plow forward for near first-down yardage. | ||||||||||||
| M45 | 3 | 1 | I-Form | 4-4 under | Run | Naked boot | -- | 12 | ||||
| Williams(-2) loses contain like whoah and there's no one else on third and short.. (RPS -1) | ||||||||||||
| M33 | 1 | 10 | Ace | 4-4 under | Run | Delay | Sagesse | 15 (Pen -10) | ||||
| Sagesse(-1) runs upfield and ends up getting pancaked by a momentary double as the C hurls him to the ground. This draws a shaky holding call from the umpire that erases a big gain. Mouton was in the area but Ezeh(-1) ran himself out of position again, and gets yanked, again. | ||||||||||||
| M43 | 1 | 20 | Ace 3-wide | 4-4 under | Pass | TE drag | Williams | Inc | ||||
| Underneath receivers run the “mesh” play that TT likes so much and Michigan has had big problems with so far this year; here Williams(+1) stays home on the one crossing route and is in position to break up and sort of kind of nearly intercept (cover +1) | ||||||||||||
| M43 | 2 | 20 | Ace | 4-4 under | Run | Delay | Heininger | 4 | ||||
| Looks like there's a crease of sorts but Royster delays, hitting it, possibly because Heininger(+1) has shoved the RT back and then come inside, getting he hell held out of him but at least making the hole look closed off. When Mouton hops outside (OMG contain!), Royster darts back in and because of the hold can pick for a few yards. | ||||||||||||
| M39 | 3 | 16 | Ace 3-wide | Nickel even | Pass | Throwaway | -- | Inc | ||||
| Clark has plenty of time (pressure -1) but first and second options are open (cover +2) and a brief scramble results in Clark just chucking the ball OOB to avoid a sack. | ||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Punt, but a roughing call, 10-32, 9 min 4th Q. | ||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Play | Player | Yards | ||||
| M29 | 1 | 10 | I-Form | 4-4 under | Run | Zone stretch | Martin | 4 | ||||
| Good job by all three playside DL, as Graham(+0.5) does pretty well against a double, Martin(+0.5) gets playside of his guy and beats him, and RVB avoids a cut and flows down the line. Williams blitzed, taking out the FB. He fights inside and gets a hit on Royster that should stop him and does; RVB(-0.5) then overruns it and allows Royster to spin behind—great play by him—and turn nothing into something. | ||||||||||||
| M25 | 2 | 6 | Ace Twins Twin TE | 4-4 under | Run | Delay | Martin | 5 | ||||
| Mouton does an excellent job to read the play, shoot past the guys doubling Martin(-1), who gets blown too far off the ball, and shoot past the pulling TE into the backfield, but he then overruns the play. So no plus as Royster's not that delayed. Williams(-0.5) stumbles coming to the line, preventing him from hitting Royster with force, and Martin can't stand up to him, allowing Royster to fall forward. | ||||||||||||
| M20 | 3 | 1 | I-Form Big | 4-4 under | Run | QB sneak | -- | 1 | ||||
| They get it. | ||||||||||||
| M19 | 1 | 10 | Ace Twin TE | 4-4 under | Run | Delay | Warren | 3 | ||||
| TE motion ends up with Michigan over-shifted to the strong side of the formation. Herron(-1) runs upfield against what's likely to be a run play, opening up a cutback lane when Ezeh(+0.5) fills a small gap between RVB and Martin smartly. Warren(+1, tackling +1) comes up very well to tackle after a minimal gain, partially because Beachum makes a rookie mistake and tries to cut it outside instead of just slamming into a CB trying to tackle him. | ||||||||||||
| M16 | 2 | 7 | I-Form | 4-4 even | Run | Delay | Graham | -1 | ||||
| Ezeh blitzes, absorbing the center and getting playside of him, forcing a cutback. Graham(+1) stunts directly into that, tackling for a minimal gain(+1, RPS +1). | ||||||||||||
| M17 | 3 | 8 | Ace Twin TE | 4-4 under split | Run | Zone stretch | -- | 6 | ||||
| PSU clearly doesn't care, and okay whatever now it's FG time. | ||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Field goal(28), 10-35, 5 min 4th Q. End of charting. | ||||||||||||
Aren't you Mr. Cranky Pants?
Well, maybe I am. Maybe I'm not. To determine that I think we need a—
Chart?
Chart.
| Defensive Line | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Player | + | - | T | Notes |
| Graham | 21 | 4 | 17 | At some point in the second half I emailed Dr. Saturday that Brandon Graham was an All-American and the rest of the defense hated me. |
| Heininger | 3 | - | 3 | …though this suggests that Penn State's RT spot is something of an issue. |
| Patterson | - | - | - | DNP. |
| Roh | 4 | 1 | 3 | Got a sack against the real side of the PSU D. |
| Herron | - | 3 | -3 | One of three culprits on the 60-yard TD. |
| Martin | 2.5 | 2.5 | 0 | Off day. |
| Van Bergen | 4 | 3 | 1 | Also not a great day. |
| Banks | - | - | - | Played less. |
| Sagesse | - | 1.5 | -1.5 | Meh. |
| Campbell | - | - | - | DNP. |
| TOTAL | 34.5 | 14 | 20.5 | Pretty mediocre day outside of Graham. |
| Linebacker | ||||
| Player | + | - | T | Notes |
| Ezeh | 4 | 7 | -3 | Iowa progress gives way to the disappointing usual. |
| Mouton | 4.5 | 8.5 | -4 | Ugh. |
| Brown | - | 2 | -2 | Zug TDs not really his fault. |
| Fitzgerald | - | - | - | Didn't do much. |
| Leach | - | - | - | DNP. |
| TOTAL | 8.5 | 17.5 | -9 | Run filling = very good. Pass defense = very bad. |
| Secondary | ||||
| Player | + | - | T | Notes |
| Warren | 4 | 2.5 | 1.5 | Got burned on one TD. |
| Cissoko | - | - | - | Happy trails. |
| Floyd | - | - | - | DNP. |
| Turner | - | - | - | DNP. |
| Woolfolk | 2 | 1 | 1 | Eh. |
| Williams | 1 | 5 | -4 | Plus more bad news if you think the long handoffs are on him. |
| Emilien | - | - | - | DNP |
| Kovacs | 1 | 6 | -5 | Just can't play a deep half. |
| TOTAL | 7 | 14.5 | -6.5 | It gets worse. |
| Metrics | ||||
| Pressure | 6 | 2 | 4 | Even when PSU went deep Clark was about to get hammered when he threw most of those. |
| Coverage | 13 | 23 | -8 | PSU exploited the safeties and the linebackers all day. |
| Tackling | 5 | 5 | 0 | First even tackling day; think that's bad. |
| RPS | 6 | 13 | -7 | Robinson got pwned. |
[A reminder: RPS is "rock, paper, scissors." Michigan gets a + when they call a play that makes it very easy for them to defend the opponent, like getting a free blitzer. They get a – when they call a play that makes it very difficult for them to defend the opponent, like showing a seven-man blitz and having Penn State get easy touchdowns twice.]
I guess I am pretty cranky.
Why are you such a grump? Iowa put up 30 points and 367 yards of offense to Penn State's 35 and 396 , and Michigan managed to escape that game with way better numbers.
I think it was that all the stuff Penn State was doing came so easy. The Zug touchdowns, the Quarless touchdown, all the long handoffs: all of those plays required nothing more than Penn State not screwing up with wide open receivers. To Clark's credit, he hit all those guys. He then laughed about the primitive defense that Michigan was running, and on review I totally agree: Michigan telegraphed their now-predictable third and long redzone blitzes and got killed. They showed the long handoff was there and got killed. They put Obi Ezeh in man coverage on the edge against Evan Royster and got killed.
That's what the big minus in RPS is there for: I think Robinson got owned by Penn State's offensive brain trust (which is Galen Hall, not Jaypa). This game was slightly reminiscent of the Purdue game a year ago where Michigan switched to a new system and got their brains beaten in by it.
Also, Penn State spent ten minutes of the fourth quarter trying to kill the clock and went on a death march of a drive. It got helped out by a bad penalty on the punter, Penn State successfully strangled the clock. The PSU numbers are basically three quarters of action.
Well, what do you suggest we do?
I don't know. I am sort of mad at Robinson for making it easy by not breaking tendencies with two weeks to prepare. But when you've got Kovacs as your deep safety, what can you do? Kid's smart and can be an effective player in the box but obviously lacks the athleticism to be a deep safety in the Big Ten. This is not a surprise, he is a freshman walk-on. Michigan's not even rolling out third-option fifth-year senior walk-ons like Josh Hull and his Hullstache…
…we're rolling out first-option (IE: no one is injured) freshman walk-ons who are technically redshirt freshmen but didn't even get to be on the team last year because they had a knee injury and so are really just off-the-street hi-who-are-you-get-in-there-Cavanaugh-oops guys. Which makes for cute stories but not good defenses.
And he's obviously better than the other safety! Arrrrgh. I think I need to do me one of those "this is why we suck" lists that shows safety recruiting over the last five years.
Meanwhile, the linebackers remain a disaster and I still think it might be Hopson's fault. Those four spots on the defense are just killing Michigan. They can't cover TEs. They can't have sensible two-deep coverage. They regularly overrun plays on the ground that the DL has destroyed. Williams whiffs tackles and both safeties are totally unsuited for deep coverage to the point where Michigan is trying to use Warren as some sort of hybrid CB/S just so they can run two-deep without a guaranteed touchdown, just a high chance of touchdown.
I guess I suggest we wait and hope things are better next year because eight guys returning should make up for the loss of Graham.
Heroes?
Brandon Graham.
Goats?
The slightly poorer set of folks not named Graham: Greg Robinson, Mike Williams, Jordan Kovacs, and pick a linebacker.
What does it mean for Illinois and the rest of the season?
Well, Brandon Graham is going to do an awful lot to stop opposition offenses and he needs some help. Kovacs as a deep safety (oddly, in Michigan's system this is the "strong" safety) doesn't work, Williams as a deep safety doesn't work, Floyd as a cornerback doesn't work, Michigan has two Big Ten level secondary members and guys who might not start for a good MAC team elsewhere. There is no hope for that the rest of the season.
I've given up on the linebackers, and it sounds like the coaches are getting there, too. The line is actually pretty good, non-Graham off day against Penn State nonwithstanding.
Upon Further Review: Defense vs Iowa
Video note: This week's torrent is in a format I can't figure out how to clip, so I'm converting it to something I know works. This process is currently scheduled to complete at around 9 PM. So no video today, unfortunately. I'll add it later. [UPDATE: Video added.]
Goofy new complicated metric note: I was convinced to try out a "Rock-Paper-Scissors" metric and tried but it didn't really work because I forgot about it 80% of the time. I will try again next week. Those will be the "RPS" +/- below; the general concept is that when Michigan's coaches get owned by someone else's playcall they get a minus and vice versa; Moeaki Disaster I, when Iowa released their TE into the seam after duping Williams into a blitz, was the inspiration for this.
Personnel notes: Woolfolk moved to corner and Williams re-entered the starting lineup as a safety; Kovacs was usually the guy in the box and Woolfolk the deep guy, but sometimes they switched. Michigan's rotation on the defensive line continued, but Will Campbell replaced Renaldo Sagesse as Mike Martin's primary backup. Not sure why, because Campbell proved he was not ready.
Michigan broke out a flat, aggressive package like so:
I think this is something USC runs from time to time called "double eagle".
You can see the NT head-up on the center and the two DTs in tight against a standard ace formation. Each guy is flanked by two linebacker-type players, Michigan is in man on the outside (see Woolfolk following the receiver in motion), and they're going to slant into the backfield. Suggestions as to what to call this welcome.
On with the show:
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Play | Player | Yards | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| O34 | 1 | 10 | I-Form | 4-3 under | Run | Zone left | Mouton | 1 | ||||
| RVB gets walled off by a double team but this was a double from a playside guy and there was no chance he was going to run through that. This allows LBs to flow to the hole unimpeded. Roh(+0.5) shoves a guy away and ends up off balance but in the hole and he delays the tailback with a missed tackle attempt. Meanwhile, it looks like Mouton has done something disastrous by heading inside of the tackle that was blocking Roh; Ezeh follows because that's his hole, and once the tailback escapes he's got a lot of green in front of him; he's thwarted by a desperate diving tackle from Mouton. Very, very fortunate. I can't minus Mouton here but I want to. | ||||||||||||
| O35 | 2 | 9 | Ace 3-wide | 4-3 under | Pass | Yakety Sax | Warren | Int | ||||
| Stanziball! I have no idea what the hell this was supposed to be, but it's chucked right at Warren(+1), who's not particularly near any Iowa receviers, and returned for a touchdown. Woo? Can I even cover + 1 this? I guess so. | ||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Defensive touchdown, 7-0, 14 min 1st Q. | ||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Play | Player | Yards | ||||
| O43 | 1 | 10 | Ace Twin TE Twins | 4-3 under | Run | Zone right | Martin | 5 | ||||
| Note that for most of the game Michigan will run press man on the corners, something I bet they've wanted to do all year but could not. Here Martin(-0.5) gets sealed by a scoop block that gets a blocker with a great angle out on Mouton; this would be a -1 but for Martin fighting through the remaining blocker to tackle the RB as he shoots through the hole Martin ceded. | ||||||||||||
| O48 | 2 | 5 | I-Form | 4-3 under | Run | Zone left | Ezeh | 0 | ||||
| Michigan slanting away from the play, which sees Roh shoot inside the OT upfield, dragging the tackle out of the play and leaving a pretty big hole occupied by Michigan's ILBs, the Iowa FB, and Wegher. Ezeh(+1) gets outside of the fullback, forcing the play back into Mouton(+0.5), who tackles(+1) at the LOS with help from a good fill from Kovacs(+0.5). | ||||||||||||
| O48 | 3 | 5 | Ace 3-wide | 4-3 under | Pass | Hitch | Warren | 9 | ||||
| Warren is communicating something to Kovacs at the snap, which might make him flatfooted to start the play. In any case, Stanzi has plenty of time (pressure -1) to step and fire to a wide open McNutt on a simple hitch for the first (cover -1, Warren -1) | ||||||||||||
| M43 | 1 | 10 | I-Form | 4-3 under | Pass | Throwaway | Williams | Inc | ||||
| Iowa trying to burn Warren on a stop and go, but a blitz from Williams(+1) shoves a tailback into Stanzi, forcing him to start scrambling(pressure +1). Graham then tears through the line, knocking everyone over except Stanzi; Ezeh misses to the outside (tackling –1) and as he and Martin converge Stanzi manages to get it away. | ||||||||||||
| M43 | 2 | 10 | Ace Twin TE | 4-3 under | Run | Zone left | Brown | 7 | ||||
| Stross motions in to make this a 3 TE look. This play appears to be meant to go inside from the RB's initial angle; he bounces it out as Martin(+1) tears through a double and can't be sealed. Brown(-1), however, is, giving up the edge for a big gain. He's getting held like hell, but even so he should not be a yard behind the LOS and unable to get outside to contain this. Kovacs makes a good fill tackle(+1). | ||||||||||||
| M36 | 3 | 3 | Ace(?) Empty | Base 3-4 | Pass | Hitch | -- | 4 | ||||
| Hitch finds a little spot in the zone and picks up the first down. Immediate tackle. Question mark in the formation is because this is an empty set from under center and therefore not an "ace"—1 RB—set, but I don't know what to call it. Whatever. | ||||||||||||
| M32 | 1 | 10 | I-Form | Base 4-3 | Pass | PA Cross | Williams | Inc | ||||
| The first enormous bust of the night on this play action. Warren is headed forward at the snap so I assume this is a blitz with a zone behind it; Ezeh(-1), Williams(-1), and Mouton(-1) all bite like hell on the play action, opening this receiver up by yards and yards (cover -2). Possible touchdown, but a terrible throw and, eventually, an incompletion. | ||||||||||||
| M32 | 2 | 10 | Ace | 4-3 under | Run | Inside zone | Van Bergen | -2 | ||||
| RVB(+0.5) gets playside of his guy and Martin(+0.5) does the same, so the RB goes for a cutback, which goes directly into Graham(+1), who avoided a cut and provides a thumping TFL. | ||||||||||||
| M34 | 3 | 12 | Ace 3-wide | Base 3-4 | Pass | TE Short Seam | Williams | 34 | ||||
| Michigan sends the house; Williams(-3) is tasked with man coverage on Moeaki and when Moeaki looks like he's going to block he blitzes; Moeaki then passes his guy off and is wide open for a killer touchdown. (RPS -2, cover -3) | ||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Touchdown, 7-7, 9 min 1st Q. Defended pretty well, one missed hold, one missed opportunity to sack, and one huge disaster where Williams blew it and Iowa smoked a playcall. | ||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Play | Player | Yards | ||||
| M19 | 1 | 10 | Ace 3-wide | 4-3 under | Pass | Out | Brown | 3 | ||||
| Michigan playing a zone; Brown fakes a blitz and then drops into the flat. The blitz fake does get the slot guy open, but a quick close from Warren(+0.5) and Brown(+0.5) prevents any YAC (cover +1, tackling +1) | ||||||||||||
| M16 | 2 | 7 | Ace Twins | 4-3 under | Pass | TE Flat | -- | 5 | ||||
| Attacking that same area of the field; the WRs run off the corners and Stanzi uses the space to hit his TE releasing into the flat. Throw's a little off and the TE is clunky, so Michigan is able to react without much in the way of YAC. | ||||||||||||
| M11 | 3 | 2 | Ace 3-wide | 4-3 under | Pass | Fade | Warren | Inc | ||||
| Iowa's first attempt at the fade they'll run a lot. Warren(+1, cover +1) runs to it, watches the receiver take the ball in, and rakes it out. | ||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: FG(28), 7-10, 6 min 1st Q. | ||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Play | Player | Yards | ||||
| O35 | 1 | 10 | I-Form | 4-3 under | Pass | Waggle hitch | Warren | Inc | ||||
| Dude, Michigan's linebackers blow this spectacularly, too, leaving guys wide open on crossing routes; Stanzi only looks for the outside receiver and ends up turfing it. Decent coverage by Warren. Good job by Heininger(+0.5) to get outside the edge blocker, cutting off the outside and forcing an awkward throw. | ||||||||||||
| O35 | 2 | 10 | Ace 3-wide | 4-3 under | Pass | Scramble | Mouton | 5 | ||||
| Stanzi's looking for an out or a slant to the top of the screen and can't find it (cover +1). As he tries to come down to another receiver, Heininger(+1) splits two blockers and harasses him(pressure +1) into rolling out and scrambling. Mouton's got the contain and DL are charging back from inside; he blows it(-1) by clobbering himself into a blocker, allowing Stanzi outside of him and turning zero yards into five. | ||||||||||||
| O40 | 3 | 5 | Ace 3-wide | 4-3 under | Pass | Sack | Graham | -7 | ||||
| Slot slant is covered(+1), giving Graham(+2) time to go right around Bulaga and crush Stanzi for a sack. Martin(+1) and Roh(+1) were also bursting through, preventing any attempt to move up in the pocket (pressure +2) | ||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Punt, 14-10, EO1Q. | ||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Play | Player | Yards | ||||
| M46 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun 3-wide | 4-3 under | Pass | Deep slant | Mouton | 22 | ||||
| Miscommunication of some variety as Williams flies out into the flat in a zone—it's cover three with both cornerbacks laying off and Mouton(-2) also zooming out into the flat, apparently in man on the tailback, on a play where everyone else is in zone. The vacated area is huge and it's an easy throw for Stanzi to a receiver breaking wide open. (Cover -2). | ||||||||||||
| M24 | 1 | 10 | Ace 3-wide | 4-3 under | Pass | Out | Brown | Inc | ||||
| Trying the out that they used a lot in an attempt to exploit our lack of a third corner; Brown is in decent position and can probably tackle on the catch if there is one; there isn't because of Stanzi's inaccuracy. (Cover +1) | ||||||||||||
| M24 | 2 | 10 | Shotgun 3-wide | 4-3 under | Pass | Wheel | Williams | Inc | ||||
| Stanzi gets some momentary time on a dropback until Graham(+0.5) pushes through to get late pressure and force a back-foot throw. Stanzi pumps and looks for a wheel route that's well covered by Williams (+1, cover +1) but way underthrown. If this was Texas Tech it would be an intentional back-shoulder throw they drill all the time; IMO, this is just plain lucky. Ball is too far underthrown to be caught despite a valiant attempt by the RB. | ||||||||||||
| M24 | 3 | 10 | Ace 3-wide | 4-3 under | Pass | Slant | Warren | Inc | ||||
| Michigan again sends the house, forcing a quick throw; it's a slant that Warren(+1, cover +1) gets up on and maybe helps be incomplete. More helpful was a high and hard throw. A catch was going to be a couple yards short of the first, anyway. | ||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: FG(41), 14-13, 12 min 2nd Q. | ||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Play | Player | Yards | ||||
| O22 | 1 | 10 | Ace Twin TE Twins | 4-3 under | Run | Zone right | Ezeh | 2 | ||||
| Ezeh(+1) is running downhill from the snap, busting into the backfield and forcing a cutback; RVB(+0.5) has avoided a cut and flows down the line to tackle (+1). | ||||||||||||
| O24 | 2 | 8 | Ace 3-wide | 4-3 under | Run | Draw | Martin | 2 | ||||
| This looks like it's about to open up nicely as Martin has blasted to the left of the center, leaving a big gap between himself and Graham outside the tackle. Michigan has also blitzed to the outside, leaving no support downfield until you get to Kovacs. This looks dangerous, but Martin's(+1) terrific agility allows him to come around the C and tackle(+1) the RB as he crosses the LOS. | ||||||||||||
| O26 | 3 | 6 | Ace 3-wide | 4-3 under | Pass | Slant & Go | Warren | 33 | ||||
| Again they're going after Warren on a double move; Warren recovers and is in great position on this but Stanzi chucks it anyway and just happens to get it in the only place it can go, allowing Stross to lay out to make a diving catch. Indefensible, a DO+ 1 from the opposition, and a (cover +1, Warren +1) from Michigan. What's more is Stanzi threw this with Williams in his face. Just one of those plays where you tip your cap. | ||||||||||||
| M41 | 1 | 10 | Ace 3-wide | 4-3 under | Pass | Dumpoff | Mouton | Inc | ||||
| They again go after Warren on a slant and go, this stuff is crazy. I mean, its not like Warren has been weak the last few times he's been tested. It looks like Iowa went into this game with some sort of crazy gameplan to attack Warren. RVB(+0.5) and Graham push the line back, causing Stanzi to decide to roll out once he finds no one open (cover +1). He then throws across his body to a tailback on a little dumpoff route that Mouton(+1, cover +1) breaks on and breaks up; another step and he can intercept. Stanziball. | ||||||||||||
| M41 | 2 | 10 | Shotgun 3-wide | 4-3 under | Run | Yakety Sax | -- | -14 | ||||
| Snap over the head. | ||||||||||||
| O45 | 3 | 24 | Shotgun 3-wide | 4-3 under | Pass | Post | Williams | 47 | ||||
|
Aaaaargggggghghghgh. One: it's third and twenty-four, the safeties should not be ten yards deep. They should be 15-20 or whatever. Two: there's not even anyone running sort of in between on Williams(-3), who has no excuse for not giving Warren the deep safety help he expects (cover -3); this is just a huge bust. Robinson on third and twenty-five:
|
||||||||||||
| M8 | 1 | G | Ace 3-wide | 4-3 under | Run | Zone right | Campbell | 5 | ||||
| Campbell(-1) in and showing why he's not playing more: he gets blown three yards off the ball and sealed by the center in a way that Martin just does not. [Editor's note: actually, Martin will get sealed like this a few times in the second half.] This opens it up, leaving the safeties to clean up. | ||||||||||||
| M3 | 2 | G | Ace 3-wide | 4-3 under | Pass | Scramble | -- | 2 | ||||
| Stanzi looking for a slant that isn't there as M drops into a zone (cover +1); no pressure(-1) , though, and Stanzi gets outside of Heininger, breaking for the endzone. Mouton and Williams stop him just short. Herbstreit is right that the reason this opens up is Williams(-1) getting irresponsible and sinking inside to run with a receiver instead of passing him off to Mouton; this should be no gain or a loss but for that. | ||||||||||||
| M1 | 3 | G | Goal line | Goal line | Run | Power off tackle | -- | 1 | ||||
| Not enough penetration, so Wegher can leap in. | ||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Touchdown, 14-20, 5 min 2nd Q. | ||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Play | Player | Yards | ||||
| O35 | 1 | 10 | I-Form | 4-3 under | Pass | Sack | Graham | -9 | ||||
| Graham slides inside slightly with Williams outside of him; Williams blitzes, absorbing the TE. Graham(+3) smokes the tackle to the inside—shift!—and comes up the middle to sack Stanzi before any of his receivers can break open. (Pressure +2.) | ||||||||||||
| O24 | 2 | 19 | I-Form | 4-3 under | Run | Zone right | Graham | 3 | ||||
| Martin(-1) gets scooped and sealed by a double, allowing Iowa OL downfield to seal Mouton. Graham(+0.5) bursts upfield to cut off the outside and makes a lunging tackle attempt at the RB that's unsuccessful, but it does slow the RB up enough for Roh(+0.5) to come from the backside and tackle as he nears the LOS. Without that contribution from the DEs this could be a big gainer. Kovacs was coming up but that was asking for a pretty good open-field tackle there. | ||||||||||||
| O27 | 3 | 16 | Shotgun 3-wide | 4-3 under | Pass | Screen | Ezeh | 6 | ||||
| Mouton(+0.5) attempts to shoot up into this when he reads it but cannot because both OL releasing downfield come together to seal him off. He's out of the play but the attention he's drawn allows Ezeh(+0.5) to come unblocked, form up, and tackle with help from RVB. (Cover +1) | ||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Punt, 14-20, 2 min 2nd Q. | ||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Play | Player | Yards | ||||
| O31 | 1 | 10 | I-Form | 4-3 under | Run | Zone left | Ezeh | -2 | ||||
| Big crease opens up as Roh(-1) gets sealed inside by Bulaga but Iowa can't get anyone through the line into the linebackers, for which credit goes to RVB(+0.5). Ezeh(+1) zooms up into the hole and crushes the fullback backwards, forcing the RB back inside to Mouton(+1, tackle +1), who meets the guy in the backfield for a loss. Excellent play by both linebackers; their eagerness to get to the hole will be something Iowa exploits later. | ||||||||||||
| O29 | 2 | 12 | I-Form Big | 4-3 under | Run | Iso | Ezeh | 2 | ||||
| Bit of a counter here as the line slides as if it's another zone play; Ezeh(+1) takes a couple shuffle steps to the right and then reads the fullback coming backside. He charges downhill, meeting the FB at the LOS and standing him up, which allows Graham(+0.5) to come around the outside and tackle(+1). | ||||||||||||
| O31 | 3 | 10 | Ace | 4-3 under | Pass | Out | Woolfolk | 11 | ||||
| This is just way too easy; Iowa drags a receiver across the formation and Woolfolk goes with him, but is playing soft(-1, cover -1) and way too far off to make a tackle before the sticks. Michigan only had one deep safety on third and ten? Were they expecting another run? | ||||||||||||
| O42 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun 3-wide | 4-3 under | Pass | RB flat | Williams | 9 | ||||
| Michigan dropping off into deep zones, and Iowa runs off the guy underneath to one side and then throws a safe little pass in the flat that beats the coverage (cover -1, RPS -1) | ||||||||||||
| M49 | 2 | 1 | Shotgun 3-wide | 4-3 under | Pass | Scramble | Martin | 1 | ||||
| Same deep zone, eight guys this time. Stanzi will have his tailback releasing for a few but for Martin(+2, pressure +2) splitting a double team, flushing Stanzi, and tracking him down as he attempts to scramble out of the pocket. He actually hurls him forward for the first down, unfortunately. | ||||||||||||
| M48 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun Trips | 4-3 under | Pass | Dumpoff | -- | 14 | ||||
| Again Michigan drops very, very deep; by the time Stanzi rolls out of the pocket seven guys are ten or more yards downfield and dropping. This opens up plenty of room for Wegher's little dumpoff. (Cover -1). Roh(+0.5) was coming around the edge, forcing the throw. | ||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Missed FG(53), 14-20, EOH. I think the TO on third down here is a justifiable decision, but one with low upside. | ||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Play | Player | Yards | ||||
| O14 | 1 | 10 | Ace 3-wide | 4-3 under | Pass | Fade | Woolfolk | Inc | ||||
| Iowa's going after Michigan's press man here, throwing a fade that Woolfolk(+1, cover +1) runs stride-for-stride with and breaks up as the ball arrives. Good play for a guy who's been playing safety all year. | ||||||||||||
| O14 | 2 | 10 | Ace Twin TE | 4-3 under | Run | Zone right | Kovacs | 19 | ||||
| Martin(-1) gets scooped again, which ends up catching Mouton in the wash; Ezeh's responsibility is outside and he runs out of the play. Kovacs makes a great read and comes up to tackle for what would be a 3-4 yard gain, but misses it (-1, tackling -1), opening up a big gainer. | ||||||||||||
| O33 | 1 | 10 | Ace 3-wide | 4-3 under | Pass | TE Out | Mouton | 11 | ||||
| Man coverage(-1) that Mouton(-1) just gets beat on, and so badly that he can't make a tackle on the catch, turning this from five to ten. | ||||||||||||
| O44 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun 3-wide | 4-3 under | Pass | Scramble | Graham | 12 | ||||
| Backup DTs in, and they don't do well. Campbell ends up basically sitting at the LOS doing nothing. Graham(-1) is attempting to pass rush inside but gets stoned; he keeps running inside, giving up contain and allowing Stanzi plenty of room to run after he can't find anyone downfield (cover +1, pressure -2) | ||||||||||||
| M44 | 1 | 10 | Ace 3-wide | 4-3 under | Run | Zone right | Campbell | 15 | ||||
| Campbell(-2) is single-blocked and blown four yards downfield, opening up a cavernous cutback lane when RVB flows down the line as he's supposed to. No LB help because of a blitz from Mouton; wouldn't have helped much anyway. | ||||||||||||
| M29 | 1 | 10 | Ace Twin TE Twins | 4-3 under | Run | Zone right | Martin | 6 | ||||
| Starting DTs back in, but Martin(-1) is again effectively scooped by Iowa. Mouton(-1) takes a cut block hard, going to the turf and getting blown out of the play; Kovacs(+1) is the last guy and makes a good open field tackle(+1). | ||||||||||||
| M23 | 2 | 4 | Ace 3-wide | 4-3 under | Pass | Out | Brown | Inc | ||||
| Brown(-1) appears to bust an assignment, dropping way too straight upfield to be any problem for an out route to Stross that's wide, wide open (cover -1). Stanzi's throw is errant. | ||||||||||||
| M23 | 3 | 4 | Ace 3-wide | Base 4-3 | Pass | Corner | Brown | Inc | ||||
| Outside receiver sort of fakes a post and then goes to the corner, which may be covered OK by Kovacs. We'll never know because Stanzi left it way, way short, so short that Brown almost intercepts it. Roh(+1) gets the credit for spinning past Bulaga and hurrying a throw that came off Stanzi's back foot (pressure +1). | ||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: FG(40), 14-23, 10 min 3rd Q. | ||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Play | Player | Yards | ||||
| O15 | 1 | 10 | Ace 3-wide | 4-3 under | Pass | Fade | Woolfolk | Inc | ||||
| Again going after Woolfolk in man press; Woolfolk in decent, not unbeatable position. The throw is outside and long, glancing off Stross's fingertips. | ||||||||||||
| O15 | 2 | 10 | Ace 3-wide | 4-3 under | Pass | TE Out | Martin | Inc | ||||
| Stanzi gets quick pressure from Martin(+1, pressure +1), who zipped past the center and threatened to sack. A Williams stumble gets the TE open with some potential to turn it up for YAC but the pressured Stanzi throw is high and incomplete. | ||||||||||||
| O15 | 3 | 10 | Ace 3-wide | 4-3 under | Pass | TE Out | Warren | Inc | ||||
| This out is going to get swallowed up for like five yards as Warren comes up in cover 2 (cover +1) but Stanzi way overthrows it, basically throwing it to Warren. Warren drops it. | ||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Punt, 14-23, 8 min 3rd Q. | ||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Play | Player | Yards | ||||
| O28 | 1 | 10 | Ace Twin TE | 4-3 under | Run | Zone left | Mouton | 5 | ||||
| Michigan slanting away from the play and sending the linebackers to fill the holes that open up. Mouton(+1) gets around the releasing TE and has an opportunity to tackle but cannot because he's being extremely blatantly held, but there's no call. As result, Robinson can bounce off Mouton's one-armed tackle attempt and spin inside. Martin meets him after about three yards and a big pile of folks falls forward. | ||||||||||||
| O33 | 2 | 5 | Ace Twin TE | 4-3 under | Run | Zone right | Martin | 8 | ||||
| Martin(-1) scooped a third time and blown out of the hole. Mouton has to deal with a guy coming off of Martin and ends up pushed past the play; Kovacs fills and makes an okay tackle, but one that gives up some YAC. | ||||||||||||
| O41 | 1 | 10 | Ace Twin TE | 4-3 under | Pass | In | Woolfolk | 4 | ||||
| Think Woolfolk is playing this too soft as the timing on this is off for Iowa and McNutt's sort of waiting for the ball for a second or two. However, general policy is not to ding corners for short routes on which there's no YAC and Woolfolk does come up quickly enough to grab McNutt and spin him around. This doesn't actually tackle him but it does stop him and set him up for a Graham killshot. | ||||||||||||
| O45 | 2 | 6 | Ace Twin TE | 4-3 under | Run | Zone left | Van Bergen | 1 | ||||
| Van Bergen(+1) drives the LG three yards back, opening up attack lanes for Mouton and forcing the play outside, where Michigan strings it out; Ezeh(+1) also avoided a blocker who'd released straight onto him and flew upfield to help the stringing-out process, though he couldn't tackle. On this play Martin does avoid a scoop and helps in the backfield. | ||||||||||||
| O46 | 3 | 5 | Shotgun empty | 4-3 under | Pass | TE Out | Kovacs | 4 | ||||
| Brown comes free on a blitz (RPS +1, pressure +1), forcing an immediate throw. TE is open as he cuts to an out but Kovacs(+1, cover +1, tackle +1) reads it and is there to tackle as soon as the ball arrives, preventing the extra yard that makes this a conversion. | ||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Punt, 21-23, 1 min 3rd Q. Mathews fumbles the punt and the D has to go right back on the field. | ||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Play | Player | Yards | ||||
| M16 | 1 | 10 | Ace Twin TE Twins | 4-3 under | Pass | Waggle TE Cross | Brown | 10 | ||||
| Brown(-1) gets beat in man-to-man by Moeaki, and there's no contain at Mouton(-1) gets sucked inside by the playfake, leaving Stanzi plenty of time to survey and find the open guy. (Pressure -1, cover -1) | ||||||||||||
| M6 | 1 | G | Ace Twins | Double Eagle? | Pass | Rollout out | Herron | Inc | ||||
| Herron(-1) gets a free run at Stanzi (RPS +1), who's rolling out directly at him, and whiffs on a tackle(-1, pressure +1). This isn't even PA so it seems like either an Iowa bust, possibly because Michigan went with an unusual formation. Stanzi does get almost tackled by Herron and then another DL is closing in so he must throw, but it's to a guy standing OOB. | ||||||||||||
| M6 | 2 | G | Shotgun 3-wide | 4-3 under | Pass | RB flat | Ezeh | 3 | ||||
| A little play in the flat that seems designed to exploit the same coverage deficiencies as Michigan experienced on the last drive of the half. Ezeh(+1) gets out on this, tackling as the ball arrives and holding it down about as well as anyone can expect. (Tackling +1, cover +1.) | ||||||||||||
| M3 | 3 | G | Ace 3-wide | 4-3 under | Run | Zone right | Van Bergen | 1 | ||||
| RVB(+1) blows into the RG, shoving him back a couple yards and forcing the tailback inside of him, where Martin(+0.5 ) has disengaged from a double. Wegher ducks/spins under Martin, at which point three players converge to stop him. | ||||||||||||
| M2 | 4 | G | Goal line | Goal line | Pass | PA TE corner | Brown | Inc | ||||
| Really selling out here to dupe Michigan, as Stanzi is given one and only one option; everyone else stays in to sell the run fake. Brown(+2) does not bite and gets out on the tight end, nearly intercepting. (Cover +1). Ezeh(+1) read the play and shot out on Stanzi, as well; he had a pulling tackle coming around to provide a run option that Ezeh erased. | ||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Turnover on downs, 21-23, 14 min 4th Q. | ||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Play | Player | Yards | ||||
| M42 | 1 | 10 | Ace Twin TE | 4-3 under | Pass | PA TE Cross | EVERYONE | 42 | ||||
| Well.... I don't know. Both ILBs and Kovacs freak out about the run fake as Williams pulls up to the line, leaving both tight ends wide, wide open. If Stanzi didn't throw it to Moeaki the other guy had a TD, too. Mouton -2, Ezeh -2, Brown -2, Kovacs -2, Cover -6. | ||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Touchdown, 21-30, 12 min 4th Q. You know, if we didn't do this twice a game this would be a good defense. | ||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Play | Player | Yards | ||||
| O24 | 1 | 10 | Ace Twins | 4-3 under | Pass | Rollout out | Woolfolk | 4 | ||||
| Kind of a weird way to start here but ok. Stross is slightly in front of Woolfolk and is escorted OOB immediately. | ||||||||||||
| O28 | 2 | 6 | Ace 3-wide | 4-3 under | Pass | Hitch | Woolfolk | 5 | ||||
| Ezeh gets through on a twisting blitz, forcing a throw (pressure +1). Woolfolk(-0.5) is playing off a bit too far to do anything about this, but a low throw prevents any YAC. | ||||||||||||
| O33 | 3 | 1 | I-Form Big | 4-3 under | Run | QB sneak | -- | 2 | ||||
| They get it. | ||||||||||||
| O35 | 1 | 10 | Ace 3-wide | 4-3 under | Run | Zone left | Graham | 9 (Pen -10) | ||||
| Michigan looks misaligned, with Graham too far inside to reasonably keep contain, and indeed he gets doubled and shoved inside and this hops outside the tackles. Martin(+1) has busted into the backfield against single blocking, though, and is held all the way downfield, finally drawing the flag Iowa's avoided a few times tonight. Graham -1 for opening up the outside; this was obvious from the snap. | ||||||||||||
| O25 | 1 | 20 | Ace 3-wide | 4-3 under | Run | Zone counter dive | Graham | 15 | ||||
| An under-center version of the play we've run to good effect a lot; Graham(-2) attempts to go outside of the crackback TE block and ends up ceding a big hole; Ezeh(-1) ran himself out of the play anticipating a stretch and fell down when he tried to come back. | ||||||||||||
| O40 | 2 | 5 | Ace 3-wide | Double Eagle? | Run | Zone left | Van Bergen | -3 | ||||
| Odd-man front this time with the three DL aligned up directly over the tackles/center. RVB(+1) blasts the sliding guard into the backfield; Martin(+1) does the same with the other guard, cutting off the play in the backfield and killing it for a loss. | ||||||||||||
| O37 | 3 | 8 | Shotgun 3-wide | 4-3 under | Pass | Hitch | Woolfolk | Inc | ||||
| Woolfolk in the area and might have a play on the ball if it's accurately thrown; it is not and he definitely has a play on the ball because it's coming right to him. The receiver goes for it too, the two guys knock into each other, and the ball falls harmlessly to the turf. Em... (+1, cover +1) | ||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Punt, 21-30, 7 min 4th Q. | ||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | D Form | Type | Play | Player | Yards | ||||
| M45 | 1 | 10 | I-Form Big | 4-3 under | Run | Inside zone | Roh | 2 | ||||
| Roh(+1) slants inside, bursting into the intended path of the runner and forcing a cutback. That cutback threatens to zip past Graham, crashing inside, and Woolfolk, blitzing form the outside, when Roh(+1 again) makes a diving shoestring tackle. Yeeek. (Tackling +1) | ||||||||||||
| M43 | 2 | 8 | I-Form Big | 4-3 under | Pass | Scramble | Graham | 4 | ||||
| They run a waggle that Graham(+1, pressure +1) gets out on by crushing the tight end back. He can't make a tackle and Stanzi escapes, rolling out to run after the close call. Want to minus one of Woolfolk or Williams for running the same coverage on not coming up on Stanzi but won't. | ||||||||||||
| M39 | 3 | 4 | I-Form Big | 4-3 under | Run | Zone left | Mouton | -1 | ||||
| ILBs, as they've been most of the game, are screaming downhill at this; both of them zip through the line and their intended blockers, with Mouton(+2) crushing Robinson in the backfield. +1 for Ezeh and tackling, as well. | ||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Punt, 28-30, 2 min 4th Q. | ||||||||||||
So… they did okay?
Yeah, they did okay. They faced 15 possessions, all of which were meaningful—though one was the time-compressed drive at the end of the first half and the last couple were more concerned with killing the clock than scoring—and gave up 23 net points. Iowa started drives at the Michigan 19 and 16 and came away with 3 points from those drives. By the Mathlete's reckoning, the day was a positive one:
An average team given Iowa's field position would have averaged 37 points given where Iowa started on the day. That's a +7 for the defense to go with a pick 6.
Of course, that pick six was decidedly unforced, as were an array of other Stanzi misthrows. Michigan was the recipient of a number of unforced errors. Not as many as Iowa was on the other side of the ball, but here we're just evaluating how the defense did against a pretty mediocre offense. They did a mediocre job.
What about that timeout?
Which timeout?
The one right before the half.
I liked it at the time but in retrospect the upside there was very low, since there were 27 seconds left and Iowa was on its 31. Even an incompletion followed by a punt leaves Michigan with 15-17 seconds and probably 40 yards to go for a long field goal attempt. And you know Michigan's not going to get a great return. About the only thing Michigan can hope for is a punt block.
Still, if you asked me to choose between that sort of error and the ones Carr made more regularly I'd go with that one. The instinct to wring another possession out of the first half is right, and usually Rodriguez is going to be calling that timeout with 1:30 or 2:00 on the clock, in which case the risk you take is more than offset by the strong possibility you'll get the ball back.
What about the other timeout?
That was on offense.
I'm asking about it now.
Fine: obviously you want that timeout a lot more than the half-yard you save by expending it but it's really hard to expect players to break years of training and not call it when the play-clock ticks down.
Anything else?
You want me to say chart—
Chart.
Dammit.
| Defensive Line | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Player | + | - | T | Notes |
| Graham | 8.5 | 4 | 4.5 | Had a couple issues on the ground and UFR is newly tough on vacating your lane when the QB scrambles out for good yardage, so those are the minuses. Still had two sacks. |
| Heininger | 1.5 | - | 1.5 | Split a double that contained Bulaga! |
| Patterson | - | - | - | DNP. |
| Roh | 5.5 | 1 | 4.5 | Had a couple hurries, used his athleticism well from the backside on a couple runs. |
| Herron | - | 1 | -1 | Did little except run by Stanzi once.. |
| Martin | 9 | 4.5 | 4.5 | Demonstrated great agility several times and had a couple good pass rush moves but got crushed off the ball four times, too. |
| Van Bergen | 5 | - | 5 | Very competent against a day of single blocking, which got him a lot of half points. |
| Banks | - | - | - | Played less. |
| Sagesse | - | - | - | Also played little. |
| Campbell | - | 3 | -3 | At least people will stop asking about him now. |
| TOTAL | 29.5 | 14.5 | 15 | NT collectively got blown off the ball six times and the rushing stats were still pretty good. |
| Linebacker | ||||
| Player | + | - | T | Notes |
| Ezeh | 8.5 | 4 | 4.5 | This looks like progress… now about play action? |
| Mouton | 6 | 9 | -3 | Three weeks in a row: alternates great plays with killer mistakes. |
| Brown | 3.5 | 5 | -1.5 | Some issues in coverage, took some of the hit for the second Moeaki TD. |
| Fitzgerald | - | - | - | DNP. |
| Leach | - | - | - | DNP. |
| TOTAL | 18 | 18 | 0 | Run filling = very good. Pass defense = very bad. |
| Secondary | ||||
| Player | + | - | T | Notes |
| Warren | 3.5 | 1 | 2.5 | Busy day; can't blame him for either long reception. |
| Cissoko | - | - | - | DNP. |
| Floyd | - | - | - | DNP. |
| Turner | - | - | - | DNP. |
| Woolfolk | 2 | 1.5 | 0.5 | Major win relative to the other guys Michigan's thrown out there. Why hasn't he been a corner all year? |
| Williams | 2 | 8 | -6 | Oh. |
| Emilien | - | - | - | DNP |
| Kovacs | 2.5 | 3 | -0.5 | Missed one tackle, made another few, good downhill box safety. |
| TOTAL | 10 | 13.5 | -3.5 | Ah, disastrous safeties. How I did not miss you. |
| Metrics | ||||
| Pressure | 12 | 4 | 8 | Three sacks and a lot of harassment. |
| Coverage | 19 | 23 | -4 | Actually very good except for the three disaster plays that totaled -13. |
| Tackling | 12 | 3 | 9 | Another good day. Wish I had English numbers to compare it against; missed tackles do seem rare, don't they? |
A step back from the DL, which was almost +30 against MSU. A step forward for the linebackers, albeit only to mediocrity, and a step back from the secondary mostly because of the return of safety doom.
So… um… delicately phrased question about Mike Williams?
Very tactful. It's hard to blame Williams for the first disastrous Moeaki touchdown. He was obviously coached to see if the TE was staying in to block and attack the QB if he did. When Moeaki set up and he reacted and Moeaki released, that was just Ken O'Keefe owning Robinson. That play caused the email that spurred the obviously goofy addition of RPS this week; these things are always goofy because I forget to track it 80% of the time I try something new. When these things occur it's not 100% on the player in question. O'Keefe noticed the tendency to blitz vast numbers sometimes (seven happened several times against MSU) and killed it dead.
I still gave him a –3, yeah. But I'm not 100% mad about it.
Third and twenty-five is a different story, there is the Robinson quote above and this still I grabbed:
You can see the TE bugging out to the sidelines and Kovacs in a deep seam zone with Warren in cover-three to the outside; Williams absolutely has to get deeper than this. There is nothing threatening him short and it's third and twenty-four. It was a huge mistake from a guy who was thrust into a new-ish position—Woolfolk was always the deep centerfield guy before—and speaks to why Michigan needed to move Woolfolk in the first place despite the evident lack of a second cornerback.
Michigan has two defensive backs and one feisty walk-on mini-linebacker. It's pick your poison.
But moving Woolfolk seemed to work out, right?
Yeah. He was tested a couple times on fade routes, breaking one up and seeing the other one glance off the WR's fingertips because his coverage was good. There were a couple errors on outs. Despite that, it was by far the best performance Michigan's gotten out of that spot all year. The Woolfolk move allowed Michigan to play the press cover man Robinson said he wanted to play in August for the first time all year, and they played it well. Michigan's going to have to hope Williams makes a quick adjustment because Woolfolk isn't moving back.
And how about Will Campbell?
Campbell got crushed backwards on two separate zone plays and basically sat at the LOS on a passing down. He was poor, and I assume we'll see Sagesse again next week. Campbell was not ready to play.
You gave a collective –8 and a cover –6 on the second Moeaki TD. Overreact much?
Hey, man, Stanzi had his choice of two different tight ends wide open for easy touchdowns. –6 coverage each, and –4 for one disastrously open receiver x 2 = –8. It's time to get serious about big negative plays. UFR is going tough love. Or something.
Ezeh… good?
So I really wish I had the video for this and will revisit it tomorrow when I do. For now I'll just have to use my words: Michigan appears to have changed their style here. Early in the year, linebackers were sitting back and waiting for stuff to develop. Here's Ezeh and Mouton sitting, waiting, sitting, waiting, against Notre Dame:
Against Iowa the linebackers were screaming downhill at the first sign of zone blocking, which accounts for the +2s and TFLs and times that Ezeh smashed a FB at the LOS and closed down a hole for no gain. I think it also accounts for a large number of wide open waggle plays, amongst them Moeaki Disaster II. I'll come back to this when I have more evidence.
Goats?
Delicately phrased comment about Mike Williams. Also: Mouton's got to stop making big errors. Will Campbell was extremely ineffective in limited time. Mike Martin showed a propensity to get blown back for the first time all year.
Heroes?
A first: I won't mention Warren or Graham first. Ryan Van Bergen's crazy hulk up after the 85-yard Indiana touchdown has now extended itself to three games. Hes only got a +5 above but when you don't get to the QB much and end up with a bunch of half-points, +5 from a DT is a good day. I no longer think of him as a weakness on the line.
Elsewhere, yes, Graham had two sacks and though he was less beastly than usual he is still a beast. And the two corners had a good day.
What does it mean for Delaware Penn State and beyond?
Michigan's new glaring hole to attack again and again is free safety, which says things about Woolfolk and the fellows trying to replace Woolfolk. The corner play should be improved; Williams should just start playing afraid of letting anything behind him forever.
The defensive line continued being functional to good, but the disturbing ability of Iowa to blow NTs off the ball on their zone stretch plays was a new development. By my count it happened six times and was the only reason Iowa got more than 2 YPC on the ground. Penn State's shambles of an offensive line has really struggled with the stretch play this year—Iowa eviscerated them, and Michigan's just-ok OL did very well—and probably won't be able to duplicate that, but if they do look out. Royster remains dangerous when he can get past the LOS. Which he cannot regularly. That matchup will be one to watch early.
I've been saying this for a few weeks now: if Michigan can just stop making huge freaking errors this defense can be okay. They made some huge freaking errors against Iowa and were still okay, but Iowa's offense was a participant in that. Penn State and Ohio State look to also be participating-type offenses, though, and Illinois definitely is. It'll be hairy. On the podcast this week I called the defense "competition-invariant": they have talent and do well when they use it but when they make an error is so huge that even Indiana can exploit it ruthlessly, so the defense kind of plays the same against everyone.
