Upon Further Review 2013: Offense vs Akron Comment Count

Brian

FORMATION NOTES: Discontent with trying to file plays on which a tight end motio`ns inside of the tackle box but does not line up as a pure fullback as either "ace" or "I-Form," I've created new lingo. This is "Ace H":

ace-h

Welcome it. It will be your good friend for a long time.

As the coaches mentioned, Akron spent much of the day in bear fronts. That means they folded linebackers inside of their ends at the LOS like so:

6-2-bear

I noted this as 6-2 bear. When only one Akron player was folded inside it was 5-3 bear. (On almost all plausible run snaps Akron showed an eight-man front.)

PERSONNEL NOTES: OL was the usual, with Magnuson making his regular goal-line cameo. AJ Williams didn't play and Funchess went out late, paving the way for a lot of Jake Butt and the debut of Jordan Paskorz, runnin' routes with a broken hand.

Green got two snaps, I think, and Justice Hayes was briefly featured as a second back in a shotgun 2-back formation; all he did was pass block. Wideouts were as usual. If you squint maybe you can perceive Chesson getting more time than he has in the past.

Oh: again there was a small Norfleet package. Hopefully as the season goes along "Norfleet is on the field" starts being less than 90% "Norfleet is getting the ball."

[After THE JUMP: wha happen]

Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Type Play Player Yards
M25 1 10 Ace trips bunch 2 1 2 4-3 over Run Inside zone Toussaint -2
Butt in a two point stance with Houma also stacked over there along with Chesson. Akron shifts over with a NT shaded between Miller and Glasgow. Miller(-2) barely touches that nose as he moves to the second level and Glasgow has no prayer of getting a block. Akron did not cover a threatened Chesson end-around at all.
M23 2 12 Ace 3-wide 1 1 3 4-3 over Pass Slant Gallon 6
Quick pass with the Akron CB in excellent position to get a play on the ball; Gallon makes a tough-ish catch. Disturbing they can play this versus how we did. (CA, 2, protection 1/1)
M29 3 6 Shotgun 4-wide 1 1 3 Nickel even Pass Dig Funchess 17
Excellent protection; Gardner steps up and rifles a bullet to Funchess in between three guys in the zone. It's a little high, but this is to Funchess so it's not. (DO, 3, protection 2/2)
M46 1 10 Ace 3-wide 1 1 3 4-3 over Pass Long handoff Reynolds 1
This is a sight adjust that's a check out of a running play. But Akron's corner is four yards off the LOS, so he tackles on the catch. A screen BR? Yup. (BR, 3, screen)
M47 2 9 Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 4-3 under Pass Swing Norfleet 5
This is a called swing screen to Norfleet with Glasgow pulling around and trying to be useful. Dileo(-1) is out on the edge and sets up to block a safety coming down; he gets run over. He's falling backwards and doesn't make the DB pick a side; Norfleet tries to run outside since the corner looks wide open and gets ankle-tackled. (CA, 3, screen)
O48 3 4 Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 4-3 over Pass Hitch Funchess 48
An easy pitch and catch designed to move the chains goes much bigger as Funchess demonstrates great athleticism by turning it up and outrunning the Akron secondary. Zip safety biffed hard to open it up but Funchess took advantage. (CA, 3, protection 1/1)
Drive Notes: Touchdown, 7-0, 10 min 1st Q. And Akron immediately went away.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Type Play Player Yards
M10 1 10 Ace trips bunch 2 1 2 4-3 over Run End around Chesson 2
I'm not sure if you can expect Miller(-1) to make this judgment live, but I think by the positioning of the linebackers you can tell that this is man coverage, and in that case Miller should block the linebacker farther away from the play, who will be hauling after Houma, not the guy to the playside, who is going to check Toussaint. He picks the guy who checks Toussaint so Houma's guy is ripping through to follow. He cuts down on the space available as Houma moves to the safety, and Reynolds(-1) gets thrown away by a DB who started the play in press coverage. Not sure why you're blocking from the start here instead of trying to a get a release off the line.
M12 2 8 I-Form twins 2 1 2 6-3 bear Run Zone stretch Toussaint -2
Nine guys in the box for Akron. Michigan runs at it. Cumong man. Making matters worse, only the right half of the line has the snap count. Glasgow, Lewan, and Butt are all motionless for a beat after the snap. That makes all those guys give ground and then Toussaint gets buried instead of making a hard upfield cut behind that mess. A holistic failure. Glasgow -1, Lewan -1, Butt -1, Toussaint -1, Schofield +1 for a nice cut block.
M10 3 10 Shotgun trips bunch 1 1 3 Nickel over Pass Rollout throwaway N/A Inc
Bleah to rollouts in principle. This looks like their flood concept, FWIW. Toussaint gets a good cut on a hard charging DE, so the corner, but an Akron LB is flowing up hard to the outside and pressures. No idea what Gardner is seeing downfield because this is pore-o vision and the BTN's replays are nonexistent. He escapes the second attacker and then has to chuck it away. (TA, N/A, protection 1/1)
Drive Notes: Punt, 7-0, 5 min 1st Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR DForm Type Play Player Yards
M26 1 10 I-Form 2 1 2 6-2 bear Pass PA Hitch Gallon 8
Eight in the box with LBs tucked inside both DEs. M goes PA and actually has Kerridge running up the middle of the field unmolested but Gardner just goes with the Gallon hitch. Gallon evades a tackle for some YAC. (CA, 3, protection 1/1)
M34 2 2 Ace H 1 2 2 4-3 over Run Power O Toussaint 11
Funchess motions from a wing position to an H-back spot. M runs at the strong side, pulling Kalis to it. Lewan(+1) blows his guy off the ball. Funchess(+1) takes the playside end inside and pancakes him. Kalis(+0.5) kicks out a linebacker. Butt(+0.5) basically gets a free block as the other LB runs himself out of the play, but he does extend it a while. Glasgow(+0.5) gets out to the second level after bumping that LB and gets a block on a linebacker; Jackson(-1) whiffs on two separate guys in the secondary, potentially preventing a bounce to the sideline and forcing everything back to help. He did get a block coming back upfield, FWIW. Toussaint(+1) made a nice cut to get behind Glasgow's block.
M45 1 10 I-Form twins 2 1 2 6-2 bear Run Zone stretch Toussaint 14
Gardner checks after seeing the front. Schofield(+1) escorts the playside LB upfield; Kalis(+1) rides the DT down the line and pancakes him. Miller(+1) figures he can't get a scoop on that guy and releases, getting a block on an ILB as he slows up in case of a cutback. Toussaint(+0.5) jumps through the narrow crease and picks up another first down. Kerridge(+1) got through that hole too and cut off a linebacker.
O41 1 10 Ace 1 2 2 6-3 bear Run Pitch sweep Toussaint -1
Another check as Akron has all 11 guys within six yards of the LOS. It's a check to... a pitch. Uh, okay. Schofield is supposed to pull around Funchess(-1) and Chesson; Funchess is supposed to block a DE lined up outside of him. If he's going to do that he needs to take stretch steps, giving ground to get around the guy. He instead just kind of goes upfield. Chesson(-1) was supposed to help him maybe? This is a pitch to the boundary against a nine man front that asks Funchess and Chesson to execute a scoop block. Dumb. Kalis(+1) buried his guy. RPS -2.
O42 2 11 Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 5-2 bear Pass Tunnel screen Norfleet 15
Flare fake to Toussaint, hit Norfleet coming underneath. Akron's DL all bite, and the LBs are late to react. Norfleet(+1) does a good job of briefly threatening outside to get a couple of block hop-outs; Miller(-1) turns around despite having Kalis outside of him to handle one of those guys trying to get around. As a result he can't block a safety and Norfleet gets penned in. Funchess(-0.5) did get a LB, kind of, but he fights through to constrict and help tackle. RPS +2; a couple more blocks and this is a TD.
O27 1 10 I-Form twins 2 1 2 4-3 under Run Zone stretch Toussaint -1
Akron ends up with a massive hole between the NT, who is shaded just over Miller, and the DE, who's outside of the TE Butt. They run at this... and get nowhere. Yeesh. Glasgow(-2) releases immediately, leaving Miller(-1) trying to block a guy playside with zero help. He has a tough task but could do better, getting driven back. With Lewan and a FB they can get the two playside LBs and then Glasgow can release after a double; instead Michigan's just asking their players to make reach blocks against guys slanting away from them all day. Toussaint(-1) should just continue playside since he does have a crease since Kerridge hit Miller's guy, but cuts back into doom. Picture-paged.
O28 2 11 Ace 1 2 2 6-2 bear Pass Waggle corner Jackson Inc
Flood concept. Gardner makes the right choice here as Jackson(!) has a step or two on this guy in the endzone and there is a large swath of area in which Jackson has a touchdown, but he leaves it short and to the inside, as he's being chased and can't set his feet. (IN, 0, protection N/A)
O28 3 11 Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 Nickel even Pass Throwaway N/A Inc
Glasgow(-2) does not read a stunt and lets an end directly upfield. Gardner should just run to the field, where he's got space, but instead does his turn around thing, gets in lots of trouble, and heaves it up OOB. (PR, N/A, protection 0/2)
Drive Notes: Missed FG(45), 7-3, 14 min 2nd Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Type Play Player Yards
M27 1 10 I-Form 2 1 2 6-2 bear Run Inside zone Toussaint -1
Schofield(-2) gets burned around the corner by the defensive end; Miller(-1) gives a bunch of ground and allows the DT playside of him in the backfield. The bear front meant that Kalis had to go to the LB right away, so no double possible.
M26 2 11 I-Form 2 1 2 6-2 bear Penalty False Start Gardner -5
Gardner has the wrong snap count, rocks back.
M21 2 16 Shotgun trips TE 1 1 3 4-3 under Pass Swing Toussaint 27
Replay of the swing against ND, with the TE the only player to the boundary. Linebacker to that side goes with him, no one on the swing. RPS +2. (CA, 3, protection N/A) Funchess(+1) gets a crunching downfield block to allow Toussaint(+1) to cut in smartly.
M48 1 10 Ace twins 1 2 2 4-3 over Pass PA Scramble Gardner 11
All day; Gardner decides to throw and then pulls it down at the last second. That out of the question, he tucks and takes off. (SCR, N/A, protection 3/3, Gardner run plus)
O42 1 10 Ace H 2 1 2 6-2 bear Pass TE Hitch Butt 14
Miscommunication for Akron as one LB bugs out for Funchess and no one slides over to deal with Butt. Routes would have been difficult to deal with given Akron's posture. (CA, 3, protection 1/1, RPS +1)
O28 1 10 Ace H twins 1 2 2 6-2 bear Run Power O Green 2
Playside end dives inside as the bear LB to that side appears to have contain. He gets under Funchess(+0.5) a bit but Funchess does hit him and seem to have him under control; Kalis(-1) does not adjust, hitting the same guy. Stripped of his lead blocker Green is probably dead either way; he goes straight upfield and gets a couple thanks to a good seal from Miller(+0.5).
O26 2 8 Ace H 2 1 2 6-2 bear Pass PA FB Flat Houma 10
Houma gets wide open as man coverage sees Butt's seam route incidentally pick off the LB trying to get to Houma. (CA, 3, protection 1/1, RPS +1)
O16 1 10 I-Form 2 1 2 6-2 bear Run Power O Toussaint 15 (pen -10)
This gets called back for a nonexistent hold on Butt. Seriously: there is no penalty here. Refs -3. Playside end is diving inside hoping to get a two for one and spill it to an unblocked guy, but there isn't one. Just the ILB, who isn't anywhere close enough to upfield to contain Toussaint, who cuts outside and has lots of daylight. He goes down at the two. Lewan(+1) and Glasgow(+1) buried the playside tackle; Butt(+1) did likewise with playside LB. Toussaint's(+1) bounce is a good one.  Kalis(-1) got caught up in the playside end that Houma blocked inside.
O26 1 20 Ace twins twin TE 1 2 2 4-3 even Pass Throwback screen Gallon 16
Always works, works. Chesson(+1) occupies a corner until the end of the play; Lewan(+1) gets out to get the playside LB; Gallon(+1) breaks a tackle to pick up extra yards. (CA, 3, screen, RPS +1)
O10 2 4 Pistol trips bunch 2 1 2 4-4 even Run Speed option Gardner -12
If Gardner(-4) pitches, an easy touchdown. RPS +2. Miller(-1) had totally whiffed on a guy behind the play; Lewan(+0.5) and Glasgow(+0.5) sealed the playside end in, but that was pretty easy.
Drive Notes: Fumble, 7-3, 8 min 2nd Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Type Play Player Yards
O20 1 10 Pistol 3-wide 1 1 3 5-2 bear Pass Slant Gallon Inc
Press cover on Gallon works well. Gallon sells fade, breaks inside, has just a yard of space on a three yard slant that will be an immediate tackle, and may be thrown off by all of this as he lets one go right through his hands. (CA, 3, protection 1/1, RPS -1)
O20 2 10 Pistol 3-wide 1 1 3 5-2 bear Pass Out and up Funchess Inc
Funchess breaks open inside the ten and Gardner finds and fires, but well behind his target. This still clangs off of Funchess's hands, but it was humming and is a pretty easy throw over the middle. (IN, 2, protection 1/1)
O20 3 10 Pistol 3-wide 1 1 3 Nickel even Pass Skinny post Gallon INT
Terrible read as the corner going with Gallon should be an automatic throw to Funchess dragging underneath. (BRX, 0, protection 2/2)
Drive Notes: Interception, 7-3, 5 min 2nd Q. M has 44 seconds when the next drive starts.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Type Play Player Yards
M28 1 10 Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 3-2-6 dime Pass Drag Dileo Inc
Three man rush; Miller(-1) sort of beat up the middle by it. Gross. Gardner, off balance, turfs a throw to Dileo. Should have hit the uncovered swing to Toussaint. (IN, 0, protection 0/1, Miller -1)
M28 2 10 Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 3-2-6 dime Pass Seam Funchess INT
This is a dart that goes through Funchess's hands and off his helmet before the Zip makes contact with him. Funchess was definitely seeing that guy come at him and heard footsteps, but this was there for 20 yards. (DO, 2, protection 2/2)
Drive Notes: Interception, 7-3, 30 sec 2nd Q. M's last snap of the half is a kneel.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Type Play Player Yards
M27 1 10 Pistol 3-wide 1 1 3 4-3 over Run Belly Gardner 2
This is a tight keep or give situation as the backside end is moving down pretty quick. He redirects well once Gardner pulls and forces him outside, but Gardner does get the corner. Gallon(-1) loses his corner, though, and he's here to clean up. Michigan had blocked the other part of this really well, FWIW. Glasgow(+1) and Kalis(+1) had locked out their guys and it looks like the entire second level is blocked.
M29 2 8 Ace H 1 2 2 6-2 bear Pass Dig? Chesson Inc
All day as M is running max protect with just the WRs, Gardner pumps once and then fires in the direction of Chesson, but it's to Tacopants. No replay so can't see what the deal is with the pump. (IN, 0, protection 2/2)
M29 3 8 Shotgun 2-back 2 0 3 Nickel even Pass In Gallon Inc
Hayes in as a second RB. Gardner has Gallon for the first down and throws the ball way late and behind. (IN, 0, protection 2/2)
Drive Notes: Punt, 7-3, 14 min 3rd Q. Woof.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Type Play Player Yards
M43 1 10 I-Form 2 1 2 ??? Run Iso Toussaint 25 (Pen -10)
M caves in the backside and an end has to contain Gardner, so Fitz has a cutback lane as Kalis(+1) and Schofield(+1) blow guys off the ball. Fitz shoots past the backside linebacker and then has a ton of space with just Gallon(-1) and his guy in it. Gallon's set up outside and he can go straight upfield for at least a first down; Toussaint(-2) inexplicably tries to go outside and turns a block that doesn't get flagged into a holding call.
M33 1 20 Ace H 1 2 2 6-2 bear Run Power O Toussaint 27
Lewan(+2) blows up the playside DT. Glasgow(+1) momentarily helps and then pops off on a linebacker trying to shoot a gap. Funchess(+1) drives a LB trying to get a two for one inside and allows Kalis(+0.5) to get out on a linebacker who is the force player. Crease. Butt(+1) engaged the playside LB for a long time and Toussaint can just jet off LT for a nice gain. Chesson(+1) buries a safety so Toussaint probably scores here if he just runs by the last desperate Akron player instead of trying a stiffarm; Akron guy grabs the arm and manages to drag him down.
O40 1 10 I-Form twins 2 1 2 4-4 over Run Iso Toussaint 4
Glasgow(+1) escorts an Akron DT well upfield and out of the hole. Kalis(+0.5) and Miller(+0.5) actually double the NT and drive him back; Miller is about to pop out on the WLB. Kerridge(+1) puts the MLB on the ground; Toussaint... cuts away from all this great blocking. WTF. -2.
O36 2 6 Shotgun 2TE twins 1 2 2 6-2 bear Run Inverted veer keeper Gardner 36
Kalis(+1) blasts the playside DT inside. End contains, pull for Gardner. Toussaint blocks the contain guy because he's right in the way. Funchess(+2) pounds the playside LB about six yards off the LOS and seals him to one side. Schofield(+1) blows up another LB, shoving him to yet another guy, who Glasgow(+1) IDs and crushes from behind, which is legal since it's in the tackle box. Got there fast, too. Gardner(+1) picks through his blocks well, then hits the jets; Jackson(+1) initially loses his corner but is able to peel back and get him on a second attempt to make it easy sailing.
Drive Notes: Touchdown, 14-10, 8 min 3rd Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Type Play Player Yards
M14 1 10 I-Form twins 1 2 2 4-4 over Run Yakety snap N/A -6
Gardner holds the ball out for Toussaint; Kerridge knocks it out as he passes.
M8 2 16 Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 4-3 over Run Inverted veer keeper Gardner 35
Odd play. Playside end flies up, keep, Toussaint blocks him out. Schofield(-0.5) gets pushed back by the playside tackle; Glasgow(+2), the puller, puts him on his ass and then heads to the second level inside of Schofield. Miller(+1) seals the NT; Kalis momentarily doubles and then releases himself; Gardner(+2) reads that the hole is directly up the middle and shoots upfield, then hits a cutback lane. No angles for second level blocks for Glasgow and Kalis but there's so much room on the backside that it doesn't matter. He takes off for a huge gain.
M43 1 10 I-Form 2 1 2 4-3 over Run Iso Toussaint 3
M runs at the overload side of the Akron line. Miller(-0.5) and Glasgow(-0.5) can't get the nose sealed away on a double and he plus the MLB mean no gaps on where there are supposed to be gaps. Miller comes around and does get a block on a linebacker. Sort of. Tough angle because of the no NT seal. Toussaint does take it N/S this time, hitting it up behind that nose and getting a few. We'll take it.
M46 2 7 I-Form 2 1 2 4-3 under Pass Waggle drag Chesson Inc
Chesson coming across the formation, Gardner turns around and is almost immediately hit. He throws, dangerously, and the pass hits the turf. Atari 2600 play. (PR, 0, protection N/A, RPS -2)
M46 3 7 Shotgun 4-wide 1 1 3 Nickel even Pass Hitch Gallon 8
Pitch and catch rhythm throw that Akron defends pretty well, getting a hit on the catch. Still unable to break it up. (CA, 2, protection 1/1)
O46 1 10 Pistol trips TE 1 1 3 4-4 under Run Inside zone read Toussaint 1
DE holds up, give. M is running towards the stacked side of the line and has Funchess away from the play, so he never has a shot at blocking anyone who matters. It's possible he's supposed to hit the backside end? Glasgow(+1) kicks out a DT effectively. Lewan(+0.5) gets a good kickout. Miller releases immediately and gets on the MLB, putting him to one side. Kalis(-0.5) and Schofield(-0.5) double the backside tackle and don't get him sealed; Kalis pops off on a LB but doesn't really have an angle to seal him either. Toussaint tries to pop outside into the large amounts of space Glasgow bought him but the MLB tackles. RPS –1.
O45 2 9 Shotgun 2TE twins 1 2 2 4-3 even Pass TE Hitch Butt 14
Probably an option route; Butt reads zone and sits down; Gardner hits him in rhythm, allowing Butt to turn up for some YAC. (CA, 3, protection 1/1). Thought about DO.
O31 1 10 I-Form 2 1 2 4-3 even Run Power O Toussaint -2
Akron slants, causing chaos. It's clear M is now trying not to turn around and pass guys off; here they blow it and get buried. I think this is Kalis(-1) not IDing the slant and coming off to block the nose who is coming into his gap. Schofield(-1) also loses his guy, who goes upfield, picks off Glasgow, and gets a two for one as Schofield chases. RPS -1.
O33 2 12 I-Form 2 1 2 4-3 under Pass Hitch Chesson 33
Finally! This is an iso fake into a pass with Toussaint blocking the edge guy. Two guys go after Houma. Chesson comes open for a hitch for about eight, goes around one guy, runs through an ankle tackle attempt from a second guy, and then is gently pushed towards the endzone by a third. He takes the invitation. +2 run. (CA, 3, protection 2/2)
Drive Notes: Touchdown, 21-10, 3 min 3rd Q. Hold onto your butts.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Type Play Player Yards
M29 1 10 I-Form 2 1 2 6-2 bear Run Iso Toussaint 1
With an LB over him Glasgow cannot help Miller(-1), who gets blasted back again in a poor fashion. Fitz tries to cut back, and this time he has to. Kalis(-1) had a free release and ends up letting a LB upfield of him to tackle.
M30 2 9 Ace 1 2 2 5-3 bear Pass PA skinny post Gallon Inc
Four verts for M with man free. This means both inside guys have an S coming with them and the outside guys are one on one. Instead of trying Funchess on an LB, a skinny post to Gallon against double coverage is Gardner's pick. It is well behind Gallon and that's probably good, since otherwise it's intercepted. (BRX, 0, protection 2/2).
M30 3 9 Shotgun trips bunch 1 1 3 Nickel even Pass Screen Toussaint INT
MLB sent on a blitz. Doesn't tip it at all; Miller(-2) looks to a DT immediately, which lets that guy through clean. Even a bump throws him off. Gardner drops, throws the screen, guy makes an awesome play to undercut and intercept for six. Gardner is looking at this the whole way and can loft the ball or turf it, so not good, but first and foremost I don't think you expect a linebacker to come under this like this guy does. (BR, 0, protection N/A, RPS -3)
Drive Notes: Defensive touchdown, 21-17, 14 min 4th Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Type Play Player Yards
M25 1 10 Shotgun 2TE twins 1 2 2 5-3 bear Run Inverted veer keeper Gardner 3
Playside end is playing this better, shading down as the LB to the outside contains. Playside NT shoots into the backfield immediately. Glasgow gets him, but gets him such that he takes out Miller's legs in a dangerous way. Miller goes down, NT keeps his feet and starts flowing, free of Miller. Funchess(-2) again turns entirely around chasing the contain guy, leaving a MLB totally free. He and the tackle freed up by the Glasgow/Miller thing combine to tackle. Glasgow(+1) pounded his guy, FWIW, and Lewan(+0.5) got out and sealed off a linebacker.
M28 2 7 Ace H 1 2 2 5-3 bear Pass Sack Gardner -10
Sympathize with Toussaint(-2) here, as he seems to be expecting a waggle and ends up outside of the DE, but Gardner is setting up in the pocket. DE gets in, Gardner evades, delayed LB sees it and shoots up to sack. (PR, 0, protection 0/2, Toussaint -2)
M18 3 17 Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 3-2-6 dime Pass Scramble Gardner 10
Three man rush, lots of time, Gardner decides he doesn't have anything and takes off. (TA, N/A, protection 2/2)
Drive Notes: Punt, 21-17, 13 min 4th Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Type Play Player Yards
M20 1 10 I-Form Big 2 2 1 5-4 bear Run Iso Toussaint 16
Okay, Fitz, this is a cutback to make. Akron has three guys shaded to the playside and while the blocking is okay, Kalis had to block a guy playside of him without help and that threatens to eat Toussaint. But backside end is containing Gardner, Schofield(+2) blows up the bear LB enormously; Funchess(+1) gets a great extended kick on a backside LB and Toussaint(+2) slams it up between them after the smart cutback. Glasgow(+0.5) got a good frontside block, but it becomes irrelevant. Kalis(+0.5) did drive his guy somewhat, giving Fitz more room.
M36 1 10 I-Form Big 2 2 1 5-4 bear Run Iso Toussaint 2
Same play. Fitz should try the same thing on the same play but the backside end is coming down more and he decides to slam it up into an unblocked LB as an Akron guy cuts Kerridge in the backfield. Schofield(+1) got good drive on the backside guy and Funchess appears to get a kick; this is just Akron loading up and selling out and Toussaint(-0.5) not expecting to get the same thing he got the last play. RPS –1.
M38 2 8 Ace H 1 2 2 5-3 bear Run Power O Toussaint -1
Ludicrously bad from Toussaint(-3) as he immediately cuts away from a well-blocked playside. Funchess(+1) had banged the end inside, Kalis had gotten clear of that attempt to spill, and Toussaint runs straight into the backside of the play for a loss that is entirely his fault.
M37 3 9 Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 Nickel even Pass Comeback Gallon 8
Protection is okay, but only just, as Gardner gets some heat as he throws. Gallon is open, but only just, and gets tackled immediately. That's life on third and nine when your RB ignores the playcall. (CA, 2, protection 2/2)
Drive Notes: Punt, 21-17, 9 min 4th Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Type Play Player Yards
M30 1 10 Ace twins 1 2 2 6-2 bear Pass Wheel Funchess Inc
This is batted at the line. Not a great read since Butt is leaking out by himself on the other side of the field, but it's Funchess so you can throw it up and he might catch it. Miller(-1) allowed the pressure. (BA, 0, protection ½, Miller -1)
M30 2 10 Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 5-2 bear Run QB draw Gardner 35
When in doubt, run the QB. Glasgow(+1) hits a LB, opening up a crease, and then Gardner(+3) hits it, cuts back inside, dodging two guys trying to fill, and bursts upfield.
O35 1 10 Ace 2 1 2 4-3 even Pass PA out and up Gallon 21
Akron in zone; Gardner kind of stares this down but Gallon does come open in between levels and sits down; Gardner hits him in rhythm, and Gallon spins upfield to shake a tackler and pick up some YAC. (CA, 3, protection 2/2, RPS +1.)
O14 1 10 I-Form twins tight stack 2 1 2 4-4 even Pass TE Dig Butt Inc (Pen +12)
Blitz right up the middle taken care of by Kerridge with aplomb. Glasgow(-1) can't prevent his guy from coming inside of him and then Toussaint(-1) gives him a weak shoulder block instead of cutting a guy much bigger than him, so Gardner has pressure in his face as he throws. Ball is inch perfect; DB wraps his hand around Butt in an attempt to get a PBU and gets an obvious PI flag. (DO, 0, protection 1/3)
O2 1 G Goal line 3 2 0 Goal line Run Down G Toussaint 2
Magnuson in, Lewan and Schofield buddy cop comedy time. Lewan(+1) caves in the playside end; Schofield(+1) puts his guy on the ground. Glasgow(+1), pulling outside of those two, also puts his guy on the ground. Toussaint has acres of space for a play from the two, and scores.
Drive Notes: Touchdown, 28-24, 3 min 4th Q. Michigan doesn't get the ball back.

ACK

You know, change some parameters here and Michigan is fine.

FALSE. ACK

The biggest parameter is admittedly "starting QB doesn't make the large mistakes that now seem baked into his game."

ACK ACK ACK TTHPPPTH ACK

Oh and some stuff about the line and Toussaint. But we should look at the main man first. Here is a—

ACK TTPPHTHTHTH BLARF

—chart.

Devin Gardner 2012

Opponent DO CA MA IN BR TA BA PR SCR DSR
Minnesota 3 7(1) 4 2(1) 2* 2 - 3 4 72%
Northwestern 4 16(2) 2 1 3* 2(1) 2(1) 2 5 79%
Iowa 3 16(4) - 2(1) 2 1 - 1 4 83%
Ohio State 3 11(1) 2 5* 2 1 - 3 2 65%
South Carolina 4 16(2) 2 8 3 4 - 2 2 57%

Devin Gardner 2013

Opponent DO CA MA IN BR TA BA PR SCR DSR
Central Michigan 2 10(1)+ 1 1 2* - - 1 3 82%
Notre Dame 7+ 16(1)++ 4(1) 2 3* - 1 4 4 82%
Akron 3 14(2) - 5 3** 2 1 3 1 59%

Shane Morris

Opponent DO CA MA IN BR TA BA PR SCR DSR
Central Michigan - 4 - 1 1* 1 - - - N/A

Dammit. One week after a superlative performance with rushers all up in his face, Gardner gets all wobbly.

Gardner made three mistakes that had a huge impact on the game: not pitching on the speed option and the two interceptions that weren't rifled off of Funchess's head. The first INT was just a terrible read. It's the same play Michigan scored on at the end of the Outback bowl, a route that sees Gallon head inside to a seam area and then break in or out to a corner or post. This is the post, but it doesn't matter which Gallon is breaking to, when that corner sinks with Gallon he should immediately come off and hit Funchess on the crossing route:

I'm torn on the pick six, which is at least half Akron getting a good playcall in and the linebacker making an awesome play. I don't know if you can expect Gardner to see that guy when he's got defensive linemen in his face. He may have had his vision blocked.

The frustrating and crazy thing about the option play is that Gardner saw Akron didn't have a force player to the boundary, checked into the speed option, and then didn't make the obvious pitch he'd seen presnap. Akron's end played it well, backing off and waiting, but there's a moment he commits and Gardner don't curr.

I filed that as a BRX, a BR, and a –4 on the ground for Gardner (mistake plus fumble), FWIW.

Gardner got rattled after the first couple mistakes, pump-faking on a throw to Chesson and then shooting it way over his head, then throwing way late and thus behind an open Gallon to force a Michigan punt.

On the other hand, hey, Devin Gardner can do this:

That was one of three separate 35-yard runs he had. Even with a 12-yard loss for the fumble in there, Gardner ripped off 111 yards on nine carries. (He was sacked once for a ten yard loss). That was the difference between victory and death when everything else was going wrong. Also, Gardner's YPA of 8.2 remained in the excellent range.

But let's move on to the hot line takes.

OH NO. NO NO NO NO—

Offensive Line
Player + - Total Notes
Lewan 7.5 1 6.5 Pancake factory on power.
Glasgow 12.5 3.5 9 Apparently I agree with the coaches.
Miller 3 8.5 -5.5 Oof.
Kalis 7 4.5 2.5 Not as consistent as the other G.
Schofield 8 4 4 Got push, push got used by Toussaint cutbacks.
Williams - - - DNP
Funchess 7.5 3.5 4 Turned around once, but otherwise a nice day.
Butt 2.5 1 1.5 Pretty good for a freshman.
Magnuson - - - DNC
TOTAL 48 26 65% Not what you want against Akron but better than it seemed after initial shakiness.
Backs
Player + - T Notes
Gardner 7 4 3 Fast; argh option.
Morris - - - DNP
Toussaint 5.5 9.5 -4 Much more on this later.
Green - - - One carry.
Smith - - - DNP
Hayes - - - DNC
Rawls - - - DNP
Houma - - - DNC
Kerridge 2 - 2 Blocks got cut away from.
TOTAL 14.5 13.5 1 Toussaint YPC his own doing.
Receiver
Player + - T Notes
Gallon 1 2 -1  
Jackson 1 1 0  
Chesson 4 1 3 Two for his catch and run.
Reynolds - 1 -1  
Dileo - 1 -1  
Norfleet 1 - 1 Followed blocks on screen.
York - - - DNP
TOTAL 7 6 1 Note on blocking press stuff in WR chart section.
Metrics
Player + - T Notes
Protection 36 8 82% Glasgow –3, Miller –2, Toussaint –3
RPS 10 11 -1 We love him this week

--wait. What?

Toussaint's day looks a lot better statistically if a phantom holding call on Jake Butt doesn't bring back a 15-yarder and he doesn't nerf a long run himself by running outside of Jeremy Gallon. Oh, and occasionally follows good blocks by his teammates. After the initial issues with zone, Michigan blocked well enough to see their tailback crack 100 yards at an excellent YPC; the tailback just didn't cooperate. Why in just a bit.

The other thing that jumps out is the noobs on the interior…

FIRE MILLER! FIRE GLASGOW! FIRE LEYLAND!

People have been mad about guys on the line in the aftermath of Saturday's game and have been demanding change. Since the tackles are obviously sacrosanct and Kyle Kalis is guru-approved, most of the vitriol has fallen on Miller and Glasgow. The fact that both have been dumped into the backfield periodically doesn't help.

Unfortunately, the issues here are more complicated than sending one or two guys to the unemployment line. As noted in the picture pages, some of the things they're doing don't make sense, and it's hard to tell why. The one about Michigan leaving first-level defenders un-doubled spawned a triple-digit comment thread featuring a lot of infighting about whether this was terrible on the part of Miller and Glasgow or terrible on the part of the coaches/Gardner for not checking away from the doomed play. I don't know.

I do know that if M does double those guys at the line, they are far less exposed to the kinds of TFLs they experienced in the first half of that game until Akron starts shooting gaps, and that not doubling guys on inside zone—which was Michigan's first play of the game—is very bizarre.

But why is Glasgow in the game? Because he executes his assignments more consistently than his competitors. Miller, too. Yes, even if he's badly negative in this one. Maybe Chris Bryant will be a revelation at some point, but every snap those guys take and every one in practice Bryant misses because of nagging injury du jour distances the current starters from their backups. Their issues are serious, but not fixable by anything but time.

In this edition of "here is a subtle thing I think an experienced offensive line might pull off," Miller releases on the Chesson end around and blocks the linebacker nearest to the play:

That turns out to be the wrong guy to block, because Akron's in man coverage and the guy further outside is the one shooting to the backside of the play while the guy Miller blocks is checking Toussaint. Miller looks at both of these dudes and picks the superficially logical one; a deeper understanding of what he's looking at when the playside LB is stepping away from him might get him to block the guy booking for where the play's actually going. (Coaching types, feel free to tell me this is crazy to expect.)

That kind of stuff is the thing holding back the running game against Akron and CMU. It's turning around in space, or not getting the right double. It's no coincidence that when Michigan's running game turned into see-man-smash-man power plays it (largely) took off. It may turn out that Miller can't hold up against Big Ten linemen and gets replaced, but so much of offensive line play is quick decisions aided by reps and chemistry. A midseason shift brings its own problems.

If you want a little hope in this department, watch Glasgow on one of Gardner's two big inverted veer gains:

Schofield gets pushed back, cutting off Glasgow's route to where the play design is, so Glasgow decides to end that guy and go get him a linebacker. That is one huge crease up the middle all of a sudden and Gardner's off to the races. That's the kind of thing I'm talking about. That kind of instinct under fire is a long-developing thing.

I actually think Michigan has a problem elsewhere…

Fire Toussaint? Surely you can't be serious.

Not exactly Fire Toussaint, but he's really starting to frustrate me. He all but refuses to follow his fullback (again, as noted in the recent Picture Pages) and has turned into Michael Shaw when it comes to any and all options. Here he's already cut to the back side of the line on an iso. Unlike many times he's done this, it works out for him because the guys on the backside have blown their guys back and he evades a tackle attempt—#5 on the ground there.

fitz-go-north-south

He takes this ball outside of Gallon. Yup. Instead of cutting right upfield on the M and maybe juking a safety for six points he goes east/west, bringing the sideline into play and turning an irrelevant block by Gallon into a holding call as he blows up that blocking angle. Gallon's blocking an iso to the other side of the field—he can't expect the running back to go behind him.

Meanwhile, this was another iso on that drive:

follow-your-blocks-fitz

That is a huge freaking hole. Every one of his offensive lineman has executed his assignment and Kerridge is about to cut the MLB to the ground. Toussaint cuts this to the backside like he did on the frame above; this time he gets tackled by that linebacker hanging out back there, turning a potential big gain into four yards.

We've been trying to figure out why the run game sucks so much basically since the season started, and every time I try to explain this I talk about the offensive line mostly and then go "oh by the way, Toussaint probably should have done something different." Those add up. He's turning 2 yards into –2 yards and 10 yards into 4 yards too often and not making up for it much. He's got a nice 14-yarder against ND and then yet another cutback into trouble when he had a gaping hole that he managed to turn into 22 yards by breaking a tackle and juking. That's it.

Meanwhile on play after play he's killing blocking angles to everyone's detriment. For every play on which the opponent actually overplays the playside enough for the cutback to be the best choice there are three on which he's setting yards on fire. This was the capper, a power play on Michigan's penultimate drive that he cuts back into blood and doom for no earthly reason:

That is a healthy gain if he follows his lead blocker turned into a loss. Michigan would complete a tough eight yard pass on the ensuing third and nine. I know he had a nice day against Notre Dame in the run charting, but if he doesn't break that Day arm tackle he's right around zero for that game with negatives in the two MAC games—you know, the ones in which there were actually holes for him to hit because the line wasn't getting spanked by NFLers.

I don't know if the guy is totally borked after last year's slasher flick, but I sincerely hope Fred Jackson spends the next three weeks screaming at him to follow his lead blocker. Kerridge is wrecking people to no purpose. Fitz needs to stop playing heroball.

FWIW, Green's only carry was a power play on which Kalis made a mistake and got caught up by the playside end crashing inside. He burrowed straight upfield for a few yards instead of heading to the intended gap, which I can understand but do not prefer.

Receivers?

[Passes are rated by how tough they are to catch. 0 == impossible. 1 == wow he caught that, 2 == moderate difficulty, 3 == routine. The 0/X in all passes marked zero is implied.]

Player 0 1 2 3   0 1 2 3
Gallon 3   3/3 3/4   8   8/9 11/12
Jackson 1         2     3/3
Reynolds       1/1     0/1 1/1 2/2
Chesson 2     1/1   3     1/1
Dileo           1 1/1   4/4
Norfleet       1/1   1     3/3
York                  
Funchess 1   0/2 2/2   2 1/2 0/3 6/6
Butt 1     2/2   1 0/1 0/1 5/5
Williams                  
                   
Toussaint 1     1/1   1     3/3
Hayes                  
Green                  
Smith                  
Kerridge                  
Houma       1/1         1/1

This week in Jeremy Gallon is good at football:

Lock-on syndrome does appear to be a thing, and it hurt Michigan on one of the interceptions.

I don't have a table for this, but with Akron in press coverage for big chunks of this game it was strange to see Michigan try to block guys. It turned an otherwise open Chesson end around into two yards when running the DB off* is usually the preferred option. Michigan did that on the doomed option play…

…to good effect, so not seeing it a couple other places was odd. You know they use it.

Speaking of Chesson, welcome to the party. Good to see a few targets his way, especially when he's such a nice guy that opponents actively try to get him touchdowns.

*[IE, immediately releasing outside and running a fly pattern, which will turn the DB's back to the LOS away from the play. By the time the DB realizes it's a run, he's 20 yards downfield.]

Funchess blocked some dudes?

Yeah, he was considerably better in this game. When Michigan ran power Akron was shooting the end inside (playing to "spill"), hoping to get penetration on Funchess and pick off the pulling G. Funchess got the guy inside and held his ground enough to allow the guard around, and Toussaint picked up some nice runs when that happened since Lewan and company were pounding their guys inside. Example:

Watch the H-back.

Funchess also got some nice kicks on iso plays that cut back to him and was the key block on Gardner's inverted veer touchdown. He may have gotten away with a hold, but I'll take Funchess driving a guy six yards off the LOS any way that he can do it. I don't even really blame him for the one ugly block he seemed responsible for, as he was given a tough assignment, trying to seal a DE lined up outside of him on a pitch to the boundary. That's tough for anyone.

Caveat: I do think Akron Isn't Notre Dame is a big factor in his improvement. There's Prince Shembo and then there's a 230-pound defensive end you have to catch because he turned his back to you for no reason.

Funchess also was more involved with the gameplan, catching a 17-yarder and of course turning upfield for a long catch and run on the first drive. An encouraging game that may not mean much against stiffer competition.

Do you have a preview of Khalid Hill's life at Michigan?

Yes!

Heroes?

Glasgow and Kalis consistently bashed in the Akron line. Gardner's legs were hugely important. Gallon was as good as he usually is.

Maybe not so heroic?

Gardner's huge mistakes cost Michigan ten points and depending on your POV of the pick-six maybe another seven. Toussaint gave away a ton of yards by not trusting his blocking. Miller had a rough day.

What does it mean for UConn and the future?

The offensive line wasn't as bad as it looked. They had some identification issues early that hampered things, but they also get credit for blocking the inverted veers and once they adjusted to what Akron was doing they were blowing them up, for the most part. Protection was good, as well. Glasgow had a good game after a tough outing against Nix. If there is a change it will be sliding him to center so Bryant can come in.

Glasgow is ahead of Kalis. That's right, I said it.

Toussaint has PTSD. Poor Damn Toussaint is only a thing still because he assumes the blocking will die and makes bad decisions both when it does (bouncing hopelessly) and doesn't (cutting away from big creases). Not to sound like a low-rent color commentator, but go north/south, and stop pussyfooting around like a pinko. RUN LIKE 'MERICA: INTO THE TEETH OF UNNECESSARY DANGER.

Gardner is a danger to himself and others. If he stops making the big mistakes, look out. If he continues making the big mistakes, look out. He can get wobbly and fall apart; when he's on, he's really f-ing on.

Michigan needs some counters. Passing off the veer or running that counter trey right or something. Need it.

THROW IT TO DILEO. No targets. Cumong man.

Comments

IowaBlue

September 18th, 2013 at 5:27 PM ^

My 2 cents... which may not be worth that much.

Fitz is starting because he is the best back at executing assignments in games and in practice.  The coaches see him in action more than any of us have; but that has to carry over to the games too both for Fitz and the O-line.

Until the lines starts consistently executing in games, I think Fitz seems predisposed to expect the blocking to fail in front of him.  He's trying to make something happen vs. pound into an opposing lineman that seems to have a better break to the hole than he does at the snap.  I think and hope that once the line starts showing that the hole will be there, as we've seen he's maybe lost the faith a few times when he should have just rode out the play call... he will start to stay with the plan more and hit the holes that we all "think" he should be seeing at an instant in time, freeze frame captured.

I want to see us run up the score on some folks too to see Green and Smith get plenty of snaps (guess i'm a hipster too for liking Smith so much)... but i'm not ready to turn my back on Fitz so quick until we sort out the mess in front of him.  Let's give him a couple of more games to trust his young linemen. Then both he and the line will be fine...

When we get UConn by 21+ this weekend... the whole damn board (ok 80%) will be back on the undefeated season hype again as unwarranted as it may be.

Go Blue!

Magnum P.I.

September 18th, 2013 at 5:30 PM ^

Magnus gives pretty superficial game reviews. His is mostly just a fan's take of a one-time viewing of the game combined with a combing of the boxscore. The UFR approach--revisiting every single play in slo-mo--is likely a much more valid assessment, regardless of the reviewer's expertise.

Magnus

September 19th, 2013 at 11:14 AM ^

In my defense, I usually re-watch the game, but I don't have time to do a full UFR like Brian. It would be fun to be a full-time blogger, but I have other jobs that have me working approximately 13 hours/day from Monday through Saturday. Unfortunately, football season takes place during...football season.

Magnus

September 19th, 2013 at 11:06 AM ^

First of all, there weren't a ton of options for MVP of a game in which Michigan barely beat a MAC team. But I disagree with Brian's assessment of Toussaint, because in my opinion, he's learning to cut back because the playside blocking often isn't there. This has never been a problem, but after the offensive line really struggled against CMU and Notre Dame, it's understandable that he would be looking somewhere other than the intended hole for yardage.

Now that doesn't mean he's perfect. He certainly made some mistakes, some of them glaring. But the same can be said for Glasgow, Gardner, Miller, Kalis, Funchess, etc. The problem is that if a running back makes a bad read, everyone sees it and says "STUPID RUNNING BACK." If the left guard or right guard or H-back makes a bad play, it's often not recognized.

ca_prophet

September 18th, 2013 at 5:23 PM ^

1. The coaches have more and better film, much more experience, and know what the play calls and assignments are supposed to be. If they're praising Glasgow, the implication is that what Brian's seeing on the UFR is real. 2. The coaches also see what's going on in practice. If Glasgow is trying and failing to snap the ball consistently, or is a completely inept blocker because he has to focus on his snap the way Miller does not, we would never know, and the coaches would be right to not move him. 3. Green may not have PDTS but if he can't consistently block on pass plays in practice he's not going to get much run, if any. I don't know how we fix our running game other than by getting these guys time, and running more plays where we do option off someone as opposed to run over him - less has to go right, it seems. A lot of our unsuccessful plays above have three people doing good things and one person missing a critical block that kills the play, or Fitz cuts into trouble. Sadly, that is becoming a meme along with "Gardner spins out of the frying pan into the fire".

Magnum P.I.

September 18th, 2013 at 5:43 PM ^

People complicate this too much. At this point, I'd just like us to perform at league average in rushing offense.

Fact: our feature back is getting fewer rushing yards per carry than any other feature back in the Big Ten. Riley Bullough, Nick Hill, Mark Weisman, all of them (except for Akeem Hunt, actually--he's the only one who's worse, and his name seems like it should have some embedded dirty joke).

We're not doing bad by Michigan standards. We're doing bad by bad-Big-Ten-team standards. 

Just put someone else in there at RB and the interior line. We have nothing to lose. I refuse to believe that there's not one of our six RBs or two of our eight interior lineman than can't get us to at least Indiana, Minnesota, or Sparty levels. 

 

 

 

 

 

Sten Carlson

September 18th, 2013 at 5:50 PM ^

After looking at all the film concerning the OL, Fitz, and the running game -- as well as remembering Fitz's issues in the past -- I think Fitz isn't as special as I thought him to be.  I love the guy, I respect the guy, and there are times when he flashes brilliance.  However, the missed holes, improper/early bounce/cut backs, etc. are getting old -- especially when I watch other teams around the nation that have RB's that go forward, that hit holes hard and even when stuffed, fall forward for at least a couple of yards.

People can talk about blitz pick up and fumbling (which no Michigan RB has done this season), but what really matters is production, and Fitz isn't doing it often enough for the seeming talent that he has as this issue has been with him since the beginning.  So, apparently, no amount of coaching is going to develop his vision and decision-making, sadly.

Obviously the coaches are seeing the guys in practice and know best.

Profwoot

September 18th, 2013 at 6:38 PM ^

I'm not confident that Gardner even had the option to pitch on his fumble. A lot of the option looks in this offense aren't actually options. Still, tuck that shit.

CriticalFan

September 18th, 2013 at 7:18 PM ^

Things need to be calmed down and evened out. Settle down and reestablish trust.

Funchess played better but in the UFR there was at least one play where an O-lineman left what he was supposed to do to go help, because he assumed DF needed it. Fitzgerald is cutting back because he doesn't believe in holes. 

After a first play long bomb to Jehu to put the fear of an unleashed dragon into their safeties, just run the absolute simplest designed run plays and get in a groove again, get used to the guy next to you doing his job.

That said, if said guy can't, then it's the G-to-G mind-meld and scrambles for 45 plays a game.

uncleFred

September 18th, 2013 at 9:35 PM ^

If we rely on the UFR the Oline performed badly in the first half with regard to opening holes. So for just a moment put yourself in Fitz's head. The team needs a score and he has come to distrust the performance of the line. What would you do? Not watching film in slow motion, but on the field in the heat of competition? I suspect you'd try to make plays. I certainly would.

So he missed some holes. Yes that is bad, but for half a game most of the time those holes simply weren't there. Further he has to find the holes while running as hard as he can. Not a lot of time.

It ain't all Fitz's fault. Football is not slow motion chess. If the line open's holes with some consistency, Fitz will trust the line to open the holes and won't feel like he has to find yards on his own. 

This is a TEAM sport. When they don't play as a team you get games like Akron.  I predict that things will come together and that the team will have a solid, possibly great year, and we'll all be very please with Fitz, Gardner, Gallon, and a bunch of others. We are three games in. There a a lot of problems to iron out, but at this point the data does not support Fitz as one requiring benching.

Sten Carlson

September 18th, 2013 at 10:43 PM ^

There is a difference between missing a hole now and then and continually bouncing/cutting back even when there is a hole. To say he's not hitting a hole because he doesn't trust it is there, when it is, isn't mitigating his issues. It would be one thing if when the hole was there he slammed into it and got north south in a hurry. But, unfortunately, he doesn't -- he misses gaping holes, takes odd angles (highlighted in the UFR) and doesn't follow his blockers effectively. Even if one were to concede that he lack confidence in the blocking/hole, it's still and issue that needs to be addressed, and quickly.

Adam Schnepp

September 18th, 2013 at 10:16 PM ^

Devin Gardner is Don Draper. At first we think he's perfect, but as time progresses we see fractures in what was a previously immaculate surface. There are parts of him that we love and parts of him that are grating, but that's exactly what makes him interesting. The peaks will be euphoric and the valleys will bring near collapse, but somehow we still end up rooting for him.

Space Coyote

September 19th, 2013 at 8:54 AM ^

But it's really getting annoying. After every game, Brian does these UFRs, which are great. Someone ends up in the negative, Brian gives his reason. Some of the examples he gives I really don't even think are good examples, but that's fine, difference in opinion. But he gives three or so examples, a fair criticism, then this board cranks the volume from 3 to 11 instantly. 

Some of the things being insisted about Fitz are ridiculous here. Fitz had two really bad plays: 1) cutting outside the WR; 2) cutting back on the one power. I have a differing opinion on some of the other negatives Brian gave him, some, alright. He didn't have a perfect day. But not people are acting like Michigan should yank his scholarship. Play Green who has shown about nothing so far. People claim "at least Green would pick up 3 yards, whereas Fitz loses 4 every time". People take a small piece of information, ramp it up, and suddenly act like it's the absolute norm to happen.

The offensive line has done better than they initially looked. They've gotten to their spots at times as individual members. But they have yet to work consistently as a unit and have yet to win consistently as a unit, if not individually. They are getting to spots but still failing to get good push or maintain blocks. You can freeze frame all you want, it doesn't tell the story and it doesn't exactly show what Fitz is looking at.

Like I said, Fitz had two really bad plays, and suddenly people act like he's running around backwards and then spiking the ball in the wrong endzone. Maybe Fitz is just a little above average, because for the most part he can make his reads but doesn't have a "feel" beyond the reads. Maybe instinctually he still has improvement to make. But he is not Shaw. He is not randomly bouncing outside. Most of his cuts have actually been to the backside, and most of those cuts were based on a reaction to over aggressive flow by the defense. He could do better in situations, that's the "feel" for it all. He could do himself a great service by picking up his legs in the hole. But this board's, this fan base's tendancy to find a single scapegoat and then rail on him as if he's the cause of all or even the majority of the problems is ridiculous. It's Borges. It's Gardner. It's Miller. It's Glasgow. It's Funchess. It's Wormley. It's Ross. It's God knows who's next. But it will surely be someone. And it may not even be for a week, it may be for half a week when one person gives their opinion half way through the week and so many take it as gospel instead of forming their own.

This is not intended to disrespect Brian. I think the UFRs are great, I know he spends a lot of time working on them, and frankly, without knowing the plays, calls, and assignments, there are going to be some areas where opinions differ. But the way the board will flip on a guy instantly because of one person's opinion, and suddenly that guy's head should be had, it's awful. 

Space Coyote

September 19th, 2013 at 10:53 AM ^

I get annoyed that people always go to the extreme, that people seemingly need to find a single person or position group to pin point all their angst. As Magnus said above, yeah, Fitz hasn't been perfect. But that's also because of the OL, coaches, QB, WR, everybody. But people seem to want to simplify it so much that it becomes "just Fitz". And it happens to different people all the time. It gets dumbed down to the point where it becomes irrelevent and redundant.

And I have joined the debate. I did so in the picture pages. I did so in other threads. I've even done a little here. But it's not really a debate when no one listens. It's not a debate when everyone wants to find the witch and burn the witch. And I've had this debate time and time again, with Borges, with Funchess, now with Fitz. It's not changing. It's still find the witch; burn the witch. My opinion, as much as I think some people tend to respect it, can only do so much.

InterM

September 19th, 2013 at 6:10 PM ^

that there are far more of us reading than commenting here.  When you say that "no one listens," that's based largely on the comments of a few folks who tend to belabor their same points again and again.  My unsolicited advice (or request) -- keep sharing your views, and trust that many of us appreciate your valuable contributions to the discussion.

Bodogblog

September 19th, 2013 at 10:51 AM ^

The problems are 1) the certainty with which people run with Brian's opinion, and 2) the exaggeration of those opinions.

Brian's being critical and making his case, but he's not bailing on Fitz.  Too many blogfolk are, and that's an overreaction.

I agree with Brian, there's some concern with the holes he's missing at times.  But nobody makes the right decision on every play, and nobody blocks it perfectly on every play.  I do think the UFR write-ups need to recognize that more, but in the end it's supposed to be a description of exactly what happened on every play.

Funchess is not as bad as it was portrayed last week.  He's bigger, he's willing to hit people (he's tougher), and he's holding his blocks longer.  He gets confused at times, but he'll be up to average in short order, in my opinion.  In another year he could be good, given he's improving.  But the standard opinion on this board is that he sucks this year, will continue to suck.  Really due to last week's UFR.

Glasgow is good.  Miller should be probably be beaten out soon.  Butt is doing astoundingly well for a true freshman.  These are opinions I have from watching the game, and as the UFR supports or refutes them, I may or may not let that influence my opinion.  It's not the end all, which is the point SpaceCoyote is making.

Sten Carlson

September 19th, 2013 at 10:08 AM ^

@Space Cowboy,

As one of the posters that has recently been negative about Fitz, I never said that he needs to have his scholarship yanked.  We've all watched Fitz run the ball now for several years, and IMO, he's not shown much development.  It's not only about his "two bad plays" it's about the fact that he seems significanly less capable than every RB that Michigan faces -- even teams like CMU.  I remember hearing the same thing about his vision, his constant bouncing, and his lack of "north-south" running in 2011 -- 2 seasons ago!

Obviously some of the issues revolve around blocking, or lack there of.  Maybe Fitz has gotten the "yips" like a golfer gets on the putting green in which he just cannot go upfield mentally.  I am usually one that favors the players and gives them the benefit of the doubt (perhaps to a fault), and I love Fitz as a Michigan Man.  But, I think his issues are holding Team 134 back from becoming the power run team Hoke & Co. want it to be.

Space Coyote

September 19th, 2013 at 10:49 AM ^

And I don't mind people being critical of him, as long as they do it in the proper context. I have a problem with people suddenly jumping on board the "Fitz is terrible" train when they don't actually see the whole situation. What they see is Fitz, Fitz makes a cut, it loses yards, must be Fitz's fault. It's over-simplified. Fitz has done far more correct than he has incorrect. Half of the things people are complaining about he's read correctly, and not just in this game, but in the past, because they lack an understanding of how a RB is supposed to read the developement of the play.

I'm not saying Fitz doesn't have his issues. If you followed my post-game reactions on twitter or read them on Maize n Brew, you would see that I had some issues with Fitz. It's not that I'm not critical of him. It's that it's ridiculous how people can suddenly, en masse, just switch opinions to having Fitz be the hero of the game to becoming the scapegoat for the whole offense and lack of run game production.

I think a lot of Fitz's problems come from a lack of true push from the offensive line. Like I said, it's not that the OL isn't getting to their spot, it's that there is a lack of consistent push at the point or on the backside. Fitz is making his reads based off of certain things he seems. People complain about Fitz cutting behind the NT on the stretch play. Well Fitz cut behind the NT to correct his center, who went from trying to scoop to trying to push the NT past the play. He couldn't press the edge because Butt got pushed back and the end could set the edge deep in the backfield. He cut to correct his center and then tried to work back to the playside B gap. That's exactly what he's supposed to do in that situation. People jump on him for that.

He "shoulder blocks" a guy instead of cutting him that the OL released. Well, he can't cut that guy if a OL just released him because he's not sure if that OL is sticking on that man. That's not a technical mistake, it's a communication mistake. Fitz "shoulder blocked" a guy because he was chipping him until the OL could regain position on the player. The communication of responsibilities was wrong, not necessarily Fitz. But he has blame.

The Iso that he cut back was because he saw fast flow over the top. The backside LB left his backside A gap responsibility. The issue wasn't the cut back, it was that he couldn't press the playside hole before the cut back. Should he have then plunged into the intended hole? Probabably. But if the OL does their job correct, he is making the correct cut, as he did on the play just before it. But the blame is all on Fitz.

Fitz got negged for half his OL not knowing the snap count because people want him to just shove it in there...

And Brian remarks on it, which is fine, it's his opinion, but then the people in the comments take it to the extreme. They don't actually listen to what Brian says. They read part of it and assume the rest and take it 10 steps further. It's not a debate, it's a witch hunt. So that's what I have an issue with. I have an issue with people calling for more Green when Green has had exactly one carrie that went farther than the LOS. And I think Green will be good. But right now Green isn't quick enough for this OL that can't drive on their blocks as a unit and can't hold blocks individually. This OL is figuring out how to get to their spots so they can at least start their assignment, but they aren't following through to the finish. They aren't winning at the point. The OL is neither as bad as people thought earlier this week or seemingly forgettable as they appear to be now. They still aren't very good on the interior yet.

CriticalFan

September 20th, 2013 at 12:19 AM ^

About OL play and running in the trenches nearly every time you post, SpaceCoyote.

In a month or so, I hope I actually have enough knowledge to have my own opinion on these things. Until then, I listen to those whose opinion has value to me (Brian, yourself, anyone else with 2000 points, etc), and split any difference between them.  

I think Fitz is continually feeling like he has to fix everything going wrong ahead of him each play, and since he has a half-second to choose between options, he isn't perfect himself every time with his choices, even if he has time/space/momentum to do anything about it. Then everybody overreacts to it because 90% of tv football is about the guy with the ball.

Mr. Blue on Pa…

September 19th, 2013 at 11:03 AM ^

I'm certainly no football coach, but on the example you used with Miller taking the wrong* LB in the second level, it would seem that at the point of decision, he made the right choice. The LB who makes the play bites on the RB right at the time Miller makes his decision. This leaves the playside LB as the obvious block. Unfortunately, the farside LB adjusts quickly when he realizes his mistake and makes a good play.

This LB could have been eaten up by the WR (can't tell the number, Reynolds maybe) if the WR engages the LB rather than running past. His assignment may have been the DB/Safety, but making that block 10yds downfield doesn't help when your ball carrier is getting hit behind you.

I would assume this is what the coaches refer to as "assignment" issues. For slow developing plays like an end-around, assignments > technique.

Space Coyote

September 19th, 2013 at 11:06 AM ^

The end around problem isn't on Miller, he's assigned to the MIKE and seals the MIKE. If the problem is on anyone it's actually on Lewan, who is supposed to seal the most dangerous defender inside. He tries to make a late play on the guy but doesn't disengage from his original block fast enough to retrace to the fast flowing LB.

Magnus

September 19th, 2013 at 11:22 AM ^

I agree on Lewan, who doesn't really block anyone...

...but Houma could afford to be coached up a little better there, too. If he's got his head on a swivel, he can block that guy trailing from behind rather than just sprinting upfield.

Anyway, the guy who makes the tackle is the wide receiver, so I'm more worried about that failed block than Miller, Houma, etc.

Space Coyote

September 19th, 2013 at 11:36 AM ^

You tend to tell a FB not to chase of his path, but the feel for it comes with experience. I think here if Houma actually looks inside and sees the guy fast flowing down the line he should readjust and pick him up. I'm also not sure why the WR didn't go to the safety. It's hard to tell here, if the CB started to leak off him and he determined he had to block him or what. Maybe the guy looked like he was going to blitz off the edge. Haven't seen a CB blocked at that point by a WR on an end around though and can't really see much on the replay.

FWIW, we really seem to be on the same page on this thread. It's nice. We should do it more often.

IowaBlue

September 19th, 2013 at 12:06 PM ^

Space, Magnus, Brian, many others...

I appreciate that you take the time to comment and point things out, with a reasoned opinion... I tend to digest what everyone says and just sit on it myself; rarely commenting here or elsewhere for that matter.

But I do agree that "the sky is falling" attitude that seems to be needed around here by some folks can wear you out sometimes.  After the game this weekend... I stayed away from this blog until Monday for just that reason.  To let everyone "vent or freakout or whatever" and wait until some focused discussion would return.

I don't think Fitz the greatest back ever, nor is he the worst decision maker in the history of the program... I'm willing to ride it out as a fan and see how it develops without "freaking out" when a few issues are pointed out.  If the freshmen were our best options... i'm sure the competent coaches will make that decision on their own sometime soon.

I'm excited and hopeful to see us take out our current frustrations on UConn this weekend... and I'm not going to let last weeks game keep me from enjoying it. 

Stay positive, even in criticism... and Go Blue!

 

Cranky Dave

September 19th, 2013 at 12:44 PM ^

For me the takeway from the UFR (which I love reading), picture pages and others comments is that the offense is inconsistent at every position group.  My own views are:

O-line: solid at tackle but interior has issues on getting push, communication, technique and maybe scheme too. 

QB: Devin could be his ND version (int excluded) or Akron version in terms of passing

RB: Fitz is only back with enough carries to really evaluate and I think he is serviceable but not outstanding.  Without seeing practices or more game carries I have no idea if Green or Smith would be any better but would like to see them get some carries.

WR: Other than Gallon it seems like separation has been a bit of an issue but to be fair the other guys haven't been targeted enough

TE: improvement in Funchess' blocking against Akron and obviously catching the ball fine.  Butt playing well for a true FR and Williams coming back.  Could this be the position of least concern?

The only moral to the story, if there is one, is expected the unexpected

cjpops

September 20th, 2013 at 9:32 AM ^

"Oh: again there was a small Norfleet package. Hopefully as the season goes along "Norfleet is on the field" starts being less than 90% "Norfleet is getting the ball."

Argh.

ND Sux

September 20th, 2013 at 12:14 PM ^

Y U NO DRAW THE DEE OFFSIDES ANY MORE? 

Seriously, it seems like Devin was using snapcount voodoo twice or more per game last year.  Starting 1st & 5 now and then give the offense a lot of options, not to mention the lift of picking up a short/mid range 3rd down now & then.