Devin Gardner to Receiver: Good Idea Comment Count

Ace


Walker, Gardner, Avant (L to R)

After yesterday's one-two gut punch of basketball news, let's talk football, shall we? The story that will likely dominate the spring is the potential move of quarterback Devin Gardner to wide receiver, at least part-time. Gardner, in case you didn't see Brian's UV yesterday, showed some pretty serious skills at receiver when camping as a high schooler. He's also 6'5", athletic, blessed with hands large enough to make the catch above, and familiar with the offense. Meanwhile, Michigan's two known quantities at receiver are Roy Roundtree, whose production plummeted last year when QB OH NOES wasn't a regular part of the playbook, and Jeremy Gallon, who looks quite promising but is also listed at 5'8".

Gardner taking some snaps at receiver is a good idea then, right? I certainly think so, but I've heard several arguments to the contrary. Allow me to present them, then do my best to crush them.

Argument 1—Gardner shouldn't play receiver because if he's hurt at wideout and Denard gets inevitably dinged (or hurt himself, God forbid) we're totally screwed.

This is the argument I've seen the most, and the mentality behind it is one I absolutely hate. Yes, I'm aware that Michigan has just three scholarship QBs on the roster. That is the reality for this year and it's not an optimal one. Denard Robinson has been known to get knocked around on occasion, sometimes requiring a backup cameo. He's a running quarterback. Injuries happen.

But it takes a large leap from "Michigan is thin at QB" to "Gardner can't play wideout because injury doomsday scenario." First of all, if Denard gets hurt, that's a doomsday scenario in and of itself. If Gardner is hurt at the same time, well, the football gods hate Michigan. Does the slim chance of this worst-case scenario happening mean Michigan shouldn't play one of their best athletes at a position in dire need of help when he otherwise wouldn't see the field? No.

Simply put, college coaches cannot operate under the assumption that the worst will happen. That's the same line of thinking that made coaches doubt the viability of the forward pass (remember, only three things can happen when you throw, and two of them are bad) and causes the Zooks of the coaching world to punt on 4th-and-3 from the opponent's 38. Brady Hoke has proven that he's got some serious cajones, and that's generally regarded as a fantastic trait in a head coach. This is not how he operates.

Also, redshirt freshman Russell Bellomy may very well be an equally viable backup option as Gardner, or at least at the point where the dropoff between the two backups isn't large enough to justify keeping Gardner on the bench when he could be contributing at wideout. Which brings me to the next argument...

Argument 2—Gardner shouldn't play receiver because it'll take away from his practice reps at quarterback and he won't develop.

This one holds more water than the first argument, but I still don't agree with it. Gardner is already splitting backup reps at QB with Bellomy, and unless you think Gardner needs a ton of "mental reps," I don't think it hurts to have him spending his non-throwing practice time running routes and catching passes.

It's not like Gardner is switching sides of the ball. In fact, playing receiver can help with his quarterback play; running routes can hone timing, understanding of schemes, and keep him sharp and ready to see the field.

This year's NFL draft will provide a great example of a player who went through a very similar mid-career situation. Texas A&M's Ryan Tannehill was a three-star dual-threat QB in the 2007 class, redshirting in his first season. As a redshirt freshman, he battled for the starting QB job but ultimately fell behind two other players. At 6'4", 220 pounds, Tannehill was moved to receiver in fall camp by head coach Mike Sherman. All he did was catch 55 passes for 844 yards and five TDs.

The next year, Tannehill again competed to start at quarterback, but lost out to Jerrod Johnson. As the primary backup, A&M could've handed him a headset, but instead they threw him back out there at receiver. Tannehill had 46 receptions for 609 yards and four TDs while also appearing in three games at QB in mop-up duty. As a junior, Tannehill started the season as a receiver but earned the starting nod as a quarterback partway through the year, completing 65% of his passes and throwing 13 TDs to just six interceptions. After a strong senior season as the full-time starter at QB, Tannehill is expected to go in the top 12 in this year's NFL draft. If playing receiver stunted his development as a quarterback, it wasn't enough to merit keeping the team's best receiver off the field.

Argument 3—The dumbest argument ever.

Sorry to put you on blast, Eric Lloyd, but I can't let this just slide on by:

Just no. If I seriously have to argue this point, and I hope I don't for 99.9% of you out there, I'll keep it short. Denard Robinson is about to be a senior in his second year under the current system, coming off an All-Big Ten season that followed up one of the most productive years by a quarterback in the history of college football. Whether or not he's going to be a quarterback at the next level, it's by far the most optimal position to play him at in college.

Devin Gardner has attempted 17 career passes—10 against Bowling Green in a 2010 curb-stomping—and has spent his entire career as a backup quarterback. If he's better at this point in his career than Denard, he hasn't made that apparent to anyone who would have the best idea about whether or not that was the case. End of argument that hopefully never needed to be made.

Michigan can explore the opportunity of sticking a 6'5" playmaker on the field at a position of huge need, or they can keep Devin Gardner on the bench for fear that the worst thing ever will happen. Unless you're the type to keep a fully-stocked bunker in case of the nuclear holocaust, the choice here is rather apparent.

Comments

jback1111

March 22nd, 2012 at 4:11 PM ^

I think Borges is a smart guy and wants defensive coordinators to have to prepare for as much formations and plays as possible. Last year was pretty cool to see them throw DG in there to get the defenses on their heels. But it did get played out and did seem to disrupt the flow of the games at times. Whether DG is coming in at WR or QB I think he reps should be very limited (maybe 3-4 plays a game). I honestly would only want to see him in at WR and only if he displays that he could actually play the position. Now if Bellomy is already out performing DG in practice then to be honest I think if he is viable WR they should make the move permanent. I was pretty sold on Gardner's QB skills out of HS but it doesn't seem like he has improved what so ever. I am with the announcers last year in saying that ANYTIME you are taking Denard out of QB you are making a mistake. I think the first part of his career dealing with DickRod really hurt his legacy. If he was a fresman and had the current coaching staff I honestly the Robinson would go down as one of the greatest college football players of all time! Period. Having said that last year and hopefully if he has a year like he should, he will still definitely mention with the greats from UM.

After saying that Ace you have to be fair to Mr. Lloyd in regards to Denard having a better chance in making the NFL as a WR(really just a flanker). I love what the dude brings to the QB position to the likes of even Tommy Frazier or Mike Vick. But there is ABSOLUTELY no way the DROB will ever be a productive NFL QB. He just does not have the proper footwork and equally not a strong enough arm. He is a GREAT NCAA QB and that will be pretty much it. But moving DROB to WR would just show Gardner's flaws at QB and would be dreadful. I really hope that Morris is ready to play as a true freshman because I think a full season of DG is going to be trying. If DG could develop into a big time playmaker under DROB I think Morris to Garnder could be even better with Morris throwing it to him.

Having said that I hope DROB tears it up this year and explodes on Sep.1!!!! Let the HEISMAN CAMPAIGN BEGIN!!! Hopefully Gardner devlops and has a break year for his senior year. He definitely deserves it because I have never heard any bad press about the guy complaining about PT. Other than that Hoke is killing the recruiting game and I am looking forward to the development of those kids.

 

GO BLUE!!

RadioMuse

March 22nd, 2012 at 4:13 PM ^

But not about Devin playing at WR.  That'd be awesome, I love the idea.  His presence as a 6'5" true athlete would be imposing enough to draw double teams, especially after he's proven himself with a couple big plays.  And based on that little bit of video, he's going to make plenty of those if given a few oportunities.

I have my doubts about whether or not Borges really gave us any indication one way or the other.  He was clearly extremely surprised by the question:  he look like he'd just been slapped.  Which implies that he definitely has strong feelings about the possibility.  He did kinda act like a kid who'd just been caught with his hand in the cookie jar, but that doesn't mean anything for certain.  He might just be angry that we doubt our other recievers abilities, and his judgement.  Maybe he just hadn't thought of it and thought it was a great idea, who knows?  Coach-speak can't really let him tip his hand too much.

Personally I hope that they at least reverse Devin and D.Rob's roles in the offensive formations where they're both in;  keeping Robinson at QB.  I don't think we want/need to run Devin at WR always, but we could certainly put him in on certain plays designed for him and/or four-wide sets.

uncleFred

March 22nd, 2012 at 5:00 PM ^

I found myself wondering if this might be a bit of spontaneous  disinformation. It seemed that as he was about to say Nah, he caught himself and ended that particular discussion. As if he suddenly thought "Heh - let Saban work on defending this possibilty" and decided to hedge the answer a bit. As you say "coach speak".

NoMoPincherBug

March 22nd, 2012 at 4:39 PM ^

Nice post Ace.  Well thought out on all points.  I especially agree with you on the "ooh noos what if" fears.... anyway IMO Bellomy may have more upside as a QB than Devin.  He is just as athletic for a QB, almost as big and probably has a better arm (judging by his HS tape compared to Devins)...but they are close in Arm.

It just makes sense to get Devin on the field and have Bellomy with 4 years eligibility left, to be primed as the number 2 QB...

And as you mentioned, Devin will still have ample opportunity to prove that he is better than Bellomy in 13 when they both compete for the starting job.  Id rather have both of those guys going in to 13 with some experience and snaps at QB, then just riding Devin with Bellomy having 0 experience.

PS: The way that Denard throws most of his deepballs, it helps to have a 6-5 WR out there to go up and grab them. 

ashea

March 22nd, 2012 at 4:43 PM ^

so how do you explain the fact that i'm "the type to keep a fully-stocked bunker in case of the nuclear holocaust" and yet i like the gardner to wr idea?

 

TyrannousLex

March 22nd, 2012 at 7:07 PM ^

I wouldn't be surprised to learn that Gardner was taking Spring practice snaps at WR, nor would i be surprised to find out that the two QB sets that i expect to see more of this year might use Gardner as a receiver. But unless Bellomy is looking like the best QB since sliced bread and Gardner looks terrible at the position, i don't think we'll see Gardner being anything like a regular WR.

Like Ace said, Gardner practicing at the WR spot is probably good for his development and could pay off with some on trick plays or even now and again on third down.

However, other than a few times when we saw a young, over-amped Gardner QB and not look great doing it, all indications are that he's got the tools to be an incredible quarterback. He probably represents the perfect transition to a WC offense when Robinson departs, especially given that by then he will have two full seasons of being taught the position by a guy who wants a passer. And he'll still have wheels to take off and run to keep the defense honest and punish a decent pass rush.

 

 

Monocle Smile

March 22nd, 2012 at 7:59 PM ^

Can't wait till fall when we have legitimate things to freak out and spend too much time posting about.

I'm referring to the MGoCommenters, not the OP. This is a well-written post, Ace.

Mr. Yost

March 22nd, 2012 at 8:05 PM ^

It keeps the best players on the field in games AND in practice...

He can still get the same # of reps at QB in practice...

He certainly helps us at WR...

It keeps him in the game plan, thus his head in the game...

 

There was an article on Kain Coulter of N'Western (sp?) and Ryan Tannehill of TAMU (sp?) on how they enjoyed playing WR along with backup QB because they were able to stay in the game mentally and feel like they could contribute. Now Tannehill is a potential first round draft pick at QB and Coulter is the starting QB at NW.

 

This isn't a bad thing.

champswest

March 23rd, 2012 at 12:04 AM ^

Headline: Gardner blow out knee in spring practice while running pass routes.  Out for the season maybe career.

It's almost like being without a point guard.

Sambojangles

March 23rd, 2012 at 10:56 AM ^

The thing about Denard at WR is that it really doesn't solve any problems. We still have lots of short dudes who might not be as fast, but would serve essentially the same purpose Denard would. Gallon, Dileo, Justice Hayes, etc.

On the other hand, Gardner fills the hole at BIG receiver at 6'5", who can go up for jump balls in the end zone, and maybe a few plays here or there elsewhere on the field. With the threat of him throwing the ball as well, it could really be a big advantage.

Even Jim Tressel moved Terelle Pryor to WR in his freshman season for the bowl game, and that put Todd Boeckman on the field. It's not a big deal, coaches move players, even QBs, around all the time.