Upon Further Review 2016: Offense vs Colorado Comment Count

Brian

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FORMATION NOTES: Michigan was very heavy in this game, with only a quarter of their snaps featuring 3 or more wideouts. 27 of them had 0 or 1. CU was very consistent with their formations, running a pure 3-4 on all non-passing downs:

base CU D

They ran a standard nickel on passing downs.

SUBSTITUTION NOTES: OL the expected starting five with the exception of one drive for Bredeson in the first half. Smith got about half the snaps at RB with Evans and Isaac getting the rest; FB once again split just about down the middle between Hill and Poggi.

Butt and Darboh were just about omnipresent; Chesson only got slightly more than half the snaps since Darboh was preferred in one-WR formations. Bunting got about half the snaps; Perry and Asiasi both got about a dozen. Various other guys got 1-5 snaps.

[After THE JUMP: I'm fretting.] 

Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Box Type Play Player Yards
M26 1 10 I-Form Big twin TE 2 2 1 Base 3-4 8.5 Run Iso Smith 12
Good cut and a little fortune. Smith doesn’t like the designated hole since Kalis(-0.5) gets stood up by a DE one on one and there’s no natural gap for Poggi to attack. Smith(+1) cuts backside, where there’s a gap; Braden(+1) and Cole doubled the nose tackle and got him a few yards off the LOS. NT chucks Cole downfield impressively but because of the drive from the double Smith is able to hit a crease outside of this dude. Cole gets a pass since he did provide the crease but got dang. Braden got to the second level and locked out a LB; Butt(+1) had an extended second level kickout that provided the gap.
M38 1 10 Ace 3-wide 1 1 3 Base 3-4 7 Pass PA comeback Darboh Inc
Good pass protection that breaks down slightly at the end as Butt gets driven back by a hefty DE. Still plenty of time for Speight to find Darboh, who’s popped open on a comeback route in front of Witherspoon; he drops it. (CA, 3, protection 2/2)
M38 2 10 Offset I tackle over twin TE tight 2 2 1 Base 3-4 8.5 Run Pitch sweep Peppers 7
CU slides their DL towards the tackle over. Pitch sweep the other way with Morris hustling to lead block. Braden(+1) steps around and seals the playside DE. Easy reach-ish blcok but effective. Asiasi(+1) meets playside LB and blows him towards the sideline. Ways(-2) should almost certainly be cracking back on the MLB but checks the force guy and then looks outside; he has barely moved by the time the action gets to him. Good cut on the edge by Poggi(+0.5). Cole(+1) comes around and picks up the slack by hammering the MLB but he should be heading to a safety. Morris airballs entirely, and I’m not going to neg him for that because he’s a QB but neither does the weird twist get an RPS as a result. RPS +1 for the tackle over drawing a shift M exploited.
M45 3 3 Shotgun trips tight bunch 1 1 3 Nickel even 6 Pass Drag Chesson Inc
Happy feet from Speight as CU sends six and then backs a guy out as a spy after he crosses the LOS. This draws Kalis’s attention and results in single blocking across the rest of the line. Smith and Cole are giving ground but have this under control long enough for Speight to get the ball out; instead he runs up and gets himself into big trouble. He tries to hit Chesson dragging across the field against man coverage but gets hit on the throw and leaves it well short and nearly intercepted. I guess this is a BR? (BR, 0, protection 2/2)
Drive Notes: Punt, 0-0, 13 min 1st Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Box Type Play Player Yards
M25 1 10 Shotgun empty TE 2 1 2 Base 3-4 6 Pass Bubble screen Evans 3
Outside CB is sitting at 7 yards and once Darboh breaks in he’s got a relatively easy job to come up and tackle to the short side of the field. (CA, 3, screen, RPS -1) Also it’s Awuzie. Why do this?
M28 2 7 Offset I 3-wide 1 2 2 Base 3-4 8 Pass Corner Butt Inc
Newsome(-2) leaves the guy he’s blocking to pick up a blitzer who does not exist. Meanwhile downfield, Butt(route -1) gets redirected and bangs into Darboh. He can’t get to his corner route in due time. Speight tosses it off his back foot at the version of Jake Butt who is running his route at full speed, and probably hits him. This version of Butt is far away. This looks terrible but is the right read and probably right on the money if CU hadn’t blown up the timing. (MA, 0, protection 0/2)
M28 3 7 Shotgun 2-back 2 0 3 Nickel even 6 Pass Sack N/A -8
Sack/strip/fumble/TD. Competing theories here: it’s Hill for running out into a route, or it’s Smith for doing the same. I’m going with the guy closer to the edge Michigan shifts its line away from, which is Hill(-2). YMMV. (PR, 0, protection 0/2)
Drive Notes: Defensive touchdown, 0-14, 11 min 1st Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Box Type Play Player Yards
M25 1 10 Ace empty 1 0 4 Base 3-4 3 Run Jet sweep Peppers 17
Peppers motion sends LB screaming at jet sweep attack point; Chesson(+2) steps in, takes a hit from a bigger guy, keeps his feet, and eventually steps around him to seal out. Dang. Cole(+1) sheds the NT, who’s trying to hold him, and gets in front of the other LB. Playside OLB, who’s more of a DE type, is dropping on the snap here; Darboh(+1) hits him and moves him. He gets shed eventually but the drive gives Peppers(+1) enough room to shoot by him and into the secondary. RPS +1.
M42 1 10 Ace empty 1 0 4 Base 3-4 3 Run Jet sweep McDoom 10
Other side of the defense, with Chesson(+1) getting a cut block on that OLB type who doesn’t really know what he’s looking at. Darboh(+0.5) gets an okay block; it’s kind of a cut; it doesn’t get the CB down but it does send him backwards four yards and help turn this into a first down. RPS +1.
O48 1 10 Shotgun empty 1 0 4 Base 3-4 4 Pass Fade Darboh Inc
This isn’t a great idea but again Speight is under pressure and just trying to make a play. Braden(-2) completely blows a blitz pickup from a guy who starts six yards deep. He’s absolutely got to see this guy and pick him up; instead he’s through scot free. Speight throws at Darboh, who’s running a go route at a guy eight yards deep. No double move, just go, and CB is over the top of the route, dominating it. Darboh has to PBU an INT. While Speight’s getting pressure he should have written this route off presnap. (BR, 0, protection 0/2)
O48 2 10 Offset I 1 4 0 Base 3-4 7.5 Run Iso Hill 2
Four tight ends and Hill with O’Korn the QB. No idea why. M runs an iso because sure why not; Hill(-1) robotically runs into defensive linemen as Braden’s guy gets to the hole and Newsome(-1) gets shed. I don’t actually mind Braden’s block here despite his guy getting to the iso gap since he put that guy to one side and moved him after he declared a gap; Hill has an opportunity to cut off his butt for a better gain since a double on the nose probably delays him sufficiently to prevent him from getting a tackle in. RPS -1.
O46 3 8 Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 Nickel even 7 Pass Out Perry Inc
This is the first terrible-looking pass that’s actually that terrible. CU tips and sends a corner blitz that Newsome picks up. It’s just a four man rush and M has it stoned; Speight throws at a very covered Perry and airmails it yards over his head. Nervous, jittery throw by a guy who doesn’t trust his protection. BR/IN combo special. (BR, 0, protection 2/2)
Drive Notes: Punt, 0-14, 10 min 1st Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Box Type Play Player Yards
M25 1 10 I-Form Big 2 2 1 Base 3-4 8 Run Iso Smith 10
Smith(+1) again passes up the iso gap and finds daylight elsewhere. This is to the weakside of the formation and CU has slid its LB level heavily to the strongside. Only LB equipped to deal with this slashes Poggi down at the LOS in an attempt to create a pile; Smith shifts outside. That’s still hard to do because Kalis and Mags both got eh blocks not worth a minus or a plus; force guy comes off Mags and threatens to tackle for a 4 or 5 yard gain. Smith runs through it. He spins through a CB’s shoulder block and gets hewed down with authority by a S. Darboh(+1) came in to pop a LB and helped once the play shifted outside. Cole(-1) lost Tupou one on one.
M35 1 10 I-Form Big 2 2 1 Base 3-4 8 Run Trap Smith 1
Two FB/HB types to the left; M traps right. Cole(-2) gets stood up by the NT and shoved back; Poggi(+1) gets a disabling cut on the trapped DL. There is almost a promising crease here until the NT shoves it closed; Smith runs into the back of Cole and falls forward for a minimal gain. This isn’t really the DL to trap against. RPS –1.
M36 2 9 Offset I 2 1 2 Base 3-4 8 Run Outside zone Evans 1
Wooof. Cole(-2) elects to not even touch the NT, who is shaded playside of him. Bredeson has no hope and that guy runs to close off gaps. Kalis(-2) does the same thing with a DE, who ends up splitting him and Cole. Either Poggi or Mags blows something as Poggi(-1) heads outside for the force guy Mags(-1) is already blocking. Three guys tackle Evans at the LOS.
M37 3 8 Shotgun 2TE 1 2 2 Nickel even 7 Pass Drag Butt 13
Newsome(-1) gets ripped around by a DE; he manages to shove/hold/whatever him to the ground but that’s dodgy. Doesn’t matter since CU elects to not cover Jake Butt on a drag route. RPS +2, I guess? (CA, 3, protection ½)
50 1 10 Ace trips 1 2 2 Base 3-4 7 Pass Hitch Darboh Inc
Awuzie gets matched on Darboh and kicks his ass on his route(--); Speight throws it anyway. Awuzie nearly intercepts this. Butt seemed open on a flat route to the other side; Speight at the very least has to throw this away. (BRX, 0, protection 2/2)
50 2 10 I-Form Big 2 2 1 Base 3-4 8 Run Outside zone Smith 0
M tips this with fullback motion; LBs see it, move presnap, and fire hard on the run action. Cole(-1) at least sticks his hand out at the NT on this one but mostly just ole blocks again. He can’t get to the LBs anyway. Kalis(+2) turns and buries a DE but it doesn’t matter since those LBs are hammering so hard. An ineffectual cut block from Poggi(-1) doesn’t help matters RPS -2.
50 3 10 Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 Nickel even 6 Pass Throwaway N/A Inc
Bredeson(-2) fails to ID a blitz that CU waved a huge damn flag was coming. Smith stands up and erases the DB that comes; LB is scot free because freshman. Speight scrambles up and throws a wild ball as he’s getting tackled. (PR, N/A, protection 0/2)
Drive Notes: Punt, 7-21, 1 min 1st Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Box Type Play Player Yards
M20 1 10 I-Form twins 2 1 2 Base 3-4 7.5 Pass FB out Hill 9
Plenty of time. Speight doesn’t like deep options, moves up in the pocket a little bit, and hits Hill on a checkdown route for a nice gain. (CA+, 3, protection 2/2)
M29 2 1 Offset I 2 1 2 Base 3-4 7.5 Run Inside zone Smith 2
Cole(-1) gets significant help from Kalis with a bump that moves the NT and still can’t get him sealed away. He rips through to the hole. The other interior zone block sees Butt(-1) fail to lock out a guy Mags hit hard in the same fashion. Smith has to cut and can cut to either side; he probably picks the wrong hole but any cut is good. There’s a gap thanks to a good Braden(+1) block that moved one of the DE’s a couple yards; Smith gets hit by a LB who is free because Kalis no longer has an angle for him.
M31 1 10 I-Form BIg H 2 2 1 Base 3-4 7.5 Pass Back shoulder Darboh Inc
M has Butt as an H back and slings him out into an out after he fakes an iso block. He threatens vertical, turns around a S, and is breaking open near the sticks. Speight instead throws it at Darboh, who has Witherspoon stride for stride. He’s also on the numbers, so there’s a ton of territory Speight can put it in that Darboh has an advantage. He leaves it short and to the inside. Darboh could still do better here and get a play on the ball, but this was both inaccurate and at the wrong guy. (IN, 1, protection 2/2)
M31 2 10 Power I 3 1 1 Base 3-4 7 Run Split zone Isaac 1
Michigan has everyone in tight and CU has two deep safeties, which should be a dead giveaway for this CB blitz. It’s not. M runs right up the gut and Awuzie, the short-side corner lined up inside the numbers, has an easy time of nerfing it. RPS -2. Rest of the blocking gets submarined by the slants and M’s unpreparedness for this blitz. Cole(-1) again gets put in the backfield.
M32 3 9 Shotgun trips TE 1 1 3 Nickel even 6 Pass Fly Darboh Inc
Newsome(-2) beat around the corner instantly; Speight rolls away from it and sets up to throw at Darboh, who is again dominated by the CB over the top (Route-) and this ball is yards long, not even an attempted arm punt that gives your guy a chance. (IN, 0, protection 0/2)
Drive Notes: Punt, 7-21, 11 min 2nd Q. I cannot believe we won this game.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Box Type Play Player Yards
O38 1 10 Ace 1 2 2 Base 3-4 7.5 Pass Drag Butt 21
CU again elects not to cover this. There aren’t even any picks. They’re just not covering this drag in an extreme fashion. (CA, 3, protection 1/1, RPS +2)
O17 1 10 Offset I 2 1 2 Base 3-4 7.5 Run Jet sweep Chesson 17
Playside end flies upfield and is gone, and then it’s just Hill and Chesson in space. Hill(+1) does a good job to get to the right spot, at which point the relevant corner falls or bugs out or converts to a pacifist religion or something, backing out and tripping a teammate. Chesson(+1) is fast. Touchdown. RPS +2.
Drive Notes: Touchdown, 14-21, 8 min 2nd Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Box Type Play Player Yards
O37 1 10 Shotgun 2-back 1 1 3 Base 3-4 7 Pass Delay TE drag Butt 2
Michigan’s put this double fake screen thing on film a couple times and this time the CU LBs stay home, tackling for a minimal gain. RPS -1. (CA, 3, protection 1/1)
O35 2 8 Ace twins 1 2 2 Base 3-4 7.5 Pass TE out Butt 12
Excellent protection; Speight hitches up a couple times and hits butt as he breaks open towards the sideline. (CA, 3, protection 2/2)
O23 1 10 Ace trips tight bunch 1 2 2 Base 3-4 7 Run Inside zone Smith 2
This is tough for Smith as the NT takes a shot from Kalis and just doesn’t move. When Kalis moves on Cole is unable to do anything with the guy. The two just stand there and when NT threatens the intended hole Smith cuts back. He’s probably better off going in that original hole but I understand the decision. I almost don’t want to neg these guys because this NT seems pretty freaking good right about now, but Kalis -1, Cole -1. Mags(+1) and Butt(+1) effectively comboed through a DE and Kalis did get out to the next level but the cut ruins his blocking angle.
O21 2 8 Shotgun 2TE twins 1 2 2 Base 3-4 7 Pass Scramble Speight 2
CU sends two guys off the edge. Interior guy gets blocked by Mags. Nobody for the corner. Speight definitely has Butt on another drag that gains something, but he doesn’t pull the trigger and instead steps up in the pocket, at which point Kalis’s guy has had enough time to improvise a stunt that Kalis can’t do anything about; Speight rolls out and manages to get a few yards. Still should have thrown the hot route. (BR, 0, protection 0/2, team -2)
O19 3 6 Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 Nickel bear 6 Pass Fly Chesson Inc
Blitz, pickup, Speight again goes deep when he’s got an underneath option that is highly plausible; M likely converts if Speight throws an open circle route Perry’s running. Instead they challenge Witherspoon again; ball is actually right on point and Chesson catches it, but he can’t get a foot in bounds. (MA, 0, protection 2/2)
Drive Notes: Missed FG(36), 5 min 2nd Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Box Type Play Player Yards
M38 1 10 Ace 3TE 1 3 1 Base 3-4 7 Run Jet sweep Chesson 6
CU now reacting heavily to this. Butt(+2) catches a guy pointing things out on the snap and steps around him for a seal. Asiasi(+1) gets a kickout block that puts a DB on the sideline. Chesson avoids one guy and then hesitates at that kickout despite its very obvious nature; he could probably get close to the sticks if he just puts a foot in the ground and goes right behind it. Instead some dancing and a few yards spurned. With the guy-avoidance, a push.
M44 2 4 I-Form twins 2 1 2 Base 3-4 8 Pass TE drag Butt 11
CU sends the OLB to the area Butt is going to run into. He gets picked up and Darboh runs into the MLB’s area. No actual contact but the proximity does slow up the LB and give Butt the edge. Butt(-3) fumbles a hair before his elbow goes down; ball goes OOB. CU picks up a sideline infraction penalty. (CA, 3, protection 2/2, RPS +1)
O30 1 10 Ace diamond TE 3 1 1 Base 3-4 7 Run Double iso Smith 4
CU slants and both FBs redirect to the new gaps. Mags(+1) picks up a blitzing LB, stalls him, and drives him off the ball. Kalis(+1) takes a slanter and shoves him well out of the gap he wants to hit. The only negative here is that this block ends up getting into Mason Cole’s feet and he loses the NT as he leaps the mess. Not his fault. Smith cuts backside into this gap and then bounces outside as Tupou threatens. This takes him to an unblocked safety. He spins through that guy but blocking angles blown, etc., and the cavalry arrives. Large reason this play gets held down is safeties at 7 yards. RPS -1. Butt(+0.5) got a good kickout.
O26 2 6 Offset I 2 1 2 Base 3-4 8 Pass Dumpoff Hill 7
Corner sent; Smith picks him up ably. Speight maddens himself into pressure here by dropping back in the pocket continually; rest of the blocking is excellent and there’s a good pocket. He picks a dumpoff as it doesn’t look like his other options are any good—Chesson and Butt may be running too close to each other. CU should hack this down for zlich but Hill(+1) breaks a tackle and picks it up. (CA, 3, protection 2/2)
O19 1 10 Ace diamond TE 2 2 1 Base 3-4 9 Run Power O Isaac -1
Isaac(-2) bangs into Speight as he’s got the wrong play in his head. The intended play is pretty well blocked but CU is so tight to the LOS and overloaded that there’s a free hitter anyway. Cole(+1) seals away the NT; Braden(+1) sees that and redirects to lock out a LB. Newsome(+0.5) gets a couple yards of depth even if he can’t seal out the other DL and he either makes a tackle for about four or five or Isaac shoots through into the secondary. Instead Isaac runs around in a panic until he loses a yard.
O18 2 11 I-Form Big twin TE 2 2 1 Base 3-4 7 Pass PA post Darboh Inc
Excellent protection, with Cole coming off the NT to pick up a LB. Michigan runs play action and Speight is again throwing at the wrong guy. Darboh is bracketed. Meanwhile he’s got Butt on a lone corner he can probably box out or out leap and Hill popping very open on a checkdown. But this is open enough for a TD, with Darboh a step in front of Awuzie; he simply misses and nearly ends up throwing a pick. (IN, 0, protection 3/3)
O18 3 11 Shotgun 2-back 2 1 2 Base 3-4 7 Pass Fly Darboh Inc
Speight doesn’t even give Darboh a slight chance at making a play on this. (IN, 0, protection 2/2) Also there’s a CU coverage bust just like the first TD M gave up with zero safeties in the middle of the field and Chesson running open. Ugh.
Drive Notes: FG(35), 17-21, 2 min 2nd Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Box Type Play Player Yards
O45 1 10 Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 Nickel even 6 Pass Tunnel screen Darboh 45
Take a bow, Grant Perry. Perry’s assigned to cut the corner on Darboh, which he does a crappy job of. Newsome(+1) has to adjust and kick that guy out and Michigan is now down a blocker, except Perry gets back up and gets Awuzie, blasting him back a few yards; Awuzie discards him but Darboh’s already past. Perry then starts running for the safeties and gets a shove in on the last guy to help Darboh break that tackle. +3 even with the biff. Meanwhile Kalis(+1) and Cole(+2) get out in space and get their guys, with Cole burying a DB. Darboh(+2) does have to run through an arm tackle at the sticks and stiffarm that last guy Perry hit. (CA, 3, screen)
Drive Notes: Touchdown, 24-21, 1 min 2nd Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Box Type Play Player Yards
O45 1 10 I-Form Big twin TE 2 2 1 Base 3-4 8.5 Pass Waggle scramble Speight 3
I have no idea if anyone’s open downfield. Butt isn’t in the flat. Speight doesn’t think he's got a throw and gets a few yards. (SCR, N/A, protection 1/1) Director -2.
O42 2 7 I-Form Big 2 2 1 Base 3-4 8 Run Pitch sweep Smith 42
Pitch sweep that goes the distance without Smith having to do much at all. Darboh(+1) takes a corner blitz and locks the guy up long enough for Michigan to get around him. Newsome(+0.5) pulls for the force guy and watches him power slide away. Playside end shoots inside and is gone of his own volition. Only guys left are the playside ILB and various members of the secondary. Hill(+4) gets an unprecedented blocking plus for something I haven’t seen in all my years of charting this stuff. He hammers through the playside ILB and just keeps going; he’s not slowed at all and agile enough to get out in front of a safety, who cut blocks Hill for reasons known only to himself. Hill had leverage on him, I think, and that’s a bonafide edge two for one. Smith just runs until the five, where he picks up a block from Butt(+1) for the final few yards. RPS +1.
Drive Notes: Touchdown, 31-28, 13 min 3rd Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Box Type Play Player Yards
M29 1 10 Ace twins twin TE 1 2 2 Base 3-4 8 Pass Dumpoff Smith 2
Good protection. Kalis’s guy is getting through at the end here but Speight’s had time to survey. He ends up checking down to a covered Smith and almost turfing it. Smith has to scoop it off his shoetops and has no shot at YAC. (MA, 2, protection 2/2)
M31 2 8 Ace twins twin TE 1 2 2 Base 3-4 8 Penalty False start Kalis -5
Kalis -1
M26 2 13 Offset I twins 2 1 2 Base 3-4 7.5 Pass Flare screen Smith -5
Deflected as it passes the DE. Smith makes a spectacular catch that he definitely should not make, as he’s in no position to deal with a linebacker shooting for him. Chesson(-1) runs a bubble and that’s gotta be a bust, you’d think; he’s probably supposed to go crack that LB. (BA, 1, screen.)
M21 3 18 Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 Nickel even 6 Pass Tunnel screen Chesson Inc
Batted down. (BA, 0, protection N/A)
Drive Notes: Punt, 31-28, 10 min 3rd Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Box Type Play Player Yards
M20 1 10 Pro 3-wide 2 0 3 Base 3-4 7 Run Jet sweep Chesson 2 (pen -9)
Michigan zoning these DL, which they almost do well except for the fact that Kalis(-2) goes low on the NT and gets an obvious chop block penalty. Smith(-1) falls as the playside LB goes inside of him; if that happens he’s gone and you just keep going. Instead he uses himself and gets in Braden’s way as he tries to pull outside. Chesson gets outside of that back but nobody can get to a playside OLB hammering to the play and Chesson can’t cut back in time; he gets run OOB after a minimal gain.
M11 1 19 Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 Base 3-4 5.5 Pass Screen Isaac 21
Most of the OL way late getting out because of the way the DL attack them; Braden(+1) does get out and get to a LB. CU dropped their most DE-ish LB into this space; Isaac(+2) jukes him and bursts to the outside; Darboh(+1) gets a hit in to help him get the last few yards before the marker.
M32 1 10 I-Form Big 2 2 1 Base 3-4 8 Penalty Offsides N/A 5
oops
M37 1 5 I-Form Big 2 2 1 Base 3-4 8 Run Pitch sweep Evans 1
My least favorite thing to watch in a block is an outside run on which an OL simply ignores the DL over him and leaves his buddy to futilely chase a guy. Happens here as Magnuson just runs outside and gives Kalis an impossible job trying to deal with a DE shaded just inside of Mags(-2). This guy will chase to the sideline and make the tackle. Mags ends up blocking nobody at all as he runs outside for a force player who isn’t there. Asiasi(+1) kicked out the playside OLB huge and turns him into an accidental force. M does combo through the NT (waves tiny punt flag) with Cole(+1) and Braden(+1) getting around him, getting a seal, and hitting a second level defender. Darboh(+1) thunks playside ILB. Evans gets tackled by aforementioned DE and the CB who ducked inside the Asiasi block that Mags did not.
M38 2 4 Ace 1 2 2 Base 3-4 7 Run Inside zone Smith 5
Jet fake with Smith going up the gut. Tupou fights to the jet side and Cole(+1) locks him out. Newsome(-1) lets his guy under his pads and gets shoved back and controlled; that guy fights to the gap and tackles Smith near the LOS. Smith(+1) being Smith he carries this dude to the sticks. RPS +1; this also distracted the LB level.
M43 1 10 Offset I 2 1 2 Base 3-4 8 Run Split trap Smith 4
Odd play where the two sides of the line both go towards opposite sites of the field, leaving a huge gap in the middle. Poggi comes in to wham the NT from the side, which has almost no discernible effect. Backside(?) DE swims outside of Mags but that’s probably fine since this is directly up the gut; he can’t make a play. Kalis(-2) redirects away from this guy to the LB level, and just falls over. That’s two LBs and zero blockers. Smith runs directly upfield for a few yards. Someone busted, and if I had to guess it’s either Newsome or Braden who’s supposed to pull around up the gut. Braden(-2) is the likely culprit. RPS +2, if these LB blocks get made this is a cavern in the front.
M47 2 6 Offset I Big 2 2 1 Base 3-4 8 Pass Sack N/A -8
Mags(-2) checks the DE and then lets him pass by, which gets Speight pressured immediately; with short options covered he eats a sack. (PR, N/A, protection 0/2)
M39 3 14 Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 Nickel even 6 Pass Improv Perry 54
DE pulls out and tries to get around two gaps to blitz. Butt’s route gets in his way and delays him some. Braden has nothing in his zone and does get his head around in time to get a shove in on the looper. That coupled with his delay means big gap in the front and Speight rolls up into it, still looking downfield. Awuzie vacates his zone in a move hypothetical CU UFR guy is steamed about since it’s 3rd and 14 vs Wilton Speight; Speight hits Perry at the sticks and then he keeps running a long way. (CA+, 3, protection 2/2, Perry +1 run)
O7 1 G Ace twins 1 2 2 Base 3-4 9 Run Outside zone Smith 4
Director(-3) run this play from an oblique near field-level angle. I hate him. Near as I can tell, Mags(+1) and Kalis(+1) combo through the playside DE with Mags getting out to a LB. Butt(+0.5) gets an okay second level block.
O3 2 G Offset I Big H 2 2 1 Goal line 10 Run Iso Isaac 2
Pinched DE shoots inside of Mags(+0.5) and doesn’t really get anywhere. Poggi(-1) does not shift outside a gap and just runs into this so he spends his momentum doing little. Isaac does hit the hole outside of this but with Butt(-1) seeing his lead block submarined and worked through Isaac(+1) meets a lot of meat. He does well to get two.
O1 3 G Offset I Big twin TE 2 2 1 Goal line 10 Run Pitch sweep Isaac 1
Oh man Michigan gets away with one here. Bunting(-2) immediately loses his guy outside and recovers by holding the guy and then blasting him in the back. Neither gets called, refs +4. Woo refs. Butt(+1) gets a good extended block on a DB and Hill(+1) deftly shifts inside Newsome as he gets a kick and manages to get a shoulder into the last guy.
Drive Notes: Touchdown, 38-28, 3 min 3rd Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Box Type Play Player Yards
M21 1 10 Offset I 2 1 2 Base 3-4 8 Run WR wham? Isaac 3
Bizarre play where the playside OLB is let free by Butt and Chesson tries to crack back on him while he’s in the backfield? Kalis(-1) and Cole(-1) don’t do anything with the NT, who’s just waiting in the hole as if nobody even tried to block him. Poggi’s running into a huge mess of bodies because of the weirdness described above. Isaac(+1) is able to pick his way through extreme amounts of traffic for a minimal gain; Mags(+0.5) had a decent block that helped.
M24 2 7 Offset I Big twin TE 2 2 1 Base 3-4 8 Pass Drag Butt 15
Braden(-1) beat up the gut by a DE.He stays attached and shoves him past Speight; the rest of the protection is good, so Speight can move around and float a ball to Butt for a solid gain, (CA+, 3, protection ½) Butt(+1) gets a chunk of YAC by cutting back.
M39 1 10 Offset I 2 1 2 Base 3-4 8 Run Power O Isaac 5
Not quite jet motion from Chesson as he goes behind Poggi and could actually get called for illegal motion since he’s moving towards the LOS at the snap; refs +1. Just a power play the other way. Probably meant to go further inside but adaptations are made. Poggi(+1) fires in the playside OLB and removes him. Isaac(+0.5) reads the shift outside and goes there. Braden(+0.5) comes around and leads the way, getting a hit on one LB; CB comes down from the side and tackle; Isaac drags him for a few yards.
M44 2 5 Offset I Big twin TE 2 2 1 Base 3-4 8.5 Run Naked boot Speight 3
This is the yep Navarre play where Speight(-1) ends up in space against a DE and just takes a tackle like he’s a sled, getting hammered OOB.
M47 3 2 Shotgun trips tight bunch 1 1 3 Nickel even 6 Pass Out Darboh 6
Really really iffy pass from Speight that’s upfield of Darboh and almost a PBU. Not hard to see a slightly different situation where this is picked. Darboh manages to dig it off the ground while getting heavy contact from the CB. This throw is so short and so off I can’t MA it. (IN, 1, protection 1/1)
O47 1 10 Offset I Big twin TE 2 2 1 Base 3-4 8 Run Power O Isaac 1
Playside OLB dives inside Hill looking to spill the play. Hill cant do much here a the dude just cuts him. Kalis(+0.5) shifts outside upon seeing this. Isaac(-1) does not make the same read and shoots up the gut minus his pulling G. This still has a reasonable shot to work since Braden(+1) actually cuts off this NT and Mags(+0.5) gets a yard or so of depth on a DE; Newsome(-2) airballs on a linebacker. Stuff.
O46 2 9 Ace diamond TE 3 1 1 Base 3-4 8.5 Run Double iso Evans 5
Similar to the Smith version of this double iso I complained about last week; this is what I wanted Smith to do, except the blocking is worse all around. Kalis(-0.5) doesn’t really move one end. Cole(+0.5) does move the NT back a couple yards but he’s still getting two-gapped. Evans’s initial motion takes him to a frontside gap and both LBs eventually insert themselves in it; Evans(+1) cuts backside and manages to get some yards by running over(!) the NT. That’s the first time I’ve seen him respond to someone contacting him. Didn’t end up relevant but Braden(+1) got a good kick in the other gap. Both FBs made contact on iffy blocks.
O41 3 4 Shotgun 4-wide 1 1 3 Nickel even 6 Pass Out Butt Inc
Butt picks up a safety moving with him after a corner blitz from Awuzie, nominally on him, is picked up. Speight throws a terrible, terrible idea of a ball that has just one positive: it’s too far upfield and therefore not a pick six. Bunting open right in front of his face for the conversion. JFC. (BRX, 0, protection 2/2)
Drive Notes: Punt, 38-28, 12 min 4th Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Box Type Play Player Yards
O44 1 10 I-Form Big 2 2 1 Base 3-4 8 Run Iso Isaac 0
Cole(-1) and Kalis(-1) both get stood up by their guys and give up a little groundqq; Isaac blindly runs at the iso gap despite a solid shot at yards on a cutback thanks to Newsome(+1) driving his man off the ball. Braden even shoves Tupou towards that hole, oddly, not that Tupou responds to external impacts.
O44 2 10 I-Form Big 2 2 1 Base 3-4 8 Run Pin and pull Evans 4
Butt(+1) motions around a bit and settles just outside of an H-back spot; he seals the playside OLB away. Corner opts out so Mags doesn’t really have to do anything on the edge. Playside ILB charges do the pullers and cuts both of them down, which isn’t really their fault, just a clever play. Evans(+1) manages to hop the trash and get a solid gain, although I do want him to try to juke past the S instead of running to the sideline and getting popped OOB.
O40 3 6 Ace 3-wide 1 2 2 Base 3-4 6.5 Pass Improv Butt 12
Pretty miserable pass protection here as CU sends a double A gap blitz. Cole(-2) runs after Tupou despite his clear path outside and lets a guy through untouched. Evans(-2) gets run over by the other guy. Speight rolls away from it and finds Butt for a conversion. (CA+, 3, protection 0/4)
O28 1 10 Offset I Big twin TE 2 2 1 Base 3-4 8 Run Outside zone Isaac 5
M gets the edge as Poggi(+2) first whacks the playside OLB and gives M the edge, then proceeds down the sideline to cut off a linebacker flowing. Other ILB is free and runs Isaac out after a good gain. Another zone play on which Michigan players simply run by DL and give the guy running behind an impossible job. If Michigan does not get the edge here they get nothing.
O23 2 5 Offset I Big 2 2 1 Base 3-4 8 Run Outside zone Isaac 1
Okay… this is so consistent that it seems intentional and that baffles me. Once again this outside zone run features zero persons actually getting blocked, let alone comboes through. Isaac bounces it outside again because I guess that’s his best option.
O22 3 4 Ace 1 2 2 Base 3-4 8 Pass Sack N/A -4
Newsome(-2) beat around the corner at eight yards. Speight steps up; he does have Darboh open for the first down but doesn’t see him and as he steps up he has to slow because CU has good lane discipline and the OLB who got past Newsome sacks. (PR, N/A, protection 0/2)
Drive Notes: Missed FG(44), 6 min 4th Q. Final three plays not charted.

sa

I am ready for this. I am not panicking. I am serene.

So, before we start, Colorado NT Josh Tupou is a beast. I know we didn't go into this game expecting that, necessarily, and it's always questionable in the aftermath of a disappointing game when a partisan says "no seriously, that guy was legit." But take it from a guy who picked out future NFL second round draft pick Jason Jones back in 2007 in a game against Eastern Michigan(!!!): Tupou is going to be drafted and probably pretty high.

I suspected this from the first snap, when Tupou chucked Mason Cole aside like he was Willie Henry encountering some balsa wood. I converted to the church of Tupou on this play, when he engaged with Cole and took everything Kyle Kalis could muster:

That dude doesn't even notice a 300-pound man hitting him hard from the side.  Later in the game Michigan would run a trap; Henry Poggi would thud into a stationary Tupou not expecting contact from the side and simply bounce off.

Outside of (probably) Malik McDowell this was the best DT Michigan will face this year, by some distance.

It's just that…

Don't.

I have to.

I will feel bad about the season. I am feeling less serene.

This game made me legitimately panicpanicpanicpanic about the offensive line. They were a wreck.

You don't think "wreck" overstates things?

No. This game made me very depressed as I charted it, to the point where I grabbed both of Michigan's outside zone plays deep into garbage time because FFS both of them saw nobody except Henry Poggi block anyone. I mean, look at the

no i don't want to

chart:

Offensive Line
RUN PASS PRO
Player Snaps + - Total PFF Snaps Pass- Error% PFF
Newsome 36 3 4 -1 -1.3 35 7 10% -2.4
Braden 32 8.5 2 6.5 -0.6 32 3 4% -1.2
Cole 36 7.5 11 -3.5 -4.9 35 2 3% -0.2
Kalis 36 5.5 11 -5.5 -3.4 35 - - 1.1
Magnuson 36 4.5 3 1.5 -0.1 35 2 3% 0.5
Bredeson 4 0 0 3 2 33% 0.6
Butt 27 9 5 6* 1.0 2 - - 0.1
Bunting 20 2 -2 0.3 3 - - 0.1
Wheatley 2 0 0 - - -
Asiasi 9 3 3 -1.2 0 - - -
Hill 13 7 1 5* 2.4 2 2 50% 0.1
Poggi 20 4.5 3 1.5 -0.2 1 - - 0.1
TOTAL - 52.5 42 55%

*[Butt got +1 for running and –3 for a fumble. Those are not included in the blocking total. Hill got +1 on a catch, also not included.]

Metrics
Player + - T Notes
Protection 34 22 61% Newsome –7, Braden –3, Hill –2, Bredeson –2, Magnuson –2, Cole –2, Evans –2, Team -2
RPS 14 9 +5 Good job mitigating above issues.

So! That's real bad. I more or less agreed with PFF on the line except Braden, who I thought was good, and Butt/Asiasi/Poggi, who I thought were major assets overall.

As far as the OL, woof. I clipped four or five stretch plays on which the entire line ignored guys they have to block only for those guys to meet at the running back.

There are five defenders across the LOS on this play. I'd argue that zero of them are effectively blocked. Even the force guy who has to accept a kickout block both draws a two-for-one and gets back to the ballcarrier. This is one of the worst zone stretch plays I've seen in a decade of doing this, and for five years in there that was one of Michigan's staple plays.

The two late ones are just baffling. Isaac gets the edge on the first and the result is a nominally successful run, but that doesn't mean the guys on the interior shouldn't be seeking to cut guys off at the pass. Instead they run by without exception:

Next play, same thing. I expect Cole to chip Tupou so Braden can step around. Instead he runs directly downfield and once again not a single CU DL is effectively blocked:

This was so consistent I almost assume it has to be as intended, except not once did any playside CU DL get blocked, at all, on plays that should exploit a hypothetical mobility weakness. On every single one the guy I expect to chip just ran by the guy and the guy behind couldn't do jack. Except that one time they took a chop block. If it's as intended, maybe stop intending to do things that don't get anyone blocked.

This was a trend even on nominally gap-blocked runs. My least favorite thing to see on a run play is when an OL gets hung out to dry by a teammate and ends up chasing a guy to the play, because it's always the dude who got screwed over who people get on afterwards. Here Kyle Kalis is asked to reach a guy a gap outside of him without any help because Magnuson pulls:

Nobody makes that block. (And of course further inside Cole and Braden successfully scoop Tupou for like the only time in the game on a play that he's irrelevant on. I may have sighed expansively while watching this play.) I have to assume that's a busted assignment because the alternative is bad design; ditto that second Tupou play embedded above Kyle Kalis falls down, and that's bad, but even if he was upright Michigan has one blocker for two LBs. Someone, probably Braden, did not pull around into the gap.

Meanwhile, in pass protection Michigan chased ghosts. Blitzers got through scot free over and over again, even in situations where the only reasonable interpretation appears to be a mild stroke:

I have no idea how a left tackle abandons a guy shooting outside of him. Magnuson did the same thing later:

This, meanwhile, was even more alarming since it's the continuation of a trend:

Three man line, only one plausible blitzer in the area, and Braden somehow manages to miss the blindingly obvious blitz coming straight at his face. Not one but two guys shoot through the line untouched on this one; Smith gets an excellent pickup on one of them.

Soooooo, yeah. These are the reason I was alarmed about the OL performance.

BUT AT LEAST WE HAVE A STEADY, RELIABLE GAME MANAGER AT QB RIGHT

Uh.

HAHAHAHA I'M NOT NERVOUS AT ALL

This did not look like the same quarterback. The early sack/strip may have had something to do with it. (Please, please, please have everything to do with it.)

It's one thing for Speight to get sped up into bad decisions because he's afraid of pressure, and it's another for various passes to be wildly off. The giant ice pack he wore to the post-game presser may indicate a physical reason on top of whatever footsteps he was hearing, or the first couple weeks might have been a mirage. The only thing that will clarify is more data.

Here's what we have so far:

[Hennechart orientation: mouse over column headers for explanations of the categories. + is handed out for a good throw under duress. * is handed out for a very bad version of a bad thing. Numbers in parens are screens. DSR is an attempt to compress the numbers into one overall number. PFF is PFF's grade.]

Good Neutral Bad Ovr
Game DO CA SCR   PR MA   BA TA IN BR DSR PFF
Hawaii 1 8(1)+ 1(1) 1* 2* 73% -1.0
UCF 3 21(1) 5 2 2 2(1) 2 82% 1.0
Colorado - 14(2)++++ 1 4 3 2 - 5 6** 50% -3.5

So that's Early Rudock Except Crazy.

A fair portion of the negative things that happened were not on him. Michigan's protection broke down repeatedly in this game, and sometimes when it did this was compounded by guys not getting open. On one early prayer to nowhere Butt actually gets redirected into Darboh; the resulting Speight throw is actually a damn good one in a hypothetical universe where Butt can get to his spot with minimal delay.

Many were definitely on him. His reaction to an ugly blitz pickup early was instructive. Darboh lined up with a CB eight yards off him and ran a fly route. That should immediately disqualify his route or at least invite a back shoulder throw; Speight got pressure and threw it such that Darboh had to break up an INT. This led into a series of throws that were into coverage or nowhere near their targets or both. This one is late at a receiver who's dominated by a future NFL player:

A later fly down the sideline would see Darboh give himself a ton of room for a back shoulder throw; Speight literally hits the DB's foot:

That uncanny accuracy we talked about after the UCF game inverted itself into spray passing. A third and short conversion to Darboh was left way upfield and exposed to a DB;

On top of that there were a number of throws where he was both inaccurate and probably throwing to the wrong guy. Darboh has a window here that Speight misses, and Jake Butt is one on one with a CB, which veritably cries out for a #buttzone throw:

I probably don't notice Butt if that throw is on point; it's not.

Then there was the grand-bull-moose of WTF throws, an out to Jake Butt that was nearly a pick-six:

Wooooooof.

I'm going to dip myself in bleach.

I mean…

Okay you're going to talk me off the ledge okay it's going to be okay

…just make sure you have your affairs in order first?

: (

Fine, fine. Here is a positive thing. It seems paradoxical that a jumpy Speight would be at his best once he got pressured, but, lo, it was so. When afforded the opportunity to move around in the pocket he seemed to forget about the men chasing him—or at least knew what direction they were coming from now—and hit various guys who popped open. The big catch and run to Perry was the moment when the game went from a coin flip to a win to close out, and it only happened because Speight drew the attention of Awuzie and took advantage of it:

That asset carried over from the first couple games and can be regarded as fact now; even as he lost near everything else he maintained it.

No quarterback and no OL, how does Michigan put up 38 points and 400 yards?

Michigan's blocky/catchy guys and wide receivers came to play. It's no exaggeration to state that Michigan picked up more yards because of peripheral blockers than the actual offensive line. Between the Smith and Darboh touchdowns, a screen to Isaac, the two Peppers runs, a bubble, the weird Speight bootleg, and four jet sweeps Michigan picked up 166 yards—almost half their total. All of that hits to the outside of the field and involves the OL blocking in space, if they block at all.

Some of those numbers are in that chart above: I thought Butt and Hill were excellent on the ground, with Asiasi chipping in as well. The WR/RB ground chart also has a ton of positives:

RB chart (WR grades are run only):

Backs
Player Rushes + - T PFF Notes
Speight 0 1 -1 0.2 Navarre.
Smith 12 3 1 2 0.7
Isaac 10 3 2 1 -1.1 Juke offset the backfield biff.
Evans 5 2 2 -0.8
Higdon
Peppers 2 1   1 0.4
Johnson       DNP
TOTAL 36 9 4 5 -1.2
Receivers
Player Blocks + - T PFF G Notes
Darboh 26 7.5 7.5 1.2  
Chesson 11 4 1  3 1.5
Perry 3 4     -0.1 WTF?
Ways 7 2 -2 -0.1  
Harris        
McDoom    
Crawford    
TOTAL - 15.5 3 12.5

The skill position players and their blocking are the main reason Michigan's offense remained even barely functional.

On the one hand, excellent job to rescue Michigan after finding themselves down 21-7 after the first quarter without having to have a functional inside running game or effective quarterback. On the other hand, also that last sentence.

Anyway. The good bits. Khalid Hill's already become an internet fave-rave after his 7-10 split of a block on the Smith touchdown, but it's too pretty not to embed again:

Hill also squeezed out a first down conversion by bouncing off a cornerback and deftly cut through some traffic on the Isaac touchdown to get a whack on a guy many fullbacks don't get to.

Jehu Chesson was the primary engine for the second Peppers run:

Darboh was the other important block. Grant Perry was the main motive force on Darboh's touchdown, and Michigan's jet sweeps were consistent gainers until very late.

Jake Butt had a second consecutive excellent week on the ground; he was consistently able to step around guys and seal them off:

Also featured on this play: Devin Asiasi putting a DB on the sideline. Asiasi seems to have moved past Wheatley as Michigan's go-to blocking tight end, and early returns are good. He had a rough outing last week; this week he latched on and ejected guys from the premises. Meanwhile,  Butt had a similar block on Isaac's touchdown and helped Smith get the last five yards on his 42-yarder.

Running back crabbing, you crab?

Says something about the blocking that I have only a few nits not worth mentioning after that game. On the contrary, Smith looked something like his decisive Citrus self when provided any opportunity. Here he cuts away from the intended iso hole just after getting the second level to commit:

He'd shift a gap in the other direction for ten yards a bit later. Other runs had similar cuts and met worse fates because of blocking issues.

And one MGoPoint to Chris Evans for making the cut last week's De'Veon Smith Vision Controversy Of The Week was about. He gets both LBs to commit to one iso gap and then cuts away from them… directly into Tupou. The blocking was a little worse this week.

Tupou falls over after a featherweight freshman hits him because of course he does. Anyway: if Michigan is able to block either DL there that's a nice gain into the secondary because of the backfield cut. Five yards isn't bad considering the game and the situation.

(Side note: Evans's pass blocking is currently very bad.)

The only other item of note was Isaac juking his way past a DE/OLB type and bailing Michigan out on first and 19:

Here's some analysis: yes good do that more.

Peppers?

Only two runs in this game, both successful but not particularly illuminating for anyone familiar with his work last year.

Boo! /throws shoe

none of these even match
do you go around wearing two different shoes all the time

Catch chart?

[0 = uncatchable, 1 = circus catch, 2 = moderate difficulty, 3 = routine]

THIS WEEK SEASON
Player 0 1 2 3 0 1 2 3
Darboh 5 1/2 1/2 7 1/3 9/10
Chesson 3   3 0/1 2/2 5/5
Perry 1 1/1   2 2/2
Harris  
Ways   1/1
McDoom   1/1 2/2
Crawford   1/1
Butt 1 1/1 6/6   2 1/1 14/16
Bunting   2/2
Wheatley  
Asiasi  
Poggi   2/3
Hill 2/2   1/1 3/3
Smith 1/1 1/1   1 1/1 1/1 2/2
Isaac  
Evans 1/1   1 2/2
Higdon  
McKeon   2/2
Hirsch   1/1

ROUTES: Darboh –3, Butt –1.

Rough week, with a large proportion of total attempts filed completely uncatchable. Darboh struggled against CU's CBs; "Darboh might be fast" is tabled this week.

Stanford?

I ended up somewhat frustrated by the lack of big plays that seemed related to playcalling. In retrospect this is a function of an erratic QB and even more erratic OL. As we all learned during the Rodriguez years, to get big plays you have to do something well. I don't think Michigan did anything well enough to demand a response here.

There were a couple wrinkles I picked up.  The first Peppers run saw Michigan align in a tackle over formation. CU slid their DL to that side of the field and the resulting seals were easy:

Ways completely biffs his assignment and it's still seven yards because the alignment almost buys you that at the snap.

OTOH, sometimes your shuffling fullback takes the LB level directly to your back with no reasonable blocking response.

Michigan didn't have the opportunity to counter that because of circumstance.

Also here's a WR with a crackback block on an OLB on a play that makes no sense.

Your guess is as good as mine.

Heroes?

Your collection of perimeter blockers: Hill, Perry, Chesson, Darboh, Butt, and Asiasi. Butt was also the only consistently effective bit of the passing game.

Maybe not so heroic?

Cole and Kalis couldn't do anything with Tupou; Grant Newsome gave up a ton of pressure. Speight looked broken after the big hit.

What does it mean for Penn State and beyond?

Speight was rattled and hurt? And this is going to be a blip? That's the ticket.

Seriously, though: given the ice pack and the talk from Harbaugh afterward it's likely that Speight sustained some sort of bruise or stinger that crippled his accuracy. Meanwhile getting blown up like that had a major impact on his reads. Michigan had more guys open than it seemed at first blush; Speight did not find them.

I'm punting on whether this means anything until we see him against Penn State.

Michigan's wide receivers are terrific assets on the ground. I think we already knew this but this was a game they pulled out of the fire based on that skill.

Blitz pickups need serious, serious work. Early season hiccups, you'd hope. About half the pressures in this game came from either guys jetting through the line untouched or players freaking out about blitzes that either didn't come or they didn't have to get to.

Braden had a bounce-back. He blew one early blitz pickup but was otherwise good; Bredeson got just seven snaps and I assume Braden's very bad week from UCF was injury and rust related.

Jake Butt: back to being real good. Opening week blocking issues seem like a blip and he didn't drop anything here. /waves tiny flag

Interior line issues are partially Tupou-related… dude is the truth and Cole and Kalis won't have games that bad all season. Terrible matchup.

…but they can't run a stretch to save their lives. Woof! Woof woof woof!

Khalid Hill: impact fullback? Strange world. Possibly true.

Comments

stephenrjking

September 22nd, 2016 at 3:31 PM ^

Isn't part of the problem that the ball wasn't going where they expected it?

I will say that I've seen several situations this year where Darboh appears to be making poor adjustments on the ball in flight, maximizing the danger of a turnover. He's athletic and good at catching, but his jump-ball skills just don't seem to be there.

reshp1

September 22nd, 2016 at 3:55 PM ^

I suppose inaccuracy is at least part of the problem, but by "where the ball is going" I more meant they know the route and play design. Also, given the DB has to keep his eyes on the receiver, it seems pretty inexusable for the defender to consistently make a better play on the ball than the receiver.

You're right, there's been a couple other instances. The Darboh target the Hawaii safety nearly spectacularly intercepts had him falling backwards instead of working back to the ball. Grant Perry also passively lets himself get run over by two DBs instead of fighting back to an underthrown ball and drawing a PI.  

stephenrjking

September 22nd, 2016 at 4:22 PM ^

I was thinking of the same play you were. Darboh is a solid player, but this seems to be a weakness which limits the offense's ability to exploit the types of coverages he gets. It's a lot harder to throw, for example, effective back shoulder fades if his footwork is poor.

Doesn't mean he's a bad player or even that he's not a serious plus asset, just that there are some things he can't do. Given his skillset, though, it's a bit frustrating.

I dumped the Dope

September 22nd, 2016 at 3:25 PM ^

not nearly as detailed (as usual thanks for these awesome details!), is we seem to have the fire in our eyes when given a short field.  But starting at our own 20, not so much.   I haven't seen the steady grinding of yards yet via a combination of bread and butter plays to chew thru long drives, its been mostly converting 3rd downs (good) via Butt after being 3&5 or more.  Or the occasional big play.

I hope the Drev can align the stars once again or we are going to find a team that our D can't hold back and the O cannot compensate.

Reader71

September 22nd, 2016 at 5:22 PM ^

Switching to zone would come with all sorts of transition costs. As you can see, this line isn't really cut out for it. Also, it makes sense that we stink at running the stretch. I was on some lines that featured All-Americas, All-Conference guys, and future pros, but we couldn't run the stretch for shit because we were a man blocking team and didn't rep zone enough to be any good at it.

Indonacious

September 22nd, 2016 at 3:31 PM ^

I think our OL and RB situation is what it is at this point. I just feel that by this time a positive trajectory would have been seen on either fronts and while there have been some incremental changes, its basically the same. At this point, we should start working on schemes to combat teams with strong DLs, and figure out how we can try to compensate for it. McDowell looms large (no pun intended) based on our OL struggles. You have to think that MSU is already working on their blitz packages for us and our advantage with TEs and WRs can be nullified if Speight doesn't have any time to do anything.

Durham Blue

September 22nd, 2016 at 3:34 PM ^

I miss the days when we could rack up 200+ yards running between the tackles against a good defense.  And pick up blitzes with regularity.  Seriously, it seems like it's been forever since we could count on at least 3 yards every time we pounded it between the tackles.

1974

September 22nd, 2016 at 5:14 PM ^

When we got two hundreds yards rushing from between-the-tackles running, it generally wasn't against a very good or great defense. The complaining occurred when we were doing "27 for 27" or when we were going up against a defense that was at least very good. If you'd like a good example, look at the bowl game against USC after the '06 season.

Durham Blue

September 22nd, 2016 at 7:08 PM ^

OK, maybe not 200+ yards but at least 125 yards.  My casual obsevation is more often than not our runs between the tackles feature Smith, Isaac and Evans being stuffed at the LOS with those guys churning like hell for a yard, or, they're dropped in the back field for a loss.  We've been very successful running around the edges but I question how long that will last into B1G play.  We need to be able to run successfully between the tackles in addition to the edges if we're going to talk seriously about national championships.

stephenrjking

September 22nd, 2016 at 3:50 PM ^

What's frustrating about the OL issues here is that we have experienced players and a coach in Tim Drevno who has a proven track record of producing quality offensive lines. This is not a Borges or Funk situation where there are some questionmarks about how good the guys really are; the coaches have produced good OLs at every level, full stop.

And we know our players are capable of good play, because we've seen it. The Braden issues last week were very concerning, but we could at least fall back to most of last season where he was serviceable at worst and good at best. 

Yet Saturday was a complete disaster. And UCF may well have been stacking the box, but they are UCF. And great teams have to run into stacked boxes to win games. There's no sign that Michigan will be able to do that this year. Who feels comfortable with the team protecting a one-score lead against MSU or OSU with four minutes to go right now?

Pepto Bismol

September 22nd, 2016 at 3:59 PM ^

I know these coaches can do it.  I don't think our guys are inept.  What's going on here?

You mention the stacked boxes of UCF and yeah, I didn't buy that for a second.  I remember watching Stanford just chew up defenses in the 4th quarter with 3 TEs, a FB and a FB-sized RB.  How many guys were in those boxes?  With no WRs on the field?  Yet Stanford would hammer away anyway, ripping off 4 & 5 yards at a time. 

At some point, Michigan will be able to replicate that.  And you would hope you could at least start with UCF in year 2.  Something's just not adding up right now. 

wahooverine

September 23rd, 2016 at 12:59 AM ^

Those TE's would go out and catch lots of passes for lots of yards and touchdowns. From Coby Fleener and Safj Errtz? That kept the defense guessing and on their their heels. They also had Andrew Luck and Doug Baldwin.

Pepto Bismol

September 23rd, 2016 at 1:47 PM ^

Running the ball versus lots of defenders in the box is the what we're focusing on here.

When you have 3 TEs and 2 FBs on the field, you know what the defense doesn't have?  Safeties 15 yards from the line of scrimmage, CBs 20 yards away on the sideline, LBs lining up in space over non-existent slot guys.  When you have a heavy offensive set, that draws more defenders to the box. 

And when those defenders were in the box, Stanford could still run.  To this point, Michigan can't.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Rabbit21

September 22nd, 2016 at 4:02 PM ^

Here's my thing. I used to be a pilot in the Air Force and while I was competent, there were some rare occasions where my brain just could not catch up to my hands no matter what I did. There was one memorable flight where the whole crew was just off. It's trite but some days you're the windshield and some days you're the bug. I want to see what happens against PSU before I panic about the entire O-line, this may just have been an epically bad day.

I think we're also seeing the team not quite in synch yet, hopefully they get to the point where everyone plays well at the same time.



Sent from MGoBlog HD for iPhone & iPad

Pepto Bismol

September 22nd, 2016 at 4:22 PM ^

Okay, so I'm looking at the late Isaac runs to the edge - about the 3rd and 4th embedded vid after the play list - the ones Brian is blasting for nobody blocking anybody and I'm curious where the blame lies.  Michigan is stretching the entire line to the near side, attacking the edge, and relying on Mason and Braden to "reach" (lingo) guys that they seemingly have no chance to get to. 

Kalis motors through with a half-hearted chip on the DE on his way to a LB, but Cole never has a chance to get him, Braden chases the nose tackle all the way to the sideline with no shot to catch him.  The next one is basically the same. 

Later, the "shuffling fullback" play seemed similar (2nd to last video) - Cole is asked to scoop the nose and then get out to the LB who is already a step ahead because he's following the FB motion.  The result is Cole bailing on the scoop becuase he's so far behind the LB he's after, which causes Braden not enough help to be able to get around the DT.  And these two missed blocks are the two guys who combine to make the tackle.

Just seems like we're asking these linemen to pull off impossible blocks.  These D-linemen they're chasing after are lined up what seems like 2 full yards to their right. 

 

I guess I'm just confused.  Harbaugh and Drevno have done this long enough to know what can and can't be done.  And like Brian says, that's at least 3 instances here of the same thing, this has to be intentional.   How can this be?  Regardless of your opinion of Bradon & Mason, I can't imagine ANY linemen of standard speed and size pulling this off. 

Did they drastically underestimate the defense's agility?  Is the RB supposed to get out fast enough to make those blocks irrelevant?  Are we on crack?  Is that it?  Are there drugs involved?

 

This has been "Football Thoughts", with Pepto Bismol.

markp

September 22nd, 2016 at 3:54 PM ^

I am (perhaps unreasonably) encouraged by this game.

// refills and sips kool-aid

The defense had some major busts for touchdowns, the offense had some major busts for touchdowns, the QB got rocked, they fell behind by 14 about as quickly as possible, and everybody but Peppers seemed to have an off-game... and then THEY WON BY 17 POINTS.

Good and even great teams can have rough games.  By most accounts, this was such a game for Michigan and they were still able to flip the momentum, come from behind, and estbalish a lead even before CU's QB was knocked out.

Sure, I would have rathered Michigan won 100-0 and a sloppy comeback is not by itself good, but how often do you see the wheels come off for a team and they still somehow recover and win convincingly?  In my estimation, this was pretty rare.

Extra point:  Our offense was decidedly in a funk and put up 38 points against a P5 defense currently ranked 4th in the nation.

ScruffyTheJanitor

September 22nd, 2016 at 3:59 PM ^

and getting very anxious about the MSU and OSU games. The only saving grace? MSU might not have the Secondary to make the McDowell experience have the same impact, and OSU might not have the interior line to make us pay in the middle. I

Hannibal.

September 22nd, 2016 at 3:55 PM ^

Yay.  Another year with a crap running game.  This shit is getting really old.  So far Drevno's OL has been a huge disappointment. 

We're 50th in the country in yards per carry and 53rd in the country in rushing ypg.  That's after the easy part of our schedule, with three fifth year seniors and a junior in his third year as a starter (albeit at a new position).  If Drevno is a great coach there certainly isn't any evidence of it yet.

stephenrjking

September 22nd, 2016 at 4:19 PM ^

I'm concerned, too, but this strikes me as a serious overreaction. It is highly, highly doubtful that his OC duties are somehow detracting from his ability to coach OL. Among other reasons to believe this: Eye-opening quotes from guys like Kalis, known practice patterns that maximise one-on-on instruction, and the fact that Harbaugh, who is not an idiot, can see what is going on and, if necessary, ease the OC load on Drev by moving more responsibility to himself and Fisch.

It became clear that one of the major reasons the Hoke regime failed is that Brady (and/or DB, depending upon how involved he was in decisionmaking) was unable to detect the huge shortcomings he had in his staff.

We have evidence-based reasons to believe that Harbaugh is not afflicted with those blind spots. 

 

Reader71

September 22nd, 2016 at 5:17 PM ^

I'm not on that bandwagon yet, but I always had my doubts that a guy can coach 5 players and make adjustments with them and coordinate an offense at the same time. It's a big ask. Maybe if he's got a really good GA to assist him. In my experience, the OL spends the most time with their coach during the game. There are so many of them to coach up that the coordinator might not be able to participate in any between-drives discussions with the head coach. Of course, his job would be easier if his players were playing a bit better and required less in game coaching.

Hannibal.

September 23rd, 2016 at 8:56 AM ^

It might be an overreaction to say that Drevno is the problem, but it isn't an overreaction to say that there is an obvious problem.  What happened against Central Florida and Colorado is not a blip.  We are now sixteen games into the Harbaugh era, enough of a sample size to identify a trend.  In that time, which includes only 8 conference games and a bowl game, Michigan has run for 4.3 ypc.  In Hoke's last month, against Northwestern, Indiana, Maryland, and Ohio State, Michigan averaged 4.9 ypc.  In two years, a rushing offense consisting almost entirely of the same pieces, but with two more years experience, is averaging .6 less ypc, and we haven't even played our 2016 conference games yet.  There are no valid excuses or mitigating factors that can explain away those numbers.  Kalis can rave about how great Drevno is all he wants, but something isn't working.  Is it scheme?  Execution?  Somebody needs to figure it out and something needs to change.  Fast. 

ScruffyTheJanitor

September 22nd, 2016 at 3:57 PM ^

Maybe Malik McDowell will realize that there is more to life and go on a vision quest the week of the Michigan game. 

Wow! Things are so much better here in delusional land; I think me and my six-pack abs are going to move in with Kate Upton. 

BostonBlue41

September 22nd, 2016 at 3:57 PM ^

Yeah we should probably just mail it in, season's over. It's not like Ohio State came back from a loss to a below average VA Tech team in 2014 to win the title that year.

If you recall JT Barrett threw for 219 yards and they averaged 2.7 yards per carry in that game so I think we all need to relax and trust our coaching staff that there will be improvement. 

KC Wolve

September 22nd, 2016 at 3:58 PM ^

Had to DVR the game and sped through the whole thing in about an hour. I thought they looked pretty bad, but figured I was just pissy by having to watch it late. I apparently wasn't the problem.



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mGrowOld

September 22nd, 2016 at 4:07 PM ^

God help this place should we only win a game by 10 points or less or, heaven help us, actually lose one.  This place will lose its collective minds.

I would love to time warp all you negative nancies back to October 2014, you know, the pre-historic days of yore, and show you a future in which we are 3-0 in OOC play, ranked #4 in the country,  setting school records for scoring and ask "is this ok"?

mGrowOld

September 22nd, 2016 at 4:26 PM ^

Is that it's difficult for me to understand the collective gnashing of teeth and rendering of garments because we "only" won by 17 points.  To be clear I dont think they played anywhere near their best but dammit they still won, still won by three scores and showed a fair amount of resiliance in doing so.

Go back and look at the scores of all the great Michigan teams of the 70's-90's and you'll find a clunker or three in every season.  But they WON and at the end of the day that's what matters.  

I guess I'm having a hard time understanding the extremely negative nature of many of the comments in this thread given the outcome of the game and the season so far.  I dont share that sentiment.