This Week's Obsession: Downfield Threats to National Security Comment Count

Seth

Fuller - Darboh and Gallon 8359952746_9d9770a97c_o

Bryan Fuller

Hello and welcome to the second iteration of our new feature, where we ask the MGoStaff a question regarding whatever Michigan fans happen to be obsessing about. As before we appreciate any suggestions for future questions. Participation is at will since people occasionally have more important missions to attend to. The team:

Agent Brian Johnson: Team leader. Specialty: hair styling.

Agent Ace Johnson: Demolition expert

Agent Seth Johnson: Specialist in disguise

Agent Heiko Johnson: Deadliest man in the world with a knife. Also knows a zillion old jokes his grandfather, a vaudevillian, taught him.

Agent Mathlete Johnson: Master of Kung Fu

Agent Blue in South Johnson: Token redhead.

And this week's question:

How do you see the receiver group playing out this year? Where does Gallon fall among Big Ten/National guys, how much do you see the young guys contributing in '13, and what can we get out of seniors Dileo and Jackson?

BiSB: Before you answer this, Brian, check to make sure that Jehu Chesson isn't in the room.

DSC_1919

Heiko: Don't worry I told him not to come this time.

Brian: There is no room, there is only Zuul. This is the internet, man, so we know that both Chesson and the NSA are all up in here. anthrax pants This useless discursion is over. terrorism sandwich

Gallon is going to be the best dang tiny receiver Michigan's ever had. He's shifty enough to attract screens, jumpy enough to bring in fades, and quick enough to get over the top of guys trying to rein in his YAC. It's a conundrum if Michigan puts him to the boundary side of the field consistently  since most boundary guys aren't going to be able to keep up with him. I keep saying this, but extrapolate 5 games with Gardner against 4 pretty good pass efficiency defenses (and Iowa) and you get about 80 catches for about 1300 yards; he was already the #4 receiver in the league last year. That's probably a little optimistic, but he should crack 1000 yards and be All Big Ten in some capacity.

Past Gallon, it's about the redshirt freshmen. Darboh is the key. I like Chesson a lot but he needs one more year to pack on the muscle before he emerges. Darboh is ready now, and showed off his skill on the first play of spring practice. He should be a slant merchant, more of a possession threat. Ideally you'd like to wait another year on him, too, but it is what it is. Dileo will also be a useful piece; I want him to double his catches, because I don't think he dropped a pass last year and he has both a knack for crazy twisting catches and staying on his feet afterwards.

There is a slight lack of depth that I hope Funchess covers up for; other than that it should be a solid B+ unit. jihad bacon

Mathlete: If Gallon can put together a full season like he did in the Gardner starts at the end of last year. He should easily have a first team Big Ten caliber season and have an outside shot at some level of All American recognition. His five game averages would have been the second best receiving season at Michigan in the last decade (behind Braylon's Biletnikoff season). Whether that can continue remains to be seen, but at this point I think there is a high likelihood that Jeremy Gallon will slip into the Top 5 Career Receivers in Michigan history in both receptions and yards.

Beyond Gallon, Dileo is what he is. A dependable secondary receiver. The key question is whether anyone can step into a strong second spot. After 11 catches in three years, the evidence is against it being Jeremy Jackson. That leaves Jehu Chesson and Amara Darboh as the most likely candidates. Assuming Gallons production holds Upchurch - 8193468909_3ab1bb05fe_oup at all, solid production from either of those two would be enough to make Michigan's wide receivers a great group in 2013.

BiSB: We probably all agree that based on the last half of last year, the leading receiver will be OMG Rocket Boots Cloaking Device Don Criqui Soul Eating McShortguy. Thing is, he's going to make 95% of his catches either within 8 yards of the line of scrimmage or 30+ yards downfield; I believe Brian termed this "hitch, hitch, hitch, see ya." The key is going to be finding an intermediate guy other than Funchess, and I think Darboh is that guy, but that's based on almost nothing other than specs. He looks more physically ready than Chesson to take over the role, and I see Chesson as more of a deep threat.

Dileo will probably do the same thing as last year; he'll vanish for a while, and then he'll come up big with a billion catches in some gritty game where no one can find open space unless they're my height. He'll also probably have a good amount of success getting lost in the secondary when Gardner goes on one of his crazy adventures in the backfield. Jeremy Jackson seems destined to battle Joe Reynolds for the Carl Tabb Memorial Totally Unsurprising Running Play After Personnel Change Award winner. Either Dukes or York will probably burn a redshirt for no apparent reason, because that is protocol. And as a wild guess, I'm gonna predict that whether we see DaMario Jones will depend on what happens with Justice Hayes. If he wins the third-down back role, we may see the frosh, but if there aren't gonna be enough snaps for Hayes (given the embarrassment of running back riches), we may see him back up Dileo in the slot.

Ace: I'm on break from writing words so here's a GIF that fits the general tenor of this discussion:
Inline image 1

Carry on.

Heiko: All I know is Borges is really excited about Darboh. Apparently Darboh got injured vs. Purdue last year (incidentally he was blocking on a bubble screen), so he wasn't able to show off his skillz the rest of the season.

BiSB: Bubble screens: weak-ass pansy Bieber-ball. Also WAY TOO DANGEROUS.

Upchurch -8646541780_451892731a_o - CopyBrian: For what it's worth, I've heard that (former?) walk-on Joe Reynolds is a real option as an outside receiver. Last year he graduated from Designated Guy Who Tips Run plays to pick up a few targets on long handoffs and the like; this year I bet he is the third option as an outside receiver (ie, slot Dileo is the #3 overall). I know the coaches like his blocking, and he showed some quicks on those screens. He's not likely to get any first-option snaps with Gallon/Dileo/Darboh/Funchess filling hypothetical four-wide formations, but between him and a developing Chesson there's some depth. dirty cat bomb

Seth: The NSA agents want to know why everybody's overlooking Jeremy Jackson. As you've probably guessed, the NSA works for Fred. I guess we are a bit optimistic that the other guys have finally distanced themselves from him that we won't see that one pass a game going his way.

Last year Marty Couvillan from cfbstats posted a megaload of receiver data based on how often they were thrown at. Football Outsiders' Bill Connellly made it into an end stat called RYPR (Target Rate x Yards Per Target x Passing S&P+ x Pass Rate). In this measure Gallon in 2012 was 14th in the country and tops in the conference:

Player Targets Catch Rate RYPR B1G Rank
Jeremy Gallon 79 62.0% 169.56 1
Roy Roundtree 58 53.4% 118.63 5
Drew Dileo 30 66.7% 67.70 17
Devin Gardner 37 43.2% 54.41 28
Devin Funchess 28 53.6% 47.86 34
Jerald Robinson 8 62.5% 14.11 90
Mike Kwiatkowski 4 100.0% 7.57 114
Denard Robinson 5 60.0% 6.34 127
Jeremy Jackson 12 33.3% 6.34 128
Joe Reynolds 5 60.0% 4.50 137

I've already made my bid for Gallon to wear the #1 jersey.

Since the middle of the offensive line is going to be really young this year it's unlikely Michigan will be able to get by mostly on its running game. There will be a lot more passes and three-or four-wide sets, and we're replacing not just Roundtree's underrated production but Gardner's. All told there's something between 150 and 200 targets to be given out after the returning starters repeat theirs, and while a chunk of them will go to Gallon, Darboh should get something like 75 passes thrown his way, and Chesson stands to get something like 50.

If those guys aren't bringing them in at a 50% clip or higher you'll start seeing Gallon's usage climb into Marquise Walker territory, and more frustrating balls going toward to too-covered Jackson. My prediction is Darboh becomes that Junior Hemingway we've been missing, and Funchess is split out to the slot and doubles his production from last year. Gallon will draw a lot of attention and a lot of balls, which will put him on top of the conference in the old stats but drop him back to 4th-ish in RYPR. I expect at least one of the incoming receivers to burn his redshirt but I'd really rather they not—Jones is the most ready but the least needed, and Dukes and York both are skinny leaping dudes who need to put on muscle. Whichever of those two can block better right now, I guess. Darboh eats up the passes that went to Roundtree and Gardner last year, with similar results. Chesson does some stuff that makes us get really excited for next year. And we head into 2014 predicting the group will look like Indiana's (that's a good thing). Anarchy echelon nuclear roswell Glock 26 Spetznaz hamburger assasssi- asassinn- assassinna- kill a guy.

Comments

TorturedClassof11

June 12th, 2013 at 9:04 AM ^

anthrax pants, terrorism sandwich, jihad bacon... Seems like a flawless plan to pique the interest of and increase blog readership with the gov't surveillance crowd.  Well played

DonAZ

June 12th, 2013 at 9:13 AM ^

Wait ... I thought Michigan was going back to 70's boring-ball ... 3 yards and all that.  What's this talk about receivers and ... and ... passing the ball?!!

Two tight ends and a balanced line, baby ... Huckelby deep and Davis close ... Rickeeee Leach under center ...

:-) I couldn't resist a little hat-tip to Ufer.

MGoShoe

June 12th, 2013 at 9:43 AM ^

...little if a guy projected to be a depth WR "burns" his redshirt while playing special teams? I would much prefer that the number of starters [Blake Countess] who play on return and coverage teams is reduced [Blake Countess] whenever possible.

AC1997

June 12th, 2013 at 10:08 AM ^

I am cautiously optimistic that we're going to see an exciting year from Gallon and Gardner.  But at the same time I'm trying to keep that optimism in check given that Hoke really wants to run the ball, our OL is still unproven in the middle, and beyond Gallon we don't have any proven WR.  

I had two thoughts on this post:  First, I think more time should have been spent talking about Funchess (and the other TE).  I think that the end result of the #2 WR will be determined by how involved the TE are in the passing game.  It could be that those missing yards end up with Funchess & Butt just as much as the #2 WR.....and that could be a good thing. 

Secondly, as much as I'd like to see Gallon challenge some WR records and wear the #1 jersey, it would be a very good thing for the offense if Darboh or Chesson stepped up into a solid role and offered Gardner more options.  I worry a little about Gardner staring down Gallon on every play if he loses faith in the other guys.  

 

Finally - it would be nice for Gallon to get the #1 and then we can erase the memory of the other short guy to wear that jersey (Tyrone Butterfield).  

AC1997

June 12th, 2013 at 10:14 AM ^

Thanks again Ty for "intentionally" dropping that pass against Virginia so Mercury Hayes had time to make the winning reception in the endzone.  That was awesome.....did you get in on any other plays?  I don't remember.  

I did always wonder, even before the practice of celebrating jersey numbers started, how Butterfield got the #1 jersey after AC, McMurtry, and Alexander all had it previously.  I guess it was before Terrell and Braylon, but still.  

Ty Butterfield

June 12th, 2013 at 10:25 AM ^

I had a recording of a conversation in which Lloyd said he wanted to run the spread and was sick of this three yards and a cloud of dust crap. In exchange for burning the tape I got the #1 jersey.

AC1997

June 12th, 2013 at 10:12 AM ^

Here is the question I would ask the panel for a future post:

What position on each side of the ball will determine the success of that unit this season?  

 

For example, here's my answer on defense:

  • WDE - If someone steps up as a true pass-rushing threat it will make the entire defense work.  Suddenly that person can stay on the field for more downs instead of the SLB having to generate pass rush, the number of blitzes will be reduced or will become more effective, and the secondary will be more successful while the QB is pressured.  I have my concerns about Gordon, the SDE rotation, and the DT next to Washington - but I think those will get worked out.  What will determine the ceiling and floor for this defense in my opinion is the Frank/Mario/Taco WDe position....especially without the boring but reliable Beyer in the mix.  

saveferris

June 12th, 2013 at 10:16 AM ^

What are realistic expectations for the interior OL this season?  We're obviously set at the tackles, but with an interior line consisting of most likely RS Freshman, Sophmore, RS Freshman, can the line achieve a level of performance approaching 2011 and let Toussaint and Green assert themselves out of the backfield?

Or some variation of that....

cjm

June 12th, 2013 at 10:32 AM ^

I just figured Devin would be throwing the ball to himself in an attempt to prove he can still play WR and still take over for Denard. If only he had Denard's speed he could throw the ball as #12 and move fast enough to switch to the #1 jersey and catch the ball.

Of course that would change a lot of the depth and discussion that just took place at this roundtable.

Naked Bootlegger

June 12th, 2013 at 12:53 PM ^

I used to do this (throw to myself as QB and WR) when I was like 9 years old and in my imaginary UM football player phase.   I was always John Wangler AND Anthony Carter.   It got boring after about 10 minutes since the passing routes were extremely rudimentary and limited to arm punts (had to be high enough) of less than 10-15 yards (couldn't be too far for my limited speed).   But it worked almost every time.   I had like a 90% completion rate in my imaginary games.   I would also keep the imaginary defense off balance by sometimes faking the fullback dive up the middle and naked bootlegging around the vacated defensive end slot.   But I was mostly a Wangler to Carter passing offense with killer efficiency.

Tater

June 12th, 2013 at 11:39 AM ^

Jeremy Jackson is going to graduate and get a degree in sports management.  I hope he gets a GA position and goes into coaching.  Nick Sheridan is already the QB coach and passing game coordinator at USF, at 24 years of age.  

Second gen guys get chances to climb the ladder, and Jackson is in an era where he may have a well-deserved equal opportunity to be a head coach when he is ready.  He might not ever be a star on the field, but I'm glad he is a Michigan Wolverine.

maize-blue

June 12th, 2013 at 12:04 PM ^

I am anticipating a pretty good passing attack this year. I'm anxious to see if Funchess dominates and who other than Gallon/Dileo becomes a reliable and consistant WR threat.

Gulo Gulo Luscus

June 12th, 2013 at 6:22 PM ^

i thought it was lyrics to a Beck song.

 

[damnit: this comment has been redacted by the author because it was a failed attempt to reply to the first comment in the thread.]

Blue Blue Blue

June 12th, 2013 at 11:18 PM ^

the guy who wrote  "Gallon is going to be the best dang tiny receiver Michigan's ever had"

hey kid, the  famed  Michigan's whole " #1 as a killer wide receiver"  tradition started with a "dang tiny receiver" named Carter.....you may have heard of him.   I think even Freddie the J would giggle at this one.

uminks

June 12th, 2013 at 11:45 PM ^

Gallon can out jump almost every B1G DB! He will have a great year and be a true down field threat. I would give him the number 1 jersey this season if I were coach Hoke!