Upon Further Review 2017: Offense vs PSU Comment Count

Brian

2017 logoo_thumbSPONSOR NOTE. You know who'd never give you a mattress when you were expecting a mortgage quote? HomeSure Lending. They leave that stuff for the bloggers and their ilk, writing a whole piece about a mattress that people no doubt expect will pivot to football as so many pieces do but it never does because of obvious reasons.

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FORMATION NOTES. Michigan was mainly big sets early, except when forced into passing downs. That pattern changed a bit as the game went on and Michigan put more WRs on the field, more in an effort to see if something else worked. Answer: not really.

Penn State, meanwhile, put their safeties in Michigan's face the whole game, except for passing downs.

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Michigan will have to get used to this unless they discover a passing game.

SUBSTITUTION NOTES. QB, OL, RB, and TE were about as they've been. Gentry and McKeon get the large bulk of the TE snaps. Higdon is the main RB with Evans and Isaac getting run behind him. WR saw Schoenle return and the debut of Nico Collins, who played a half dozen snaps, none of which he had a target on. Crawford, DPJ, and Perry remained the main targets.

[After THE JUMP: one guy]

Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Box Type Play Player Yards
M24 1 10 I-Form Big 2 2 1 4-4 over 8.5 Run Iso Higdon 0
PSU leaves a gap in their line and M goes right at it to start, Looks well blocked until Cole(-2) gets beat badly by a DE lined up outside of him. All he has to do is close this guy off with pre-snap leverage and he gets whipped. The rest of this play is great, with Onwenu(+2) driving a DT yards off the ball and Hill(+1) firing the playside LB inside, locking away his help. Gentry(+0.5) and JBB(+0.5) get solid kickouts and Schoenle gets to the safety, so without this Cole screwup this could go a long way.
M24 2 10 I-Form Big 2 2 1 4-4 over 8 Run Power O Higdon 3
Hill(-2) goes in the wrong gap. JBB(+1) fires in a DE and Bredeson(+1) pulls into the gap, again sealing the LB inside. Gentry(+0.5) gets another kick; playside LB is untouched because Hill goes outside of Gentry. Higdon cuts away from him and into the backside of the play, which gets shut down by both safeties, who sat at eight yards and are tackling at three. Onwenu(+1) got a jarring block as well. RPS -1.
M27 3 7 Shotgun empty 2 2 1 Nickel even 6 Pass Sack N/A -5
22 personnel on third and seven is nonsense but doesn’t really matter. Kugler(-2) beat clean; JBB(-1) loses his guy around the edge at 8-9 yards, Onwenu(-1) also struggles. O’Korn gets sacked. While this is a PR he does have Schoenle open for a few yards; contrast this with PSU’s first play. (PR, N/A, protection 0/4)
Drive Notes: Punt, 0-7, 12 min 1st Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Box Type Play Player Yards
M43 1 10 I-Form 2 1 2 4-4 over 8 Run Delay Higdon 0
Collins in. Michigan runs a delay on a standard down with everyone within ten yards of the LOS. Okay. Poggi(-2) runs in the wrong gap. Cole(-1) stumbles coming out and overruns a LB; at least he made him go around and if Poggi gets a block here Higdon might spring outside? The delay did convince the secondary to back off. Kugler(+1) got a good kickout and Onwenu(+0.5) did okay as well. Gentry(+1) locks out an OLB with authority.
M43 2 10 I-Form Bigh 2 2 1 4-4 over 8 Run Iso Higdon 3
NT drives between Onwenu and Kugler. Not a ton either can do; Onwenu is checking the LB he has to get to and eventually has to leave, sort of. He decides to stay on the guy eventually and does get him locked away. JBB does okay with his guy; he gets a little drive as the DE gives up some position to dive back inside for a tackle; LB fired hard at this so despite Poggi(+1) getting a thump he's there at the LOS. Safety comes up and hits at 3 yards. RPS -1.
M46 3 7 Shotgun trips 1 1 3 Exotic 6 Pass TE screen McKeon -6
S on McKeon slides down into the box presnap and there is zero chance for anyone to get out on him. He tackles on the catch. (CA, 3, screen, RPS -3)
Drive Notes: Punt, 0-14, 7 min 1st Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Box Type Play Player Yards
M41 1 10 I-Form twins 2 1 2 4-4 over 8 Pass PA FB flat Hill 8
Very basic PA dumpoff sees LB bite hard, nice gain on dink throw. (CA,3, protection 1/1, RPS +1)
M49 2 2 Ace FB 3-wide 2 1 2 Nickel over 6 Pass Scramble O’Korn 12
M doesn’t pick up a DT twist, but it’s a slow one that allows O’Korn a beat to find a WR. He does not. IMO he has time to find Perry or Gentry, who are open on 20-30 yard routes. Or Hill, open on a dump. O’Korn(+1) does find a hole up the middle and runs for the first down. Not sure what to do about the protection here; Kugler never comes off the twist guy so Onwenu has to take the first guy through the whole way. (SCR, N/A, protection ½)
O39 1 10 Shotgun 2-back twins TE 1 1 3 4-3 over 7 Run Pin and pull Evans 9
McDoom in the backfield, motioning out for a potential screen. M runs the other way. Gentry(+1) turns in the playside end. 230 pound OLB is in a SAM spot near the LOS. Onwenu(+2) pulls around and wipes him. He can’t set the edge. Kugler could go for the S now as the other LB is inside of this block but plays it safe and makes sure that LB is cut off. S forces out after a nice gain. RPS +1, Onwenu against a slight gent. Also safety held by the unusual motion.
O30 2 1 Ace 3TE 1 4 0 4-3 even 8.5 Run Inside zone Evans 3
Big doubles on the two DTs; PSU crashing their LBs hard. M does not have the blockers here with PSU pinched in tight. Wheatley has no angle to one LB. Cabinda is just firing downhill on the snap so it’s tough to get out on him. Evans(+1) runs through a tackle and converts. McKeon as the outside WR is odd and useless.
O27 1 10 Offset I Big 2 2 1 4-4 even SAM 8 Pass PA dumpoff Higdon Inc
JBB(-1) beat but can keep pushing so O’Korn can step up with otherwise good protection. He checks down, and this is open for a good gain; he misses. (IN, 0, protection ½)
O27 2 10 Offset I Big twin TE 2 2 1 4-3 under 7.5 Run Power O Higdon 11
Higdon(+2) initially threatens the interior gap and gets the LBs to commit; he then busts outside. Gentry(-1) allowed his guy to surge forward after Cole left for the LB level and Onwenu(-1) gets caught on this so no lead block. Higdon breaks the S tackle for a first down. Hill(+1) had a good kick. McKeon(+1) cut off the playside LB.
O16 1 10 Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 Nickel over 6 Pass Flare screen McDoom 13
McDoom in orbit motion into that screen spot and Michigan throws it. Two blockers for two DBs who are backing out at the snap so this is close to a gimme. Perry(-2) even whiffs his block entirely and this still works. DPJ(+1) holds his guy up and McDoom(+1) takes a maximally efficient path to make that work. RPS +2. (CA, 3, screen)
O3 1 G Goal line 2 3 0 Goal line 10 Run Iso Higdon 2
PSU slants under the line and gets through. Onwenu(+1) stops momentarily to bang a guy that JBB(-1) lost; Gentry(-1) lets a guy through as well. Higdon(+1) can pound out a couple yards thanks in part to the hit Onwenu offered.
O1 2 G Goal line 2 3 0 Goal line 11 Run FB dive Hill 0
Kugler(-1) fired back slightly and Hill runs into him. He does surge near the goal line towards the end of the run.
O1 3 G Goal line 2 3 0 Goal line 11 Run FB dive Hill 0
Kugler(-1) again unable to get any movement forward; Hill bangs into him at the LOS. Rest of line surges into the endzone, but the Kugler holdup is enough.
O1 4 G Goal line 2 3 0 Goal line 11 Run Edge pitch Higdon 1
Hill(+2) cuts the playside LB to the ground and that’s the endzone.
Drive Notes: Touchdown (missed XP), 6-14, 12 min 2nd Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Box Type Play Player Yards
M36 1 10 I-Form 2 1 2 4-4 under 8 Pass Scramble O’Korn 3
S walks down and is just outside of the OLB, which just about always means slant away from that and a blitz; yep. M runs PA. Blitz picked up well. O’Korn does have to step up. He does, and starts looking, but finds no one. He can only get three. (TA, 0, protection 3/3)
M39 2 7 Ace twin TE 2 1 2 4-3 over 7 Run Insert iso Higdon 4
Poggi lined up as a wing TE; he hops a gap further inside and acts as a lead blocker. Bredeson(+2) catches a DT unprepared and blows him out. Cole(-1) fires out free to the MLB and Cabinda manages to juke at the last moment to scrape over him. Poggi(+1) stands up the playside LB; McKeon(-1) can’t hold his kickout, getting tossed away as the back passes. This was otherwise blocked to the S as well.
M43 3 3 Shotgun 3-wide H 1 2 2 Nickel even 6 Pass Dumpoff Evans 2
Knee pump from O’Korn reveals a big ol blitz coming from PSU. Evans repositions. This is good tactically, or at least it should be, since O’Korn should be tipped off that the blitz is coming and go for the quick dump to Evans, which is open for the first down. He takes vastly too long to get to this despite the tip and Evans gets tackled on the catch as a result. (BR, 2, protection 0/2, team -2)
Drive Notes: Punt, 6-14, 10 min 2nd Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Box Type Play Player Yards
M33 1 10 Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 4-3 over 7 Run Pin and pull Higdon 1
Same orbit motion from McDoom and pin and pull opposite. This is blocked just fine. PSU stunts the playside DL. Gentry(+0.5) has a freebie but prevents penetration. JBB doesn’t really have a chance to make a block; his guy flows down the line. Kugler(+1) gets out and seals the MLB; Onwenu(+1) kicks the playside CB. Higdon hits the gap, and that DT and a safety starting at eight yards combine to tackle. RPS -2.
M34 2 9 Ace trips tight bunch 1 2 2 4-3 over 7 Pass Scramble O’Korn 14
Two guys sent off the edge and Michigan just about picks this up. It’s chancy, with Higdon and Bredeson reacting a little late as they read different things but both guys get to their guys in time to start shoving. O’Korn has to step up and suddenly there’s a lot of grass in front of him. He takes off. (SCR, N/A, protection 2/2)
M48 1 10 Ace twin TE 1 2 2 4-4 even SAM 8 Pass PA Y cross DPJ 18
Play action, good protection, and DPJ running a crossing route against a guy with outside leverage as the PA sucks the LBs up. O’Korn finds him for a nice chunk. Open guy and clean pocket 15 yards downfield isn’t a DO, but this is a nice semblance of passing offense. (CA, 3, protection 2/2, RPS +1)
O34 1 10 I-Form Big twin TE 2 2 1 4-4 under 8 Run Power O Isaac 4
M almost gets this slant right, with McKeon(+2) blowing his guy down the line and out of the picture to clear the path. Gentry(-2) mis-IDs and goes for the same LB Bredeson is going to. MLB left alone. Poggi(+1) doesn’t have much chance of cutting off a guy slanting behind him but does get a helmet on him and move him such that he’s unable to get to the POA until back is past it. Onwenu(+1) gets around and gives MLB a thwack so there’s a bit of room.
O30 2 6 I-Form twins 2 1 2 4-3 over 8 Pass Post corner Perry Inc
Kugler(-1) reads a stunt late. He does get around to shove the guy after a 360 hole in the pocket as another DT goes down. O’Korn steps up and finds Perry 20 yards downfield… and juuuust misses high. Perry could have caught this; this was asking a lot of him. (MA+, 2, protection ½)
O30 3 6 Shotgun empty 1 1 3 Nickel even 6 Pass Stop and go Crawford 24
M borks their protection, with three rushers on the right side left to two blockers. O’Korn gets a free run up the middle and just horks one up to Crawford, who got open on a double move and makes a slick over the shoulder catch to convert. This ball was impressive considering the circumstances. (DO+, 1, protection 0/2, team -2, Crawford route +)
O6 1 G Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 4-4 over SAM 8 Run Inside zone Higdon 0
Backside DE is let go and doesn’t bother to check O’Korn at all. If this is a read it’s O’Korn, if it’s not it’s RPS. I have to assume this read is viable. O’Korn -2.
O6 2 G Goal line 2 3 0 Goal line 11 Run Power O Isaac 6
And then they just manball it in. Same slant away. McKeon(+2) drives the playside OLB into the endzone. Poggi(+1) gets a kick. PSU CB goes outside this kick. That means Onwenu(+0.5) is there to annoy the MLB, who Gentry(-0.5) targeted correctly but lost a bit. Cole(+1) fired a guy off the ball and Isaac(+0.5) ground through some arm tackles.
Drive Notes: Touchdown, 13-14, 2 min 2nd Q. M gets ball back with 53 seconds.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Box Type Play Player Yards
M25 1 10 Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 Nickel over 6 Run Inside zone Higdon 1
This one is on Higdon(-3) as PSU leaves a gap in the line and M puts a hole there. Kugler(+2) reaches the NT and DE jets by Cole(+0.5) on pass rush. Bredeson misses a second level block mostly because the LB is running himself out of the play so this is either a nice gain or a big chunk if Higdon just does the obvious thing. Instead cuts into a mess.
M26 2 9 Shotgun 4-wide 1 1 3 Nickel under 6 Pass Deep hitch Crawford 24 (Pen -10)
JBB(-2) beat clean and tackles his guy. O’Korn rolls out and finds Crawford for a big chunk, but for naught. (CA+, 3, protection 0/2)
Drive Notes: Punt, 13-21. Rest of this drive is give up and halftime.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Box Type Play Player Yards
M25 1 10 I-Form Big 2 2 1 4-4 over 10 Pass PA FB flat Higdon Inc
Daring M to pass at any depth other than at the LOS. M does that. Instant pressure on a waggle, covered FB in the flat, O’Korn hurls it a zillion miles an hour at Hill, who can’t catch it, but it’s going to be a zero yard play anyway. (MA, 2, protection N/A, RPS -2)
M25 2 10 Ace twins twin TE 1 2 2 4-3 over 7 Pass Scramble O’Korn 6
Pocket entirely fine. O’Korn sees a big cavern in front of him and takes it but there’s no one threatening him, so a throw downfield is still very viable. O’Korn does get a reasonable number of yards but fumbles(-3) and M is lucky to recover. (SCR, N/A, protection 2/2)
M31 3 4 Shotgun trips tight bunch 2 1 2 Nickel even 6 Pass Scramble O’Korn 5
Close to identical to the previous play. Pocket holds, gap up the middle, O’Korn prefers it to throwing. (SCR, N/A, protection 2/2)
M36 1 10 Ace twins twin TE 1 2 2 4-3 over 7.5 Run Jet sweep McDoom 8
Pointing; corner overhanging on McKeon(+1) fires up field and McKeon kicks with authority. McDoom(+1) cuts upfield of this smartly and outflanks; playside DE doesn’t widen and playside LB dives inside of a hypothetical Gentry block; Gentry(+1) goes and gets a safety. Cabinda just runs this down before McDoom breaks it big. RPS +1.
M44 2 2 Ace 4-wide tight 1 2 2 Goal line 11 Run Crack sweepp Isaac 7
M flips their tackles. Blocked well. Cole(+1) pulls outside of the two WRs and finds the playside LB. He’s the initial force guy. S comes up hard outside of this; Isaac cuts inside of Cole. Possible because DE sort of reached by Onwenu(+1) but he kind of transparently gives up halfway through the play. McDoom(+1) puts his CB to the ground and then gets off to annoy someone else.
O49 1 10 Offset I 2 1 2 4-4 over SAM 8 Pass Tunnel screen DPJ Inc
Oh FFS. This is open and is going to be a chunk and DPJ just drops it. (CA, 3, screen, RPS +2).
O49 2 10 I-Form twins 2 1 2 4-3 over 7.5 Pass Sack N/A -6
Here’s the flipside of run all the time. O’Korn sets up in the pocket. Cole(-1) thinks he’s picking up the edge blitz and can’t redirect quite in time to pick the guy up as he slants in. OKorn has a beat. He gets around the issue. He’s sacked as Bredeson got shoved back and O’Korn doesn’t see it. (PR, 0, protection ½)
M45 3 16 Shotgun empty 1 1 3 Nickel even 6 Pass Drag DPJ 9
Nonsense read. Pocket’s fine, dumpoff is a punt, dumpoff. (TA, 3, protection 2/2)
Drive Notes: Punt, 13-21, 11 min 3rd Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Box Type Play Player Yards
M20 1 10 Shotgun 4-wide tight 1 2 2 4-4 over 8.5 Pass Hitch DPJ 16
Daring M to throw, M throws. DPJ hitches up at ten yards and gets enough respect from the S that he can catch this unmolested. DPJ(+1) then beats that tackle to add on 5-6. (CA, 3, protection 2/2)
M36 1 10 Shotgun empty 1 1 3 Nickel under 6 Pass Throwaway N/A Inc
Further nonsense. O’Korn pumps a screen M isn’t faking. He has an excellent pocket and it’s one read and run around. He runs around. He throws it away. (TA, N/A, protection 2/2) Two guys are open for nice gains short.
M36 2 10 Shotgun 3TE 1 3 1 4-3 even 7.5 Run Inside zone Isaac 4
This could work rather well as Onwenu(+1) and JBB(+1) clobber their guy and Isaac(+1) sells a LB on an inside run before cutting back outside. Wheatley(-2) mis-IDs. His LB tackles. RPS +1, bought a blocker with the zone read.
M40 3 6 Shotgun 3-wide H 1 1 3 Nickel even 6 Pass Sack N/A -11
O’Korn has all day. Three deep routes; it’s third and six and you’re down two touchdowns with a quarter to go. Throw the damn ball. It’s man, sure. Crawford has no safety help. Throw the damn ball. (TAX, 0, protection 3/3)
Drive Notes: Punt, 13-28, 3 min 3rd Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Box Type Play Player Yards
M26 1 10 Offset I twins 2 1 2 4-3 over 8 Run Crack sweep Evans 0
Stunt by playside end so crack block is free. Set up for success. Hill(-2) whiffs his kickout block and that guy tackles. Schoenle(-1) only got a shove in on his guy and he’s closing this down as well. RPS +2, this needed like 1.5 blocks and it was going to break.
M26 2 10 I-Form 2 1 2 4-4 over SAM 8 Pass Dumpoff Hill Inc
Evans(-2) whiffs a cut block as Hill goes in a route. Maybe invert those? O’Korn has one read that’s not there and has to start moving. He gets contained and fires a high hard ball to Hill that he can’t bring in. This was getting two yards anyway. (PR, 2, protection 0/2)
M26 3 10 Ace twins twin TE 1 2 2 4-3 over 8 Pass Cross McKeon 12
Gentry is the inside TE and more or less blocks off the line; PSU is playing a switch man thing and a DB is taking whoever breaks in. DB reads it late so McKeon is open for the first down; O’Korn has a relatively comfortable pocket and steps and fires confidently. (CA, 3, protection 2/2)
M38 1 10 I-Form Big twin TE 2 2 1 4-3 even 7.5 Run Power O Higdon 4
Playside line effectively bulled in. Gentry(+1) and McKeon(+1) both win blocks and give Bredeson(-2) a clear path. Bredeson gets there and meets Cabinda, sort of. Cabinda manages to slash through him upfield and get a tackle in. Pile lurches. Poggi(+1) got a much better block on the S.
M42 2 6 I-Form Big 2 2 1 Base 3-4 8 Run Crack sweep Isaac 5 (Pen -15)
DE dives inside Gentry(-0.5); Gentry does okay with this but guy does bend Bredeson a bit. Cabinda charging; Poggi(+1) cuts him. Bredeson is caught up in this because of the bend. Cole(+1) mostly cuts an S on a tough block and Isaac has the corner. He could maybe turn this up for the first down. M hit with a chop block on the Poggi block, which… I mean, by the letter of the law yes. Bredeson does touch Cabinda as Poggi cuts him. I’m not minusing this, it’s just dumb luck.
M27 2 21 Ace FB 3-wide 2 1 2 Nickel over 6 Pass Corner Perry 22
It looks like offense. Perry(route+) runs a corner route against zone; S picks him up and CB is dealing with DPJ’s go route so it’s open. Good pocket and O’Korn puts it on him for a catch and run and first down. (DO, 3, protection 2/2)
M49 1 10 Offset I Big 2 2 1 4-4 over 9 Pass Sack N/A -5
Higdon(-1) picks up a blitzing CB for a second, enough for a rhythm throw, or more. O’Korn can’t find it and gets stripped. This is four seconds after the snap. Poor pocket awareness. (TAX, 0, protection ½)
Drive Notes: Fumble, 13-28, 13 min 4th Q. PSU scores a quick TD to basically end the game.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Box Type Play Player Yards
M29 1 10 Shotgun 2-back twins TE 1 1 3 Nickel even 6 Run Pin and pull Higdon 3
Blocked to S for the most part, S at ten and charging. Cole(+1) turns in his guy, gone. Gentry(+0.5) gets his guy turned in; he spins off but is late. Bredeson(+1) and Kugler(+1) both get good cuts on LBs; Higdon gets nailed at three yards. RPS -2.
M32 2 7 Shotgun trips 1 1 3 4-3 even 7 Pass Improv Perry Inc
Pocket solid for a read or two. JBB sees his guy spin off of him but he’s off balance and JBB re-engages. O’Korn leaves the pocket and tries a bomb down the sideline that’s push OOB by a DB. I don’t see anyone open here so no complaints. Ball is taking Perry OOB by itself though, so I’m punting. (MA, 0, protection 2/2)
M32 3 7 Shotgun 3-wide H 1 1 3 Nickel even 6 Pass Cross Perry 24
JBB(-1) again sort of beat on an edge rush , allowing his guy to the QB just barely after a rhythm throw gets out; this one is a dart between two guys in zone under duress. (DO, 3, protection ½). -1 for JBB because his guy gets around at 9, which is the borderline zone.
O44 1 10 Shotgun empty 1 1 3 Dime even 5 Pass Sack N/A -8
Another four-second sack as M gets beat by a DT stunt Bredeson(-1) and Kugler(-1) fail to pick up. I guess this is a PR but O’Korn has DPJ running on a drag for a few yards at least. (PR, N/A, protection 0/2)
M48 2 18 Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 Nickel even 6 Run Inside zone Evans 5
Blocking is fine; play is beat because PSU pays no respect to the bubble. Overhang CB reads QB; outside CB at ten yards. So when Evans breaks to the second level that guy is there with no one to block him. Evans dodges him and gets a few before folks can rally. JBB(+1) with a big kick; Kugler(+1) gets his guy; Onwenu(+1) seals Cabinda. Crawford(-1) is cracking down on this guy and totally misses, but he’s got a tough job. RPS -2.
O47 3 13 Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 Nickel even 6 Pass Drag McDoom 2
Onwenu(-2) blows a blitz pickup and a looper gets in free. O’Korn has no choice but to dump it to his hot read. (CA, 3, protection 0/2)
O45 2 11 I-Form 2 1 2 4-3 even 7 Pass Sack N/A -6
PA on fourth and eleven: did Mike DeBord stow away on the team plane and call this? Poggi(-2) runs up the middle of the field for a bit, possibly to sell the play fake, and then a looper gets around him for a sack. (PR, N/A, protection 0/2)
Drive Notes: Turnover on downs, 13-35, 9 min 4th Q. M goes on a 13 play drive against PSU backups that I’m not charting.

Standard despairing preamble.

Yeah, it's about at that point.

But!

Oh come on there's no "but."

No, not really. But!

Fine.

So the offense sucks and the number one reason for that is the near-total lack of a passing game brought about by several factors we'll get into later. This is the original sin of the offense and one that will not be overcome this year. But at least the ground game is coming along.

Seriously?

I mean. Sort of? This was yet another game where Michigan had an excellent ability to get the first few yards, They got 3.5 line yards a carry (national average: 2.9) per Football Study Hall. Some of that was O'Korn scrambles, but the RBs combined for 3.4. Like the Michigan State game the overall numbers were held down because of two main factors. Number one was Safety With No Respect For Michigan's Passing Game. Here's Karan Higdon blowing through a safety tackle at two yards:

note that bad Gentry block prevents Onwenu from getting around and blocking him, but still!

If he doesn't do that it's another 3 yard gain on a play that Michigan blocked.

Number two was One Guy Per Play. I feel like I've been saying something along these lines since about 1500 AD, but on many of Michigan's unsuccessful plays they'd actually done a great job... except for one guy. It was never the same guy. It was a rotating guy momentarily possessed with the Spirit of Hoke. So a lot of runs ended up with a lot of +1s and a single play-wrecking –2 or -3.

Like, say, the first two plays of the game. Everyone hated them! They both would have worked but for One Guy! Michigan blocked its opening snap all the way to the safety for what should have been a chunk run, but Mason Cole got beat to the inside by a DE lined up with no leverage:

I always say that when a guy is futilely pushing a guy into the ballcarrier that someone left the first level too early, but not here. That's a block Cole has to make. Meanwhile:

image_thumb[7]

Either 7 gets off that block and it's five yards or it's a CB coming from the side versus Higdon for a lot. That's a whoopin'. The guy Onwenu is putting on the ground is the nose tackle.

On the second play Michigan again carves out a huge gap, but Hill doesn't go in it:

That one has less potential because problem #1 is rearing its head—the safety prep to tackle at three yards but the blocking there is quite good except for the –2 that destroys the play. This is a big gap between 48 and the guy JBB is giving the business to:

image_thumb[12]

The first play of the next drive saw Poggi go in the wrong gap:

This is maybe more of a two-guys play since Cole gets run around but there is the strong possibility that Poggi can ram Cabinda hard enough that Higdon hits the gap on a guy Gentry has definitively sealed out.

image_thumb[21]

Those are Michigan's first three run plays of the game. Each features a play-wrecking goof from a different guy and a massive gap in Penn State's front. Hooray. Do you want more? I have more. This time One Guy is Higdon, who doesn't see the massive gap right at the bubble in the PSU line:

Dude.

image_thumb[27]

If you can prevent yourself from running your mouse up and down in the gap despairingly you're better than I.

Also, Ty Wheatley runs by the playside LB on and a play that's otherwise a big chunk:

That's still four yards because Bushell-Beatty and Onwenu obliterate the right side of that play. Also: Hill whiffs a kickout on an RPS +2. Etc.

Tim Drevno said something along the lines of how the offense is so close to busting out, and while he's not correct—the pass protection is dire and will remain so—he's sort of correct. Michigan was one guy away from about a dozen plays.

And this is... good?

I don't know anymore. I guess it's good that errors on plays are usually one guy and often no guys. This feels very different than the late Hoke offenses, which were a frustrating mess to chart because the playcalling was terrible and there were huge errors on the regular because Michigan kept changing what they do. This is a bunch of stuff that almost works. I can see the idea. I can see that Michigan can execute these plays. I've seen the OL and TEs gradually improve their blocking. This isn't the same morass of hopelessness that Michigan suffered through a few years ago.

Michigan had plenty of plays where they looked physically dominant against the PSU line, none more so than the Isaac touchdown where they manballed it in from the six:

Michigan's tight ends didn't give up the sort of penetration they had in previous games; they grabbed slanters and blasted them down the line almost without exception. McKeon is the guy blowing a LB down the line and opening up the gap. This was a bonafide trend:

#84 TE off LOS

That's another One Guy play, as Gentry goes for the same LB Bredeson does; if Gentry gets a hat on Cabinda this is 8 instead of 4.

And Mike Onwenu was a capital-F Force. Two of the plays above feature him blasting PSU players, and when he pulled he was able to make edge-collapsing contact:

#50 RG

Another thing to note on this one is the safety who eventually tackled Evans: he is rotated back by the motion and spends a second or two reading the play out before barreling downfield. That makes for a good gain instead of good blocks and three yards. The difference between that nine yard gain and this three yard one is evident:

PSU safety to top of screen

PSU also got a DT out there on a stunt, but that's just a thing that happened. It's not a trend. The trend is the safeties firing at Michigan's ground game with impunity. PSU's safety froze on the first one because he didn't know what he was looking at. Once he saw the play once he was able to fire because nobody cares about Michigan's passing game. That's a version of what happened to early Rodriguez offenses where the new stuff would work for a bit and then when the defense had seen it they curled up and died, because they could only do one thing.

But hey, the blocking was good on that. And I mean that. It's meaningful that Onwenu and Gentry get positives there. I mean, the chart is okay to good? Numbers are low because I charted just 24 runs, but they're better than you'd expect given the results.

Offensive Line
Player + - Total Notes
Cole 4.5 4 0.5 Flanked by TEs a lot and those blocks don't usually get evaluated. One Guy play on opener.
Bredeson 4 2 2 Okay.
Kugler 6 2 4 Pass pro was a struggle.
Onwenu 12 1 11 The monster mash.
JBB 3.5 1 2.5 Moved a few peoples.
Runyan DNP
Ruiz DNP
McKeon 7 1 A few mashers on the edge.
Bunting   DNP?
Gentry 5.5 5 0.5 A mis-ID hurt.
Eubanks   DNP
Wheatley 2 -2 Sole charted block saw him run by his guy. 
Hill 3 4 -1 Two –2 One Guy plays, but got M a TD.
Poggi 6 6 Very good except for the play he blew up.
Mason     DNP
TOTAL 51.5 24 68% Matches MSU number.
Backs
Player + - T Notes
O'Korn 1 5 -4 Fumble and blown zone read.
Isaac 1.5 1.5
Evans 1 1
Higdon 3 Missed huge cut.
Walker  
Samuels     DNP
TOTAL 6.5 8 -1.5 Not many plays made.
Receivers
Player + - T Notes
Crawford 1 -1
Black DNP
DPJ 1    
Perry -2 Whiff on McDoom screen.
Schoenle 1 -1
Ways        
McDoom 3   3 More touches please.
TOTAL 4 4 0
Metrics
Player + - T Notes
Protection 30 24 56% JBB –5, Kugler –4, Onwenu –3, Evans –2, Poggi –2, Higdon –1, Bredeson –1, Cole –1 TEAM –5.
RPS 11 13 -2 Most of the minuses were safeties who couldn't be held back.

So that's pretty encouraging on the ground and a disaster in pass protection. I handed out five TEAM minuses that feel like mental errors in the call; those probably go back to Kugler, who had some live-fire issues of his own, and maybe O'Korn. But probably Kugler.

SEVEN SACKS WHAT THE BALLS

Well... I mean. It is what it is. My modest hopes for Juwann Bushell-Beatty's pass protection remain modest indeed. Michigan coulda should had a late-clock drive in response to PSUs but for JBB getting beat very easily to the inside and just tackling the dude.

There are holds, and there's that. He was beat clean for a second sack on the last Michigan drive I didn't bother to chart, as was Mason Cole. Michigan has no tackles. They're playing a center at tackle and they tried to insert Nolan Ulizio instead of Bushell-Beatty earlier this year. There's no way this was going to be at all acceptable.

More frustrating than the incidents where tackles get beat one on one is Michigan's persistent inability to pick up anything resembling a stunt. But many of those stunts were only sort of pressure.

Sort of pressure?

I mean... pressure. Sort of.

Michigan's pass protection is bad. O'Korn is exacerbating that because he can't reliably read defenses. His scrambles were moderately effective in the first half but degenerated into some problems he ran himself into, and even at their best they're only ways to mitigate his primary flaw. O'Korn ripped off a first down here, hooray. Also Grant Perry should be his primary read on this and he's wide open. If he's surveying the right side, either an up-high shot at Gentry or the wide open dumpoff to Hill are acceptable options:

#88 slot to left

please don't make noise about the OLB Perry is 15 yards past

Michigan would come back to this route later and O'Korn would throw a dart to convert on second and 21, so bully for that, and bully for the first down. But you can't build an offense out of improvisation, and while O'Korn was improved in this game from his last two outings he's still a long way from even average. The dump to Hill may pick up fewer yards but a QB who throws that is part of a more sustainable offense than hoping a hole opens up in front of your face.

A more frustrating example was this third and short on which a false snap from Michigan triggered PSU defense into tipping a blitz. There's no check, O'Korn should know that the OLB is coming. Michigan either manages to screw up the protection or Evans leaves the backfield immediately because he should be the hot read; I think it's the latter, but O'Korn doesn't throw it until he's dodged the blitzer and it's too late:

That looks like a should-be RPS plus that's a quick conversion to Evans with potential for YAC but for O'Korn's slow information processing. I mean:

Pick one of the two open guys, if not some more of the other potentially open guys downfield.

image_thumb[33]

And there were some complaints about the route set on the O'Korn ultrasack where he sat in the pocket long enough to grow a beard. They are bad complaints.

image_thumb[38]

All of these guys are in pure man coverage. They're already in their breaks. The safety is to the hash to the bottom and can't get to Crawford. Literally everyone is open enough to throw. The guys are 30 yards downfield, it's 3rd and six, you're down two TDs in the fourth quarter. Throw one of the shorter guys open or go at Crawford, who has a step on his guy. Eating a sack is totally unacceptable.

The capper:

O'Korn feels the pressure there as Higdon doesn't get a ton of his man. He gets enough to provide a lane to step into. O'Korn steps up. And then he waits. The ball is in his hands four seconds after the snap, and that's the game-sealing turnover. Yes, the protection wasn't great. This is still at least 50% on O'Korn.

So we're doomed.

Mostly. But! Here's a chart:

JOHN O'KORN

  Good   Neutral   Bad   Ovr
Game DO CA SCR   PR MA   BA TA IN BR   DSR PFF
Indiana 2016   6(1) 1   2 3   1 1 3* 2   46% -2.5
Florida 1     1     1*   50% -
Purdue 6++ 14(2)+++   3 2   1 3 2   75% -
MSU 3 16(4) 2   4 5   2 4*(1) 6*   60% -
Indiana 1+ 9(3)+   2(1)   3 3 3***   44% -
PSU 3+ 9(3)+ 4 5 3+   5** 1 1   65% -

O'Korn was improved over the last two games, when dropbacks were almost invariably pain. He had a fair selection of downfield throws that looked polished, including the aforementioned long conversion to Perry. This to DPJ was also a nice reminder of how it feels to get a downfield chunk:

That's a two man route and max protection with PSU's entire front biting hard so this is very basic. It's still progress from last week. There were other blips and bloops in there: a nice first-down hitch to DPJ; a shot between guys in the zone to Perry. The latter was instructive because far more of the pressure events PSU faced—their line wasn't a whole lot better than Michigan's in pass protection—ended with events like this instead of sacks:

QBs who know where they're going with the ball paper over a lot of pressure. This stunt gets through but super-slowly and I think most quarterbacks get the ball out on this little drag route to DPJ to set up second and medium:

That looks like pressure. It is, sort of. It's sort of not. Sorry, sorry, that's the other section.

Another potential positive: O'Korn seems to have something a little like McSorley's ability to loft balls down the sideline effectively. He hit Black in the opener, had that deep shot to Gentry against Purdue, and then set up Michigan's second touchdown by standing in against a blitz and giving Crawford a chance:

Crawford converted, and will now be Braylon Edwards.

O'Korn looks good when he knows where he's going. He looked good against Purdue on a bunch of open stuff, and at times against Penn State he looked excellent. Those times were interspersed with large plains of indecision and error. There's a possibility that Michigan finds a set of things that the opposition defense is consistently giving up and O'Korn might have a replay of his Purdue game. The hope you should probably be holding onto is that Michigan can stop having so many One Guy plays and turn into an efficient rushing offense, whereupon O'Korn can keep the opposition honest with plays like that crossing route to DPJ: two man routes on play action.

Any... like, ideas?

I would be down for some heavier involvement for McDoom. He got two cracks at the ball in this one and on both he did well. The first was a screen pass that saw his speed and running instincts turn into a first down despite a whiffed block:

And the second was a jet sweep that he turned up smartly and got maximum yardage on.

There's a limit to the number of things you can get him without eating a 5 yard TFL because the defense is overplaying it but when he gets the ball in his hands he does good things with it. I'd like to see McDoom get up to a half-dozen touches a game instead of the 2 or 3 he's gotten so far. Nothing crazy.

Other than that not really? Michigan's plays are almost working so just keep working at that.

Receivers?

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

  THIS WEEK   SEASON
Player 0 1 2 3   0 1 2 3
Crawford 1/1 1/1     2/5   0/2  10/12 
Black       1   0/1 10/11 
Perry 0/1 2/2   8 1/3 4/6   14/14
DPJ   3/4    4 0/1 2/4 9/10 
Schoenle           1/1 1/1 
McDoom     2/2   4   5/6
Ways       2      2/2
Wheatley                   2/2 
McKeon       2/2           17/18  
Gentry     1    0/1   1/1 7/8 
Eubanks           1/1 1/1 
Bunting                   1/1
Hill   0/1 1/1     0/2   1/2 1/2   
Poggi                     1/2
Evans   1/1      1       1/1 2/2  
Isaac                  2/2
Higdon   0/1   3       0/2 3/3

ROUTES: Perry +.

A brief and rudimentary day save for Crawford's catch.

Heroes?

Mike Onwenu was a bulldozer, as was McKeon. Run blocking in general was good.

Maybe not so heroic?

Everyone who thought about pass blocking except Bredeson. Also O'Korn was responsible for about half the sacks himself.

What does it mean for Rutgers and beyond?

The run game is close to putting it together. Unless they don't in which case I said none of this. But seriously folks: PSU was an average-ish P5 run defense and Michigan's blocking was pretty good, with gains held down by the nonexistent passing game and one guy blowing way too many plays.

Pass protection is a disaster. Surprise.

I'd like to get a look at Brandon Peters. Just in case.

Comments

Carcajou

October 27th, 2017 at 1:50 AM ^

Ah, but maybe that's a reason Peters shouldn't play much this year. Possibly he is still a work in progress. It just might make him a better QB next year.

One of the biggest challenges for coaches with young QBs is improving their mechanics, some of which can be the difference between a good QB and a great QB.
[Not claiming to have seen enough of Peters or the other QBs to know what mechanics need improving]. Once a QB gets thrown into playing regularly, especially during the season, coaches are unlikely to continue working with the QBs on those details- they will be pretty much frozen at whatever level they are at.

HarbaughsLeftElbow

October 26th, 2017 at 9:29 PM ^

Rudock was a proven QB in a pro-style system. O'Korn had a good year in the Air Raid but also was throwing the ball all over the field to veteran WRs and regressed to the mean severly the next year. 

I don't think O'Korn can scan the field and progress through reads for whatever reason. He just stares down one WR from before the snap until being sacked or taking off running. 

skwogler

October 26th, 2017 at 8:02 PM ^

I am more and more impressed with McKeon.  He is, by far, our best all-around TE blocking and catching.  

In Harbaugh parlance he is an ascending player.

Bunting, on the other hand, what has happened there.  Too much rapping and not enough reppin' iron.  He has regressed and I figured he would be the guy to fill Butt's shoes.

Wheatley has his moments, so does Gentry.

 

M-Dog

October 26th, 2017 at 8:52 PM ^

McSorley got the ball out quickly . . . read and release . . . read and release.  He didn't fuck around.  He's not a multiple read guy.

O'Korn needs to do some of that.  Find the single-covered guy (you know he's there, Penn State's safety's were all within 8 yards of the LOS) and get the ball out to him 50/50.

You only need to hit on two of those and it completely changes the way the defense attacks you.

Give that a chance.

O'Korn is no better at multiple reads than McSorley, but at least McSorley has enough sense not to try.

 

carlos spicywiener

October 27th, 2017 at 11:23 AM ^

Man is predicating on winning everysingle block at the line of scrimmage with force Zone is about leaving one man unblocked, moving in concert, and moving people out of the way enough for a one-cut back to move through the gap.

I like zone. I think it's harder to execute man, where often one bad block means youre toast. Not necessarily about ID'ing. If you ID incorrectly the play is often screwed.

getsome

October 26th, 2017 at 9:43 PM ^

pre and post snap ID, communication and execution really hurts this O.  i assume its mostly okorn and kugler since C and QB typically manage things but it still a team game and it falls on the team and the staff. 

i wont get into it any deeper.  but as frustrating as it to watch, its obviously worse for the players and staff. 

im sure theyre working on it - heres hoping they find answers sooner than later so they can perform a bit more consistently, have more fun out there and win some big games  (though unless another QB steps up, several OL start clicking, etc, any answers they find will likely only go so far)

YoOoBoMoLloRoHo

October 26th, 2017 at 10:18 PM ^

thing of beauty and it's great to see the young guys like Gentry, McKeon and Onwenu locking up on blocks. I am still optimistic about next year - Harbaugh must be able to find a QB. Right?

BlueinLansing

October 26th, 2017 at 10:31 PM ^

the last year of the Hoke era I didn't and will not read this weeks UFR.  No offense to Brian and thank you for the hard work. 

 

Maybe if things turnaround I'll go back and take a look but this one had OSU beatdown I'll get to it when I get to it 5 months later feel to it.

 

Carcajou

October 27th, 2017 at 1:29 AM ^

I don't understand this thinking. Certainly for players and coaches (and fans), losses and temporary failures teach you a lot more about your strengths and weaknesses and where to improve than wins do. It's painful, for sure. But sometimes it seems like nothing clarifies things like getting your ass kicked.

Carcajou

October 27th, 2017 at 1:36 AM ^

That one, and several others, was all on O'Korn. Unlike many plays, receivers did actually get off and downfield and into and out of their breaks. The protection gave him a good pocket for 3-4 seconds which is more than enough time in dropback. As mentioned, at the bottom of the screen he had the whole outside third to throw to Crawford(?). Even more strikingly, at the top of the screen, the Go route was open, and it was obvious before JOK even finished the drop ("If we're even, I'm leavin'") and there again, plenty of room from the numbers to the sideline to throw the receiver open.  No underneath defenders to worry about on that play, either...so even a poor pass wopuld have been at worst, a 30-35 yard Arm Punt interception .

Yes, RB pass protection sucks especially, and Cole and Kugler had a poor game IMO. But as a whole, OL pass protection has marginally improved.

But O'Korn does a few things that cause him trouble. In his drops, he always extends his back leg too far, and looks to hitch forward- which gives him some momentum on the throw or if he runs straight ahead, but nullifies the quick throw and some of the depth advantage of taking a drop, and he runs out of room to throw the ball.  He'd be better off keeping his weight over both feet, bouncing in place in many cases.

O'Korn also takes a long time to wind up and release the ball. Part of the reason for this is he carries the ball very low- near the bottom of his number, rather than shoulder high- and conesquently takes a big wind-up, allowing pass defenders to break on the ball, and the rush to close and get their hands up. 

A bit late in his career to fix some of these things (and I wouldn't be surprised if some of those are the result of habits picked up as a spread QB), but we can only hope that we will see improvement over the next several games.

 

xtramelanin

October 27th, 2017 at 5:49 AM ^

where it was supposed to be, i.e., right about high-chest, shoulder height.  the obvious problem was he should've thrown the ball 1.7 seconds before he then got the ball whacked out of his hands.  i think some of this is indeed fixable.  

jackw8542

October 27th, 2017 at 9:38 AM ^

Because of the situation, he should have put it up, but all four receivers are well-covered in that picture.  He may have been able to get it to Crawford breaking to the boundary with a perfect pass, and he may have been able to get it to the fly route with a perfect pass, but with anything less than absolutely perfect passes, those were at best 50-50 propositions.

JFra

October 27th, 2017 at 8:44 AM ^

Did anyone catch that Deadspin piece on how terrible Wilton Speight's medical attention was at Purdue? It's almost hard to read by anyone with vague knowledge of medical care and standards.

It's shameful the entirety. Read it if you want a reason to hate Purdue.

jackw8542

October 27th, 2017 at 9:30 AM ^

The team that makes a play when the opportunity presents itself usually wins big games.  For one team, receivers make tough catches or RBs break off big runs or DBs complete an interception opportunity. 

MSU's defenders intercepted the pass every time an opportunity presented itself (the one on the short, albeit ill-advised, pass was a remarkable catch) and recovered fumbles when the opportunities were present.  PSU's receivers made a living out of 50-50 plays and recovered our fumbles.  We simply did not do the same. 

I still have nightmares about the pass McDoom dropped near the end of the MSU game where, at least on TV, it looked like he had a chance to take it to the house if he caught it.  Here, our guy dropped a potential interception in the endzone (tough play but the kind we need to make), our kicker missed an extra point, we had between 4 and 6 outright drops and no really good catch (Brian seems to think Crawford's catch was exceptional, but it is one that every decent WR should make - a better throw than catch) and no RB busted a play (on the 2nd play, Barkley made the cut that Higdon later missed).

When we had our Heisman caliber players, like Desmond Howard or Charles Woodson, we made the plays.  We need guys who make those plays when they need to be made, and right now it does not look like we have a skill player who can do that.  Maybe Gentry, Black and DPJ will develop into guys like that.  I continue to believe the only RB who has that potential is Isaac, but in spite of his consistent production (thought he looked really good when in against PSU) he does not get many touches.  I would like to see some swing passes to him, as he seems to be able to make that first guy miss and to either outrun or run over others, but I doubt it will happen.  Maybe we will get to see him do it on Sundays next year.

Mgoczar

October 27th, 2017 at 10:25 AM ^

Part of what you are saying is youth. When you dont have all world talent (not saying we dont have talent, just no Barkley) then the Juniors and seniors start making those plays. Remember Darboh and Chesson? Specially Darbohs 150 yard game at MSU? When he mad ethat ridiculous catch while the DB was yanking at him the whole way (which F the refs for not calling bunch of spinless crooks)? Yea give it time and average talent receivers and RBs start making those plays aws well when they are older. 

it'll get better.