Upon Further Review 2016: Offense vs UCF Comment Count

Brian

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FORMATION NOTES: UCF was a 3-4 front with a couple of adjustments. This is their base front; Michigan is in "ace diamond TE," with Asiasi at one of the FB spots.

ace-diamond-te

On passing downs UCF would go to a nickel with two DL on the field and standup ends:

nickel standup end

And they'd frequently line up their three DL right next to each other and shifted to the run strength of the formation:

pinched 3-4

Called this "pinched 3-4."

PERSONNEL NOTES: Michigan cut down on the rotation severely despite having a huge lead. With the exception of left guard, the starting OL got almost every snap. Non-LG starters (Newsome, Cole, Kalis, Magnuson) got all 81 snaps. Braden and Bredeson platooned at LG with Bredeson(49 snaps) getting the plurality of time. Bushell-Beatty and Onwenu came in very late in a 7 OL package.

At WR, Chesson and Darboh got most of the run in a game featuring a lot of heavy packages. Grant Perry got just 15 snaps. Butt was near omnipresent; Bunting was the next-most utilized blocky/catchy guy. Poggi and Hill are still splitting things down the middle.

Smith got about half the work at RB(37 snaps), with Evans, Isaac, and Higdon splitting the rest about down the middle.

[After THE JUMP: pass great, run not so much]

Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Type Play Player Yards
M46 1 10 Ace 1 2 2 Base 3-4 Run Inside zone Smith 1
Bunting(-1) gets slanted under as UCF is using two safeties at about eight yards and those are the force guys, so OLBs can slant inside awkwardly. Cole(-1) and Braden(-1) are trying to combo the NT and neither really gets anything on him. Braden’s hit is ineffectual before he releases to the second level and Cole ends up doing very little; he put himself on the wrong side even with the minimal help. Smith has to bend outside, which blows up blocking angles. Smith(+1) actually runs through about four simultaneous ankle tackles before getting lit up by the MLB, who shed Braden’s second level block quickly. RPS -1. FWIW, Newsome(+1) had a nice block on a DE who he got a yard or two of depth on and sealed out of the intended lane.
M47 2 9 Offset I 2 1 2 Base 3-4 Run Lead zone Evans -2
Braden(-1) doesn’t even try to get outside of the DT lined up over him and that guy ends up penetrating into the backfield; Braden manages to stay attached and both guys eventually go down so that’s not -2, but this feels like a missed assignment. That erases any chance of an interior run and exposes Evans to one of those safeties, who is thundering downhill on the snap and makes a TFL. RPS -2. Poggi(+1) trashed his dude, FWIW. Cole(+0.5) got to a LB about eight yards downfield, albeit on a free release.
M45 3 11 Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 Nickel standup end press Pass Circle? Perry? Inc
Two DL split wide and LBs acting at DE. Press on the outside and a safety walks it down. Braden(-2) fails to read the blitz and lets in a LB scot free up the gut. Speight is hit on the throw and the ball falls to the turf. (PR, N/A, protection 0/2)
Drive Notes: Punt, 0-0, 12 min 1st Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Type Play Player Yards
O42 1 10 Offset I 2 1 2 Pinched 3-4 Pass Fly Chesson Inc
Speight checks as he sees one high and thinks his WRs can win outside. Good protection in large part because Braden straight up tackles a blitzer(refs +2), which I guess I can’t minus. Speight loads up and misses by about a yard or two. (IN, 0, protection 2/2)
O42 2 10 Ace Diamond TE 2 2 1 Base 3-4 Run Double iso Higdon 2
Many problems on this. Double iso sends two FBs through gaps on either side of an OL, almost always the C, and makes the NT wrong no matter what he does. He hops to the right of Cole; Higdon goes up in that gap. Braden(-1)[loses his guy to the outside so quickly that he can get in a tackle attempt and he’s been on the verge of -2 for a bit here so there it is. Hill(-2) and Asiasi(-2) both completely airball on their lead blocks. Higdon gets buried by three guys at the LOS. This had zero chance. I don’t like Cole losing his guy but he did enough to keep him out of the play even if it does end up closer to Cole. Higdon(+0.5) did well to squeeze anything at all out of this.
O40 3 8 Shotgun 2-back 2 0 3 Nickel standup end press Pass Post Chesson 35
There is no deep centerfielder on third and eight, which may be design but given how the safeties end up so close I’m guessing a bust. Speight reads it and fires at Chesson, who has the DB on his back after winning to the inside early in the route(+). He lays out for a diving catch that isn’t absurd but is pretty dang good. (CA, 2, protection 2/2). Refs(+1) missed the spot on this by almost three yards to M’s advantage.
O5 1 G I-Form 2 1 2 Base 3-6 Run Iso off tackle Evans 1
Magnuson(-1) gets chucked away on a down block; Kalis(-1) also shot back a yard and eventually discarded, so Evans gets swallowed.
O4 2 G Ace trips tight bunch 2 1 2 Goal line Run Crack sweep Isaac 1
M motions Hill to the trips side and this feels like a sweep; it is a sweep. UCF prepped for this and hits it, with the SAM shooting inside of Chesson(-1) before he has a chance to react and picking off Hill. Actually Hill(+1) whacks this guy and still manages to get out for a kickout block. Kalis has no shot at doing the same since he has to dodge around a bunch of trash and the MLB is booking for this play on the snap. Isaac has to dod3ge his guy, which he does, and then he bangs into Kalis. S is now waiting and tackles a slowed up Isaac for no gain. RPS -2. Butt(+1) had an excellent play long block on a little guy; Mags(+1) and Cole(+1) sealed their guys away with aplomb.
O3 3 G Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 Goal line Pass TE drag Butt 3
Speight knows where he’s going with this ball immediately. He takes a couple steps back and then instead of setting up he rolls to the throw a couple of steps. The route is Butt on a drag route that can maybe get some help from Darboh rubbing the coverage off, but unnecessary here. Good protection, with Higdon getting in a solid blitz pickup. (CA, 3, protection 2/2)
Drive Notes: Touchdown, 7-0, 8 min 1st Q. Bredeson gets the next drive.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Type Play Player Yards
M43 1 10 Offset I 2 1 2 Base 3-4 Pass PA y-cross Chesson 32
Harbaugh’s tired of this so he’s just going to bomb them now thanks. With one deep S in the middle of the field and everyone selling out against the run this is easy. Darboh runs a post-corner to take the guy in man press on him and the deep safety. Chesson’s CB runs to a useless deep third. Don’t know if that’s a bust or the CB on Darboh is actually in a deep third himself. In any case a LB who bit on PA has to try to get from four yards downfield on one hash to the edge of the field 30 yards downfield. Chesson gets there first. (CA, 3, protection 2/2, RPS +3)
O25 1 10 Offset I 2 1 2 Pinched 3-4 Pass PA hitch Chesson 11
Triangle read; Chesson pops wide open as UCF way overplays Butt. Easy pitch and catch and some bonus YAC. (CA, 3, protection 1/1)
O14 1 10 I-Form 2 1 2 Pinched 3-4 Run Crack sweep Evans 3
Pinched playside DE is confusing for M. Newsome(-1) blows his assignment, I think, as he pulls despite having a guy over him. If this guy was at normal 3-4 DE alignment that’s right. Butt blocks down, he pulls. At this alignment no. So this dude hammers in the backfield but Michigan runs outside it and gets lucky. Then Newsome’s pull is super deep and way wide and seems like it can’t be right. He ends up blocking nobody. Chesson(+0.5) couldn’t seal the playside LB but does maintain contact through the play and kicks him. Evans can go inside no problem. Hill gets submarined by a desperate defender and Evans(-0.5) is too close to him to make a cut. Needs to downshift a hair there. Instead he ends up leaping over that and running into Cole, falling down untouched. Butt(+0.5) did a good job to cut off a LB after diagnosing that his true block was downfield.
O11 2 7 Offset I Big twin TE 2 2 1 4-4 over Pass FB flat Poggi 8
M sends everyone out of the backfield. UCF sends a blitzer around the edge. These things then combine: with no protector and four guys exiting the formation to the left of the center, the guy coming around the edge is a free rusher who seems inevitable. Meanwhile the two TEs run off coverage and the guy to this same side of the field picking up someone out of the backfield goes with Smith. Poggi is vastly open in the flat. Speight gets nailed and hurls the ball at Poggi(+1), who has time to catch the ball, file his nails, and read the paper before turning upfield. He gets a few yards and then runs over a gent for the first down. (CA+, 3, protection 0/2 team -2). RPS +1?
O3 1 G Goal line 2 3 0 Goal line Run Iso Smith 1
M grinds the opposition DL off the ball and should probably score except for a UCF LB scraping just in front of the trash and then hitting a tiny gap in the line to shoot into Smith’s legs at the LOS. I think Asiasi(-1) picked the wrong guy on the outside so a DB closer to the play than the guy Asiasi kicks also meets Smith(+0.5) right there. Smith manages to squeeze out a yard. I’m not even mad about this play. UCF LB was crazy good here.Kalis(+0.5) and Mags(+0.5) got good motion on single blocks.
O2 2 G I-Form Big 2 2 1 Goal line Pass PA throwaway N/A Inc
Blitzer right up the gut gets taken out by Smith. Speight gets spooked and starts rolling out; too much traffic and he boots it OOB. If he could have stuck in the pocket Bunting was open coming across the formation, but I understand the impulse. Speight couldn’t step up in the pocket and there were guys coming around the corner. (TA, N/A, protection 2/2)
O2 3 G I-Form Big 2 2 1 Goal line Run FB dive Hill 2
This is pretty dang easy for a dive from the two. M motions Butt to an H-back spot on the opposite side of the line from where they run. Hill goes straight upfield. Kalis(+2) provides most of the motive force. Bunting(+1) got a DE effectively; Cole(+1) helped push the pile. Mags kind of missed as a guy dodged, but that guy then ate Kalis.
Drive Notes: Touchdown, 14-0, 3 min 1st Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Type Play Player Yards
O45 1 10 Ace 1 2 2 Base 3-4 Pass PA fly Darboh 45
The lone deep safety breaks with Butt on his corner route, which is understandable since Michigan has already hit them with a similar route on the last drive. This leaves Darboh(route++) one on one with Griffin, and Darboh just jets by him. Speight puts it on his chest. (DO, 3, protection 2/2, RPS +2)
Drive Notes: Touchdown, 21-0, 2 min 1st Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Type Play Player Yards
O25 1 10 Ace twins twin TE 1 2 2 Base 3-4 Run Jet sweep McDoom 16
This is a variant on their earlier jets. McDoom comes in motion a first time, nothing. Then he comes in motion back to the field side and gets the handoff. I’m not sure if this is the cause but the playside DE flies straight upfield and is useless. Michigan has three guys on the edge against three blockers. Butt(+1) kicks a DB with authority. Bunting(+1) widens and tracks an in-out move well. Not a lot of power, but competent. Newsome(-2) again pulls super deep and blocks nobody; M is fortunate that McDoom(+2) can outdistance a linebacker who almost gets an ankle tackle in for minimal yardage. McDoom then spins through one tackle and jukes through another to double his eight yards. (RPS +2)
O9 1 G Offset I 2 1 2 Base 3-4 Run FB power Hill 2
This is not a trap but an actual power play with Hill the ballcarrier. Bredeson(-2) inexplicably stops on his pull. Hill runs into him. He can only squeeze out a yard as he panicked. Wheatley(-2) lunged at the edge guy and fell over, leaving him free to attack; Kalis(+1) sealed out the NT. Mags(+0.5) did all right with the other DE.
O7 2 G Ace 3TE 1 3 1 Goal line Pass Waggle TE flat Butt -2
Sniffed out, sort of. LB shoots directly at Speight at the snap. When he turns around that guy is in his grill and he has to dump it ASAP. He takes the default flat option, which is well covered. Asiasi is wide open in the endzone. Speight doesn’t have time to read that unless he’s a superhero. (PR, 3, protection N/A, RPS -1)
O9 3 G Shotgun trips TE 1 1 3 Base 3-4 Pass Flare screen Evans 3
Speight’s throw is way too looped and too the outside. Michigan caught a big blitz here and a throw that gets Evans past the guy who tackles him is a touchdown. Instead Evans gets tracked down from behind. (IN, 3, protection N/A, RPS +2)
Drive Notes: FG(24), 24-10, 14 min 2nd Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Type Play Player Yards
O12 1 10 Ace 1 2 2 4-4 over Pass PA dumpoff Evans Inc
UCF times a blitz up perfectly and jets a LB into Speight’s face. LB prevents him from reading downfield and trying something. Evans runs by the blitzer to get into a route. He hits Braden, delaying his release. Speight throws because he’s got to throw; Evans doesn’t get his head around in time, in part because he got hung up. Catch is somewhere between a decent gain and a TD. (PR, 0, protection 0/2, team -2, RPS –1, Evans route-)
O12 2 10 Ace 1 2 2 Base 3-4 Run Outside zone Smith -2
Michigan is unfortunate to catch a safety blitz to the playside of this stretch. Darboh is caught off guard and can’t really be expected to do anything about this anyway; he almost holds the guy. (Refs +1.) Smith(+0.5) manages to avoid the tackle and get back to the LOS; this naturally blows up all the blocking angles. RPS -2.
O14 3 12 Shotgun 4-wide tight 1 2 2 Base 3-4 Pass Corner Butt 14
Slick pitch and catch I talked about in the game column. Darboh and Butt both run vertically and then switch over each other, with Darboh running a post and Butt a corner. Outside CB turns his hips inside as he’s taught since he’s in a deep third and this route hits exactly where he’s vulnerable as a result. Speight sees it and nails it. (DO, 3, protection 2/2, RPS +1)
Drive Notes: Touchdown, 31-0, 11 min 2nd Q>
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Type Play Player Yards
M13 1 10 I-Form Big 2 2 1 Base 3-5 Pass PA FB flat Poggi 2
Triangle read with Darboh on a corner and Poggi in the flat. Third guy is Bunting(route-), who’s coming on a drag from the other side of the formation. Butt goes out of his way to pick off a LB in an way that could generate an OPI if it becomes relevant; Bunting slows up and seems to want to bump that LB too, so he doesn’t get to his spot in a timely fashion. Corner blitz on the way, Speight checks down. (CA, 3, protection 1/1)
M15 2 8 Ace trips TE 1 1 3 Base 3-4 Pass PA hitch McDoom 5 +15 pen
Fake jet, fake handoff, Speight surveys. I think Perry and Harris run into the same area—Harris on a fly route and I think Perry is breaking to a corner as he exits the screen, so Speight doesn’t like what he sees. He’s got forever, though. He starts rolling as a blitzer mildly threatens before Smith ends him; he rolls and finds McDoom for a solid gain. McDoom is then targeted. (CA, 3, protection 3/3)
M35 1 10 I-Form Big 2 2 1 Pinched 3-4 Pass PA dumpoff Smith 8
Again great protection; Speight doesn’t like the two deep routes. Timer goes off, Speight starts moving up in the pocket and checks it down for a solid gain. (CA, 3, protection 3/3)
M43 2 2 Offset I 2 1 2 Pinched 3-4 Pass PA FB flat Poggi Inc
Standard short yardage pass should be good for five or so; Poggi drops it. (CA, 3, protection 1/1)
M43 3 2 I-Form Big 2 2 1 Pinched 3-4 Penalty Offsides N/A 5
Magnuson(+1) deliberately gets out of his stance when the DE crosses the LOS.
M48 1 10 Offset I Big twin TE 2 2 1 Pinched 3-4 Pass Sack N/A -3
Hill(-2) beat around the corner by the SAM. Speight should do a hair better here, as he’s got Smith open for a dumpoff and has enough time to check down. Instead he pulls the ball down and is lost. (TA, N/A, protection 0/2)
M45 2 13 Ace Diamond TE 2 2 1 Base 3-4 Run Double iso Smith 17
FBs up both gaps around Cole. Smith(-1) runs straight upfield, which is fine as far as it goes but he gets both LBs firing into the gap he’s attacking, so the other guy is a free hitter. He should be prepared to cut if that LB commits to the gap he threatens first. He doesn’t. Asiasi(+1) reads(?) that the NT is slanting to his side of Cole and turns his iso block into a zone double. W/ LB shooting the other gap there’s no one to get out on. Smith runs directly into the free LB and is… unmoved by his passion. He chucks the dude to the ground. Two S types come up on him and dive to the ground in his vicinity; they can’t get him. Butt(+1) had a very long kickout that he maintained forever and annoyed his guy as he tried to arm tackle Smith. Ditto Mags(+1). Smith then runs over and through three more dudes for a very Smith first down. +3 and a shruggie.
O38 1 10 Ace twins H 2 1 2 Base 3-4 Run Trap Evans 9
Jet fake. M runs up the gut with Braden pulling across flat, anticipating getting a guy in the backfield. He does, a blitzing LB he can’t get a hand on because he’s flying well past that play of his own volition. Cole(+1) blows out an NT slanting away from him to the point where Mags has to go under him to get downfield. (The blocking on this play got weird because UCF overloaded the jet side heavily.) There are only two guys on the second level. Mags(+1) gets one of them. Kalis missed but he’s shooting into space that should have someone and just… doesn’t. He can’t know Mags is going to pick him up and go get someone else. Evans(+0.5) slips through an ankle tackle and gets a good chunk. RPS +1.
O31 2 1 Offset I Big twin TE 2 2 1 Base 3-4 Run Crack sweep Smith 14
Butt(-2) lines up with a big positional advantage on the SAM and fires out flat; dude gets around him. He stays attached for a moment but loses contact and his gent threatens a TFL. Smith(+2) runs through this tackle and glides down the sideline for a big chunk. FWIW, Smith could have cut inside of Butt because Kalis(+1) buried his guy and Darboh(+1) erase the near side LB. Cole(-1) mistargets, ignoring a LB who’s a threat; M gets lucky as he’s tripping over a prone Poggi(+1), who blasted a DB OOB.
O17 1 10 Offset I Big twin TE 2 2 1 Pinched 3-4 Run Lead zone Isaac 4
Kaiju package. M blows UCF off the ball. Kalis(+1) pancakes his guy, albeit after a while. Wheatley doesn’t get much motion on his chip but does erase a second level player; Mags(-0.5) ends up driving the DT off the LOS but gets chucked away at the last moment. It looks like M is trying to use Asiasi and Poggi(+0.5) to combo through the SAM. They don’t end up kicking him out; they do blow him up. Cole(+1) blows out the NT with some help from Braden. I don’t love what Isaac does here; he bounces outside into unblocked contain. Still a decent gain but if he goes more N/S maybe a couple more.
O13 2 6 Ace 1 2 2 Base 3-4 Pass Post Darboh Inc
Kalis(-2) tardy recognizing the blitz and the blitzer gets through clean. Speight nailed just as he turns around; he gets rid of the ball. General direction of Darboh but probably more a throwaway than anything. (PR, 0, protection 0/2)
O13 3 6 Shotgun trips 1 1 3 Base 3-4 Pass Screen Smith -4
UCF sends a LB on a flight path that takes him directly to Smith. RPS -3. (CA, 3, screen)
Drive Notes: FG(36), 34-7, 6 min 2nd Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Type Play Player Yards
M32 1 10 Shotgun empty twin TE 2 2 1 Base 3-4 Pass TE stick Bunting 4
Quick pitch and catch that just gets there before the coverage. (CA, 3, protection 1/1)
M36 2 6 I-Form Big 2 2 1 Base 3-4 Run Iso off tackle Smith 5
M goes uptempo here. Might catch UCF off guard. Kalis(+1) blows up the playside end with help from Mags(-1); unfortunately a blitzer flashing by Mags distracts him from the LB further inside he should actually get. He turns upfield and Never Turn Upfield. He got a huge chip on the DE that helps Kalis lock him out so just -1, but if he gets this block Smith has a big play. Butt(+2) takes the SAM and fires him way down the line as as he tries to slant under. Hill(+1) does a good job to get around this and kick out the force guy. Smith(+0.5) runs into the LB Mags missed and grinds out a couple YAC.
M41 3 1 Offset I Big twin TE 2 2 1 Pinched 3-4 Run Split zone Isaac 1
Isaac(-2) misses his cut badly here. Wheatley(+1) gets a chip on the playside DE and Mags(+1) seals him. Hill(+0.5) gets a kick and Asiasi(+0.5) goes to the second level. there’s a damn cavern on the backside. Isaac instead goes to the defenders side of Cole’s block and barely squeezes out the first down.
M42 1 10 Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 ??? Pass TE stick Butt Inc
First inexplicable Butt drop off the day. Excellent pocket. (CA, 3, protection 2/2)
M42 2 10 Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 Base 3-4 Run Inside zone Higdon 3
Butt arcs around like team that actually run their QB do. He chops down the SAM on a block that's totally irrelevant. Meanwhile Michigan blocks this play pretty well with Cole (+2) ejecting the nose tackle way downfield. Bredeson’s(-0.5) block on a DE is barely adequate; Cole still provides a big lane; Mags(+1) got around a DE as well to seal him out. Higdon(-1) does not run close enough to his OL, instead going directly upfield in the huge lane. This runs him into trouble; Kalis cannot redirect fast enough to get to the linebacker who tackles him. Needs to slow up a half beat here.
M45 3 7 Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 Nickel standup end press Pass Fly Perry Inc
This ball is reasonable but it’s short and it forces Perry to slow up. It looked like interference live but after looking at it some more it seems like the ball actually hits the DB’s back before anyone contacts Perry. Perry did not adjust to the flight of the ball. If he slows up to high point it he does get run over for a flag. (MA, 0, protection 2/2, Perry route-)
Drive Notes: Punt, 34-7, 1 min 2nd Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Type Play Player Yards
M34 1 10 Ace 3TE 1 3 1 Base 3-4 Pass PA TE corner Butt 23
PA leaves LB covering Butt flat footed until they’re even and he can’t catch up; Speight sees the open guy and hits him right in stride. Butt gets a fair chunk of YAC. (DO, 3, protection 2/2, RPS +2)
O43 1 10 I-Form twins 2 2 1 Pinched 3-4 Pass Drag Butt 17
Coverage bust leaves Butt wide open on the drag. No rub necessary. (CA, 3, protection 2/2) Poggi was very fortunate not to pick up a holding call; refs +2.
O26 1 10 I-Form 2 1 2 Pinched 3-4 Run Counter iso Smith 3
Odd play, as M threatens to run right at the big gap this alignment leaves in their front, and that looks like it’ll work. Then Poggi and Smith veer backside into the heart of the three guys lined up right next to each other. Single blocks from Newsome, Braden, and Cole are all meh handfighting until Poggi(+1) comes in and thunders Braden’s guy back; then he pops out on a LB to provide the small crease Smith hits for minimal yardage. RPS -1.
O23 2 7 Offset I tackle over 2 1 2 Base 3-4 Run Power O Smith 1
Newsome next to Magnuson; M tries to run power at that side of the line. UCF times up a blitz and M doesn’t handle it. NT slants away. Kalis(-1) doesn’t let Cole handle it himself and wastes himself doubling a guy on the backside. Mags(-1) has a tough assignment as he needs to deal with this blitz up the gut from basically a DB; DB gets past him. Braden’s pull gets blown up by this guy; Smith stops in the backfield and cuts behind it into unblocked guys. RPS -1.
O22 3 6 Ace trips 1 1 3 Nickel standup end press Pass Drag Darboh 20
UCF in a zone that should handle this but the guy to the edge of the field drifts inside for seemingly no reason and gets beat to the corner by Darboh(+1). This is kind of free but Darboh feels pretty fast here. (CA, 3, protection 2/2)
O2 1 G I-Form Big 1 3 1 Goal line Run FB dive Hill 1
Shot from pylon cam, so I can’t tell what’s going on. One yard from the two is a push most of the time anyway.
O1 2 G I-Form Big H 2 2 1 Goal line Run FB dive Hill 1
Cole(+1) and Kalis(+1) put their dude three yards in the endzone.
Drive Notes: Touchdown, 41-7, 11 min 3rd Q. Ensuing kickoff is a popup that UCF fumbles and Jordan Glasgow scraps out.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Type Play Player Yards
O17 1 10 I-Form Big twin TE 2 2 1 4-4 over Run Iso off tackle Smith -1
Not great at the POA. Bredeson(-2) loses ground and his man sheds. The Kaiju then mess up a block on a DE who’s actually a standup LB. Wheatley(-1) ducks his head and runs past the guy after an initial hit; Asiasi(-1) then leaves the guy and hits the same person Newsome is hitting. Smith gets buried.
O18 2 11 Shotgun twins twin TE 1 2 2 Base 3-4 Pass Dumpoff Darboh 9
M uses Darboh as a decoy; he runs a would-be tunnel screen as M tries to slip Evans past him into space. UCF doesn’t bite; Speight checks down to Darboh, who picks up a few. (CA, 3, protection 2/2). Darboh(+0.5) ground out some extra yardage.
O10 3 2 I-Form Big 2 2 1 Base 3-4 Pass Sack N/A -10
M motions Butt and UCF responds but running a safety up to the line and blitzing him past the line in a flash; he’s running forward on the snap and damn near impossible for anyone to get to him. Speight goes down. (PR, N/A, protection 0/2, team -2, RPS -3)
Drive Notes: FG(37), 44-7, 9 min 3rd Q>
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Type Play Player Yards
M35 1 10 Offset I 2 1 2 Base 3-4 Pass PA y-cross Chesson Inc
UCF actually covers this, mostly. This is full on max pro so no dumpoffs, which I’m surprised by. This is more flood and the flood-side flat is open. Anyway, Speight has a ton of time and tries to float it to Chesson on a corner route. Ball is fairly accurate; Chesson has to break stride as a DB flashes in front of him; he dives for the ball but it’s just past his outstretched fingers. (MA, 1, protection 2/2).
M35 2 10 Offset I 2 1 2 Base 3-4 Run Crack sweep Evans 18
Asiasi(+1) motions to the playside and manages to shove a guy trying to blitz inside of him so that he knocks over another super aggressive member of the opposition. Ways(+1) does a nice job to cut off the playside LB and force him upfield, where he’s gone. Hill(+0.5) gets a big kick on a CB. Bredeson has to shuffle out in case he needs to help Cole(+1) seal the NT; he doesn’t need the help. He can't quite get to the other LB. Doesn’t really matter. Evans jets, safety barely maintains his angle. RPS +2.
O47 1 10 I-Form Big 2 2 1 Pinched 3-4 Run Split zone Smith 1
UCF slants hard playside and forces a cutback into three unblocked LB types since they got Cole and Newsome to release to a spot where they have nobody to block. Butt(+1) got a nice driving block on a DE sort. That prevents a TFL but can’t buy M much else. RPS -2.
O46 2 9 Ace 1 2 2 Base 3-4 Pass TE hitch Butt 5
Simple pitch and catch in front of a linebacker. (CA, 3, protection 1/1)
O41 3 4 Offset I 2 1 2 Pinched 3-4 Pass Improv Butt Inc
Three guys in the pattern, one blitzer. Blitzer gets under Smith a bit but he stays attached and the guy’s dive inside makes it easy for Speight to move outside. Butt’s on a crossing route that he continues; Speight throws a bit of a wobbler, but one that’s accurate; Butt drops it. Michigan Stadium and Butt in equal disbelief. (CA, 3, protection 2/2)
Drive Notes: Punt, 44-7, 6 min 3rd Q
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Type Play Player Yards
M35 1 10 Ace twins twin TE 1 2 2 30 nickel slide Pass In Chesson 6
Quick pitch and catch that Speight throws right on Chesson’s break. (CA, 3, protection 1/1)
M41 2 4 Ace twins twin TE 1 2 2 ??? Pass TE drag Bunting 1
Protection bust as Cole(-2) doesn’t immediately come off the NT as he slants away; another DB/LB up the gut untouched. Speight spins away from this guy, oddly, and then flips around to throw a drag route to Bunting that gets immediately bashed by a safety. (CA, 3, protection 0/2)
M42 3 3 Shotgun 3-wide 2 1 2 Pinched 3-4 Pass Hitch Darboh Inc
Speight is late on this one; he doesn’t like the hitch at first, looks to Evans at the sideline, realizes he’s covered, and then goes back to the first read. DB has time to break on it and breaks it up. (BR, 0, protection 2/2)
Drive Notes: Punt, 44-14, 3 min 3rd Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Type Play Player Yards
M28 1 10 Shotgun 4-wide double stack 1 1 3 30 nickel slide Run Inside zone Evans 1
Bredeson(-2) pulls a Kalis but running by a guy he absolutely has to block as M zones. Newsome gets driven into the backfield by a guy he has no shot at; Evans(+1) does well to skip around that and turn -3 into 1.
M29 2 9 Shotgun empty quads tight bunch 1 1 3 Base 3-4 Pass Hitch Butt Inc
Speight picks the wrong hitch, as Butt’s is very very covered and Chesson is open. LB PBU. (BR, 0, protection 1/1)
M29 3 9 Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 Nickel standup end press Pass Curl Darboh 8
A well timed and almost entirely accurate ball gets Darboh a nice gain against man press. The ball is a little low, a little upfield, but really this just makes me think about how it’s so rare that I’m even debating to myself whether this ball was accurate. (CA, 3, protection 2/2)
M37 4 1 I-Form Big H 2 2 1 Pinched 3-4 Run FB dive Hill 2
Cole, Kalis, and Mags(+0.5 each) all get good enough hits on their gentlemen to the off side and Hill plunges across the line to gain.
M39 1 10 Ace 1 2 2 Base 3-4 Pass PA TE corner Butt 26
PA gets the front to suck up, as it does, and Butt is open by a good 4 yards as Speight picks him out. (CA, 3, protection 2/2, RPS +3)
O35 1 10 Ace 3-wide 1 2 2 Base 3-4 Run Crack sweep Evans 0
Asiasi(+1) motions down to an H-back spot and cuts off the playside end. Mags(-2) also blocks this guy when it’s pretty clear that he’s supposed to pull once Asiasi covers him. This leaves M short on the perimeter. Evans thinks about cutting right upfield and probably should but with the goofed blocking hard to blame him.
O35 2 10 Offset I twins 2 1 2 Pinched 3-4 Pass FB flat Hill 5
More or less a speed out with decent results. (CA, 3, protection 1/1)
O30 3 5 Ace trips tight bunch 1 1 3 Base 3-4 Pass Drag Darboh 30
UCF sends the house; excellent pickup highlighted by Smith picking off the free guy up the gut and banging him into the second free guy. M catches man coverage against this super mesh concept with three WRs picking off various pursuit; Chesson(+1) obviously alters his path to pick off the guy coming across the formation in man. He doesn’t get enough of him for OPI; he does get enough of him to delay him and give Darboh(+1) the corner and a TD. (CA, 3, protection 3/3, RPS +3)
Drive Notes: Touchdown, 51-14, 10 min 4th Q. Last drive gets the items of note treatment.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Type Play Player Yards
M35 1 10 Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 30 nickel slide Pass Scramble N/A 2
Bredeson(-1) has no blitzers and lets a DT shoot outside of him because he’s still not sure who to block. O’Korn takes off for what he can get. Bredeson did recover to shove, so just –1.

PANIC

panic

YES THAT

Maybe panic. On the other hand, this is what happens when you're that gung ho about the run:

Maybe not so panic.

EVEN SO I AM NOT TAKING KYLE KALIS'S ADVICE.

To relax?

YES. I DECLINE.

I don't think you're totally crazy. Let's look at the—

CHpanicpanicpanicpanicpanicpanicpanicpanicpanicpanicpanicpanicRT

OL Chart.

Offensive Line
RUN PASS PRO
Player Snaps + - Total PFF Snaps Pass- Error% PFF
Newsome 36 1 3 -2 0 45 - - 2.5
Braden 16 3 -3 -2.3 26 2 6% 0.8
Cole 36 9 2 7 4.4 45 2 3% 1.1
Kalis 36 8 2 6 0.9 45 2 3% 1.0
Magnuson 36 7.5 5.5 2 -0.9 44* - - 2.4
Bredeson 20 6.5 -6.5 -1.0 29 1 3% 0.6
Butt 20 6.5 2 4.5 0.5 0 - - -
Bunting 11 2 1 1 -1.4 5 - - 0.2
Wheatley 6 1 3 -2 -1.2 0 - - -
Asiasi 9 3.5 4 -0.5 -0.2 0 - - -
Hill 12 3 2 1 0.3 2 2 50% -0.9
Poggi 10 4.5 4.5 0.9 1 - - -
TOTAL - 46 34 58%

*[PFF has Magnuson in a pass route on one snap. panic]

There were four TEAM pass minuses as I couldn't assign blame on some blitzes.

Metrics
Player + - T Notes
Protection 45 13 78% Team –4, Braden –2, Hill –2, Kalis –2, Cole –2, Bredeson -1
RPS 20 18 +2 Vast bulk of + on passes, vast bulk of – on runs.

In the aftermath PFF came away calling the line's performance "dominant":

After some initial struggles in the first quarter, Michigan’s offensive line put together a really dominant performance. Grant Newsome and Erik Magnuson, the two starting tackles, did not allow a single pressure on 89 combined pass-blocking snaps. In addition, with the exception of left guard Ben Braden, all members of the unit were solid in run-blocking, too. Center Mason Cole was the best player on the Michigan offense, as he had only one negatively graded run-blocking snap and had multiple plays where he drove UCF linemen several yards downfield.

I didn't come out that positive but once you separate out run and pass we're close to the same wavelength. Let's discount the protection minuses from Hill and "team" since the former is not an OL and the latter were blitz issues applied to RPS. That leaves you with an 85% protection rate against a team blitzing a ton—which I may not have taken into account sufficiently. That's top-notch, and PFF put a lot of weight on that.

The situation versus the run is a lot murkier. Michigan did not hit or approach our Mendoza line; I thought the right side of the line was mostly good and the left side, especially left guard, a major issue. PFF is mostly on board, less high on the right side and far less skeptical about Bredeson.

You're both in agreement that the left guard spot is a problem.

Yes, the rotating left guard, whoever he was, was a clear issue. Michigan started out with Braden and he struggled from the get-go. This is the first offensive snap:

NT does a good job there to turn his body so he's not too exposed to the chip but nonetheless that chip fails and he's in the backfield. There was a lot more of this kind of stuff than I'd like to see against UCF.

On third and eleven Braden would way overplay a DL slanting away from him and allow a blitz through untouched:

That guy's blitzing from some depth and leaning forward enough to tip an aware player off; that's pretty grim. On the next offensive snap he'd straight up tackle a dude and somehow avoid a holding call; on the snap after that his man came around him so quickly on a double iso that he made a tackle at the LOS. (To be clear, that last play was doomed for several different reasons.)

Braden was so far off where he was by midseason last year that you have to wonder how healthy he is, and how much practice time he missed with whatever injury he sustained. This was very rusty version of Braden nowhere near an established level of performance.

Bredeson meanwhile seemed just as unready as he did in the opener. He again just stopped on a pull, this one even less understandable than the one last week. This is well blocked on the interior and there's a clear gap for him to go into:

He changes his mind in the middle of the play. That's Layman's Blocking Axiom #3: Never Change Your Mind Halfway Through A Play. If you're wrong, you're wrong. You might block someone relevant all the same. Football's weird. Turning around means you're not blocking anybody.

This zone play was reminiscent of the Funk lines where guys would just run downfield versus guys they absolutely have to block:

That guy is almost head-up on you. You have to combo through. (If that looks familiar, Kalis did the same thing in the bowl game.) I get why that happened: UCF is playing a 3-4 and usually that means the end is further outside and you can go get whoever. Not adjusting to a change in front of you is freshman stuff. Or I-never-had-Tim-Drevno-until-now stuff, if you're Kalis.

In addition to the mental stuff Bredeson got beat up a couple times:

I'm confused why he was in this game over Kugler, who looked functional against Hawaii. I have no doubt he's got bigger upside; I'm skeptical he's going to reach it this year. There's a reason you don't want to play freshman OL.

I'm going to go buy a shotgun now.

This is an excessive level of concern.

Ice cream cone?

Okay. Yeah, that's okay. There was some good news on the blocking front.

Probably related to Wilton Speight mostly standing unmolested for hours at a time?

Yes, and thanks in no small part to Grant Newsome. The most important thing so far: Newsome has been excellent in pass protection. He had one –2 in the opener and was perfect here. All caveats about level of competition apply, but all he can do is block the guys in front of him. So far so good.

In that context a few run issues are nitpicks. They do exist. A couple of times he pulled oddly wide and deep on Michigan's perimeter runs. On this one I'm about 90% sure he's not even supposed to pull since the DE is lined up directly over him:

Michigan gets lucky that doesn't bite them, and then Newsome doesn't read the play in front of him, going outside of a force guy and blocking nobody. He had a similar pull to nowhere on a later jet sweep.

Also Cole and Kalis were thumping people. Cole blew a guy to the sideline. Those two were repeatedly used on short yardage. Hill dive + Cole + Kalis == easy. I didn't clip much of Kalis because unsuccessful runs aren't good platforms on which to convince people that a guy is playing well; he is. Again I don't think I caught much in the way of mental errors.

Left guard is an issue but Newsome and Kalis are hitting the upper end of reasonable projections so far. I'd take that trade if you offered it to me preseason.

So if we can pass protect, and Wilton Speight is good…

Should we just be the world's most hippopotamus-shaped air raid?

I mean…

I want to see Newsome go up against some tougher customers but it's a consideration, because Speight's performance didn't look any less confident on review. His incompletions, categorized:

  • Hit on throw: 2
  • Drops: 3
  • Intentional throwaways: 1
  • Receiver disrupted by D: 2
  • Missed deep balls: 2
  • Bad read leads to PBU: 2

"Receiver disrupted by D" contains two events, one a deep crossing route to Chesson that was probably Speight's best option and almost complete, the other an attempted dumpoff to Evans in the face of heavy pressure where Evans gets hung up on an OL trying to get into his route and can't get his head around in time. Everything else is self-explanatory.

One thing does not make an appearance here: a straight-up miss on a throw shorter than 30 yards. Speight's accuracy was excellent, with vanishingly few throws where the receiver had to do anything even mildly difficult. The receiver chart has a ton of throws marked routine and almost nothing else. I actually clipped a catch of mild difficulty for Darboh because it reinforced how things like this were not happening often:

That's still routine in my book but I had to think about it. Everything else was on point. There haven't been any passes to dig out or guys taken off their feet or throws on which the receiver has to reach behind his body. Everything short has been almost 100% on point. The only exception in this game was a screen to Evans that should have been a TD; Speight lofted the ball far too high and to the outside, allowing the opposition to recover.

Speight's deep accuracy, meanwhile, was still good. The misses stand out because there were so few otherwise. On the other hand he nailed Darboh on a 45-yard ball you can't throw better…

…and hit Chesson on a post that is maybe a yard too far in front:

He was perfect on the blizzard of routes Michigan ran at the numbers about 25 yards downfield.

Thus this chart:

[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

While this wasn't a high degree of difficulty game I'm wondering if PFF is still a little pro football focused—I was way more impressed with Speight's outing than a +1 passing grade would indicate. Eddie McDoom got +1.5 on one jet screen.

Speight gives off an aura of confidence. At times it's clear he knows where he's going early in a play. On the first Butt touchdown he takes a couple steps to the right before he throws, improving his angle:

He's done this a few times as he tries to shorten redzone throws, which often have very tight windows. He's comfortable throwing with his feet in motion. That's not MOBILITY, but neither is he a statue who breaks into pieces when you move him off his spot.

His grasp of where he's going led to things like a no-problem touchdown on third and twelve from the 14:

Again he has a great feel for who's going to be open when and why on this play; ball is out exactly on time and Michigan converts in a tough spot to do so.

This feel only let him down twice. On one play he came off a Darboh hitch because he thought the flare to Evans would be open; on the other he threw at a covered Butt instead of an open Chesson. Both of those resulted in PBUs and BRs in the chart, but they're innocuous BRs as they go: neither PBU was anywhere close to an interception because the defenders were being boxed out by Michigan WRs.

His poise under pressure isn't flawless but the eye test is much kinder to him than PFF's (admittedly low sample size) numbers. UCF got in on him in a flash repeatedly in this game and the worst that happened was a throw that could have gone anywhere since he was hit on it. He also took a sack he didn't have to. He did not throw it into coverage and he occasionally made something out of nothing:

I think the play design there is supposed to overload coverage by shooting both TEs to the left side of the field and then both RBs; Smith gets picked up. Poggi does not. That seems far more like a guy Speight knows is open from looking at the TEs than a Mallett event where he's just chucking and praying.

Similarly, the dump to Evans that didn't go well is the right decision in the face of a ton of pressure:

When Speight wasn't totally clean in this game guys were coming in fast, and nothing dumb happened as a result. Let's not go overboard about Speight's start—he passed sophomore John Navarre for most touchdown passes in his first two games, which is a proper dose of perspective—but it almost literally could not be more encouraging against this opposition.

You had some complaints about the running backs again?

After looking at things in detail, not really. Smith did miss that cut I talked about in the game column, about which more in a second, but then he plowed guys flat. When given an opportunity he did very well with it.

RB chart (WR grades are run only):

Backs
Player Rushes + - T PFF Notes
Speight 0   0 N/A
Smith 14 7.5 1 6.5  0.4 -0.3 pass blocking to PFF, which I didn't see.
Isaac 6 2 -2 -0.9 Biffed third and one, barely made it.
Evans 8 1.5 0.5 1  -1.0 Also –0.2 in routes, probably for the one he couldn't get his head around on.
Higdon 8 0.5 1 -0.5 0.2 +0.3 pass block.
Peppers   DNP
Johnson       DNP
TOTAL 36 9.5 4.5 5 -1.2 I guess I'm more impressed by stompy stompy.
Receivers
Player Blocks + - T PFF G Notes
Darboh 18 2.5 2.5 -0.6 I have him +2 for runs after catch.
Chesson 13 1.5 1  0.5 0.4 –3 for big jet sweep run error.
Perry 3        
Ways 6 1 1 -0.1  
Harris 2        
McDoom 2 2   2  1.5 All of this from the jet.
Crawford    
TOTAL - 7 1 6

Michigan mostly got buried by RPS and some iffy blocking. Those plays I mentioned in the game column did stand out as WTF moments. The Smith run where he went stomping through six different guys is one:

Many commenters thought it was unreasonable to expect Smith to change direction here. Nope! Nope nope nope! To feel the location of the hole based on the data in front of your face is a thing that some running backs have. Running backs like Citrus Bowl De'Veon Smith:

Decisive one cut running does exist, and it would have put Smith into the secondary without having to flatten a fishing village on the way. Right here the LB is committed and right in Smith's field of vision:

image_thumb[3]

This is the moment for a hard cut to the backside hole. He does flatten those fishermen so I gave him a plus anyway, but that was a callback to his vision early last year. I also thought his other notable tackle-breaking run could have used a cut behind Jake Butt's iffy block. But, hey, notable tackle-breaking runs.

Higdon got some early playing time. He mostly got buried through little fault of his own, as per usual with him. He did display some blitz pickup chops .

Evans didn't have anything that leapt out either way. I don't know where they got the negative grade for him. He did bang into Mason Cole on a crack sweep:

Downshifting for a step or two is preferable there. Still managed to cut past some chaos and get something out of it. He could be a bit more patient, especially with his burst.

Darboh is fast now?

Just a sec. Chart:

Catch chart?

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

LAST WEEK SEASON
Player 0 1 2 3 0 1 2 3
Darboh 2 5/5 2 0/1 8/8
Chesson 1 0/1 1/1 3/3   0/1 2/2 5/5
Perry 1   1 1/1
Harris  
Ways   1/1
McDoom 1/1   1/1 2/2
Crawford   1/1
Butt 1 7/9   1 8/10
Bunting 2/2   2/2
Wheatley  
Asiasi  
Poggi 2/3   2/3
Hill 1/1   1/1 1/1
Smith 2/2   1 2/2
Isaac  
Evans 1 1/1   1 1/1
Higdon  
McKeon   2/2
Hirsch   1/1

ROUTES: Darboh ++, Chesson +, Evans –, Bunting –, Perry –.

As discussed in the Speight section above, this was a day of routine opportunities for the receiver corps. The most notable events were the three drops, two by Jake Butt. I will continue to ignore these as a thing until they become a thing. We have a ton of data on Butt's hands and it is not describing a guy who regularly drops routine balls.

Other than that, Chesson had that nice diving catch and Darboh blew by a fringe NFL draft pick. On review, the drag routes he took long distances were 1) a defensive biff and 2) good play design instead of Darboh doing something crazy. However, he continued to stay even with or even outdistance Griffin on the second:

It feels like he's got more downfield upside after this game.

Perry's opportunity at a deep ball was underthrown, but like Darboh in the opener I think he can do better with it:

Neither of those guys is looking back for the ball, so if Perry reads the flight of it correctly and slows up to high-point it, he gets run over and legitimately deserves the flag he pleads for afterwards. Instead he fades away. If there's nobody here he's catching this at his waist. It's not good when I'm reminded of Jake Rudock's receivers at Iowa.

Can I go back to something? Jake Butt got a lot of blocking points. Other tight ends… not so much.

Bunting had inline issues with the little quick guys UCF presented him with:

That's a shock to the system for a guy expecting to get an easy kickout block, one that was facilitated by UCF's aggression. They're relying on the safety to get up on any run outside the tackle to that side of the field. Bunting did adapt pretty well as the game went along. On McDoom's jet sweep he stayed annoying a long way downfield and got a second hit in that facilitated some of McDoom's wicked sweet moves:

He didn't get many more opportunities; it was fine.

Jake Butt bounced back after a tough opener. He had one downblock on a crack sweep that he really should have gotten and did not; otherwise he was moving people and staying attached to them. This style of defense fit his blocking skillset. He's good at taking on DB sorts as he can mirror their movements and also move them:

UCF had a lot of DB sorts. Butt got a lot of play long blocks where nobody was overwhelming anyone else but neither was anyone going anywhere.

The Kaiju were up and down, mostly down. Asiasi got more playing time than Wheatley in this one. He airballed on that early double iso and had a couple of seeming mental errors. On the other hand he wiped the edge clear on a late crack sweep:

Wheatley had a poor day, with some Sophomore Braden-style lunges at people:

"Work in progress" is the applicable term.

Any Stanfordization or is it still in the garage?

Mostly still in the garage, or stuff we've already seen. They ran a trap. They brought the double iso back out. These are Harbaugh things but not new Harbaugh things. Most of their RPS+ plays were play action on which chunk passing was easy because UCF sold out against the run. It didn't have to get more complicated than that.

I did notice one little tweak that was effective. Michigan ran McDoom on a jet sweep. To set it up they motioned him across the formation, threatening jet, and then ran him back. The relevant unblocked UCF defender went straight upfield:

The motion there coupled with last week probably has the defense thinking "jet," and then once they don't see it they think "not jet," only to get the jet with little time to react since McDoom is coming from so close. McDoom gets outside and picks up a big gain despite Newsome not blocking anyone.

Also, dang McDoom. There wasn't a ton of that on his high school tape. If he's got that Breaston in him and he's threatening Jehu Chesson for title of "fastest guy on the team," look out.

And if we can go back to that Smith run:

That might not be double iso. It might be something I don't even know what to name. Asiasi is damn near OL sized and he approaches this play like he's going to combo block this DT. And he does. The NT gets sealed away and then he moves to the second level, where there's nothing because the aforementioned LB shot the gap.

Could be an error from a true freshman. Could be a new wrinkle. If it is a new wrinkle than it's even more evidence Smith's got to cut.

While we're taking about tactical stuff, RPS number? Eating blitzes?

I thought many of the blitz issues were OL problems, not Michigan getting RPSed. This was a notable exception:

Nobody can do anything about that except make sure your snap count isn't as predictable. Safety already moving half-speed forward at the snap is not a blockable player most of the time.

Meanwhile the overall RPS number is huge amplitude both ways and ends up just about even. The run blitzing was almost entirely offset by the fact that every play action pass was wide open.

Heroes?

Speight is best case scenario Speight so far. Long may it continue. Cole and Kalis did good work that didn't really come through. Chesson and Darboh were perfect and their athleticism outclassed the UCF secondary. Poggi had a nice day at FB. Both tackles pass-blocked perfectly.

Maybe not so heroic?

The left guard, whoever it was, was real bad.

What does it mean for Colorado and beyond?

Left guard has to get fixed and is now up for grabs. Braden's probably still hurt. Bredeson is either going to get a lot better or it's Kugler time, whether that's Cole moving over or not.

Best case starts for Kalis, Newsome, and Speight. Three of the biggest question marks on the team have started out about as well as can be expected minus some mental hiccups from Newsome.

Butt's blocking returned to decent. Better than that in this game, but an easy matchup.

Darboh might be fast? Ask again later.

Kaiju are a work in progress. As mentioned, the bet here is that they alternate great and awful for big chunks of the year.

Harbaugh will pass on your face if you load up against the run. Not that we didn't know that already, but there's no such thing as slowing down with him, and if you dare him to pass six consecutive times he'll do that.

Comments

CalifExile

September 15th, 2016 at 2:04 PM ^

It's pretty clear that those people were wrong. Certainly there are differences between T and G and difficulty handling one position doesn't mean Bredeson wouldn't shine at OT, but he is considered a natural OG who would play OT only as a desperation measure, whether this year or next. I take "pushing" to mean legitimately challenging to take the starting position, but if you're saying something just for motivational effect you probably don't feel constrained by definitions.

J_Dub

September 14th, 2016 at 4:08 PM ^

FYI, I clicked on the Homesure Lending link and it goes to a page with a password.  Is there an mgoblog password for secret Homesure Lending content!?

Bambi

September 14th, 2016 at 4:18 PM ^

This actually made me feel much better about everything.

Pass protection is a major plus. Blocking by blocky catchy types better than it looked. Right side of the line good in run blocking. Kalis improvement looks good part 2. RB vision was actually fairly good.

Only issues as far as I see it were left side of the line run blocking and Jake Butt dropping passes. The Butt thing is an anomaly and Newsome wasn't terrible at run blocking. He wasn't good, but he should get better as the season goes on, and he's great at pass pro.

The only major issue going forward should be LG. Even that I feel confident will get fixed. I trust Drevno, and the struggles are explainable. Braden is dinged/rusty and showed last year he's a capable LG. Between him getting better as he gets healthy/shakes off rust, Bredeson improving like a highly touted true freshman should, and having Kugler who looked decent in the first game, I think LG should end up being okay.

Bambi

September 14th, 2016 at 4:47 PM ^

Considering Kugler's only played one game with significant snaps, and he split those snaps against Hawaii, yes.

I think Braden will end up being fine. He struggled in this game, but he struggled in the first game last year too before becoming a decent LG. Competition level differences apply, but I'm sure a large part of his struggle is a result of knocking off rust/coming back from injury. If he struggles this/next week too, then I think you have a real problem.

contra mundum

September 14th, 2016 at 4:47 PM ^

That first video play of Braden/Cole is not on Braden. TE gets owned to the inside..which must not happen, and forces RB to move from A gap to backside. Blocks are all set up for TE side A gap run. TE cannot allow inside penetration on this play.

 

Blue Durham

September 15th, 2016 at 9:55 AM ^

1. Cole makes no attempt to gain any leverage to block the NT to the right (strong side) during/after Braden's chip block. This seems to indicate the play's design is to the right. 2. The RB's first look is to the right side of the line - and ends up looking right into the charging DE and thus cuts left. But I do think that if the TE buries the DE into the line this play is wide open off tackle. 3. The linemen on right side of the line are all blocking their men left (which you point out how the blocks are all set up).

Hobbes

September 14th, 2016 at 4:47 PM ^

Does anyone know why David Dawson isn't getting a chance at LG? The season preview listed him as the top backup to Braden, and now he's not even getting garbage time snaps.

oriental andrew

September 14th, 2016 at 4:59 PM ^

the offense is already fine, but fixing the LG will make it very good. Not sure if it will be elite - we'll need to see how Speight deals with actual pressure (early returns are positive) and what the running game looks like against teams with a pulse and not completely selling out on it - but it should be better than the first half of last year. 

blue in dc

September 14th, 2016 at 5:58 PM ^

I wonder if Harbaugh and Drevno think Bredeson has more very short term upside. It seems like He was in a battle for the left tackle spot until very late in preseason camp. While he was probably spending some time at left guard, I suspect he was likely more focused on left tackle. While I think there was a presumption that Bredeson competing at left tackle was both a worry about Newsome and a credit to Bredeson, Early returns from Newsome suggest it may have had much more to do with how good Bredenson is rather than a knock on Newsome. Harbaugh and Drevno may be thinking that if he is solely focused on left guard, he may have a quick learning curve and they are expecting rapid improvement. Maybe they have thoughts that he can be better than either Braden or Kugler later this season. I think this is also consistent with Bushell-Beatty getting all of the snaps at left tackle and Kugler getting none at left guard against UCF. I think the coaches are assuming that by Wisconsin, Braden will be back to late season form and Bredenson will be continuing to improve with the hope that Bredenson can be the clear stater by later in the season. With two games before Wisconsin, I think this is a risk woth taking. If Braden does not look better against Colorado, maybe they re-evaluate but stll have the Penn State game to get Kugler some left guard snaps if need be.

Fuzzy Dunlop

September 14th, 2016 at 4:58 PM ^

With Braden/Bredeson struggling so much, is there any reason Kugler didn't get any run?  Or is there an injury that I'm not aware of?

I remember everyone being very excited with Kugler as a recruit given his pedigree, and he seemed to do well against Hawaii.  Is there any hope that he can shore up our weak spot?

kevin holt

September 14th, 2016 at 4:59 PM ^

Brian, on that Smith run most commenters (including myself) weren't saying it's unreasonable to expect Smith to cut quickly. We were saying that there is a UCF player coming around Poggi and occupying the backside hole. Smith saw the option of being tackled at the LOS because Poggi didn't block it well enough vs. a LB after a couple yards. OR the play was designed to have Poggi seal into that hole and Smith knew it wasn't an option because that player would tackle. Can you address that take?

tolmichfan

September 14th, 2016 at 11:34 PM ^

I also think Asisi screws this up. He needs to sell that he is the lead blocker better. If the linebackers keys are full back to play side gap=fill gap then both linebackers should be filling the gaps in front of them. The backer forcing the tackle doesn't even step to the gap Assisi is supposed to be attacking and just scrapes and fills. I still believe Smith's read goes which side the centers ass is pointing followed by your lead blocker.



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mikegros

September 14th, 2016 at 5:13 PM ^

is irrelevant to the cut Brian is referring to. Brian is commenting that he should cut hard to the right, into the hole that Asiasi went into. This is away from Poggi entirely. The backside DE and OLB have been kicked out leaving a big hole. Kalis is looking for someone to hit and Asiasi would be able to pick up the ILB that's heading to the hole that Smith actually heads to. That ILB is committed there and would be likely unable to recover.

You could say this is too hard of a cut, but Brian correctly points out that Smith made nearly that same cut against Florida in the next clip below. Florida fills the frontside A gap, so Smith cuts hard into open space on the backside.

kevin holt

September 14th, 2016 at 5:16 PM ^

Yeah I just realized that and felt dumb. This whole time I hadn't seen the hole he's talking about because I was focused on the other one. My bad, Brian! I knew I was wrong because I'm not nearly as knowledgeable or experienced at breaking down football but I just wanted to address it (and now I see why it wasn't addressed).

LJ

September 14th, 2016 at 5:15 PM ^

I think issue was that many of us interpreted Brian as saying Smith should have been cutting left, to the left of Poggi's block.  At least that's what I thought when I initially started the discussion.

I think Brian is actually saying Smith should have cut hard right, outside of Asiasi's block.  Which makes sense to me, though I think it's risky for backs like Smith to get too bouncy.

Carpetbagger

September 15th, 2016 at 10:24 AM ^

I assumed the same, go left. I also missed the big hole to the right, with plenty of blockers. I do wonder if that's too far for someone like Smith though. I still prefer big backs to run north-south if at all possible. Not just for the yards, but because you then force linebackers to commit early to all run action.

Poor fisherman!