27 For 27: A Document Comment Count

Brian

[SITE NOTE: Due to a confluence of things including a long drive home, four overtimes, thrilling CONCACAF qualifier business, the Tigers, this post, and a desire to stab my eyeballs whenever I look at the tape, UFR is not quite done and will go up tomorrow.]

Fitzgerald Toussaint set a Michigan record for sustained futility on Saturday by running for 27 yards on 27 carries. Since 1949, no other back has gotten as many carries without gaining at least twice as many yards. Posterity demands that someone detail what happened.

A note: blame is apportioned. When things are designated playcall it's because I don't believe it's reasonable to expect Michigan to block player X, either because he's an extra guy in the box or he's tearing towards the line of scrimmage on the snap because he has no fear of a pass. You can adjust your personal indignation levels on this based on how reasonable you thought running into stacked boxes was vis a vis Devin Gardner's 13 YPA and constant turnover threat; I'm just trying to figure out how much of the run splat was preordained by playcalls.

Ready? No. I know you're not. But here we go anyway.

One

27f27-1

Play: Power O
Formation: Tackle over I Form H
Yards: -3

Why it didn't work:

  1. Graham Glasgow ignored the NT.
  2. Predictable playcall sees PSU linebackers flow hard with effectively nine in the box.
  3. Jake Butt gets beat badly by a PSU LB in the hole.

Blame: 80% OL, 10% playcall, %10 TE/FB

Two

27f27-2

Play: Zone stretch.
Formation: Tackle over I Form big
Yards: -3

Why it didn't work:

  1. PSU has straight up nine in the box.
  2. Michigan tries to be clever by running at Williams and Bryant, both of whom get destroyed.
  3. Schofield leaves immediately, so Lewan has no shot at the backside tackle.

Blame: 30% TE/FB, 30% OL, 40% playcall

Three

27f27-3

Play: Power O
Formation: Tackle over Ace H
Yards: 12

Why it didn't work:

  1. Actually it did work.
  2. It works because Schofield gets nice push, giving Toussaint a crease. Glasgow gets movement on a DT and the eighth guy in the box for PSU tries to get over to the frontside when he should probably stack this up near the LOS.

Blame: Everyone is happy!

Four

27f27-4

Play: Counter
Formation: Tackle over trips TE
Yards: 1

Why it didn't work:

  1. Seven guys in the box against six blockers; extra guy makes the stop.
  2. PSU WLB doesn't get suckered by the counter, gives Glasgow no shot to block him.
  3. Kalis gets shed, falling to the ground.

Blame: 80% playcall, 20% OL.

[After THE JUMP: just don't click through. I'm sorry I even did this.]

Five

27f27-6

Play: Tricky edge pitch
Formation: Tackle over I-Form
Yards: 1

Why it didn't work:

  1. PSU has a DE flared out to the short side of the field who stays at the LOS and shuffles out to tackle.
  2. Toussaint can't run through five PSU players.

Blame: 100% playcall.

Six

27f27-7

Play: Inside zone read
Formation: Pistol 2TE twins
Yards: 1

Why it didn't work:

  1. Gardner should pull.
  2. Bryant doesn't come off a double and an aggressive PSU MLB shoots a gap.
  3. Kalis gets no motion on a DT.

Blame: 50% Gardner, 50% OL. (Eight in the box is OK since they are trying to option one off.)

Seven

all-dts

Play: Zone stretch
Formation: Tackle over I-Form twins
Yards: 0

Why it didn't work:

  1. Glasgow and Kalis can't scoop the NT; seems like a Kalis issue.
  2. Schofield gets driven back by other DT.
  3. Penn State has 4 DTs and a DE on the field.

Blame: 50% playcall, 50% OL.

Eight

27f27-9

Play: Iso
Formation: I-Form
Yards: 2

Why it didn't work:

  1. Playside LBs are already at the LOS when the handoff is made.
  2. Eighth guy in the box is unblocked and there to deal with a good-idea cutback from Toussaint.
  3. Maybe Kalis doesn't get off his block fast enough but with LBs plunging down like this very difficult for him to do so.

Blame: 90% playcall, 10% OL.

Nine

27f27-10

Play: Zone stretch
Formation: WTF
Yards: –2

Why it didn't work:

  1. Michigan runs a stretch into the boundary with an unbalanced line.
  2. Six blockers against eight defenders.
  3. LOL

Blame: 100% playcall

Ten

27f27-11

Play: Zone stretch
Formation: Ace 3-wide
Yards: 0

Why it didn't work:

  1. Kalis, Bryant, and Funchess get obliterated.

Blame: 80% OL, 20% TE/FB

Eleven

27f27-12

Play: Power O
Formation: Goal line
Yards: 0

Why it didn't work:

  1. No OL movement.
  2. Butt gets pancaked on a kickout block.

Blame: 50% OL, 50% TE/FB

(End of first half.)

Twelve

27f27-13

Play: Power O
Formation: Tackle over twins H
Yards: 0

Why it didn't work:

  1. Eight in the box with three guys flowing to a hole that will have two blockers in it.
  2. Butt runs past a LB to try and hit a DB, misses, but Bryant gets hit two yards in the backfield so it's not really relevant.
  3. When Fitz cuts back that blows up Magnuson's blocking angle. (Michigan is still running tackle over with Lewan out.)

Blame: 100% playcall.

Thirteen

27f27-14

Play: Power O
Formation: I-Form
Yards: –1

Why it didn't work:

  1. Shane Morris is in after Gardner's helmet gets knocked off.
  2. Williams loses a downblock against a DE.
  3. Bryant doesn't block either of the two guys who show.
  4. Kerridge picks off a DB instead of a LB.

Blame: 50% bloody fate, 30% TE/FB, 20% OL.

Fourteen

27f27-15

Play: Inside zone
Formation: Ace twins
Yards: 0

Why it didn't work:

  1. PSU has 4 DTs and a DE on the field.
  2. They have nine in the box.
  3. Kalis and Williams get destroyed.

Blame: 40% playcall, 30% OL, 30% TE

Fifteen

27f27-16

Play: Iso
Formation: I-Form
Yards: 4

Why it didn't work:

  1. We'll count this one as working. Woo!
  2. PSU has two deep safeties.
  3. Blocking's good.
  4. Iso is generally not something that breaks for a lot of yards.

Blame: Ain't no blame on second and six. /highfive

Sixteen

27f27-17

Play: Zone stretch
Formation: Ace twin TE twins
Yards: 8

Why it didn't work:

  1. It did! Two in a row.
  2. M gets lucky as their blocking is gross but when Toussaint cuts back the backside end is unable to close it down.

Blame: we're cookin' now

Seventeen

27f27-18

Play: Power O
Formation: Ace twins H
Yards: 4

Why it didn't work:

  1. It did again. Three in a row.
  2. Da'Quan Jones trips on Kalis, falls.
  3. Nice kicks from Williams and Butt open up a lane.
  4. Safety makes contact two yards downfield.

Blame: this is almost like offense

Eighteen

27f27-19

Play: Zone stretch
Formation: Ace twin TE
Yards: 0

Why it didn't work:

  1. Despite doubling a LB at the LOS, the two TEs neither kick nor seal him.
  2. M has no angle to get a MLB
  3. Williams then releases and blocks air.
  4. Toussaint bounces into a free corner since Chesson cracked down on a safety who is guy 7.5 in the box.

Blame: 50% TE/FB, 50% OL

Nineteen

27f27-20

Play: Zone stretch
Formation: Ace
Yards: 3

Why it didn't work:

  1. Fitz finds a hole as Jones gets upfield and there's a big gap between him and the backside DT.
  2. Glasgow helps create this hole with a shove and then blocks the MLB, which is probably wrong since that's Burzynski's guy.
  3. SAM is headed outside as that momentarily looks dangerous and slips as he cuts back with Toussaint, tackling Toussaint in the actual gap.

Blame: 100% OL, but amplitude decreased since this almost kind of worked.

Twenty

27f27-21

Play: Power O
Formation: Ace H twins
Yards: 1

Why it didn't work:

  1. Butt gets rocked back by the LB in the hole.
  2. Magnuson gets pushed back by Jones, Burzynski trips over him.
  3. PSU is desperate to preserve clock and M kill it so they know it's a run.

Blame: 50% OL, 50% FB/TE

Twenty One

27f27-22

Play: Inside zone
Formation: Ace
Yards: 0

Why it didn't work:

  1. MLB shoots interior gap on the snap before anyone has a prayer of reacting.
  2. Seriously, I don't know how you stop this.

Blame: 100% playcall

Twenty-Two

27f27-23

Play: Zone stretch
Formation: I-Form Big
Yards: –3

Why it didn't work:

  1. PSU has all DTs in.
  2. One of them beats up Williams.
  3. Glasgow and Kalis can't execute a scoop.
  4. Schofield gets good motion on playside DT with help from Burzynski but then peels off to shove a linebacker. This shove pushes him right past what would have been Kerridge's block and into Toussaint.

Blame: 40% OL, 30% FB/TE, 30% playcall.

Twenty Three

infamous-first-play-of-ot

Play: Zone stretch
Formation: Ace twins twin TE
Yards: 1

Why it didn't work:

  1. Burzynski/Jones matchup doesn't go well(surprise!).
  2. Schofield gets blown up by the WLB, who penetrates.

Blame: 100% OL.

Twenty Four

27f27-24

Play: Iso.
Formation: I-Form
Yards: 2

Why it didn't work:

  1. PSU aligns two LBs basically holding hands and shoots both of them into the A gap. There is one blocker in there, Kerridge.

Blame: 100% playcall.

Twenty Five

27f27-25

Play: Inside zone
Formation: Pistol 3-wide
Yards: 3

Why it didn't work:

  1. Glasgow gets beat by the NT but because of the nature of the play there's a cutback lane; PSU LBs much more hesitant here.
  2. Burzynski gets thrown away by the WLB.
  3. Toussaint is trying to cut and it looks like he slips, so he does not get any YAC.

Blame: 50% OL, 50% Toussaint.

Twenty Six

27f27-26

Play: Iso
Formation: I-Form
Yards: 0

Why it didn't work:

  1. Eight in the box, with every linebacker shooting forward on the snap.
  2. PSU stuffs up the hole, but M actually gets decent motion and there will be a cutback for Toussaint.
  3. Except the eighth guy roars in unblocked from behind and ends it.

Blame: 100% playcall

Twenty Seven

27f27-27

Play: Down G
Formation: Goal line
Yards: 0

Why it didn't work:

  1. Burzynski gets shot back into the hole by Jones.
  2. Magnuson gets pushed back.

Blame: 100% OL

Final Tally

Ten points per play were awarded.

  1. PLAYCALLING: 94
  2. OL: 91
  3. FB/TE: 30
  4. FATE: 5
  5. TOUSSAINT: 5
  6. GARDNER: 5

I'm impressed you got to the end of this. Hang in there, man.

Comments

AC1997

October 16th, 2013 at 5:26 PM ^

The more I think about it, since they never pass to Williams, why not give Magnuson or Braden a number in the 80's and have them take his job?  They can run one pass play for that converted OL against Indiana to keep the defense honest and actually have a guy out there who can block.   

 

Someone tell me why this is a bad idea?  

Reader71

October 16th, 2013 at 5:33 PM ^

Does evidence of those counters mean that we will stop hearing that Borges never runs them? We don't block them for shit, but he calls them.

I also propose that we try to extend this to passing plays. When Gardner scrambles or is sacked, Borges has still called a pass. Someone might even be wide open, but we have no time to throw because our line is the worst any of us have ever seen. And because TV doesn't show us all of the routes, we never know. It just looks like a bad play.

gustave ferbert

October 16th, 2013 at 5:50 PM ^

It's pretty well established that we're trying to fit the square peg in a round hole.  What gives us the best chance to have a more potent offense going forward?  Just revert back to a spread?  Put Funchess out as a wide receiver and let Touissaint run in more open ground?   I feel at this point, we know the OL is not good, Borges playcalling is suspect, the insistence of B Hoke manball is proving to be counterproductive.  What in the opinon of the bloggers/readers is the solution for this year? 

Cranky Dave

October 16th, 2013 at 5:52 PM ^

Since Sunday my view of the problem has moved from 80/20  playcalling/blocking to more like 50/50 in line with Brian's assessment of these 27 plays.  Reading this post and looking at tape of other teams both running Power O, stretch, iso-it is not as hard to run those plays against 8 man fronts as it might seem on the surface.  However, it is almost impossible to run those plays against any defense with this offensive line.  The problems are never the same affect all of the OL, TEs and FBs (except Lewan).  Poor angles, no push, mental errors.  It also seems like sometimes our guys are late getting off on the snap.   

Maybe this is 2008 again in terms of the offense and the coaches are going to keep calling the same damn plays regardless of whether it works. However, at least there was significant improvement in '09 but this offense seems like it could be even worse next year absent some huge positive surprises from the OL, TEs, FBs and QB. 

 

 

Blue Durham

October 16th, 2013 at 6:29 PM ^

I realize the focus was Toussaint's carries, but it should include all tailback runs. Green had 3 carries for 1 yard, thus the tailbacks had 30 for 28.

Even ESPN did better with 30 for 30.

Also, asking a TE (essentially in name only) to block when he is a known liability in blocking should NOT absolve the playcaller of blame.

Bluebastard

October 16th, 2013 at 7:35 PM ^

Gardner, evidently is not smart enough to check out or into anything. Why not throw to the slot time and again, He missed a wide open Drew Dileo!!!!!!!!!!! AHHHHHHHHHHHHH

UofM626

October 16th, 2013 at 7:38 PM ^

27 yards on 27 carries is not acceptable. I could get more yards then that and I'm 40 years old. I've seen enough of FITZ to last me forever. Give the rock to Green and Rawls and use Fitz sparingly. I'm so sick of his lazy running

Sten Carlson

October 16th, 2013 at 8:34 PM ^

Great detailed breakdown of the running failure. After reading through the post, and the expert comments, I have a question for Space Coyote and the others who seem to have a high football IQ.

Is it possible that Devin is not allowed to audible out of a called run play when he sees a stacked box? It seems inconceivable to me that a college program doesn't have a simple run/pass check system in place. I mean, say what you will about Borges, the man is clearly not a moron, and he obviously understands that running into a stacked box is impossible, or at least not very likely to succeed. As such, I am forced to choose between one of two conclusions: either a) Gardner is given the ability to check out of plays, but for whatever reason did not most of the time; or b) Hoke has told Borges to run up the middle, regardless of the outcome, until the players get it right -- a sort of dogged determination/show of will kinda thing in which he's trying to build the OL experience for the future.

I know one thing for certain: when DG is on, he's very good, and if he could stop turning the ball over, and Michigan had even an average rushing game, the offense would be very hard to stop.

Thoughts?

AlbanyBlue

October 16th, 2013 at 8:39 PM ^

Good analysis.....this pretty much matches up with what I was thinking while watching the game. Namely, this playcalling blows, and the line is suffering from a serious lack of talent. I was watching, thinking, "Okay, I know why Borges / Hoke is trying to do this.They're going uber-conservative on the road with a turnover-prone QB. But they can't do it, so they need to do something else."

The fact that they were unwilling to do something else, that means changes have to be made. Even with a top-quality OL (questionable if it's even possible with Funk's track record), this playcalling will not work against the better teams with smart DCs and quality personnel.

 

Sten Carlson

October 16th, 2013 at 8:58 PM ^

There has to be a motive at play, doesn't there? I mean, everything a play called does is to set up something, right? You show determination to establish the run to catch the defense being "nosey" and beating them with play action. What's befuddling, is that PSU started the game in a "run stop" set and really never left it. Right away, unfortunately, Borges calls a PA Pass, DG throws and ugly INT, and PSU scores quickly. I think Borges wanted to pass, but was torn between worrying about DG's INT problem, and his desire to keep PSU "in the box" to exploit the PA pass. Another INT, a sack fumble, a near miss, and one has to wonder whether Borges felt like he was choosing the lesser of two evils with the crappy running. DG did have 2 TD's to FUNCHESS and 2 to Gallon (and 2 that DF dropped), so Borges didn't TOTALLY go into a shell.

In the 2nd half it seemed like running DG loosened up the defense some, but it was obvious to me that DG (who was wearing a knee brace) looked like he was nearing the limit of his durability. What then?

smwilliams

October 16th, 2013 at 9:14 PM ^

Not to pull something from a writer talking about another sport, but during this year's NBA Draft, our favorite Grantlander Bill Simmons made an excellent point when the Pelicans drafted Nerlens Noel (only to trade him).

Great schools / teams / franchises have an IDENTITY. With the drafting of Noel, the Pelicans were going to play defense like nobody's business (see Thibs' Chicago Bulls teams recently). Oregon Football has an identity. The Patriots have an identity.

Right now, we don't have an identity, especially on offense.

The spread-to-pro transition is the cause for a lot of these ills. Borges/Hoke have spread personnel, but want to establish a POWER MANBALL identity. But, we're more successful with spread concepts. So, the brain trust wants to do A, but is forced to do B in order to have short-term success. Sometimes, you get 2011 Ohio State. Sometimes, you get 2013 Penn State.

The important thing is to believe in establishing that IDENTITY, come hell or high water. Hoke wants to turn this team into Alabama/Stanford. I'm not against that. Right now, we're caught between two worlds. Growing pains, friends, growing pains.

NCBlue

October 16th, 2013 at 9:18 PM ^

Id argue that the weighting is to low as it pertains to the failure of the playcalling.  Specifically, with the run game being so unsuccessful thru the game and yet continuing to run the rock the probability of failure has to be greater. IE, heavier weighted rating for play calling.

Mike420GoBlue

October 16th, 2013 at 9:34 PM ^

A bad call worth 10% in the first quarter should be called at least 20% in the second, 30% in the third... So if it were a 50% play call fault in the first, in the fourth it would be 200%! Crap, I'm with you but my numbers are obviously off...

HighSociety

October 16th, 2013 at 10:52 PM ^

Gardner's 2 first half INT's?

 

They basically went in a shell and tried to let the defense and special teams win the game, which they obviously couldn't.

Not an optimal strategy, but good enough to win 75% of the time which is pretty good for a 2 point road favorite.

Blue Durham

October 17th, 2013 at 10:31 AM ^

Gardner's interceptions came on 3rd and 8 and 2nd and 7. His fumble, the result of a sack, came on 3rd and 5.

Passing on obvious passing downs is going to result in a much higher turnover frequency.

Mixing in a few more passes on 1st and 2nd down probably would have given Gardner better looks and resulted in more yardage. Giving Gardner easier throws could only help with his confidence. Michigan left a lot of yards on the field by refusing to attempt some easy throws on first down.

Yeah, Michigan was a 2 point favorite on the road to a team with 20 less scholarship players, and lost. Perhaps if Penn State had 30 fewer scholarship players, Michigan might have won.

One Inch Woody…

October 16th, 2013 at 11:50 PM ^

Why the eff does Michigan run the zone stretch? I have never seen itgo for a big gain ever. It takes coordination and good understanding of leverage to effectively run the play and I don't think the OL has that yet. At least with power you can run play action to cause some hesitation in the LBs unlike the stretch where they can flow immediately.

zggolfer

October 17th, 2013 at 12:48 AM ^

Sorry we cant seem to win the one on one battles, which doesnt really surprise me with the youth on the line.  To keep trying when we are outnumbered and unable to win the individual matchups reeks of pure desperation or insanity.  With perhaps the third starting lineup this weekend i'd guess we try the same running attack again, hopefully with better results.  If this doesnt produce maybe then we will see a broader playbook.  Unless of course desperation and insanity are once again the offensive philosophy and the beatings will continue.  Personally i'd like to give the offensive line a chance, spread the field and let Gardner do what he's going to do through the air, good or bad.  We have seen the 27 for 27 and it cant get much uglier.

uminks

October 17th, 2013 at 3:27 AM ^

Even our two senior tackles seem to get manhandled at the line. I don't understand. These guys have got size. May be they just lack technique and toughness at this point? Our OL better get better. Even going to more zone blocking will not help us much if the OL doesn't get tough!

Starkii

October 17th, 2013 at 9:10 AM ^

I really have no idea what would be a normal EV for playcalling, but if we say 1/3 good playcalls (not counted here), 1/3 even playcalls (no point) and 1/3 bad play calls, the EV would be 81. We ended up at 94, which I would put us at 1 full bad play worse than average.

I'm still not sure if I'm reading the scoring for playcalling correctly or not though.

In any case, I don't know that I consider the playcalling a major factor in the lack of rushing yards.

jdon

October 17th, 2013 at 10:10 AM ^

so much schadenfruede.

Brian is in his glory.

for me it's over.

 

that's all I have, but jesus this is getting out of hand, I can't wait for saturday just so we can stop hearing about PSU/27 for 27/tackle over/we finally lost so we can implode.

jdon