When there was but one set of footprints: That was when I was carrying the team. When there were none, I was hurdling a fool. [Patrick Barron]

Upon Further Review 2021: Offense vs Penn State Comment Count

Seth November 18th, 2021 at 9:04 AM

Letters: I’ve taken to adding them (p=pass pro, y=YAC, c=catch, b=block for RBs) to pass event +/- since it’s included in the charting now. So Hayes(-1p) means he got a pass pro minus versus a run blocking minus.

Formation Notes: Penn State often swaps their SAM, #23 6’1”/230 Curtis Jacobs, for their nickel, #25 5’9/180 Daequan Hardy, but a) uses them exactly the same and b) is lying their asses off about Jacobs’s size since he’s looks 6’0”/205 at most. Since their numbers look alike on digital film, I think I labeled them incorrectly a few times before it hit me that the HSP looks like he’s shrunk. PFF says Jacobs got 43 snaps to Hardy’s 24, for what it’s worth.

They also use a lot of different formations with their base personnel I called this one “4-3 Over 4i” to denote the SDE is lined up inside the T’s shoulder (that’s Jacobs on the top).

image

And this is Nickel Odd Split:

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Michigan added a pure tackle over formation (“T-Over”) that preserves that TE as an eligible receiver (their MSU version did not).

image

Substitution Notes: Cade the whole way, Haskins almost always with Edwards in for a few, another big chunk of Trente Jones, WRs went Johnson-Sainristil-Wilson most of the way, with Anthony, Baldwin, and Henning rotating in. Erick All was limited but in on crucial downs.  Snap counts are here.

Weather note: Heavy winds, sleet at times, and the ground got soaked and remained one big splooshy puddle of ploopiness, so adjust your expectations accordingly.

[After THE JUMP: I deserve that, Michigan deserved to win.]

I’m up against the WTKA roundtable so I’ll insert the links into the text later.

Ln Dn Ds OForm DPack Front Hi Type Box Play Player Yards EPA
M25 1st 10 Pistol 12 FB 4-3-4 4-3 Over 4 1 Penalty 8 False Start Stueber -5 -0.74
Stueber(-1) moved, seemed to tell officials he got disconcerting signals. If so it was vocal—there's nothing on tape.
M20 1st 15 Pistol 12 FB Twins 4-3-4 4-3 Over 4 1 RPO 8 Trap/Flash Screen Haskins 4 -0.06
The read is probably in case the CB is 10+ yards off not on an OLB so McNamara(RPO+) gives. All(+1) shoulders the kickout and Stueber(+1) bent the FS edge but the safety is in the box (RPS-1) and meets at the LOS.
M24 2nd 11 Empty Bone X Tight 4-3-4 4-3 Even 2 Pass 7 Dumpoff Schoonmaker 2 -0.19
Hayes(-2p) barely blocks the DE and Cade has to abandon a seam opening up to CJ to dump it to Schoonmaker in hopes he can make YAC. He cannot. (CA, 3, Prot 0/2, Hayes-2, McNamara+1)
M26 3rd 9 Gun Wk Y-Flex 4-2-5 Nk Wide 1 Pass 6 Batted Wilson Inc -0.17
Keegan(-1p) shoved back many yards by the DT so this has to get out. Cade's throw to Wilson goes off his center's helmet and pops up, fortunately landing safely on the ground. (BA, n/a, Prot 1/2, Keegan-1, McNamara-1)
Drive Notes: Punt. 0-3. 8 min 1st Q. Yeesh.
Ln Dn Ds OForm DPack Front Hi Type Box Play Player Yards EPA
M29 1st 10 Pistol Ace Twins T-Over 4-3-4 4-3 Under 1 Run 8 Counter CF Haskins 4 -0.14
Hayes(+1) gets a good pin on the edge, Vastardis(+1) got a good kick on the SAM and All leads through the big gap seeking the FS who's the last guy to the endzone. Haskins(-1) is running over the MLB instead of following his lead blocker because the MLB slipped past Stueber(-1) who should have left the doubled DT to Keegan. think HH didn't have to get so low in the hole but definitely thought he was going to get TFL'd and made 4 yards out of it. Man that was a good gap too.
M33 2nd 6 Gun Wk Z Orbit 4-3-4 Nk Over 1 Penalty 8 False Start Zinter -5 -0.82
Zinter(-1) starts a millisecond early. It's a good, if a little ticky-tack, call but I wonder if M's been getting away with this and they were told to look for it.
M28 2nd 11 Offset Twins 4-3-4 4-3 Splits 1 Pass 7 TE Cross All 5 0.04
Hayes(-1p) loses Ebiketie around after a beat and a half. Cade gets it out then takes a shot. All(+0.5y) edges and shoulders through the SAM but LB gets him down after just a few. (CA+, 3, Prot 1/2, Hayes-1, McNamara+1)
M33 3rd 6 Offset Str 3-2-6 Okie 1 Pass 7 Slant Sainristil Inc -0.40
So Hayes(-2p) loses again and this has to get out. Cade puts it on Sainristil who's blanketed by a CB with his arm wrapped around and going for a ride. It ricochets to Schoonmaker (who was getting held, refs-1) but he can't grab it either. Nowhere else to put this because of the pressure so I'm going with (CA+, 1, Prot 0/2, Hayes-2, McNamara+1)
Drive Notes: Punt. 0-3. 2 min 1st Q. Well, at least we've already charted a quarter!
Ln Dn Ds OForm DPack Front Hi Type Box Play Player Yards EPA
M10 1st 10 Offset Str X tight 4-3-4 Nk Over 1 Run 7.5 Counter CF Haskins 1 -0.29
Brisker is next to the ref (6 yards) at the snap and the Nk is stacked with the other safety so Cade should be checking out of a run here. RPS-2 as PSU is slanting to deliver their LBs and Brisker right to this. Vastardis(+1) turns an edge who sorta lets it happen since they know they have numbers. All(-1) misses the MLB then turns around instead of getting the safety in case Haskins(+1) breaks that. He breaks that, and the safety's and the CB that CJ(-0.5) lost, but not the WLB who came all the way around from behind. Check out of this man.
M11 2nd 9 Gun Str Y-Demi 4-2-5 Nk Even 1 Pass 7 Cross Johnson 22 1.66
Blitz is picked up but Vastardis(-1) is getting beat back into the pocket and the DT may get his fingertips on the throw. CJ(+2y) has to fully turn around to catch this behind him. Then he goes upfield and edges the Nk. Anthony(+1) gets in a block on the edge to add an extra 10 yards to CJ's run. (MA, 2, Prot 2/3, Vastardis-1, McNamara-1)
M33 1st 10 Pistol FB Str H-Jet 4-3-4 4-3 Even 1 Run 7 Dbl Split Zone Haskins 3 -0.39
The way the OLB widens here I would like M to add a flare read to the Jet motion. There isn't because Henning turns to block that guy unless that's an arc read for him. It gets him away but the RPS-1 good it does is wiped out because the DE knows he's not being read and steps into the hash while the MLB sees the flow action and steps outside of Vastardis who's got no angle after a second with a double. All(+0.5) pops the DE back a few yards but he can tackle there. MLB gets into HH's legs at the LOS as three defenders converge.
M36 2nd 7 Offset Str 4-3-4 4-3 Even 1 Pass 7.5 Sack McNamara -6 -1.30
Cade can't get through 1 read before Hayes(-2) lets Ebiketie inside. Maybe we should try holding. (PR, n/a, Prot 0/2, Hayes-2)
M30 3rd 13 Offset Str Y-Demi 3-3-5 335 Odd 2 Pass 5.5 Slip Screen Haskins 15 2.84
Set this play up by not running it for 4 years so RPS+2 as PSU has no idea. Sainristil(-1) is unceremoniously pushed down by a LB so Haskins(+2) has stiff-arm and spin away from that guy and both safeties to get the final 6 yards.
M45 1st 10 Pistol 12 FB Z tight 4-3-4 4-3 Under 1 Run 8 Counter Trey Z Edwards 1 -0.93
Safety is at 4 yards at the snap and they're slanting again. Zinter(+1) gets the DE turned in. Hayes(-1) stops blocking down to kick the MLB (that's new!) but what he should do is get the safety who ripped down right at this (RPS-1) because the MLB is already upfield and Hayes is just going to block in the back. All hits the MLB and the safety gets a free shot in the hole with the WLB right behind him as the extra guy.
M46 2nd 9 Offset 2TE Twins Covered 4-3-4 4-3 Under 1 Run 7 Pin & Pull Edwards 1 -0.80
PSU blitzing Brisker with no thought to two WRs out there (RPS-1). Stueber(+1) kicks him to make a hole but that means two unblocked LBs for Vastardis with Edwards(-1) who tripped before they're relevant.
M47 3rd 8 Offset Wk F cross 4-2-5 Nk Even 2 Pass 6 Fly Anthony Inc(+5) 1.14
All crosses, Cade claps and a PSU DL jumps the line (RPS+2) that was planned. Free play goes nowhere as Anthony is knocked down or pulled down or something off-screen (his sleeve is off the pad) and the ball sails way overhead. (Not charted, 0, Prot 1/1)
O48 3rd 3 Offset Twins Tight 4-3-4 4-3 Over 4 1 Run 8 Pin & Pull GC Haskins 1 -1.66
Just a mess here. Zinter(+1) got a reach block by cutting the NT but Honigford(-1) can't get any vertical push on his DE and ends up putting him into Hayes, freeing his DT. Schoonmaker(-1) can't get to a LB keying the pull (RPS-1) and doesn't get the next one. Keegan(+0.5) gets a late turn on the SAM but it work. However with the CB, S, and MLB there are three guys for the ball and his blocker. Vastardis(-1)0 misses the LB, the CB gets a free shot. Everybody in the world knows where M is running and how.
O47 4th 10 Offset Goal 5-3-3 Goal 0 Run 11 Dive Haskins 2 3.05
I hate our short yardage plays. Schoonmaker(-2) gets planted in the backfield by a DE, Haskins(+2) spins off that and reaches as a CB flies down and grabs his leg. It's just enough. I won't RPS but come ON.
O45 1st 10 Offset 2TE 4-3-4 4-3 Over 4 1 Pass 8 Fade? Wilson Inc -1.00
Looks innocuous and then Hayes(-1) lets this LB get all the way around him and graze the ball. Cade could have moved up too. Lucky it has enough to carry past the coverage. (BA, 0, Prot 0/1, Hayes-1, McNamara-1)
O45 2nd 10 Offset Wk 4-2-5 Nk Wide 1 Play-Action 7 PA Slant Anthony 13 1.60
Lol. So PSU is completely not buying the PA (RPS-2) and that leads to four PSU players on the wrong side of the blockers except Schoonmaker's. Somehow Cade slips this ridiculous ball to where Anthony(+2c) can tip it to himself and catch. (CA+, 1, Prot 1/3, TEAM-2, McNamara+2)
O32 1st 10 Gun Wk 4-3-4 Nk Over 4 1 Pass 7 RB Dumpoff Haskins 7 0.37
This time it's Stueber(-1) who gets Ebiketie and he gets away with a big hold (refs+1). Zinter is also about to be spun through by a DT. Times up. Cade rolls out of the pocket to dump to Haskins(+1y) who collects, dodges one dude, and dives forward to make this a good gain. (CA, 3, Prot 1/2, Stueber-1)
O25 2nd 3 Gun Str Bunch Z Jet 4-3-4 4-3 Under 1 Run 7.5 Dbl Split Zone Haskins 2 -0.34
Still trying to make this work. It might because there's zero respect for an Arc keeper as McNamara(-1, read-1) gives and with no edge Haskins(-1) could bounce behind what becomes two lead blockers. He hits it up inside instead for 2 yards.
O23 3rd 1 Pistol FB Goal 5-3-3 Goal 1 Run 10 Split Zone Haskins 2 0.21
RPS+1 because PSU isn't set yet when they snap. Hayes(+1) takes advantage to remove a DT then affect a LB so Haskins can dive through a guy slanting under Honigford(-1). Even when they're successful I hate our short yardage plays.
O21 1st 10 Gun Wk Bunch 4-3-4 4-3 Over 4 1 Pass 6 Skinny Post Wilson 21 2.58
Cade sees they have a one-high safety on the other side and there's no way he can get over to Wilson(+2cr) in time. Perfect protection, perfect throw, touchdown. (DO, 2, Prot 2/2, McNamara+2)
Drive Notes: Touchdown. 7-3. 5 min 2nd Q. Let's now all forget how dumb this drive was until now.
Ln Dn Ds OForm DPack Front Hi Type Box Play Player Yards EPA
M12 1st 10 Gun Str 4-3-4 4-3 Over 4 1 Pass 7 RB Dumpoff Haskins 8 0.62
Waits too long as Hayes(-1p) is losing to Ebiketie again (that's why this guy has a shield, folks). The throw takes Haskins(+2y) off his feet but he collects behind the LOS, runs through the MLB and carries a DE for a few more. This player, folks. (MA, 2, Prot 1/2, Hayes-1)
M20 2nd 2 Pistol Twins Tackle-O 4-3-4 4-3 Over 4 1 Run 8 Counter CF Haskins 4 -0.04
PSU is slanting again at this (RPS-1) and it gets dangerous as Keegan(-1) loses a DT into the backfield and he can give chase. All(+1) got a good kick on the SAM coming in from the slot, and Vastardis(+0.5) didn't get but at least persuaded the WLB to go inside of him which is enough for Haskins to shoot this into the free LB whom Stueber couldn't reach because of the slant. Haskins(+0.5) contacts that guy and then falls forward for a few more.
M24 1st 10 Pistol 12 FB 4-3-4 4-4 Over 1 Run 8.5 Backside of Power Haskins 16 1.39
Remember that Rutgers game in 2017? They do that thing, where PSU is stacking the box then catch the defense overplaying the frontside and cut back inside (RPS+1) Great double from Hayes(+1) and Keegan(+1) opens up the lane and Haskins(+1) breaks Brisker's tackle after thinking about hurdling him.
M40 1st 10 Offset 2TE Twins Covered 4-3-4 4-3 Over 4 1 Play-Action 7 Flea Flicker Anthony Inc(+14) 1.21
PSU not fooled by the flicker. Cade waits on Anthony(+1route) who goes to his spot and gets impeded by the Nk. Learned that's a real thing, no matter if it's catchable, vs Nebraska. Face of SAM tells you this guy doesn't like the rule. It also might have been catchable--it lands inbounds. (Not Charted, 0, Prot n/a)
O46 1st 10 Offset Str Z Orbit 4-3-4 4-4 Over 1 Run 8.5 End-Around Henning -4 -1.93
Looks good at first but well-defended—DE doesn't bite on Haskins, Vastardis(-1) can't get the Nk down and that guy forces a bend, then Schoonmaker(-2) gets run by Brisker. This is a tough defense.
50 2nd 14 Gun Trips X/Y flip 4-2-5 4-3 Even 2 Pass 7 Out Johnson Inc -0.88
Ball is thrown inside CJ(-1c) with a CB coming to hit and he drops it. (MA, 2, Prot 1/1, McNamara-1)
50 3rd 14 Offset Wk Z tight 3-3-5 335 Odd 2 Pass 6 Flare Screen Haskins 12 1.46
Sainristil(+1) and All(+1) are the lead blockers, one removes the Nk the other escorts the MLB to where All could leave him and pick off the safety coming to stop this, but he doesn't disengage and that guy gets Haskins(+0.5) down a few yards short. (CA(screen), 3, Prot n/a)
O38 4th 2 I-form Heavy 5-3-3 Goal 0 Run 11 Down G Lead Haskins 0 -4.15
PSU has 8 guys to the right side of the center and Michigan runs right for Somme reason. RPS-3 (this is more than a 4-point swing). You're asking Vastardis to reach a guy Cade has to check out of this or the box has to call timeout. Great play by Luketa makes it academic by dodging Schoonmaker but that's because he knows what's coming not a block the TE can make.
Drive Notes: Turnover on Downs. 7-3. 1 min 2nd Q. I hate our short game so so much. Next drive starts with 31 seconds and no timeouts.
Ln Dn Ds OForm DPack Front Hi Type Box Play Player Yards EPA
M25 1st 10 Offset Str 4-3-4 Nk Over 2 Run 6 Counter Trey Haskins 3 -0.30
0:21. Slant but given circumstances PSU isn't overloading the box this time so there's room to run. Vastardis(+1) turns in the end, Schoonmaker(-1) lets the OLB who replaces him get inside and make the tackle.
M28 2nd 7 Offset Str 4-3-4 Nk Over 2 Pass 6 TE Out Schoonmaker Inc -0.56
0:14. Don't know what a 6-yard out is supposed to accomplish here but it's covered so they throw OOB. (TA, 0, Prot 1/1, McNamara-1)
M28 3rd 7 Offset Wk 4-2-5 Nk Under 3 Run 5 F Insert Haskins 12 0.86
Zinter(+0.5) and Vastardis double to the MLB, Schoonmaker(+0.5) gets a well-timed chunk of the WLB and Haskins(+1) uses up the rest of the clock dragging a DE into two safeties then fighting them to get free.
Drive Notes: EoH. 7-6. Eo2Q. Don't understand what we're trying to do at the end of this half so I just charted it.
Ln Dn Ds OForm DPack Front Hi Type Box Play Player Yards EPA
M25 1st 10 Offset Dbl Stacks 4-3-4 Nk Wide 1 RPO 6 ZR/Flash Screens Haskins 3 -0.30
The DE can't play the ZR any better than this. He is perfectly square to the RB but stopped outside of the QB. Hat tip to good play because Stueber(+1) got to the LB and PSU was slanting their DTs (RPS-1) to the frontside planning on this guy making a play. Haskins gets the handoff and can't escape. You'd need a QB in the 7+ range to break out of this.
M28 2nd 7 Gun Ace 4-3-4 4-3 Over 2 Run 8 Pin & Pull GC Haskins 12 1.62
Both safeties are at 7 yards and PSU is blitzing the WLB into the gap the G and C leave which should kill this in the backfield (RPS-2). M fake reads the backside DE which does slow him a step. Zinter(+1) has a titanic clash with the DE who wants to plant him inside but they stalemate and Haskins(+1) hops over that to pinch off the blitzer. We're still in danger but Vastardis(+1) gets the MLB turned and HH bounces into the clear. Would have gone MANY but Schoonmaker(-1) can't seal Brisker even with Keegan(+1), who released past the blitz to go be useful, getting shove in. That drives HH to the sideline behind a good play-long occupational block by Wilson(+0.5)
M40 1st 10 Pistol Ace 4-3-4 4-4 Even 1 Pass 8 Fly Wilson Inc -1.12
Take a shot deep, Wilson(+0.5) has maybe a half step on this CB so this will take a DO or a circus catch to complete. It's too long to lay out for. (IN, 0, Prot 1/1, McNamara-1)
M40 2nd 10 Gun Str 3-3-5 335 Odd 1 Pass 7 Shallow Cross Johnson 25 2.91
Blitz picked up and M runs a shallow cross under verts that gets CJ(+1y) wide open (RPS+1) underneath. He hops out of a CB's tackle but gets taken down by Luketa, who was the guy in coverage, as Sainristil(+0.5) harasses Brisker. I have mad respect for Luketa--that's a DE tracking down a guy who was PFF's fastest player of the week one time this year.
O35 1st 10 Offset 2TE Twins Covered 4-3-4 4-3 Over 4 1 Run 8 Pin & Pull GC Haskins 6 0.23
Edge shoots inside Zinter(-1) who could let him this as Vastardis(+1) knocks that guy down and keeps going to pick off Brisker. Big gap now because Schoonmaker(+1) put Luketa inside the RT and Anthony(+0.5) temporarily locked the SAM outside. All(-1) could not get the MLB, almost holds him and stops, but that guy now has an angle to get Haskins(+1), who drags him and the SAM for extras.
O29 2nd 4 Pistol FB Heavy 4-3-4 4-4 Over 1 Run 9 Power Lead Haskins 12 0.16
Harbraughffense. PSU is slanting so RPS-1 as usual since Jones has no shot at the MLB. Honigford(+1) starts the correction by blocking Luketa into the SAM to bump him off pursuit for a second. Keegan(-1) can't turn Brisker in but doesn't panic and doesn't hold, just keeps moving him so Schoonmaker(+1) can get around and punk the CB while locking the MLB inside that. Haskins(+2) sheds Brisker and hops back inside and now Jones(-0.5) could be relevant again but he doesn't get much on the SAM and he gets to go on a Haskins ride. This is why UFR takes so long, Jim.
O17 1st 10 Offset Str Y-Demi 4-3-4 4-3 Over 4 2 Penalty 6 False Start Haskins -5 -0.38
Haskins(-1) rocks and it's flagged just like the PSU one wasn't. Randy Sklar(+1 hot take) suggested they do this to get out of the red zone.
O22 1st 15 Offset Str Y-Demi 4-2-5 Nk Over 1 Pass 7 Hitch Wilson 9 0.35
Haskins(+1b) levels Tarburton (the 3rd DE) on a chip—guessing that was planned for one of the other two DEs. It also gives Cade a nice moment to find Wilson(+1route) under soft coverage (RPS+1). (CA, 3, Prot 2/2, McNamara+1)
O13 2nd 6 Pistol 12 FB 4-3-4 4-3 Under 2 Play-Action 7 PA TE Wheel All 12 1.66
Haskins(-1p) sets up too low on the blitzing WLB and so Cade has to put this off his back foot under pressure. Safety bites on the fake (RPS+1) and Cade arcs it in perfectly so All(+1y) can Kaiju down the sideline to within a breath of the endzone. QB1 play. (DO+, 3, Prot 1/2, McNamara+2)
O1 1st Goal Pistol Bone 4-3-4 Goal NA Play-Action NA PA quick seam Wilson 1 0.89
Tempo(22) and they run Franklin's Vanderbilt OT play against him: Gattis go get some RPS+2 on your old sensei, as both CJ and Wilson are open and Cade chooses Wilson so he can use the ref as a natural pick. Ref ducks, CB hits him and goes airborne, and Wilson cradles it like a babe. (DO, 3, Prot n/a, McNamara+1)
Drive Notes: Touchdown. 14-6. 11 min 3rd Q. Great drive for McNamara.
Ln Dn Ds OForm DPack Front Hi Type Box Play Player Yards EPA
M14 1st 10 Empty Trips 4-3-4 Nk Over 2 Run 6 Tight End Around All 0 -0.42
Cute idea, badly executed. Vastardis(-1) can't kick the DE who bends the run into the backfield. Stueber can't get to the MLB (RPS-1) who's ready and widening. Sainristil loses Brisker but stays on him and gets a kick finally that lets All(+1y) shake the MLB and fight back to the line of scrimmage. Wilson(-1) block also ineffective.
M14 2nd 10 Gun Wk Z Tight 4-2-5 Nk Over 4 1 Pass 7 Fade? Johnson Inc -0.19
CJ has his guy beat inside and Cade throws a fade short, CJ is looking for it high and inside unless that's a feint, either way he thinks it's going way deeper. (IN, 0, Prot 1/1, McNamara-1)
M14 3rd 10 Offset Str Y-Flex 4-2-5 Nk Under 2 Pass 6 Fade Wilson Inc -0.08
Ebiketie jumps and M snaps thinking he's in the neutral zone but he held up. This one I thik is on Wilson(-2c) who looks for this very late. It falls at his feet and he pops his chest in the universal "that's on me" signal. (Not charted, 2, Prot 1/1)
Drive Notes: Punt. 14-6. 8 min 3rd Q. Whatever sight read they're running this drive it's not working.
Ln Dn Ds OForm DPack Front Hi Type Box Play Player Yards EPA
M25 1st 10 Gun FB Heavy 4-3-4 4-4 Under 1 Run 9 ZR Down G Lead Haskins 12 1.03
Honigford(+1) gets rocked back but then buries Luketa. Zinter(+2) works around that and gets outside the CB, pinning him and Brisker inside. All(-1) gets through but looks back instead of finding somebody to block the pulls up. Vastardis(+1) is loose and delays the MLB until he can't anymore and lets go before it's a hold. That guy gets Haskins out.
M37 1st 10 Pistol 2TE Y-Flex 4-3-4 4-4 Even 1 Run 8 Zone Stretch Haskins 2 -0.51
Close to breaking big. Keegan(+1) cuts a DT lined up inside of him and guy goes to the ground. Vastardis(+1) reached the DT Zinter was on, and Hayes(+1) got over the Keegan mess and inside of the Nk. Haskins(-1) takes this too far inside, Stueber(-1) let Luketa come under him when the DE is already engaged with Schoonmaker and just needs a pop, and Zinter(-1) misses on the MLB who was running for the edge.
M39 2nd 8 Gun Trips 4-2-5 4-3 Even 2 Pass 7 Hook Sainristil 7 0.45
Protection lasts for three reads (Ebiketie isn't on the field) and that's Sainristil(+1route) who sat down in a zone. Pitch and catch, but two guys are there to stop him from getting the last yard. (CA, 3, Prot 2/2, McNamara+1)
M46 3rd 1 Offset Goal 5-3-3 Goal 1 Run 9 Dive Haskins 3 1.18
Zinter(+1) and Stueber(+1) clear out the right side and that's plenty.
M49 1st 10 Gun Str Bunch 4-3-4 Goal 1 Play-Action 9 PA Deep Hitch Johnson Inc -1.13
PSU stays in their goal line look. Token PA gets CJ(+1route) wide open and Cade overthrows him. (IN, 0, Prot 2/2, McNamara-2)
M49 2nd 10 Pistol Str 4-2-5 4-3 Over 1 Penalty 7 False Start Zinter -5 -1.05
Oops. Zinter(-1)
M44 2nd 15 Offset Str Bunch 4-2-5 4-3 Under 2 Pass 7.5 Drag Sainristil 4 -0.13
Has time but leaves the pocket when Luketa is going inside Stueber. Wish they would show the rest of the play so we could know if anyone else was open because I suspect someone was. Out of pocket means he has to force this where the guy trailing Sainristil and the guy covering Johnson nearby can prevent YAC. (TA, 2, Prot 1/1, McNamara-1)
M48 3rd 11 Offset Str F-slot 3-3-5 335 Odd 2 Pass 6 Shallow Cross Johnson 4 -0.12
Orlovsky explains as well as I can. They try to get the same cross that CJ got 25 on before but PSU is sitting on it. TA not an RPS because that should open up All past the sticks and the protection vs 3 guys is holding but Cade forces it. (TA, 3, Prot 1/1, McNamara-1)
Drive Notes: Punt. 14-6. 3 min 3rd Q. If not for the false start it's 4th and 2 on the PSU 43. Punt wars: M can't stop Robbins's from bouncing in the endzone, PSU does theirs so next drive begins at the 1 yard line.
Ln Dn Ds OForm DPack Front Hi Type Box Play Player Yards EPA
M1 1st 10 Pistol FB Heavy 5-3-3 Goal 0 Run 11 Split Zone Haskins 1 -0.20
Schoonmaker(-1) gets shot through by Brisker. All(-1) gives himself up so Haskins can wedge forward a yard instead of trying to bounce that where only a CB is protecting the edge. If only we had the personnel/guts to run an arc here. Also go to the NFL already Brisker!
M2 2nd 9 Goal 5-3-3 5-3 Under 1 Run 8 QB Sneak McNamara 5 0.03
Tempo(22) and it works as PSU isn't expecting a sneak. Then Haskins(+1) comes down to shove his QB for a gain that actually sets up a running down. RPS+1 I'm here for it.
M7 3rd 4 Empty 2TE/3w 4-3-4 Nk Split 1 Pass 7 RB Slant Haskins 3 -0.06
It's open (RPS+1) under a pick play and here I wish we had Corum (or Edwards) because Haskins(-1c) goes to his knee to catch this then hops over the LOS, meaning he's down a yard short. Pass also could have not been at his knees. (MA, 2, Prot 1/1, McNamara-1)
Drive Notes: Punt. 14-6. 13 min 4th Q. Many PSU 4th down conversions later M gets the ball back tied with 7:30 remaining.
Ln Dn Ds OForm DPack Front Hi Type Box Play Player Yards EPA
M25 1st 10 Pistol Twins Tackle-O 4-3-4 4-3 Over 1 Run 7.5 Counter Trey Haskins -1 -0.80
Hayes(-3) lets Luketa slip inside of him. That changes everyone's angles because this is supposed to get outside so the MLB can redirect and kill it when Haskins(+1) makes the first guy miss. Hate giving a guy a -3 but that's really really bad. Just tackle him man, they're not calling shit today.
M24 2nd 11 Offset Wk 4-2-5 Nk Over 2 Pass 6 TE Dumpoff All Inc -0.29
Hayes(-1p) is beat again inside by Ebiketie. Cade is checking down and Ebiketie bats it. Had room to roll out and find Wilson here. (BA, n/a, Prot 1/2, Hayes-1, McNamara-1)
M24 3rd 11 Empty 4-2-5 Dime 1 Pass 5 Sack McNamara -8 -4.26
The disaster. Hayes(-2p) run right around by Ebiketie who sack strips Cade. PSU collects their 4th/4 fumbles this game. RPS-1 because given what you've seen so far you have to give that guy some help—going 5 wide on 3rd and 11 means you need your OTs to survive long enough for your guys to get into routes. (PR, n/a, Prot 0/3, Hayes-2, TEAM-1)
M25 1st 10 Offset 11 Twins 4-3-4 4-4 Over 1 Run 8 F Insert Haskins 17 1.52
Tether your fandom to Hassan Haskins(+2) and let him pull you for a ride. Also RPS+1 because PSU has the FS playing LB and he gets stuck in the wash. Schoonmaker(+1) textbook clears out the MLB. Zinter(+0.5) got control of a DT so Vastardis(-1) could release to the WLB but he misses. HH runs through that guy, and the Nk, and meets both safeties at the line to gain, then takes them on a Haskins ride of 7 more.
M42 1st 10 Offset Str Y-Flex 4-3-4 Nk Over 2 Run 6 ZR Belly Haskins 4 -0.17
The WRs are blocking like this is a real read. McNamara(-1, read-) gets a tough read that the WLB shades to the give with an extra step inside, but that's not enough for Cade to keep. WLB gets to Haskins at the LOS and Haskins(+1) stumbles forward behind a good double by Stueber(+0.5) for four.
M46 2nd 6 Offset 11 Twins 4-3-4 Nk over 2 Run 7 F Insert Haskins 4 -0.17
Sainristil points at the Nk cheating into the box but they don't check out and find PSU is pinching at the gap they just gashed two plays ago (RPS-2). Vastardis(+1) catches the pinching DT and Stueber(+1) gets a solid kick so there's a nice backside gap to cut into but the Nk is waiting there and so is the MLB because Schoonmaker's lead block is ruined. They meet Haskins(+0.5) at 2 yards and he spins to turn 3rd and 4 into 3rd and 2.
50 3rd 2 Offset 11 Bone 4-3-4 Goal 0 Run 10 Dive Haskins 2 1.21
Tempo(18) as Michigan wanders for 10 secs then races to the line. Vastardis(+0.5) and Zinter(+0.5) and Stueber(+0.5) grade a road while Ebiketie backs Schoonmaker, who gets an effective PSU-style block that lets Haskins dive by and just get this.
O48 1st 10 Offset Str 4-2-5 Nk Over 1 Run 7 F Insert Haskins 1 -0.84
Third time in five plays they run this. PSU (RPS-2) has Brisker shooting down at this so that he's in the backfield before Haskins is out of it. Yeesh.
O47 2nd 9 Offset Trips 4-2-5 Nk Odd Split 1 Pass 7 Mesh All 47 1.62
Goes in the Sap Archives under the label "All the way." PSU blitzes the left side and finds 5 guys blocking that side (RPS+2). They're also in cover 1 vs crossing routes. Sainristil's defender crashes into the CB tagging All(+2y) who goes...the distance, dusting his CB and getting over the pylon despite playing on a bad ankle. McNamara's pass is on the money so he never has to break stride. Chefs kiss. (DO, 3, Prot 2/2, McNamara+1)
Drive Notes: Touchdown. 21-17. 3 min 4th Q. Defensive heroics ensue and M gets the ball back on the PSU 47 with 3 and three timeouts to burn down.
Ln Dn Ds OForm DPack Front Hi Type Box Play Player Yards EPA
O33 1st 10 Pistol FB Heavy 4-3-4 Goal 0 Run 11 Power Lead Haskins 4 2.85
2:51 (3 PSU TOs). This is going outside and Vastardis(-0.5) got rocked back, but Zinter(+1) and Stueber(+1) pinned a DT and LB inside so Haskins(+0.5) cuts inside through some arms to pick up 5 (or 4.75 they mark it exactly on the field but the scorer calls it 4, worriers).
O29 2nd 6 Pistol FB Heavy 5-2-4 Goal 1 Run 10 Power Lead Haskins 5 0.08
2:45 (2 TOs). Haskins nearly stumbles in a deep patch, but stays up which is good because they've got some nice blocking set up for him out here despite PSU selling out for this (no RPS it's a goal line situation basically). Jones(+1) rides Ebiketie to the opposite hash. Schoonmaker(+1) deposited the MLB with Hayes(+1) who came off the slant to seal so Schoonmaker can cut off Luketa. Zinter(+0.5) gets the WLB popped inside. All(-1) passes up the FS and whiffs on the CB but Haskins(+1) spins to within inches of the first down.
O24 3rd 1 Goal 5-2-4 Goal NA Run NA QB Sneak McNamara 2 0.23
2:40 (1 TO). MLB leaps over the pile and McNamara(+1) sees that and goes under him. They get it.
O22 1st 10 Pistol FB Heavy 5-2-4 Goal 1 Run 10 Split Zone Haskins 3 -0.13
2:06 (1 TOs). PSU slants heavy left, Keegan(+1) turns his DT upfield.
O19 2nd 7 Pistol FB Heavy 5-2-4 5-2 Over 1 Run 10 Power Lead Haskins 12 0.58
2:00 (No TOs). WLB blitzes, Hayes(+1) wisely lets the slant go and picks him up as Jones(+2) puts Ebiketie on skates so that he's in the path of the MLB. That makes the play so Zinter can just harass the CB until All(+1) pops him into the FS. Haskins(+1) gains the line to ballgame and spins back inside despite the CB's urgent pulling at him to go out of bounds.
Drive Notes: EoG. 21-17. Three kneeldowns and we're outta here.

So, uh, all those things you said about the other side of the ball about drama and luck and the offense actually being pretty dumb and the defense being really good and offensive tackles.

Yes.

You sounded pretty confident there.

I know.

Got a little dismissive of Penn State’s offense.

I know I know I know.

Especially their left tackle.

I am completely aware.

Okay, just wanted to make sure you know you deserve this.

I do.

image

Yeah but guess what?

What?

That was a first down.

It was a rather silly first down, but no sillier than Penn State tying it on a similar “DO”/“Circus Catch” combo that should never have been.

Michigan and Penn State are a pair of Spiderman Pointing.gif programs, no doubt about it. Franklin had the Big Dumb of the Game with his fake field goal, but Michigan was also content to slog it out on a sleet-drenched field by running into eight-man boxes with seven guys. PSU’s tackles were hopeless against Hutchinson and Ojabo; Ryan Hayes got abused until Michigan put away the long pass plays, then taken to the woodshed on the drive right after PSU tied it in the 4th quarter.

The programs get here different ways. Franklin puts his bets on his skill player recruiting and cleverness the way that Harbaugh leans on being hard-nosed. Both are equally foolish because Franklin isn’t that clever and Michigan isn’t so strong that they can spot a good defense two extra players to a side and still get two yards.

Count how many players Penn State has to the right of the center. They ran INTO that. For a team with good, powerful linemen, good blocking tight ends, and Hassan Haskins to not be automatic for two yards is an issue. The reason it’s an issue is they take away their own advantages.

They don’t use the quarterback in the running game, they rarely pass, and they do crazy unnecessary things like add tight ends then telegraph which gap they’re going to so the defenders who followed the tight ends back to the formation are in position to do something about it.

And yet they managed to put together a coherent offense by the end, and Penn State needed to collect all the fumbles to stay in it. Drives, categorized:

  • Touchdown drives of 90 yards (15 plays), 75 yards (9 plays), and 75 yards (6 plays)
  • 8-play, 23-yard drive to end the game.
  • 7-play, 50-yard drive to kill the end of the 1st half but ended on 4th and 2.
  • 7-play, 27-yard drive that stalls on a false start.
  • Five(!) three-and-outs, two aided by false starts, and one ending on a sack-strip fumble.

If Michigan’s offense was an original Super Mario Kart driver, we’d be Bowser or Donkey Kong—one of the burly dudes who will trounce you once they get revved up but have a rough time getting restarted if they bump into a wall.

I remember them getting bottled up outside, then not getting bottled up outside. Was there a difference?

Yeah, so strategically we all thought Michigan was going to copy the Illinois attack of power runs that tried to turn in the edges, since PSU was using their excellent DEs to cover for a missing star defensive tackle. Penn State anticipated this attack, still slanted their DEs inside to keep the interior clogged, but had a safety flying down to add a man to the gap. Watch #1 Jaquan Brisker, who’s going to be an excellent pro, here as he creeps down the bottom hash:

Dude is at 7 yards when they hike it, 4 yards at the mesh point, and closer to the line of scrimmage than Haskins when the play resolves.

image

Most teams when they do that, e.g. Rutgers, will stick in a one-high look all day, forcing you to try to beat them at the sidelines. But if you scroll back up to the video you can see PSU was leaving their other safety on the hash mark. Gattis picked up on that and used it to score Michigan’s first touchdown. Here again you see Brisker, #1, walking down on our right, and #16 staying much higher on the field side. But #16 still has to play one-high, meaning he’s in the wrong spot to help in cover 1 if you send a fast Hawaiian down the seam.

That was a first-half punishment for that behavior, but probably wasn’t going to keep working. In the second half Michigan had a plan for dealing with Brisker. It wasn’t more speed in space, but the opposite: more beef. In fact the reaction was similar to Bo’s in the 1986 game Harbaugh guaranteed: If you have one tight end they’ll key your tight end side and snuff out your two receiver side with a high-low. If you have two tight ends however the formation is balanced. The defense keeps adding guys to the box to keep up, but eventually those guys are getting in each others’ way.

This was the point I thought the running game started to break through, but it too should have been dead on arrival. PSU has nine in the box. They do the same slant inside and fling the linebackers out where a releasing OL can’t get to all of them (circled in blue). However by moving the edge one spot over they’ve changed the roles of defenders around. Brisker isn’t the free hitter, he’s the one eating the first block.

image

He’s going to be an NFL safety but he’s not going to stand up to a 330-pound Trevor Keegan, and once he does get turned inside, #13 the MLB gets stuck inside of that block as well and that leaves Schoonmaker and Haskins versus a cornerback. Taking it one step heavier took advantage of Penn State’s refusal to change personnel by placing the onus of defending power on the defensive backs. This was true right up until the end of the game—both power runs to get first downs and kill the clock on the final drive came down to Michigan’s heavies abusing Penn State’s lights as the linebackers watched helplessly from one gap inside.

Another power wrinkle was one that Michigan added during the week: Have Haskins check for a backcut into the middle if the defensive line didn’t replace the linebackers and safeties hopping over to the playside. Here you get a good view not just of the LBs hopping to the left when they see counter action, but also the left DT’s failure to get across Keegan, who’s thus able to combo down to the last LB on the right (the hybrid one) and spring Haskins through an A gap.

Haskins ripped that cutback for a free first down several times in the first half. After that Penn State chilled out a bit with the extra linebackers, and the edge was open for business again.

Harbaugh/Gattis wracked up a ton of RPS-minuses early in the game trying to probe for Penn State’s response. Once they had it figured out, I think they gave Haskins the keys and let him read the playside tackle to make sure the Nittany linebackers were always wrong.

That doesn’t seem very Harbaugh/*Gattis* if you ask me.

No doubt Harbaugh (and Sherrone Moore, and Matt Weiss, and Jay Harbaugh) is (are) involved with the offensive game-planning, and the power run stuff has never been Gattis’s main thing. This little beauty however was very much his:

I know because James Franklin ran that play at Vanderbilt as a pop pass to win an overtime game. I can’t find the clip but it was one I saw and filed away for the HTTV 2019 article on Michigan’s new offensive coordinator. The part about using the ref as a natural pick was what stuck out to me, and came around again in the 2019 spring game.

We also had two catch and run plays from Cornelius Johnson. This is the very definition of Speed in Space. It’s a play that was on Page 1 of the offense because the offense expected to have Ronnie Bell. Johnson uses the space afforded to make a play. Note how the other receivers are all moving left. If this caught man to man you have a footrace one way and if it’s caught on the run there are suddenly a lot of defenders who were footracing the other way. If it catches zone, as it does here, there should be room underneath to turn 2nd and 9 into 3rd and short.

Gattis’s fingerprints are all over this passing game, and conceptually I think it’s the best passing game we’ve had here since Jedd Fisch’s.

The passing game that Michigan only uses as a decoy or when they have to?

There’s a difference that I think a lot of coaches don’t recognize fully between being what you are, and adhering to a philosophy that got you there. Fans get hung up on this too: Power is HARBAUGH, RPOs and slinging passes to crossing routes is GATTIS, and these are constantly at odds. The heart and soul of this Michigan offense isn’t the playcalling; it’s the playmaker.

I think I know where you’re going with this. And I think I need something for context first.

Thirty-six touches for 201 yards, and 5.6 YPP, with nothing longer than 17.

No I mean something in different shades of blue.

The chart.

Offensive Line
Player + - T Notes
Hayes 6 16 -10 Everyone gets a bad day. It was a very bad day.
Keegan 4.5 3 +1.5 I was making comps to Glasgow then realized he basically is one.
Vastardis 9 5.5 +3.5 Cleary the guy they wanted pulling.
Filiaga 0 0 0 DNP
Stueber 7 4 +3 Held Ebiketie once and got left alone.
Zinter 9 4 +5 The other guy they wanted pulling.
Barnhart     0 DNP
Jones 3 0.5 +2.5 Extra TE, helped seal the game.
Atteberry     0 DNP
Crippen     0 DNP
All 9 5 +4 Limited duty, rusty targeting, a play for the ages.
Schoonmaker 4.5 8 -3.5 Asked to do super-hard things against Ebiketie and Luketa.
Honigford 2 2 0 The backside TE on tackle over.
Selzer     0 DNP
Hibner     0 DNP
TOTAL 54 48 +6 One big loss and otherwise small positives against a ROUGH front.
Backs
Player + - T Notes
McNamara 1 2 -1 At least one of those reads was real. Clever sneaker.
McCarthy     0 DNP
Villari     0 DNP
Haskins 24 6 +18 When there was but one set of footprints: That was when I was carrying the team.
Corum     0 DNP
Edwards 0 1 -1 Two carries.
Dunlap     0 DNP
TOTAL 25 9 +16 When there were none I was hurdling fools.
Receivers
Player + - T Notes
CJ 4 1.5 +2.5 Speed in space.
Sainristil 2.5 1 +1.5 A couple of his patented blocks, one patent rejected.
Henning 0 0 0 Had the one end-around, wrong team to try it against.
Wilson 4 3 +1 Still not a blocker and a bad route vs two TDs with a wrist cast.
Baldwin 0 0 0 DNC
Anthony 4.5 0 +4.5 When he was on the field he was noticed. Can't keep him off it.
TOTAL 15 5.5 +8.5 New charting work in progress, feels more correct.
Metrics
Player + - T Notes
Protection 29 48 60% Hayes-12, Stueber-1, Vastardis-1, Keegan-1,
RPS 16 23 -7 First half was bad, big second half comeback.

Um, is Hayes alright?

Can we save that? You brought up Hassan.

Right.

Once again broke the charts, and this time I’m not taking arguments when someone says I give him too many points because I held back so hard every time. When he broke a blitz right into the spot where two linemen just vacated on a pull—the sort of thing that should kill any play dead—Haskins got a point.

Yep, one point. For turning a coulda been 3rd and 11 TFL on the second play of the 2nd half into a first down. If #13 of “Linebacker U” wants to appeal on the grounds that his arm was harder to get out of than I’m crediting it I’ll hear it.

I will admit that I gave him a point here for a pass block, which is a that I normally just minus if it’s bad. This comes not from Haskins bias but seeing a hundred RBs and TEs begrudgingly offer Hutchinson a perfunctory shoulder while all the other skill players are out running full routes. This is Haskins’s approach to chip duty.

Oh I thought you meant *chip* him, like at the end of Fargo. I’m going to run my route now!

And yes, I did give him two (2) points for this immediate response to Penn State kicking their go-ahead field goal.

I thought getting through the hole and breaking #23’s tackle was worth a point and taking the Penn State safeties for a ride to the spot they should be covering was worth another point. Anyone in the Black Pit of Negative Expectations at that moment was welcome to come along. Latching on to Hassan Haskins has been the single most rewarding thing I’ve ever done with my fandom. There’s still time if you’d like to: he’s 15 yards from 1,000 on the season.

He also more than doubled his passing yards for the season, with five catches and only one of them planned.

That is called a “screen” if you’d forgotten because Michigan hasn’t run one in a decade. Penn State certainly didn’t think they’d be the first to get one, and paid with a flaming, raging, poisonous sword of doom rampaging through the secondary.

The bulk of Haskins’s passing day was dumpoffs, which consistently went better than they were supposed to.

People keep tweeting at me that they want to be talked out of buying a #25 HASKINS jersey. I am not the person who will talk you out of this. I will also talk you into buying one of those tacky canvas prints over a pinewood frame that people decorate their houses with that says:

When there was but one set of footprints:
That was when I was carrying the team.
When there were none, I was hurdling a fool.

There was the one time I wished Corum (or Edwards) was in for Haskins, that the pass out of Michigan’s endzone that took him to his knee and brought up a 4th and 1 and a punt. Even if the pass was low, I think a scurrier type catches that slant and gets at least one YAC to move the chains. It’s a small complaint that was only relevant because of circumstances that are unlikely to be replicated.

I was going to say why don’t we use him in the Haskinscat package if we’re not going to ever pass on short downs, but then I remembered we have a quarterback who’s a true run threat.

Uh, Cade is not…oh him.

Yeah, where did he go?

I think the more relevant question is when in this sleety, windy muck of a day would you want anyone but Cade McNamara under center?

I take it the chart was good?

Nah, the chart was like the offense: *HIT* or miss.

CADE MCNAMARA

 

  Good   Neutral   Bad   Ovr   Reads
Game DO CA SCR   PR MA   BA TA IN BR   DSR GRADE!   RPOs ZRs
W. Michigan 3+ 3(3)-           2     1   67% +5   4/5 2/7
Washington 1 3(2)-     2 (1)     3 1(1) 2   40% -8   5/5 4/9
NIU 2 7+ -     1 1             100% +11   1/2 1/2
Rutgers 3+ 5-     1 1       5xx 1   57% +2.5   2/2 1/6
Wisconsin 6 13 1   1 2   1 1 4x 2x   71% +10.5   2/3 1/2
Nebraska 3+ 13(2)-     3 6   3 3 6 1x   55% -1.5   1/3 2/2
Northwestern 2 11(5)+     2 2   1 3 4xx 1   59% -1   5/7 5/8
Michigan St 9++ 19(1)+ - 1   1 1   2 5 5 4   64% +20.5   1/2 1/1
Indiana 4 8(1) 1   4       1 1 1   81% +10   0/0 3/6
Penn State 4+ 8+++(2)     2 4   3 3 3     57% +0   0/0 0/1

(reminder: you can hover over the letters in the headers if you forget what they mean, or there’s an explainer in the glossary)

JJ MCCARTHY

 

  Good   Neutral   Bad   Ovr   Reads
Game DO CA SCR   PR MA   BA TA IN BR   DSR GRADE!   RPOs ZRs
W. Michigan 1+++ 2       3   1x   1     60% -2   0/0  
NIU   4+             1   1   67% +4   2/2 3/3
Wisconsin 1                       100% +2   2/2 4/6
Nebraska   1                     100% -   1/1 2/2
Northwestern 1 (2)               2 1   25% +2   0/1 1/2
Michigan St.   2(1)                     100% +2   1/1 4/4
Indiana 1 1     1 1     3x 3 2x   20% -6   2/3 1/2

A 57% downfield rating and +/- of zero is not good.

You’ll note some big differences in this week’s charting:

  • Four +’s that denote throws made under pressure.
  • Two pressure events.
  • Four “marginal” passes that mostly led to yards after the catch anyways.
  • Three batted throws.

The closest thing to it was the Nebraska game, which always just happened to be played against a very good defensive front. Pressure any quarterback and his efficiency goes down. There were certainly times when it felt like he was just a “game manager.” Former Detroit Lion Dan Orlovsky came very close to saying it in his analysis of this play.

I thought Cade made plays when Michigan needed him to. There was the one drive when it seemed like he and his receivers were not on the same page. My guess is those were “sight reads” or option routes—Run & Shoot/Air Raid stuff—that Michigan wanted to try against PSU in case the cornerbacks’ fear of Johnson/Wilson’s speed unlocked cheap chunks. Both times the receivers didn’t turn around for passes that landed harmlessly and just inbounds. Wilson’s had to have been on him because he said so and Harbaugh said something to him after. Johnson’s got credited against McNamara—on so few throws that’s the difference between being over or under the 60% downfield success rating Mendoza line.

That said, we saw a few throws he hadn’t made all year. Like this one to All with a guy in his face.

And perhaps the throw of the year:

And there was also the one he fitted to Andrel Anthony that I didn’t know how to grade because it went to the only spot it could, and also required a crazy double-catch. Offsetting his dead-on passes were three batted balls. One went off Vastardis’s helmet, another sailed way past where his receiver was running, and a third flittered about in the linebacker level—all very dangerous places for an oblong spheroid to be airborne. Unfortunately that seems to be baked in to the player: McNamara isn’t any taller than I am, and his release point is kind of low, so he’s going to get those from time to time. Shoring up the pass protection should mitigate them.

Speaking of that, Ryan Hayes…

Sigh. So yeah, that was a disaster.

It maybe feels better to have that happen when we’re doing it all the time too. Ebiketie is the #9 DE in the country to PFF; Hutchinson and Ojabo are #1 and #8, and #s 2 through 5 are at mid-majors, meaning you can make the case that a majority of the nation’s best college edge rushers were playing in this game. Luketa is at #30, and Ohio State’s Zach Harrison waits at #22, and the best in the rearview mirror is WMU’s Ali Fayad (the guy I’m always going on about) at #34. My point is Ebiketie’s going to make a lot of money doing that to NFL tackles very soon, and Hayes has not seen anything like him this year outside of practice.

I do not know what happened in-house, but I assume Hayes won enough reps against Hutchinson that they trusted him to hang without help. It’s possible that Ryan and Aidan have been battling each other so often at this point that Hayes can anticipate things better—every edge rusher is different and in college they all fall into patterns. Anyway it became apparent early that he was outclassed. Their third play from scrimmage was one bad beat, Hayes lost to Ebiketie and Luketa in quick succession on 2nd and 3rd down of the next drive.

You’ll note Stueber has Ebiketie on this one and is doing fine, and also doing it straight up—I dare you to find one play on the other side of the ball where an elite DE is blocked and the blocker’s hands are inside. I did tag Stuebs for one “oh you gotta call that” (refs+1) grab, though he cleverly kept it to a wrist so the motion looked like Ebiketie trying to go inside. But that was it from either of Michigan’s tackles. In the most lenient league in college football, Michigan’s OTs are surprisingly un-grabby. I don’t know what to do with that; I cheered for Taylor Lewan for four years so it’s not like I demand angels.

One Ebiketie mitigation technique I did catch Hayes using was one (1) Nebraska-grade illegal formation to get a head start on his pass set.

image

Unfortunately this also tipped a pass and I think his coaches told him to cut it out afterwards. For most of the game then Michigan avoided long-developing pass plays. The way I grade the pressure metric is a four-man rush on a quick pass like a slant is 1/1, and then I add one for every extra rusher or every two beats the QB has to make it through his progressions. This line has usually been good to deliver McNamara to his third read (2/2), but Michigan mostly scrapped those in the 2nd and 3rd quarters. Then the disaster.

Note that Hayes still has no help. We got one instance (ironically against PSU’s backup guy) of a chip from the RB, but here we are in a critical must-survive-two-beats situation and going empty, and by this point Hayes has lost more of these reps than he’s won. I don’t know if he was hurt today or slowed by the conditions or what, but we’ve seen all the myriad ways Michigan’s opponents deal with this problem, and nobody in the country should have more practice at it than the offense that goes up against Michigan’s pass rushers six days a week.

My best guess is they gambled on Hayes and he lost. That’s disappointing considering our hopes were his natural agility and length would result in a first round blindside type. There’s still time for that too. He’s clearly not on that level.

Any other questions?

What about Erick All? The winning score! How’d that happen?

Good ol’ Mesh.

Michigan has barely run that this year, but it’s a college staple because it’s so effective even after teams have practiced it. It’s Ryan Day’s whole jam, which makes it weird that Penn State was so unprepared for it mere weeks after facing Ohio State. But unprepared they were. The Nit at fault here is the nickel, #25, who starts over Sainristil on the far right.

Given their alignment, I think #25’s lane is supposed to be along the 45 yard line while #4’s level is just inside the 40, but #25 drifts upwards to avoid the referee, who’s part of the natural pick by design: Sainristil runs his route right where the ref always steps up to to make sure there’s nowhere for #25 to go.

They also kept Haskins home to help the protection(!), using three receivers crossing from the right and bumping All’s cross into the primary read. That meant everyone in the secondary was moving one way when All got the ball going the opposite direction. #SpeedinSpace. Cade’s pass is on the money so he doesn’t have to break stride, and All’s stride, even with an injured ankle, does the rest.

Michigan also caught Penn State tipping a blitz that overloaded the left side, and set their protection that way.

I can’t figure out who our best (non-Ronnie Bell) receiver is any given week.

Sooner or later it’s going to be Andrel Anthony. This catch was ridiculous:

And I was surprised to see he was up to a +4.5/-0 on a day when he only had 16 snaps. Poor Daylen Baldwin only had four; he has another year of eligibility after this one but Anthony’s emergence probably means there’s no more need for a transfer to keep his spot warm. Anyway if you’re one of those mad about Gattis please spare a minute to consider his receiving corps lost the best recruit in the country AFTER he was signed this year, and is still going into 2022 with Ronnie Bell, Cornelius Johnson, Roman Wilson, Mike Sainristil, AJ Henning, *and* this freshman who’s probably going to be the second-biggest star of all of them.

  THIS WEEK   THIS YEAR
Player Uncb Circus Tough Routine   Uncb Circus Tough Routine
Johnson 2   1/2 2/2 14 2/12 8/11 20/21
Baldwin         4 0/6 6/8 5/7
Sainristil   0/1 1/1 1/1 3 2/8 4/5 12/12
Henning         3 0/1 1/2 2/2
Wilson 2   1/2 2/2 2 2/3 3/4 13/14
Anthony 2 1/1     3 2/6 2/2 5/5
Dixon         1 0/1   1/1
x Bell x           1/2 1/1  
All       3/3 2 0/3 5/6 23/23
Schoonmaker 1     1/1 4 0/4 1/1 10/10
Honigford         2   0/1 1/1
Selzer           0/1 0/1  
Hibner                
Corum         2 1/1 1/1 18/21
Haskins     2/2 3/3 1   2/2 8/8
Edwards         1 0/1   1/1

Routes: Anthony+, Sainristil+, Johnson+.

Cornelius Johnson had two #SpeedInSpace Ronnie Bell-style YAC-a-thons in this game. I discussed the first in the Gattis section above. Here’s the other.

Roman Wilson also had two touchdowns and a pretty route snapped off underneath soft coverage. On the flipside, they tried a few sight reads on one drive and none of them connected, one of which was clearly on Wilson not snapping his route off when he should have. Guessing the injury and all the shuffling has made it hard for any one guy to develop that sort of timing.

Who’s Mr. Worldwide this week?

image
[Patrick Barron]

As a reminder, our criteria here are versatility, the ability to make your teammates better, being cool against long odds, and enjoying time spent under highway overpasses. This is decided after the second UFR. Your top three this week:

1. DJ Turner II. Won the day against an All-American receiver. Hung out under two-high coverages, tight ends, and long fly balls to Because. Why? I don’t know, he’s on third, and I don’t give a damn.

2. Hassan Haskins: Forty touches, massive positive, ran inside and outside, did some reading, was also their leading target in the passing game and had the game’s best block. Counter Trey is the most highway overpass of running plays.

3. Aidan Hutchinson: Spent most of the day taking on double teams and turning them into highway overpasses he could run under for saxxxxx.

HMs (half points). Mazi Smith, Andrel Anthony, Andrew “Didn’t get beat by those DEs” Stueber.

3-2-1 point system so our standings are:

  • 10.5: Aidan Hutchinson
  • 8: Hassan Haskins
  • 6: DJ Turner II
  • 5.5: Erick All
  • 4: Cade McNamara, Luke Schoonmaker
  • 3.5: Ryan Hayes
  • 3: Ronnie Bell, Daxton Hill
  • 2.5: Andrel Anthony, David Ojabo
  • 2: Mike Sainristil, Junior Colson, Josh Ross, Andrew Stueber
  • 1.5: Mazi Smith
  • 1: Nikhai Hill-Green, Cade Kolesar, Cade McNamara, Julius Welschof, Chris Hinton
  • 0.5: Blake Corum, Joel Honigford, Chuck Filiaga, Donovan Jeter, Trevor Keegan

Heroes?

Hassan Haskins, Andrew Stueber.

Maybe not so heroic?

Ryan Hayes.

What does it mean for Maryland and The Game?

McNamara all the way. His mediocre grade comes with the most caveats because Penn State was a new level of pressure and he survived it in terrible weather. I’m still down for a package for McCarthy because it’s clear now who the guy is. It’s also clear who McNamara is: a pre-snap reader with good accuracy and not enough height who’s going to protect you from sacks and turnovers as well as anybody but not a run threat.

Hassan Haskins forever. Hate not having Corum but we do have a dude and you can tie your fandom to him if you need to.

Erick All is important. Even with a few targeting issues at the end of outside runs, he’s a difference-maker even when used sparingly. Getting him healthy to The Game is paramount.

Andrey Anthony be comin’ IMO. Was a good blocker in this game, made a crucial play. Stardom is going to come.

Ryan Hayes is not a 1st round left tackle right now. At least that means we get him back.

Your Moment of Zen:

Comments

blueneverquits

November 18th, 2021 at 11:09 AM ^

That was awesome.  I hadn't seen it before and I definitely just watched that on a loop 50 times.  The best part was watching Steuber.  He's blocking, he's blocking, he's blocking, he's - Oh.  Hahahaha. Steuber just drops his arms and his stance and looks at the DE and was like wow, that escalated quickly.

gustave ferbert

November 18th, 2021 at 9:53 AM ^

Of course everyone knew Haskins had a great game.  But seeing some of the replays.  I'm only appreciating now how great of a game he really had.  

The way he laid out #46 was amazing.  

Watching From Afar

November 18th, 2021 at 10:21 AM ^

going into 2022 with Ronnie Bell, Cornelius Johnson, Roman Wilson, Mike Sainristil, AJ Henning, and Andrel Anthony

I think it may be a bit presumptuous to assume all of those guys come back next year with the new transfer rules. Since Michigan doesn't throw a lot to begin with (and I doubt that will change) there are limited targets to go around before you get into Henning not really getting any to begin with and Wilson possibly being passed by Anthony.

Count how many players Penn State has to the right of the center. They ran INTO that. For a team with good, powerful linemen, good blocking tight ends, and Hassan Haskins to not be automatic for two yards is an issue.

I watched Sam's offensive breakdown with Borges and this play was talked about. Borges argues that while it's not an ideal set up, it still should have worked had Vastardis won his match up and someone blocked #40 the first time around (3 guys couldn't do it). Which is just dumb (coaches calling for "execution") and kind of a microcosm of Michigan's offense. IF every guy wins his match up, Haskins can maybe get 2 yards since he's a moose that always falls forward, but everyone from Vastardis to Schoonmaker has to win against a defense that has a numbers advantage.

Meanwhile on the other side of the center, you could lose a match up and it probably wouldn't torpedo the play because Michigan has a numbers advantage and Haskins is a moose who always falls forward. It's been like this for a long time now. When Michigan gets into those plays and wins the match ups, the result still has a relatively low ceiling. Haskins gets the 2 yards he needs to convert, maybe 2 more falling forward. So everyone does their job and... 4 yards but absolutely 0 room for error. Putting everyone in a phone booth and requiring 100% win rate is not a recipe for sustained success.

Edit: Also, Bell and Haskins combined might be 2 of the best recruiting finds in recent history? Haskins had Caris arms in high school and was like a 2 star. Bell was a basketball player going to the MVC. Haskins has turned out to be a great college RB.

gbdub

November 18th, 2021 at 11:35 AM ^

I watched Sam's offensive breakdown with Borges and this play was talked about. Borges argues that while it's not an ideal set up, it still should have worked had Vastardis won his match up and someone blocked #40 the first time around (3 guys couldn't do it). Which is just dumb (coaches calling for "execution") and kind of a microcosm of Michigan's offense. IF every guy wins his match up, Haskins can maybe get 2 yards since he's a moose that always falls forward, but everyone from Vastardis to Schoonmaker has to win against a defense that has a numbers advantage.

Of course Al "27 for 27" Borges would like that play. Vastardis is being asked to reach-block a guy slanting away from him, which is a tough-to-impossible ask. David Molk would struggle with that. Even if #40 gets blocked, the play ends with 2 PSU defenders (#16 and #4) unaccounted for just sitting there waiting to insert into the gap Haskins commits to. At best Haskins would be able to hit those guys at the sticks with a little momentum and fall forward, but that's hardly a guarantee. Even if it "works" this is the running equivalent of throwing an 8 yard route on 3rd and 10. 

Meanwhile, anything that punishes PSU for their unbalanced formation and hard slant to that side would likely go for many, many yards. 

EDIT: Also, watch the left side of the line. 3 guys all block 1 PSU lineman, while the PSU man on the end of the LOS gets a free run into the backfield. A PSU linebacker gets stuck in the wash too, but still, SMDH. Haskins might have been better off going up the middle but that free hitter or the unblocked linebacker probably get him. Otherwise, that was another option for many, many, yards that the playcall refused. 

EDIT EDIT: It gets worse every time I watch it. At the handoff, Haskins is actually looking at the gap up the middle. So that option is there! But he dismisses it because no one accounted for PSU #17 and he's a free hitter in the backfield. I said above, the "extra beef" being added to the formation is pointless, and Michigan #80 completely wastes himself on this play. 

LeCheezus

November 18th, 2021 at 11:43 AM ^

I doubt they lose any of those guys.  Baldwin may end up moving on, but I don't think any of the other guys are going to leave next year.  Sainristill is still mainly known for blocking and has the look of a program guy willing to do whatever role is given to him.  Wilson was ascending before the injury and appears to be back on track.  Henning would be the highest ranked guy with the smallest role, so maybe, but I bet he sticks around to play with his old buddy JJ.  Remember everyone gets an extra year for Covid as well.  There's not a ton of young guys coming in, and after 2022 at least one and probably 2 of those guys are headed for the draft.  Certainly can't say for sure, you just never know.

There's a guy on OSU that you may remember from recruiting named Kamryn Babb that we were after for the 2018 class - he was the composite #73 overall guy and came in with Olave (same year we recruited Bell).  He has zero career catches, a couple tackles (literally 2) on special teams, and I believe is a captain.  His biggest TV screen time this year was trying to calm down the LB that quit during a game earlier this year.  I think he may have been injured, but he'll probably never play a meaningful snap for OSU as they continue to bring in 3 top 100 receivers every year, but he's still there.  On the other hand, Jameson Williams ghosted the second he fell behind Smith-Njigba, a definite casualty of Olave coming back to be the #3 guy for some reason.

stephenrjking

November 18th, 2021 at 11:47 AM ^

Good question about receivers. Seems reasonable to expect to hold on to most, but we might lose a guy we weren't expecting. We did last year, and I thought it was a problem, and it hasn't been. 

The receivers haven't lit the world on fire, but they've shown real signs of capability and promise. If Anthony can turn into what he looks like he's becoming, that's a huuuuuge win.

Regarding the short yardage play: Uh, Al Borges endorsing it because it "should have worked" evokes more than passing memories of the 27-for-27 game, which was at Penn State, called by Borges, and perhaps the pinnacle of the "it should have worked" argument with Borges.

Space Coyote was an ardent Borges defender. What he did was look at the plays that were called and explain how they should have worked. This alignment forces the defense to do this, that motion forces the defense to do that, this personnel grouping forces these matchups, etc. And then you'd hit play on the video and the defense would devour it.

This is where I have learned to be cautious on reading what "should have worked." Because sometimes it should have and the defense guesses right. But sometimes it's a situation where the defense knows to ignore signals that "should" tell it to do something because they know or believe they know that the offense won't punish them for cheating. 

Against Washington Michigan stubbornly refused to pass, but they often didn't need to, because Washington's defense was respecting their feints; for example, Michigan was running RPO looks where Cade would hand off while looking at a pair of receivers that were running patterns. Between alignment and patterns, this kept three Washington defenders out of the play, allowing Michigan consistent numbers advantages, which Michigan converted into a big win.

My concern at the time was, what happens when Michigan runs this play and Cade needs to read the defense and throw? Because Cade didn't seem trusted to throw those passes much. It was a valid concern.

The answer was, Michigan hasn't run that stuff. They provided a look, it worked, they knew they weren't going to fool anyone if they tried it again, and they shelved it, installing different plays instead. Makes sense, I guess. A little annoying that they put all this work into something they won't just use the read potential for, but better to draw up something different (that the defense has to respect) than to run plays that are doomed because opponents know what's coming.

So, in short yardage? Looks like Penn State knew what was coming. The under-center package isn't big at all--Michigan has only run a handful of plays all season, and other coaching staffs know what those plays are. And, further, given down and distance, Michigan was unlikely to pull out something creative that they had been saving as a change-up. And the bad case scenario if Michigan did break tendency a bit was just a first down anyway. So Penn State could afford to lean in on the play and pounce. Since Cade doesn't audible, the coaches should have checked out of the play.

 

 

mi93

November 18th, 2021 at 10:28 AM ^

On the A gap cutback clipped above I was so disappointed Haskins couldn't get his footing to hurdle a fool.  And really, only because I wanted the fool hurdling streak to continue.  Had he, that one might have gone the distance.

An incredible, gut check of a game from so many players.  And a great read, as always.

1VaBlue1

November 18th, 2021 at 1:58 PM ^

Do you realize that the OL has run 5 different blocking schemes this year?  They've been changing things around all season, rather than simply running the same thing over and over.  Maybe that's on the coaches for not giving them a chance - I wouldn't argue that point.  But they aren't really getting a chance to get really good at any one blocking scheme.  However, they've been pretty good at all of them!

I wouldn't call it the best OL I've seen from Michigan, but it's one of Harbaugh's top 2 units, maybe top 3.  The false start penalties at PSU were tough situations with a lot of noise (and at least one DL clapping at the LoS - illegal).

M_Born M_Believer

November 18th, 2021 at 10:36 AM ^

Yes Jim, you can smile after this one.  This was a good win, before the season no one gave Michigan a chance at winning 2/3 road games against Wisky, MSU, and PSU.  Most had 0-3.

Two good wins and a BS officiated game is nice (obviously would have preferred 3-0).  Now go finish the job...... Its all in front of you......

Blues the ONE

November 18th, 2021 at 10:39 AM ^

At 13:19 of the 2nd quarter. Michigan 1st and 10 from their own 10 yard line: 

If Cade hangs onto the ball, he has more than half of the field all to himself!! Probably gets the 1st down and then some! 

JHumich

November 18th, 2021 at 10:47 AM ^

Upon further review of the Upon Further Review, we beat a good PSU team despite the return of Cyan Cade and Ryan Hayes forgetting how to do OL things.

If those two things get corrected, I feel good about what we will do in The Game.

bronxblue

November 18th, 2021 at 11:34 AM ^

Cade was really good in this game on second viewing; McNamara has never been a big part of the running game but this team doesn't win this game without his passing and general control of the offense.  I know it's basically a joke now but Cade is playing as well as any QB under Harbaugh in my opinion in terms of overall command of the offense and all the feelingsball crap in addition to making some really nice throws and holding up against pressure.  

stephenrjking

November 18th, 2021 at 11:52 AM ^

I'd have to review how Shea looked in his better moments to say this for sure, but right now Cade feels like the closest we've had to the growth we saw in Jake Rudock in late 2015. Cade doesn't run, and he's not perfect, but he remains extremely reliable with the ball and has made some great plus-level throws. 

Michigan scored TDs in places where, in earlier weeks, Michigan was settling for field goals. And it was because of really good plays from Cade. Those two Roman Wilson TDs are things we've waited all year for, and Cade nailed them both. That's not to mention the two huge passes to All, one of them an incredible high-pressure outlet to turn a loss into a makeable TD, and the other being the play that won the whole game.

bronxblue

November 18th, 2021 at 1:59 PM ^

Yeah, Rudock and Speight were the only other names that popped into my head, but Rudock was worse than people remember the first half of the year (which makes sense; he was a transfer coming to a team with a whole new staff) and Speight always felt like a guy who was a little too careless with the ball at times and had some accuracy issues on the move.  And those throws by Cade, like you noted, were ones he didn't make earlier and were why UM won this game.  He's done that in all the road games this year and that's a testament to his performance in tough spots that hasn't been a hallmark of other Harbaugh QBs.

1VaBlue1

November 18th, 2021 at 2:11 PM ^

Shea's better moments, I think, show more potential than I've seen from Cade.  We remember Shea's running game, and the 2nd half comeback performance against PSU.  His other big games came within context of the overall game - 2018 UW, PSU, and ND were all total team triumphs where things just got piled on and the games weren't even close.

But I will also say that Shea's floor was so much below anything I feel Cade may deliver.  Think no further than the OSU games.  2019 PSU, first half PSU 2018; yikes - Alabama 2019 was tragic...

I don't see Cade's floor hitting the low levels that Shea's floor hit.  Not saying he'll only win, but that he won't perform as poorly as Shea did.  But I also can't see his game hitting the high's that Shea was capable of hitting.

vanarbor

November 19th, 2021 at 2:26 AM ^

If you were to review Shea’s performances vs OSU on a play-by-play basis (especially in 2019), you’d realize that’s not at all true.

He was VERY good in the first three quarters with our receivers uncharacteristically dropping like double digit passes. But then his fourth quarter + the entire Bama game was some of the worst football he’s played.

We also did not beat ND in 2018 - I believe you’re referring to 2019. You also left out perhaps the two of the best games in his career - 2019 MSU and Indiana - which was the peak of UM QB play in the Harbaugh era. Overall though I agree with the analysis, though I definitely would appreciate the higher ceiling QB in this instance.

JHumich

November 18th, 2021 at 2:56 PM ^

Literally going off Seth's analysis here. It's pretty objective.

There was a lot from the QB that was unhelpful. Lots to clean up, lots to work on. I'm sure he will be. Maybe "Cyan Cade" was an overly provocative way to put it, but the UFR's assessment was that it was a weak game. I don't even pretend to be qualified to assess.

gbdub

November 18th, 2021 at 10:53 AM ^

Really, really don't understand what they think they are gaining by cramming more OL and TEs into the box on short yardage. The blocks aren't buying them anything except less space for Haskins to operate because all 22 players (except Cade) are within 5 yards of the play at the relevant moment.

On that 4th and 2 - PSU was so clearly selling out for that, that if Michigan did literally anything else other than a run to the right, it's a TD or at least a big gain. RPS-3 indeed.