Don Brown comments on what went wrong this season

Submitted by azee2890 on January 14th, 2021 at 1:51 PM

https://tucson.com/sports/arizonawildcats/football/be-positive-and-attack-every-day-don-brown-talks-about-his-philosophy-approach-as-arizonas/article_168c246e-b149-5b0a-9559-179a7a6148de.html

 

Here's the snippet about last season.

Your defenses have gotten better just about everywhere you’ve been. Until last season. What went wrong?

A: “With the pandemic, we lost a very important element of college football, and that’s spring practice. You’re learning a lot of technique and fundamentals. You’re also attacking the tackling phase, the turnover phase.

“We had an interesting team. We had a group of older guys, but we weren’t very deep. And then we didn’t have a very big junior or sophomore class, so then it became the true freshmen and the redshirt freshmen jumping into strategic roles.

“Now you’re practicing in June, and then the Big Ten decided to cancel the season. Then we lost a couple of key players on defense (to opt-outs). Then you kind of jumped back into practice when they OK’d the Big Ten season, and you had to get ready to play a game.

“The techniques and fundamentals, I could have done a better job in that area. (But) we gotta do the best we can. We ended up missing three weeks due to COVID. We had significant injuries. We were down to playing a walk-on ‘Mike’ (middle linebacker) and a walk-on safety, and they did a great job. But that just gives you the idea.”

gm1234

January 14th, 2021 at 6:13 PM ^

I agree with you. If Solomon had stayed, we probably don’t have to find out how shitty Mason is as a DT. Solomon wasn’t good, but neither were any of the other options. I like a rotation with him and Hinton better than Hinton and anything UM rolled out there.

DairyQueen

January 14th, 2021 at 3:05 PM ^

Totally disagree, the Pac-12 is the most wide-open of any conference every year (certainly more than the BIG, SEC, ACC).

If Jedd Fisch is the real deal (and I hope he is, from his pressers he seems like a genuinely thoughtful and open coach), then they'll be competitive, he himself is a QB-guy.

The common denominator of the failure of Harbaugh's tenure has been far more on the offense (specifically QB's), inability to run stalling drives, WR drops, and turnovers, not Brown's defense (which would show in consistent 55-48 shootouts which never happened, it was always the offense unable to drive/turning over and hanging the defense out to dry). This is the very first year Harbaugh played a QB he ACTUALLY recruited, and this is the end of year 6.

The recruiting holes on defense are real (and I don't feel like the massive DL transfers were fully explained), but that falls on the entire management of the team, and losing Mattison (and subsequently not finding an equivalent), and that still falls on Harbaugh.

this is michigan, for god sakes (lol)

Eng1980

January 14th, 2021 at 4:32 PM ^

True, they couldn't co-exist but it is more complex than that in that it may have been about the total number of scholarships allowed by Jim to the defense and how many defensive tackles to offer.  I can still imagine Mattison saying "I told you that wouldn't work against OSU" but who knows.

 

East German Judge

January 14th, 2021 at 2:51 PM ^

....as did OSU, didn't seem to bother them too much.  Too many apologists on this board that gloss over facts and want to find that one needle in the haystack and blame the entire season on that.  We did not play any non-conference foes, just B1G, and we have never been this bad since what the 1940s???  Where was the recruiting to fill in the gaps and those who left early???

Kevin13

January 14th, 2021 at 6:05 PM ^

It’s a lot easier to coach and cover up personnel weakness. Trying to cover someone man to man who is faster and a better athlete is not going to work no matter how much coaching you do. Zone defense is actually a much easier concept in just about any situation. Teaching man coverage is very difficult. Not sure why you think otherwise 

Pumafb

January 15th, 2021 at 10:36 AM ^

While there is some technique teaching with man coverage, you need very specific traits to be good at it, regardless of how well those techniques are taught. Kids with tight hips, for instance, can be taught by the best man technique coach on the planet and it won't make a difference. As someone mentioned, having length and speed is important and can't be taught. Short space quickness and change of direction (which is tied to fluid hips) is vital. If you don't have those guys you can't run man with consistently good results.