cristian dixon

*Bruce Lee noises* [Bryan Fuller]

Previously: The StoryQuarterback. Running Back

WIDE RECEIVER:

RATING: 4

Depth Chart

[Patrick Barron]

Previously: Podcast 14.0A, 14.0B, 14.0C. The Story. Quarterback. Running Back

WIDE RECEIVER: OLIVERS TWIST WANT SOME MORE TARGETS

RATING: 5

Depth Chart

WR Yr. WR Yr. SLOT Yr. SPREAD H Yr.
Roman Wilson Jr. Cornelius Johnson Jr. Ronnie Bell Jr.* Donovan Edwards So.
Darrius Clemons Fr. Andrel Anthony So. AJ Henning Jr. AJ Henning Jr.
Tyler Morris Fr. Amorion Walker Fr. Eamonn Dennis So. Blake Corum Jr.

Sometimes not knowing where to start is a problem. Like, you know, the Rodriguez-era secondary where you didn't know where to start because everybody left the damn team.

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Sometimes not knowing where to start is because there's a guy who looked like Braylon Edwards in one game and a guy who blazed past Ohio State's secondary and a guy who legitimately runs a 4.3, and then there's another one of those guys, and then you're getting back a guy who led the team in receiving yards for two straight years. Oh, and there are tight ends. And a running back.

This is less of a problem.

THE MANS. MENS? WE'LL WORKSHOP IT. WA'LL WORKSHOP IT? ANYWAY

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zip zap zippity blad I have a touchdown now you're sad [Patrick Barron]

We'll start with Cornelius Johnson because there's more to say of recent vintage. With Bell's injury, Johnson emerged into Michigan's #1 receiver with 39 catches for 620 yards. That doesn't sound like all that much for a #1 receiver, but Michigan put up 42 points on Ohio State by throwing once in the second half. In that context it's a minor miracle anyone threw the ball at all.

Johnson did this in a slightly unusual way for a strapping 6'2" guy: with route artisanship. This first really popped in the Indiana game, where he turned a Hoosier DB 360 degrees and would have had an easy touchdown if JJ McCarthy hadn't gotten lit up on the throw.

He did catch a bomb later after slickly selling that corner route and turning into a go.

Those two occurrences weren't the first time Johnson had torched someone. People first got hyped about him giving future ND safety and first round pick Kyle Hamilton the business during his high school All-Star game, and in the opener he got open by five yards on an 87-yard touchdown. They were a tipping point, though. Going over Seth's UFR's from last year the sheer number of Johnson (route+) events really leaps out.

[After THE JUMP: like eight more guys]
[Aaron Bills via Twitter]

Previously: Last year’s summary. The 2021 profiles: P Tommy Doman Jr. S Rod Moore. CB Ja’Den McBurrows. LB Jaydon Hood. LB Junior Colson. LB Tyler McLaurin. DE Kechaun Bennett. DE TJ Guy. DE/DT Dominick Giudice. DT George Rooks. DT Rayshaun Benny. NG Ikechukwu Iwunnah. C Greg Crippen. C/G Raheem Anderson. T Giovanni El-Hadi. T Tristan Bounds. TE Louis Hansen. WR Cristian Dixon. WR Xavier Worthy. WR Andrel Anthony Jr. RB Tavierre Dunlap. RB Donovan Edwards. QB JJ McCarthy.

I guess I’ll keep this now-three-year-old tradition alive as well, since I have stray remaining thoughts after this exercise. Now that I’ve watched all the tape, read every take, and scraped the internet for information in a year that had less of it than ever, I’ve got a few takeaways about the class.

It is another B+ class

I may just be more of a homer than Brian—which comes from inexperience at this—but I rated this class slightly higher than Brian put the 2020 class, despite 247 ranking them on average about 100 spots lower. Mathlete converts our “General Excitement Level” ratings into a 10-point scale that you can effectively halve to get a 5* scale we’re used to. Here are the two classes against each other, and the MGoBlog take versus the industry (247 Composite also converted to 5* scale).

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I think in a few cases this was mostly the program itself relying on their evaluations more than they have in the past. They had huge Signing Day victories in December (Donovan Edwards and to a lesser degree keeping Hood & McBurrows) and February (the three DTs). I don’t think losing Xavier Worthy changed things; picking up Daylen Baldwin makes that sort of a Josh Christopher-for-Chaundee Brown situation. Grading by position group:

  • QB: A+. Got the cornerstone
  • RB: A+. Got their Dude of the Year plus a really underrated proto-Haskins.
  • WR: B-. I really like Anthony. Was an A- with Worthy in it. Could go up to a B+ if you include Baldwin.
  • TE: B. Love Hansen, wanted at least one more.
  • OL: B+. Were handed an excellent situation and came in under the expectation, but El-Hadi is the surest thing, Bounds is the highest of upsides, and two real centers is nothing to sneer at.
  • DT: B. Reverse of OL: Situation was dire when they needed a big haul, Nua & friends rescued the class late. Benny the only impact guy.
  • DE: B-. Trusted Don Brown.
  • LB: A-. Love Colson, like McLaurin more than I thought I would, Hood fits the doom squirrel mode.
  • S: C. Moore is pretty good considering they didn’t have a coach, last year had three 4*s. Wanted more.
  • CB: D. Nothing against McBurrows. Needed a lot more.
  • SP: A. Can Tommy redshirt in Australia?

The end of 2019 and terrible 2020 season were big hurdles to overcome, and keeping this class together while the fans fell into the BPONE took a lot of doing. That alone was one of the greatest upset victories yet for a Harbaugh tenure that hasn’t had many of them. I mean, Harbaugh went through Early Signing Day without a contract! Starting with Gio El-Hadi and J.J. McCarthy and then adding Junior Colson is a big part of the reason there was a class to worry about losing last winter. Only one of these guys did I conclude was a flier, which is not how we felt this class would turn out at the end.

The big miss is at cornerback. While I like the guy they got a lot more than the scouting services did, they needed two more guys who could come in and compete immediately. This was circumstances—they were fighting uphill for most of their top prospects even before you factored in the ease with which opponents could sell instability. Michigan also addressed some of the issues they could affect. Mike Zordich wasn’t able to close on guys like Tyreek Chappell, Ceyair Wright, Prophet Brown, Ishmael Ibrahim, and Omarion Cooper, and was replaced with Mo Linguist and then Steve Clinkscale when it was already too late. They lost Cass Tech’s Kalen King (and his LB brother) to Penn State because Tim Banks has very strong relationships [with the bagmen] in Detroit that Harbaugh angered. Banks is still going to hurt us in Knoxville, but Michigan emphatically mended Detroit connections, and then hired Bellamy, Hart and Clinkscale.

That happened in time to rescue Rayshaun Benny from a life in East Lansing. It will make a big difference in the future.

[After THE JUMP: Superlatives, those who got away.]

A senior year would have been nice.

The early enrollees have hit campus and rather than making us sleuth through frames of 18-year-olds’ Instagram videos the program has helpfully put out a hype video. 

And everybody is in each other's lives and business. All the time! Like, you never just have a minute alone, just to think, 'Cause we're always together, just eating, eating, eating!

Why yes we are bad at keeping up with this. Sorry.

a big ratings split means we'd really like to see a senior season happen

Whisper sweet maize and blue nothings in the ears of 5-stars.