It's getting to them. [Bryan Fuller]

Fee Fi Foe Film: Michigan State Offense 2019 Comment Count

Seth November 14th, 2019 at 8:56 AM

Resources: My charting, MSU game notes, MSU roster, CFBstats, Last Year

The film: I charted them against Ohio State and watched the Illinois game twice. OSU because I used some of the bye week to start scouting OSU. Illinois because it was pretty funny.

Personnel: My diagram:

PDF version, full-size version (or click on the image)

MSU assures the public that senior quarterback Brian Lewerke will start his fourth Michigan game after going through concussion protocol (or not). His backup got in against Wisconsin and Penn State when Lewerke was struggling—Rocky Lombardi went 6/20 for 71 yards and 2 INTs. Statuesque freshman Theo Day got a drive vs PSU on which he threw for 12 yards on 4 passes, ran once for no gain, and fumbled a snap.

Most of the running back room bolted once redshirt freshman Elijah Collins (+7/-4 in my charting vs OSU, 5 YPC) took over. He's one of those MSU backs, with good balance and power after contact. He is still a freshman, picking up a false start in both games and many pass pro minuses against one good cut block. With backups Connor Heyward, La'Darius Jefferson and scatback Weston Bridges among the departing, freshman Anthony Williams has had to serve; he's getting under 3 YPC and is just a guy.

Tight end is down to two of the foursome they started with, losing the guy who was #4 to a transfer, and the guy who was #1 to a season-ending injury last week. That leaves an odd couple: Buffalo grad transfer Matt Seybert (+4/-7) is a fair run blocker and the best receiving target (8.5 yards per target, 73% catch rate) but still lost in pass pro. Athletic redshirt freshman Trent Gillison at this stage of his career is a big receiver who commits a lot of OPI.

[After THE JUMP: Weird guys]

With dynamic receiver Darrell Stewart still expected to be out they're trying to lean more on WR Cody White (527 yards, 8.2 YPT, 58% catch rate), who's as big as last year's favorite fade target Felton Davis but Absolutely Not Felton Davis.

After the first two times he jumped on a cornerback who had position, missed the ball, then complained to the nearest ref I started a Cody White Counter, which got to five—six if you count the one he caught (he still complained). State has realized he's more Breaston than Braylon and started giving him the ball in space, which works but for the fumbles. The other guy they're using is Julian Barnett (76 yards on 10 targets, 50% catch rate) the 4-star we badly wanted to be the next Detroit cornerback, who's as athletic as any of those guys but still very much a freshman. Classmate Tre Mosley (4.9 YPT, 63% CR) is the guy who had an endzone interception (that would have been called back for OPI) bounce off his chest. "F" receiver (slot or flanker) C.J. Hayes (5.1 YPT, 52% CR) missed Illinois. Laress Nelson (4.8 YPT, 40% CR) and Jalen Nailor (5 yards on 4 targets) are speedy jet objects—Nailor might return this week.

That leaves me with the offensive line, which might be more of a train wreck than last year:

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Or the year before that:

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Or the year they went 3-9*:

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The injuries again screw everything up. Forever-trying-to-eat-his-way-to-300-pounds Cole Chewins has been out all year with a back thing, and Kevin Jarvis, the guard version of Chewins, has been out most of it, replaced by a very large, not very mobile box-shaped RG Matt Carrick (+5/-10.5 versus the run, –8 in pass pro, which is [checks notes] a lot for a guard). Then they lost C Matt Allen (+4/-13.5 vs the run, –3 pass pro vs OSU), whom I mention anyways because a) I watched him keep trying to injure some Ohio State DL between the whistles before the above happened to him, b) because as an impertinent, cheap, grabby, dirty, unskilled, injured legacy he's a perfect avatar for this team, and c) because whoever's playing now was behind him.

That would be true freshman C Nick Samac, who wasn't that much of a problem vs Illinois until you realized he was probably responsible for the constant issues with protections, not to mention the bad snap that gave the Illini their first shot at tying it up inside the MSU 10. Samac's not even the only 2019 Dantonio plans to start, as LG J.D. Duplain started against Illinois while the very pushable Luke Campbell (+6.5/-5.5, –5 pass pro vs OSU) was dealing with some sort of illness that apparently went deep into this week. Interestingly neither of the true freshmen are five-star Devontae Dobbs.

I saved the tackles for last because they're so bad even MSU can't cover it up. My charting of old friend RT Jordan Reid ended in an all-timer: +3/-3 run, –17 pass pro, and the funny part is not even half of that was Chase Young-induced. Young was responsible for the 8 pass minuses II gave to LT (former G) Tyler Higby, who is probably still out this week, which means they remain stuck with opening day starter LT AJ Arcuri, which means Chewins minus 4 inches, 20 pounds, and a year of PB&Js. If you play back the post-"totally not a concussion you guys" interception from your memory, Arcuri is the tackle who was put on his ass by an Illini DE first.

Okay I can probably stop recording after the throw. It's not really necessary to show the entire runback. Fine, we'll right after he scores. I mean after he waves.

* …and Notre Dame was 4-8.

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Spread, Pro-Style, or Hybrid? Hybrid. Lewerke is a runner so they shotgun more with him. "Exotic" was an Ace 11 and a Wildcat. Charting is from Ohio State:

Formation   Personnel   Playcall
Down Type Shotgun Pistol Ace Exotic   Avg WRs   Pass PA RPO Run
Standard (37) 81% 13% 6% -   2.59   30% 22% 11% 38%
Passing (32) 81% 13% - 6%   2.81   71% 6% 6% 16%
Total (68) 56 9 2 2   2.70   33 10 6 19

They'll pull out all the modern tricks: RPOs, flexed tight ends, five-wide from 11 personnel. The routes are quite simple—especially once they're down to the freshman receivers. They run mostly pick routes, not so much mesh as that play where a slot or tight end goes upfield and bangs into a linebacker or trailing cornerback to free a route that breaks inside and under that.

As with all of MSU's cheap strategies, it gets flagged sometimes but they're counting on the refs to let a fair bit go so as not to make themselves the center of attention. State remains one of the Big Ten's most penalized teams, and worst officiated teams—I had "refs" at +13/-0 on this side of the ball.

Basketball on Grass or MANBALL? It's funny: they were running arc reads and pin & pull so much in practice because beating Michigan is the only thing, that they realized it's a good fit for Lewerke. Arc read featured against Illinois. The mix against Ohio State wasn't that different from Michigan's offense, except with the Lewerke sprint option and more jets and end-arounds. Also like Michigan they're experimenting with ways to run their power stuff to different gaps:

Yes it only breaks big because of an epic hold by that guard in the middle of the play (refs came out + a lot for MSU in this game) but it's a cool design that starts out like Counter Trey but is really Power, with the "2nd puller" turning around to kick the backside end.

Hurry it up or grind it out? Grind it out.

Quarterback Dilithium Level (Scale: 1 [Navarre] to 10 [Denard]): Lewerke running still looks like a guy you'd give a 4 or a 5 and then he gets the edge because he's the very definition of an 8. This is their weapon. They use it as they can. Opponents are all aware of it by now, especially the fake sprint option rollouts. But at least once a game Lewerke will do his Jake Rudock in fast forward impersonation, an NFL-bound safety will pick an angle like it's Jake Rudock, and Lewerke will run past the 1st down marker then fall into the bench looking for a late hit flag.

I guess if it works for Izzo.

HenneChart: I thought I'd go back and get the charting from previous years. Ace did 2016 and two games in 2017, and I did a pair of his 2018 games—note that I converted "CA+" throws to "DO" since.

Brian Lewerke Good   Neutral   Bad   Ovr
Opponent DO CA SCR   PR MA   BA TA IN BR   DSR PFF
2016 BYU 2 7+(2) 2   3 2   - 2 7x(1) 2   46% x
2017 Notre Dame 3 9++ (3) 1   3 1   1 2x 4(1) 2x   59% x
2017 Iowa 1 15+(1) 2   - 2   1 3 7 2   58% x
2018 Indiana 7 6(1) -   4 1   - 1 9xx 2   52% x
2018 PSU 5 15(2) 1   5 5   2 6 5x 10x   48% x
2019 OSU 3 14(1) -   8(1) 5   - 2 4x 4   63% x

Horrific PSU game aside, Lewerke is still mostly the same quarterback he was as a redshirt sophomore. He doesn't have great pocket presence because he knows (see OL history above) that his line is going to get him killed, but he is pretty good at escaping sacks if only one guy screws up, and he's gotten progressively better at getting the ball out quickly. His reads are not complicated: either they're cutting the field in half for floods and triangle reads, or there's one guy to throw to on a sideline fade, RPO slant, or what's basically a screen where the tight end blocks the coverage and Lewerke just has to throw it to the open guy:

He also will flat-out miss sometimes because the constant pressure has him imagining linebackers in his ribs:

Zook/Frames Janklin/Him Jarbaugh Factor: They left in Brian Lewerke after it was pretty clear that his—in his words—"head was ringing for a little bit, but it was nothing serious, I don't think" for a play and he threw a pick-six that got Illinois within an extra point try from tying the game late in the 4th quarter.

But they use 4th down correctly, especially considering their OL is pocked with sub-300 freshmen and whatnot, and they always have a few good tricks up their sleeves.

Dangerman: If I have to pick a guy RB Elijah Collins is the only (available) player to grade out positive against Ohio State, and he's apparently so good that every challenger who runs out of eligibility before he does decided they'd rather seek carries at another school. Not many people have done this to Tuf Borland:

There was also the time he did more blocking than anyone on his offensive line:

No wonder the rest of his room bailed.

OVERVIEW:

They're not good, but they do have quite a few gimmicks, like the world's weirdest Breaston in beast-sized WR Cody White, and an end-around DRAW they used to highlight his unique skills:

I have questions. Like have they run a pass off this look yet? Also why is their athletic 6'3/220 guy not doing more than end arounds and sideline fades?

One of the problems with Michigan's offense this year was changing offensive coordinators, warranted as it may have been, created a situation where the offense was strategically back in Year 1 in Year 5. Fortunately however the rest of the offensive staff was more or less left in situ, allowing them to settle into something like continuity with new ideas. MSU is the opposite extreme: they got rid of nobody, but changed everyone's job. Even now it's incredible, both in content and level of spin the beat writer gave it:

"This is probably the most significant change we have had in my 12 years here," Dantonio said. "But it is warranted."

….

"I'm a foxhole guy," Dantonio said. "I don't apologize for that in any respect. I believe in surrounding myself with loyal people. I believe in digging in when things get tough."

This is how they described promoting the QB coach, who had previously been the RB coach, to offensive coordinator, while bumping the old co-offensive coordinators to QBs and OL, respectively, which shifted the—chart? Chart.

image

The newest of them, Brad Salem, has been with Dantonio for almost a decade. But they're loyal, not like Bill Blackwell who refused to be the fall guy for the cover up of an old sexual assault case, and now has MSU's attorneys scrambling to find an excuse why Dantonio shouldn't sit for a deposition. These assistants are the kind who are going to dig in when things get tough, not bail like six of their players—five on offense—have done already this season. They're foxhole guys: When a player takes a head injury and gets up woozy, they're not going to pull him, or even apologize for not pulling him, or even admit he hit his head, even if the school has to change the story days later.

To outsiders this comes across like a wholesale disintegration. They see the 84th offense to S&P+ that was florping around with backup quarterbacks mid-season, that is starting a true freshman center on a line they've shuffled as much as their coaching staff, that just saw most of their running backs jump ship, and for the second straight season can't keep their go-to receiver healthy. These outsiders do not understand true fidelity, what it means to rise up with your head swimming, your tackles flailing, your center tackling, your tight end running an OL coach's idea of a route, and stand in to throw a game-tying touchdown to Illinois, not for a great cause, nor a great leader, nor a great institution, but for the glory of Mark Dantonio and Michigan State.

Comments

Sambojangles

November 14th, 2019 at 9:08 AM ^

I'm not sure if marking Salem as 1st year HC instead of OC is a mistake or a joke. But I do appreciate the coaching moves chart, it makes everything crystal clear.

By the way Seth, I haven't seen the Maryland Offense UFR nor an announcement for why it's delayed. Am I an idiot or is it not out yet? Seems strange that the defense UFR came out first. 

maize-blue

November 14th, 2019 at 9:14 AM ^

If they bother Lewerke early, he won't recover. 

As a whole, if UM brings the Notre Dame game level of energy then this game has no business being close.

JFW

November 14th, 2019 at 9:42 AM ^

Yes. We'll see MSU run a completely scripted drive or two and get on the board, or at least tighten my sphincter quite a bit. After that we'll see. 

Can UM come off a bye ready to go? Will they be up to the level of aggression they'll face (not worried about that too much). Can they break the weird 'home field doesn't matter' pattern of the last couple years?

I think so, but this game is MSU's season; and maybe Dantonio's last shot at making a mark against us. 

So if it turns into a rock fight I won't be shocked. 

dragonchild

November 14th, 2019 at 10:04 AM ^

The scripted drive may happen but that's not what I consider the "usual STAEE BS"; that's just good gameplanning.

What keeps it close in general is that they're going to bring more cheap shots and dirty tricks than can even be processed by China's shipping fleet.  And they're going to get away with most of it.

I want a win, but more than that I don't want to see anyone get hurt.  And even if that happens, this game always has ZERO fun.  I get very uncomfortable watching the brazen double standards where one side is counting on barraging the game with so many penalties that some won't be called, many of them flat-out malicious, versus the other having to not only play clean, but will even have penalties called on them for imaginary reasons that can make even the announcers (who by nature are centrists to the extreme) incredulous.

We're probably going to win, but it'd be like Ali-Wepner, with one side clearly outclassing the other but the fight almost going the distance with the "darling" underdog constantly throwing rabbit punches while the crooked ref just stands there.  A fair fight would be over quickly, but we ain't getting one.

You Only Live Twice

November 14th, 2019 at 10:27 AM ^

They'll commit tons of infractions knowing they all won't get called, but this year the fan reaction at home will be different, so it won't help as much.  I truly believe Michigan fans were fed up after Penn St. and really rose up to call out the BS at ND.  The calls evened out after that.

We probably won't get towels this time though. :-/

ijohnb

November 14th, 2019 at 10:37 AM ^

I don't really see unbalanced officiating as a recurring theme of Michigan v. Michigan State games.  There have been many missed calls throughout the series, but I cannot say that I feel like the refs "favor" Michigan State.  Ohio State gets every call, no argument on that, but I just think what we have seen from refs over the years in this game is garden variety incompetence that we see week in and week out.  I have to be honest, I feel like every year I see Michigan engage in one or two plays against MSU that could very easily be called targeting that are let go.  Mettelus in particular is very lucky he was not tossed for a late/high hit on the sideline during the first drive last year that I was 100% sure was going to get called.

2015 was a complete mess but that is because John O'Neil is just really bad at his job.  

dragonchild

November 14th, 2019 at 11:30 AM ^

The refs are not "anti-Michigan" or "pro-Michigan State".  It is not bias for or against those teams per se (Ohio State is another matter -- holy shit that game is corrupt), but rather, as Seth says, their inclination to avoid the spotlight (save the glaring exception that is the O'Neill crew).  MSU counts on that to commit multiple infractions every play, and between plays.  The refs' "garden variety incompetence" and disdain for grinding the game to a halt by calling every penalty work in STAEE's favor, by nature of how they play.

The quarters defense MSU rode to brief prominence was built around literally coaching the CBs to commit PI every down.  Now everyone does it, including Michigan, because the refs capitulated.  But it started with MSU.

ijohnb

November 14th, 2019 at 11:36 AM ^

Yeah, I guess I see what you are saying there.  I cannot argue with regard to the "antics" for sure.  I feel like it is legitimately dangerous for Michigan to play Michigan State sometimes, particularly when there is no other "big picture" for State to worry about.

 

LKLIII

November 14th, 2019 at 1:14 PM ^

Not only that, but the injured OL starters and/or back-ups also have cyan circles as well.  It's basically an 7-8 deep OL of 100% cyan circles.  So there isn't even a chance that they accidentally sat a competent OL on the bench or have one on the injured list that will return to action this week.  The back-ups are known tire-fires, as opposed to merely inexperienced/unknown entities.

BayWolves

November 14th, 2019 at 9:35 AM ^

We best take a wrecking ball to these fucks and flat out demolish them.  Show some damn passion and aggression to defeat your foe damn it!

Foot on the gas for 4 quarters until the clock hits :00.  None of this get up by 14 points and coast until the end of the game bullshit.  Staee must be demoralized and we need to show extreme passion, will and determination. Players, rise up and bury these fucks!

Ziff72

November 14th, 2019 at 9:43 AM ^

Seth, this was great as always, but teasing me with Allen cheap shots all game and then providing no examples is leaving me very unsatisfied(KGB voice).

MGlobules

November 14th, 2019 at 9:46 AM ^

Okay refs, let's referee this one, whaddyasay? State's strategy for years has been to overcome their schematic and personnel advantages by committing too many fouls to call them all registered TM. In the interests of keeping the potential chaos bounded, let's call the game that's in front of us, if this isn't too novel an approach.

P.S. That shy touchdown-scoring wave

A State Fan

November 14th, 2019 at 9:49 AM ^

Okay, I'll come out of hiding to talk about it:

QB: Lewerke as a cyan circle hurt, but is fair. He's pretty inconsistent, which when combined with all the awful around him, is a big issue. He doesn't run as much as I'd like him to actually. I think the coaching staff broke him of that and it's hurt our offense. (I think Day is the odds on favorite to start next year)

RB: Collins I think is a really, really good back. Even taking out his 17c/192y game against Western, he has the highest ypc of all regular ball carriers by nearly a full ypc. Him with a decent OL would be really something fun. He is a lot like Leveon in that he gets the handoff and kinda scrunches down, then can burst through a hole (in the rare times a hole exists).

WRs: White's fine, but without Stewart teams really are keying on him. Missing Nailor hurts a bit too, I'd be shocked if he played in this game. Barnett and Mosely looked alright against Illinois, Mosely's drop excepted.

TEs: I'm certainly not going to say losing a starter is a good thing. But the difference between a not very good Dotson and an also not very good (yet) Gillerson isn't that big a deal. I think we play Seybert a little too much, but if we had Stewart/Nailor maybe we wouldn't go so TE heavy.

OL: Here's the issue of the last 3 years. They're just really bad. I'm hoping that Jarvis redshirts so we can get two more years of him. I think Seth's too harsh on him, he was good as a guard, not great as a tackle (and weight hasn't been an issue, he was 327 I think last year, playing at like 310 this year). After that, the freshman and rFr look okay. But everyone above them is b.a.d.

I can't wait to see what the next head coach does on this side of the ball, because I think there is some talent at the skill positions here. But that OL is so bad none of it matters right now.

A State Fan

November 14th, 2019 at 10:18 AM ^

I have no idea. I think it should be Dec 1st. Dantonio will have a job in the AD if he wants it anyways, you can work out a deal of some kind where he gets that Jan 15th bonus. 

But honestly I think he stays at least 1 more year. Is Beekman telling him to hang them up? Yeah right. I think he's going to fire the whole offensive staff, bring in new guys, and try again next year.

ijohnb

November 14th, 2019 at 10:41 AM ^

I think that recruiting is a bigger issue than coaching at MSU, but I don't think Dantonio has the current chops to turn that around, and too many issues spiraling around him and his "brand."  That is the biggest reason that I would want to see him out if I were a State fan.  MSU badly that needs that momentary bump in recruiting that generally comes with a new-energized staff.  Negative recruiting against MSU has got to be a walk-in-the-park for opposing BIG coaches.

A State Fan

November 14th, 2019 at 11:26 AM ^

Yeah I think so, mainly because he's the winningest coach in MSU history, and doesn't have (in the eyes of fans at least) any internal pressure. But man, I don't know if any fans really want him to stay beyond this year. I've defended him to my friend group as much as I can, but even I'm not excited to head to the stadium next year. 

But if he walks off into the sunset and we could bring in a Fickell/Campbell/etc right now, I'd do it in an instant

Champeen

November 14th, 2019 at 11:04 AM ^

I think you may believe that their is more talent at MSU than their is.  After this class leaves, there is very little under it.  It is an average Big Ten roster as far as talent, at best.  I don't think anyone is going to tell Dantonio to leave after this year, but man, he knows what he has, and what he has coming in, and it is not pretty.  He can stay another year if he wants, but next year is going to be worse, or with some luck, the same (.500).  He will be fired after next year if he does not walk this year.  And if he does not walk this year, his legacy goes further down the drain.