Preview 2015: Special Teams Comment Count

Brian

Previously: Podcast 7.0. The Story. Quarterback. Running Back. Wide Receiver. Tight End And Friends. Offensive Line. Defensive Tackle. Defensive End. Linebacker. Cornerback. Safety.

Kicker Yr Punter Yr Kickoffs Yr Punt return Yr Kick return Yr
Kenny Allen Jr* Blake O'Neill Sr* Kenny Allen Jr* Jabrill Peppers Fr* Jabrill Peppers Fr*
Kyle Seychel Fr* Kenny Allen Jr* Andrew David Fr Jehu Chesson Jr* Jehu Chesson Jr*

No coaching upgrade on the team is steeper than special teams. Under Brady Hoke and Dan Ferrigno, Michigan featured adequate kicking and terrible everything else. Their usual MO was one blocked punt against an early tomato can, archaic punt coverage that was terrible even with 11 guys on the field, and return units that did little except take penalties when Dennis Norfleet finally managed to escape from ravenous packs of defenders.

John Baxter's Fresno State teams led the country in blocked kicks over the course of his tenure there—one that overlaps with Virginia Tech at its Beamerball peak—and in his only year at USC took their special teams units from nowhere to 2nd and 4th in the country in blocked punts and kicks, respectively. Special teams is a low data, high variance enterprise but if anyone's got the track record to suggest he's going to make an impact, it's Baxter.

Now about that scholarship kicker…

KICKER

Rating: 2

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The holder becomes the holdee [Fuller]

This is looking hairy all of a sudden. Scholarship freshman ANDREW DAVID was immediately dumped well down the depth chart, and Michigan must turn to the walk-ons that populate any D-I team's kicking roster. One, KENNY ALLEN [hello post], was the heir apparent at punter until John Baxter rolled into town with an Aussie in tow; the other, KYLE SEYCHEL, is a redshirt freshman who fans didn't even know was on the team until fall camp.

Reports out of said camp have been worried. Those coming out of the open practice were mixed, but guys who had been around for more than a few attempts were disquieted. There are reports Michigan is reconsidering their decision to forgo a scholarship guy in the 2016 class. That is not a good sign. Neither is that OR on the depth chart.

"I dunno, is kicker" is always a valid thing to say about kickers you have not seen much of; in this case I'm just hoping for a guy to bang them in from 40 yards and in.

PUNTER

Rating: 5

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wait isn't this guy in twilight or something [Eric Upchurch]

The OR is much more welcoming at this spot. Things are looking just fine at punter despite the departures of both Matt Wile and Will Hagerup. Allen has been booming punts in practice for a few years now, and during the Hoke era we saw a lot of punts in practice.

And then there's that imported Aussie. BLAKE O'NEILL [g'day mate post] comes from a land down under where small children carry around football-shaped objects to punt at anything they run across that is poisonous. Everything in Australia is poisonous. (Yes, especially the koalas.) When the survivors reach adulthood, the resulting skills are impressive:

Asked if the 6-foot-2, 215-pound kicker is the type of special teams player who can change a game, Baxter nods, saying, "He's that."

"Listen," he continued, "if you put a trashcan out there 40 yards, he can usually hit it, OK? He's as accurate, and in some cases more accurate than, the quarterbacks."

O'Neill's first year in college football was last year, when he did this at Weber State:

O'Neill finished sixth nationally (Football Championship Subdivision) in punting during the 2014 season at Weber State. He played in all 12 games and averaged 44.1 yards per punt, setting a single-season punting average record for the Wildcats.

O'Neill tallied 62 punts for 2,737 yards with a long of 74 yards. He boomed 18 punts of 50-plus yards and notched 25 boots inside the opposition's 20-yard line. O'Neill ran for a first down on a fake punt and tossed a completion for a first down on another fake.

Are you ready for some punting highlights? Woo!

AUSSIE PUNTS: SKY TERRITORY sounds like a Chuck Norris movie

Not sure if he's going to be able to do the thing where he idles for a couple seconds before he punts at at D-I level, but Michigan now has a special teams coach with a terrific track record. If he can make it so, it will be so.

O'Neill can rugby punt with either foot and his directional kicking skills in the video above are creepy, Orin Incandenza-level stuff. Real life Blake O'Neill probably isn't going to be good as a fictional punter who is the highest paid player in the NFL. Probably.

[After THE JUMP: gratuitously placed Jabrill Peppers highlights designed to make you click through mooohahaha]

RETURN UNITS: CANNAH GET A HOT TUB TAKE TWO

Rating: 4

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LET'S GOOOOOOOO [Fuller]

Jabrill Peppers got one return in last year before he was dinged and then done for the season. It didn't get that far but was enticing all the same:

He sailed past those first two guys, and if you can do that on the regular you are going to have a good time returning punts. Also:

Peppers should have an impact even in the modern million-gunner world. He's listed with an OR next to Jehu Chesson, and I like Jehu Chesson, but cumong man. Unless he can't field them consistently it's going to be Peppers.

Yowza.

I'm not sure how much impact a special teams coach can have on this aspect of the game, since the schemes are all "try to get in this guy's way as he runs 40 yards downfield." Meanwhile the spread punt has nerfed return games nationwide. Last year's preview:

In just the last five years, punt return rate has dropped from 41% to 33% as the spread punt's tendrils reach across the nation, and the drop would be much more drastic than that if you took touchbacks out of the equation.

Still, there's a ton of upside here. Since Norfleet's touchdown against Maryland was erased by a block in the back, last year's returns consist of one 32-yarder from Ben Gedeon off a block in the Appalachian State game and just 13 others for 4.3 yards a pop. This was somehow worse than last year's numbers, which featured another touchdown block return and 18 additional attempts for 4.7 yards each.

This will be an interesting test bed for the possibility that coaching matters in this department. If Baxter can free up Peppers just a few times a game the payoff entices.

Kickoff And Punt Coverage

Rating: 3

Last year:

If Michigan doesn't block and cover better this year I am going to start grumbling about Dan Ferrigno.

"Grumble" was putting it mildly after Michigan conjured this up:

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Everyone knows that is ten guys playing a sport in which you're allowed eleven, but also consider that this was yet another punt on which Michigan had two guys within 30 yards of the returner on the catch. That was above average for the Ferrigno era:

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Last year Michigan was 97th in FEI's fancy punt efficiency metric, which was all the more impressive with Will Hagerup ending up 29th in raw average. Under Ferrigno, Michigan finished 97th, 60th, 91st, and 83rd. On the bright side, that's incredible consistency for such a low-sample, swingy thing like punt returns. That's the ticket.

Baxter used spread punting at USC a couple years ago and should bring that to Michigan. I say "should" because Harbaugh, bless his heart, has omitted punting from any open practice he's had since his arrival. That will significantly perk up the coverage teams, if there are even any punts to return.

BLOCKY BLOCKY TEAMS

RATING: NEW!

This preview has never considered the idea that Michigan might go block a bunch of kicks and turn games around. This is because Michigan has never really done that. Occasionally they would overwhelm the special teams unit of a lower-level team. I can't remember the last time Michigan blocked a kick in a real game. 2008 Northwestern?

[Consults with MGoTeam] Best we've got since Brandon Graham got punts in back to back games against Penn State and Illinois is an extra point against MSU and a field goal in the Outback Bowl and some punters fumbling snaps. God. Five years of nothing, and no returns, and… ugh. Baxter feels it too:

"I do feel like we can make an impact," he said. "It's upsetting to me that the last time we returned a punt or a kick was in 2007 and 2008. The last time we returned a field goal for a score was 2003. That's way too long. I can tell you this: we can approach this camp and this season with tremendous urgency. When those things happen, it's when they happen, but I can tell you that we expect it tomorrow."

I have no idea what to expect here, but "something" is a massive improvement already.

Comments

True Blue in CO

September 2nd, 2015 at 12:03 PM ^

Even if our special teams get to average by mid season and then continue to improve, it should help us win one or two games this year.  Every punt by O'Neill and every return by Peppers et. al. will be a chance for something good to happen versus the pangs of fear we had in the past few years.

dragonchild

September 2nd, 2015 at 12:21 PM ^

By midseason?

I get the game here.  You're protecting your heart.  And that makes sense for QB (Rudock is a low-floor guy but we don't know what Harbaugh will get out of him), RB (can coaching fix bad vision?) or CB (which suddenly looks thin after Lewis).

But Baxter has gotten consistently excellent results in an inherently high-variance part of the game.  That's kind of ridiculous by itself.  We not only have a full-time ST coach, he's one of the best in the country.

It's OK to expect something here.

dragonchild

September 2nd, 2015 at 12:34 PM ^

From what I can see, it's not a timed delay.  It looks like he's watching the jammers to see if they go after the punt or block the gunners.  He draws aggro with the delay and if they commit to the punt, he quickly boots it.  It doesn't have to be as great a kick because he's given his teammates so much time.  It's much more effective than just booming one as soon as the snap arrives.

If it's only a half second as opposed to a few seconds that's fine.  What he's doing is taking the edge players out of the game and that's astounding.

LJ

September 2nd, 2015 at 12:26 PM ^

Anyone else wish the NCAA would adopt the NFL punting rules?  I'm glad we'll likely be entering the 21st century and adopting a modern formation, but I miss the days when punt returns were actually a thing that happened.  It's one of the most exciting plays in football, and these days you really only get a couple of legit opportunities a game, if that.

Big Blue 4

September 2nd, 2015 at 12:39 PM ^

Hopefully we are scoring touchdowns instead of relying on our kicker to get us points (ex-Jason Hanson with the lions)

Our kickers are unproven but have faith in Baxter. I believe we are going to have a ferocious FG blocking unit  and possibly a dynamic return team. 

WolvRev86

September 2nd, 2015 at 12:33 PM ^

Love the Infinite Jest reference. On page 356 myself. Love the intellegence on display on this blog pretty much daily. I log my hours spent reading here as professional development. 

saveferris

September 2nd, 2015 at 12:34 PM ^

Kicking is the one thing that really worries me about this season.  In a year where it looks like we'll be locked in a bunch of tight games because our defense is good and our offense may struggle a bit, whether you win or lose could come down to, "did you make your field goals?"

cheesheadwolverine

September 2nd, 2015 at 12:51 PM ^

I don't think I'd ever seen the Peppers full video before. My God. Every play is like the SC-top 10 one.  Clearly his sucess depends largely on high schoolers being unathletic/bad at tackling.  But even allowing for that, it's the most amazing HS recruiting tape I have ever seen.  I now feel like we have to get him significant offensive touches.

NoVaWolverine

September 2nd, 2015 at 2:32 PM ^

Some guys are just special with the football in their hands, and Peppers is one of them. I've heard everything about him already, but man, watching that video ... Good Lord.

If he can meet his big responsibilities on D and in the return game and still handle a bit more on his plate (and given what we've heard from the coaches themselves about the kid's work ethic, that doesn't seem like a stretch), I don't see how you can't at least try to get him at least 5-10 snaps a game on an offense that is lacking in explosiveness. Even his presence as a decoy can open things up for other guys. 

Cali Wolverine

September 2nd, 2015 at 1:09 PM ^

Baxter is such a good special teams coach...fans aren't going to complain about special teams while he is the coach. I will go out on a limb and say that Baxter is probably the best Special Teams Coach that Michigan has had since I started following Michigan in the '90's.

spiff

September 2nd, 2015 at 1:14 PM ^

Has anyone else put that on repeat b/c the background beat is awesome and strangely hypnotic? I've been listening to it for 30 minutes at my desk at work.

alum96

September 2nd, 2015 at 1:16 PM ^

Yep for a team that is going to be a grind it out offense and try to parlay a good defense and developing offense into a lot of 24-20 type games, the lack of confidence in place kicker is something being missed.  I had David coming in and winning the job no problem as its a place a top rated recruit can handle the job for 4 years.   I could see a lot of frustration among the fan base as I expect the bulk of our games to be won by a TD or less so losing 3 pts here and there with a 60% type FG kicker is an issue.

On the flip side maybe we win a game along the way with a special teams blocked kick.