Unverified Voracity Invents Numbers Comment Count

Brian

Bye week, remember. UFRs are delayed as I take the annual breather from the grind. These might be a little later than usual (Thurs/Friday in non-Hoke-doom-spiral years), but it's on its way.

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Henry was fierce Saturday [Eric Upchurch]

The difference. PFF grades the game:

–In a direct contrast to the Spartans’ signal caller, Michigan quarterback Jake Rudock (-3.0) struggled once again. He brought his grade down to -20.9 on the year, and didn’t look great even when he was completing passes. On 3rd-and-9 with 5:42 left in the third quarter, he underthrew wide receiver Amara Darboh on a go route, turning a potential touchdown into a play where the receiver had to save the reception.

Ouch. Another PFF article notes that they have Rudock the 7th-worst quarterback nationally in their grading system.

The Michigan defense has been on another level this year, with standouts on the defensive line in Chris Wormley (+25.3) and Maurice Hurst (+25.8), at linebacker in Desmond Morgan (+17.0) and at cornerback with Jourdan Lewis (+16.7). Before the loss to Michigan State they had posted three straight shutouts and yet, with Jake Rudock’s (-20.9) struggles at quarterback, they find themselves on the outside looking in when it comes to the College Football Playoff picture. Our seventh-lowest graded player at the system, he has graded positively just once all year.

I don't think he's been that bad—I'm guessing PFF is dumping all of the collective WR/QB issues on Rudock since they must be going over these games as quickly as possible given the sheer volume of work they've given themselves. But he has not been good. We can definitely say that.

Not much more to do here than shrug at Hoke's QB recruiting and ponder the future.

In other PFF grade things. Both DLs grade every high, as did Michigan's LB corps. Ben Gedeon's most extensive playing time to date resulted in a solid +3.4 just behind Morgan. That's good for next year, and possibly the rest of this year.

Henry led the way for M despite the personal foul; you can see the implied struggles of Michigan's tackles in the grades of Calhoun and McDowell. Both Lewis and Burbridge graded out positively, which pretty much.

Still. "Michigan is not going to the college football playoff because of one glaring personnel deficiency" is a lot better than "Michigan is not going to the college football playoff because hahahahaha

stop

hahahaha

what would that score even look like

they'd have to invent new numbers

they've already invented all of them

hahahahaha"

So we've got that going for us.

Finally PFF thing that doesn't really have anything to do with PFF. In the second article I learned that Utah State has a defensive end named "Kyler Fackrell" who I really wish played for BC.

Advanced stats. The Connelly box score is kind of amazing. Michigan and MSU had 13 possessions and on average Michigan had a 14-yard advantage in field position. That is a whopping 182 yards almost entirely due to special teams, and that's how you lead a team that's outgained you by 160 yards until that thing happened.

Another item of note: M brutalized the MSU ground game, which had a "success rate" of 23%. Michigan was at 40%; national average is 42%. MSU made up for it in the air.

Michigan's five man cover one pressures. M has been running a ton of man free blitzes this year. James Light with a comprehensive breakdown of them:

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When you have the personnel to hold up in the secondary in man coverage, Cover 1 Rat is very tough on quarterbacks and offenses in general, which is why this is the favorite coverage of Alabama head coach Nick Saban, “Man free, rat in the hole is the best coverage involved, absolutely the best coverage involved. They can’t run the ball, the quarterback has to throw the ball outside, and he can’t make any easy throws like when you play zone.”

Michigan ran into a team that was very, very good at hitting those tough outside throws and still had to eat a 75-yard fancy play coverage bust to give up 21.

The Raiders will double that respect. Harbaugh on the usual NFL rumors:

Harbaugh was asked Tuesday on the Big Ten coaches teleconference if it "bothers" him to hear his name tossed around in speculative circles with regard to other head coaching jobs.

His answer was simple.

"I won't comment on it, it's disrespectful to the game," he said. "I look at it as disrespectful."

I wouldn't run to the Har-bank with that since it's pretty much what he was saying last year when the 49ers were approaching the end of their season. This got headlined as "Jim Harbaugh says it's 'disrespectful' to mention his name for other coaching jobs," which is not quite what he said. To me he's saying, its disrespectful to the game to talk about taking other jobs when there is a season going on.

I don't think Harbaugh's leaving. He's definitely not leaving until he feels he's done right by Michigan. But if it should come to that a comment like the above is no more than a slightly more aggressive version of the usual deflection.

The cord cutting is coming ongoing. ESPN has started shedding high-priced talent as their six-bucks-from-every-granny-who-only-watches-Matlock model starts to implode. Now the cuts have gone wider:

Walt Disney Co.’s ESPN sports network, confronting rising programming costs and a loss of viewers, plans to eliminate as many as 350 positions, about 4.3 percent of its workforce, according to people with knowledge of the matter.

No, Stephen A. Smith won't be among them.

I hope the Big Ten enjoys this brief window in which the paltry Rutgers and Maryland fanbases are a net benefit to the bottom line—and only the bottom line—of the conference. It is not going to last much longer.

Louisville thing. It sounds not at all subtle.

A book, "Breaking Cardinal Rules: Basketball and the Escort Queen,"published this month by self-described former escort Katina Powell, 42, details nearly two dozen stripping and sex parties from 2010 to 2014 inside Billy Minardi Hall, the on-campus dorm for athletes and other students named for Louisville men's basketball head coach Rick Pitino's late brother-in-law. Powell, who first spoke to Indianapolis Business Journal Book Publishing, has said that McGee arranged the parties and paid her $10,000 for supplying dancers during the time period.

That is not a thing that you can reasonably say "I had no knowledge of X" about. If Rick Pitino was ignorant of five-digit payouts for dozens of sex parties that is also grounds for a firing. It should be obvious "lack of institutional control," but NCAA enforcement is a magic eight ball.

Very Harbaugh. One day after the MSU game he was at the White House. Obama:

He says Barack Obama watched Saturday's 27-23 loss to the Spartans and told the coach it "was a tough way to lose a football game."

Thanks, Obama.

Not yet please. Mike Spath talked to some NFL scouts and they are not blind.

At 5-10, 175 pounds, Lewis is smaller than ideal, but at least three scouts to have attended Michigan games this season told TheWolverine.com that the Detroit Cass Tech alumnus had earned a first-round grade from them.

"Some teams will shy away because they draft almost solely on physical traits but a kid like him, with that competitive fire, and an ability to make a play on the ball in the air, is really appealing," one of the observers noted.

Henry and Wormley are also attractive NFL prospects; the best shot Michigan has on offense is Jehu Chesson, if and when Chesson gets some polish. Hopefully they'll stick around for their senior seasons; if they do this epic defense will probably see a repeat next year.

Emo takes. The "Elsewhere" section in the game recap was abbreviated, but if you want to get some additional catharsis posts Andrew Kahn, the Hoover Street Rag and Holdin' The Rope have you. HTR:

A time-tested mantra I've found myself resorting to over my years of watching sports is a simple one, but resonant: Things happen.

Michigan completes a Hail Mary against Northwestern in 2012. Colorado completes a Hail Mary against Michigan in 1994. Yin and yang, a grand swinging pendulum of Fortune, karma, mindless spinning of a dimpled, brown prolate spheroid through wind and rain and snow and the sun's reaching rays in the Midwestern fall.

Would not have managed to go with "things" there. Good man.

Etc.: Brief Victor Viramontes video profile. Maize and Blue Nation on 100 Years of Moe's. Aubrey Dawkins was only recruited by Michigan and Dayton. Remember that this year. Accurate. Moritz Wagner is here, German. You can apparently vote TE commit Sean McKeon into the UA game.

Comments

winterblue75

October 21st, 2015 at 12:59 PM ^

 

Michigan and MSU had 13 possessions and on average Michigan had a 14-yard advantage in field position. That is a whopping 182 yards almost entirely due to special teams, and that's how you lead a team that's outgained you by 160 yards until that thing happened.

Wouldn't both UM and MSU have had to score a TD on every possession in order for that 182 yd field possession discrepancy to work it self out? I get that UM had shorter fields to go all day long due to better special teams, but the fact is they still had a lot of three and outs (only 10 first downs). To me this just seems like a cover-up for UM's not so great offense on Saturday

winterblue75

October 21st, 2015 at 1:17 PM ^

Okay, but UM really didn't do anything with this "advantage", aside from 2 TD's, they settled for 3 field goals, only had 10 first downs and had 6 three and outs. I just feel that people are trying to cover up for the lack of yardage because it's a Harbaugh offense and people don't want to think that a Harbaugh offense could possibly have been as bad as it maybe looked to some on Saturday.

WestQuad

October 21st, 2015 at 1:52 PM ^

Weren't Derrick Green and Ty Issac 5 star recruits?   I thought Green was clocked at a 4.36 forty (four fakes out of five) or something ridiculously fast like that?   Vision, fumbles and going down on first contact might be legit criticisms for everyone healthy but Smith, but speed and athleticism don't seem to be.

TennBlue

October 21st, 2015 at 1:18 PM ^

MSU had to make longer drives to get within scoring range all day. That means more plays and more chances for mistakes, and more chances for our defense to make plays.

As a result, we held their much-superior offense mostly in check. The extra yards from special teams made it easier for our offense, harder for theirs and negated a significant amount of their advantage there.

Pepto Bismol

October 21st, 2015 at 1:49 PM ^

They didn't do anything with the advantage?  They had a 4 play, 8 yard drive (!) that resulted in a FG.  They had another 28 yard drive result in a FG.  They had a 38 yard drive result in a TD.  That's 13 points right there that probably don't happen if they start those drives on their own 20.

You sound like you're accusing the fan base of making excuses to protect Harbaugh, and I can't understand how you come up with that.  I haven't heard or read one person say that Michigan's offense was anything but ineffective.  The fact is they led that game at the end because special teams and defense gave them short fields all day (and MSU long fields), and they took advantage the best they could to the tune of 23-21. 

People aren't "trying to cover up for the lack of yardage".  Michigan's special teams ACTUALLY covered up for the lack of yardage.

 

charblue.

October 21st, 2015 at 1:36 PM ^

explaining how Michigan was able to lead throughout the contest and then lose when the clock ran out after being severely outgained offensively. The hidden yards of field position enabled the Wolverines to benefit in scoring opportunites that eluded MSU with both teams scheming the others weakest links, battling to a virtual standstill on the ground while Sparty enjoyed the benefit of a huge margin in talent at the quarterback position and yards through the air because Cook could deliver balls in the kind of windows that few others in the college game can match.

Neither side committed a turnover that held up, with Cook's lone interception that would have given Michigan a massive early momentum swing called back because of a questionable holding call on Jourdan Lewis.

So, Michigan special teams yardage became a silent sensor of a lost victory stolen in the midst of an epic special teams blunder.

The other mitigating factor, penalty yards and an ejection. MSU got 4 first downs via penalty to support its 20-10 edge over Michigan and the Wolverines lost a defensive leader who might have helped the defense avoid its biggest coverage bust of the season, a game-changing 74-yard pass play to a seldom used fullback after Sparty coordinators recognized Michigan failed to line up properly on a first half play and decided to save the call for a critical second half moment. That came with the team down by nine with Michigan having just extended the margin by a field goal. 

Confused safety coverage led to a mixup that allowed a backfield wheel route to burn Michigan. It was the biggest mistake of the game and the season. And it was the real reason why the game turned on a mishandled punt snap which the punter admitted was OK and catchable.

Gr1mlock

October 21st, 2015 at 1:01 PM ^

The things happen, yin and yang point clicked something in my mind - we probably owed one back to the football gods for the Drew Dileo powerslide against Northwestern still.  Ledger's even now, so the weird, divine intervention freak plays should probably stop, and we can get back to winning games by having our D eat people.  

Wolverine 73

October 21st, 2015 at 1:38 PM ^

Spartan Bob and the clock, which was simple cheating that led to the Big Ten installing league timekeepers, IIRC.  This goat rodeo, which is hard to categorize.  I think there was another flukey loss I can't recall right now.  How about giving NW a break, and crushing Sparty some time when we play them, o football gods?

DonAZ

October 21st, 2015 at 1:52 PM ^

The review booth refs for this past MSU game would have let that call stand ... *sigh*

(I still have visions of screaming at the TV during that game back in '79 ... it was so clear the refs were trying their best to give it to USC.  That's not sour grapes, that's hard reality.)

2427_Couzens

October 22nd, 2015 at 1:21 PM ^

As a child at the time, I just couldn't understand such a mistake wasn't corrected.  My parents and teachers always told me to own up to anything I did wrong and correct it.

 

Ah...such sweet innocence...

 

Also, to this day, when I hear the USC fight song, I immediately start singing:

Time out for USC

It's time to pay the referee

JeepinBen

October 21st, 2015 at 1:02 PM ^

I'm not so sure that Pitino knew, although institutional control for sure. Based on a few of the articles I've read on the subject (like the very good OTL report), I'm thinking that the $10K was TOTAL for the dozen or so parties, as opposed to 10K per, or 120K over the period. Not that I know the market factors of hiring strippers or escorts in Louisville, but the OTL article said that some of the girls made an extra $100 for a sex act. $10K disappearing over a few years seems more along the lines of "Pitino didn't know".

Rabbit21

October 21st, 2015 at 2:00 PM ^

Then there are an awful lot of professions you should probably stay away from.  I've been in lots of work environments where it's more or less an open secret once they get to know you.

Not offering judgment or defense, it doesn't move my needle much either way, simply stating a fact.

blueinuk

October 21st, 2015 at 5:02 PM ^

So you're saying most women go into prostitution thinking, 'Hmm, should I be a teacher or a banker or a prostitute?  I guess I'll pick prostitute.' 

Better not think too hard about why these women have ended up selling their bodies because the answers may not be so easy to pass off as 'two consenting adults.'

By the way, what would qualify as a moral issue in your book?  

uncleFred

October 22nd, 2015 at 9:25 AM ^

The estimated cost of each party was $1500 - $2000 not inculding "side deals" made by the individual girls to have sex with individual players. So you talking about $30,000 - $40,000+ over the period in question. One thing that wasn't clear was the source of the money used by the players to purchase sex. 

charblue.

October 21st, 2015 at 1:09 PM ^

interest rumors from other suitors will become a near fulltime proposition. Having said that, Harbaugh not only saying that the subject is "disrespectful" while a coach is in season working, was more than supplanted by a more conditional response to a question about being in Ann Arbor now in his current job.

Responding to a Brandy question on his radio show Monday, Harbaugh said there is no place he'd rather be right now. I think he knows that the feeling is more than mutual from those who support his program and team.

SoDak Blues

October 21st, 2015 at 1:24 PM ^

It has been talked about to death, but damn, I hope Lewis and the elder D-line return next year. Those who stay truly will be champions.

And Lewis is way, way, way too short for pro football (this year)