Upon Further Review 2015: Defense vs Utah Comment Count

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FORMATION NOTES: Michigan spent the entire game in nickel save for scattered snaps in a dime package with three safeties (Hill, Thomas, Wilson) on it. Their first drive they came out in an odd front featuring the buck as a standup end:

30 nickel press

Either they weren't happy with the play there or it was just a stunt, because after the first drive Michigan spent most of the rest of the day with an even four-man front:

even

On occasion they'd do this or something similar with a standup end; this pinched formation saw a hard line slant that got Wormley through for one of his impressive penetration plays:

nickel even tight press

And that was about it. Michigan spent the entire game with one very deep safety—generally 15 or more yards off the LOS; sometimes they'd offer a two high look but they always came down with one or the other presnap.

PERSONNEL NOTES: Line was mostly Henry/Glasgow/Wormley/Ojemudia. Matt Godin got the most time of any backup, spotting both Wormley and Henry frequently and pretty effectively. Charlton played a reasonable number of snaps behind Henry as well. Maurice Hurst was mostly a passing down sub for Glasgow; he did get a few standard down snaps. RJS saw a little bit of time.

At linebacker it was mostly Morgan and Bolden. Gedeon got a drive; Ross got a couple. Secondary was Lewis/Peppers/Wilson/Hill 100% of the time and a mix of Stribling and Clark at the last spot. Thomas got some snaps in the dime package.

[After THE JUMP: battling a very spread out spread]

Ln Dn Ds O Form D Form Type Rush Play Player Yards
O25 1 10 Shotgun trips 30 Nickel press Run N/A Zone read keeper Morgan 4
Dodgy start; Godin is given a free run at the tailback, holds up at the mesh point, and then resumes attacking the back. He can't get tackle in, but he might not be trying. Ojemudia(-1) doesn't read the pull and gets blasted out of the play, which provides a small lane for a few yards that Morgan(+1, tackling +1) shuts down. Could have been zero if Ojemudia held up.
O29 2 6 Shotgun empty 30 nickel off Run N/A Counter draw Bolden 13
One counter step from the QB sends both LBs to the open side of the field; Bolden(-2, tackling -2) tracks the QB and does start to attack as Glasgow(+1) rips through a zone block and forces Wilson to the backside. Bolden has a middlingly athletic QB in space and whiffs, not even slowing Wilson. Stribling cleans up.
O42 1 10 Shotgun trips tight bunch 30 Nickel press Run N/A Inverted veer keeper Godin -2
Utah totally snowed by a corner blitz that slants hard to the field. Henry(+0.5) left alone to be optioned; pulling G goes after him; Henry engulfs the back, but Wilson pulled. Godin(+1) got a free run but still forms up well and makes a tackle with some help from Stribling. RPS +2. Ojemudia chases the back despite being lined up outside of Godin. Not a good start.
O40 2 12 Shotgun trips TE 30 nickel off Pass 4 Flare screen Stribling 22
Bolden(+1) engages the TE and does a good job of pushing him to the sideline just couple yards downfield. Back has to either cut back into help or try a very narrow lane along the sideline. He tries the sideline; Stribling(-3) gets sealed inside; he's fighting inside, insanely. Anything other than this means third and long. Booker just about runs through Wilson's tackle. Dude is a hoss.
M38 1 10 Pistol 3-wide TE Nickel half press Pass 5 PA TE flat Morgan 5
Corner blitz effective again, with Ojemudia(+0.5) ducking inside an OL who doesn't really know what to do and getting pressure(+2, blitz) up the gut. Wilson has a hot option as the TE leaked into the flat with Morgan(-0.5, cover -1) focused on the backfield. Morgan is fortunate that the TE stumbles a bit on the catch. He forms up and forces it back inside, where the TE falls without really being touched, giving up a few more yards.
M33 2 5 Shotgun 4-wide Nickel off Pass N/A Bubble screen Stribling 14
Utah brings a wideout in motion from the short side to the backfield and then has him run what's basically a bubble route. Nobody on D adjusts to this presnap. Hill and Lewis sit to a side of the field with only one eligible WR on it; Morgan(-1) stays lined up inside the field-side guard. He stays inside on the PA fake and Utah has a 3 on 2 situation in a lot of space. Peppers tries to force it inside but gets pushed a bit farther than he wants; Morgan can't get there because of presnap stuff; Stribling(-2) again watches the ballcarrier and not the blocker, getting locked inside; Wilson(+0.5) shuts this down pretty fast. RPS -1.
M19 1 10 Shotgun 4-wide 30 Nickel press Run N/A Outside zone Henry -1
Michigan slants away on the line, which looks super dangerous as it means Glasgow is basically sealing himself on a stretch. Bolden is jetting for the corner, which means Henry's(+2) assignment is to get inside of the tackle; this he does, basically by throwing him. He makes good on the TFL. RPS push despite the result because yikes.
M20 2 11 Pistol FB 3-wide Nickel 3-4 Run N/A Inside zone Wormley 2
This is just a straight up 3-4 with Peppers playing WOLB. Utah runs an inside zone without a QB run threat, so Ojemudia comes down to pick off the H-back slicing to the backside. Both LBs are sitting unblocked in the hole (half point to Bolden(+0.5) for getting a scrape right; Morgan was lined up right over it); Booker tries to burrow into the line, where Wormley(+1) won a block and tackles. RPS_+1. M had a rare 7 on 6 blockers situation.
M18 3 9 Shotgun empty 30 Nickel off Pass 4 Slant Stribling 5
Hurst replaces Glasgow for passing down. Stunt doesn't have time to get there; Stribling(+1, cover +1) is driving to this slant where it should go and should prevent a first down. Wilson throws it behind his guy; Stribling adjusts to make the tackle.
Drive Notes: FG(30), 0-3, 10 min 1st Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form D Form Type Rush Play Player Yards
O14 1 10 Shotgun trips TE 30 Nickel off Pass N/A Bubble screen Wilson 6
Zone fake the other direction into a bubble. Peppers(+0.5) does a decent job to stand up to the opponent and not give him an easy decision. Stribling(+0.5) does improve here, getting upfield and outside; WR tries outside and then reverses field. Wilson(-1) overruns the play, probably because of the earlier two screens, and isn't in position to hold this down to 2 or 3.
O20 2 4 Shotgun 4-wide Nickel even Run N/A Inside zone Bolden 1
Same motion as the big flare screen from the previous drive. M has an adjustment on. Stribling goes in motion, pumping his fist at Hill, who runs downhill at the bubble as Stribling backs out into free safety mode. Utah runs up the middle anyway. Bolden(+1) times a blitz beautifully—something he can do because of the motion—and grabs at Booker in the backfield, slowing him. Glasgow(+0.5) shows in the hole, causing more delay. Morgan(+0.5) cut to the hole and prevented Booker from grabbing any more YAC; Godin(+0.5) came through a weak double and was the beneficiary of the blitz. RPS +1.
O21 3 3 Shotgun trips Nickel even tight press Run N/A Inside zone Wormley -1
D is pure man free with the FS 20 yards downfield at the snap and six on six in the box. M slants the line hard playside with two guys filling in behind and Morgan trying to fill in any holes. Wormley(+2) violently impacts the LT and gets under him, driving to the backfield, making a TFL by himself. Glasgow(+0.5) and Godin(+0.5) had significantly constricted space even if Wormley didn't kill his dude. RPS +1.
Drive Notes: Punt, 0-3, 4 min 1st Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form D Form Type Rush Play Player Yards
O3 1 10 Pistol FB 3-wide Nickel 4-3 Run N/A Inside zone Wormley -1
Clark in at CB. Hill rotates down late for a one high three LB look. Ojemudia and Hurst have stalemates at the LOS with LBs filling behind; Booker cuts back into Wormley(+2), who stood his guy up and then chucked him aside a la Henry and gets a TFL.
O2 2 11 Shotgun 3-wide Nickel 4-3 Pass 4 Rollout hitch Peppers Inc
Feels like this is designed to pick Peppers, the slot corner, and get the guy in the flat a nice catch and run; Peppers(+1) undercuts the pick and runs in an area that screams pick six; abort mission. Wilson instead dumps it to the pick guy, who drops it. He was going to get blown up for a couple yards by half the defense anyway. Cover +1.
O2 3 11 Shotgun 4-wide Dime Pass 4.5 Comeback Lewis Inc
Hard to tell exactly what happens without a replay here. Henry(+1) shoots into the pocket, forcing Wilson to reset his feet. Morgan(+0.5, pressure +1) recognizes the RB going into pass pro and has a delayed blitz that forces a throw. Lewis(+1, cover +1) has put the WR near the sideline; ball is overthrown but nearly intercepted by Dymonte Thomas.
Drive Notes: Punt, 0-3, 1 min 1st Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form D Form Type Rush Play Player Yards
O25 1 10 Shotgun 4-wide Nickel even Run N/A Inverted veer give Gedeon -1
I think this is a scrape exchange that ends up looking goofy because of the handoff. Ojemudia is certainly not containing; the pulling G ends up blasting him as he tries to split the difference. Wilson decided to hand off, though, and Gedeon(+0.5) is all over that. He can't make a tackle, he does delay and force to the sideline, where Lewis(+0.5) fills; Booker leaps over him; Bolden(+0.5) has flowed to the sideline and makes the spectacular midair spear in the aftermath.
O24 2 11 Pistol trips Nickel even press Pass 5 Cross Peppers 20
Peppers(-2, cover -2) gets shook by the slot receiver, who starts running a crossing route, fakes an up, and then continues. That gets Peppers off enough for the completion, and no tackle after the catch means a big gain. Pressure(-1) was not coming; relatively quick throw.
O44 1 10 Pistol trips TE Nickel even Run N/A Inside zone Bolden 10
Can't ever quite be sure on this but to me this really looks like a slant from the line that Bolden fails to replace. A previous Picture Pages has addressed this phenomenon, wherein the DL really looks like it wants the RB to go through a gap it's plotted that it will have an unblocked LB in, only for that LB to fail to show up. Bolden(-2) sits and reads and reads and eats a block when the line slants and Gedeon blitzes such that there's only one place a successful run can go: to the backside. Henry is checking the QB and can't shut it down; Bolden is nowhere to be found. Glasgow(-0.5) could have held up a bit better. You can even see Bolden checking backside before he decides nah.
M46 1 10 Pistol trips Nickel even Pass 3 Scramble Ojemudia 7
Glasgow(+1, pressure +2) tosses a guy aside and forces an early scramble against eight guys in coverage. This should be a profitable situation; unfortunately, Ojemudia(-2, tackling -1) misjudges Wilson and bites on a cut upfield, badly missing a tackle.
M39 2 3 Shotgun 4-wide Nickel even Run N/A Inside zone Charlton 2
M late getting lined up but they do okay here, with Glasgow(+1) fighting through a brief double to impede Booker's momentum and Charlton(+0.5) coming from the backside to help finish the play with incidental impact from the linebackers.
M37 3 1 Shotgun 3-wide Nickel over Run N/A Inside zone Ojemudia 4
Pretty jammed up with Wormley(+0.5) and Glasgow(+0.5) both standing up blocks and making an attack up the middle unpleasant. Booker starts looking. Gap does threaten to form; Ojemudia(-1) fights into it but gives up too much ground trying to spin to it and the corner opens up; Gedeon(-0.5) caught a block looking to the jammed up interior and is a bit late but I still think he makes this play if Booker has to bend just a little more. Ojemudia spinning poorly means that doesn't happen.
M34 1 10 Shotgun 4-wide Nickel over Pass 4 Slant Peppers 8
This coverage is an odd man-zone hybrid with Lewis nose to nose with a boundary guy and going with him and Gedeon attacking on a delayed blitz that looks pretty awkward. It appears that Clark is going into three-deep coverage; WR cuts off and finds space as Peppers(-1, cover -1) followed an in-breaking route a linebacker had already.
M26 2 2 Shotgun 4-wide Nickel under? Pass 4 Post Wilson 13
This is a mess from M as they can't get lined up right. At the snap Bolden is running one way. Peppers starts a blitz then aborts it when he sees a back coming at him; Morgan appears to be in man on the back;  Wilson(-1, cover –1) unable to do much else other than tackle. This is mostly getting tempoed. (RPS -2)
M13 1 10 Shotgun 4-wide Nickel even press Run N/A Inside zone Hurst 4
M again finds it hard to line up. Hurst(+1) takes a double and swims through it, which is fortunate for M as this could have gone worse than it did. Wormley(-1) never gets set and gets blown up. Charlton(+0.5) comes down to tackle as an unblocked edge guy.
M9 2 6 Shotgun 4-wide Nickel even Pass 4 Circle Peppers 8
This is how to run a circle route. Peppers(-1, cover -1) bites on the slant and is off too far to make an immediate tackle. Picture Paged.
M1 1 G Pistol FB 2-wide Goal line Run N/A Power O N/A 1
This is pretty well defended with Morgan(+1) flashing to the backfield to stone a pulling G but Wormley(-0.5) just kind of stands up his guy and Ojemudia(-0.5) gets blasted back so the bounce is enough with Booker leaping over the top.
Drive Notes: Touchdown, 3-10, 10 min 2nd Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form D Form Type Rush Play Player Yards
O30 1 10 Pistol 3-wide TE 30 nickel half press Run N/A Power O Peppers 2
Peppers(+0.5) blitzes off the corner. He doesn't get a blocker and is able to tackle from the side. Henry(-1) got blown off the ball, providing a lane for some yards. Morgan(+0.5) and Bolden(+0.5) both show up in or near the whole as they understand the slant that's on; Morgan contains and Bolden is there to help hit.
O32 2 8 Shotgun empty Nickel even Pass 4 Out Hill Inc
Quick hitter all the way with one OL going for a cut block to the opposite side of the field from where the ball goes. Hill(+0.5) in decent position to tackle after a five yard gain; ball is dropped.
O32 3 8 Shotgun 4-wide Nickel press Pass 6 Sack Morgan -6
M sends six and the back goes to the wrong side, so free run. Charlton(+0.5) stunts outside, blasting a guard back into the tackle, tackle tries to get around to Morgan(+1, pressure +3, blitz) but that's never going to work. Peppers(+0.5) comes around the outside fast to prevent any escape; pocket collapses on Wilson. RPS +1.
Drive Notes: Punt, 3-10, 8 min 2nd Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form D Form Type Rush Play Player Yards
O49 1 10 Shotgun 4-wide Nickel even Pass 4 Wheel Peppers Pen +15
Another motion into the backfield from a slot WR; M slides the LBs this time instead of the previous adjustment. Fake handoff into a rollout that is ideally supposed to suck Peppers in on the fake and end up getting a TE lined up in the slot open on a wheel. Peppers(+1, cover +1) doesn't bite, runs with the TE, and gets an absolute horseshit PI call for running this guy's route for him. This happens seconds of game time after they ignored a much more blatant PI on Utah. Refs -2.
M36 1 10 Shotgun 4-wide 3-3-5 nickel Run N/A Counter veer give Peppers -2
M backed out with just five in the box and RJS worryingly over that good freshman slot Utah has. They take the bait and run directly into a Peppers(+1) corner blitz. The QB has counter action away from this but doesn't appear to be reading this at all, it's just a handoff. Peppers and Wormley are unblocked on the backside and combine to TFL. RPS +2.
M38 2 12 Shotgun empty Nickel even Run N/A QB draw Ross 2
QB draw paired with bubble action to the short side, which doesn't really come off. Morgan is supposed to bug out for the fake and then they'll have enough guys to block it; Godin(+0.5) extends and gets to the inside of his block to force a cut away. RJS(+0.5) gets a free run because Utah's LT is doing... something. Whatever it is does not involve football. Ross(+0.5) gets a free run and closes fast; the pair tackle.
M40 3 10 Shotgun trips Dime Run N/A QB draw Ojemudia 6
Michigan does a weird thing where they have Hill up near the line and decide to swap him and Thomas. Your guess is as good as mine. Utah runs another QB draw and it is unclear how this is going work. Henry(+1) sheds his guy easily and gets to the POA; Wormley(+1) drives two guys back but maintains his lane. Ojemudia(-2, tackling -1) comes in unblocked and whiffs a tackle, overrunning the play and only slowing Wilson. This turns a TFL into a gain. Wilson and Wormley get him down short of the sticks.
Drive Notes: Missed FG(48), 3-10, 4 min 2nd Q. Ojemudia lucky this doesn't cost M points. Next drive is a two minute drill at the end of the half.
Ln Dn Ds O Form D Form Type Rush Play Player Yards
O27 1 10 Shotgun 4-wide Nickel even Pass N/A Flare screen Bolden 6
Bolden playside and lined up a yard or two inside Booker. He sprints out to make the tackle as Hill does a good job to force it in at the numbers; Bolden(-0.5) makes it there but he bends his angle upfield for a few steps, oddly, and ends up making contact from behind, jumping on Booker's back and allowing him to pick up a chunk of YAC.
O33 2 4 Pistol 4-wide Nickel over Run N/A Outside zone Bolden 2
Bolden(+1) takes a risk here and it works out; he dodges inside the guy coming out to block him and goes inside out to fill the hole authoritatively. This is the LB version of what Peppers did to screens in the second half. Normally I'm leery of it since if you botch it you get a big play on your face but it works here. Henry(+0.5) did a good job to come back and constrict the space Bolden is attacking.
O35 3 2 Shotgun 4-wide Nickel even Pass 4 Flare Peppers 11
Peppers(-2, cover -2) blows the flat coverage, running into Bolden's zone. That's an easy first down, and he keeps running with it as if it's man the whole play. Bolden and Morgan recover to hold this down about as much as is reasonably possible.
O46 1 10 Shotgun 4-wide Nickel even Run 4 Hitch Lewis 3
Lewis(+0.5, cover +1) able to make the immediate tackle.
O49 2 6 Shotgun trips Nickel even Pass 4 Throwaway Wormley Inc
Mini stunt, I guess, with Henry swiping left to draw the center's attention. This allows Wormley(+2, pressure +2, organic) to shoot inside the RG and run through an RB block to force a throwaway.
O49 3 6 Shotgun 4-wide Nickel even Pass 4 Improv Wormley 5
Excellent coverage(+2); pressure(-2) not coming until Wormley(+0.5) spins through and flushes. Ojemudia(-1) gave up the corner and it's everyone run to the sideline time. Booker shoves Morgan away on what should be OPI but isn't; Peppers(+0.5) comes up in Morgan's stead to whack Booker as he catches the ball.
M45 4 1 Shotgun 4-wide 30 Dime press Pass 5 RB flat Morgan 7
Morgan(-1, cover -1) bites on jet sweep action to the other side of the field, where he cannot help, and Booker comes open to the other side of the field for the easy conversion.
M38 1 10 Shotgun 4-wide Dime Pass 5 Out Glasgow Inc
Glasgow(+2, pressure +2) goes right up the middle, ripping through a G and forcing an immediate throw that Morgan(+1) bats down.
M38 2 10 Shotgun trips Dime Pass 4 Screen Morgan Inc
Dropped but doesn't matter as Morgan(+1) and Glasgow(+0.5) had both sniffed it out and were highly likely to converge on this to murder it for a TFL. Morgan gets the extra for getting through a block.
M38 3 10 Shotgun 4-wide Dime Pass 4 Fade Lewis Inc
That play with the ridiculous leaping catch over and through the perfect coverage of Lewis. Lewis has forced it so far to the sideline that the guy lands OOB. (Cover +2, Lewis +2).
M38 4 10 Shotgun trips bunch Prevent Pass 3 Hail Mary N/A INT
Hail Marys don't get charted.
Drive Notes: EOH, 3-10.
Ln Dn Ds O Form D Form Type Rush Play Player Yards
O26 1 10 Pistol 3-wide TE Nickel over Run N/A Pin and pull Bolden 3
Bolden(+1) and Wilson come up quickly to cut off the two pullers and force it back. Wilson got cut pretty good, so not perfect. Bolden does a good job to get there fast and constrict the hole. Henry(+1) blows his guy back and disconnects to start the tackle at the LOS. Morgan is there to help but doesn't hit the back square and he can dig out a couple yards.
O29 2 7 Shotgun trips Nickel even Run N/A Speed option Bolden 10
Ojemudia(-1) doesn't do a great job as the pitch man; he makes this an easy decision to dump the ball. Morgan(+1) runs through a block and gets outside, forcing it back a couple yards inside the numbers. Bolden(-2, tackling -1) takes an angle on this play that assumes Morgan is going to get beat to the corner; it's a full on pursuit angle. When Morgan forces it back he's got to awkwardly redirect; he makes contact and gets spun through, and that's the difference between two yards and ten.
O39 1 10 Pistol 3-wide H 30 Nickel off Run N/A Draw? Ojemudia 7
I guess I'm calling this a draw since the line pass blocks basically, but this is a handoff as fast as any other. M blitzes Peppers off the edge and folds Ojemudia back. RB through the line and finds Henry chasing him plus both LBs and Ojemudia in the area between the hash and the sideline. Booker first outruns Bolden(-1) to the outside, then Ojemudia(-1) to turn nothing into a solid gain. Tackling –2.
O46 2 3 Pistol 3-wide H Nickel over Run N/A Zone arc keeper Hill 29 (Pen +2)
This is a play I wondered if RR might run when Ds started shuffling down ends. The H-back pulls across the formation like it's slice zone, then arcs around the DE at the last second. Ojemudia(-1) does not alert that this could be bad for him and chases the back like it's 2000 and he's never seen a spread before. Hill(-2) gets locked inside by the arc block and Wilson's off to the races. This is a bad look for M, as Morgan is about the only member of the front seven who seems aware that Wilson has the ball. Hurst ripped through a guy to get to the backside but I'm not sure that's actually a good idea since it opens up a big hole on the frontside. RPS -2. M gets lucky as a WR hold brings it most of the way back.
O44 2 5 Shotgun trips TE Nickel over Pass N/A Bubble screen Peppers 2
First Peppers(+1) whoah screen, as he blows past a potential blocker to slow the ballcarrier. Wilson(+1) reacts almost as quickly to finish it off.
O46 3 3 Shotgun 4-wide 3-3-5 nickel Run N/A Inside zone Ojemudia 9
Ugh, not a fan of this setup. This looks is a pass rush D with Wormley at nose and both DTs lined up outside the tackles. Ojemudia is lined up as a LB-ish guy in a two point stance right next to Wormley. Ojemudia(-1) stands and catches a block and there's a big gap between a not NT and a 7-tech DE, but really this is just trying to run a passing down D on third and three. RPS -2. Given the setup both Charlton(+0.5) and Wormley(+0.5) do an admirable job to almost shut this down.
M45 1 10 Shotgun 4-wide Nickel even Pass N/A Bubble screen Hill 3
Tempo from Utah; Hill(+1) starts running down presnap as M gets lined up. He gets picked off by the blocker but he's slowed this up and allowed Stribling(+0.5) to make an adequate tackle.
M42 2 7 Pistol 3-wide H 30 Nickel off Pass 3 PA dig Hill 15
This is three guys rushing against max protect so tough to get in when the opponent is not PSU; M doesn't get anywhere. (Pressure -1). Wilson hits a little crack in the zone(cover -2) for a chunk. Hill(-1) did not come up at all on this; big gap after the LBs.
M27 1 10 Shotgun 3-wide H 30 Nickel press Pass N/A Improv Peppers Inc (Pen -5)
Peppers(+0.5) disguises his blitz well, running from way off the line at speed. He misses, but makes Wilson start moving around and busts up anything long that might happen. Bolden(+0.5) is handfighting with a TE; when he releases Bolden explodes upfield to nail Wilson. (Pressure +2, blitz.) Utah is hit with an illegal formation penalty that M accepts.
M32 1 15 Shotgun empty Nickel over Pass 4 Post Morgan 18
Bubble fake to a post that Morgan(-2, cover -2) bites on. It is possible that Bolden isn't getting over fast enough or Wilson not coming down fast enough. Tough to defend this unless you have all the faith in Peppers. Maybe soon? Charlton(+2, pressure +2, organic) had spun through a tackle and nails on the throw. Likely sack if coverage better.
M14 1 10 Shotgun 4-wide 30 Nickel off Run N/A Inverted veer keeper Bolden 14
WR motion to backfield sees a jet fake with RB acting as a lead blocker. M freaks the F out about this in classic M fashion. RJS runs straight upfield and forces a keep. That's fine. Once Wilson pulls, he redirects. That's more than anyone else on the D can say. Hurst(+1) blew up the puller with quick penetration so it's Wilson versus whoever Michigans got. With Hill going in man coverage with the WR AND RJS cutting off the outside this has to be both linebackers. Morgan(-1) is sent on a blitz, sees the pull, tries to redirect and falls down. Bolden(-2) completely blows his assignment, touchdown.
Drive Notes: Touchdown 3-17 6 min 3rd Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form D Form Type Rush Play Player Yards
O25 1 10 Shotgun 4-wide 30 Nickel press Pass 4 PA RB flat Bolden 9
WR motions to backfield, mesh fake, rollout into flat. Bolden draws man coverage against Booker and this is hard to shut down. Mostly RPS but I do think Bolden(-0.5) gives up a couple extra yards by bending upfield a little bit and tackling from behind. He actually doesn't tackle at all, as he grabs shoulder pads and falls off, but Booker steps OOB. RPS -1.
O34 2 1 Pistol 2TE Nickel over Run N/A Pin and pull Henry 4
Henry(+1) against a TE is comical. He blows the guy back, forcing the RB to cut behind. This erases two of three pullers. Glasgow(-0.5) got beat by a single block, losing some yardage. It's not awful; it's not great. Morgan(+0.5) fills the frontside gap unblocked and tackles; RB can fall forward because there's a lot of room due to the Glasgow block and Ojemudia(-0.5) getting blown down the LOS on the backside.
O38 1 10 Pistol 3-wide H Nickel even Run N/A Zone arc keeper Ojemudia 4
Hill(+1) fixes his earlier issue, coming up to contain on the arc. Ojemudia(+0.5) and Morgan(+0.5) both read the pull and combine to close it down after a yard; ball pops out. On a closer look, Ojemudia(+2) finds his arm underneath the ball and intentionally punches it out. Nice play; bad luck that the one Utah guy around grabs it.
O42 2 6 Shotgun empty 30 Nickel off Pass 4 Improv Henry 17
Glagow(+1, pressure +2) gets an excellent organic pass rush that makes Wilson bug out before he can see his routes develop. He can't bring Wilson down because the OL stays enaged and pushes him past. Unfortnately, Ojemudia(-1) can't bring him down after stunting into Wilson's path and Henry(-1) starts running towards Wilson's upfield move, creating an easy lane for him to escape the pocket. Peppers is now in a difficult situation and just runs as fast as possible at Wilson; Wilson has the wherewithal to dump it to the back in space for a big gain.
M41 1 10 Shotgun 4-wide Nickel even Pass 4 Slant Lewis Inc
Lewis(+2, cover +2) is tested on his press coverage. Receiver gets inside for a second; Lewis undercuts the route and just about picks it off. Instead he gets a PBU. Bad ass.
M41 2 10 Pistol 3-wide H 30 Nickel off Run N/A Inside zone Hurst 3
Hurst(+2) destroys this play, blasting the C three yards into the backfield immediately. He comes off to constrict as the back takes the cutback he has to; Henry and and unblocked Ross converge.
M38 3 7 Shotgun trips 3-2-6 dime Pass 5 Circle Hill 6
Rhythm throw that doesn't allow the blitz to get there; TE circle is well executed but I like that Hill(+0.5, cover +1) is able to immediately tackle, which brings up a fourth down.
M32 4 1 Pistol 2TE Base 3-4 Run N/A Power O Wormley 3
M blitzes off the edge but Utah isn't running to it and they bring out power, which they haven't run since the first half. Wormley(-1) gets blown down the line by a TE block; Ross(+0.5) comes up and hits the pulling G but when that guy's going forward that block goes one way, especially when Booker blasts into it. Morgan gets there, just not quick enough to kill it on fourth and one.
M29 1 10 Shotgun trips TE Nickel even Pass N/A Screen Ojemudia -5
Ojemudia(+2) is reading this all the way and shoots out to it immediately. Ross(+1) dismisses a TE trying to block him and is there to finish it after Ojemudia can't quite manage it.
M34 2 15 Shotgun 4-wide Nickel even Pass N/A Bubble screen Peppers -3
M adjusting by shifting their linebackers out now; Morgan is probably going to do okay with this as long as Peppers forces it back. Instead, Peppers(+3) blazes past a blocker for a TFL he generated and finished on his own.
M37 3 18 Shotgun 4-wide Nickel even Pass 4 Drag Godin 9
DT stunt gets Godin(+1, pressure +1) through. Godin has to dismiss and run around an OL, which he does well; still just enough time for Wilson to get a pass off. It is a high dart that his WR brings in; immediate tackle from Morgan(+0.5, cover +1). Does set up a long FG attempt.
Drive Notes: Missed FG(46), 10-17, 10 min 4th Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form D Form Type Rush Play Player Yards
O35 1 10 Pistol 3-wide H Nickel over Run N/A Slice zone Bolden 16
Bolden(-2) gets a free releasing center and tries to go hit him. He ends up running himself out of the play, sealed to the inside. All he really has to do is anything BUT this and the RB gets stuffed up since Godin and Glasgow have made this gab barely wider than Booker. Any delay sees Godin grab Booker; instead he gets stiffarmed off. Morgan hits his guy square and comes off a block; he too can't pursue fast enough.
M49 1 10 Pistol 3-wide H Nickel even Run N/A Slice zone Godin 4
Same play; Bolden(+0.5) is sent on a blitz and runs up to hit the C square in the face. No creases. Henry(+0.5) surges upfield, forcing the back inside of him; Godin(+1) spins and makes a nice tackle. I'm not a big fan of the super deep safety still in this situation; M has nobody as a free hitter in this situation. RPS -1.
M45 2 6 Shotgun 4-wide 3-3-5 nickel Run N/A Zone read keeper Bolden 3
M sends Peppers off the corner and slants the line away, with both LBs headed backside. C ends up with nobody to block. Bolden(+0.5) and Morgan converge to tackle, with Peppers(+0.5) redirecting impressively to get there after cutting off the outside. RPS +1.
M42 3 3 Pistol 3-wide H 30 Nickel press Run N/A Zone arc keeper Peppers -2
Scrape exchange from M sees Ojemudia haul after the RB while Morgan replaces. I don't like Wilson(-1) chasing the back; he's taken care of by the slant; also don't like Hill going deep on third and three when M needs the ball back, but that's the D not him. Morgan(+0.5) meets the arcing TE and forces Wilson wide. Peppers(+2) blazes past a blocker and nails Wilson for a TFL.
Drive Notes: Punt, 10-24, 3 min 4th Q. Remaining Utah snaps are kneels.

I mean okay I guess?

Yeah, I'm generally enthused but this might be a crappy offense they opposed. That Utah they got as much as they did without bothering to use their outside receivers is a little frustrating. Michigan decided they were going to keep one deep safety the whole day; that guy was basically irrelevant.

Utah's yards came mostly on spread frippery that Al Borges thinks is bullshit: QB runs and screens and a few plays off those screens and throws to guys in the flat on which one error is enough to rip off a chunk. Occasionally they did; mostly they didn't. Utah had:

  • 3 three and outs
  • 2 four and outs
  • two moderate length FG drives
  • two long TD drives
  • a longish attempt at a two minute drill that ended in a Hail Mary

If Utah's about the same team they were last year, when they acquired 5.4 YPA and finished 85th in that category that's just decent—Utah had 4.8 YPA in this game. With seven returning starters including a senior QB the Utes should be better. If they keep trying to play without outside WRs it'll be rough for them.

I mean, I felt that Michigan's DL flat out won their battles. Pass rush was barely relevant because Utah all but refused to look farther than 15 yards downfield; if they had Wilson was going to get knocked out of this game. Meanwhile Booker almost never found a significant hole. That's encouraging against a team that was a pounding ground force by the end of last year.

Many of Utah's yards were on brain farts typical of a first game, especially a first game under a new coach in a new system. Iron those out and we're talking.

But information on that corner battle is not forthcoming.

I have no idea about the second corner spot. Stribling was bad on two early screens but figured it out on the third one, and that was just about the end of his involvement in the game. Clark didn't chart, or even come close to doing so. I think they split time about down the middle but honestly I forgot to check.

Even Hill, who spent large chunks of the game as a third linebacker, didn't register many plays on which his D was tested. He was able to tackle a circle route for six yards on third and seven. He biffed on the long zone read keeper that came back. That's about it.

On the other hand, Jourdan Lewis was targeted three times. One he nearly intercepted…

…and another was that ridiculous catch out of bounds at the end of the second half. He spent virtually the entire game nose to nose with his dude. You are now watching the throne.

There are a couple of big holes in the

HIGHLY ORGANIZED AND EFFICIENT CHART

chart that isn't yet that but maybe someday.

Before I put the chart here, let me say that I'm uncomfortable with the way it worked out because there are a couple of big-ass holes surrounded by guys I graded well. I went back and re-checked those two big holes, though, and I can't see any way to move negatives away. So:

Defensive Line
Player + - T Notes
Henry 7.5 2 5.5 Blasted TEs; worked tackles; little rush.
Glasgow 7.5 2 5.5 Added interior pass rush.
Wormley 9.5 2.5 7 Three great plays and didn't get blown up more than one or two times.
Ojemudia 5 13 -8 Extensive discussion below.
Charlton 4 0 4 Nice spin to sack that got nerfed by bad coverage.
Hurst 4 0 4 Blew up a couple plays by crushing C back.
Godin 4.5 - 4.5 Added rush of his own; worry about how he'll hold up against pro style maulers.
RJS 0.5 - 0.5 Sparing time.
Marshall - - - DNP
TOTAL 42.5 19.5 23 Really encouraging from three of four spots, good depth even minus Mone.
Linebacker
Player + - T Notes
Morgan 9.5 5.5 4 Solid, steady, is Desmond Morgan.
Bolden 7 12 -5 Responsible for at least half of QB rush yards.
Ross 2 - 2 Free James Ross.
Gedeon 0.5 0.5 0 One drive in place of Morgan.
TOTAL 19 18 1 You could count Peppers here if you want.
Secondary
Player + - T Notes
Lewis 6 - 6 Three targets, zero completions, one PBU.
Stribling 2 5 -3 Early screens a problem, untested otherwise.
Peppers 12 6 6 Had a bad drive in first half; murdered screens in second.
Wilson 1.5 3 -1.5 Mostly out of the picture, literally.
Hill 3 3 0 Has some promise.
Clark - - - Played, was not tested.
Thomas - - - Got maybe a half dozen dime snaps.
TOTAL 24.5 17 7.5 Coverage metric slightly more unkind.
Metrics
Pressure 19 4 +13 A reason Utah kept it short and simple. 7 blitz, 11 organic, 1 stunt.
Coverage 13 14 -1 Peppers ate a big chunk of the negatives.
Tackling 1 7 -6 The main problem on the day.
RPS 9 7 +2 I'll take it against a spread.

So… yeah. This is much more extreme than it usually is. You'll have some guys up, some guys down, some guys hovering around replacement level. I found that most everyone played well except Ojemudia and Bolden, who I graded out as terrible and not too good, respectively. So let's address those.

I thought Ojemudia was supposed to be the boring reliable one, Mr. Smart Pants.

Ojemudia set out to completely invalidate my take on him from the season preview. When Ace and I did the podcast he mentioned something about Ojemudia making a great play on the fumble that I just kind of talked past because I had no idea what he was talking about, but sure enough:

I don't always credit forced fumbles since some of them are random; that one was +2. He also read and blew up a screen like he knew the playcall.

Other stuff was not so good, and there was a lot of it. As a linebacker, Ojemudia makes a good defensive end.

That was reminiscent of Craig Roh miscast in space during Rodriguez's defensive nadir. (Or every damn USMNT lineup since the World Cup. D-mid Alejandro Bedoya. GTFO.)

Even as a DE Ojemudia was suspect. He gave up the corner on a third and one that could have been stuffed; when given a free run on third and ten he overran Wilson on a QB draw. That gave Utah's very good kicker a shot at a 48 yard field goal Michigan was fortunate he missed. He didn't make a pitch decision tough for the QB, and normally Ojemudia is very good at splitting the two guys trying to option him when he is left unblocked. He missed a few other tackles besides and Michigan's pressure came from the DTs and blitzes mostly.

I do not think this is or will be a typical performance from him. I do expect to see a lot of Lawrence Marshall on Saturday.

What is your thing with Bolden?

He is very up and down. When he's on his horse he can go get it. This is an excellent blitz, one on which he recognizes that the WR motion means he can time the snap precisely:

When Peppers flushed Wilson on one of his blitzes, Bolden was fighting a TE block for a bit until that guy released; Bolden's upfield surge was reminiscent of Jake Ryan, and he forced an incompletion. If he's in Spring Game mode he looks awesome.

But there were a lot of plays in this game I could only interpret as Bolden screwing up. The Wilson touchdown was the most blatant:

Michigan picks off the pulling guard on that play and still has nobody for Wilson because Bolden chases a guy that 1) RJS is running right at, 2) will not get the ball because of that, and 3) also has Hill tracking him in man to man coverage. That should have been a TFL. Instead, six points. (Morgan was not present either but he was less at fault because he's not the playside guy, he was sent on a blitz, and he's trying to scrape to the correct hole when he trips on someone. He got a minus, FWIW, just not two.)

Bolden also whiffed a tackle in space on the opening drive. That was against Wilson, not Booker, and didn't even slow Wilson. On the option he assumed Morgan was not going to turn it back and took an angle that looked like he was pursuing to the sideline; when Morgan did his job his tackle attempt was at an awkward angle and easily spun through. This is a big gain on Utah's last real drive because he runs to one side of a block:

There was other stuff in there as well. Booker got a nice run when Michigan blitzed Gedeon and slanted their line; Bolden did not fill to the backside. That's something I expect from a rookie, not a senior.

Bolden got replaced by Ross late for a little bit, but Bolden was right back in there for the final drive, as you can see in the clip above. I understand that since most of this staff has only been around since January and Bolden was great in spring; here too I expect to see some serious rotation. But I've expected that for years now and no dice.

What is with Henry at end?

Henry at strongside end is a giant middle finger to tight ends. Whenever one tried to block him in this game he was driven yards in the backfield. Henry's pretty good at chucking tackles out of the way, too:

That playcall caught a zone stretch—a constraint for Utah—that could have been very bad if Henry doesn't just toss the tackle out of the way.

But really, it's about removing options. Teams that try to single up Henry with a TE, any TE, are going to lose. That allows Michigan to play a bunch of games with the line. He didn't get much pass rush in this game; we'll see if that's a weakness going forward. I think he'll be okay. Not great. Okay.

And the rest of the line was all good? Does that even happen?

I thought everyone who played the three out-and-out line spots was a positive, including the backups. Wormley had a couple of spectacular plays set up by line slants in the first half. This was the most impressive:

Otherwise he was capable of standing up blocks except one time when he got tempoed and got too high. I still wonder if he'll get blown up by extended doubles from mean pro-style teams. This was a good start on the rest of the world.

Glasgow looked like himself with one major difference: he was much more effective as a rusher in this game than he was all of last year. Scheme had something to do with that a year ago: with Clark blasting his way into the backfield on the regular I think the hope was they could leave a nose tackle at the LOS to sniff out screens and clean up when the QB broke the pocket. This year it's all hands on deck.

Hurst and Godin weren't bad, either. Hurst did this, for one:

On the inverted veer touchdown he also got quick penetration sufficient to pick off a pulling guard. Unfortunately that didn't matter, but that's a plus whenever you get that two for one. He has a very quick get off and will be hard to handle as he develops. I didn't really have a clip for Godin but I thought he picked up where he left off last year as an effective slasher who is very good at using stunts to get to the QB.

Charlton didn't get a ton of time but was able to flash a Clark-like spin move on what would have been a sack if Morgan didn't get out of a passing lane:

If he can do that on passing downs that stretch from SDE to DT looks like it has six quality players even without Mone. Let us pause from throwing darts to say thanks for that, Brady Hoke.

Peppers is terrible! Peppers is great!

Peppers looked like a promising freshman. You of course know about the circle route, and probably remember Peppers getting beat by another crafty route Utah's slot put on him. There was also an instance where he played man while the rest of the D was in zone that gave up an easy first down*. His coverage looked rough.

On the other hand:

Three times in this game Peppers destroyed plays that attacked the wide open spaces he is set to patrol. If Michigan can rely on that, those passes across the middle that open up because of bubble fakes get removed along with the screens; it's kind of a big deal to be able to do that. 

Peppers was also sent on a bunch of blitzes. Michigan's only sack featured one; Peppers pulled out a Brandon Harrison on another. Gotta downshift when you get close.

Peppers played safety in high school had a LB as his CB coach last year, and got hurt. He should start smoothing out the coverage issues as we go along here. This is why I gave him a 4 in the preview; everyone got mad at me about it but even Charles Woodson didn't leap from Bo's head fully formed with an axe in his hand.

*[ASIDE: There was grumbling earlier this week about Michigan's "unathletic" linebackers getting exploited by Utah, particularly Booker, on the edges. I didn't see any of that. I saw stuff like the Peppers play above where linebackers end up chasing someone else's mistake, a couple of instances where M did not react to motion and put themselves behind the eight ball before the snap, and occasional loss of leverage by guys like Stribling. The most edgetastic play Utah ran was a speed option that was an easy pitch decision, and Morgan turned that upfield halfway between the numbers and the hash.

Linebacker is 90% deciding when and where to run and 10% the speed at which you do so.]

I kind of feel… okay… about Michigan's ability to cope with the spread aspects of a very spread to spread and spread offense. Am I having a stroke?

We could both be having strokes.

I NEVER THOUGHT OF THAT

But probably not. I thought Michigan coped pretty well with the various wrinkles Utah threw at them.

Twice Utah got chunk plays over the middle thanks to their screen stuff. On the first Michigan got tempoed, with Morgan yelling at Bolden to cross the formation; the ensuing play looked bad for him but it was a actually a corner blitz with man behind it, so when he jets for the flat that's him covering the back, not biting on a screen he shouldn't. The other one was in fact bad for Morgan, as he does bite on the screen action hard to open up a big gain:

They were killed dead by this arc block variation of the zone read once…

…got lucky when it was called back for a hold on a WR.

Then they adjusted to both these things well. The arc zone read got nerfed with scrape exchanges and Peppers. The thing where Utah kept bringing a WR into the backfield saw Michigan adjust after the first time where they did not. Errors were largely localizable to players instead of a holistic inability to deal with the spread.

Heroes?

All six guys who are pure DL were assets, with Wormley and Glasgow a nose ahead of the pack. Lewis was an eraser. Peppers was on the whole an exciting asset.

Maybe not so heroic?

Ojemudia had a lot of struggles when not forcing a fumble. Bolden did not look like spring Bolden. Stribling had a couple of biffs on the first drive.

What does it mean for Oregon State and the future?

This DL is legit. Tough game against a very good rush offense and they shut it off save for some linebacker errors and a tough day from Ojemudia. The two deep on the interior is 100 dot emoji.

Expect more rotation at WDE. I don't think Marshall was held out for performance reasons; once he's back he will play. Ojemudia will improve. He's not a linebacker in any way, though.

Lewis is lockdown. He's a killer.

Nobody knows about corner #2. Ask again later.

Peppers is highly enticing but needs to develop as a tight coverage guy. Woodson wasn't built in a day.

It's still a 4-3 except it's all nickel. Michigan was about 80% even fronts. They were 100% nickel against a spread. They are a one-high defense that mostly uses man but also runs a significant amount of three deep; early yet but I think I saw some pattern matching on a couple plays. They'll use a dime package with three safeties on passing downs.

I don't know what they'll do about Bolden, but early returns on maybe-this-year-it-will-translate-to-the-field are poor. If they are in a nickel it seems nuts to leave Ross on the bench for 90% of a game, but at no point has playing time seemed under threat for Bolden. I'm not saying that'll change, but I'm not saying it won't, either. If I was Harbaugh I'd be rotating both Ross and Gedeon in at both spots in an effort to find your best combination.

Comments

In reply to by Ghost of Hoke

pescadero

September 9th, 2015 at 4:52 PM ^

I think Peppers will be a great player - but after watching him play, the comparisons to Woodson are just off base.

 

Peppers is a hyper athletic box safety/small OLB. Basically almost the ideal 3-3-5 "Spur".

 

Woodson was a straight up cover corner from the get go.

 

tspoon

September 10th, 2015 at 10:56 AM ^

I was at the UVa game and Charles had two PBUs that were both very nearly highlight reel INTs.  When he came in for the injured Steve King, the Hoos targeted him right away ... he gave up a play, but then was a total monster.

 

If Brian is drooling (rightly so) over #26's coverage in this game, he would be ga-ga over Woodson's first appearance on the field.

 

It was really only the game at MSU against a very excellent Mushin Muhammad that Charles really took any Freshman lumps.

 

Charles was all that.  He really, truly was.  The moment he came into that first game you could see he was on an entirely different level, first as an athlete and second as a guy whose football IQ blossomed almost immediately (I'm talking in the context of a small number of plays, not games or years).  I was in the northeast corner of the stadium about 30 rows up, sitting with a buddy who played WR at CMU ... we were just floored at what we saw.  It was very plain to the naked eye.

 

Having him and David Bowens on the field at the same time ... most freakish pair of game-changing D talents I've seen together at 'M.'  Good grief, if only someone could have gotten Bowens to go to class....

 

Wolverine fan …

September 9th, 2015 at 3:56 PM ^

maybe 20 times. I think that play upset me more than any other in that game. I never want to see it again. Defense played pretty well overall, line looked stout and should rack up some sacks the next couple weeks. Will probably see less LB-ish responsibility assigned to Ojemudia in the future. As for Bolden... I just dunno. Stribling should be fine, but tougher competition at receiver awaits. Peppers will get better every week. Ready for Saturday, bring on the Beavers!

ken725

September 9th, 2015 at 6:57 PM ^

Marcus Ray said exactly this on the Rivals podcast. He said Bolden knows the Michigan offense really well and that is why he looks so great in practice.

If that is the case, I want to see Ross get more snaps who is known for someone that has great instincts and diagnosing ability. 

dragonchild

September 10th, 2015 at 7:40 AM ^

I think Bolden plays like a computer.  Once he knows all your moves, he shuts you down.

The problem is that he's all prep and no instincts.  If he knows what's coming he's all over it, which is why he looks great in practice, but if a real opponent gives him something he's not ready for, he plays like a true freshman.  But EVERY opponent is going to do that.

So I expect him to look good against OCs like Borges, but Ross had better take his place soon because Meyer is going to shred this guy.

ohheydude1

September 9th, 2015 at 4:12 PM ^

Not an expert, but I think you were too harsh on Bolden...

- I don't think WIlson's TD run was on Bolden.  Bolden has responsbility for Booker (or whoever the back is lined up to WIlson's left) and he flares on the snap.  Bolden has to go with him - it's the design of the defense as he's in man-to-man coverage and staying with his guy.  Jenkins-Stone (or Ojemudia?) who misses the tackle on Wilson is completely at fault.  Wilson is his man on the play, and he should ignore the option back.  He needs to make that tackle and it's a big loss.  Morgan tripping on the backside turned the DE's mistake into a touchdown. 

- The play he blitzes and gets caught on the frontside as Godin gets dragged for a 16 yard gain seems more like a RPS fault - Bolden needs to blitz the gap he's assigned. 

- The play Gedeon blitzes I think is more on Glasgow, while he snows his guy down he creates too much of a gap between himself and Henry at end.  Henry misses the tackle as Booker has too much space.  Bolden is the frontside LB here and I think he'd be betraying his assignment if he went under the block and had a chance at making the play on the backside cutback. 

LJ

September 9th, 2015 at 4:28 PM ^

I kind of agree on the Wilson TD run.  The safety looks to be playing man on the motioning WR, Bolden looks to be playing man on the RB (given he immediately bugs out on the flare), and the frontside DE still chases the RB rather than containing the QB.  Someone blew an assignment there, but I'm not sure how we can know it's Bolden and not the playside DE.

ohheydude1

September 9th, 2015 at 4:45 PM ^

The reason Utah flares their RB on this play is to take the playside linebacker, in man coverage, out of position to make a play on the quarterback.  He would be there to help on a pitch, and the RB would try to block him. 

Options are typically about exploiting DE mistakes, and while defenses play the option differently, you almost always have 1 defender for each man in the option.  On this play Michigan clearly has no linebacker with QB responsibility, so it's pretty clear to me that it's the DE's man. 

If Bolden actually did have Wilson as his responbility on this play, he gets all the minuses.  -100, you may now have a seat on the bench. 

 

ohheydude1

September 9th, 2015 at 4:53 PM ^

A linebacker's job changes depending on defensive play call, offensive formation and playcall.  It is not as simple as always being their job to wait for a cutback/counter. 

Bolden played his responsibility here.  RJS, Morgan and RPS are at fault.  

Bolden still had some serious issues in this game, and eliminating this one -2 from his total doesn't drastically change the outlook on him, but he wasn't the goat on this play.

BornInAA

September 9th, 2015 at 5:07 PM ^

Well, as a senior MLB it would be his job to call the defensive play. So in that case he would still be at fault. 

The only grace would be if they never ran that play out of that formation on tape and he got caught with a trick play, which is possible.

Trebor

September 9th, 2015 at 4:44 PM ^

Yeah, I'm with you on the Wilson TD. The WR is the one moving horizontally while Booker stays outside as a blocker, so Bolden should have the outside responsibility. RJS's task should be to force the play to the RB and allow the 4 tacklers (against 3 blockers) to clean up. He ended up forcing Wilson to keep the ball, and with no help behind him due to Morgan falling, it was as easy as TDs get.

LJ

September 9th, 2015 at 7:32 PM ^

That's unbelievable, and complete malpractice.  The hilarious part is that the readership here is probably 10x greater than the readership there (and the content better by an equal margin).  It's like me writing a shitty copy of Eleanor Rigby, calling it "Eleanor Rigby," Paul McCartney calling me up and saying, "Um, name's taken," and me being like, "Oh, sorry, I had never heard of it.  My bad."

Blue eNVy

September 9th, 2015 at 4:18 PM ^

On the zone read with the FB arc block where the DE bites hard on the RB action; it's RJS, not Ojemudia.  With that said Ojemudia defintely had some horrible plays.  Far from the boring assignment sound DE play I was expecting from him.

DukeSilver

September 9th, 2015 at 5:20 PM ^

Peppers is such a dynamic athlete, can you imagine if he was the starting running back? I would think (hope) that his vision is better than Smith and Green have shown and we know he has breakaway speed. I know it'll never happen but after watching OSU and their impressive speed it would be nice to see an offensive weapon like Peppers taking runs or receptions to the house.

Jinkin Mongol

September 9th, 2015 at 5:11 PM ^

wish i had know about him a few months ago. went with Huron Valley Financial and had the worst home buying experience possible just short of them dropping the ball at the end and losing our house for us. terrible customer service and incompetant loan officer caused weeks of stress and headaches. also paying at 4% for the next 30 years instead of 3.825% solely because of their screw up. stay far away.

westwardwolverine

September 9th, 2015 at 4:52 PM ^

Have to ask: What is the deal with Ben Gedeon? Wasn't he supposed to be a super athletic recruit, the type of guy who would be perfect against Utah type teams? It just seems odd that with Bolden struggling so much once the season starts, I hear about calls for Ross, but very little about Gedeon. Is it just not working out? 

bronxblue

September 9th, 2015 at 4:56 PM ^

Kind of confirmed what I though watching the game.  Utah's pass offense lost a lot from last year, but still you figured they would at least try to air it out once and a while.  Still, I have my doubts about an organic pass rush from the ends, even with Henry out there, so hopefully Marshall is a revelation because nobody else seems like a good fit there.

It's funny about Bolden - everyone talks him up and he looks good in spurts, but then you catch a whole game and he just seems...off.  My guess is that he'll look better the next couple of games as he settles in, but his issues in coverage have lingered for years now, and if he is missing tackles on runs, that isn't good.

I was more down on Peppers because I think those TFLs were in decent part due to poor blocking by the WRs.  He's still learning and no means am I saying he won't be a star, but the "break in case of emergency" coverage with him seems a bit scary right now, at least in the slot.  I am hoping Stribling gets better as the second corner so UM doesn't have to make a change at that spot.

Overall, thought the defense looked fine.  Utah is on the "low" end of scary spreads, but they have a mobile-ish senior QB and a very good RB and UM largely held them in check.  Looking at the schedule, UM might be 5-1 heading into the MSU game, which would be a nice surprise.

dragonchild

September 10th, 2015 at 7:33 AM ^

Utah was eeriely like Philadelphia in Tecmo Super Bowl -- weak line, slippery QB, RB a capable receiver but otherwise shut down, strong defensive front, shaky secondary.

I dunno about rating Utah as "low" end.  They're not point-a-minute like Ohio State but -- as I say this through clenched teeth -- the Buckeyes are in a league of their own.  Their O-line was mauled but QB play mitigated an awful lot of that.  Even with a guy in the backfield, it's just damn tough to defend the spread when they have a good running QB, and I think Utah has one in Wilson.  He turned a lot of TFLs into solid gains.

Worst Bolden is when he runs to the line, stops and then catches a block.  With no momentum he gets walked backwards.  FFS he's a senior, has full confidence of the coaches and he's STILL doing that.  No one's perfect but if you're going to hesitate, at least run in the right direction once you've made up your mind.  If you're going to make a really dumb mistake, at least make the mistake at 100mph and something might happen.  One or the other!!

Uper73

September 9th, 2015 at 5:06 PM ^

Ojemeduia looks like a beast, however, to me he seems easy to block on the end and gets sucked in easy. I am worried about him against option and spread teams. Seems like he should be playing at beast level, however, IMO, that dynamic has failed to materialize. Hope Marshall starts getting some reps.

Ross deserves more reps. He just seemed to make plays whenever he was in and has always struck me as the best LB we have to defend option and spread.


Gedeon has promise, but got sucked in on every play last game. Most likely why he did not see another series.

I sound really critical, and, I don't mean to be as I think all of these guys have positives and we need them bringing an " A" game.

DukeSilver

September 9th, 2015 at 5:16 PM ^

In the podcast they seemed to hint that Marshall wasn't playing due to some form of disciplinary issue as he wasn't present during the fall practice that was available to students as well and nothing seems to be seen or heard from him at all. I want to see him play as he looks like a beast that could give a nice pass rush. I want to see more of Gedeon as well as I lost count of the missed tackles or out of position plays from Bolden.

UMForLife

September 9th, 2015 at 5:19 PM ^

I am glad it is not the speed issue with LBs. We would need to tackle better if we want to stop those offenses that use more short yardage passes. Great content Brian. Can't wait for Offense's UFR. I need to hear your side of who is at fault on the TD from INT.

Bodogblog

September 9th, 2015 at 5:50 PM ^

O29 2 7 Shotgun trips Nickel even Run N/A Speed option Bolden 10
Ojemudia(-1) doesn't do a great job as the pitch man; he makes this an easy decision to dump the ball. Morgan(+1) runs through a block and gets outside, forcing it back acouple yards inside the numbers. Bolden(-2, tackling -1) takes an angle on this play that assumes Morgan is going to get beat to the corner; it's a full on pursuit angle. When Morgan forces it back he's got to awkwardly redirect; he makes contact and gets spun through, and that's the difference between two yards and ten.

 

This is play side to Morgan, he's supposed to beat that guard's block and tackle the RB.  Keeping it inside isn't enough on this play.  Bolden is the WLB and he's also got a blocker on him, he's backside and he's got a longer way to go.  They both miss the tackle, but to give Morgan a +1 and Bolden a -2 seems like Morgan man love.  

Bolden had some obvious misses in this game, but this charting isn't putting enough emphasis on the things he did well, IMO.  I wish I had time to go back and dispute more, but my guess is the coaches graded him out better than it shows here. 

Excellent work as always. 

woodfeld

September 9th, 2015 at 6:00 PM ^

Hey Brian, on the 29 yard QB keeper on the zone read that was called back because of a WR hold, it's definitely RJS (not Ojemudia) that bit on the fake of the RB up the middle.  

Ojemudia was only a -7 for this game now...yay?

Cranky Dave

September 9th, 2015 at 6:16 PM ^

Got in the way of getting to read this. I would disagree with a couple of points: I wasn't as high on Peppers. As someone else mentioned the blocking of Utahs WRs onthescreens wasn't great. Still good plays by Peppers but I would take 2 points away. Secondly I do think the Wilson TD run was on RJS. BBolden and Hill were tracking the WR and RB immediately. the snap. That left RJS on Wilson.