Fascinating elevenwarriors breakdown of Jim Knowles “spill and kill” defense.

Submitted by Casanova on November 23rd, 2022 at 12:55 PM

I don’t know about you guys but I can’t get enough schematic content during this week. (Even if it’s enemy content) 

The Jim Knowles vs Weiss battle is gonna be a good one. 

The gist of the article is that Michigan loves to f*ck with defensive keys with motion and pullers…  and Jim Knowles loves to win gaps, attack pullers and spill to the field for cleanup. 

 

https://www.elevenwarriors.com/ohio-state-football/film-study/2022/11/134908/film-study-ohio-states-run-defense-has-gone-from-question-mark-to-strength-in-2022

 

ThadMattasagoblin

November 23rd, 2022 at 1:20 PM ^

Not sold on this Knowles guy. Half of their season has been spent playing putrid offenses like Iowa, Rutgers, MSU, Wisconsin, Northwestern etc. then when they play teams like PSU or Maryland they get lit up.

wolve1972

November 23rd, 2022 at 9:26 PM ^

Which is why they fired their whole defensive staff except their DL coach. They've only given up over 1100 yards on the ground this year over 11 games and heard on Channel 10 - here in Columbus - that they gave up that much in 4 games last year ......Us, Oregon and 2 others I didn't catch. A totally different defense this year and they rotate 9 to 10 DL every game

CMHCFB

November 24th, 2022 at 9:34 AM ^

They rotate too many DL IMO and I think those snap counts change on Saturday.  The linebacker unit is vastly different this year.  Watch Eichenberg during The Game last year.  At the snap he would be 5 yards off the ball and would shuffle, shuffle while trying to diagnose the play.  Now they have him playing at the correct depth, he quickly diagnoses the play, and then attacks.  LB play and gap soundness are their best improvements.  They have NFL safeties (Hickman/Ransom) but their corners are a liability. 

wolve1972

November 24th, 2022 at 10:27 AM ^

Being stuck here in Central Ohio, I here all of the OSU stuff and you could be right about their DL rotation. In fact, that's the biggest complaint from their fans - on the defensive side - is that they rotate too many DL thus not letting the starters get a feel for the game.

But you are dead on about their LBs. They went from being totally lost last year to possibly the strength of their defense this year. Eichenberg and that Steel "something" - especially Eichenberg, seem to be in on every play. They will definitely be focused on stopping our RBs on Saturday. We will need a decent game out of JJ as Pass defense is their weakness

rice4114

November 23rd, 2022 at 3:26 PM ^

What people are missing is the effect of passes over 10 yards, incompletions, and a much faster snap. I had the under in the Indiana OSU game and although I knew Indiana was hurry up I was surprised by OSU up 28 and going like their hair was on fire. Just a lot more opportunities (for them and the other teams offense). Its really difficult to compare to Michigan playing like they are up 9 with a minute to go all game long.

BuckeyeChuck

November 23rd, 2022 at 5:29 PM ^

Ohio State's defense has faced:

  • Penn St F+ #27 offense
  • Maryland F+ #37 offense
  • Michigan St F+ #49 offense
  • Notre Dame F+ #50 offense
  • Toledo F+ #56 offense
  • Wisconsin F+ #65 offense
  • Indiana F+ #66 offense
  • Arkansas St F+ #89 offense
  • Iowa F+ #104 offense
  • Northwestern F+ #108 offense
  • Rutgers F+ #114 offense

That's an average ranking of #70 with a median of #65.

Michigan's defense has faced:

  • Penn St F+ #27 offense
  • Maryland F+ #37 offense
  • Michigan St F+ #49 offense
  • Indiana F+ #66 offense
  • Nebraska F+ #74 offense
  • Illinois F+ #88 offense
  • Iowa F+ #104 offense
  • Hawaii F+ #113 offense
  • Rutgers F+ #114 offense
  • UConn F+ #122 offense
  • Colorado St F+ #129 offense

That’s an average ranking of #84 with a median of #88.

BuckeyeChuck

November 23rd, 2022 at 8:59 PM ^

I do not know what the rankings were entering The Game last year, but these are season-ending rankings.

Both teams faced the following offenses in 2021:

  • Michigan St F+ #29
  • Nebraska F+ #30
  • Maryland F+ #34
  • Penn St F+ #69
  • Indiana F+ #111
  • Rutgers F+ #117

OSU's defense also faced the following offenses in 2021:

  • Oregon F+ #16
  • Purdue F+ #35
  • Minnesota F+ #55
  • Tulsa F+ #77
  • Akron F+ #122

Average of #63, median of #55.

Michigan's defense also faced the following offenses in 2021:

  • Western Michigan F+ #40
  • Wisconsin F+ #60
  • Northern Illinois F+ #66
  • Washington F+ #96
  • Northwestern F+ #109

Average of #69, median of #66.

OwenGoBlue

November 23rd, 2022 at 1:27 PM ^

This is Don Brown shit. Reminder Day tried to hire Don AFTER 2018, this is what he wants. 

Good guys just have to do to them what Wisconsin did to Michigan with Don Brown in 2019-20. 

4th phase

November 23rd, 2022 at 1:31 PM ^

Interesting article, agree I need some X&O comment to hold me over while I mash F5 waiting for UFR and FFFF.

But I don't see anything about a spill & kill philosophy in that piece. It shows that Illinois was able to disrupt the running game by playing 5 DL with three 300 lbers and 7-8 guys in the box, is OSU going to do that? And then it shows that OSU DL are very good at winning blocks, not necessarily anything to do with play calling. For instance the first clip he says "all 4 DL cross the face of their blockers and 3 get penetration before the handoff" and the final clip "DE takes on double and NT beats center" 2 yards back into rb path disrupting the play.

But football outsiders does say their DL is top 25 in every category against the run, i.e. power success rate, stuff rate, line yards, etc. So maybe they are pretty good then?

Casanova

November 23rd, 2022 at 1:44 PM ^

My apologies I got the article confused, I read another about Jim Knowles spill and kill strategy for standard down.


To your point, the DL resetting gaps can gum up the best OLs for at least a Quarter.
 

my biggest fear is our non-corum running back’s cut back vision that Seth touched on. 

Corum is master at pressing gaps only to cut to another one at the last second. He is a human gap multiplier.

While Edwards and to a lesser extent stokes are good runners. I don’t think they can consistently get yard beyond what’s blocked.  

 

The Homie J

November 23rd, 2022 at 1:58 PM ^

Yeah that article actually didn't do much to explain Knowles system at all.  D-line fighting across OL, linebackers filling gaps isn't scheme or technique breakdown.  All defenses do that.  

I constantly hear that Eleven Warriors's  technical breakdowns are pretty good, but I'm consistently left thinking "this entire article is less informative than Seth's opening paragraph of a neck sharpie."  Whereas the MGoBlog crew give you a breakdown with many examples of things, draw parrallels to past games/teams, examine depth charts and so and on, this article just said "hey we fill gaps now".  

I'm very anxiously waiting for the FFFF and Ohio State breakdowns from Brian & Seth because it's clear that Ohio State writers simply can't provide anything worthwhile

bronxblue

November 23rd, 2022 at 3:41 PM ^

I wouldn't read too much into the MSU game offensively; that was clearly a gameplan decision given the flow of the game.  Had Michigan needed to bomb it away on them my guess is they had plays drawn up to get guys open.  Rutgers and Illinois are more troubling because those teams slowed down UM's receivers but to McCarthy's credit he was 9/15 in that 4th quarter and led Michigan to scores on their last 3 drives of the game despite facing an average 3rd-down distance of 7.5 yards.  It wasn't great but when tasked with moving a team down the field against a top defense McCarthy was able to do it reasonably well.  

BlueInGreenville

November 23rd, 2022 at 1:34 PM ^

Interesting stuff.  I'm not a football analyst but I have read nearly every word of Mgoblog for years, and to me it just looked like fairly generic "sell out against the run" stuff.  Like it's a bunch of fancy stuff messing with the gaps, but to do it you're committing six or seven guys to run defense.  It's smart for them to play that way because it's high risk/reward and they either give up a big play or force a three-and-out and either way their offense is getting the ball back.  They're forcing you to win a game of big plays against their offense.  Will be interesting to see Brian's take, but I'm guessing we'll need everything we've got including RPOs, QB run game and efficient passing to move the ball on them.  LFG.

The Oracle 2

November 23rd, 2022 at 1:38 PM ^

Interesting discussion, but everything changes if Corum is significantly impaired. McCarthy and the receivers need to have their best games of the year. The defense has to find a way to bring some pressure. It would be nice to get some help from the weather.

Amazinblu

November 23rd, 2022 at 2:17 PM ^

My view is that the Buckeyes D probably improved from 2021.  This is an expectation I would have of every team - the majority of teams improve from one year to the next, unless there is a significant loss of talent to the draft, or transfer portal.

I think their line play is the point of question.   And, these are two data points I view.

One - in the season opener, ND was predictably one dimensional because of injuries to their receiving corps.  A new QB, new HC, changes to their OL, etc.. - SO, you could make a pretty good guess that ND's offensive game plan was going to be run heavy.

Two - the game against Northwestern in the wind.  Once again, conditions dictated a run first offense, which was predictable.  

I liked how their D controlled the ground game of those two opponents - particularly, since they knew the ground game was expected.   And, these data points present a picture that gives me confidence.

The 4-2-5 base scheme is perfect for Big 12 play.  I hope they've perfected it for the pass happy offenses in that conference.   Perhaps they'll face a Big 12 team in their bowl game.

Again, I'm not counting any chickens.  Nor, do I see a "decided schematic advantage" being brought to bear by that team in Columbus.

bronxblue

November 23rd, 2022 at 3:33 PM ^

OSU's defense will come prepared in this game but let's not act like they've faced a rushing game close to Michigan's.  I could absolutely see them mess with Michigan's blocking assignments and pick up some TFLs but they really haven't played an offense as balanced as Michigan's.  I know we bemoan the passing game struggles but it's still demonstrably better than all but Maryland's and maybe PSUs, and both of those teams were able to move the ball in the air despite having sub-par running games.  

Now, if Edwards and Corum are out then sure, this is going to be tough sledding for UM.  But provided those guys can play reasonably well I think this will be a dogfight where both defenses display competence with spurts of the other team getting them for big gains.