Upon Further Review 2014: Defense vs Utah Comment Count

Brian

FORMATION NOTES: Not much of note. M was in a 4-3 over most of the day with few deviations. Miami did do some of that late-model RR/Baylor stuff by putting their WRs way far away from everything. I called this Shotgun 4-wide far. (This looks like pistol but the QB is 5 yards deep and the RB will pick a side/position presnap.)

utah 4-wide-far

SUBSTITUTION NOTES: Line starters were the usual. Backups saw some changes, though. The backup ends were still Charlton and Ojemudia; the second 3Tech was Godin—I don't think Wormley even played—and Hurst got in for some snaps that had previously gone to Pipkins. Again, don't think Pipkins played.

Linebacker was all Ross/Bolden/Ryan, and Michigan spent a big hunk of the game in a 4-3 playing zone so Ross got a fair share of time. When Michigan went nickel they slid Countess inside with Peppers and Lewis on the edge, and then Peppers disappeared and they stopped playing nickel. Hollowell didn't get on the field.

Safety was Jeremy Clark the whole way and Hill; then Hill left and Thomas came in.

APOLOGY NOTE: I used a different video file format and my conversion process balked at it, so the audio is messed up on the clips. I just didn't execute. Sorry guys.

[After THE JUMP: this went well.]

Ln Dn Ds O Form D Form Type Rush Play Player Yards
O31 1 10 Shotgun 3-wide 4-3 over Pass 5 Hitch Countess 5
First of a hitch blizzard. No time to get to the QB, quick hitch for five to Countess, who almost gets a plus here but his tackle gives up a couple extra yards so push.
O36 2 5 Shotgun 3-wide 4-3 over Run N/A Inside zone Countess 0
Jet sweep fake to an IZ. M blitzing a corner, so they slant to force a bounce and it happens. Bolden and Ryan both scraping away from the slant on the snap, hooray, so Countess(+0.5), Ryan(+0.5), and Bolden(+0.5) all there to converge with one OT getting confused and Henry(+0.5) surging to dissuade any frontside ideas. RPS +1.
O36 3 5 Shotgun 4-wide 3-3-5 nickel Pass 5 Hitch Peppers 2
Clark MLB. RT looks like he's run blocking or something... pop pass? More like bust, other half of the line seems to set up in pass pro. Ryan(+0.5, pressure +1) rips around the corner free, another instant hitch. This should get the first down but the WR peels back like it's first down and he's looking for a big play; Peppers(+0.5, tackling +1) comes up to snuff the drive. This is just bad play by the receiver jumping for a ball he doesn't have to and not immediately going upfield, so no big plus for a kick-you-off-field tackle.
Drive Notes: Punt, 3-0, 8 min 1st Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form D Form Type Rush Play Player Yards
O3 1 10 Shotgun 3-wide 4-3 even Pass 4 Hitch Countess 5
Immediate tackle this time and I've been shading to a plus for a bit. (+0.5, cover +1)
O8 2 5 Shotgun deep 3-wide Nickel even Run N/A Inside zone Ryan 0
Partially RPS as M brings Hill off the edge to contain and gets an extra guy against the run here. Henry(-2) blown out immediately and hugely; Beyer(+2) makes up for it by getting inside immediately; Ryan(+1) reads and flows hard to join him in the hole; Bolden(+1) took on and rocked back an OL to prevent YAC; Glasgow(+0.5) fought back to the hole for some aid.
O8 3 5 Shotgun 3-wide 3-3-5 nickel Pass 6 Flare screen JClark 67
Blitz gets shot in the face. Six guys are gone upfield. Feels like someone should be peeling out here for safety but nope. So that's some yards. It's a lot more because JClark(-3) actually goes upfield of a block as a safety(!) and Countess(-2) has a similarly terrible pursuit angle that gets him wiped out by the same block. Lewis(+1) bails M out, running it down and saving the last 25 yards. RPS -2. Probably should have been 20, not 60.
M25 1 10 Shotgun 3-wide Nickel under Run N/A Inverted veer keeper   3
M slides to the field and Ryan(+0.5) comes off the edge, inducing a keep and giving an erroneous pulling G no one to block. Bolden(-0.5) is just waiting unblocked, reminiscent of last year; Beyer(+1) fends off a blocker and initiates a tackle for meh gain.
M22 2 7 Shotgun 3-wide 4-3 even? Pass 4 Hitch Peppers 8
Peppers(-0.5, cover -1) a bit too far off this one to keep it down to standard five yards.
M14 1 10 Shotgun 3-wide 4-3 over Run N/A Yakety sax N/A -3
Utah botches an exchange.
M17 2 13 Shotgun empty quad 4-3 even Pass 4 Swing screen Ross -1
RB motions out, quick pass to him. Ross(+2) reads and beats a block to attack the WR in the backfield and get a TFL. Hill(+0.5) and Charlton(+0.5) also there.
M18 3 14 Shotgun 3-wide Nickel over Pass 4 Fade Lewis Inc
Looks like miscommunication but really it's Lewis(+2, cover +2) getting so far over the top of this route that the WR aborts into anything that might be feasible.
Drive Notes: FG(35), 3-3, 1 min 1st Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form D Form Type Rush Play Player Yards
O10 1 10 Shotgun 4-wide 4-3 even Pass 4 Fade Lewis Inc
Beyer(+0.5) and Ross(+0.5) are in on the QB on a zone blitz that sees a DE drop out (pressure +2) and Wilson has to chuck it without stepping into a throw; Lewis(+2, cover +2) is going to have a better shot at this ball than the WR as he runs this fade for the dude.
O10 2 10 Shotgun 3-wide 4-3 over Pass 5 Hitch Countess 6
Standard five yard hitch with immediate Countess(+0.5) tackle.
O16 3 4 Shotgun trips Nickel even Pass 4 Sack Ryan -2
Standard rollout out that QB inexplicably does not throw, inexplicably scrambles, inexplicably tries to leap over Jake Ryan, almost dies, comes back in second half. Bolden(-1, cover -1) left a guy hand-wavingly open to pursue a QB M had dead to rights; Beyer(+0.5) and Ryan(+0.5) tracked the guy down.
Drive Notes: Punt, 3-10, 11 min 2nd Q. Backup QB is in until halftime.
Ln Dn Ds O Form D Form Type Rush Play Player Yards
O20 1 10 Shotgun 2-back 4-3 over Run N/A Inverted veer keeper Ryan 3
M gets a little RPSed here but there's no handoff on what looks like an open edge so okay. Keeper, Henry is heading outside as a force guy as M does a slant/fold; rather sizeable gap that Ryan(+1) runs through two blocks from OL that don't quite have angles with Glasgow(+0.5) fighting through a double to force the QB further outside; Bolden and Clark also arrive.
O23 2 7 Shotgun 2-back 4-3 even Run N/A Inside zone Beyer 3
One back motions out threatening flare screen, zone read up the middle. This really could work big as the motion took M down to five in the box., but Glasgow(+1) and Beyer(+1) both win blocks to meet at the RB; Henry(+1) dissuaded any front side ideas. RPS -1. No LBs in position to help here.
O26 3 4 Shotgun trips 4-3 over Pass 5 Sack Ryan -14
Five sent, M blitzing into a rollout. Coverage(+1) good for first read beat and then they're on the QB. Ryan(+1) gets a free run, leaps, comes down under control, and initiates a tackle that Beyer(+0.5) and Henry(+0.5) are converging on, QB tries to dump it, ball doesn't get to LOS, grounding. Pressure +3 (blitz), RPS +2.
Drive Notes: Punt, 3-10, 8 min 2nd Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form D Form Type Rush Play Player Yards
O15 1 10 Shotgun 3-wide 4-3 even Run N/A Inside zone Glasgow 3
Jet sweep fake, zone read. Nowhere to go as Glasgow(+0.5) and Henry(+0.5) both win blocks to disrupt. Ojemudia(+0.5) avoids what turns out to be an arc block to attack the RB; Bolden(+0.5) scrapes and adjusts to a cutback to meet the RB at the LOS.
O18 2 7 Shotgun 3-wide Nickel even Run N/A QB power Henry -5
Stretch handoff fake with two guys pulling around; Henry(+2) drives through the backside of the play so quickly that the QB has to give ground to avoid him, and that is very bad for this play. Also bad are two Utah airballs on blocks; Ojemudia(+0.5) fights through one; Bolden and Lewis are also there by the grace of Utes.
O13 3 12 Shotgun empty Nickel even Pass 4 Tunnel screen Henry INT
Henry(+4, pressure +1) does't get cut (no one even tries to), reads screen when he gets released, slows up, and plucks the ball from the air like a boss.
Drive Notes: Defensive touchdown, 10-10,
Ln Dn Ds O Form D Form Type Rush Play Player Yards
O25 1 10 Shotgun 4-wide far 4-3 even Run N/A Zone read belly Ryan 3
M blitzes Ross off the slot so Beyer(+0.5) dives inside to essentially block the tackle from getting to Ryan(+0.5), who scrapes and tackles unharassed. RPS +1.
O28 2 7 Shotgun 4-wide 4-3 even Pass 4 Hitch Peppers 8
Peppers(-0.5, cover -1) gives up a first down here and is only able to tackle after a couple YAC.
O36 1 10 Shotgun trips 4-3 even Pass 4 Bubble screen Ross 13
M badly aligned on tempo and plays the bubble poorly. Ross(-1) doesn't get the edge to force it back to Hill(-1), who takes a dodgy angle that prevents him from getting to the outside when that happens. RPS -1.
O49 1 10 Shotgun trips 4-3 even Run N/A Inverted veer keeper Ryan -1
Edge blitz, slant, fold. Ryan(+2) sent on the edge, plays handoff, comes down to TFL. Both Charlton(+1) and Mone(+1) had felt downblocks as they slanted away and ripped through them to finish the job Ryan started. RPS +1.
O48 2 11 Shotgun trips 4-3 over Pass 4 Screen Bolden 3
Bolden(+1) reads and attacks the blocking, drawing two guys to him and forcing the RB wide, where Lewis(+0.5) disengages to get a tackle attempt in; JClark(+0.5) comes down to finish with some authority.
M49 3 8 Shotgun 4-wide 30 slide Pass 5 Hitch Lewis 9
Thomas in now, FWIW. Lewis(-1, cover -1) beat for a ten yard hitch that's thrown on rhythm as M tries to blitz Countess. Pressure -1 as it didn't look to be getting there. Lewis bailed to the fade just as the WR turned around, good route by that WR.
M40 1 10 Shotgun trips Nickel over Run N/A Zone read keeper Ryan 1
Ryan flared over the slot for a 5.5 men in the box look, zone read at it, Beyer crashes on an exchange, Ryan(+1, tackling +1) in a ton of space with a fairly athletic QB and makes the tackle look easy.
M39 2 9 Shotgun 3-wide Nickel even Pass 4 Back shoulder fade Lewis Inc
Glasgow(+0.5, pressure +1) surges up the middle on a stunt so must throw, Lewis(+1, cover +1) is in draped coverage, forcing a very tough back shoulder fade right on the sideline that Utah cannot convert.
M39 3 9 Shotgun 3-wide Okie two Pass N/A Scramble Glasgow 12
Welp. This is just some bad luck here as Glasgow(-1), who's dropped into a flat zone, falls over and manages to come out of both shoes as he does so. He tries to get back up and tackle but has no traction and the QB can hop outside him. Short if he can force it back, probably.
M27 1 10 Shotgun 2-back Nickel even Run N/A Inverted veer give Bolden 9
No edge here and this time they recognize it. This is looking bad as Charlton(-1) does not contain hard or pursue effectively and Bolden(-1) ends up falling on his butt; Thomas(+1, tackling +1) rescues things with a solid, no-break tackle. RPS -1.
M18 2 1 Shotgun 2-back 4-3 even Pass 3 Wheel Ojemudia Inc
M gets lucky here as Utah manages to get a three man rush and a wheel route covered by a DE that's open for a TD and flat dropped. (Cover -2, RPS -2)
M18 3 1 Shotgun 3-wide 4-3 over Run N/A Inside zone Hurst 1
Hurst(+1) slants between two OL and occupies both; Godin(+0.5) does close to the same but not quite as threateningly; Ryan(+1) pops the back at the the LOS for nothing and then the guy manages to bull out the first down with two guys draped on him. Maybe. It's hard to tell. Almost had 'em.
M17 1 10 Shotgun 3-wide 4-3 over Run N/A Inverted veer keeper Ryan -1
Ryan(+2) again sent off the edge and plays both guys and the veer. This time he doesn't need help; Godin(+0.5) had ripped to the hole in case he did.
M18 2 11 Shotgun 3-wide 4-3 over Run N/A Power O Ryan 5
Ryan(-1) gets caught looking in the backfield this time and is easy prey for an OT releasing. Clark(+1) heads inside after getting released free and hits the lead G, jamming things up for a moment; Bolden(-0.5) is force and gets knocked down, but after constricting things. Hurst(+1) beat a guy and ran down the line to harass but can't tackle when he gets to the hole; Clark does.
M13 3 6 Shotgun 4-wide Nickel over press Pass 4 Sack Clark -8
Clark(+3) turns in a play that will be the first thing on his NFL highlight reel by outright hurdling the RB trying to cut him and flinging the QB to the turf. (Pressure +3, organic) Glasgow also coming through in case there's cleanup needed. M had this blanketed, too. (Cover +1)
Drive Notes: FG(37), 10-13, EOH
Ln Dn Ds O Form D Form Type Rush Play Player Yards
O33 1 10 Shotgun 4-wide far 4-3 even Run N/A Inside zone Ryan 24
Just five in the box with the WRs stacked on the numbers to both sides of the field and it bites M. They slant to the IZ, Henry gets penetration upfield, Beyer contains the QB, and Ryan(-1) starts scraping to hit the hole between the two DL and then holds up, unsure. This gives an OL he'd had the angle to beat on the slant time to get connected and with all the room in the box and the outside LBs dealing with screen threats there's no one until the secondary. That's tough though; with Beyer(-2) holding up outside on the QB when Michigan is sending the slot LB to the line on the snap to contain it feels like he missed and assignment and at least has to be able to tackle this RB from the side for 5 yards or so. Thomas(-1, tackling -1) takes a bad angle to the back and gives up a chunk more.
M43 1 10 Shotgun 4-wide 4-3 even Pass 4 Dumpoff Bolden 9
Presnap flare move by the RB. M stunting, Clark(+1) shoots through but Henry(-1) does not get outside sufficiently, so QB can roll out, pressure -1. RB who flared is now wide open for a checkdown. This should be contained but Bolden(-1, tackling -1) overruns the play despite having Ryan right next to him to the outside; this gives up another 4 yards.
M34 2 1 Shotgun trips 4-3 over Run N/A Inside zone Beyer 6
Alignment with TE flanked wide pulls Ross all the way outside the field hash with again; Ryan moves down as M threatens another blitz/slant/fold. This is what they do; LT pops up on Ryan, which confuses Beyer(-2), who has just been given a golden ticket to a TFL if he runs directly at the back but ends up flaring out and creating a gap in the middle of the D. Glasgow(+0.5) does a good job to peel back as the back passes to get an ankle tackle to hold this down after the guy went straight up the heart of the D.
M28 1 10 Shotgun 4-wide 4-3 even Pass 4 Fly Henry Inc
Utah's G lined up over Henry(+1, pressure +1) thinks his tackle is helping him; his tackle is blocking Beyer. I think that guy screwed up a slide protection. Henry takes advantage, tossing the OT away and running up the pocket at the QB, who gets rid of it at Lewis(+0.5, cover +1), who is step for step with his guy and doesn't have to make a play because the ball is inaccurate.
M28 2 10 Shotgun trips 4-3 even Pass 4 Drag Ryan 28
This coverage is borked about four different ways as Utah is also running a wide open wheel route that could be six as well. This looks like a bunch of pattern matching that ends up incoherent Lewis initially starts dropping with the outside WR to the trips, who ends up running a post. When the WR breaks inside Lewis should let him go and pass him to the safety, expecting the wheel; he goes with the post to the point where the WR actually breaks back outside in an attempt to keep running. Ross, meanwhile, covers the #2 WR when he breaks to an out and then follows him deep in futile man coverage when he should probably come off and look for the mesh, and then Thomas is hovering over the solo boundary WR and doesn't follow all out when he breaks underneath; meanwhile Ryan is chasing a guy across what is definitely some sort of matchup zone and that is a no-no. So... Lewis(-1), Ryan(-3), Ross(-1), cover -5, and I don't actually blame Dymonte?
Drive Notes: Touchdown, 10-20, 13 min 3rd Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form D Form Type Rush Play Player Yards
O30 1 10 Shotgun trips 4-3 even? Run N/A Inside zone Godin 5
Mone(+1) nails a G back and has two gaps; Godin(-1) gives ground and then fights inside unwisely to open up a frontside gap. That takes things away from the LBs and offers up a decent gain. Ojemudia and Lewis combine to tackle.
O35 2 5 Shotgun 4-wide Nickel even Pass N/A Scramble Ojemudia 0
Flare screen action. QB doesn't like read one (cover +1) and then things start breaking down with Ojemudia(+0.5) coming around to harass; QB flushes, then reverses field. Charlton had started pursuing as if he was going to run and I don't' really blame him, usually this kind of thing from a slow-ish guy is doom. So pocket broken, again no one available (cover +1) and Charlton and Ryan chase the QB OOB.
O35 3 5 Shotgun 4-wide Nickel even Pass 6 Hitch Lewis Inc
Lewis(+1, cover +1) is there to bother this catch and help the incompletion; Spielman is correct that Anderson let the ball into him and helped the DB out here.
Drive Notes: Punt, 10-20, 7 min 3rd Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form D Form Type Rush Play Player Yards
O38 1 10 Shotgun 4-wide Nickel over Pass 4 Dumpoff Ryan 6
Zone stretch fake buys QB good time (pressure -2), comfortably decides to check down after coverage(+2) is good. Ryan(-1, tackling -1) has this covered but comes at the RB way too hard and overruns it, turning a couple yards into a solid gain.
O44 2 4 Shotgun trips Nickel even Run N/A Inside zone Ryan 0
Utah is blocking the entire DL and there's six in the box so there's a free hitter, which is Ryan right where the RB thinks he may go. RB tries to bounce gap further out; Ryan(+1) shoots and tackles him with Glasgow(+0.5) holding up pretty well against a single block and Bolden(+0.5) also harassing. RPS +1.
O44 3 4 Shotgun trips Nickel over Pass 5 Drag Thomas 21
Stribling in, blitzes off the corner. This time Thomas does chase the WR all the way but since he has to respect the guy going vertical with no help he has no real shot to catch him, and then the mesh is a mess on the other side. This looks like man, mesh is good against man, Thomas(-1, cover -1) could have done better but this getting got. Pressure -2; RPS -2.
M35 1 10 Shotgun 4-wide Nickel even Pass 4 In Bolden 4
Wormley kind of burrows into the QB a bit but pocket otherwise very clean (pressure -2) and coverage(+2) good; dumpoff with quick tackle.
M31 2 6 Shotgun 4-wide far Nickel even Run N/A Inside zone Glasgow 1
With Wilson not much of a threat outside Clark(+0.5) hovers down and collapses on this backside cut; Glasgow(+1) rips to the hole as well and Ryan(+0.5) sticks his face in to stuff it. RPS +1; no zone threat helps make this happen.
M30 3 5 Shotgun empty 3-3-5 nickel Pass 5 Throwaway Clark Inc
Clark(+2, pressure +3, 2 blitz/1 organic) sets up outside, then flies inside of a G for instant pressure up the middle that causes a prayer throw kind of at a WR but not really. Somewhat of a Utah pressure bust. RPS +1.
Drive Notes: FG(47), 10-23, 14 min 4th Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form D Form Type Rush Play Player Yards
M47 1 10 Shotgun 3-wide Nickel even Pass 4 Flea flicker Lewis Inc
Pressure not actually that bad considering, with Mone(+0.5) forcing a throw; Lewis(+2, cover +2) over the top of this and even though it's hung up against a taller WR he gets a solid PBU.
M47 2 10 Shotgun trips Nickel over Run N/A Inverted veer keeper Mone 10
Mone(-1) gets handled easily by a single block; M unsure about who's got what with Clark splitting the difference and Bolden(-1) initially flying to the edge and then coming back; Bolden(tackling -1) then sees a tackle attempt at six yards run through.
M37 1 10 Shotgun 3-wide Nickel even Pass 5 Drag Ryan 16 (Pen -15)
Another wide open mesh. Ryan(-2, cover -1) is considerably off on the catch after chucking a horizontal route (why) and then misses a tackle(-1) attempt. M gets lucky as penalty brings it back.
O48 1 25 Shotgun 3-wide Nickel over Run N/A Power O Clark -2
Henry(+1) shoves back a G with enough force to get the pulling G to trip; Glasgow(+1) gets into and under another OL to squeeze the hole; Bolden(+0.5) and Clark(+0.5) converge.
O46 2 26 Shotgun 4-wide Nickel even Pass 4 Hitch Stribling 7
Okay. Stribling +0.5, cover +1.`
M47 3 19 Shotgun 4-wide 30 slide Pass N/A Scramble Beyer 13
Beyer(+1, pressure +1) loops around on a stunt and flushes the QB, he takes off. M trying to prevent a conversion so they're a lot deeper than normal and this is good yardage. In this situation I think you have to play tighter because difference between 13 and 16 is very large. RPS -1.
Drive Notes: FG(50), 26-10, 11 min 4th Q. Charting ends.
Ln Dn Ds O Form D Form Type Rush Play Player Yards
O32 1 10 Shotgun trips Nickel even Run N/A Inverted veer keeper Clark -1
M appearing to scrape again, at least sort of, with Bolden headed to the corner and Clark not hitting it way upfield ;Clark(+1) comes down to initiate a tackle for minimal gain with Glasgow(+1) coming through a double to prevent YAC. RPS +1.
O33 2 11 Shotgun trips Nickel even Pass 4 Tunnel screen Ryan 3
Ryan(+2) does an excellent job, heading outside at an angle that convinces an OL to dive at his feet and then redirecting to tackle(+1) after a meh gain.
O30 3 8 Shotgun 4-wide far 3-3-5 nickel Run N/A Inside zone N/A 6
A variety of give up and punt. This is give up and give our awesome FG kicker a shot at putting the game away from reasonable range.
Drive Notes: Missed FG(43), 26-10, 6 min 4th Q. Utes' final drive is up 16 with 4 minutes left and not charted as it is just running clock.

This is late.

Yes, but not nine months late!

Okay, point. This bit was rather good.

It was. Now, Utah's offense isn't spectacular—they finished last year 73rd in YPP—and their 50-point bombings to open the season likely say more about the opponents than any surge from the Ute offense.

Even so, drives before it was over:

  • 6 three and outs, one ending in a long FG attempt because of a M INT
  • A defensive TD
  • 79-yard field goal drive that was basically that one screen
  • 54-yard FG drive
  • 67-yard TD drive
  • 32-yard FG drive
  • 14-yard FG drive

They made one big mistake and then they had three separate incidents where whatever pattern matching scheme they were using was falling apart on mesh routes; once they got burned on a run where they ended up with five in the box. Everything else was snuffed or the kind of dink stuff you give up so you can defend actual offense.

A lot of Utah's passing offense was the nothing hitch for five yards. One of a half-dozen examples:

I usually go "eh, push" on an immediate tackle for five yards because getting more aggressive than that is asking for trouble and it's really hard to go down the field in five-yard throwing increments. When it's third and four I do want Michigan to be tough on anything near the sticks.

Hooray.

Any time you give up about 10 points worth of field position over the course of a game you expect to win.

Sometimes you don't.

chart

okay

Defensive Line
Player + - T Notes
Clark 8.5   8.5 Hurdles small running backs in single bound.
Henry 8.5 3 5.5 Blown out once, otherwise not handled one on one.
Glasgow 6 1 5 Summon the vicars and shine the silver.
Beyer 7 4 3 Think he got confused on two plays that broke for gains.
Ojemudia 1   1  
Wormley       DNP
Pipkins       DNP
Charlton 1.5 1 0.5  
Godin 1 1 0  
Hurst 2 - 2 Couple of good sheds.
Mone 2.5 1 1.5 Seemingly #2 NT now?
Strobel - - - DNP
TOTAL 38 11 27 Won this as much as they won the Miami game minus some pressure issues.
Linebacker
Player + - T Notes
Bolden 3.5 5 -1.5 Got knocked down a lot. Still okay.
Ryan 14.5 8 6.5 Paging Jonas Mouton
Morgan       DNP
Ross 2.5 2 0.5 One nice edge play.
Gedeon       DNP
McCray       DNP
RJS       DNP
TOTAL 20.5 15 5.5 Ryan was up and down.
Secondary
Player + - T Notes
Countess 1.5 2 -0.5 Was insulated from Anderson.
Taylor       DNP
Lewis 10 2 8 Kept testing him deep on routes he had destroyed.
Stribling 0.5   0.5 Few snaps late. Peppers dinged again?
Peppers 0.5 1 -0.5 Off on a couple hitches.
Hollowell       DNP
Wilson       DNP
J. Clark 0.5 3 -2.5 Bad pursuit on screen.
Thomas 1 2 -1 Missed a couple tackles, TD not on him.
Hill 0.5 1 -0.5 Left before halftime again.
TOTAL 14.5 11 3.5 Lewis making a move.
Metrics
Pressure 16 8 8 9 organic, 5 blitz, 2 stunt. Still good, but a dropoff from last week's +24
Coverage 19 12 7 Mesh routes almost all of the cover minuses.
Tackling 4 5 -1 Some issues from Bolden, Thomas.
RPS 8 9 -1 Got burned on the screen.

M straight up dominated the Utes OL with their DL, allowing Michigan to spend almost all of the game with six or even five in the box against a rushing O that uses their QB. That is extremely impressive, and allowed Michigan to cut off the WR screen game and effectively cover deep for the most part.

What happened on the screen?

Michigan got RPSed, for one, with a bunch of guys screaming at the QB and nobody peeling back. That is likely a missed assignment for someone who's supposed to check the back, but who I don't know. If I had to guess I'd say Glasgow, but major grain of salt there. I attributed the points there to RPS.

Then Jeremy Clark and Blake Countess both took very bad pursuit angles. A safety going upfield of a block on a run that's at the sideline is just… well, it isn't good.

The RPS (and possible busted assignment) got Utah 20 yards; Countess and Clark going parallel to the LOS on a textbook example of that pursuit drill you see everybody run in practice is the other 47. Both of them need to avoid that blocker by going around downfield and then try to mitigate damage already done.

And the repeated mesh whatevers?

The touchdown felt like a pretty massive breakdown in pattern matching. Not only did Utah have a drag route open for 28 yards, but they also had a wide open wheel route down the sideline:

When I look at these things I am trying to figure out how to make this coverage make sense, which is difficult. Bear with me; here's how I think this is supposed to work:

  • This is quarter-quarter-half coverage. Craig Ross asked Mattison about what he was running and this was the answer, which clears up a lot of things I thought last week.
  • Thomas has a deep half with just the one WR to his side of the field. Lewis and Clark have quarters to the field.
  • Lewis should pass the WR off to  Clark when he shows post route and prepare for a wheel.
  • Ross should break off his coverage on the out way before he does and he should definitely not take it vertical, instead recovering to find an underneath threat.
  • Ryan shouldn't be dragging out of his zone at all and should in fact be looking for the mesh route as soon as the #3 WR breaks inside. 

If these things happen Michigan covers everything at least okay and if they give up the drag route it's not for a touchdown. The one guy I don't blame at all on the play it's Thomas, who doesn't have anyone in his zone and starts moving to the other zones to clean up. A guy with a deep half is not responsible for a drag route to the other side of the field.

Lewis was terrific.

Yes. He showed his speed on the screen and against a guy who had a bunch of yards playing in the Pac-12 a year ago. He put the clamps on Dres Anderson here:

When they tested him again he was running Anderson's route for him:

He did get beat for a first down thanks to his eagerness to get over the top of a fade that Anderson sold nicely; that was the only flaw on the day.

Mailbag reprise: where did Pipkins go?

Man I know we're complaining about everything but this is not a place in which the coaching staff's decisions look anything other than logical. Glasgow turned in another very solid game. He rarely gets sealed, he takes on doubles and runs through them, he seems to understand where he's got to be a lot. And because he's a nose tackle none of that shows up in a box score. The inverted veer is pretty tough to stop and Michigan hammered it most of the day, with contributions from everybody. Here's Glasgow burrowing through a double to constrict space:

That's only a half point in the system, as constricting space usually is, but it's an important part of the play since it sends the QB further outside than his blocks would like him to be and gives Ryan an opportunity to make a stick in the hole.

Here Utah motion gets Michigan down to five in the box and Utah still gets a blah gain because Henry and Glasgow both win blocks:

Also Beyer. If you're going to have five guys in the box you better win multiple DL blocks and Michigan did that for the most part.

Henry had an equally impactful game; here he surges up the backside of a power play to ruin Utah's angles and set up a TFL.

And even though Glasgow ends up with no part in the play watch him feel the block, start to rip away from it, delay as he figures out where the ball is, and run down the line to provide support if the D needs it. The guy does not stay blocked. Whatever you think about Hoke, give him this: guy can coach up a DT. Hurst got in and had a few nice snaps. Hell, one of Ryan's play-both-guys-on-a-mesh events saw both Mone and Charlton discard their  guys to provide ultimately unnecessary assistance.

I mean, take out sacks and Utah ran for 3.3 YPC in this game. Last year they were at 5 even with sacks included. Michigan held ND to under 60 rushing yards. Whatever is happening at defensive tackle is working.

Jake Ryan back?

Ryan had a bunch of tackles and not one but two instances where he played both guys on a mesh point, and he does feel a lot more comfortable as an MLB as the season goes along. He is getting significant help from the DL winning those one on one blocks, but on that first Glasgow clip above you can see him run through contact instead of trying to avoid it like he often did at SAM. When provided a play that should put the ball in spot X, he showed up in spot X. Here a slot blitz from Ross is paired with a slant to the play by Michigan, so the ball should pop up behind Beyer, and when it does Ryan is there:

That's not hard, except insofar as all linebacking is hard; it is a thing where you need to understand the playcall and feel where the ball is likely to go, something that didn't seem to be the case in the opener.

That tendency is not gone. Ryan seemed to drag way out of position on two of the three mesh routes. Michigan was playing zone hypothetically suited to defending those but Ryan wanted a chuck so bad that he ran after one guy and opened it up for the other twice.

There were also a couple instances when Ryan sat still because he didn't understand what he was seeing. Here he makes this block really easy:

And I thought he had the right idea on a similar IZ play that ended up on the backside but didn't trust his read enough:

With the line slanting hard playside he should know where to go as soon as the center releases without hitting anyone, because now Willie Henry is going to be ripping up into the frontside. At this point he's got the information he needs:

image

If he hits it hard this is a tackle at the line; he slows it up and it turns into a big gain to kickoff Utah's touchdown drive. (I also think with a slot guy coming in off the edge and a QB who's meh in the athleticism department that Beyer might need to be more aggressive crashing down on the back.) It's not just not getting to the line, either: he gets caught between blowing past the OL and hitting him hard and ends up getting hit, sealed, and moved, making the cut to the secondary an easy one for the back.

It is getting better. I've seen a lot worse instincts from Michigan linebackers who have been playing ILB for years.

And you're on board with Bolden now?

I'm giving the offseason hype train an 8/10 so far. He is much more decisive and this has led to a large reduction in the plays where he gets hit instead of vice versa. Even when he doesn't make the play he's kind of making a play, like this dangerous seeming screen he raided:

That shot upfield draws the attention of two blockers and forces the receiver to Lewis, so when Clark comes up he's unblocked and attacking a guy with a CB wrapped around his ankle. Again, nothing in the box score, but play made.

He scored negative in this one as he fell down a few times and had some tackling issues, but overall I think he's made good progress.

I told you Frank Clark was going to be fine.

Heyyyyyy. I told you.

Heroes?

The DL won all day. The good bits of Jake Ryan were real good. Jourdan Lewis had a breakout day.

Maybe not so heroic?

The bad bits of Jake Ryan were bad. Jeremy Clark had that boggling pursuit angle, which was just one bad play but it was 40 yards worth of bad play on a day where Utah got fewer than 300.

What does it mean for Minnesota and beyond?

The DL is ready to manball it up. This will be an interesting matchup against a very solid, veteran interior line that has a potential All Big Ten player in G Zac Epping. Michigan has given every indication they are up to the task so far.

Jourdan Lewis locked down a starting spot, Taylor and Peppers or no. Best secondary performance of the year, hands down, and one that promises more down the road.

Ryan is making progress, but is still prone to breakdowns. Especially in coverage. He remains at his best when asked to reprise his edge terror role, and Michigan is smartly asking him to do that about as frequently as possible without becoming predictable. Those tackles on mesh points are excellent stuff.

I want Jarrod Wilson back please. I don't think Dymonte was a big issue but with M going with a lot of single high safety looks I am much more comfortable with Wilson in that spot than Clark.

This may be the defense we all hoped for. Get the secondary healthy and this is a unit that has answered a couple of the questions asked in preseason by getting excellent play out of Glasgow and pretty good play from the LBs. Get Peppers or Taylor right and put 'em opposite Lewis and it feels hard to move the ball on these guys.

Comments

reshp1

September 24th, 2014 at 4:46 PM ^

He did look awfully good against Miami though, sample size and competition caveats, of course. He only got targeted for a couple of those hitches this game and seemed more or less fine. He seems to excel at being nose to nose with WRs and given the straight forward task of covering 1 vs 1. He's still picking up the finer points of zone coverage and play diagnosis on the other hand.

My guess is with everyone healthy, Lewis and Taylor man the outside and Peppers plays a much more active blitzing type of nickel. Countess is likely odd man out except to spell guys and on dime packages. I will say, our safety depth with the injuries is starting to get a little alarming so moving someone to safety isn't the worst idea in the world. It's easier said than done though, safety might be one of the hardest positions to learn on defense.

alum96

September 24th, 2014 at 4:34 PM ^

Overall thoughts:

  • Welcome to the throne of Kovacs, Mr. Glasgow
  • Et tu, Pipkins?
  • We have our starting NTs for the 2015 at least.  Maybe Mone surpasses Glasgow in 2016. Maybe not.  Either way should be good.
  • Does any backup DE want to make an impactful play to let us know not to fear 2015?
  • Lewis - if things progress down this shiny path we have our 2 starting CBs for the next 2 years

Bada bing:

  • This is a good (not elite) defense that can hold most teams (ex Indiana/MSU) to 14-23 pts. 

Bada boom:

  • Unfortunately with our offense 14-23 pts given up means a lot of losses.
  • Drink

WestWolverine

September 24th, 2014 at 4:49 PM ^

I want to be furious and say everybody needs to go but my mind keeps saying the D got torched against Notre Dame and it seemingly has been fixed and this could potentially happen with the offense. I'm torn. I really do think next year is the year for championships but i'm guessing turmoil won't let us get there.

I'll be in the corner crying for a bit.

alum96

September 24th, 2014 at 5:38 PM ^

Well the UFR analysis of the ND defense was on any given play 7-9 players played well.  But the 2-3 players who did not play well (a CB on almost every play) torpedo'd the defense.  And you are still figuring out a role for Lewis at that point who had 2 PIs v ND.  And JMFR was figuring out a new position.  So v Utah you fixed at least 1 CB role (Lewis) and took a hit at safeties and JMFR found himself (more) but overall things are ok, it's a 1-3 player issue on defense.  And Wilson and Taylor/Peppers could be 2 of those players.  The other "young" safety who at this point is a turnstile would be your last remaining issue if everyone is healthy and Taylor/Peppers can grab that other CB role.

Offense?  It's way more than 1-3 player issue, especially if 1 of those players are the QB.  There is no equivalent player to fix on defense as there is on offense.   Right now it's probably 4/5ths of the OL and a QB to fix on offense.  I think Green is sufficient if not great behind a decent OL (which we don't have) and we do need secondary WRs to show up next to Funchess.  But how much of that is on the WRs and how much on that is the QB not finding them is impossible to tell.  Right now #1 WR (if healthy) #1 RB and #1 TE (if healthy) are the only givens on the offense.   And 2 of those guys are not 100% as best as we can tell.  Butt was MIA last game - but again that could be Devin giving him the stink eye all game.

We have way more givens on the defense.

bluebyyou

September 24th, 2014 at 6:18 PM ^

Now don't shoot the messenger.

Marcus Ray was on the Michigan Insider this morning.  He said the O-line over the last two years was the worst O-line, possibly, in 30 years of Michigan football.  He said there is no QB, including Tom Brady, who could feel comfortable behind that front wall.  He also felt that Green goes down way to easy when confronted by a defensive back and doesn't know what it means to punish a tackler.

http://www.wtka.com/page.php?page_id=87

Marcus Ray Segment 2......Marcus is usually positive.  Not this time with respect to the offense, and he says it won't make a damned bit of difference who the QB is unless the line problems are fixed.

westwardwolverine

September 24th, 2014 at 5:30 PM ^

Notre Dame scored 28 points on seven drives by driving 50+ yards four different times. They had around 260 yards of offense to go up 28-0. From there, they pretty much stopped playing for the rest of the game. 

We got torched by Notre Dame. I'm holding off on calling the defense great till we see them face a real team and actually make a stop when it counts, which they really didn't do in this game. 

gbdub

September 24th, 2014 at 7:42 PM ^

Huh? They gave up 1 touchdown and had 6 3 and outs and a defensive touchdown. Otherwise they gave up 3 moderate length FG drives. How is that not "Making a stop when it counts"? None of the turnovers turned into TDs. The 67 yard screen did not turn into a TD. Most of the field goals were not in any way gimmes.

This was a good performance. You have a point that ND stopped trying because they didn't have to, but in taht game the D was still fantastic against the run - it was the slants that killed us. This is a good D, and it's much improved from last year. They're coaching them up on this side of the ball.

westwardwolverine

September 24th, 2014 at 7:51 PM ^

Last year when we needed a stop (Iowa, Nebraska, MSU, Penn State) in games that weren't offensive outliers (Indiana, OSU), we couldn't get one and it was justified by the offense's general terribleness.

"Well, they tired out because of all the three and outs."

Against Utah, they got driven on both sides of the half for points in a 10-10 game, once by the back-up QB. Again, to me a great defense doesn't let that happen. Those were crucial possessions and they came up short. Its not that they aren't good or really good or whatever you want to say, but they aren't the defense a lot of people had thought they'd be, namely the kind that would be able to offset the offense's struggles. And that's disappointing because they have a lot of talent and experience and it should be that kind of year. 

Yeah the run defense looks really good so far, but overall they don't seem any better (and have looked probably a little worse)  than the 2011/2012 defenses. 

gbdub

September 24th, 2014 at 9:04 PM ^

Caring about which drive it happened is feelings ball. Football says they gave up under 300 yards and 12 net points to a dangerous power 5 conference offense, despite having terrible field position on multiple occasions, not to mention a depleted secondary.
To imply they share blame for the loss because they gave up the line td at the wrong time is a bit silly.
Are they great? Maybe not. But they did more than their share in this game.

trustBlue

September 24th, 2014 at 11:26 PM ^

When I see comments like this, I can only wonder if they are being made by someone actually watched the game or just looked up the box score. The defense gave up only three drives of greater than 50+ yards the entire game and only two scoring drives of over 35 yards. The other scoring drives were 32 yards (FG) and 14 yards (FG). (http://espn.go.com/ncf/drivechart?gameId=400547946).  On top of that, the defense also scored a TD.  

I'm sorry, but I'll take that defense production every day of the week.  There are about 10 points that you can legimately hang on the defense (1 blown play that resulted in a FG, and 1 TD drive).  The rest of the points were a direct result of the ineptitude of the offense.  

westwardwolverine

September 25th, 2014 at 8:07 AM ^

I'd go the other way with it. There are people claiming we played well on defense against Notre Dame because we held them to under 300 yards of offense. The Utah game is similar: Look at the stats! We were great! If you exclude these 5 plays we were perfect! And while its more valid, that's not how it felt as it happened. 

Against Utah, with the score tied 10-10, I watched (yes, I watched) Utah's back-up QB drive 54 yards before the half to shut down all the momentum caused by Willie Henry's touchdown. Then immediately after the half, their starter returns and on his first drive Utah goes up 20-10. 

To me a great defense stops those drives. Its fine if you disagree, just an opinion. 

aplatypus

September 24th, 2014 at 4:58 PM ^

but ideally I'd like to keep Mattison and Roy Manning, probably Nussmeier as well just because he did good things at Bama and I don't want to blame him for this year's disasters a ton. Hell I'd even like to keep Hoke as something other than head coach. I think he's great for recruiting, program atmosphere and lots of stuff not happening on a football field. 

Yeoman

September 24th, 2014 at 5:26 PM ^

"turmoil" doesn't need to force a bad decision.

Could we somehow please do what's best for the program, instead of feeling our hands are tied by "the turmoil" or "loyalty" or whatever? And maybe not decide in advance what has to happen if the record is X or Y, instead of actually looking at what's going on and deciding what's the best plan going forward?

Dizzo

September 24th, 2014 at 4:51 PM ^

Peppers got a +2 for essentially doing his job in press coverage on a play last week. Lewis only gets a +1 this week when he sprints from the opposite side of the field, past the WRs, and saves a TD after essentially running 70 yards to catch a free running RB?  That tells me how down you are on Michigan right now, man.  

J.Madrox

September 24th, 2014 at 5:38 PM ^

Lewis singlehandly saved a TD with nothing but speed and flat out hussle. That is the kind of play you put up in film study to show your team how you wan't them to be playing all game long. Big kudos to Lewis for not quitting on that play, but good work as usual Brian, you have my sympathies for having to do the one for the offense.

Blue Since B.C.

September 24th, 2014 at 4:53 PM ^

I really like the way the D is playing, especially the line.  I hope the whole defense takes it upon themselves to pick up the offense in a big way, this Big Ten season.  I'm talking turnovers...lots of them.  I think our D play could swing us in the positive by 2 - 3 games this season.  The difference between a middling conference season again, or a 5 - 3 or 6 - 2 type of year.

They have the potential.  They just need to get more turnovers (or TD's) in the red zone, to help our offense get there in the first place.

Bigku22

September 24th, 2014 at 4:55 PM ^

When healthy, this is a B1G championship level defense. I would stack this unit up against anybody in the Big Ten. It's a shame poor coaching, offense, and special teams are going to render this irrelevant.  

Whoever takes over next year is walking into a TON of talent, and a really good unit. Absolutely one of the best run defenses in the country. This defense is going to set the next coaching staff up for success in year one (ala Denard and the offense when Hoke arrived). 

gwkrlghl

September 24th, 2014 at 4:56 PM ^

The defense is as good as many of us thought they could be and the offense is just disastrously bad. It still feels strange as the offense feels like they can move the ball at times and then completely forget how to do so right after they move the sticks.

Mr. Yost

September 24th, 2014 at 8:45 PM ^

If Jim or John is the next coach, the other one ain't coming...interesting that both are sort of under fire in the NFL and both would be saviors at MIchigan.

Nuss ain't staying if anyone but Hoke is coach and Hoke ain't staying if he's fired.

You could be right on Wheatley though.

Why not do the rest of the staff though? IMO, that's out biggest problem now...we've got 4 solid assistants, 1 okay assistant and 3 awful assistants.

Let's say we win out and Hoke remains coach...which is just as likely as your dream.

HC: Brady Hoke
OC: Doug Nussmeier
DC: Greg Mattison

QB: Doug Nussmeier
RB: Tyrone Wheatley or Mike Hart
WR/TE: Jeff Hecklinski
OL/TE: Andy Moeller
OGA (and help with TEs): Kevin Koger

DL: Greg Mattison
LB: Roy Manning
CB: Curt Mallory
S: Marcus Ray
DGA (and help with DL): Ryan Van Bergen or Will Heininger

ST (and help with LBs): Mike Mallory

Space Coyote

September 24th, 2014 at 5:35 PM ^

The quarter-quarter-half that is described by Brian is a MOD variant. You'll see MSU auto-check into it against TEs they don't think are treats, they send the CB blitz off the edge and essentially it'll look like Cover 4 with the SS and OLB playing the TE just as they would the #2 (so essentially the CB blitz covers #1, he'll peel off if a RB leaks his way).

On the TD, everyone is running a MEG version essentially, right down to the leverage aspects. Both LBs are lined up inside rather than heads up or outside, indicating that they don't have inside help (in the past, when Mattison has run Cover4/6 MOD, he's aligned the SAM heads up on #2), indicating that it's not a zone. Bolden clearly has RB, Ryan #3, and Ross #2.

Now, here's where it breaks down. Wilson should be fighting over top of Lewis here to catch the wheel (note Lewis has inside leverage, he's not relying on inside help, though he might get it if this is just an out by the #2). The rule for the CB and SAM is first to declare. When the #1 declares vertical, that is the CB's man. When #2 runs a quick out, that is Ross's man. When he wheels up, that's something that Wilson needs to see (and doesn't, he takes his eyes off #2 immediately when he breaks out) and so doesn't fight over the top. But Lewis would never fight to get inside in MOD because Wilson would be there to help.

With Thomas the issue is a bit more fuzzy. This being MEG, he is in man coverage, that is why he is immediately coming down on the snap (he would have a half if there was no CB blitz, but the CB blitz forces him to cover the man). Often times, a CB/NB and the LB will switch on the mesh route, typically a safety and a LB do not, because the safety can come down over the top of the mesh and jump the route rather than get caught in the wash. Where it becomes difficult to place blame is the fact that Thomas is working down to CB level as a CB (not like a safety would come down over a slot) because he's in man coverage, so is he then treated as a CB or a safety?

I tend to believe this is on Thomas because everyone else on the play is locked. This is Thomas taking a bad angle down and getting too shallow and getting caught up IMO. I could be wrong, but everyone else is locked once the routes are defined and Thomas is working down (there is no way for the LBs and him to communicate this because Ryan doesn't see Thomas until they are running into each other).

Hopefully this makes sense. It's a quarter-quarter-half that plays like Cover 4 Meg minus the CB that is blitzing. Because it's a WR and not a TE, Thomas's "half" is the #1 receiver to his side.

Brick

September 24th, 2014 at 8:17 PM ^

You are right.  Brian has this one wrong.  Everyone was in man with Wilson to help out Lewis and Ross.  Dymonte was supposed to have the reciever that scored.  Ryan should not have a neg as he had his guy blanketed correctly.  Bolden was man on the guy in the backfield.  Thomas was supposed to man up on the reciever that scored when that corner blitzed.  Ross and Lewis are in man right from the snap.  I'd probably have Thomas -3 and Wilson -1 for locking onto helping Lewis and not seeing the crossing route come open.  Ross could get a -1 for getting burned deep too.

Space Coyote

September 25th, 2014 at 8:42 AM ^

Was the answer that it was quarter-quarter-half or did he describe the responsibilities? There are two main types of Cover 4/6, as described, MOD and MEG.

You could very well be right, that may have been the call and the responsibilities, maybe it was a MOD call, I'd be interested to hear from Mattison why half his defense ran it like MEG. If that was the call then about 4 people completely screwed up their assignments on the back end, from their leverage to their eyes. But from alignment to where the players take their eyes and how they run the play, it looks like at least the LBs and Lewis is playing MEG, so then that's really bad communication on the defensive side of the ball and we have much bigger issues than one or two guys not being on the same page.

For instance, if it's MOD then Ross should be straight up, Ryan and Bolden should be walling off the inside to the crossing routes. Thomas should race down at the snap, he has no zone down there, he should be help over the top for Ryan and Bolden in case those receivers run a double move or the RB runs a wheel route. Lewis should never get inside of his receiver, he has inside and over the top help, and has to play hang leverage because he's then responsible to come off his man and play anything going vertical down the sideline, like the wheel route.  If this is MOD, the only player that played this coverage correctly is Wilson.