Monday Presser 9-8-14: Doug Nussmeier Comment Count

Adam Schnepp

Nuss

Can you talk about some of the positives you took away after watching the film?

“Well, you know, I think when you look at the football game and you say, ‘Okay, what were the things that we can take out of this game?’ I thought we were prepare to play. I talked to our guys about [how] the preparation was right. We were prepared. You look at the first drive, we move the ball down the field the first two drives and unfortunately were unable to convert but the preparation was right. We’ve talked a lot about what we’re doing to prepare for games and right now we’ve just got to play smarter, we’ve got to play more disciplined and we’ve got to execute better.”

What does this offense need to do to regain the consistency and solidity it had against Appalachian State and what did Notre Dame do to break down what you built up in the season opener?

“Well, I wouldn’t say that anything got broke down. The same thing I talked about a week ago; we’re still in the infancy stages. We’re still learning to play consistently and I’ll continue to hit on that because, like I said before, we play well in stretches and it showed in that game. You could see where we’d get movement, we’d create things, we’d move the ball and then we’d lack that consistency and that’s going to be a growth process and it’s something that we work every day in practice on and we continue to talk about it’s about eleven guys on every play doing the right thing. You just can’t play, when you play a quality opponent like Notre Dame- if it’s ten guys doing the right thing and one guy doing the wrong thing you’re doomed so we’ve got to get eleven guys on every play doing the right thing.”

Can you talk about what you’ve seen out of Devin Funchess in the first couple of games, but beyond that the production you’re expecting from those other guys when Devin gets the attention that he inevitably will.

“Sure. Devin’s done an outstanding job. I talked about that before. We moved him around and his ability to process the information, to move into the slot, to move back out by himself, then to have the tight end with him, that’s a lot of information. People don’t realize how difficult that is and that should tell you a little bit about his mental makeup and the other side of Devin Funchess, not just the athletic side that you see. He’s done an outstanding job with that.

“That being said, you could see in the game that there are other guys on this team that can make plays. Dennis Norfleet did a nice job for us, made some plays for us. Amara Darboh, Jehu Chesson. We’re still looking at some young guys to stand up and develop. Freddy Canteen, we’re trying to get Freddy going a little bit so we’re trying to not only let Devin do what Devin does but also develop that corps around him.”

[After THE JUMP: generating explosive plays, evaluating the offense’s progress, and a bunch of Devin Gardner questions]

Doug, when you go back and look at game film with Devin Gardner what’s the message to him and what are the teaching points there? What did you say to Devin, especially when things were going wrong?

“Well, the biggest thing is when you get in a game like that, and obviously the flow of the game never got where we wanted it, we never got the consistency and the flow. We’d get some good things started but then we’d have something that would set us back to get us behind the sticks, and we spent a lot of time talking to the whole offense about that. When you play a quality opponent you can’t play from behind the sticks. You’ve got to stay on schedule and when we got hurt was when we got behind the sticks.

“Devin obviously did some things that neither of us really wanted but that happens. It’s all about the process of learning, going through reads, going through progressions, what did you see, where do your eyes and feet need to be and he’s growing. We’re growing together. It’s the second game I’ve been with him. There’s things I need to do better, for sure.”

Were you concerned that Devin became frustrated when you didn’t get any points out of the first two drives and then as the game went on seemed to become more and more frustrated?

“I wouldn’t say concerned. I think that’s always something with a quarterback playing in that type of game when things don’t go the way you like them to. Like I said, we had a hard time establishing the offensive tempo that we wanted to establish. We couldn’t do that and therefore, the quarterback- you get behind the sticks, you get put in third and long situations and obviously we didn’t play as well as we needed to play on third downs. You put pressure on a quarterback and allow teams to blitz you and do the things they’re going to do when you get behind the chains. That’s not advantageous.”

Some of the pass pro[tection] problems- were those assignment issues or part of the growth you’re talking about?

“Well, we saw a lot of different blitzes. They did a nice job. They had a nice blitz package and I thought our guys really, we talked about it after the game, from an assignment standpoint did a really, really nice job. What you see is what you think is maybe a guy turning a guy loose. Well, that may be a shift where it’s this dangerous one or that dangerous one and he picked one or the other. Now, maybe we’d like him to pick the closest guy to the quarterback but as far as mental errors and busts there were not that many. We had a couple that we’ve got to get cleaned up but for the most part, as far as assignment-wise, it was pretty darn good. We need to be more stout, the quarterback has to be more decisive and part of that is you get into third-and-long in a game like that it makes it difficult. You’re on the road, it’s loud, you’re seeing lots of blitzes so that’s something that we can control through the process of first and second down and what we’re doing there.”

Two part question: first, against Notre Dame being your Michigan debut against a major opponent if you could reverse your role how would you grade your performance looking through the eyes of Michigan fans?

“Not very good. Obviously when you don’t score and you’re the offensive coordinator it’s not good. It’s been a lot of reflection. What could we have done differently and what should we have done differently. Obviously, we take big ownership in this and when you don’t score points it falls on everybody and you start with the offensive coordinator.”

Second part: it looked like a swing kind of over Dennis Norfleet’s head. It looked like a big play. He’s a guy who when he touches the ball can potentially score a touchdown. Are you excited about what you’re going to be able to do? Do you plan on working him more into the offense?

“Well, like I talked about we feel like we’ve got multiple guys that can do things and when you look back at the game what’s one of the things we didn’t do well, that I didn’t do well? We didn’t create enough explosive plays, plays that are a twelve yard run or a sixteen yard pass. We only had five explosives so it averaged out to about one every thirteen plays, something like that. That’s not good enough for us. When you can’t generate big plays that makes it difficult. That means you have to sustain long drives and that’s one of the things that we have to look at and how do we develop ways to get our guys in situations where they can create explosive plays.”

MGoQuestion: How would you evaluate the offense’s pre-snap communication on Saturday?

“I thought it was excellent.”

MGoWellAtLeastWeHaveThatGoingForUs

You mentioned Devin still growing. I think a lot of people have trouble embracing that because he’s a fifth year senior. What about Devin is still growing and why isn’t he more of a finished product at this point?

“Well, he’s in a new system. Second game in a new system.”

Did you ever think about Shane {Morris] at all in that game?

“I thought Shane had a great week of practice. And Shane has done an outstanding job. Said it before, we feel very comfortable with Shane playing. The way the game unfolded and the way the game played out, felt like it was the best thing to leave Devin in the game.”

You mentioned earlier that your offense was in the infancy stage right now. When do you expect that to progress? What’s the timeline there?

“I don’t think there is a timeline. We’ll go as fast as we can. You look at the big picture of things and you’re early in the season, you’re in week two and you go on the road and play a quality opponent and you find out a lot about yourself and you can some of the procedural things that we’ve got to clean up. We had the false start penalties within drives, and that’s what I talk about getting behind the sticks and those kind of things. Those are things we have to clean up.

“One of the other things we did, we went back and we looked at plays from the game and plays that we ran that were either the same exact play that we ran in one stage of the game that was successful and when we came back why wasn’t it successful the second time or what did we do differently or maybe it didn’t work the first time but it worked the second time because we executed properly. A lot of it is we’re running plays that our players, this is their second live game doing it. And we played a quality opponent.”

You talked about your need for explosive plays and your tight end Jake Butt is working his way back in and he’s one of those kind of players. Talk about where his ceiling is and what he brings when he’s fully ready to go.

“Jake, obviously, he gives you a dimension in the pass game. When you can get a tight end that can vertically stretch the field it helps the passing game tremendously. He’s coming off the ACL so obviously as he continues to get healthier and healthier we’ll continue  to implement him in our system.”

Comments

Chipper1221

September 9th, 2014 at 10:30 AM ^

I will never turn my back on Michigan but good Lord do I need to see an absolute ass whooping to be convinced this year will turn a different path from last year. Not even just the offense, I wanna see defensive guys get mad at eachother for blown assignments I want to see some heart out there I want to see one of the Seniors pulverize someone and the team react, show a heartbeat somewhere on this team. 

erald01

September 9th, 2014 at 10:43 AM ^

I keep hearing the guys were ready and were very well prepared..what happened then? Are these guys being over coached, are the players overwhelmed to the point they forget their assigments on the field?? Are thing not simple enough, I dont get it...What I like from Nuss is he at least feels accountable for the loss and feels like he needs to do a better job..havent heard Hoke say that

Space Coyote

September 9th, 2014 at 11:11 AM ^

I can believe that the coaches were happy with the way they prepared, the effort they gave, the progress they made, the gameplan, etc. But sometimes you get in game, some negative things happen, maybe the other team makes an adjustment your team isn't able to over come, and suddenly all that really good preparation unravels and you resort to things you didn't do in practice.

Now, that, in a way, is then poor preparation in some senses. You didn't prepare well enough to overcome those obstacles or those adjustments. And sometimes you just don't have the talent to, or the things implemented in the system fully. And sometimes things just unravel in game, nerves come about, pressure builds, and players just don't respond the way you want them too. Obviously, confidence in what you're doing can mitigate that, and that comes from preparation, but sometimes there is no amount of good preparation at this stage that is enough. The whole "Perfect practice makes perfect", well, this is the 2nd real game in the system, there won't ever be perfect practice to begin with, but particularly not at this stage.

They could be saving face with these comments, they could be misreading their team, or they could be honest, and maybe the team did prepare well. Who knows?

west2

September 9th, 2014 at 11:21 AM ^

Not being a football technical guy, but more dumb observations, it appeared that the offense did gain some yards both on the ground and through the air.  I dont think they had many TFLs which was a problem last year.  The blocking/OL wasn't horrible but fair and at times good.  They had trouble in the red zone and it seemed they had too many 3rd and longs at critical times when they really needed to score some points to stay in the game.  Defensively it seemed the Irish did a lot of short pass-3 step drops not allowing the defensive line to be a factor.  It was a good game plan for ND against a team learning new schemes on offense and defense.  The problem is with the being patient thing is its year 4 for Hoke and the program needs to show signs of life now.  

Reader71

September 9th, 2014 at 11:45 AM ^

The blocking was better on Saturday than it was during the ND game one year ago. This is encouraging.

But the blocking was not good. It was not even fair. Why? Because we still allow free runners in pass protection. The nature of protections often allows for a free runner; they have one more guy coming than we have guys to account for. But in this game, we often protected wrong so that the one guy we didnt account for came from the inside (the most dangerous man, as the fastest path between point A and point B is right through the A gap). We also let guys free when we had a numbers advantage.

This wasn't on every snap. But it happened far too regularly for the blocking to be considered fair. And one can argue that even one of those mistakes is too many, as they lead to tackles for loss, sacks, fumbles, and interceptions. I swear to you, I was part of a line (the last backup for the last walk-on) that didn't allow a single one of these for games at a time. We had 2-3 during a whole season. That is what coaches mean when they say execution. If they bring extra guys, we account for them, not with blocking, but with hot routes. But when you let a guy come free right between LG and C, the QB doesn't even have time for the hot route.

This is what bothers me most about this team: we don't seem to fundamentally understand pass protection. Even if each of our guys knows his role on a given play and how that role can change depending upon what the defense does, I don't think we know what it means to protect a quarterback fully. And that sucks, because I thought that would be where we would have our biggest improvement, because that depends a lot more on experience and teaching than physical ability.

nmwolverine

September 9th, 2014 at 11:35 AM ^

This is the first post where the majority is saying be patient, there is a new offense, wait for the players to move into a comfort zone.  The line is improving, the receivers are not yet at a high level, and the running backs are still developing.  Even the 5th year QB, although stellar at times, struggles at other times.  With all of that, the ND game is something that can happen.  We hope it is an early in the season problem.  We will look back in perhaps 6 games and see if this majority was right or not.  I am not among those calling for Hoke's head, because I think this will go in the right direction.  Be realistic and get off the spring practice hype.

Bashman

September 9th, 2014 at 11:36 AM ^

When I was in the USMC I had a Capt ask me if I did a good job. I'd always say yes, I am ready. He would say I'll decide if you are ready, you just prepare the best you can. So I'm sure they did prepare and it is evident they are not ready for prime time. Second point. I don't recall Saban complaining at year two how young his team was at Alabama when he was winning a championship. Alabama went through at least 7 years of coaching issues to include one coach who never coached a down (Price). The michigan excuses are lame anymore. They will bleed fans, rightfully so. The best way to vote is with your feet.

Sione's Flow

September 9th, 2014 at 12:07 PM ^

I think the offense will improve with Nussmeier at the helm. But after watching Oklahoma on Saturday, I think letting Jerry Montgomery leave was a mistake on the defensive side.

Zarniwoop

September 9th, 2014 at 12:22 PM ^

Bottom line: Other schools bring in new coordinators and succeed immediately. Not always, but iwhile I still don't understand why Michigan will not send Funchess down the ******* field when the defense plays up, it was clearly not a new offense that caused this weekend's blowout.

Other teams have youth at critical positions and succeed immediately. Last Saturday was a particularly poignant reminder of this.

Other teams recruit massive numbers of 4 star athletes and succeed.

I could accept this game as an aberration IF it was an aberration.

It's not an aberration, it's a pattern.

 

When numerous highly-rated players underperform, the vast percentage of the time it is on the coach.  Because either the coach didn't replace them, didn't prepare them, or didn't make adjustments to help them succeed. For example, realizing you couldn't possibly stop the slant patterns with our hugely overrated secondary and not making schematic adjustments.

Look, I get it. I'm not calling for anyone's job. I will still cheer for this team like a madman and always will. I do believe that next year will be the year for us (by this I mean 9+ wins) because we will finally be mostly upperclassmen. But, with the kids we've brought in here for the last 3 years, and the few seniors we have, our current reality is significantly below expectations for similar circumstances at any other high level program in the country.

I'm sorry if this sounds overly negative.  But, acting like we got shut out 31-0 because of a new OC is just not facing reality.

I'll be cheering our boys on this Saturday and hoping that our coaches can brush last weekend aside and we improve from here. Patterns can be broken. They usually aren't after three years, but I do agree that Nussmeier can have a positive impact given enough time.

Leonhall

September 9th, 2014 at 5:06 PM ^

Few things..I still think a big problem still is Devin being hesitant and holding the ball too long. He's a great athlete and I'm happy he's on our teAm. I would also like to see more Freddie canteen as well as Funchess going deep


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