so much for that
ricky barnum
Picture Pages: Unblocked ILBs FTL
Why can't Michigan run the ball without Denard? As with anything in football, the answer is "it's complicated" but against Nebraska the pendulum swung decisively towards an inability to block anything.
There were two primary ways in which things went unblocked, one of which we'll cover in two posts.
Ain't Nobody Trying To Block Important People
The first were either busts, play design errors, or combo blocking errors that left totally unblocked linebackers in the hole. A here's a third-quarter iso on the penalty fiesta drive that resulted in a field goal:
The highlighted guy is Nebraska's WLB. No one even tries to block him.
Unsurprisingly, this doesn't go well.
I'm not sure who this is on. I don't get the blocking. If Mealer releases directly downfield in the second frame in an attempt to get that WLB he does not have much of an angle and probably doesn't do much. I would expect Michigan to double that DT, leave Mealer behind on the DT, and then have Omameh pop off.
That doesn't happen. Did someone screw up? Is the play design bad? Is it Schofield moving to the second level poorly? Things are so confused I don't know.
Video:
If this was a one time thing you could chalk it up to a guy busting. It wasn't.
[AFTER THE JUMP: more unblocked guys! Like, so many you'll freak! They're coming out of holes in the ground like the Viet Cong!]
Picture Pages: ND Shift, Belly Defeat
Notre Dame has a very good defensive line, possibly great. If they still had Aaron Lynch holy pants man. They don't, but Tuitt is a 300 pound pass rusher, Nix is hard to move, and their Kapron Lewis-Moore/Prince Shembo combo at the other DE is a quality option. They've been making a lot of plays so far, and some of them against Lewan, who has a bunch of NFL hype and has shut down virtually every DE he's ever gone up against, including guys like Adrian Clayborn.
So Michigan was up against it against the Irish. They compounded those troubles with a spate of seemingly bizarre play calls that made it even harder for Michigan to execute since they often left key players unblocked, with the results you saw.
Here's a two yard run in the second quarter. It's first and ten on the first play of Michigan's first drive after the Smith interception. ND comes out showing a four-man front with one-high coverage, but will shift into their standard 3-4. Zeke Motta, currently 16 yards off the LOS, will approach the LOS for an eighth run defender against eight players in the box.
Post-shift, this is about standard for ND. Note that the secondary is showing extremely soft man coverage on the receivers, which is par for the course when you are in cover zero with three converted offensive players. Or at least, I'd imagine it's par for the course if anyone else ever did this.
Now, you may be thinking "AAAAAH DAMN AAAH BUBBLE." I am too. The defense is allowed to align like this because Michigan won't take a shot at that gooey soft edge. Constraint plays constrain what a defense can do, simplifying life for QBs. Here we've got a play, and it's a run despite the D showing a cover zero look.
On the snap it's revealed to be an inside zone play…
…but Lewan does something unusual by flaring out to go block Shembo as Denard reads Lewis-Moore. Meanwhile, look at Toussaint's upfield angle of attack:
This was supposed to be a midline type read. When ND showed a four-man front, Nix was shaded outside of Mealer. He would hit the frontside A-gap, allowing Barnum to release into the second level. Instead he's head up on the center and fights back, forcing Barnum to try and deal with him.
What Michigan thought it was doing
Meanwhile, Lewan's flare out on Shembo was supposed to be useful. Instead he's blocking a contain guy on a run up the middle. Lewis-Moore is not tearing up in a gap like a one-gap DL would but coming upfield under control.
So instead of a quick hit that got Michigan past the DT they get this:
Which is two yards thanks to an unblocked LB in the middle of where your belly is supposed to go.
Video:
This Looks Familiar
Denard's second interception is a terrible throw helped along by a totally unblocked Te'o as Barnum tries to help on Nix.
Terrible throw and all that but also not a shining example of coordinator mastery. This is a position to fail in, when you can't step into your throw because you'll get hit if you do so.
Things and Stuff
RB angle gives you the intended hole. Look at how vertical Toussaint is going. This is designed to go backside.
Checks: none. Once ND shifts to the three-man front, this play is in trouble, and once Motta slides down you're up against zero safeties. This would be a nice time to check. To what? Well, you are maybe probably getting some yards if Lewan changes his assignment and releases directly into that LB, or, you know…
…that OLB has eyes only for the backfield, so you've got one guy within twelve yards of the slot receiver. Who isn't a slot receiver, sure.
Since this was the first play of the drive I assume there was time to do this after the shift; nothing comes. This might be on Denard, or there just might not be a check for this. Rodriguez took that check burden onto himself with those plays where Michigan would call for a snap and then everyone would look to the sideline.
Constraints: none. A little later Michigan will block a QB sweep well but Motta will show in the hole as an unblocked eighth guy. Denard will abort and get three. ND again went cover zero with pudding soft outside coverage:
They're sitting out there waiting to give you their money! It's not the stupid little bubble itself that helps—though the yards from 2-8 averaging about 6 aren't bad—but the things that the defense can't do because they can't align with their secondary in Bolivia and bring down a run defender that erases your numerical advantage.
This alignment cannot be allowed to exist without a quick easy throw that invalidates it. Have we mentioned that both corners are converted offensive players? And one is a freshman?
Oy OL. Note that Nix not only drew a double but ripped through it to the backside hole, and that Tuitt has gotten inside of Schofield with ease. It may have been possible to get some yards here by getting Nix sealed and hitting a gap further to the playside, but none of that happens. I haven't gotten to the bit where Michigan just grinds on them yet, but so far there have been a lot of plays like this where Michigan OL get nowhere with their guys.
Why are we running a play that seems designed to go at a 4-3? ND will go to it but they are a 3-4 at heart and when they show a four man line it's usually short yardage or a passing down. I would expect an incoherent play like this to fire off when ND is giving Michigan a 4-3 curveball instead of the 3-4, especially after Michigan spent two weeks preparing exclusively for this defense. That Lewan flare-out is deadly to this play because Barnum has to help on a NT who is not shaded—and is rarely shaded. Meanwhile that guy on the edge is not a threat to Toussaint. RPS –1.
Upon Further Review 2012: Offense vs UMass
Formation notes: Nothing particularly new from Michigan except the Norfleet-end-around thing, which I just called 2-back. The plays run from it are being called "triple veer" since there's a third option there, not that I think any of these things are reads.
This was early; Dileo did not come in motion. Same formation plus Norfleet coming in == triple veer series against UMass.
Funchess means a lot more 2 TE formations. Reminder: TV never shows substitutions so I'm usually just describing the formation for the defense here, not the personnel. IIRC UMass was in 4-3 personnel the whole time; sometimes they would commit a LB to the slot, which I called nickel.
Substitution notes: Also nothing too unusual. Kwiatkowski was the starting TE and did pretty well; Funchess saw a lot of time; the usual WR rotation occurred. When Michigan pulled Lewan late they made the same flip they did at the end of the Alabama game, moving Schofield to LT, Omameh to RT, and inserting Burzynski at RG.
As promised, Hoke did not put any of the freshman linemen on the field. At this point we know who the staff is trying to redshirt. On offense those folk are: Braden, Kalis, Magnuson, Bars, Chesson, and Johnson. Norfleet, Funchess, Williams, and Darboh are playing.
Show? Show.
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | RB | TE | WR | DForm | Type | Play | Player | Yards | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| M35 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun twins twin TE | 1 | 2 | 2 | 4-3 even | Run | Inside zone | Toussaint | 3 | ||||||||
| Funchess off line, both TEs in two-point stance. Implies pass. M runs, shooting Funchess backside and sending Kwiatkowski to the frontside. Blocking bust as Barnum(-2) does not ever pop off the DT he is doubling with Mealer; unblocked LB in the hole. Kwiatkowski(-1) gets stuck between cracking down on this guy and trying to get a DB, eventually doing neither; Lewan(+1) gets big movement on his kickout when Toussaint(+1) bounces it outside. Schofield(+0.5) and Omameh(+0.5) had gotten nice movement on the backside. | |||||||||||||||||||
| M38 | 2 | 7 | Shotgun trips TE | 1 | 1 | 3 | Nickel even | Run | Inverted veer keeper | Robinson | 13 | ||||||||
| Omameh(+1) seals the UMass DT inside quickly, allowing Schofield(+1) to move out on a linebacker without delay. Either the hand or the keep works here; Denard(+1) keeps and manages to run through an ankle tackle attempt. Funchess(+1) is inline here and releases downfield, getting a block on a safety at about ten yards after running a fake dig. Barnum pulled through the hole but took a line way outside and did not block the last dude, the FS, who tackles. Denard is riding this mesh point longer [BWS]. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O49 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun 3-wide | 1 | 1 | 3 | 4-3 even | Run | Sprint counter | Toussaint | 7 | ||||||||
| MLB reads the Schofield pull and immediately starts heading for wherever he's going. SLB also reads the play and gets into the intended hole before Dileo can crack down on him. Mealer(+0.5) got a free release and pushes the MLB past where he wants to go, but Toussaint doesn't have anywhere to go on the playside. Omameh(+1) has blasted the backside DT back, though, and Funchess(+0.5) escorts a DE way downfield—mostly the DE being bad, not Funchess devastating him. Toussaint(+1) cuts back ably, juking a filling safety to his butt and picking up a nice gain. RPS -1? Nah, but I thought about it. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O42 | 2 | 3 | Shotgun twins twin TE | 1 | 2 | 2 | Base 3-4 | Pass | TE Out | Kwiatkowski | 16 | ||||||||
| Safety rolls down for eight man front, slot CB tight on the line. Both linebackers run right at the LOS on a straight dropback, Kwiatkowski comes wide open, Denard hits him, easy conversion. (CA, 3, protection 1/1, RPS +1) Kwiatkowski gets some YAC by running through a tackle. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O26 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun twins | 1 | 2 | 2 | 4-3 even | Pass | PA TE Seam | Funchess | 26 | ||||||||
| This is my candy now, baby. (CA, 3, protection 2/2, RPS +1). BWS picture pages. | |||||||||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Touchdown, 7-0, 12 min 1st Q. I say, these chaps don't appear to be very good. | |||||||||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | RB | TE | WR | D Form | Type | Play | Player | Yards | ||||||||
| M46 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun 3-wide | 1 | 1 | 3 | 4-3 even | Pass | Bubble screen | Gallon | 14 | ||||||||
| Or LAZER, whatever. LB two yards inside of Gallon who takes off at the run on the snap, M throws the bubble, which is wide open. Gardner(+1) dominates the CB out of Gallon's way and it's an easy first down. (CA, 3, screen, RPS +1) | |||||||||||||||||||
| O40 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun 2-back | 2 | 0 | 3 | 4-3 even | Run | Power off tackle | Toussaint | -1 | ||||||||
| Mostly on Toussaint(-2). Kerridge takes on the playside DE a couple yards in the backfield, and Omameh goes upfield of that. Toussaint goes outside when a quick cut upfield is definitely positive yardage, possibly lots. Mealer(+0.5) had locked out a DT, Lewan(+0.5) and Barnum(+0.5) blew up the other guy. Instead Toussaint runs into an unblocked LB. Well... maybe. This does seem to be asking a lot of him to make a cut when he's going outside so clearly. But with Kerridge where he is Omameh has no shot of getting outside effectively and it's never a good idea to bounce when you have to go around stuff. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O41 | 2 | 11 | Ace twins | 1 | 2 | 2 | Base 3-4 | Pass | PA Fly | Gardner | Inc | ||||||||
| They're on to us: this is our passing formation. UMass brings both safeties up and the MLB reads the pull, shooting outside. Barnum's pulled and has two guys to block in space. He doesn't really block either. Denard has two options with his short stuff covered: bomb it against cover zero or start running around. He chooses the latter, missing Gardner by a few yards. (IN, 0, protection ½, team -1) | |||||||||||||||||||
| O41 | 3 | 11 | Shotgun trips TE | 1 | 2 | 2 | Base 3-4 | Pass | Rollout Fly | J. Robinson | Inc | ||||||||
| A three-part flood on which the deep corner opens up. JRobinson is open as the CB to that side comes up on Roundtree's route, so Denard fires into the endzone. JRobinson is looking over both shoulders and may be able to do better than this, but Denard did leave it too far inside. It's still decent for a 40-yard pass. JRobinson has a shot at at a one-handed spear, but the S rakes it out. (CA, 1, protection 2/2) | |||||||||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Punt, 7-0, 9 min 1st Q | |||||||||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | RB | TE | WR | D Form | Type | Play | Player | Yards | ||||||||
| O45 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun 3-wide | 1 | 1 | 3 | 4-3 even | Run | Inside zone | Toussaint | 2 | ||||||||
| Barnum(-2) falls, allowing the DT right up the A gap. Toussaint manages to squeeze for a yard or two. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O43 | 2 | 8 | I-Form 3-wide tight | 2 | 0 | 3 | 4-3 even | Pass | Waggle drag | Gallon | Inc | ||||||||
| UMass suckered and this will get turned up for a first down; Denard just misses. (IN, 0, protection N/A, RPS +1) | |||||||||||||||||||
| O43 | 3 | 8 | Shotgun trips bunch tight | 1 | 1 | 3 | 4-3 even | Pass | Hitch | Funchess | 8 | ||||||||
| Lots of time as UMass sends three. Denard finds Funchess at the sticks and zips it in there, hard and low. This is between two defenders so I'll give Denard the benefit of the doubt. We don't get a replay, unfortunately, so I can't tell how good of a catch this is. I will go with my initial thought that is was really good. (CA, 1, protection 2/2) | |||||||||||||||||||
| O35 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun 2-back | 2 | 0 | 3 | 4-3 even | Run | Zone read keeper | Robinson | 20 (Pen -0) | ||||||||
| Backside DE does not contain, so Denard pulls. Neither LB to that side is scraping over the top, and then the playside guy is staring right at Denard with the ball and still runs away. Denard again ditches a shoe and still gets outside for a big gain. Uh... I guess Denard +1 for the read, but this was free yards from a bad, bad D. Roundtree(-1) gets a dubious holding call, but just let go, man. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O35 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun 4-wide | 1 | 0 | 4 | 4-3 even | Penalty | False start | Lewan | -5 | ||||||||
| Argh | |||||||||||||||||||
| O40 | 1 | 15 | Shotgun 4-wide | 1 | 0 | 4 | 4-3 even | Pass | Screen | Toussaint | 17 | ||||||||
| Both of the UMass LBs to the playside move towards the LOS as they see the OL release, but they move inside, which is not a good idea. Toussaint ends up in a ton of space; Barnum(+1) gets a block in space but I'm not sure he even needs to. Toussaint(+1) jukes a safety and picks up the first down; a second juke attempt at the sideline gets him tackled awkwardly. (CA, 3, screen, RPS +1). | |||||||||||||||||||
| O23 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun 3-wide | 1 | 1 | 3 | Nickel even | Run | QB iso | Robinson | 5 | ||||||||
| Barnum's guy fights inside of him, which is not a real good idea when you don't have any LBs behind you. Robinson cuts behind that as Lewan(+0.5) as eliminated the end; Toussaint(+1) gets through the other hole and redirects into a filling safety. Denard's cutting behind that when Barnum's guy tackles. I'm a little leery about Barnum's role in all this but I'll forgo the minus. Mealer(+0.5) got a nice release into the MLB and Omameh got some push on the other DT. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O18 | 2 | 5 | Shotgun 2-back | 2 | 0 | 3 | 4-3 even | Run | Inverted veer give | Toussaint | 7 | ||||||||
| I think they've worked on the veer the past couple weeks. Denard's riding it longer and the FB, here Kerridge, is flaring out immediately so that that DE cannot take him out. Kerridge(+1) books for the playside LB and blasts him; Denard(+1) reads that the end is not containing Toussaint and gives. That's about it. A safety fills; Toussaint(+1) moves the pile another three yards. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O11 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun twins | 1 | 2 | 2 | Base 3-4 | Run | Inside zone | Toussaint | 11 | ||||||||
| This seems like a blown read by Denard(-1) as they block the backside OLB and let the 3-4 DE free. He hugs Schofield's back and shoots down the line, so Denard is one on one with the safety for six. He gives anyway. The line has caved in the Minutemen but Toussaint(+2) has to run away from the DE and finds a hole outside. Safety fill is going to take him down after two yards but he busts a tackle and tiptoes down the sideline for six. Lewan(+1) got the movement that created the gap; Mealer(+1) and Omameh(+1) blew up the backside DT and erased any potential LB pursuit. | |||||||||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Touchdown, 14-0, 3 min 1st Q | |||||||||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | RB | TE | WR | D Form | Type | Play | Player | Yards | ||||||||
| M29 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun trips TE | 1 | 1 | 3 | 4-3 even | Pass | PA quick seam | Dileo | 66 | ||||||||
| The usual. Linebackers suck up, Smith wide open behind them, etc. Denard's throw is a bit in front of Dileo but not too bad; Dileo makes a nice catch and keeps his feet, stiffarming a safety down but getting caught from behind by one of their linebackers. (CA, 2, protection 1/1, RPS +2) | |||||||||||||||||||
| O5 | 1 | G | Shotgun trips | 1 | 0 | 4 | 4-3 even | Run | Inside zone | Smith | 5 | ||||||||
| Mealer(+1) and Omameh(+1) blow up the playside DT, and that's about it. Barnum had some issues with his guy but managed to fend him off; Smith(+1) was decisive. | |||||||||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Touchdown, 21-3, 13 min 2nd Q | |||||||||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | RB | TE | WR | D Form | Type | Play | Player | Yards | ||||||||
| M12 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun twins | 1 | 2 | 2 | Base 3-4 | Run | Zone read keeper | Robinson | 4 | ||||||||
| This is probably a called play and not a read as there is no unblocked player. The run fake takes out the linebackers but UMass is run blitzing their FS right into the hole. Denard(+1) jukes him and is about to hit the jets when an OLB who stunted through clean makes a shoestring tackle. Oooooh. Too bad. Schofield(+1) blew up the playside DT; Kwiatkowski(+0.5) kicked the other guy well. RPS -1, but I like the creativity. Without this call on this is a nice gain. | |||||||||||||||||||
| M16 | 2 | 6 | Shotgun 3-wide | 1 | 1 | 3 | 4-3 even | Pass | Out | Jackson | INT | ||||||||
| The fugly INT. If accurate this is a fine idea. It's not accurate. Also insert complaints about Jackson separation, or lack thereof. (INX, 0, protection N/A) Wow... on replay this route sucks. Jackson's post fake is basically vertical. | |||||||||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Defensive Touchdown, 21-10, 9 min 2nd Q | |||||||||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | RB | TE | WR | D Form | Type | Play | Player | Yards | ||||||||
| M25 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun 3-wide | 1 | 1 | 3 | 4-3 even | Pass | Bubble screen | Gallon | 6 | ||||||||
| Giving it by alignment, M takes it. Aggressive DB gets upfield of Gardner and manages a shoulder tackle that gets Gallon off his feet. (CA, 3, screen) | |||||||||||||||||||
| M31 | 2 | 4 | Shotgun trips | 1 | 0 | 4 | Nickel even | Run | QB draw | Robinson | 24 | ||||||||
| UMass puts one of their LBs over the second slot guy and goes six in the box, thus opening this up. The power of a stupid little play. UMass gets out of a lane and this opens up big. Toussaint(+1) gets a good LB block; Dileo(+1) does work on another LB, and Mealer(+1) gets a safety in space. Robinson(+2) sets his blocks up well and sets sail before that #9 again prevents a Michigan TD. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O45 | 1 | 10 | Ace twins | 1 | 2 | 2 | 4-3 even | Pass | Scramble | Robinson | 25 (Pen -15) | ||||||||
| LB blitz sent and picked up by Toussaint, who goes low. Mealer is backing out of a block and makes contact at the same time, which draws a chop block flag because they're throwing that on anything that even vaguely resembles a cut block with two guys. Unfortunate. That pickup gives Denard a ton of space, which he decides to use. Please be a trend. (SCR, N/A, protection 2/2) | |||||||||||||||||||
| M40 | 1 | 25 | Ace trips bunch | 1 | 1 | 3 | 3-3-5 stack | Pass | Throwback screen | Gallon | 12 | ||||||||
| Always works; works. Lewan(+1) donkeys the corner, Gallon goes outside, safety fills. (CA, 3, screen) RPS +1? Sure. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O48 | 2 | 13 | I-Form twins | 2 | 1 | 2 | 4-3 even | Run | Power off tackle | Smith | 6 | ||||||||
| Lewan(+1) blows one DT off the ball; Barnum(+0.5) finishes sealing him. Williams(+0.5) takes on a DE, then moves to the second level, passing the DE off to Kerridge. Williams can't quite lock that LB out, though, and he falls to tackle Smith just as he's breaking through to the secondary with Omameh(+0.5) as a safety-destroyer in front of him. Potential TD otherwise. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O42 | 3 | 7 | Shotgun 3-wide tight | 1 | 1 | 3 | Okie | Pass | Drag | Gardner | 42 | ||||||||
| UMass sends the house. Unblocked guy right up the gut who Smith blows up, allowing Denard time to step around and up into the pocket. Everyone else is taken care of. Gardner's drag has taken him past a LB; Denard hits him. Gardner then just barely outruns #9 (who can play) and tiptoes the sideline for a spectacular TD. (CA+, 3, protection 3/3, special Smith commendation issued) | |||||||||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Touchdown, 28-10, 6 min 2nd Q | |||||||||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | RB | TE | WR | D Form | Type | Play | Player | Yards | ||||||||
| M45 | 1 | 10 | Ace | 1 | 2 | 2 | 4-3 even | Run | Inside zone | Toussaint | 8 | ||||||||
| DL overplays to the playside here and the WLB is sucked out to the corner because Denard must be contained. Toussaint(+1) finds the cutback after Omameh(+1) shoots an aggressive DT past his hole. Schofield(+0.5) walls off the backside DE. Barnum and Mealer(+0.5) each combo to the second level. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O47 | 2 | 2 | Ace | 1 | 2 | 2 | 4-3 even | Run | Inside zone | Toussaint | 10 | ||||||||
| Barnum(+1) has a one on one matchup with playside DT and gets motion on the guy, driving him back a couple yards. SLB runs himself outside aimlessly. Williams and Lewan double playside DE and kick him out; would like to see Lewan climb to second level but this may be short yardage approach. Toussaint(+1) beats a filling safety to the edge and turns a first down into a small chunk. Mealer(+1) got a free release and beat up the MLB. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O37 | 1 | 10 | I-Form | 2 | 1 | 2 | 4-3 even | Run | Iso | Toussaint | 1 | ||||||||
| Nice play by the MLB to find the hole immediately, shooting past Mealer's block and arriving to tackle just as Kerridge is kicking out the SLB. Mealer(-1) could have taken a better angle to the second level, but this is mostly an RPS -1. Barnum(+1) and Lewan(+1) had provided a nice big hole with one on one blocks. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O36 | 2 | 9 | I-Form | 2 | 1 | 2 | 4-3 even | Pass | Waggle throwaway | Roundtree | Inc | ||||||||
| Everyone covered; LB specifically containing this play. Denard pumps and escapes outside, then just dumps it as he nears the LOS and it becomes clear he doesn't really have a running lane. Assumption is this was just putting the ball in the turf. (TA, 0, protection N/A, RPS -1) | |||||||||||||||||||
| O36 | 3 | 9 | Shotgun 2-back | 2 | 0 | 3 | Base 3-4 | Pass | Scramble | Robinson | 36 | ||||||||
| Has forever as UMass rushes three, then sends a spy late. Denard eventually decides to use those feet things, at which point laughter happens. Kerridge +1 for getting the downfield block that ends any chance of pursuit. (SCR, N/A, protection 2/2, Denard +3 on ground) | |||||||||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Touchdown, 35-10, 4 min 2nd Q. They get it back with 2:02 to go and run a two minute drill. | |||||||||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | RB | TE | WR | D Form | Type | Play | Player | Yards | ||||||||
| M17 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun 2-back | 2 | 0 | 3 | 4-3 even | Pass | Wheel | Smith | 19 | ||||||||
| Play action with the three WRs running vertical. LB has to sink into the boundary route, opening up a wheel for Smith; Denard floats it in nicely. Smith(+2) then stops on a dime and spins inside the tackle attempt, turning eight yards into 20. (CA+, 3, protection 2/2) | |||||||||||||||||||
| M36 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun 3-wide tight | 1 | 1 | 3 | 4-3 even | Pass | Cross | Gardner | Inc | ||||||||
| Same route Gardner had for a TD. No pressure this time and Denard just misses this one. This was going for 20+ too. (IN, 0, protection 2/'2) | |||||||||||||||||||
| M36 | 2 | 10 | Shotgun 4-wide | 1 | 0 | 4 | 4-3 even | Pass | Scramble | Robinson | -3 | ||||||||
| Denard appears to be looking for a Jackson hitch. There's a LB under it and he decides against the throw. LB then turns his back to chase downfield; Denard decides to run. Good decision, but he bumps into Mealer before he can get his motor running and falls. (SCR, N/A, protection 2/2) Scramble awarded because this was a good idea that went bad; if Denard escapes the pocket he's got at least ten. | |||||||||||||||||||
| M33 | 3 | 13 | Shotgun 3-wide | 1 | 1 | 3 | Nickel even | Pass | Cross | Dileo | 16 | ||||||||
| This one is in between Dileo's numbers; route is a yard or two short of the sticks but the throw allows him to turn it up for the first down easily. No pressure. (DO, 3, protection 2/2) | |||||||||||||||||||
| M49 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun 3-wide | 1 | 1 | 3 | Nickel even | Pass | In | J. Robinson | 9 | ||||||||
| Has just forever and eventually zings it to JRobinson just in front of a defender. Probably should have looked for Smith, who is abandoned, but he hit the guy so okay. (CA, 3, protection 3/3) | |||||||||||||||||||
| O42 | 2 | 1 | Shotgun 3-wide | 1 | 1 | 3 | Nickel even | Pass | Hitch | Dileo | 9 + 15 pen | ||||||||
| Another pump, this one at Funchess on a little out; he decides against that and nails Dileo on a hitch. Against better opposition these delays may be a problem. Here Schofield(-1) did get beat; Robinson gets a faceful of DE. (CA, 3, protection ½, Schofield -1) This turns into a dodgy flag. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O18 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun 3-wide | 1 | 1 | 3 | 4-3 even | Run | QB draw | Robinson | 16 | ||||||||
| LBs way back, expecting pass and backing out at the snap. As soon as Omameh(+1) shoves the playside DT way down the line this is easy money. Mealer(+1) got a good downfield block; Robinson(+1) is fast and stuff and knows to burrow behind Mealer. RPS +2. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O2 | 1 | G | Goal line | 2 | 3 | 0 | Goal line | Run | Iso | Toussaint | 0 | ||||||||
| Kwiatkowski(-1) does not get any push as a lead blocker and ends up stalemated; Kerridge runs up his back but can't actually contact an opponent, and Toussaint has no crease. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O1 | 2 | G | Goal line | 2 | 2 | 1 | Goal line | Penalty | Illegal sub | N/A | 1 | ||||||||
| All right. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O1 | 2 | G | Goal line | 2 | 2 | 1 | Goal line | Run | Speed option | Robinson | 1 | ||||||||
| If this is a real option, Denard should pitch(-1), but doesn't. He gets tackled by a blitzer in too quickly on Lewan(-1), the fumbles(-2) as he reaches out to the goal line. Lewan, or someone anyway, recovers. Ah, hell. RPS -1. | |||||||||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Touchdown, 42-13, EOH | |||||||||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | RB | TE | WR | D Form | Type | Play | Player | Yards | ||||||||
| O41 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun trips Te | 1 | 1 | 3 | Nickel even | Run | Inverted veer give | Toussaint | 13 | ||||||||
| DE is not containing Toussaint; give. That's about it. Rest of the D is in the box in case Denard keeps. Gardner, Jackson, and Roundtree(+0.5 each) all get okay to good blocks on DBs downfield. RPS +1. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O28 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun trips | 1 | 0 | 4 | Nickel even | Run | Inverted veer give | Toussaint | 11 | ||||||||
| Identical thing to other side. DE does not show hard upfield, give. MLB gets outside of Dileo but for naught as there's a ton of space. Lewan(+1) pancaked the other guy, that's why. Jackson(+1) gets a good extended block downfield and Toussaint(+1) takes what's he's given, accelerating past fallen bodies until the sticks. RPS +1. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O17 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun 2-back | 2 | 0 | 3 | Nickel even | Run | Inside zone | Toussaint | -1 | ||||||||
| UMass slants; this catches Mealer(+1) but surprise but he adjusts to starts shoving the slanter by the play. Lewan(+0.5) and Barnum(+0.5) had comboed the backside DT and climbed to the second level; Toussaint gets past the Lewan block, downshifts to hit this gaping hole... and gets roped down by a hand. Bad luck, that. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O18 | 2 | 11 | Shotgun twins twin TE | 1 | 2 | 2 | Base 3-4 | Pass | Slant | Gallon | Inc | ||||||||
| Batted at the line. (BA, 0, protection 2/2) | |||||||||||||||||||
| O18 | 3 | 11 | Shotgun 2-back | 2 | 0 | 3 | Nickel even | Pass | Post | Roundtree | 18 | ||||||||
| Excellent time; Denard finds and nails Roundtree on a post the safety probably should have covered but does not. Must have overplayed the route further inside. Not sure if this is too far outside or if Denard is playing it safe but he does hold Roundtree up some. (CA+, 3, protection 2/2) | |||||||||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Touchdown, 49-13, 10 min 3rd Q | |||||||||||||||||||
| Ln | Dn | Ds | O Form | RB | TE | WR | D Form | Type | Play | Player | Yards | ||||||||
| M28 | 1 | 10 | Ace | 1 | 2 | 2 | 4-3 even | Run | Inside zone | Toussaint | 11 | ||||||||
| Playside DT ends up coming through the line but not sure if that's a big problem since by doing so he gets shoved way past where he wants to be by Mealer(+1). Toussaint cuts behind. Barnum(+1) is doing to the same to the next guy. He cuts behind. Kwiatkowski(+1) has blown the last guy two yards downfield; Toussaint(+2) bursts outside. He anticipates and leaps past the safety's attempt to fill, then jukes a corner, and he's in the clear. Pursuit takes him down at the sticks. | |||||||||||||||||||
| M39 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun 2-back | 2 | 0 | 3 | 4-3 even | Run | Triple veer around | Norfleet | 14 | ||||||||
| Norfleet on the outside, he motions in and takes a quick handoff. Unblocked DE to that side is playing an inverted veer and lets Norfleet by. JRobinson(+1) cracks down and blows up the playside LB; the press corner goes with him. Gyarmati is leading now and has only the S to block. He does so; Norfleet tries to shoot past him, ankle tackle. Nice play by that S; if he only maintains leverage this might be six points. RPS +2. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O47 | 1 | 10 | I-Form | 2 | 1 | 2 | 4-3 even | Run | Power off tackle | Toussaint | 3 | ||||||||
| Schofield(+0.5) and Omameh(+0.5) bury the playside DT. Williams(+1) shoves the DE outside and then comes down on a linebacker; Gyarmati finishes kicking the DE. Barnum(-1) freaks out when Wiliams's guy starts moving upfield and hits him instead of continuing outside. He bounces back off this; Toussaint runs into him. That delay gets safeties involved; Toussaint gets what he can surrounded by white shirts. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O44 | 2 | 7 | Shotgun trips TE | 1 | 1 | 3 | 4-3 even | Run | Inverted veer keeper | Robinson | 0 | ||||||||
| DE splits the two runners very well, getting Denard(-1) to keep and still tackling. Barnum(-1) flat lost his guy one on one, straight up, no slant, and he penetrates to prevent any Denard funny stuff. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O44 | 3 | 7 | Shotgun empty TE | 1 | 1 | 3 | 3-3-5 stack | Pass | Cross | Gardner | 6 | ||||||||
| Back out from heavy pressure look to three man line. Gardner sets up on a hitch and then starts drifting across the field; Denard doesn't like the deeper look and zings it underneath. A tiny bit short of the first down. (CA, 3, protection 1/1) | |||||||||||||||||||
| O38 | 4 | 1 | I-Form | 2 | 1 | 2 | Base 3-4 | Run | Power off tackle | Rawls | 18 | ||||||||
| They've replaced Lewan. Schofield(-0.5) now at LT, he does not get his DL moving and allows some penetration that ends up delaying a pulling Burzynski. Gyarmati(+1) plus a guy on the edge, who does not keep the edge; Rawls(+1) sees that and heads out there. He breaks contain, picks up a bunch of yards, and then lowers the boom on a pretty hefty dude to finish it off. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O20 | 1 | 10 | Shotgun 2-back | 2 | 0 | 3 | 4-3 even | Run | Triple veer give | Rawls | 4 | ||||||||
| Playside DE goes straight at the pulling G and submarines him; Kerridge is trying to seal him inside so that the G can get out but he's got no shot. That's a two for one for the D. Corner is now the contain guy. He sees Rawls has it and is agile enough to crash down to tackle. Rawls takes a hit from the guy Burzynski couldn't block, too. RPS -1, but I like the concept. | |||||||||||||||||||
| O16 | 2 | 6 | Shotgun 2-back | 2 | 0 | 3 | 4-3 even | Pass | Triple veer PA | JRobinson | Inc | ||||||||
| Backside DE is going straight for Denard and gets instant pressure. Denard throws off his back foot at an open-ish Robinson and misses. Torn between IN and PR here. He had few alternatives and didn't put up a punt, so PR. (PR, 0, protection N/A, RPS -1) | |||||||||||||||||||
| O16 | 3 | 6 | Shotgun twins twin TE | 1 | 2 | 2 | Base 3-4 | Pass | Out | Roundtree | 7 | ||||||||
| WCO precision route with Williams taking a corner out and opening up a small window for the conversion. (CA, 3, protection 1/1) | |||||||||||||||||||
| O9 | 1 | G | Shotgun 2-back | 2 | 0 | 3 | 4-3 even | Run | Inside zone | Smith | 9 | ||||||||
| UMass blitzes from the edge; Kerridge(+1) does a good job to come down on him and clock him, clearing the edge. The edge should be win UMass but the LB just biffs it, taking a crappy angle. Smith(+1) outruns him to the corner and gets in. An RPS -1, probably, but results. | |||||||||||||||||||
| Drive Notes: Touchdown, 56-13, 3 min 3rd Q. Backups the rest of the way, including the walk-on OL. Charting ceases. | |||||||||||||||||||
Indubitably, I say.
What?
You said these chaps weren't very good after the first drive.
Oh, right. They're not. Let's do the numbers. So I've got these—
CHARTS
Charts.
Denard.
[Hennechart legend is updated.]
| Opponent | DO | CA | MA | IN | BR | TA | BA | PR | SCR | DSR |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2011 through MSU | 13 | 66(12) | 11(1) | 34(1) | 17 | 2 | 3 | 10 | 4 | 55% |
| 2011 after MSU | 9 | 77(9) | 7 | 17 | 9 | 6(1) | 5(2) | 9 | 5 | 69% |
| Alabama | 4 | 15(2) | 1 | 4 | 3 | - | - | 3(1) | 1 | 71% |
| Air Force | 1 | 14 | 3 | 2 | 1 | - | 2 | 1 | - | 75% |
| UMass | 1 | 16(4) | - | 4 | - | 1 | 1 | 1 | 3 | 68% |
An easy day with a lot of open guys and a few worrying misses. Those were the INT, the cross to Gardner flung over his head, and the little Gallon drag similarly flung to Tacopants. The fourth one was a bomb on which he was long, which happens. But hey no BRs (UMass covered no one so there could not be any) and some scrambles (UMass managed to both not cover anyone and give up huge running lanes).
As I was saying, indubitably.
Indububibubly.
What?
BOOM 1987 CEREAL COMMERCIAL
This is burned into my head.
Let's talk about actual things. Denard accuracy monitoring?
Still feeling pretty good about it. Though UMass was actually a slight step back in the Downfield Success Rate metric, its impact on our hypothesis ("Borges + Denard == Tate Forcier passing") is positive since we need more data here.
He's still good for the one or two ARGH NO throws a game nothing will ever get him to stop. Look at those Throwaway numbers: three games, one ball I thought was not an attempt to complete a pass. Four more got filed as scrambles, but that's still a vanishingly low percentage of balls tossed away. Everett Golson doubled that in one game against MSU.
We got some more screens.
Yes, as Heiko's on-going, not-serious-but-actually-deadly-serious bubble/lazer-off with Borges highlights, Denard is throwing more stuff at or behind the LOS. The four throws marked as screens in the last game are almost half of Denard's output from the entire second half of last year.
Bubble bubble yes but there was also an honest to God screen-screen that Toussaint turned up for a bunch. Michigan hasn't been throwing those under Borges because when Denard has tried it he has gotten pressure in his face and launced balls well over the intended receiver's head. Maybe that's technique, maybe it's the fact that he's maybe six foot tall and there is no angle that he can throw the thing that won't get stuffed back in his face and not overshoot the mark dangerously.
On the linked screen above, Michigan actually gets it done by blocking the end and shoving the DT, giving Denard a window. The horizontal aspect also helps prevent disaster—previously a lot of these RB screens were going straighter up the field. I'm still not sure how much that's ever going to be a staple since teams tend not to blitz Denard hard, but having that option is a nice.
Also: throwback. Believe it.
What happened on the next play after that bubble you linked above?
UMass put about five and a half players in the box and got a QB draw in their face for 24 yards. Panacea, no, but an effective play that opens up the rest of your offense when people on the edge are accounted for man-to-man.
Denard doing stuff with legs?
Michigan's been working on the veer. Michigan has moved from a stationary quick pull to the more common hop-hop-hop-decide process where the QB rides that fake as long as possible and only makes a decision when he feels the DE has committed. Even when he doesn't commit that movement and delay gets results on the second play of the game:
You'll notice that the pulling G actually runs by that DE (and then widens out so far that he ends up blocking a guy already being blocked many yards from Denard, so they're not exactly a machine yet).
Michigan's also screwing around with some additions/alterations, like the Norfleet end-around series Michigan broke out in the third quarter.
There the DE is like "veer veer veer" and Norfleet just zooms by him. Once he's outside of that, a big gain is guaranteed. Michigan came back with a handoff and a play action pass off that, neither of which were as successful.
This was kind of like the Minnesota game last year when Michigan test-drove their sprint counter against the twitching corpse of a long-dead opponent. I like seeing new stuff enter the offense, but I'd rather bring it out against Notre Dame. What's the deal with all the secrecy around the program if they're just going to bring out the toys against the UMasses of the world?
Offensive line?
Offensive line. 43 runs in this one, so numbers should approach normal… and would if I hadn't chalked up many of the yards gained as UMass being UMass. Remember that it's the ratio that is important for the OL. On a lot of plays they do okay and get a push.
| Offensive Line | |||||||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Player | + | - | Total | Notes | |||||||||||||||
| Lewan | 7.5 | 1 | 6.5 | Dominating in this game. | |||||||||||||||
| Barnum | 7 | 6 | 1 | Pretty concerning. Fell down some, got straight up beat a couple times. | |||||||||||||||
| Mealer | 9 | 1 | 8 | Mobility in space a pleasant surprise. | |||||||||||||||
| Omameh | 7.5 | - | 7.5 | Beating up on little guys, but Nix will be a load. | |||||||||||||||
| Schofield | 3.5 | 0.5 | 3 | Got beat once in pass pro, but fine. Think people got a little panicked because of Alabama. | |||||||||||||||
| Kwiatkowski | 1.5 | 2 | -0.5 | Eh. | |||||||||||||||
| Moore | - | - | - | DNP | |||||||||||||||
| Williams | 1.5 | - | 1.5 | Eh. | |||||||||||||||
| Funchess | 1.5 | - | - | HE DOES EVERYTHING (against UMass sometimes) | |||||||||||||||
| TOTAL | 39 | 10.5 | 79% | Meaningfulness: not meaningful. | |||||||||||||||
| Backs | |||||||||||||||||||
| Player | + | - | T | Notes | |||||||||||||||
| Robinson | 10 | 5 | 5 | Hit him for the fumble. | |||||||||||||||
| Bellomy | - | - | - | DNC | |||||||||||||||
| Toussaint | 13 | 2 | 11 | Did a lot of bouncing, hit a lot of holes, juked some guys. | |||||||||||||||
| Rawls | 1 | - | 1 | Lowered the boom on a pretty big dude. | |||||||||||||||
| Smith | 4 | - | 4 | Spin move was sweet. | |||||||||||||||
| Hayes | - | - | - | DNC | |||||||||||||||
| Hopkins | - | - | - | DNP | |||||||||||||||
| Kerridge | 3 | - | 3 | Insert complaints about scholarship FBs. | |||||||||||||||
| TOTAL | 31 | 7 | 24 | Gyarmati was also +1. | |||||||||||||||
| Receivers | |||||||||||||||||||
| Player | + | - | T | Notes | |||||||||||||||
| Gardner | 1.5 | - | 1.5 | ||||||||||||||||
| Roundtree | 0.5 | 1 | -0.5 | ||||||||||||||||
| Gallon | - | - | - | ||||||||||||||||
| Jackson | 1.5 | - | - | ||||||||||||||||
| Dileo | 1 | - | 1 | -- | |||||||||||||||
| J. Robinson | 1 | - | - | ||||||||||||||||
| Darboh | - | - | - | -- | |||||||||||||||
| TOTAL | 5.5 | 1 | 4.5 | [Comment] | |||||||||||||||
| Metrics | |||||||||||||||||||
| Player | + | - | T | Notes | |||||||||||||||
| Protection | 32 | 2 | 94% | Team –1, Schofield -1 | |||||||||||||||
| RPS | 14 | 7 | +7 | Veerin'. | |||||||||||||||
That's what happens when you average almost 7 YPC without a run longer than 36 yards. Note also the near-flawless day in pass protection. Denard had forever, and on that 36 yard run he had two forevers before finally deciding to take off.
So, yeah. Complete obliteration of a foe that can only be obliterated and causes panic if you do not obliterate them. File under necessary and not meaningful.
POWER OL POWER RANKINGSSSSS
Um, okay.
1. Lewan
2. Mealer
3. Schofield
4. Omameh
5. Barnum
Barnum had problems?
Yeah. He fell down a couple times; once he just never popped off a double and exposed Toussaint to an unblocked LB, and late on a veer-type run he got beat straight up. By ND transfer Hafis Williams, so not a total scrub, but from a confidence perspective guys who transferred away from the team you're about to play are not the best guys to beat your OL.
Last game I thought Omameh struggled and Barnum did pretty well, so jury is out on both guards.
Toussaint's pretty good again?
Yeah, man. Independent of the opponent he tiptoed the line for a TD and I love a particular aspect of this zone that cuts all the way across the field. Try to figure out what it is:
If you guessed "the little hop he takes when he perceives that an ankle tackle is coming from behind," you win an MGoPoint.
Receivers?
[Passes are rated by how tough they are to catch. 0 == impossible. 1 == wow he caught that, 2 == moderate difficulty, 3 == routine. The 0/X in all passes marked zero is implied.]
| Player | 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gardner | 2 | - | - | 2/2 | 7 | 0/3 | 1/2 | 7/7 | |
| Roundtree | 1 | - | 2/2 | 3 | 0/1 | 1/1 | 4/4 | ||
| Gallon | 2 | 3/3 | 4 | 0/1 | 2/3 | 5/5 | |||
| J. Robinson | 0/1 | 1/1 | 1 | 0/1 | 2/2 | ||||
| Dileo | 1/1 | 2/2 | 1 | 1/1 | 1/1 | 2/2 | |||
| Jackson | 1 | 1 | 3/4 | ||||||
| Darboh | |||||||||
| Chesson | |||||||||
| Kwiatkowski | 1/1 | 2/2 | |||||||
| Moore | |||||||||
| Funchess | 1/1 | 1/1 | 1/1 | 5/5 | |||||
| Williams | |||||||||
| Toussaint | 1/1 | 0/1 | 1/1 | ||||||
| Smith | 1/1 | 0/1 | 3/3 | ||||||
| Rawls |
A bit of a fuss was made about Gardner only bringing in 8 of 20 targets this far. I'm missing one, but of my 19 he's got seven with no shot and three really tough ones. It's somewhat about his routes, but I chalk most of that up to "is deep threat".
I've mentioned this already this week, but Dileo is increasingly a guy who I'm comfortable with getting lots of playing time. He's not big, he's not super fast, but he catches everything in his area…
…and has a knack for keeping his feet as he does so. Usual slot-dot drawbacks apply; Dileo adds a fourth or fifth guy who I think is a pretty good receiving option.
QB Oh Noes returns?
A point of order is in… order after I saw a bunch of @replies in the twitter and BWS pointed out the vast open Funchess TD. QB Oh Noes was coined here to specifically refer to plays on which Denard himself takes a step towards the line as part of a run fake and then backs out. The PA fake made here:
Is something RR did a bit but not a ton. Borges, on the other hand, does run it a ton, and did last year as well. Now that he's got Funchess running down that seam expect even more of it.
[Also, BWS points out that Omameh is not quite Air Force-level illegally downfield. Illegal downfield: go for it, OL!]
Special commendation Vincent Smith needs out-of-table love.
Indurbiertably.
"Why isn't Norfleet playing more?" the message boards ask. That is why. Fingerguns Smith.
BONUS: that's the play of which Borges said this:
I’m knocking on wood. I never assume anything, but his footwork is like night and day. He’s pulling balls down now and working up underneath the pocket and taking off and buying beats. He had a play during the game and it was a zero blitz where he got underneath the rush, gave Vince a chance to chip off a blitzing linebacker and threw the ball to Devin for a touchdown. A year ago he would have run backwards, and they’d have chased him for about an hour, and he’d probably end up throwing it out of bounds.
I'm ready to upgrade the Denard Can Throw hypothesis to a theory if he can just do it on Saturday.
BONUS BONUS: Smith spin move swag featuring Denard touch pass.
Heroes?
Anyone.
Goats?
If you're really mean and stuff, Barnum could have done better.
What does it mean for ND and the future?
Sadly, not much. The worries about the OL will go one way or the other on Saturday and I'm not sure which one it will be. Schofield's going to come in for scrutiny—I'm guessing he handles it fine. More concerned about the guards.
Meanwhile, inching towards the idea that Denard can throw… sidling up to it, not looking at it directly, maybe giving it an eyebrow. Saturday is maybe not an acid test against a young secondary featuring three position switch starters, but after last year yeah it's an acid test. Let's do some stuff not on Gary Gray's back.
Big Ten Draft O' Snark: The Final Snarkdown
PREVIOUSLY ON "MGOBLOG WRITERS DRAFT BIG TEN TEAMS SO YOU CAN NOW, FINALLY, VOTE FOR THE TEAM THAT HAS DENARD ON IT"…
Rounds 1-3: At Jim Leyland's lakeside mansion in Somerset, quarterbacks are divided.
Rounds 4-7: In the War Room of the Toledo Ramada Inn, Heiko is replaced by a mysterious stocky middle-aged man with a mustache.
Rounds 8-12: In the Presidential Suite of of the Ishpeming Red Roof Inn, a 1970 Fiat 500 assumes the commissioner's chair, rules all picks must get 30 mpg.
Rounds 13-17: In a Secret Submarine Headquarters Underneath the North Atlantic, iPhones apparently get zero bars.
Rounds 18-something whatever: Onboard the Voyager II Spacecraft at the Edge of the Solar System, quarterbacks are put through a series of zero-grav tests to determine if there is anything they can't do.
Companion pieces: MGoBlog's All Big Ten Team, Googledoc spreadsheet of handiness.
Weary and ignoring the complaints of abused livers, SETH, HEIKO, ACE, and something that looks like a lanky sheep dog emerge from a secret lair in the PHOSPHATE MINES of the PACIFIC ISLAND OF NAURU. They ask for your ballot…
Seth "Progress" Fisher/Heiko "Progress" Yang/Ace "Progress" Anbender/Brian "Progress" Cook
POLLS ARE NOW OPEN. Go vote!
The Final Snarkdown
BRIAN COOK AND THE FLYIN' ZOOKS:
OFFENSE: Nathan Scheelhaase (QB, ILL), Fitzgerald Toussaint (RB, M), LeVeon Bell (HB/FB, MSU), Jared Abbrederis (WR, UW), MarQuies Gray (QB/WR, Minn), Kevonte Martin-Manley (WR, Iowa), CJ Fieodorwicz (TE, Iowa), Taylor Lewan (LT, M), Ryan Groy (LG, UW), Matt Stankiewitch (C, PSU), Chris McDonald (RG, MSU), Jack Mewhort (RT, OSU).
DEFENSE: Ra'Shede Hageman (DE, Minnesota), John Simon (DE, OSU), Beau Allen (NT, UW), Akeem Spence (DT, ILL), Jake Ryan (LB, M), Desmond Morgan (LB, M), Denicos Allen (LB, MSU), Terry Hawthorne (CB, ILL), Bradley Roby (CB, OSU), Blake Countess (CB, M), Daimion Stafford (SS, UNL), Christian Bryant (FS, OSU)
SPECIAL TEAMS: Mitch Ewald (K, Indiana), Andrew Maxwell (P, Michigan State), Abbrederis (KR/PR, Wis)
I didn't mean to do this but I ended up with a Rodriguez spread'n'shred circa 2007 with a running quarterback, a damn fast outside back, and a fullback type who can rip off runaway beer truck touchdowns. The offensive line is a lot more POWER based but I figure that's fine since Auburn and others have made the inverted veer and related plays major spread drivers. Then you've got an array of excellent WRs with big catching radius: the deep threat (Abbrederis), the unstoppable guy on intermediate routes (Gray), and a promising TE.
The defense is Greg Mattison.
FINAL SNARKDOWN (by Heiko): Dear Brian: You know that red and gray plaid shirt you wear all the time? You should wear it less. Oh, something mean about his team? Ummmm... None of your QBs have a winning record. I've seen Desmond Morgan in person, and he's still really small and liable to get crushed by offensive linemen. And you drafted two LOLphers.
[The drafters still got some splainin' to do. For the rest of the roundtable, and which school had the most picks, and stuff, HIT THE JUMP.]
Preview 2012: Offensive Line
Previous: Podcast 4.0, the story, quarterback, running back, wide receivers.
| LT | Yr. | LG | Yr. | C | Yr. | RG | Yr. | RT | Yr. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Taylor Lewan | Jr.* | Elliott Mealer | Sr.* | Ricky Barnum | Sr.* | Patrick Omameh | Sr.* | Michael Schofield | Jr.* |
| Erik Magnuson | Fr. | Joey Burzynski | So.* | Jack Miller | Fr.* | Kyle Kalis | Fr. | Ben Braden | Fr. |
This again. One year after Michigan's offensive line looked pretty shiny as long as you did not consider the cliff after guy #6, Michigan's offensive line looks really shiny… as long as you don't consider the cliff after guy #5. Or maybe guy #4. In a best case scenario, still guy #6.
Last year, Michigan had Michael Schofield to step into the lineup, and needed him to. This year any injury will see a walk-on or freshman—probably a true freshman—hit the field. Yipes.
But let's not think about that. As long as the starting five stays intact, the line should be quality. Taylor Lewan is projected as a first-round NFL draft pick, Patrick Omameh is in his fourth year as a starter, Michael Schofield started most of last year and moves to a more natural position, and the other two guys are redshirt seniors. Michigan should have a better line this year even without David Molk.
That first step's a doozy, though.
Tackle
Rating: 5 of 5, not considering depth
Guralnick/Greilick, Detroit News
At this point, "Taylor Lewan is the next Jake Long" is not hope or hype or projection but just a (pretty much) true thing. Lewan may not go first overall in the NFL draft but he's already being projected in the top half of the first round next year, should he choose to depart.
After a promising but penalty-filled freshman year, Lewan cut out the holding calls and stoned opposing pass rushers, snap in, snap out. The primary reason ultra-hyped MSU DE Will Gholston started playing judo chop with various Lewan limbs was that he had no hope of impacting the game in any other fashion:
| TAYLOR LEWAN |
|---|
| AGILITY TO PULL |
| sprint counter |
| gets outside on p&p |
| another sprint counter |
| HATES DONKEYS |
| donkey McNaul |
| donkey Short |
| donkey Meredith |
| donkey some guy |
| donkey-ish Hankins |
| DONKEY HANKINS |
| ETC. |
| nice seal on Worthy |
| stands up Binns |
| gets Toussaint edge |
| DOES BIFF |
| loses balance |
| fails to cut on screen |
In a game where the Michigan OL was overwhelmed, blitz or not (Mark Huyge got 7 protection minuses), Lewan had a measly +1. Across twelve games of fending off the opposition's best pass rusher he racked up a total of four protection minuses. Two of those were for not cutting a guy on a screen; a third was not getting out on a corner on an attempted double pass. The fourth is somewhere in that video above, and I'm not even sure what that was. Even counting that there was literally one QB hurry going one-on-one with Lewan last year, to say nothing of actual sacks. There is a reason he is getting the NFL hype.
(Note that when blitzes cause confusion not localizable to one or two players that sends in free rushers I file that under "team." Lewan's no doubt responsible for some of those. When he identifies a guy to block, it's over.)
The black lining in our silver cloud was Lewan's lack of impact in the run game. He started off well, with three games around +10 in the UFR run chart and a 7-3-+4 against ND in limited opportunities—Michigan did jack before eviscerating Gary Gray in the fourth quarter. This was noted.
how often have you thought about Taylor Lewan this year? Not often, right? Mostly when he takes some donkey and punches it so hard in the nose shards of cartilage come out the back of its donkeyhelmet, right? (In a non-personal-foul acquiring way, of course.)
After that, he struggled to register on the run chart until late. His Big Ten season:
| Game | Opponent | + | - | T | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5 | MINN | 5.5 | 6 | -0.5 | Yeah, surprised me too: had a couple busts and one bad whiff. |
| 6 | NW | 4.5 | 2 | 2.5 | Why so low, numbers? Discussion later. |
| 7 | MSU | 6 | 5 | 1 | Lucky to have both arms in his shoulder sockets. |
| 8 | PU | 7 | 1 | 6 | Would like to see him more involved somehow. |
| 9 | Iowa | 6 | 7 | -1 | Off day. |
| 10 | Illinois | 8 | 5 | 3 | Had some mistakes in space. |
| 11 | Nebraska | 9 | - | 9 | Finally some productive donkey hatred. Belly helps him produce; also got Toussaint the edge on a play that would have gone badly otherwise. |
| 12 | OSU | 9.5 | 1 | 8 | Effective against DTs, mostly, also getting to the second level. |
There's a certain amount of busting plays that is part and parcel of being an offensive lineman, especially one learning a new offense. That doesn't bother me. What does is the overall lack of positives until the tail end of the season. Heavily involved linemen will be putting up twice the positives and negatives as the above—Omameh had eight games where his positives were above ten and five where they were 13 or greater. Lewan didn't get there, and I think this was because of Omameh, ironically:
What is with those Lewan numbers?
The system doesn't try to judge blocks that are far away from the play and often declares an easy thing done okay to be a zero, so backside tackles and down-blocking guys a gap away from the play rarely register. Lewan rarely registered and this week's picture pages were examples of Schofield pulling, Schofield pulling, and Schofield pulling. Why is Michigan pulling the converted tackle backup and running away from their donkey-hating first round tackle?
The only conclusion that makes sense is they hate pulling Omameh. When they did pull left, they pulled Molk or Schofield and Molk, only rarely trying Omameh.
We'll talk about that when we get to the right guard, but Omameh came on in those last three games in which Lewan finally got some traction. Once they could pull the right guard, the left tackle got to express his donkey hatred.
With Omameh figuring it out and another year of experience for both, Michigan figures to be more left-handed on the ground; combine that with the pass blocking mentioned above and factor the injuries Lewan dragged around all year and the projections for his 2012 should be sky-high. He should be an All-American, or at least play like one.
[hit THE JUMP to find out about the other starters, but probably not the backups.]
Big Ten Draft O' Snark: All Big Ten Team
- 2012 illinois
- 2012 iowa
- 2012 nebraska
- 2012 ohio state
- 2012 preseason nit
- denard robinson
- devin gardner
- devin gardner wide receiver possibility
- draftosnark
- fitzgerald toussaint
- jake ryan
- jeremy gallon
- johnathon hankins
- jordan kovacs
- lolgophers
- lolhoosiers
- michael schofield
- museday
- ricky barnum
- taylor lewan
- will gholston
- will gholston isn't state's scariest pass rusher allen is
- wisconsin
Several weeks ago Brian sent me an e-mail to say we're going to have a fantasy draft of Big Ten players called "The Draft Where Whoever Picks Denard Wins," and that I was on the clock. (Parts II, III, and IV)
People of the Earth: this is how you recruit for a fantasy league. Actually this is how if you're a college sports site editor you motivate your hypercompetitive (Michigan grads, remember?) staff to become insane experts on the rest of the conference right before football season begins. For that reason, despite quarterbacks chosen out of position and so so much snark, right now we feel as competent as anyone at putting out one of those All-Such-and-Such list things.
The draft is still going on and some of the picks we've made have yet to be revealed, however we have tagged enough positions at this point to post an official-ish pre-season All Big Ten team. There's a few specialists I'll include but won't reveal who drafted them. I'll also follow up either next week or later on this week with a "what we learned about the Big Ten" post that breaks down all the picks by team. This one's about the best by position.
Site note: We're bringing back jumps again so we can fit more content on the front page for you during the season. You see the "Read more" thing below this? CLICK THAT to get to the good stuff.
