Upon Further Review 2014: Offense vs Miami Comment Count

Brian

FORMATION NOTES: Hello tiny TEs. Michigan used a lot of formations where they would bring a wide receiver tight to the line to act as a blocker. Here's Chesson in what I called "pistol biggish," because it's only big-ish.

adjust-1

For its part, Miami ran an under front whenever presented with seven blockers for the opposition, and about 90% of the time brought a safety down late or just lined him up in the box.

Miami 4-4-under 2

This press look was not common.

M ace

Miami would roll that safety down before this snap, FWIW.

Michigan used a lot more under center stuff in this game. Under center stuff was approximately 55% of the offense after being maybe 20% against ND, and there were a lot of tight ends. Only about 40% of Michigan's snaps had 3 WRs, again way down from ND.

SUBSTITUTION NOTES: Line static: Cole/Magnuson/Miller/Glasgow/Braden. I saw Kalis in for the last drive, and I thought I saw him earlier in the game live but either I missed it in the film review or my mind was playing tricks on me. 61/67 are not easy to distinguish. Burzynski got in at the tail end at left guard.

Gardner QB; RB mostly Green, with less Smith and Hayes relegated to third down duties and some late stuff. Johnson did not appear. Mo Hurst(!) got a goal line FB snap. Showy, but a dollar says Kerridge is more effective. At TE, Butt got a little bit more time but it was still mostly Williams and Hill, with Heitzman again appearing sporadically.

Without Funchess, Darboh and Chesson were the main guys at WR, with Norfleet marginalized with a ton of 2TE sets. Damario Jones got about as much playing time than Canteen, making the first catch of the game.

[After THE JUMP: yards, eventually, and yet more infinite RB discussion.]

Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Type Play Player Yards
50 1 0 Ace 1 2 2 4-4 under Run Inside zone Green 2
Miami brings a S down into the box late for an eight man front but this should get blocked anyway. Cole(-1) moves to double a NT shaded inside of Mags next to him, leaving that guy for Williams as he runs down the line. Williams(-1) has a tough job to prevent this guy from ripping down the line but if he at least bumps him then maybe Green has an opportunity to try a cutback that won't work because this is under center and they don't respect Gardner on the boot. Or cut him. People cut this guy all the time. RPS -1.  Mags(+0.5) did get good push so it looks like there is a crease here; Glasgow(+0.5) did well on his DT; Miller was kind of eh.
O48 2 8 Pistol trips TE 1 1 3 4-3 over Run Zone stretch Green 4
Again Michigan blows Miami off the ball; Miami overplays playside; when Green cuts back the backside end tackles. Mags(+1) blows his guy off the ball. Cole(-1) has a handfight that ends in the backfield a bit; Green(-0.5) could bounce here since he's got a blocker for the CB but with this block so deep he's hesitant. He does an in-out-in hesitation before deciding to take it vertical, which allows the DE to catch up faster. Braden(+0.5) and Glasgow(+0.5) blow the backside DT off the ball to provide the space.
O44 3 4 Shotgun trips bunch 1 1 3 4-3 even Pass Out Jones 11
Damario Jones(?!) your first pass target, making a solid catch well outside his body on a throw I kind of want to MA but also suspect this might be a route/timing thing with an unfamiliar WR. (CA, 2, protection 2/2)
O33 1 10 Ace twin TE 1 2 2 4-4 under Pass Waggle comeback Chesson 16
Part of the run focus is M's ability to get these unpressured waggles. Hill whacks the end, Mags pulls around, and Gardner has all kinds of space and time to find Chesson for a big chunk. (CA, 3, protection 1/1, RPS +1) I already miss NBC replays so bad. BTN gives us a shot of this about one second before Chesson makes the catch. We never actually see a route.
O17 1 10 Pistol Biggish 1 2 2 4-4 under Run Inside zone Green 7
Biggish==WR as third TE-type substance. Same alignment from the Miami DL, M gets the assignment right this time with Cole(+1) ripping the DE inside with help from Williams(+0.5), who pops out onto an overaggressive LB. Kerridge(+1) gets the edge LB stood up and moves him out for a crease; Chesson(+1) seals out a DB, and Green(+0.5) reads the hole and cuts to it. He's one on one with a safety and instead of trying to go around him he tries to run him over and gets flipped into the air painfully. Meh. I mean, this guy doesn't even try to use his arms here, this was an eminently breakable tackle.
O10 2 3 Ace 1 2 2 4-3 under N/A Fumbled snap N/A -2
Blerp. Miller -1, Gardner -1.
O12 3 5 Shotgun 4-wide 1 1 3 4-3 over Pass Out Hill Inc
Everyone looks disturbingly covered save Norfleet, who isn't an option with both LBs just hanging out in front of him in short zones; Hill is the target and the pass is broken up. Gardner is not pressured and has a lane right up the middle plus the possibility of Norfleet coming through behind Hill, so BR despite the fact there wasn't an obviously open guy. (BR, 0, protection 2/2, Hill route -)
Drive Notes: FG(29), 3-0, 11 min 1st Q
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Type Play Player Yards
O37 1 10 I-Form twins 2 1 2 4-3 over Pass Scramble Gardner 6
Gardner spooks unnecessarily as Braden's guy flies upfield well past him and Braden follows; he's got it under control if Gardner just steps to the vacated space calmly. Instead he bugs out, and since there's a ton of vacated space he can get some yards thanks to a nice stiffarm(+0.5). Still would like better pocket presence. (SCR, N/A, protection 2/2)
O31 2 4 Ace 1 2 2 4-3 under Run Zone stretch Green 8
Second time in this game Cole(+1) has improved on his play on a second opportunity to execute. This is a close relative to the first stretch; here Cole gets around more definitively, anchors, and starts getting motion by the time Green(+0.5) gets to him and bursts through the gap provided. Williams(+0.5) got a good kick but this OLB guy is 190 because he's Lo Wood so keep that in context. Mags(+0.5) had some trouble with a hard-filling LB but did slow him down enough for Green to get there, and then your super aggressive LB play is a problem. Green gets to a safety after the sticks, safety hauls him down.
O23 1 10 Shotgun trips 2 1 2 Nickel under Pass Out Chesson 5
M shows I-form and then spreads it out, with Butt alone to the boundary and Kerridge your flanker. M throws five yard out, complete, hooray. (CA, 3, protection 1/1)
O18 2 5 Shotgun deep trips 2 1 2 Nickel over Run Inside zone Green 2
Same deal with the formation except Green behind Gardner suggesting IZ. It's IZ. Mags(+2) takes on a DT and pancakes him when he tries to rip back inside, so there's a huge frontside gap with no one in it; Green(-2) instead decides to cut back into the unblocked guy on the backside. Gardner probably could have kept this, as the DE was really shuffled down, but no idea if this is really a read. Miller(+0.5) got a good second level block and Cole a meh kick; backside stuff was a push.
O16 3 3 Shotgun trips 1 1 3 Okie zero press Pass Slant Darboh 16
Starts as a bunch and then Norfleeet flares wide; Miami in pure cover 0. Darboh(+) beats the press easily, pushing the DB on contact and getting an inside release with good separation, Gardner fires it on the numbers, he stretches for the TD. This is an excellent hot read as Miami sent six for five blockers and was in Gardner's face as fast as that implies. (DO, 3, protection 2/2, Darboh route +)
Drive Notes: Touchdown, 10-0, 7 min 1st Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Type Play Player Yards
M49 1 10 I-Form 2 1 2 4-3 under Run Iso Smith 2
Miami again rolls an eighth guy down. Iso gets this number of yards usually and does now. Miller(+0.5) gets a solid second level block; Glasgow(-2) gets stood up and ripped through in an ugly fashion. LB does a good job to meet Kerridge at the LOS and while that block is a stalemate at worst his quick hit gives Smith some meh options, especially with Mags(-0.5) getting shoved back to restrict space. Braden(+1) absolutely blew the edge guy out, but M couldn't use it.
O49 2 8 Ace 3-wide 1 1 3 4-3 even Run Zone stretch Smith -1
Williams(-1) offers a sad whisper of help to Braden(-2), who is trying to deal with a guy going straight upfield lined up outside of him and needs Williams to hit him inside so he can step around and seal. He can still do better with this block but the combo is just not here; if it is it is highly likely that this aggressive upfield move by the DE sees him sealed inside and Smith gets a nice gain. Instead, TFL. Smith(-1) shares blame as well as you cannot cut outside this block when the guy is so obviously set up outside; Glasgow(+1) had pancaked his guy and Cole(+0.5) got a good cut block on the backside so a hard vertical cut is at least not a TFL.
50 3 9 Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 30 slide Pass Improv Jones Inc
Braden(-2) blows a blitz pickup and Miami gets a guy in free. Gardner scrables out and almost finds Jones but he's hit on the throw and Jones can only get a fingertip on it. (PR, 0, protection 0/2)
Drive Notes: Punt, 10-0, 3 min 1st Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Type Play Player Yards
M46 1 10 Shotgun 2TE twins 1 2 2 4-3 under Run Counter power Smith 2
This is the first run where the eight man box is a real problem, as they run a counter and things are fine and dandy and then the extra guy is right where they want to run. Williams(+1) clubs the backside end in, so considerable space. Braden(-1) falls as he tries to get to the second level, leaving a linebacker free, and Magnuson's pull is just okay. Smith would be able to set up a block here but he's got guys to both sides of it with the Braden mishap and eight guys so he's picking which guy to get nailed by. RPS -1, relevant free hitter.
M48 2 8 Shotgun 2-back 2 0 3 3-3-5 nickel Run Counter Smith 10
Bo Dever in, FWIW. This counter sees six in the box as M spreads it out a bit and they get results despite probably worse blocking. Cole(-2) has a very bad whiff on the edge LB type guy; Kerridge(+1) does well to see that and abort his plan to prevent a TFL. Glasgow(+2) pulls, gets there, and turns his guy in with authority. And that's it since Miami aligned with pass D in mind; Smith(+0.5) zips through, runs through a diving ankle tackle from an out of position guy, and then the safety nails him. RPS +1.
O42 1 10 Ace twins twin TE 1 2 2 4-4 even Pass PA Fly Darboh Inc
Out of the Borges playbook with Unconvincing PA Fake followed by deep pass. This one has three guys in the route, not two. Cole(-1) doesn't do well on the edge here; Gardner can step up and throw but I wonder if this upset his rhythm a bit. His mechanics throwing this thing are not good, possibly as a result, possibly just because he reverts when moving around. Darboh has decent separation; is not given a chance. (IN, 0, protection 1/2)
O42 2 10 Ace 1 2 2 4-3 under Run Zone stretch Smith -1
This is mostly RPS as Miami sends a LB at ludicrous speed towards the line just before the snap; he blasts Glasgow back into the lane that would otherwise be there; Glasgow(+0.5) actually did well just to prevent that guy from shooting the gap; Miller(+1) had turned in the NT; Braden(-1) let his guy upfield understandably but then lost him, falling. Smith(-1) also erred as he was seriously trying to take this outside Braden for a while when it was clear this was never happening. RPS -2.
O43 3 11 Shotgun trips TE 1 1 3 3-3-5 nickel Pass PA rollout comeback Darboh 22
Not really sure what the rollout does against not much pass rush but maybe they're fearing blitz. Darboh releases outside, CB does not maintain physical contact with him, tries to be Jourdan Lewis, and then keeps running downfield after Darboh stops. Easy pitch and catch after. (CA, 3, protection 1/1). Darboh(-3) fumbles afterwards. Bler. Guy has it high and tight, just one of those things.
Drive Notes: Fumble, 10-0, 14 min 2nd Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Type Play Player Yards
M21 1 10 Ace Biggish 1 2 2 6-2 under Run Zone stretch Green 1
More guys in the box is just more guys to screw up for Michigan right now; it stresses them, not the D. I think Green's decisions are bad on this play but it's not going to make a difference. Braden(-1) gets pushed two yards back and there's not even a kick action from Braden; he's getting two-gapped. Darboh(-1) our mini-TE, seems to blow an assignment and doesn't block much of anyone so when Green tries to pop it outside there's an unblocked CB. Hill(-1) lost his guy, contributing. On the backside Mags(-1) and Cole(-1) make the same error M did against Smith in the ND game, not comboing through an OL and letting that guy run free at the backside, so there's no cutback. Green should still cut back. Tackle has not given you bounce; cut up. I'm not minusing him because same result probably and maybe I'm wrong about the way M wants him to run this.
M22 2 9 Shotgun trips 1 1 3 Nickel even Pass Slant Chesson INT
While this is tipped it's still not a great idea since Miami sends a safety into the chest of the WR and it's doubtful Chesson catches this anyway. That's because Kerridge at flanker is scouted and Miami has no qualms about him going over the top. Or even bothering to cover him. (BA, 0, protection 1/1, RPS -1)
Drive Notes: Interception, 10-0, 11 min 2nd Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Type Play Player Yards
M34 1 10 Ace twins twin TE 1 2 2 4-3 over Pass PA dig Darboh 26
Excellent pocket as no one really rushes except Williams's guy; Williams just pushes him inside and Gardner moves around it, throwing a dart to Darboh across the middle for a nice gain. (CA, 3, protection 2/2)
O40 1 10 I-Form 2 1 2 4-3 under Pass PA sack N/A -6
Braden(-2) smoked one on one versus this good MAC DE. Glasgow(-1) and Miller(-1) miscommunicate; Gardner gets buried by both those guys. (PR, N/A, protection 0/4)
O46 2 16 Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 Nickel over Run Power O Green 26
Perfect example of how this works easily when an O doesn't expect it: first pulled G of the game for the rushing offense and nobody home. Glasgow(+1) takes a stunting guy and obliterates him, Miller(+1) turns in the other DT. Braden(+0.5) gets a free release at one LB; Mags(+0.5) gets to the hole; Williams(+0.5) gets an okay kick block and Green(+0.5) hits the hole that's obvious, but he hits it fast. Safety seems to be responding to a different run play like the stretch, so Green blazes by him for a big gain.
O20 1 10 Shotgun deep 2TE 1 2 2 4-3 under Run Inside zone Green 11
Mashing blocks at the POA as Glasgow(+1) and Braden(+1) double and blow out the backside DT, with Glasgow getting to a LB. Miller(+1) shoots his guy way down the line as Mags(+1) picks up an unwise attempt to shoot a gap and Gardner holds the backside end out with the zone possibility. Green(+0.5) has a pretty easy job of it but does make cut to find the secondary with impressive burst.
O9 1 G Shotgun deep 2TE twins 1 2 2 4-4 under Run Inside zone Green 8
Mags(+0.5) gives the backside DT a shoulder and Cole(+1) drives him downfield after; Mags tries to pop off but the LB is gone upfield outside of the gap so he doesn't even have anyone to hit. Miller(+0.5) gets decent movement on the other guy; other LB also attacks wrong gap, Green(+0.5) goes hard and gets some YAC.
O1 2 G Goal line 2 3 0 Goal line Run Iso Green 1
Mo Hurst(!) your FB. I could have been your FB and this is still a touchdown as Glasgow(+1) and Braden(+1) club their guys and Green walks in untouched.
Drive Notes: Touchdown, 17-10, 4 min 2nd Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Type Play Player Yards
M47 1 10 Shotgun deep 2TE twins 1 2 2 4-4 under Run Zone read keeper Gardner 5
Looks like Miami has an exchange on with the backside end shooting down and a linebacker over the top but that LB plays it eh; Cole(+0.5) gets to him despite his unexpected path and this likely hampers him; Gardner(+0.5) darts outside of him and goes down to an ankle tackle.
O48 2 5 Shotgun deep 2TE 1 2 2 4-4 under Run Inside zone Green 3
Bad cut by Green as he takes it to the unblocked backside end when he has a crease frontside. Miller(+0.5) and Glasgow(+0.5) momentarily double one DT before a charging LB forces Glasgow to abort and take him; he does. Mags(+0.5) gets a shoulder into the other DT and Cole(+0.5) helps drive that guy a couple yards downfield; if Green(-1) hits it between the DTs he may or may not get tackled by guys coming off blocks; by going to the backside he definitely is getting an unblocked guy.
O45 3 2 Ace Biggish 1 1 3 4-4 even Run Zone stretch Green 4
M has both Darboh and Chesson as tiny TEs. Okay? M runs a stretch and Miami seems to be blitzing in a way that takes one DT way upfield. This allows him to dodge Glasgow's(-0.5) attempted cut but takes him upfield so that hs route does not get to Green in time to prevent him from lurching forward for YAC. Again, though, I think Green made an iffy cut here, as he's supposed to press it outside until he gets to the tackle and then make a decision; Magnuson (+1) successfully turned in his DT, and Miller(+1) cut a linebacker to the ground. so there is a clear crease where the play is designed to go. He did use his considerable power to drag guys forward and got the first down... I wouldn't be surprised if someone yelled at him after this play anyway. Hell, he probably has a bounce to the perimeter as well.
O41 1 10 Shotgun deep 2TE 1 2 2 4-3 under Pass PA comeback Canteen Inc
Well wide of Canteen and you wonder if the route here is what Gardner expects, but no replay and no evidence so (IN, 0, protection 2/2)
O41 2 10 Shotgun twin TE 1 1 3 Nickel even Run Power O Hayes 3
Norfleet your tiny TE. He actually gets a good kick(+0.5); Magnuson(-2) got caught up on Williams's block as he drove his guy way inside. Williams's(+1) guy is right on the LOS and way away from the play; it is in fact a good block and Mags should not even think about stopping for it; he does. Hayes(+0.5) ground out some YAC despite being presented with an unblocked guy in the hole thanks to the biff.
O38 3 7 Shotgun 4-wide tight 1 1 3 3-3-5 nickel Pass Rollout out Canteen 6
Standard third and medium rollout out; this one is completed at standard distance but it's seven yards instead of four to go so Canteen ends up short. Gardner could have done better with this and allowed Canteen to turn up for a first down. (MA, 3, protection 1/1)
O32 4 1 I-Form Big 2 2 1 4-4 under Penalty Delay N/A -5
A TOWER OF BLOOOOOOD
Drive Notes: Punt, 17-10, EOH
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR DForm Type Play Player Yards
M14 1 10 Shotgun deep 3-wide 1 1 3 4-3 over Run Counter Green 6
Late move of a safety into the box is relevant this time as M has no blocker for him and he flows to tackle. But before that M leaves the backside end as if it's an IZ, pulling Glasgow around and having Butt act as the lead blocker. Mags(+1) and Cole(+1) blow a DT in, with Cole extending to the second level. Glasgow(+0.5) and Butt(+0.5) get enough of their guys on the pulls and Green(+0.5) hits the hole, running through a tackle for some YAC. RPS minus? Uh... yeah, I guess. RPS -1.
M20 2 4 Shotgun deep trips 1 1 3 4-3 over Run Inside zone Green 2
Glasgow(+1) first hits the DT and then does a good job to recognize, block, and seal a LB coming hard. This leaves the DT with Braden, and Braden can't do much since the DT decides to fall over (probably) in the hopes of making a pile because that's the best option he's got. It works. Backside end comes down. I want Michigan to punish this DE shuffle on this action somehow... but not in this game. I guess this is just a two yard run I'm not finding minuses for.
M22 3 2 Ace Biggish 1 1 3 4-5 even Pass Waggle flat Darboh 5
Advantage of tiny TEs is that you get this in the flat. Darboh has the first down easy on the corner, decides to stop, almost gets tackled at the LOS, and eventually squeezes out the first down. Yeesh. (CA, 3, protection N/A, RPS +1)
M27 1 10 Ace 3-wide 1 1 3 4-3 even Pass PA Dig Chesson Inc
Cole(-2) gets blazed by at DT, worryingly. That guy nails Gardner as he throws; throw still on target. It's to a blanketed Chesson and he's getting bumped, probably not PI but he is thrown off. (CA, 1, protection 0/2)
M27 2 10 Shotgun deep 2TE 1 2 2 4-4 under Run Zone read keeper Gardner 8
No contain at all on this; Gardner(+1) pulls. Butt(+1) gets a god kickout on the OLB; Cole's guy rolls off of him but it's hard for Cole since this may be a handoff; that guy starts a tackle when the safety comes in and whacks Gardner good. Marcus Ray is hyped about this tackle. It's a good tackle.
M35 3 2 I-Form Big 2 2 1 4-4 under Run Iso Green 0
Miami stuffs this up quite effectively; Miller(-1) is late to a hard charging linebacker and on an iso play where the DT you're hitting is a gap away from the play it seems like you should go to the second level immediately. IZ this is right; iso probably not. He fills the gap Green wants and that is all she wrote. Possible Green should be trying to plow outside here as Kerridge got a block that rocked the LB back and he may be able to run up his back for the first down. Glasgow(-0.5) and Mags(-0.5) had difficulty as well getting any movement.
Drive Notes: Punt, 17-10, 10 min 3rd Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Type Play Player Yards
M32 1 10 Ace trips TE 1 1 3 4-4 under Run End around Norfleet 21
Norfleet comes at the snap, pretty token interior handoff fake, and then Norfleet gets it with Glasgow(+2) pulling around. Glasgow meets the force guy and takes him 15 yards downfield before he disconnects; Mags(+1) gets a second level block that sees his guy fall over; Norfleet just jets to the edge and gets 20 yards without having to do much other than run. Williams(+0.5) just had to push a guy already headed inside but he did stay connected to do that. RPS +2.
O47 1 10 Shotgun trips TE 1 1 3 Nickel even Pass Flanker screen Darboh 0
M runs a pin and pull zone with Gardner seeming aborting into the screen. Chesson(-2) gets pwned on his block and Darboh eats the corner at the LOS. Pin and pull looked good, sadly. (CA,3 , screen)
O47 2 10 Shotgun deep 2TE 1 2 2 4-4 under Run Zone read keeper Gardner 3
This should work fantastic with the scrape on and Darboh(-1) cracking down on the scrape LB, but once that guy attacks upfield Darboh changes his mind about getting that block and goes downfield. This is not quite a violation of Never Turn upfield because Darboh will be turning 90 degrees precisely to wall off this LB. If he does that Gardner has a big vertical crease with Butt kicking a DB: since he doesn't Butt's block has no angle and Gardner gets chase OOB after a few. RPS +1.
O44 3 7 Shotgun 4-wide 1 2 2 30 slide Pass Improv Darboh Inc
Insert complaint about Williams and Butt as flankers on third and seven. First and ten, go for it. Third and seven WR instead of guy with one career catch. Anyway, Gardner brings this pressure on himself as he's got Darboh open for a rhythm throw that gets the first down; he doesn't like it and pauses, which allows a corner blitz to get home. Meanwhile Williams is not looked at or considered for a route here that would be an obvious option if said player had more than one catch in his career. Gardner miraculously escapes the sack, scrambles out, and manages to finally find Darboh for first down yardage but he's getting hit as he throws and the throw is low and hard to dig out. All that and you could have just thrown the out. (BR, 1, protection 2/3, team -1)
Drive Notes: Punt, 17-10, 6 min 3rd Q
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Type Play Player Yards
M37 1 10 Ace twin TE twins 1 2 2 4-4 over Pass PA TE Dig Butt 22
PA, vague edge pressure that Gardner steps up through and then he throws a weird no-step floater at Butt. This is a good decision, as Butt has a good two yards of separation and is much taller than the guy covering him, but the pass is frighteningly short and almost intercepted before Butt reacts to save it by ripping it away from the DB. (IN, 1, protection 2/2)
O41 1 10 Shotgun trips TE 1 1 3 4-3 over Run Pin and pull Smith 12
They run the P&P that the ill-fated flanker screen had going on the previous drive and it's still good. Would like to see Williams(+0.5) step around more to cut this end off but he gets the job done; Mags(+0.5) comes around to get a kickout and Miller(+1) cuts the relevant LB with authority. Smith(+0.5) runs through the fallen limbs of this dude, maintaining balance and picking up a nice chunk.
O29 1 10 Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 4-3 over Pass Screen to wheel Butt 29
I'm so happy. Michigan goes back to the flanker screen that got blowed up, with Butt impacting the corner like he's blocking; everyone bites; Butt breaks over the top for the first RPS +3 play in a long time around these parts. (CA, 3, protection 2/2, RPS +3)
Drive Notes: Touchdown, 24-10, 4 min 3rd Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Type Play Player Yards
M32 1 10 Ace 3-wide 1 1 3 3-3-5 nickel Run Counter zone Green 7
Okay this is definitely a subtle IZ counter as Gardner hands off to the backside of this play and Green hits the gap that Braden(+1) has paved by blowing a guy thinking IZ inside; Williams(+0.5) does okay on a linebacker and Green goes right downfield at a somewhat rolled up safety. Glasgow(+1) got a very nice release and second level seal.
M39 2 3 Ace 1 2 2 4-4 under Run Zone stretch Green 8
This is what I was talking about earlier when I thought Green had not done what his coaches want him to on a spread. On this one he drives to the tackle and then decides, and this looks great. Miller(+0.5) only does an okay job on the NT but does delay him so that he can't impact the play; Glasgow(+1) gets to the second level, hits, and then extends a block on a LB. Braden(+0.5) does okay with his block; Williams(+0.5) buries 190 pound OLB, and Green(+1) goes hard until he decides the bounce isn't there and then goes upfield inside the Braden block.
M47 1 10 I-Form 2 1 2 4-4 under Run Iso? Green 17
Kerridge motions from wing TE to FB. This is very weird. Green and Gardner seem on the same page, with Green taking a handoff to the left side of the line on what looks like an iso, but Kerridge(-2) runs in the backside gap. I have to assume that's a missed assignment from him because the other two guys are thinking the same thing. Green(+3) is presented with the prospect of an unblocked guy in the hole for little and cuts behind Glasgow(+0.5), who didn't get much depth but got enough to provide the lane; he then runs through a rolled-up safety tackle at the line to burst for a big chunk of yards that are all his. MAKE PLAYS! Braden(+0.5) and Williams(+1) both got good motion on their blocks to provide this room.
O36 1 10 Ace twins 1 2 2 4-3 even Run Zone stretch Green 1
Miller(-2) ends up giving way too much ground to a guy going straight vertical; he can't push or anchor effectively and ends up yards in the backfield. Green has to cut back and gets tackled immediately as Williams(-1) couldn't do anything wit the backside end; this should be a cut block.
O35 2 9 Ace 3-wide 1 1 3 4-3 even Pass Waggle TE flat Butt 8
Butt blocks to prevent immediate waggle death and then releases; guy is really thinking waggle so he cuts off the outside; Gardner has an awkward but effective jump pass to Butt, who's just released, for a nice YAC event. (CA, 3, protection 1/1)
O26 3 1 Ace goal line 1 3 1 Goal line Run Inside zone Green 1
Darboh as little TE; Kerridge also in. Heitzman(-2) lets a guy right through, forcing Green(+2) to hop around that, but that exposes him to an unblocked overhang guy; Green spins through that tackle for a first down.
O25 1 10 Ace twin TE 1 1 3 4-4 over Run Counter zone? Green 3
Norfleet tiny TE. This feels like another subtle counter as Green takes a step left and then comes across Gardner to take the handoff moving right. But I have no idea how they're supposed to block this LB if he doesn't bite hard and with the overhanging eighth guy not sure if this gets anything anyway. LB does not bite; attacks Green(+0.5) hard; Green swims by him and cuts upfield for an okay gain. RPS -1.
O22 2 7 Ace 1 2 2 4-4 under Pass Waggle scramble Gardner 10
Gardner(+1) gets the edge and just takes it, as an over-aggressive Miami has ceded it. (SCR, N/A, protection N/A, RPS +1)
O12 1 10 Pistol Biggish 1 2 2 4-4 under Run Counter zone Green 12
Canteen your psuedoTE this time. M runs the same likely belly thing picture paged; this time there is no force and Green bounces it out. Kerridge(+1) gets depth on his edge block; Canteen(+0.5) doesn't have to do much but does find and wall off a guy; Green(+1) bounces and outruns for a touchdown.
Drive Notes: Touchdown, 31-10, 10 min 4th Q. I'll do the last drive since the starting OL is in for the most part. Kalis does replace Glasgow.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Type Play Player Yards
M19 1 10 Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 4-3 over Run Counter power Smith 16
Mags(+0.5) turns in a DT heading away from him; Miller(+1) gets to the second level and gets an extended block, Kalis(+1)pulls and kicks; Butt(+1) gets a good hit and Smith(+2) shows good patience to wait for the last two blocks to hit and split, then runs through a tackle at the sticks, carrying guys for six extra yards.
M35 1 10 Ace twin TE 1 1 3 4-4 under Run Counter zone Smith 1
Another designed cutback run with a counter step and then the handoff to what would be the backside of a zone run. Michigan seems to block this well enough but they don't account for the eighth guy in the box so when Smith cuts to the backside he's just there to tackle. Feels like someone forgot to pull? But probably not since this is something they ran earlier? I'm not RPSing on this drive FWIW, but I would if this was relevant time.
M36 2 9 Shotgun deep 2TE twins 1 2 2 4-4 under Run Zone read keeper Morris 27
Scrape exchange from Miami, Morris pulls. Cole(+1) fires inside at first then tries to redirect and get some sort of block on the exchanging guy, and actually kind of does; hopefully in the future we see a setup where Michigan is ready for this sort of exchange and the OL is doing this from the start. Morris(+1) runs through a tackle that's breakable thanks to Cole's reaction and shows surprising speed to get a big gain.
O37 1 10 I-Form twins 2 1 2 4-4 under Run Lead zone Smith 3
This is a weird cut from Smith(-0.5) on another play where the back takes an outside step and then comes vertical; paired with Houma shooting up a backside gap this is a weird looking play. I imagine Houma is supposed to meet the linebacker further away from the LOS and Smith hits it behind? Super aggressive Miami LB makes that a bad idea, Smith continues to a gap further out which is rather wide but full of unblocked eighth guy. Not a fan of what feels like a ponderous cut that may cost him a couple yards. Smith also could have aborted and gone to a big frontside gap as Kalis(+1) and Braden(+1) moved their guys, creating a big, big gap. Assuming this is not what he's looking for, so no minus.
O34 2 10 Ace 1 2 2 4-4 under Pass Waggle TE dig Heitzman Inc
Heitzman flat drops a ball that's 20+ yards with YAC as Miami leaves him wide open and doesn't contain Morris. (CA, 3, protection N/A)
O34 3 10 Shotgun 2TE 1 1 3 4-3 over Run Power O Hayes 11
Norfleet tiny TE., and he actually pounds the OLB in(+1) to provide a nice edge. Braden(-1) can't get to the second level, leaving a linebacker to flow; Cole(+0.5) cuts him off, but this leaves the overhang guy against Hayes(+1); Hayes just outruns him to the corner.
O23 1 10 Ace twins 1 2 2 4-4 under Pass Waggle corner Chesson Inc
This ball is not quite as excellent as it looked live, as Chesson has to slow up for it a bit and this allows the defensive back to rake at his arms. That's a bit of a nit for a 30-yard rope, and Chesson needs to get his Manningham on here by slowing up way more so that he puts the DB on his back and then can extend his arms to bring it in. Here he just tries to catch it in his body, thus issues. (CA, 2, protection N/A)
O23 2 10 Ace 1 2 2 4-4 under Run Zone stretch Hayes 12 (Pen -8)
Miller(+2) steps around the NT for a seal that should assure a big gap up the middle if the play goes there; it does not as Cole(+1) also gets around the DE and starts driving him to the LOS, so a bounce is there if Heitzman(-2) can get a block; he loses his LB and then holds him; Hayes darts outside for a nice gain that gets wiped out.
O31 2 18 Shotgun 4-wide 1 1 3 Nickel even Run Draw Hayes 1
Burzynski's(-2) in. I think this might be his first play. He sets up to sell pass and the guy doesn't go upfield, then guy blows him into the backfield and tackles.
O30 3 17 Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 Nickel even Run Counter Hayes 7
This gets outside easily with Miami playing soft; want Hayes to cut back inside some blocks here instead of running directly to a corner who's unblocked.
Drive Notes: FG(40), 34-10, EOG.

WHY WE NO POINTS

Oh, some bad luck and some continued teaching moment whatnot.

Bad luck?!?!

Look man when a ball gets deflected right to a DB because someone on the line gets a fingertip to it, that's bad luck. And the punt thing was something Michigan has to fix but not on the offense; the Darboh fumble shot down a drive that had just cracked field goal range. I think wide receivers should not fumble, of course, but the fact of it is that sometimes they do not take my advice and there's no way to predict it or plan for it or really even coach it—Darboh was high and tight until the ball came out a fraction of a second before he was down.

So I'm looking on a down to down basis and it looks… fine.

Fine?

Are you mad that I think it's fine and not horrible or mad that I think it's fine and not better after running for like a million yards at a good clip?

Both?

At least you're consistent?

I guess?

So to address both outlying complaints: Michigan mashed Miami off the ball, a necessary but not sufficient condition to approach the rest of the season with anything other than gallows humor. Check the Miami DTs on this stretch play, which is not always a situation where you need to blow guys downfield:

But that's three yards. It's three yards because

  1. Cole doesn't gain any ground and makes Green's decision non-obvious.
  2. Green doesn't make either decision quickly, cutting in-out-in.
  3. Michigan doesn't do much of anything to hold the backside end, who is able to shuffle-pursue effectively.

1 and 2 are recurring issues. The line is better but still experiences minor breakdowns more often than high-octane OLs, and the tailbacks were better but still felt like they weren't acting instinctively. #3 is an RPS thing that they seemed to be aware of and had a play for (about which more later).

So if you're frustrated about the early bit of the game where Michigan kept eking out two and three yard gains, you should know that Miami didn't change their approach one iota—it was eight man boxes all day—and the minor problems that hampered the early runs were solved, whereupon Michigan did what you would expect them to do. Except, of course, we don't expect them to do much of anything right now so even progress against Miami is progress.

Por ejemplo, Michigan came back to the stretch to the left on the next drive; Cole's block was more emphatically sealing and a yard further downfield, so Green's read was clearer and decisively taken:

Those two plays are a summary for the game itself. At first I was like ugh, but then I was like… okay. I mean, Miami guys were resurrecting techniques from the days when defensive linemen looked like mean pencils. On one play the only thing preventing a big gain was a defensive tackle figuring his best bet was to fall over and make a pile and turning out to be right.

If that's the best they've got, okay. The line is doing some very nice IZ things. This Green rumble is textbook:

Those combo blocks are how it's done. M gets movement on the nose and Magnuson pulls off to intercept a charging linebacker; they get a different feel on the other double and end up scooping him to get to the other LB. Consistent? No. I'd be surprised if you showed me one play from last year's line that looked that good, against anyone.

So this is why I am relatively happy. The line seems a lot better, and I think that'll show over the course of the year. HERE IS A CHART

dammit, no fair

You are the second-slowest bolded alter-ego in the country at getting the chart interruption off.

Offensive Line
Player + - Total Notes
Cole 8 5 3 Okay; also had one very bad pass pro.
Magnuson 10.5 4 6.5 IZ comboing looked good.
Miller 10.5 4 6.5 Twins, all on the same wavelength and such.
Glasgow 13.5 3 10.5 Unless part of this is Kalis and I missed it.
Braden 8 4 4 Some very big kicks, less leaning.
Kalis 2   2 Last drive only.
Williams 6.5 3 3.5 Context: against Lo Wood, basically a CB.
Kerridge 3 2.5 0.5 Minus may actually just be what he's supposed to do on play that looked really odd.
Hill   1 -1  
Butt 2.5   2.5 Working his way back.
TOTAL 64.5 26.5 71%! Burz –2, Heitzman –4, not included in total since neither figures to play save garbage time down the road.
Backs
Player + - T Notes
Gardner 3 1 2 Would like to see him a bit more involved against real teams.
Morris 1 - 1 Surprisingly fast.
Green 10 3.5 6.5 Made some plays. Made some less serious errors.
Smith 3 2.5 0.5 Going E/W too much.
Hayes 1.5   1.5  
Johnson       DNP
Shallman - - - DNP (offense)
Kerridge N/A N/A N/A moved to TE for now
Houma       DNC
TOTAL 18.5 7 11.5 Infinite RB discussion below.
Receiver
Player + - T Notes
Funchess - - - DNP
Chesson 1 2 -1 Tiny TE issues.
Darboh   5 -5 Fumble, some bad edge blocks.
Norfleet 1.5 - 1.5 Our tiniest TE
Canteen 0.5 - - DNP
Dever - - - DNC
Jones - - - DNC
TOTAL 3 7 -4 Mostly just a fumble.
Metrics
Player + - T Notes
Protection 22 10 69% Braden –4, Cole –3, Glasgow –1, Miller –1, Team -1
RPS 10 7 3

Hooray for Buttdown.

So this is a ground clubbing, but that protection number is not great against a bad team. There was one 0/4 sack in there, but it was really an 0/4 sack, featuring a totally whiff by Braden and a second guy coming through a double thanks to bad communication.

Tailback evaluate-o-rama time.

Obvious progress, and lingering frustration. Here is a digression about the thing I know best about running back patterns since I've seen piles of it under DeBord and RR: the stretch.

I thought we were an inside zone team.

We are but we run enough stretch to keep people honest. And this is about RB decision matrices.

Oh you fancy.

I AM FANCY

Anyway.

I'm not sure if Michigan teaches the stretch the same way Rodriguez did but it seems likely that they do. Rodriguez told his backs to follow this pattern. First you run hard to the playside tackle and then you try to cut as close to him or your next option as possible. Your matrix, ordered by priority:

  1. BOUNCE. If the tackle gets his guy sealed inside head to the corner.
  2. BEND. Check the gap inside the tackle if the defense has forced it back.
  3. BANG. Cut behind the next OL on the line (usually the center) and get what you can. (Green's cut on the embed above is a Bang.)

Since a stretch is a stretch I'm guessing that Michigan's pretty much the same. "Bend" is your goal as an offense. Bounce only happens in cases of defensive incompetence; Bang is bringing a lot of backside players into play. Bend runs are those runs where the center steps around a guy lined up a gap to the playside of him and you get a gashing run. Bend runs are Molk runs.

In that context it seems like Green is not always executing per spec even when he's getting yards. The bang embedded above was possibly a bounce situation and his hesitation cost Michigan a yard or two—every false step taken is one step closer for the backside end.

This was not isolated. Michigan had an odd tendency to run stretch on short yardage, and here Green cuts up for the first down:

Hooray for moving the chains; I wonder if Green got a talking to about his approach here. Ideally he runs harder to the tackle, checks to see whether the gap between Cole and Miller is viable, and if not cut right off the back of Miller when his guy fills the gap. Here he picks a side before the guy blocking Miller does. And it works out, so hooray and all that.

Green pulled it wider in the fourth quarter, FWIW:

That's a bend in which the tackle has not sealed the guy inside (which should never happen unless the defense goes derp) and Miller has gotten the DT delayed enough, if not exactly walled off.

The point is: going that wide expands the range of blocks that are good enough to get the job done when you do cut (hard and decisively) upfield. Miller loses the guy in the most recent embed but by the time that happens Green's already gone; in the first one a tackle gets initiated by a player who flew upfield of Glasgow, something that should mean you have just decided not to participate in this stretch play. I may not be picking at this if I hadn't just seen the tailbacks with the equivalent of five airballs in the last game, but I dang well did.

But this is wishy-washy stuff about how plays that worked were not working per some imaginary spec that Michigan may or may not use.

Okay:

[Side note: check Darboh forming up for a quick pass like the one Funchess grabbed in week one. Presnap abort check, that is.]

That's bad yo. Green ends up with a massive frontside gap and cuts to the unblocked guy for zilch. Seems like he sees that tackle rip inside and thinks OH NO NOT AGAIN and runs away from it because he's still assuming this is doom; Magnuson calmly pancakes the dude and now there's an inviting hole. This happened more than once.

Neither of these plays is as frustrating as the ones from Notre Dame because there are some yards on the backside and the holes aren't as gaping. I do want Green to favor blasting playside because anyone contacting him is going to be harassed by an OL and pile-lurching is in the cards. This was relevant on the third and short that Miami stuffed up. A LB hit Kerridge hard in the hole, Kerridge stood him up, and Braden ripped his guy to the outside to provide a crack; Green cuts back into a pile of anger.

Sometimes he needs to just run the damn play instead of cutting to the backside. Driving your legs forward with Kerridge pushing is a better bet than heading back to the writhing pile of limbs behind. I didn't minus him for this because it was by no means obvious, but it's another example of Green preferring to cut away from the intended path of the play.

De'Veon Smith was coming off a game where he was less obviously frustrating than Green but in this one the roles were reversed, to the point where I think Smith not taking the right cuts saw Michigan bench him until the fourth quarter. Thus the highly imbalanced carry distribution. The early TFL no doubt set teeth on edge, again on a stretch:

Braden set you a bad table, but once that guy is that far in the backfield you have to cut behind him and eat whatever's waiting for you. In this case the answer is a bunch of dudes slashed to the ground and some yards instead of no yards; sometimes it's going to be no yards. This goes double for a guy like Smith, who is not fast but does run through tackles like a mofo.

Smith's last carry of the first half was similar to the above, another stretch where he tried to go outside when presented with difficulty. This one was mostly RPS with a Miami LB blitzing his way into the running lane but Michigan actually gets this blocked for the most part and if Smith doesn't try to run outside of blocks that have defenders in those gaps, a MAKE PLAYS play is there.

Tough, yes, and if his next carry wasn't almost 30 minutes of game time later I wouldn't read anything into it but it dang well was so I am.

All of this is of course moving too fast for Smith to make actual decisions about this; it's why people talk about feel and instincts when discussing this stuff. Instincts can be learned—they're what happens when you're executing things so familiar that they no longer rise to the level of conscious thought. Reps reps reps reps. Hopefully things start feeling more natural as the season goes along.

But MAKE PLAYS?

Yes, there was some MAKE PLAYS in this game. The main one came on a weird run that featured a fullback, a rarity. That fullback hit a backside gap on a play that looked like it was going to the other side.

Unblocked guy showed up in the frontside gap, Green cut backside hard and ran through a tackle. I don't know what that is. There is no backside end left alone; the opponent doesn't have to account for the QB. The free guy is just waiting for Green, and then Green beats him. Wave your tiny flags, people.

BONUS: I'm counting a third down conversion on which he got nailed behind the line and spun out for the first down as a MAKE PLAYS as well.

Was it just me or are there a ton of plays labeled "counter" above?

Not just you. Michigan ran a ton of 'em (nine, almost as many as any particular base play) in two primary flavors. One was your regular pull-this-guy-backside counter. Braden can't get out to the second level on this one:

(Note that this was one of the rare plays on which it seemed like the extra Miami guy in the box had much impact.) Michigan had better success with it on the very next play from a three-wide formation with Miami overloaded to the IZ side.

Michigan is also definitely doing some sort of subtle-ish belly type thing which doesn't have a pull but is definitely headed for the backside of the play on purpose. One of those was mentioned in the Picture Pages;  they went back to it for the Green touchdown that was bounced to the corner:

The line fires out in an inside zone-ish fashion; Michigan hands to the backside of this hypothetical IZ. This was even more apparent when Michigan ran it from under center:

Also on this play: I'm hoping Michigan can find a way to screw with this shuffle technique DEs do these days. I think they tried something like that on a Gardner keeper that didn't quite work out. Watch Darboh start to crack down and then change his mind:

Continuing would be a violation of the hallowed Never Turn Upfield blocking strategy, but in this case I think we need to allow it. Michigan caught a scrape exchange here that may have confused Darboh. If he does get that crack down Gardner has  a lane upfield for a nice gain.

Norfleet block of the century of the week?

What an excellent idea for a thing, bolded alter-ego. Glasgow your winner.

What was with this tiny TE business?

I assume they think Chesson, Norfleet and Darboh are better run blockers than any defensive backs are run defenders and are hoping to seal edges and the like, creating piles that are hard to run around. It was… iffy. I'm a spread zealot so I just see piles of guys who can screw something up when teams go big, and freshman tight ends and wide receivers don't make for confidence.

We'll see.

I've been a bit frustrated by this shuffle-DE action opponents are showing on the zone read that induces handoffs and allows the backside end to pursue hard. Some of these cutbacks are nice gains if the DEs are pursuing upfield to contain, and this may be a way to address that by mucking with who exactly the unblocked guy is. It also creates the potential for plays like one Michigan didn't quite make but looked like they could be tweaked to aim at the DE shuffle. Check Darboh:

He's cracking down on nobody as Miami sends an exchange. If he does pick off the LB, or a shuffling DE, Gardner has a lane he can go upfield in between that and the Butt block. Finding a way to punish the shuffle is recommended, because it seems like everyone does it.

We haven't actually talked about anything other than running.

Right. Right. Gardnerchart:

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%
UConn 2 13(1) 1 5*+ - 1 - 5 5 76%
Minnesota 4+ 7(1) 4 1 - - - 1 2 92%
Penn State 7+ 12(2) - 5+ 2** 3 1 4 4 66%
Indiana 5 18(3) 1 1 3 3 - - 5 78%
Michigan State 1 15(2) 1 5 4* 6 - 4 1 50%
Nebraska - 17(1) 1 4(1) 2* 5 - 6 - 62%
Northwestern 5 21(6) 3 5 6***** 1 2(1) 6 4 65%
Iowa 3 12(5)+ 2(1) 5(1) - 2 2 4 3 68%

Devin Gardner

Opponent DO CA MA IN BR TA BA PR SCR DSR
App State 1 11(4) - 2(1)   1 - 1 1 82%
Notre Dame 3 17(3) 2 1 6(1)** 3 - 2 2 68%
Miami(NTM) 1 9(1) 1 3 2 - 1 2 2 65%

Shane Morris

Opponent DO CA MA IN BR TA BA PR SCR DSR
Central Michigan - 4 - 1 1* 1 - - - N/A
App State 1 2 1   1*          
Miami(NTM)   2                

Gardner was basically fine. The bad reads were mild varieties: he did not throw to Darboh when he seemed open and then after a bunch of running around threw a much tougher ball to him on one particular third down, and he threw at a covered Hill for a PBU when he had time and a running lane on another. Neither was mindblowing.

His interception was tipped, and while the throw was going to be a bad idea either way, to me that's more on the play design than Gardner:

Kerridge is the flanker on second and nine; Miami deploys a robber safety who is headed for Chesson's ribs on the snap. The resulting hospital ball is asking for trouble even if it's not tipped. Meanwhile Kerridge is totally open one receiver over… and a fullback.

I'm fine with this SPLIT OUT ALL THE BLOCKY GUYS as a tactical gambit on standard downs; on second and nine or even more extreme passing downs I say thumbs down. Also I'm hoping that Butt's increasing involvement will put him out at flanker, where he's viable enough to prevent these kind of overplays.

The other dodgy throw was thoroughly so. Gardner found Jake Butt open, moved up into the pocket, and threw a weird jump pass well short of the right place. Things looked grim until Butt rescued it for the rare IN-marked catch. We saw Gardner execute a throw like this to Funchess in the opener and the right throw here is the same kind of looping pass that was, but the reason they mechanics you is to make you consistent. That was not consistent. But I think we're just stuck with that now.

Wide receivers?

Not a ton of note other than Darboh flashing those slant merchant chops when Miami loaded up:

Here's the chart:

Player 0 1 2 3 0 1 2 3
Funchess           3   2/3 14/14
Chesson 1 0/1 0/1 2/2   2 0/1 1/2 6/6
Darboh 1 0/1   5/5   3 1/2   7/7
Norfleet             0/1 0/1 6/6
Canteen 1     1/1   1   1/1 1/1
Butt   1/1   2/2     1/1   2/2
Hill 1         2 0/1 0/1 1/1
Williams                  
Heitzman       0/1         1/2
Jones 1   1/1     1   1/1  
                   
Green                  
Smith                  
Hayes           1      
Johnson                  
Kerridge                 1/1
Houma                  

ROUTES: Darboh +1, Hill –1.

Heitzman turned in Michigan's first flat-out drop of the year. So it's been pretty good so far when it comes to hands.

Heroes?

Interior line. How about THAT. Green.

Maybe not so heroic?

The tackles were a clear step behind the inside guys when the pressures they allowed are factored in. Darboh did fumble.

What does it mean for Utah and the future?

The tailbacks are working on it. Gradual improvement, maybe Green getting some faith that hole is not a mirage, are goals for the next few games.

The tackles showed some holes. They were still positive overall, but here and there they showed some freshman issues. I assume this is going to bite Michigan at some point.

The interior line was coherent and good. Level of competition yes. Progress undeniable.

I don't know what the deal was with all the TEs and under center stuff. It wasn't a gameplan to defeat Miami, in all likelihood. I prefer Norfleet to Hill and Williams at the same time. Butt and Williams is more plausible but still let's just get him the dang ball five times a game.

Darboh does feel Avant-ish. He is not a blazer; he'll have sufficient assets other than that to be a solid #2.

We aren't going to do the same thing over and over and say "stop it" and then say "oh I guess you stopped it." Thumbs up to the frequent counters in different flavors and liberal sprinkling of stretch. Michigan might have to whittle down if they can't run their alternate stuff effectively, but this has the shape of an offense with a thing and then alternatives that burn you if you overplay the thing, which Borges offenses never really did.

Comments

We Do Not Sow

September 18th, 2014 at 3:53 PM ^

"On one play the only thing preventing a big gain was a defensive tackle figuring his best bet was to fall over and make a pile and turning out to be right."

This was the correct move by the DL and was probably taught to him. In my experience it is the "last ditch" effort that a DL is instructed to do when absorbing a double team and being pushed backward. The DL cannot let himself get swept into the LBs, so the best possible outcome when giving ground is to stop, hit the deck, and - ideally without showing the referee - grab the two players blocking you and pull them to the ground. 

The result should be (and in this case is) a big pile where there was supposed to be a hole. If nothing else, as a defender you've taken a 2-for-1 on the blockers and kept the LBs from getting plowed over in one wave.

We Do Not Sow

September 18th, 2014 at 4:03 PM ^

I guess I should have read the whole article before commenting, but that seems too level-headed and reasonable. 

i see what you mean about it not being a true double team block. To me it looks like a combo/scoop to me where Glasgow and Braden both engage him before Glasgow moves to the 2nd level. Maybe i'm wrong, you football more than me.

DaddyToThree

September 18th, 2014 at 4:02 PM ^

Does Green have a moral problem with throwing a hand into the face or the chest of oncoming tacklers?  Every time a safety or a corner gets a shot at him, it lands cleanly on his body.  Make them work for it!

Hugh White

September 18th, 2014 at 4:18 PM ^

"Glasgow meets the force guy and takes him 15 yards downfield before he disconnects."

I disagree: Glasgow does not "disconnect" at the end of this play. Instead, it looks like Glasgow is attempting to hurl the force-guy into the free-safety in order to get Fleet a few more yards.

JeepinBen

September 18th, 2014 at 4:52 PM ^

Michigan has shown progress, but continues to make mistakes. They're going to have trouble if they make mistakes like this against better competition. That said... there still might not be a really good team on the schedule till November. Baby steps... As BiSB noted - this was not Akron.

GoBLUinTX

September 18th, 2014 at 5:18 PM ^

what your protocol would or should be, but Jones broke up what would have been an INT on the last play of Michigan's 3rd possession.  If he doesn't reach out to tip that ball, that easily could have been six going the wrong direction.

ca_prophet

September 18th, 2014 at 5:41 PM ^

I'd say we were progressing about as well as we should have expected. We're already better on both lines than we were and the offense is getting better on a play-by-play basis. That ND scoreboard and Gardner's continuing inconsistency worry me, but there's a lot of football left to play. Utah will be a stiff test for our defense but I think we can overcome it. If I wasn't a fan it would be an interesting game :)

JediLow

September 18th, 2014 at 7:37 PM ^

It's really nice to see some people coming down from the cliff they were on on Saturday. We're seeing progress which is great! (More progress would be even greater)

chewieblue

September 18th, 2014 at 10:51 PM ^

Doing a nice job with what we have.
I'm convinced a lot of what is viewed as a personnel package mystery, is solely intended for getting looks on film. Nuss is creative and dedicated to a system. We could be pretty good on offense before it's all said and done.

ThoseWhoStayUofM

September 19th, 2014 at 3:07 AM ^

The stretch play that Brian was eluding to was a read option, and in no way could green have bounced this because the playside end was standing outside the tackle, unblocked, after Gardner read him and correctly gave the ball away.

"The bang embedded above was possibly a bounce situation and his hesitation cost Michigan a yard or two—every false step taken is one step closer for the backside end."

Ummm... You're wrong.
_________________________________________

 

Here, Glasgow completely wiffs on his block which forces Green to make his decision way too early.  I don't know what happened, but Glasgow just faceplants for apparently no reason.

"Ideally [Green] runs harder to the tackle, checks to see whether the gap between Cole and Miller is viable, and if not cut right off the back of Miller when his guy fills the gap. Here he picks a side before the guy blocking Miller does."

...and for good reason.

_____________________________________

Lastly, I have come to the conclusion that Brian is far too nice in handing out pluses to offensive linemen for simply doing their job on any given play.  If you want the most accurate representation of which offensive linemen are doing well and which aren't, ignore the pluses in general.  Whichever offensive linemen has the most minuses, that is the weakest link, regardless of any positive Brian may attribute to them, which seem to be more or less arbitrary.

EDIT: What's the deal with the point values?  Some times it's a -2.  Other times it's a -1/2.  Is that also more or less arbitrary?  In the future, a chart that shows how many minus and how many pluses, regardless of the value, would probably be a better indicator of who is doing well and who isn't.  Ben Braden was a detriment to this team offensively, and that is completely invisible by looking solely at the UFR chart.

Hannibal.

September 19th, 2014 at 8:46 AM ^

This offense is not materializing as I expected.  The offensive line has been significantly better than I thought it would be, but a lot of other parts are worse.  Going into the season I think that the conventional wisdom was that the team had almost no weaknesses outside of the offensive line, outside of arguably a new starter at safety.  Now, the offensive line looks at least functional, but we have gotten some really poor play out of Gardner and the defense has looked shaky at times.  If you had told me a month ago that this is where the O-line would be, I would have felt a lot better about the prospects for our season than I do now. 

ndhillon

September 22nd, 2014 at 8:43 AM ^

I'm late on this, but it was a comeback route that got the ball to the 46 yard line Also, "Mags(+1) gets a second level block that sees his guy fall over;" I'm pretty sure that was Cole. I'm just pointing these out since it will affect performance scores. Not trying to be a dick. THANK YOU for your hard work

ndhillon

September 22nd, 2014 at 10:08 AM ^

Norfleet tiny TE. This feels like another subtle counter as Green takes a step left and then comes across Gardner to take the handoff moving right. But I have no idea how they're supposed to block this LB if he doesn't bite hard and with the overhanging eighth guy not sure if this gets anything anyway. LB does not bite; attacks Green(+0.5) hard; Green swims by him and cuts upfield for an okay gain. RPS -1.
I thought the counter step froze the b-gap LB and allowed Miller to reach him. The strong side DT absorbed a double that prevents the LB from being touched. And the DE squeezes nicely.