Upon Further Review 2013: Defense vs Akron Comment Count

Brian

FORMATION NOTES: Nothing weird. This one has pinched DTs, but they only did this once. This was in the first quarter, so you can see the three linebackers on the field:

4-3 pinch

In the second half they ditched a linebacker in favor of nickel packages (and probably tipped a stunt):

stunt-giveaway

This is what I mean when I say pistol diamond: four guys in the backfield, hanging out and stuff.

pistol-diamond-te

SUBSTITUTION NOTES: Secondary was almost entirely Wilson/Gordon/Taylor/Countess with the nickelback usually Jourdan Lewis and occasionally Delonte Hollowell. I don't think I saw Stribling except on special teams.

At LB, it was the usual Bolden/Ross/Morgan rotation. Bolden had some issues and late it was just Ross/Morgan. SAM mostly didn't exist, but Beyer got the vast majority of those snaps if you include the nickel DE looks.

On the line, much rotation.Clark and Ojemudia rotated with a little bit of Charlton. Black was almost omnipresent. Wormley, Godin, and Heitzman all got significant amounts of playing time; Glasgow was marginalized in this game to make way for Willie Henry. The nose tackles played a bit but they were largely lifted in the nickel.

[After THE JUMP: it's fine, it's fine, it's fine… erp.]

Ln Dn Ds O Form DForm Type Rush Play Player Yards
O25 1 10 Pistol 3-wide 4-3 under Run N/A Inside zone Beyer 12
Beyer nominally over the slot, walks down and blitzes on the snap. M is slanting away from the play but the linebackers don't seem to understand it; Bolden(-1) gets locked inside and Morgan(-1) does not scrape behind the slant and gets blocked; Beyer(-1) got too far upfield and could not come under control fast enough to get in a tackle attempt from the side.
O37 1 10 Shotgun empty 4-3 over Pass 4 In Beyer Inc
No pressure(-1); Beyer(+2, cover +2) in position on a little in route that he breaks up.
O37 2 10 Pistol 2TE 4-3 under Pass 4 Fly Wilson Inc
Max pro against a four man rush, they take a shot. Wilson(+1.5, cover +2) is over the top with Taylor(+0.5) also there, though he slows up late for seemingly no reason.
O37 3 10 Shotgun 2-back Nickel even Pass 4 Scramble Black 0
Both backs stay in. Black(+1, pressure +1) is executing a DT twist with Wormley that gets him through and flushes the QB after initial coverage(+1) is good. Nobody open as the QB rolls away from his throwing hand; Clark and Countess track him down.
Drive Notes: Punt, 0-0, 13 min 1st Q. Washington in on the first three snaps.
Ln Dn Ds O Form D Form Type Rush Play Player Yards
O25 1 10 Pistol 4-wide 4-3 pinch Run N/A Inside zone Henry 2
Pipkins(+1) and Henry(+0.5) your DTs lined up in the A gaps. They attempt to shoot those gaps, preventing any of the three interior linemen from leaving. Wormley has the backside gap; Morgan(+0.5, tackling +1) flows unimpeded to the hole and tackles; Pipkins helps, getting the extra half point. RPS +1.
O27 2 8 Pistol 3-wide 4-3 over Pass 4 Screen CGordon 5
Good old fashioned RB screen. The two playside DL are stunting and a little slow to pick up on developments; CGordon(+1) gets upfield, gets cut down, still is in a good spot to force the RB away from his blocks, and gets up to tackle(+1) with help from TGordon.
O32 3 3 Shotgun 4-wide Nickel even Pass 5 Hitch Countess 5
Michigan's in man and Jarrod Wilson gets dragged across the formation by a guy in motion. This forces Countess to give Wilson some room between himself and the WR, opening up a short hitch for the first down. RPS -1.
O37 1 10 Pistol 3-wide Nickel under Run N/A Inside zone Ross 4
Backside stunt isn't relevant but does seem tipped. Akron runs at the bubble to the frontside; both LBs flow to that hole. Ross(+0.5) gets outside of a guard and trips the RB as he passes; would like to see CGordon(-0.5) constrict this hole a little bit more but he's trying to play DE at 230.
O41 2 6 Shotgun 2-back Nickel even Pass 4 Comeback Lewis 7
M sends Ross, dropping Clark into a short zone. Black eventually rips through to pressure, but late(-1); everyone else got stoned. Akron completes a comeback in front of Lewis that finds an immediate tackle.
O48 1 10 Shotgun 2-back Nickel over Run N/A Inside zone Ross 3
Black(+0.5) gets to the outside of the center as the G over him releases; M stunts on the backside, opening up a crease. Ross(+0.5) reads the handoff quickly and shoots up in the gap to tackle; wish he'd be a little more direct here and tackle from the front. Clark did help tackle as well.
M49 2 7 Shotgun empty Nickel even Pass 4 Throwaway Beyer Inc
Stunt gets Beyer(+1) through up the middle with Black(+0.5) looping around (pressure +2), forcing a rollout and throwaway. RPS +1.
M49 3 7 Shotgun 2-back Okie two Pass 6 Skinny post Ross Inc
M tips a corner blitz; Akron checks. They then run the blitz anyway. Taylor playing with outside leverage on the WR, clearly expects someone to come underneath in the zone, that's Ross(-1, cover -1), who does not get near enough depth on his drop. WR is open for a conversion, but Michigan sent six and got Clark(+1, pressure +2) to loop around on a stunt and in free. He hits the QB as he throws. RPS +1. I guess Ross's drop wasn't too far off allowing him to deflect the ball.
Drive Notes: Punt, 7-0, 6 min 1st Q. Next drive starts on the M 31 thanks to a shanked punt.
Ln Dn Ds O Form D Form Type Rush Play Player Yards
M31 1 10 Pistol FB 4-3 under Run N/A Yakety snap N/A -5
QB falls on a bad snap.
M36 2 15 Pistol 4-wide 4-3 over Run N/A Inside zone Ojemudia 4
Washington(+0.5) pushes his guy back; Ojemudia(+1) gets the LT rocked back, then disengages to tackle as the RB passes. Bolden and Morgan were pretty eh reading and reacting, but on second and fifteen that's probably reasonable.
M32 3 11 Shotgun 2-back Nickel even Pass 4 Improv Ojemudia 3
More stunts stunts stunts. Ojemudia(+1) knifes inside and upfield, convincing the QB to roll out. Wormley keeps his feet and has mediocre contain; he should really be headed further outside here. He does roll off a block to chase, forcing a dumpoff. Pressure +1, cover +1.
Drive Notes: FG(44), 7-3, 2 min 1st Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form D Form Type Rush Play Player Yards
O28 1 10 Pistol 3-wide 4-3 over Run N/A Zone stretch Henry -2
Michigan sending Beyer and dropping Ojemudia. Henry(+2) is slanting playside and quickly gets under the G, driving three yards in the backfield in a flash and forcing a major bounce. Ross(+1) reads the bounce and is on it, cutting the RB off and getting a TFL.
O26 2 12 Shotgun trips Nickel over Pass 4 PA pop seam Morgan Inc
Morgan(+0.5) does a pretty good job to read this and get out to harass the catch or at least tackle immediately; the WR dropped it by himself, but if he didn't Morgan might have jarred it loose. Cover +1.
O26 3 12 Shotgun 4-wide 3-2-6 dime Pass 3 Throwaway Black Inc
Black(+2, pressure +3) goes right by the center, who ends up in a heap; pressure right up the middle means the QB has to roll and get rid of it. This is uncalled grounding, as there's no one in the area and the ball doesn't get to the LOS. Refs -2. A sack in spirit for Black.
Drive Notes: Punt, 7-3, 13 min 2nd Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form D Form Type Rush Play Player Yards
O22 1 10 Shotgun 4-wide 4-3 even Pass 4 Screen TGordon 6
Set up pretty well; Beyer is sucked in on a hitch route but avoids a cut when he recovers and TGordon(+0.5) fills quickly to hold it down somewhat. RPS -1.
O28 2 4 Pistol trips Nickel under Pass 4 Hitch Bolden 8
Bolden(-0.5) mistimes his blitz and the hitch behind him is hit by the Akron QB before a safety can fill for him.
O36 1 10 Pistol 3-wide 4-3 over Pass 4 PA slant Taylor 9
Way too easy, as Taylor is in no position to make a play on this. (Cover -1, Taylor -1). He was in press man and gave up the inside. No bueno.
O45 2 1 Pistol 3-wide 4-3 even Pass 4 PA out Beyer Inc
Another shift blitz; Beyer(+1, pressure +2) times this one up perfectly and nails the QB. He just gets it away. RPS +1.
O45 3 1 Pistol Diamond TE 4-4 under Run N/A Inside zone Ross 10
Excellent decisive cutback by the Akron back. The lane is to the backside behind Beyer. With the line slanting hard playside this is on Ross(-1.5), who doesn't see the fact that there's no lanes in front of him and then head to the back. By the time he does it's too late; he misses a tough tackle(-1) attempt past the sticks. Beyer(-0.5) got washed down the line too much, maybe.  Henry(+0.5) shot past the Akron OL on his slant and got penetration, possibly causing the cutback quickly. Bad luck, maybe.
M45 1 10 Pistol trips 4-3 even Pass 4 Hitch Henry INT
Henry(+1, pressure +1) gets a legit pass rush up the middle, driving inside of a guard, who holds him so badly that he ends up facing 180 degrees from where he wants to as he approaches the QB. No call. Refs -2. Akron's got a guy open for a few yards plus maybe a little YAC, QB rifles it through his hands, Countess(+1) intercepts and returns for many yards. Washington(+0.5) was also rushing rather well.
Drive Notes: Interception, 7-3, 5 min 2nd Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form D Form Type Rush Play Player Yards
O25 1 10 Shotgun 3-wide Nickel even Pass 4 Screen N/A Inc
Akron just misses this one. Looked like M had it covered with Countess(+0.5) and TGordon(+0.5).
O25 2 10 Pistol 2TE 4-3 under Run N/A Inside zone Morgan 1
Black(+1) gets penetration on the frontside. He almost gets pancaked doing so but he causes a lot of indecision for the back; results based charting. Pipkins(+0.5) rocks back the C trying to double him, delaying his release. Morgan(+1) takes that guy on and disengages to tackle. Godin(+0.5) flowed down the line on the backside to prevent a cutback the RB looked for once Black showed up in the backfield.
O26 3 9 Shotgun empty Nickel even Pass 4 Seam Bolden 30
BTN literally only has field-level replays, which are about as useful as Rutgers is in the Big Ten, so I'm not 100% sure what's going on here. I'm pretty sure this is Bolden(-3, cover -3) abandoning the seam. Michigan generally has a nickel or LB carry the seam downfield on virtually all plays like this. Here the empty set makes that a linebacker instead of Countess. Clark(+1, pressure +1) had come around the edge and would have made trouble if not for the biff here.
M44 1 10 Pistol 3-wide Nickel even Run N/A Iso Pipkins 5
FB dives in from an H-back spot to lead. M stunted its way out of half of the hole. Pipkins(-1) gets blown back by a double in the other half. Both linebackers are trying to get to the playside, and I'm not sure what to do with Morgan hopping around the FB lead block. May work; RB cuts back since Pipkins got blown up. I think it's bad that Morgan(-1) does that since it potentially opens up a major crease. Ojemudia(+1) helps out by chucking a tackle and coming down to prevent this from getting to the secondary. RPS -1.
M39 2 5 Shotgun 2-back Nickel even Pass 4 Fly Lewis Inc
Four man rush gets nowhere (pressure -2); Lewis(-2, cover -2) is beat over the top despite giving eight yards on the snap and clearly interferes, raking the WR's arms before the ball arrives. No call. Refs +2.
M39 3 5 Shotgun 2-back Nickel robber Pass 6 Hitch Taylor 7
Six sent, stunt, free guy up the middle, Taylor(-1, cover -1) not able to even vaguely bother a seven-yard hitch on third and five when he knows he's got the house coming. Pressure +1.
M32 1 10 Shotgun 2-back 4-3 under Run N/A Inside zone Charlton 5
M tipping this blitz by rolling down a safety. Charlton(-1) folds back and ends up taking on a guard; this is easy for him to stay outside and funnel back, but he does not. Henry(+1)) had gotten inside and got an arm tackle attempt that slowed the back, but with no contain he can head outside. Washinton(-1) also inexplicably fought his way out of the hole, which was his gap as a DL.
M27 2 5 Shotgun 4-wide Nickel even Pass 4 Scramble Henry 3
QB decides he doesn’t like a sticks-moving hitch and takes off. Washington thought they were twisting the DTs; Henry did not, providing the lane. Bet that's Henry(-1). Ross(+0.5) reacted quickly to force third down.
M24 3 2 Pistol Diamond TE 4-4 under Run N/A Inside zone Ross 1
M slants under hard, getting many people through the line and forcing a cutback into an unblocked Ross. Ross(+1) has lot of space to shut down because Henry got a little overzealous as he shot upfield, and makes a tackle attempt at the LOS that provides for some YAC; Henry(+0.5) comes around the guy trying to block him to help finish the tackle. RPS +1.
Drive Notes: Missed FG(45), 7-3, 1 min 2nd Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form D Form Type Rush Play Player Yards
M38 1 10 Shotgun 4-wide Nickel even Pass 4 Throwaway Ojemudia Inc
Ojemudia(+1, pressure +2) beats the right tackle and gets into the QB; Black(+0.5) follows up, threatening to sack. Hit, off balance QB throws one into the stands. Had an open guy at the sticks(cover -1) that he missed because of the pressure.
M38 2 10 Shotgun 4-wide Nickel even Pass 4 Throwaway Godin Inc
Matt Godin(+2, pressure +2) swims through a guard and gets instant upfield pressure, forcing a roll and throwaway.
M38 3 10 Shotgun 4-wide Nickel even Pass 4 Wheel N/A Inc
A clearly spooked QB just chucks it OOB. Pressure +1, cover +1.
Drive Notes: Missed FG(55), 7-3, EOH.
Ln Dn Ds O Form D Form Type Rush Play Player Yards
O25 1 10 Pistol 3-wide 4-3 over Run N/A Iso Washington 3
Zips shoot their H-back inside of the left tackle and try to hit that gap. Both linebackers read IZ instead of an iso; Morgan(+0.5) ends up taking the FB block downfield but does shed quickly to the outside. Washington(+0.5) got motion on a single block and makes a diving tackle attempt that does slow the RB somewhat; TGordon(+1) fills very quickly to hold it down with help from Clark, who finishes the play once Gordon's slowed the back significantly.
O28 2 7 Pistol 3-wide Nickel over Pass 4 Comeback TGordon 13
More stunts. Akron looking for it, plenty of time (pressure -2). Heitzman eventually spins free; too late. QB fires a looping comeback route between TGordon and Countess that's actually a really good throw, arced enough to get over Countess and there just in time. Cover -1, but if he's harassed he has no shot at this throw.
O41 1 10 Pistol 3-wide Nickel over Run N/A Inside zone Clark 6
Black(+0.5) holds up to a double and Ojemudia(+0.5) squeezes his guy inside. Heitzman(+0.5) gets movement on his guy too and there's no lane inside. But there is a big old cutback because Clark(-2) got sealed inside and gave up the edge. Bolden does about as well as he can once he sees the cutback, but since the RB isn't delayed at all he can't get out on the corner. TGordon fills, forcing the back into Lewis.
O47 2 4 Pistol 4-wide Nickel over Run N/A Inside zone Ojemudia 3
M sends a blitz, with Morgan coming off the corner. Ojemudia(-0.5) gets pushed too far down the line, providing a cutback lane; Morgan(+0.5) cuts that down enough on his blitz that the guy trips over his own OL; Bolden(+0.5) hops around a second level block and finishes the tackle with Morgan.
50 3 1 Ace Diamond 4-4 under Run N/A Blast N/A 2
One of those plays where everyone burrows down and the RB leaps over the pile. They get it.
M48 1 10 Pistol trips Nickel over Run N/A Draw Ross 1
Black surges to the outside, taking the center with him, and the guard who has no one over him ends up delayed on his release but does manage to adjust and get downfield; another example of OL awareness I don't know if M has yet. Wormley(+0.5) did a nice job to two-gap the G who he's dealing with, and Ross(+2) looks like he's hitting it up an interior gap before redirecting just before contact, beating the OL block and making a nice open field tackle(+1).
M47 2 9 Shotgun empty Nickel even Pass 4 Hitch Countess? 9
Michigan leaves a huge hole underneath on a simple hitch. Gross. Cover -2, RPS -1. This looks like Tampa 2 that Countess(-1) doesn't get the message on.
M38 1 10 Pistol twins twin TE 3-3-5 stack Pass 5 Fade Taylor Inc (Pen+15)
Blitz doesn't quite get through but threatens to enough to force the QB to put up a punt, basically; Taylor(-2, cover -2) is right there but doesn't turn around and gets a legit PI flag. Pressure +1.
M23 1 10 Shotgun empty Nickel even Penalty -5 False start N/A -5
Orp;
M28 1 15 Shotgun empty Nickel even Pass 4 Hitch and go Bolden 28
Twist doesn't quite get there; Bolden(-3, cover -2) bites on a little out on first and fifteen and gets burned over the top; safeties playing 15-20 yards deep and dropping can't get there. Grim. RPS -2. Just all the space in the world.
Drive Notes: Touchdown, 7-10, 9 min 3rd Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form D Form Type Rush Play Player Yards
O22 1 10 Shotgun 3-wide 4-3 even Pass 4 RB flat Beyer Inc
Beyer(+1, pressure +1) times up his blitz well and leaps over an attempted cut block. QB is throwing something like an RB bubble screen; Beyer leaps at it and can't bat it but is pretty annoying to both QB and RB; RB drops the ball. TGordon(+0.5) was there for a likely no gain tackle anyway.RPS +1.
O22 2 10 Shotgun empty Okie zero Pass 6 Slant Countess Inc
M gets both ends in free in a 6-on-5 situation. Pressure +1; Countess(+1, cover +1) is there to tackle on a three-yard slant that's dropped anyway.
O22 3 10 Shotgun 4-wide Nickel even Pass 5 Hitch Lewis 5
Wilson walks down late and both ILBs and Wilson blitz as the ends drop off. Doesn't have time to get there; Lewis(+1, tackling +1) is there to tackle immediately on a five yard hitch that the QB probably got spooked into.
Drive Notes: Punt, 14-10, 7 min 3rd Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form D Form Type Rush Play Player Yards
O25 1 10 Pistol 3-wide Nickel over Pass 4 PA pop slant Countess 9
Wilson in the box, follows TE across formation. Man, then. Tough ask for Countess as this looks like a run all the way until the slot WR breaks inside for a slant; Countess tackles on the catch. Cover -1. No help to the inside here.
O34 2 1 Pistol 3-wide Nickel under Run N/A Iso Glasgow 8
Second and one and the DTs are Wormley and Glasgow. Cumong man. Glasgow(-2) gets put to his knees by a double so even though he's not sealed the playside guy just releases into Morgan easily. He's facing 180 degrees from the play. Ross(+1) plugs the fullback at the LOS and immediately sheds; nice play. For naught as there's a gap inside. Morgan(-0.5) didn't read the play and isn't there to hold this to a few.
O42 1 10 Pistol 3-wide Nickel over Pass 4 Rollout throwaway Ojemudia Inc
Play action boot. Ojemudia(+0.5) does a good job of redirecting to annoy; this is also an awkward roll. Ross(+0.5) and Taylor(+0.5) have initial coverage(+1), QB tosses it away.
O42 2 10 Shotgun empty Okie zero Pass 6 Tunnel screen TGordon -4
A tunnel screen that no one releases on as M blitzes, mostly. Morgan goes at first and then drops off but he draws two OL. Countess gets walled off by one receiver; TGordon(+1) and Ross(+1) read it and blow it up. RPS +2.
O38 3 14 Shotgun 4-wide 4-1-6 dime Run N/A Inside zone Black 2
A give up and punt. Black(+1) comes under his blocker to slow and Godin(+1) drives his guy back, realizes it's run, and ends the play.
Drive Notes: Punt, 21-10, 1 min 3rd Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form D Form Type Rush Play Player Yards
O39 1 10 Shotgun 3-wide Nickel even Pass 4 Slant Taylor 11
This slant is way, way too easy. Taylor -1.5, cover -1.
50 1 10 Shotgun 3-wide Nickel even Pass 4 Slant Taylor Inc
Taylor(+1, cover +1) kind of makes up for the last one by jumping this one, knocking the WR off his route.
50 2 10 Shotgun 3-wide Nickel even Pass 4 Fly Lewis 43
Ain't even mad about this one except that pressure(-1) doesn't really come. Lewis(+1, cover +1) is step for step for this, looking out for the ball, and it just happens to be in the exact six inches it needs to be. This is basically indefensible.
M7 1 G Shotgun trips 4-3 under Run N/A Inside zone Ross 5
Ross(-1) gives up the corner, but Akron's got him on the LOS against an OT, so that's RPS(-1) since that's a 230 pound guy instead of Beyer trying to play SAM. Wilson comes up to fill.
M2 2 G Ace Diamond TE Goal line Pass 6 PA TE seam Wilson INT
Wilson(+3, cover +2) doesn't freak out about the run action, hangs back, undercuts the throw, and intercepts. This was the only route, so QB was either going to throw this or throw it out of the endzone.
Drive Notes: Punt, 21-17, 11 min 4th Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form D Form Type Rush Play Player Yards
O33 1 10 Shotgun 3-wide Nickel even Run N/A Inside zone Black 5
M stunts on the playside, which ends up with Black(-1) kicked out like a mofo, so when the RB has to bounce when Beyer comes inside he has a lane. Ross(+0.5) reads and initiates a tackle.
O38 2 5 Pistol 3-wide Nickel even Run N/A Iso Morgan 2
Same iso out of the H-back set as they've shown; H-back is either faking counter or remembers the playcall late. Godin(+1) fights playside and fills a gap; Ojemudia(+0.5) cuts off the outside then disengages to help tackle; Morgan(+0.5) reads the play and gets outside the FB to tackle.
O40 3 3 Shotgun 2-back Nickel even Pass 4 Slant Lewis 6
Too easy in front of Lewis(-1, cover -1). Bad throw still completes it.
O46 1 10 Shotgun 3-wide Nickel even Pass 4 Screen Countess 3
Countess(-0.5, tackling -1) shoots up into this and almost takes it down for a loss but misses the tackle, opening up the corner. TGordon(+0.5) and Ross(+1) combine to tackle rather quickly, with Ross bashing the RB back to hold this to little YAC.
O49 2 7 Pistol 3-wide Okie zero Pass 5 Fade Taylor Inc
Check from O, no check from M. Their check is a hopeless sideline fade? Okay. Taylor(+0.5, cover +1) seemed to have this covered; Beyer(+0.5, pressure +1) avoided a cut and was likely to sack without the chuck. RPS +1.
O49 3 7 Shotgun 4-wide Nickel even Pass 4 Scramble Clark 7
Either a completely botched stunt or Clark blowing his contain. Either way the field has no contain(pressure -3) as no one even approaches the QB. Time plus no contain. Wow. Coverage(+2) is excellent; QB rolls out and scrapes out a first down. Clark(-1) had an opportunity and went too far upfield; also I suspect this is on him; he also knocked Heitzman down. Ojemudia(-1) and Black had a similar mishap on the other side of the line. RPS -1.
M44 1 10 Pistol 3-wide Nickel over Run N/A Iso Wilson 3
Another H-back iso. M has Wilson rolled into the box. Heitzman(+0.5) gets drive on his guy. Beyer(-0.5) gets upfield, expecting pass. Morgan drives up and redirects to take the lead blocker; Wilson makes an adequate tackle.
M41 2 7 Shotgun 3-wide Nickel over Pass 4 Fly Taylor 40
Taylor(-2, cover -2) is beat despite lining up six yards off a MAC receiver and not particularly close, unlike Lewis just was. This is perfectly timed and thrown, though, and with 7 on 4 pass protection there's not a whole lot you can do about this.
M1 1 G Ace Diamond TE Goal line Run N/A Iso Morgan -1
Godin(+1) submarines the playside guys and Morgan(+1) anticipates the leap, bashing the guy down at the LOS.
M2 2 G Pistol Diamond TE Goal line Run N/A Inside zone Godin 1
Washington(+1) gets into the C and pushes him back; making things difficult. Wormley ends up turned, not ideal, but does hold up against a momentary double; Godin(+1) shoots forward, gets his guy on the ground, and is first contact. Akron back makes a nice second effort to get back to the one.
M1 3 G Shotgun trips Goal line Pass 4 Hitch N/A 1
Motion puts a receiver to the boundary, making it trips. M shows man with the motion. TGordon(-1), who probably has the eventual receiver, shoots up on the outside guy, opening this up. Damned if you do, damned if you don't. RPS –1, Cover –1.
Drive Notes: Touchdown, 21-24, 4 min 4th Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form D Form Type Rush Play Player Yards
O25 1 10 Shotgun 4-wide Nickel even Pass 4 In Countess Inc
M in zone, Countess(+0.5, cover +1) is there to tackle for about three yards if the receiver doens't drop the ball. Throw too quick for pressure.
O25 2 10 Shotgun 4-wide Nickel even Pass 4 Post Lewis 24
M sends Ross off the short corner, dropping Clark into a short zone. This plus a twist gets Ross(+0.5) around the corner free(pressure +1); wide open guy downfield. This appears to be man free with the corners playing outside leverage and absolutely no one in the middle of the field. (Cover -4). Taylor's guy is running the same route on the other side of the field and is wide, wide open. Maybe Morgan was supposed to drop into a robber zone? TGordon(-1) was way too far off; Lewis(-1) beat easily. RPS –1, as Michigan had Clark and Morgan sitting uselessly near each other.
O49 1 10 Shotgun 4-wide Nickel over Pass 4 Hitch Taylor Inc
Miscommunication between QB and WR results in throw nowhere near the target. Ball way overthrown, else Taylor might have a pick.
O49 2 10 Shotgun 2-back Okie one Pass 6 Slant Taylor 6 (Pen +5)
Countess(-1) sent to blitz, ends up offsides. Throw is a slant Taylor(+0.5, cover +1) hits and tackles on immediately.
M46 2 5 Shotgun 4-wide Nickel over Pass 4 Dig Ross Inc
No pressure(-2); everyone is inside so there's no contain, either, not that that's relevant.. yet. QB tries to hit a dig that Ross(+1, cover +1) breaks up. Behind the WR helps... quite a bit.
M46 3 5 Shotgun 4-wide 3-2-6 dime Run N/A Inside zone Godin 19
Five in the box on third and manageable, Akron checks, no response from M. RPS -2. Godin(-3) plays this really badly, getting rocked back and giving up the corner, which is too bad because Henry(+1) had bulled two guys back and prevented anyone from getting out on Ross; if Godin forces it back this is fourth and three or something.
M27 1 10 Shotgun 2-back Nickel even Pass 4 Post Beyer Inc (Pen -10)
Beyer(+1, pressure +1) shoots inside the LT and gets tackled, drawing a call. TGordon(-2, cover -2) sucks up on a deep in, opening up a post for a TD behind him that the QB just misses. Countess(-1) didn't get a good chuck on the guy underneath, so he was going to be open if Gordon dropped.
M37 1 20 Shotgun 4-wide Nickel even Pass 4 Dumpoff Clark 4
Pressure is late coming but does kind of arrive as Clark(+0.5) stunts through the line and threatens. Dumpoff ensues. Morgan(+0.5) there to tackle. Cover +2.
M33 2 16 Shotgun 4-wide Nickel even Pass 4 Improv Clark 22
If I had to guess, Clark(-2) didn't get the call here, which was for him to loop inside of not only the DT closest to him but also the DT away from him, as both those guys slant hard to him. He tries to go around the first but not the second. He ends up in the feet of his other DL, all three hit the ground. QB can roll out with epic acres of time now. Taylor(-3, cover -3) insanely abandons his WR to pressure a no-run QB, giving up a big play. Pressure –4? Yes, the first ever pressure –4.
M11 1 10 Shotgun 4-wide Nickel over Penalty 4 Delay N/A -5
Oops.
M16 1 15 Shotgun 4-wide Nickel over Pass 4 Post TGordon Inc
All day (pressure -2). QB tries a post in the endzone that's bracketed (cover +2) but almost completed anyway because the WR is taller than Gordon(+1), who can't bat the ball away. Just goes off the WR's fingertips.
M16 2 15 Shotgun 4-wide Nickel even Pass   Skinny post Morgan? 15
Ojemudia(+1, pressure +1) gets around the corner and is tackled, no call. Refs -2. Hole in the zone between Ross(-1, cover -2) and Morgan(-1), whose drop takes him away from the center of the field relative to the QB, ie the right hash, and makes this quite open.
M1 3 1 Pistol Diamond TE Goal line Run N/A Pitch sweep Morgan -3
Beyer(+1) gets outside of the TE assigned to him and gets penetration, picking off a second blocker leading for the RB. Wilson(+0.5) also out on the edge, making a bounce unappealing. Cutback never had a chance with Morgan(+1, tackling +1) unblocked flowing hard and making one of his trademark bang you're dead tackles.
M4 4 4 Shotgun trips Okie zero Pass 6 Fade TGordon Inc
Beyer(+1) a little off the line and going later after Black(+0.5) gets upfield on the center; Akron's protection gets blown as both gents roar up the middle of the pocket (pressure +2), with Beyer crushing the QB as he throws. Gordon(+1, cover +1) had taken away the slant and the WR's desperate attempt to release to the back of the endzone is badly overthrown. RPS +1.
Drive Notes: Turnover on downs, 28-24, EOG. Exhale.

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While I agree with you, eventually one has to start talking in English. This was a weird, weird game. To context up: Michigan's defense yielded 14 points, with seven coming on the pick-six and three more after a shanked punt and three-and out. However, Akron also missed a 45-yard field goal (a 55-yarder at the end of the half was set up by a Gardner interception) and drove to the one yard-line two separate times without getting points. On the first, Jarrod Wilson picked a ball off in the endzone; on the second, Akron tried a pitch sweep that got nailed for a loss and then Mattison sent the house on the last play of the game. They did get the stops.

The drive-by-drive is everything going according to plan until the bridge goes out and the school bus teeters over the crevasse, waiting for someone to breathe wrong:

  1. One first down and out.
  2. Two first downs and out.
  3. Three and out, FG from field position.
  4. Three and out.
  5. 33 yard drive ended by interception.
  6. 47-yard drive ends with missed field goal.
  7. Three and out at the end of the half. (Despite being the end of the half this was important: with 29 seconds left Akron just needed a first down to get a reasonable FG attempt off. They got zero yards.)

That's the first half. Everything is on pace. In six drives plus an end of half situation, Akron acquires 120 yards and gets two reasonable field goal attempts off. That is what Akron-Michigan is supposed to look like.

And then…

  1. 8 play, 75-yard touchdown drive.
  2. Three and out.
  3. One first down and out.
  4. 5 play, 59-yard drive snuffed out by Wilson INT.
  5. 11 play, 67-yard touchdown drive.
  6. 11 play, 71-yard drive ends at Michigan's four yard line.

What. The. Balls. Four of six Akron drives reach the Michigan one-yard line.

WHAT THE BALLS ACK

Well, if you see here this—

ACK

chart. Usual charting context disclaimer: Defensive linemen are supposed to be about +4 to have an average performance. Historically, linebackers over zero have gotten a thumbs up but these days expectations are creeping upwards, and due to the fact that I can't see the secondary most of the time unless the QB thinks the guy they're covering is open, anything over zero is good for DBs. Also there was a large volume of plays in this one: 79, so amplitudes will naturally be larger.

Defensive Line
Player + - T Notes
Heitzman 1 - 1 Little PT in nickel.
Washington 2.5 1 1.5 See above.
Black 7 1 6 Generated more rush than I thought.
Clark 2.5 5 -2.5 Knocking over his own guys.
Wormley 0.5 - 0.5 Henry and Godin took over.
Pipkins 1.5 1 0.5 Nickel equals no PT.
Glasgow - 2 -2 Playing time seriously reduced.
Ojemudia 6.5 1.5 5 More liable to get around a tackle.
Godin 6.5 3 3.5 Had an impressive pressure and a really terrible job on a draw. Will it hold up?
Ash - - - DNP
Henry 6.5 1 5.5 A nice introduction.
Charlton - 1 -1 -
TOTAL 34.5 16.5 18 You'd want better than this against Akron.
Linebacker
Player + - T Notes
C.Gordon 1 0.5 0.5 Next year Mattison will say "we really need to play Cam Gordon," be informed he has graduated.
Morgan 6 3.5 2.5 Negative coverage number should be factored in here.
Ross 10.5 4.5 6 Ditto on the coverage; played pretty well.
Beyer 8.5 1.5 7 Still mostly a DE.
Ryan - - - DNP
Bolden 0.5 7.5 -7 Bit on first Akron touchdown, didn't carry seam in first half.
Gedeon - - - DNP
Jenkins-Stone - - - DNP
TOTAL 26.5 17.5 9 Crunch time PT says it all.
Secondary
Player + - T Notes
Countess 3 3.5 -0.5 Only got one point for the INT.
Taylor 2.5 9.5 -7 Burned over the top, gave up PI. Also some too easy underneath stuff.
Stribling - - - DNC
Hollowell - - - DNC
T. Gordon 7 4 3 I may be too kind here but I can't tell without better angles.
Avery - - - DNC
Wilson 5 - 5 INT was a lifesaver.
Furman - - - DNP
J. Clark - - - DNP
Lewis 2 4 -2 Freshman debut not terrible, not great.
TOTAL 19.5 21 -1.5 Could have been better, but 6.3 YPA and 2 INTs.
Metrics
Pressure 24 18 6 Michigan was getting there sometimes but…
Coverage 24 32 -8 Too many coverages burst open so the ball was gone.
Tackling 8 2 80% Tackles are at least being made.
RPS 9 9 - Push

Sanity-checking what might seem like an excessively positive point of view: Akron threw for 6.3 YPA and 3.6 yards per rush and scored 14 points. They had 13 drives, which is a lot.

While Michigan did give up scads of yards in the second half, they got big plays to keep Akron out, and the Zip QB made a couple of pretty throws to pick up big chunks. UFR tends to give out candy for shortish runs and quick tackles on short passes, and there were a ton in here. Also: coverage metric should override some of the good bits from the secondary and ILBs.

These pressure numbers do not reflect my personal reality.

Yes, because they are just a rough estimate of is Michigan getting towards the QB. It's time to get some more detail in here. I'm going to change the pressure metric next week in an attempt to find success rates of blitzes, false blitzes, stunts, and straight up rushing. The current number is part Mattison, part DL, and I'm going to try to separate those two factors.

Y U NO LIKE FRANK CLARK

It's time to photoshop a bowling ball on Frank Clark's head, but in a sad way. On two critical plays in the fourth quarter the Akron QB escaped into acres of space to Clark's side of the field, and on both he knocked over his fellow defenders. The first one was a holistic cluster, as it appears Michigan stunted both DEs and both of those saw Michigan players bash into each other and fall down:

If Bo Pelini saw Nebraska do this… actually, this would constitute an improvement. But if Bo Pelini saw LSU do this, twirls of smoke would come out of his ears and he would swear colorful imps into existence.

I'm not sure Heitzman is going to contain a whole lot better since he doesn't seem to be going outside too much, but once Clark's botched attempt to come behind him trips him he's done. That's a negative.

Then Michigan somehow managed to top that on second and sixteen on the final drive. You remember this play as the one that flipped you from "this isn't happening" to "THIS ISN'T HAPPENING" just before it became very clear that it was happening:

This time not two but three Michigan defensive linemen end up eating turf. I can't be totally sure but my experience strongly suggests that when you see both DTs shoot so hard to the left Michigan wanted to loop Clark around them both. Clark thought it was the usual stunt and runs up the back of both DTs, causing a pile of useless meat to plop into existence. (Also it looks like Black is ripped down to the ground without a call.) That continues a pattern we've had to deal with since Clark was a freshman. The lightbulb has not gone on.

Clark's just part of a larger problem, but part of that problem is the weakside end the world hyped up this year can't get a pass rush unless he's not blocked, so Michigan is fussing around with line stunts on almost every play. Three games in, Clark has zero sacks on 130 opponent attempts, and on maybe one or two of those has he gotten a hurry on something other than a free run. It's just not happening.

Must… find… something… to hold on to… SPOCK. Willie Henry was good?

Yeah, he was. He ate up a big chunk of the second-three-tech time that was so ineffectual against Notre Dame and did well. Here's a stretch on which he gets under the guard trying to block him and gets about five yards in the backfield:

Henry flashed into the backfield on an unsuccessful third-and-short stand, showing impressive burst for a guy that big, and when they folded both tackles inside he flashed the ability to keep linebackers clean like Will Campbell did last year:

By contrast on one of the relatively few snaps Glasgow got, he was turned and put on his knees by a momentary double:

(That snap was the biggest WHERE MY NOSE TACKLES AT of the game. Second and one and your interior linemen are Wormley and Glasgow.)

He even got some pass rush; he should have drawn a holding call on the Countess interception after beating a guard, straight up and everything, no funny business.

I guess Henry must be one of those guys who's not consistently executing his assignments, because there's no question who Michigan's most physically talented three-tech is.

 

Coverage holes downfield. So many coverage holes downfield.

Bolden caught a lot of heat after the game, and deservedly, but he was far from alone The Big Ten Network caveat applies here—BTN almost never shows useful replays—so I don't want to get too strident, but I don't get this coverage at all:

Michigan drops Clark as they send Ross. Everyone appears to be in man coverage. So why are both cornerbacks giving outside leverage to the WR like that? That's unbelievably easy on both sides of the ball and Thomas Gordon is 25 yards off the ball by the time the catch is made. Is Morgan supposed to be in a robber while Clark checks the RB? Or… like… what?

It's really frustrating to watch Akron play press cover on Michigan's receivers and do it well while Michigan is sitting in the parking lot giving up a lot of room, especially when Michigan gets Ross in untouched.

Similarly, this is way, way too easy:

These kinds of breakdowns were almost nonexistent against Notre Dame, which earned almost every yard they got by playing well and hitting the small windows provided. That, like Gardner' performance, was too good to sustain; hopefully this isn't more representative.

But they ran past us! They are Akron! We are not to be Akron unless we are to die!

The long outside completions were also a problem. Not the first one, as Lewis gave Akron's QB about a six-inch window, which he hit:

                                                            ball

                                                             \/

ain't-even-mad2

It's not perfect coverage—ideally Lewis forces the fade route closer to the sideline—but that's a one in a hundred throw from the QB.

The other incidents were not so good. Taylor got beat by a couple yards on his, and the WR barely put a move on. Looked like Taylor was looking in the backfield and thus late to react to the WR going vertical on him. Taylor picked up a pass interference call on the same route earlier in the game. Lewis seemed beat on an earlier one, too, before displaying impressive recovery speed to track the WR down. His recovery speed allowed him to obviously interfere with the receiver before the ball arrived, is all. Akron threw it over the top to the outside five times, got two long completions, a pass interference flag, and should have had another. When Avery's back I hope they put him at corner.

I thought the linebackers were going to be playmakers?

Michigan's started out by playing three extreme passing spreads, and they've spent most of that time playing passive bend-but-don't break defense. A lot of the time there are two 280-pound three-techs playing the DT spots. That's a perfect recipe for invisible linebackers, because most of the time they're dropping into coverage and when they're not they're often eating defensive linemen because the DL isn't holding up.

I do think we're seeing a bit of resurgence in that issue I mentioned last year when Michigan slanted the line and their linebackers did not seem to understand what that meant for where the play would go. Michigan blitzed Beyer on their first snap and slanted away from that; Beyer did get upfield but both linebackers got bashed inside as frontside gaps are obliterated:

I think this is actually Akron's backside H-back iso they ran a lot—good adjustment from the H-back—and is thus designed to hit quick away from zone action; it still bugs me that both linebackers should know that Michigan is slanting away from the strength of the line and they are going to be needed away from that slant.

That doesn't take away from the fact that these guys are not getting free runs to the ballcarrier, so when they make a play it's a tough one:

And Beyer's a linebacker, too. Beyer's my guy now. He is the guy who strung out the Akron sweep at the end of the game, getting outside and upfield of the TE to force it back to an unblocked Morgan. He is plausible in coverage and is the best rusher of any defensive lineman.

Heroes?

Brennen Beyer is consistently making plays; also it is easy to see Michigan getting smoked from the one late if a guy who is not really responsible is out there. Ross quietly did well for himself. Wilson did not seem involved in any long completions and bailed Michigan out hardcore with his interception.

Maybe not so heroic?

Think about 60 Akron yards are on Bolden's pass coverage. Taylor really struggled. Clark messed up late stunts badly.

What does it mean for UConn and the future?

I personally guarantee that Beyer remains a starter when Jake Ryan reclaims his job. Brennen Beyer is the best WDE/SAM type guy they have now by a large margin and there's no way he's going back to the bench when Ryan returns. Corollary: Frank Clark is only marginally better than he was last year.

Willie Henry should be the second three-tech. At least until such point as this performance evaporates in a sea of missed assignments. He has an impressive combination of size and explosiveness. Time to find out what we have there.

Matt Godin announced himself in the SDE competition, if we ever see an actual Big Ten offense again. Godin had one really terrible play on which he gave up the corner on a draw in the dime package; other than that he was quite good. He hasn't been run at like Wormley yet, so his flaws may not be as apparent. Like Henry, he's earned a chance to continue showing it on the field.

Zone drops need work. I didn't understand a lot of what was going on in the secondary. This may be me being dumb, but I think it's also the goings-on back there not making sense.

Jibreel Black is a pretty good interior rusher. Needs some help.

When Courtney Avery returns he should probably be a corner. The rotating nickel guy is not a good sign, Wilson has been good so far, and Michigan could really use a smart veteran like Avery to help paper over some of the Kovacs awareness gap.

Michigan should start whittling down their defensive line rotation. Two guys at a spot plus some spot snaps for other guys to get breathers/keep them interested. If we ever see nose tackles again that one's obvious. I vote Heitzman/Godin at SDE, Black/Henry at 3T, and Ojemudia/Clark at WDE until Beyer pushes one of those guys further down.

It's going to be okay. There were some disturbing moments, sure. They will figure it out.

Except the pass rush, organic division. Jake Ryan, please hurry.

Comments

Magnum P.I.

September 19th, 2013 at 10:53 PM ^

Agree completely. The excuses that everyone has laid out for our pisspoor defensive showing last weekend are:

  1. Poor talent
  2. Poor football smarts
  3. Bad scheme/coaching
  4. Lack of focus
  5. Complacency

Well, when you're fighting for your lives on the last drive of the game, you can throw 4 and 5 out the window. That means that Akron (AKRON!) was better than us in one or more of the first three areas. 

Bodogblog

September 20th, 2013 at 9:21 AM ^

But you have to balance that against how we played against Notre Dame.  Michigan's talent, smarts, and scheme/coaching were fairly outstanding in that one.

The game was weird, the mojo of the day was weird.  And when you're such a favorite, you get a little tight in that situation: obviously M had everything to lose, Akron played loose with everything to gain. 

One great game against (what I think) is a very good opponent, one awful game against a much lesser one.  It hits expectations, but doesn't mean they still can't be as good as we thought after ND.

WolvinLA2

September 19th, 2013 at 6:39 PM ^

I like that idea, but not with the personnel you lost. I'd play MO as one of the OLBs and have the other DE be the same guys we have platooning at SDE. Our base D isn't that dissimilar to a 3-4 if you tell the WDE to move back and pick his hand out of the dirt. But yeah, I'd like to see Beyer at one of those rush spots.

Ron Utah

September 19th, 2013 at 7:05 PM ^

Yeah, there is no way Ojemudia is ready play DE in a 3-4.  IF we went to a 3-4--which I am totally against--I'd like to see QWash on the nose, and Wormley/Godin/Heitzman/Henry/Black (not in that order) as your DEs.  I like the idea of having Beyer and Ryan on the field as OLBs.  Both can rush the passer and cover.

FWIW, I do believe we'll see Beyer and Ryan on the field together quite a bit when Ryan is back.

EDIT: Ojemudia would rotate as an OLB in a 3-4.

Whiteac87

September 19th, 2013 at 7:26 PM ^

Is like when everyone is getting their ass handed to them waiting for Goku to show up and get into the backfield or whatever we need him back so bad I don't even have time for proper grammar aghhh

MGoStrength

September 19th, 2013 at 10:15 PM ^

Why don't our talented freshman play?  We can't get a pass rush, yet we have a 6'6" freshman who was recruited for this...let him play.  People keep saying you can't expect a true freshman to play.  Well, I'm watching the Clemson/NC State game and Shaq Lawson is playing pretty well as a true freshman and he was not as highly rated as Taco was coming out of high school.  So, why can't Taco do that?  I feel like he probably could but the coaches tend to let the more "reliable" guy play over the more "talented" guy.  If our upperclassman guys aren't getting it done I don't see why we wouldn't put the talented freshman in and give them a shot.  And, same goes for Hand if we sign him.  If he has the ability he should be playing next year.

MGoStrength

September 20th, 2013 at 12:03 PM ^

It seems like a trend that our freshman never are on the first team. I know his recruiting profile doesn't guarantee success but its more likely than those of a lesser rank and guys at other places seem to play earlier. It seems a little more than a coincidence, no? I hope if peppers and/or hand are ready they get more snaps than Thomas, green, Charlton, and Lewis are ( not saying all those should be but they are highly ranked and in positions of need)

In reply to by MGoStrength

Magnus

September 20th, 2013 at 1:43 PM ^

I don't necessarily agree that our freshmen are never on the first team. We've had Blake Countess, Devin Funchess, and AJ Williams starting at various times, and Channing Stribling/Jourdan Lewis were essentially on the first team against CMU/Akron. I think if you look at most big-time football programs, the true freshmen find themselves coming off the bench to begin the year. It's pretty rare that a true freshman is the unquestioned starter to begin the year.

MGoStrength

September 20th, 2013 at 10:21 PM ^

I know it's not the norm for a true freshman to play early on the first group, but despite that it still happens with a guy or two in a lot of programs.  Every Saturday I see a true freshman not only starting but having a good game.  Yet, I never seem to see our guys making impacts as a freshman.  Although, as you pointed out Funchess definately did have some impact games early last year.  Maybe it's just my frustration with not seeing the results of our recruiting yet but it would be nice if one of our D-ends or CBs were one of them.  Charlton would be great, but apparently he's not ready yet (or even Ojemudia as a sophomore for that matter, but he seems like our best rusher right now imo).  I think Peppers & Hand are probably physically further along than any of those guys I mentioned before so they could see time and make an impact as a true freshman, but they are both top 5 guys versus top 150 guys so that makes a difference too.

Michigan4Life

September 20th, 2013 at 1:48 AM ^

Frank Clark = Vernon Gholston.  Both are freak athlete who has the burst to get upfield, but is stiff hipped that they cannot bend on pass rush.  Elite pass rushers not only have the burst but has the ability to bend upon contact.  If you can't bend, OT will push you away from the QB with ease and QB can just step up or side step.

Hip stiffness is a big reason why Vernon Gholston is a bust in the NFL.

elm

September 20th, 2013 at 5:45 AM ^

If we're playing two-deep zone with the safeties, shouldn't they be available to help out on the fly routes?

On the 40 yarders, Brian says,"This is perfectly timed and thrown, though, and with 7 on 4 pass protection there's not a whole lot you can do about this."

Unless my math is off that means we have 7 players covering 3 routes.  If everyone were doubled, we'd still have one player free to do something else.  It seems to me that what you can to stop this is have a safety over the top to break up the pass or dissuade it from being thrown.  So, where are Gordon and Wilson on these deep plays?

 

Bocheezu

September 20th, 2013 at 10:45 AM ^

I don't think I've ever seen two opposing OL standing around and looking at each other (with #67 noticably shrugging at the other guy), with neither one of them having anyone to block because there are three Michigan DL already on the ground