Fee Fi Foe Film: Purdue Offense Comment Count

Ace

Previously: Purdue Defense


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So, uh, Purdue is crazy fun now. Jeff Brohm's offense put a serious scare into Louisville before easily handling Ohio and Mizzou. The Boilermakers haven't just been far more productive than the moribund Darrell Hazell squads, they've also racked up major style points. Brohm's spread features a dizzying array of run-pass options, motion, misdirection, and straight-up gadget plays. They've managed to be good despite fielding two unreliable quarterbacks throwing to wideouts who, with one notable exception, can't seem to hang onto the ball.

If Brohm sticks around, this offense is going to be terrifying in a couple of years. For now, they're merely frightening.

Personnel. Seth's diagram [click to embiggen]:

Running back Tario Fuller has turned Purdue's backfield from a committee into a bell-cow situation with a great start to the season. There's a fair amount of rotation elsewhere. We're very likely to see both David Blough and Elijah Sindelar at quarterback, and #2 tight end Brycen Hopkins is currently third on the team in receptions.

Spread, Pro-Style, or Hybrid? Spread to the max. Purdue went under center for only four snaps this game, with one of those occurring on the goal line.

Basketball on Grass or MANBALL? Zone blocking, though sometimes with a twist; Purdue's RPOs often feature a pulling guard with the rest of the line blocking outside zone. More on that in the play breakdown section.

Hurry it up or grind it out? Purdue rarely huddles but they also take their time at the line of scrimmage. This isn't like a Kevin Wilson IU offense.

[Hit THE JUMP for the rest of the breakdown.]

Quarterback Dilithium Level (Scale: 1 [Navarre] to 10 [Denard]): Of the two quarterbacks, David Blough is easily the most mobile. He can keep for a modest gain on a read option, but he's more likely to throw when he breaks the pocket, especially since most of Purdue's option plays also have a passing element. He did convert a third-and-two which I'm including just to show the brilliantly designed fake jet sneak, which I'd never seen before:

Blough's not a big-play threat on the ground unless the defense really screws up and a lot of his attempts to escape the pocket end in sacks. He gets a four. Elijah Sindelar is a statue; let's give him a two.

Dangerman: You may remember Danny Anthrop, the obnoxiously productive Purdue slot receiver wearing a running back's number a few years ago. Purdue claims their current starting slot receiver is "Jackson Anthrop," who's definitely not just his older brother with a fresh shave. "Jackson" caught two touchdowns in this game, the first a toe-tapper in the corner of the end zone off a Purdue coverage bust, the second a tough snag between two defenders (both of those clips are later in the post). He also had two fourth-down conversions on PU's ultimately failed last-gasp drive, one when Sindelar made him fight for it with a bigger defensive back:

Anthrop isn't big, but he runs sharp routes and displays really strong hands. He's also used on jet sweeps, though he hasn't broken any for more than a modest gain.

Anthrop may not even be the most dangerous pass-catcher on the team. Cole Herdman is a flex tight end who runs routes like an oversized wideout, and he's reliable both as an underneath receiver and big-play threat; he's caught seven of ten targets for 200 yards(!) and a touchdown on the double-flea-flicker against Ohio. He makes tough catches look easy:

Herdman and second TE Brycen Hopkins are both major threats as receivers, with Herdman boasting slightly better hands and athleticism. Neither player possesses much power as a blocker and can be overwhelmed when they have a hand in the dirt, but that doesn't happen often in this offense.

Finally, running back Tario Fuller had a couple impressive runs on limited chances in this game, getting to the hole quickly and finding ways to twist for extra yards after contact. He blew up in the Ohio game the following week and now has an apparent stranglehold on the job.

Zook Factor: There's no Zook in Brohm, who's already had Purdue attempt seven fourth-down conversions, only three of which came in desperation mode against Louisville. They've converted five.

HenneChart: Purdue has rotated Blough and Sindelar in each of the first three games, though Blough has started to seize control of the job after very productive—and, crucially for him, interception-free—games against Ohio and Mizzou. I can understand why Brohm wanted to give Sindelar every chance to win the job, however. Blough's arm isn't nearly as strong and he compounds that issue by forcing throws to the outside, often a beat late. He threw 21 picks a year ago and had two against Louisville, including an awful pick-six:

He'll also force the ball to his first read. His other interception was a throw over the middle into double-coverage off a flea-flicker when he had a much safer throw to a single-covered receiver on the outside, and he nearly threw a couple more pick-sixes with soft tosses on deep outs/comebacks. He's more accurate than Sindelar but he doesn't adjust nearly enough for his lack of arm strength. He either looks really good, mostly on throws that require touch, or really, really bad. The HenneChart reflects this:

Opponent DO CA MA IN BR TA BA PR SCR DSR
Louisville (Blough) 3+ 10+ (5) 1 3x (1) 4xxx 1 -- 2 1 64%

Blough could've had a better stat line, as a couple open deep shots were flat-out dropped by Purdue receivers. It also could've been much worse; I counted four very interceptable passes, three of which were potential pick-sixes.

Sindelar, meanwhile, has a cannon that isn't entirely calibrated. His best throw of the day was also one of his riskiest and required a great catch by Anthrop, but this is a tiny-ass window and he nails it:

Sindelar isn't often that pinpoint. In fact, I'd call him scattershot. He gets the ball out quicker than Blough but misses a lot of the short-to-intermediate throws that Blough consistently hits; he even took a running back to the ground with a wayward throw on a slip screen. 

Opponent DO CA MA IN BR TA BA PR SCR DSR
Louisville (Sindelar) 2+ 11 (2) 1 7x (1) 4xx 3 (1) 3 -- 48%

Brohm went with Sindelar to try and lead a late comeback after Blough threw interceptions on back-to-back possessions. He reponded with drives ending in a near-pick on a third down throw short of the sticks, a pick on a throw into two defenders, and a one-yard flare to the running back on fourth-and-four. When he's making those kind of mistakes, there's not much reason to play him over Blough.

OVERVIEW

Did I mention it's a spread?

Formations Run Pass PA
Gun 12 33 24
I-Form -- -- --
Ace 2 -- 1
Pistol 2 -- 6
Heavy -- -- 1

The run/pass/PA designations don't tell the whole story here, as a ton of those PAs were actually RPOs, but Louisville wanted to force the Boilermakers to go to the air. All three plays from ace sets with either jet sweeps or fake jet sweeps.

Down Run Pass PA
1st 7 12 19
2nd 7 6 12
3rd 2 15 1

Purdue has been more balanced over the last couple games; they were playing from behind for a lot of the second half against Louisville, but they also didn't make much effort to establish the run early. The emergence of Fuller is likely to change that approach.

Before proceeding further, I must recommend you check out Ian Boyd's post on the Purdue offense over at SBNation. He provides the requisite background; Brohm comes from the Bobby Petrino coaching tree, which means damn near every play features some sort of misdirection or option. Brohm has also incorporated some NFL-style route tweaks into his scheme, and those have already produced some explosive plays. Boyd highlighted a modified four verticals play that got Herdman open to set up a first and goal:

The idea with four verts is that you create maximal stress by flooding the deep field with targets. Purdue has a few other wrinkles mixed in here, though, to ensure the secondary isn’t in position to handle it all.

  • On the twin receiver side, the wideouts switch, with the slot (H) running an out-and-up and the outside receiver running a sort of sluggo (slant-and-go) to try and create confusion or even a rub on the free safety and cornerback.
  • To the flex TE side, the TE (Y, Herdman) uses an outside fake to cross the strong-side linebacker’s face and get inside leverage on the safety ($) who’s responsible for matching him deep.
  • The RB runs a quick stab route at the middle linebacker, pulling him out of the passing window to the TE or becoming a checkdown option, if Louisville’s handled the TE’s route fake.
  • So Blough checks the weak side to see how Louisville handles the switch verticals before coming back and throwing inside to the TE.

Louisville managed to cover the switch verticals on this play. That may be because they had already busted to allow a touchdown in the first quarter against a similar concept, this one with three vertical routes (and again the switch on the twin receiver side) and a couple checkdown options:

Purdue will constantly screw with your assignments via pre-snap motion, RPOs, and unusual route combinations. The offense is already springing guys wide open for huge plays on a regular basis.

The problem, for now, is the personnel. I've gone over the unreliable quarterbacks. The wide receivers other than Anthrop are equally erratic. The Ohio game started off with a comical series of dropped passes, and that carried over from the Louisville game, which most notably featured senior WR Greg Phillips dropping a dead-on would-be touchdown:

Phillips looked like just a guy, as did the other starting outside receiver, Anthony Mahoungou, who boasts excellent size but has a tough time creating separation—he also had a bad drop early against Ohio. They don't get much going to these guys in the passing game that isn't entirely created by scheme. It's Anthrop and the TEs who have to come up with the tough plays; it's no surprise the QBs usually lock onto them on third downs.

The offensive line benefits from a lot of quick passes and looks shaky when they have to hold up for long. Redshirt freshman left tackle Grant Hermanns biffed a couple assignments to allow heavy pressure, while right tackle David Steinmetz was beaten clean twice by speed rushes. I do like their center, Kirk Barron, who had a couple impressive blocks in space. I'm still not sure their interior line can hold up against Michigan's front, and Don Brown should be able to dial up some easy sacks—Purdue had some trouble with blitz pickups, and Blough tends to hold onto the ball too long if his first read isn't there.

The running game served mostly as a changeup against Louisville to keep them honest. Purdue runs a lot of outside zone with some quick tosses, inside zone, and trap/wham frippery mixed in. I'm not too impressed with their committee of backs beyond Fuller. DJ Knox, the unusual 5'7", 210-pound inside runner, is the next-best option. Brian Lankford-Johnson is a meh change-of-pace guy and Richie Worship is a plodding short-yardage back.

PLAY BREAKDOWN

Here's one more example of Brohm scheming up some really tough stuff to defend. The play-action rollout with a throwback to the running back on a wheel route isn't an uncommon big-play shot in football. Brohm added a couple evil wrinkles, however. On this play, the line will block for an outside zone save for the pulling left guard, who leads out in front of Blough after the mesh point. Louisville manages to pursue, dissuading Blough from running himself, and also check the wheel route out of the backfield. Play blown up, right?

Not so much. Herdman, who went in motion before the snap, briefly engaged in a block, then slipped into a drag route to the near side of the field. This provided Blough with a wide open checkdown and netted a first down. Seth diagrammed this beauty [click to embiggen]:

It's really dang difficult to come up with a scheme that accounts for all of that. Thankfully, Michigan has Don Brown.

Comments

creelymonk10

September 21st, 2017 at 4:37 PM ^

This is why the 3 yard rule for illegible man downfield is such bullshit in the NCAA. You have 2 receivers lined up on the LOS at the bottom of the screen. Inside receiver is ineligible, but runs to the 3 yard limit and stops. Louisville for some reason has someone covering him, but still stupid that it's legal. Move to the 1 yard limit like the NFL please.

 

TrueBlue2003

September 22nd, 2017 at 1:28 AM ^

because while the rule is pretty simple that if you're on the line of scrimmage and someone else outside of you is also on the line, you're ineligible.

But it's probably very rare for a corner to be paying attention to two guys on the outside lined up on the LOS like this.  Here, it appears this guy doesn't realize it.  They designed the play assuming it would trick people so my guess is that it's somewhat common that they wouldn't realize it.