It's hot seat season in the Big Ten. Survive and advance! [Bryan Fuller]

Preview 2021: Heuristics and Stupid Predictions Comment Count

Seth September 2nd, 2021 at 9:00 AM

Previously: The Story. Podcast 13.0A. Podcast 13.0B. Podcast 13.0C. 5Q5A Offense. 5Q5A Defense. 2020 Heuristics.

Heuristicland

Turnover Margin

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The theory of turnover margin: it is pretty random. Teams that find themselves at one end or the other at the end of the year are likely to rebound towards the average. So teams towards the top will tend to be overrated and vice versa. Nonrandom factors to evaluate: quarterback experience, quarterback pressure applied and received, and odd running backs like Mike Hart who just don't fumble.

  TO THE GOOD   TO THE PAIN
Year Margin   Int + Fumb + Sacks +   Int - Fumb - Sacks -
2007 0.15 (41st) 14 15 2.46(33rd) 14 13 2.17 (67th)
2008 -0.83 (104th) 9 11 2.42(33rd) 12 18 1.83 (57th)
2009 -1.00 (115th) 11 5 1.83(68th) 15 13 2.33 (83rd)
2010 -0.77(109th) 12 7 1.38(98th) 15 14 0.85(10th)
2011 +0.54 (25th) 9 20 2.31 (29th) 16 6 1.38 (33rd)
2012 -0.69 (99th) 7 11 1.69 (69th) 19 8 1.38 (28th)
2013 +0.38(33rd) 17 9 1.9 (64th) 13 8 2.77 (109th)
2014 -1.33 (124th) 5 5 2.4 (49th) 18 8 2.2 (63rd)
2015 -0.31 (92nd) 10 2 2.5 (32nd) 10 6 1.4 (28th)
2016 +0.54 (24th) 13 6 3.54(5th) 7 5 1.69 (39th)
2017 -0.31 (90th) 10 7 3.23(8th) 10 11 2.77 (111th)
2018 +0.38 (35th) 11 6 10.5% (3rd) 9 3 5.4% (43rd)
2019 +0 (61st) 9 11 9.0% (16th) 9 11 6.1% (61st)
2020 -0.50 (96th) 2 1 4.1% (111th) 4 2 3.6% (11th)

Other than “worst sack rate in program history” how was the play? Mathlete put together an adjusted sack rate that accounted for things like opponents and the likelihood of sacks by down and distance, and Michigan’s defense was 61st if that helps you sleep better. Their offensive sack rate dropped to 45th by that measure. It was a weird, weird year.

Anyway it was not a year the turnover gods loved Michigan. If you try hard enough you can name all nine events. I can think of a could of dropped INTs along the way. The only thing I have to add is that in non-garbage time Ohio State picked up 8 of their opponents’ 9 fumbles and lost 1 of their 4, giving them the best fumble luck in the country. They were 2nd in adjusted sack rate so some of that was earned, but also 113th in adjusted sack rate (101st true) on offense so they should have given those back. Just thought you should know.

At such low samples this stuff doesn’t mean much. If you want to add “snakebit” to the jellyfish, pufferfish, striated surgeonfish, scorpion, hooded pitohui, dart frog, and Pfeffer’s flamboyant cuttlefish and Spartan wide receivers that punctured Michigan’s hide last year, be my guest.

[After the JUMP: Things that might mean more]

Position Switches

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You want me to take on what? [Fuller]

Theory of position switches: if you are starting or considering starting a guy who was playing somewhere else a year ago, that position is in trouble. There are degrees of this. Flipping sides of the ball is very bad. Sliding an OT to OG is probably fine. Sliding an OG to OT… might be bad. Flipping ILB slots is nothing.

None of these really bother me this year, and a few are positives. I’ll note quickly that the switch to the new defensive system doesn’t change certain roles. The DTs are still DTs unless they weren’t really DTs last year, MLB/WLB are the same, safety, cornerback, and nickel safety are unchanged by the front even if the coverages have changed.

In descending order of concern:

Trying to move Zak Zinter to C in place of Vastardis: Cross-training your guards in case of injury makes sense, but this became a serious storyline from the end of spring through when he got dinged up in fall camp. It didn’t seem to take, and Vastardis seems firmly entrenched back at center. The fact that they tried—and the fact that Vastardis has lost weight two years in a row (he was 317, now 294) tells me this might be a problem spot. It also almost certainly means they were hoping to replace him with one of the guys on the bench.

RG/RT Andrew Stueber staying at RT: The cascade of injuries to the OL last year necessitated Stueber kicking back outside for most of the year after a couple of games at guard, where I was really hoping he could team up with Zinter. He might be overmatched by elite edge rushers. He also might not see one until November.

All the Defensive Ends to OLB: The concern is about the linebacker aspects, since all but the newcomers are sized and were recruited for DE. One the weakside, Aidan Hutchinson can play outside to anchor and dominate all, and that OLB spot in this defense is really a DE anyways. Taylor Upshaw, David Ojabo, and Braiden McGregor (once he’s healthy) came in with some linebacker in them, and are probably going to fit in fine. If we were worried the Anchor types like Mike Morris and Gabe Newburg might find themselves too blocky for the role, based on practice reports that hasn’t been the case (especially with Morris).

Viper Michael Barret to WLB: The vipers are going to eat the transition cost the hardest, and Barrett at the ILB spot worried me because he gave back all the points he earned screaming off the edge by getting blocked into the Gatorade by tight ends, and now he’ll have to take on any linemen that escape the five-man front. He’s got enough size to play it in Macdonald’s system, and flipping from one 4-3 OLB position to another isn’t that big of a deal. Getting passed by Hill-Green is evidence Barrett’s been removed from his wheelhouse. The Ravens would use a hybrid there so there’s a role still, and this is relatively minor.

Rush 3T Julius Welschof to 5-2 DT: Juice was starting to break through last year as an effective passing downs DT. That sounds like it would translate to a 3-4 DE but the DT position in this defense really calls for more of a regular 4-3 DT type, and by all accounts Welschof needs more time to get used to it. The other Don Brown DTs all seem well-suited to the new role, all of them more than they were to NT in the old system.

6th OL Joel Honigford to (slimmer) TE. He was an effective snowplow last year in their 6th lineman packages. He slimmed down 48 pounds and is now 257 and a tight end in fact. Can he catch a pass? Could he not at 305 when nobody was expecting it? Does this say anything about the position’s depth. Probably not.

Unused safeties to CB and vice versa. New safeties coach Ron Bellamy traded German (twin brother of Gemon) Green and Quinten Johnson to the cornerbacks for Jalen Perry and future considerations. German is another surviving member of the “let’s not get fades anymore” tall guy class but Quinten arrived the year after as an athlete with an injury. These might have been “let’s throw something at the wall” moves when they saw the CB situation, but none of these guys have produced a whisper since.

OG Jack Stewart to NG. Was buried at guard and a sign they were looking for bodies to fill the defensive line. It occurred to me with the COVID year that he (and Q.Johnson for that matter) still have freshman eligibility, so there’s no rush to get him on the field. There doesn’t seem to be any talk of it either.

OPPOSITES OF CONCERN, by how amped we are about it:

Ronnie Bell back to slot WR. #SpeedinSpace means getting Ronnie the ball where he can make YAC. Don’t call this weird; it’s what he does. This is PFF in their annual preview mag:

Bell has been a decidedly better receiver from the slot compared to the outside. He has run 70% of his routes from the slot over the past two years, but it was more of a 50-50 split in 2020, so he could see more of the outside in 2021. Bell’s receiving grade in the slot since 2019 sits at 78.1, over 20 grading points higher than his grade from the outside. His yards per route run differential is staggering, too, as he has generated 2.71 yards per slot route to only 1.20 yards per outside route. Both of those slot metrics rank in the top 10 among Power Five receivers. He has also struggled to get off press coverage when on the outside. Regardless, Bell is an after-the-catch threat at all times. His 9.2 yards after the catch per reception since 2019 is tied for first in the Power Five. The only question is: How easy will it be to actually get the ball in his hands when he lines up on the outside?

Answer: You get the best deep threat in the transfer market, pair him with Cornelius Johnson and Roman Wilson outside, and start Ronnie back in the slot.

Mike Sainristil back to slot WR(?). He wasn’t bad but the addition of Baldwin means Sainristil too can move back inside after a season trying to be Nico Collins but half a foot shorter.

Mazi Smith to 3-4 nose tackle. It didn’t take long for the “Mazi needs to get his body in shape” talk to change into “Mazi is the breakout player of the defense” once Macdonald put him at the “tip of the spear” for his 3-4 defense. Smith is also up to 326 after being listed at 305 the last two seasons. Seems like a natural fit.

An Embarrassing Prediction, No Doubt

Worst Case Barring Extreme Injury Scenarios: This is a tough question this year because there are several guys they could lose—Hutchinson, Dax, Ross, and Gemon on defense, Vastardis if Zinter can’t play C and the next guy’s a true freshman on offense. Also what is an extreme injury scenario when literally their last game week was the one they were set to travel to Columbus with 35 active players quarterbacked by Dan Villari (and would have won)? Is there something worse than knocking out every one of their 8 draft picks (plus Hawkins) except the extraneous RB they won’t throw to?

Yes there is, because we’ve been through waiting to fire the coach seasons before, and if it comes to that they really could go 3-9. Really. NIU is the only freebie on the schedule.

Best Case: I consider three of their games highly unlikely, but the rest are beatable. Tape the defense back together into something functional and weird, and there’s enough offensive firepower to go 10-2.

Final Verdict

I honestly can’t tell you which is more likely. But I can paint a feelingsgraph.

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In other words if there’s blood in the water after a bad start (lose to Washington, crushed by Wisconsin again, struggle with Rutgers), the enemies will frenzy, and chunks of the team who’ve done enough to prove themselves to an NFL team or a transfer destination could check out rather than risk injury for Harbaugh’s inglorious end. That’s NOT a prediction (I hope it’s not!) but a statement that there’s a bar to reach where there’s hope for next year and beyond under Harbaugh, and no floor if that hope isn’t there.

You’re going to scream at me for this I know, but it was kind of how I felt going into the 2006 season. That 7-5 season Brian titled the “Year of Infinite Pain” before he knew how much the irony on that might mature had my younger self’s faith deeply shaken. Intellectually, the injuries and the nature of those close losses, and the talent on the team should have made me feel more confident. I thought we were seeing the momentum lent to Lloyd Carr’s program by his predecessors finally petering out. I thought he was losing the team, feared their superstar DE wouldn’t take to OLB when they futzed with the front, that going nickel was going to bite them, and that they didn’t have a second linebacker, a second cornerback, or any depth behind them. Was it reasonable to doubt back then, given what we knew? Not as much as there is now.

I am no more predicting a 2006 hurrah than I am the wheels come off like the end of the Hoke and Rodriguez regimes. I’m not even on board with those who think this is the end, even if they lose to Ohio State again.

The main difference between the Seth losing faith at 26 and the 41-year-old version who gets to share it with more than a group of friends who involuntarily signed up to be emailed is improved mental health, more perspective about real shit than I would wish on you at this life point, and the knowledge that everyone not basking in the gloriously preposterous potential of a new coach also feels this way about their teams.

Think of Nebraska.

OOC
Sep 4 Western Michigan Must Win
Sep 11 Washington Tossup
Sep 18 Northern Illinois Must win
Conference
Sep 25 Rutgers Must win
Oct 2 @Wisconsin Likely loss
Oct 9 @Nebraska Lean to win
Oct 23 Northwestern Lean to win
Oct 30 @Michigan State Must win
Nov 6 Indiana Likely loss
Nov 13 @Penn State Lean to loss
Nov 20 @Maryland Lean to win
Nov 27 Ohio State Expected loss
Absent: Iowa, Illinois, Purdue, Minnesota

8-4. I did it: I managed to talk myself up one win from my prediction all offseason, but it’s a very very precarious 8-4—the kind that is unlikely to get to 10-2 but could crumble any moment into 4-8.

The schedule has one certain doom, two strong conference contenders, and a trip to Penn State that would be a tossup on neutral ground (Penn State is just Michigan with the order of last year’s games reversed). If Michigan can find one win in the afore mentioned group (one nice thing please?) they can afford to drop one to Washington or various down-on-their luck Big Ten teams. Trips to Nebraska after Wisconsin and to Maryland between PSU/OSU look less daunting if you consider those two teams might already be checked out on their coaches by then.

If Michigan enters November as one of those teams, it will be the usual end-of-a-coach horror show. If they get there with one loss Michigan will be back to their Carrbaughller normal. Outback or death. Let's ride!

Comments

lhglrkwg

September 2nd, 2021 at 9:53 AM ^

The spread of 3-9 to 10-2 feels right. I truly have no clue. Part of me thinks the program is in just as much disarray now as it was a year ago, and another part of me thinks Harbaugh is still a good coach who generally wins 9-10 games (albeit often aided by Don Brown's defense crushing everyone mediocre and worse).

7-8 wins feels about right

Brian Griese

September 2nd, 2021 at 10:29 AM ^

I agree. If you view the schedule as having 9 in the “could lose” bucket, you’re doing very well to win 5 or 6 of those.

Honestly, the Harbaugh regime seems to bank on 4 games: Wash, @PSU, @MSU and IU. We all know what’s most likely coming with Wisconsin and OSU. Hopefully there’s enough talent on the team to beat the 6 other teams not listed. Is 2-2 in the 4 games I listed enough to save him if the 2 wins are MSU and PSU? What happens if it’s 1-3 and the one win is Washington? 

DennisFranklinDaMan

September 2nd, 2021 at 12:16 PM ^

The neat thing is, this is a perfect opportunity for the team to surprise people. Expectations (at least by Michigan standards) are really low, and the players certainly will have a bunker mentality. Harbaugh -- if he's able (and that's a big question at this point) -- should have no problem motivating them to "shock the world" ... and for once to mean it.

I mean, seriously. I'm kind of hoping that they decide to rally around the tradition, the helmet, the stadium, and the lack of any real optimism, and ... just play, dammit. Just play. Hard.

DennisFranklinDaMan

September 2nd, 2021 at 10:01 AM ^

I know we've said this ad nauseam, but one last time: I sort of honestly don't care about the record. I could even take a losing record, if absolutely necessary. But please make watching Michigan football less like torture this year. Make it look like the coaches know how to coach and are trying to maximize player potential, and are actually thinking about exploiting mismatches and seizing opportunities. Make Michigan look like a fun place to play, so we can use that to lure future recruits, rather than a place for talented players to run into a wall over and over. If we lose, let it be less obviously tied to a lack of preparation and understanding by the coaching staff.

Dammit, coaches, do your jobs this year. That's all I ask.

gobluem

September 2nd, 2021 at 10:11 AM ^

Yeah I said it in another thread yesterday, but I just want to watch a good product on the field

 

Yeah, I'd love to beat OSU. I crave that. But I'd settle for just feeling like we played to the best of our ability and didn't commit a bunch of dumb mistakes and have poor coaching

 

2016/2017 had that feel, and then we quickly fell off a cliff

dragonchild

September 2nd, 2021 at 11:07 AM ^

Hear, hear.  We know this team has problems, but we BPONErs can overlook problems a lot more than haters give us credit for.  What's been breaking our hearts is the dysfunction.  The team will have enough challenges without punching itself in the face.  Stop punching yourselves in the face!

Seth's given us the facts.  Given as optimistically as he can manage, but reality is our DTs will get pushed around, our CBs will get burned, and once again half the B1G will gleefully try to end the football careers of various Michigan players, and the refs will obligingly look the other way.  OSU has everything it could ever want but it won't be enough; they'll also get stupid lucky and the B1G will change the rules midseason to ensure they win the conference.  The coaches, at least this season, can't do anything about any of that.

Fine.  No, really, it's fine!  It won't be fun, but I've learned to stop worrying about things out of everyone's control.  However, as long as you're snakebit, rebuilding, and dealing with institutionalized corruption, AT THE VERY FUCKING LEAST PLEASE, PLEASE, PLEASE STOP RUNNING STUPID PLAYS like wildcat as a one-play look, or a 1990-style play action on 2nd and 20, or a flare route you never throw to, or take 20 goddamn seconds to get out the play on your own 30-yard-line when there's 48 seconds left in the half.  Mr. Jim Harbaugh, there are head coaches making half the salary you make this year that aren't so embarrassing to watch.

We're going to lose to OSU.  We're going to get annihilated by OSU.  But.  BUT.  We could lose to OSU by 70 points because we took risks that backfired, or we could lose by 70 because we did things like handed off to a fucking tight end.

This is MGoBlog, home of UFR fercrissakes.  We're here to make that very distinction between fate and incompetence.

P.S. My prediction, as long as we're making them:  4-8.  Barring injury, the team has talent to win considerably more, but dysfunction can't fix dysfunction.  The team will need the coaches to go straight-As at everything from development to playcalling to get the most out of this stretched-thin unit, which. . . well, if they had that in them, we wouldn't be here.

Brian Griese

September 2nd, 2021 at 11:19 AM ^

I agree with this line of thinking.  I am less concerned with Michigan sneaking out a 10-9 win versus Nortwestern and more concerned with:

  • The coaches understanding the law of large numbers and how that pertains to tempo use
  • Knowing when to use tempo and when not to
  • Peppering our best offensive skill players instead of trying to get 8 different players involved every game
  • Embracing downfield passing
  • Not being called for constant stupid and obvious penalties
  • Managing the clock correctly and using proper game theory on 4th down
  • Improvement on defense in terms of scheme and results as the season goes on, as we know that side of the ball probably won't be that great

 

That's my measuring stick(s) for the year.  I am optimistic about some of them, not so much about others.  

WGoNerd

September 2nd, 2021 at 10:12 AM ^

The only thing I'll say is that, regardless of where you stand on him right now, with Jim Harbaugh as the head coach the best case scenario will always be 12-0, no matter how unlikely that outcome is. The man can still put together a perfect game plan every now and then.

Remember the OSU game plan the O'Korn year? If Brandon Peters doesn't get murdered against Wisconsin we win that game. The possibility is ALWAYS there. It's just (severely) improbable.

Have I hedged enough so that people know I don't actually think this will happen?

Blake Forum

September 2nd, 2021 at 10:13 AM ^

One thing Michigan has going for it is that the B1G as a whole is probably worse at the top end than it was in 2019. OSU, PSU, and Wisconsin all seem at least a bit worse than they were two years ago. The bad news is that Indiana is a lot better, but more importantly, Michigan also appears to be worse than they were in 2019. 8-4 seems like a sober prediction with 9-3 being possible if we get a little bit of luck 

stephenrjking

September 2nd, 2021 at 10:24 AM ^

The schedule is a real factor here. Seth is exactly right about how things could go wrong, and this team is on a knife edge if things go any worse than they should at all.

On the one hand: if the team can beat Washington and fulfill its potential consistently enough, they’re going to Michigan State with a 6-1 record. Win there and then they are 7-1 and you’re looking at a slate of games where everyone expects them to lose a couple… which means that the team (if not the fanbase) can absorb a loss to Indiana or something and still stay cohesive to perform well at Penn State or something.

On the other hand, lose to Washington, look shaky in another game… the team is traveling to Wisconsin under pressure and could well get trucked, and then the wheels could fall off.

It’s not like this team is incapable of losing a game that it shouldn’t. Michigan does that from time to time. If that game is early in the season and Washington and Wisconsin are actually better teams, Michigan could be going to East Lansing 3-3 and the meltdown may already be in progress going into a rivalry game where the opponent smells blood in the water.

No pressure or anything.

Beating Washington has a lot riding on it. Can they do it,

…maybe. I’ll guess yes and say 8-4, hope for better, and expect worse. 

nappa18

September 2nd, 2021 at 10:57 AM ^

I’ve always found your posts sensible and well written. One minor point, Michigan is extremely capable of losing games it shouldn’t. Think you understated this a bit. Since Harbaugh at least 2 a season? But, Iam nit picking. More significantly, I just don’t see this team getting to 7-1. Forget about opponents, game  home or away. 


 

 

 

Perkis-Size Me

September 2nd, 2021 at 10:29 AM ^

Its pretty remarkable that this team has a spread between 3-9 and 10-2, but it honestly feels right.

I have no stinking idea which way this team is going to go. There is absolutely enough talent on the team to where, if all the right buttons are clicked and the proper coaching is put in place on both sides of the ball, they can thoroughly beat everyone not named PSU, Wisconsin and OSU, steal one between Wisconsin and PSU, and then hang tough and play a close, respectable game against OSU where OSU is still clearly the better team, but Michigan makes them earn what they get. 

Or, by the same token, if this team gets punched in the mouth early or loses bad to Washington or Wisconsin, I could also just see the wheels completely falling off, the team collectively checking out, and OSU handing Michigan a 50 point obliteration at season's end. 

Neither outcome would surprise me. 

L'Carpetron Do…

September 2nd, 2021 at 11:31 AM ^

It's amazing to me that under Harbaugh in many of the games they've lost, this team has played like absolute garbage but was still in contention to win (2018 @ND, 2019 @Penn St., Orange Bowl, et cetera). I don't know if that means Harbaugh's teams are good or bad.

But, in other games they've looked absolutely lost. Since you brought up Mike Tyson's famous quote about getting punched in the mouth, I would argue that no team embodies that quite like Michigan. In so many of these L's, Michigan is just stunned after one big play or bad turnover and they never respond or recover (the most stark example of this is the early fumble at Wisconsin in 2019). This is totally mental and I'm desperate to see a Michigan team play with some fight and energy. That's what I'd like to see different in 2021- they may be less talented than previous teams but if they get some mental toughness I will be thrilled.

Goggles Paisano

September 2nd, 2021 at 4:57 PM ^

I don't have much of an expectation for this season as I am waiting to see it first. But... I cannot fathom this team being 3-9.  Too many talented players to be that bad.  We should have better athletes than most of the teams on the schedule.  You have to have some serious kind of dysfunction to go 3-9.  Even 5-7 or 6-6 is hard to fathom.

jbrandimore

September 2nd, 2021 at 10:36 AM ^

Well done, Seth. 

I'm going to force myself out of BPONE for a bit of evenhanded prediction making and observations that I think are evidence based that have been mostly overlooked by the media and blogging community.

Reasons for optimism:

1. Steve Clinkscale has a proven track record of getting above average secondary play out of undermanned and under athletic players. In short, the whole was always more than the sum of the parts. This is in direct contrast to Don Brown whose approach demanded better athletes at those positions.

2. If JH can step back a bit, Matt Weiss came from the NFL and he knows things JH doesn't know. In the NFL, knowing what time outs are for and that two minute drills aren't something to be avoided are part of your job description. Hopefully, JH puts Weiss in charge of both things.

3. Even when Don Brown's defense was working well, it was always a fairly low turnover unit. This is because essentially, man to man involves the DBs rarely looking at the QB throwing the ball and the goal is to bat it and not intercept it. Zone schemes are the opposite. Hopefully, the turnovers the defense generates goes up. This should also help with those super annoying QB runs that Don Brown always seemed to give up on 3rd and 12. Zone defenses stop those more effectively.

4. The schedule is actually favorable. Nebraska looks to be the worst team in the league, and MSU isn't far ahead of them. JH is undefeated in EL for those chalking up the MSU game as a loss. Coupled with Maryland - which should be a struggle - that's three very winnable road games. If they can hold serve on the tossup home games you can see 9-3 as very possible.

5. Overall, the B1G is crap. The B1G will likely produce the nation's worst 9-3 team. Why not us?

6. I expect early struggles in learning the new defensive schemes. The good news is for the first time since 2015, we are nearly guaranteed to not play all our best football before Halloween. Win or lose some of these games, we should at least expect to see some of the lightbulbs turn on as the season goes on and the players learn the defensive scheme and maybe even master it a bit.

7. Crossing fingers on this one: it's possible JH maybe gets it that he's been mentally checked out for 3 or 4 years and realizes that he features prominently on any list of those who have to improve their performance.

 

stephenrjking

September 2nd, 2021 at 10:49 AM ^

Good analysis, except I disagree about #6: while it is not unreasonable to expect a team to grow as it learns new stuff, even if it loses a couple of games… we have a proven track record of the program falling off the rails when things go wrong, and most of the guys in the locker room were there for it last year. So, where the strong character of the leaders in 2007 were able to right the ship after two of the most disastrous losses in program history, I don’t know that the current program can do that if they lose a game they shouldn’t. 

jbrandimore

September 2nd, 2021 at 11:17 AM ^

As usual, you are correct, but my thinking on #6 is as follows:

When the man to man obviously wasn't working the only coaching move available to Don Brown was to suggest that the defensive backs run much faster. I can see why the continued failure would lead players to mentally check out on the coaching last year.

My expectation for this year includes Clinkscale providing help and schemes where we are out-athleted. This may or may not be effective, but I think if they players see the coaches are actively trying to help them and not setting them up for failure week after week might make the buy in stronger and more durable.

Of course, I write that fully expecting to see ridiculously stupid goal line wildcats formations which do not work and next to zero QB runs.

 

Durham Blue

September 2nd, 2021 at 11:35 AM ^

I put the IU matchup in favor of Michigan.  IU is certainly good and returns a good, experienced QB.  And their coach is a proven thorn in our side.  But I feel like Mike Hart may have some good intel to share with the Michigan coaches and it will prove helpful.  And losing pretty badly to them last season likely does not sit well with the Michigan players.  The home crowd will be jacked up looking for revenge.  I think Michigan wins this game and for once it's not a sweaty palms affair for Michigan.  I think the sweaty palms affair will be at MSU but I think we pull that one out.  It will be a very frustrating game because of last season's loss and the want of Michigan fans to put the Spartans demonstrably back in their place.  I can see Michigan winning that game on a last second FG or in OT.

I am most confident that Michigan goes 8-4 with losses to Wisconsin, PSU, Ohio St and some other bad optics loss such as NW, Maryland or Nebraska.  But I don't think we will lose to IU.  Gut feel time.

dragonchild

September 2nd, 2021 at 11:42 AM ^

I dunno.  They have better corners and a better QB.

Motivation can beat ability, on a good day, when the latter is complacent.  But it's generally Harbaugh who's terrible at mentally preparing his teams for big games.

I remember we hired this guy because (in part) he motivated Stanford out of their nadir into a historical upset against USC.  That was with their backup QB!  The guy we have now seems to get his players to freak out on the regular.

Seth

September 2nd, 2021 at 2:03 PM ^

The road factor is going to be a lot bigger this year I think. The players have not played in a full stadium in over a year and the fans have not had a chance to be in the stadium for over a year. I'm not going looking for it now but someone proved opening games are even a bigger home field advantage because the fans have so much pent-up cheering in them and the road team is not used to it yet. This year will be that effect on steroids. 

MGoStrength

September 2nd, 2021 at 12:32 PM ^

@Maryland Lean to win

@Nebraska Lean to win

Indiana Likely loss

Am I the only one that thinks Nebraska is shit, Maryland will be a tough game, and Indiana is a toss up?  I think people are giving Indiana way too much credit and not giving Maryland enough.  The Maryland game is also sandwiched at the end of the year between PSU & OSU.  I think that's a difficult draw for a road game in November.  I also think PSU is better than Indiana.  Indiana needed Covid, a miracle last play, a home game, and a healthy Penix to beat them last year.  I don't see it happening again.  Indiana has to play @ Iowa, @ PSU, and @ UM and get OSU and Cincy at home.  I could easily see them dropping all of those games.  So, I'd go Maryland lean to win, Nebraska must win, and Indiana toss up.

Anyway it was not a year the turnover gods loved Michigan.

I have no statistics to back this up, but I get the feeling turnover margin doesn't mean what it used to.  Today's offenses get the ball more often, score more often, and score faster.  Turnovers are a killer in a 21-17 game...not so much in a 52-38 game.  I don't have much to back this up other than looking at last year turnover margin leaders.  OSU and Indiana were up there.  So were teams like ASU, Wake Forest, & Kentucky.

Spitfire

September 2nd, 2021 at 1:35 PM ^

I agree. Can't lose to Nebraska. Maryland's going to be tougher this year and I see Indiana taking a step back. Interesting comment about turnovers. I think you still want to reduce them but not at the expense of being too conservative on offense. In today's game the offenses need to keep pushing. 

Vote_Crisler_1937

September 2nd, 2021 at 12:40 PM ^

If the general consensus about Michigan having a lot of talent is correct (here’s hoping) I am still unconvinced of much better than 6-6, maybe 7-5, but closer to 5-7 because of the following: 

Harbaugh led Michigan teams: 

1. cannot beat equal or more talented opponents more than once in a very great while (2-12 vs top 10)

2. come out unprepared and totally surprised by teams, even those with inferior talent (MSU last year, Rutgers last year, Northwestern 2018 or 19 in Evanston at night, Army’s defense, etc)

3. bizarre play-calling/strategy, (QB “reads” nobody, play-action on 2nd and forever, hand off to the TE playing running back, 2 QBs on the field, “player name” Cat that is always a run straight ahead, no attempt at tempo, etc.) 

4. Astonishing substitutions/personnel packages (Mason at nose, walk-ons subbing in for DPJ/Black on 3rd and 10 in a one-score OSU game, Devin Gil playing over Ross and then platooning with Ross, etc) 

I doubt many of these will be fixed. 

AlbanyBlue

September 2nd, 2021 at 5:27 PM ^

An excellent summation. I hate Harbaugh's "tricks" with a passion. Apparently, he feels like he's outthinking the opposition, but they have Harbaugh downloaded. And he doesn't see that.

As far as substitutions, they are very Quinn-tricia Lion-esque. There was a play last season where the Lions took their best receivers off the field so they could throw to a backup TE. When Michigan's substitutions seem Lion-esque, that's clearly a problem.

BlueSky

September 2nd, 2021 at 1:14 PM ^

Just as there was recency bias back in '06, that is going on now with a lot of fans and media.  Sane analysis says Michigan will be better this year than last, and Harbaugh will not be fired this year.

Seth

September 2nd, 2021 at 2:07 PM ^

I went back and forth on that one but I decided Nebraska certainly could have beaten Illinois and we have to play at Nebraska. I am totally ready for Nebraska to be a one-win team but I also expect Nebraska to give Michigan trouble just because of the kind of team they are and the way they use space horizontally. So I punted. They are kind of like Maryland in that I really don't know what we are going to get.