Mailbag: NCAA Reform #1, DL Moves, Coaching Evaluation, Bo Pelini's Secret Twin Comment Count

Brian

jerry-maguire[1]md19[1]

SHOW ME THE HENRY

How to resolve the NCAA being terrible thing.

Brian,

My friend and I were having a discussion about the best way to compensate college players, and he came up with the idea of paying players based on performance, sort of how incentive laden contracts work in the NFL, with the stipulation that the players will not receive the money until they graduate or go pro. I thought his idea was awful and unrealistic, because the “student athletes” would now become paid employees of the university and we essentially would have a semi-pro league on our hands. BUT, that got me thinking about a possible solution…

The issue we have here is the balance of compensation between stars and bench-warmers, large schools and small schools, men’s sports and women’s sports (which could also very well be a legal issue), revenue-generating and non-revenue-generating sports, etc. Instead of trying to figure out that mess, let’s take the decision of compensation out of the universities’ hands.

The solution: allow the student athletes to sign endorsement deals. If a corporation is willing to pay for a player’s likeness, he deserves that money. However, the stipulation here is that all money earned by a student athlete through endorsements would have to be held in an escrow account, and the release of the money would be contingent upon the completion of the player’s eligibility or his/her declaration to go pro, whichever comes first. Now if a player is caught accepting benefits beforehand, the NCAA would not look hypocritical when laying down punishments. Student athletes get compensated, legal issues are avoided, and you won't have a bunch of teenagers running around campus with millions of dollars to blow/get into mischief with.  What do you think? So crazy it just might work?

Go Blue,
Stephen Y

That's fine. It's a little paternalistic to tell the kids they can't have money until they get their degree, and that will be less effective at legitimizing the stuff under the table, because poor college kids will still want walking-around money. It's still fine.

I'm not sure why there's this widespread opposition to giving people money in exchange for services, but whatever middle ground you want to stake out that gives the kids their image rights and avoids Title IX issues is fine by me. Sign whatever you want, get whatever money you can acquire, and everything will be the same except compliance folk will have to find less mindlessly pedantic jobs. Worries about booster involvement are naïve—they're already involved.

The other major thing that the NCAA could do is get rid of their inane opposition to agents. If you're a legit agent with X number of current pro clients you can sign players regarded as prospects, and give them some advance on whatever they're going to make in the pros. (If you don't make the pros, that's just tough luck for the agent.) The NCAA doesn't even have to redirect any of the buckets of cash they're currently making to make the system

  • less impossible to manage
  • a more even playing field
  • fairer to the players
    Yeah: a more even playing field. Right now no one is going to MAC schools over major offers, but schools willing to do under the table stuff—or just not stop it—have an advantage over schools that don't. And it's tough to figure out what the more moral position is there these days.
    DL moves?

Hey Brian,

Sometimes in football, it seems that you just want to get the best guys on the field right?  Do you think we might see a DL consisting of Beyer, Henry, Qwash, Black?

I would think Black could flip back out to SDE pretty easily and could fold back in to 3 tech occasionally depending on the substitution patterns.  To me that gets your best pass rushers on the field more regularly and is the most likely combo to soak up OL in the run game too.

You mentioned that you expect Beyer to take Clark's job when Ryan comes back, but why not just make that switch now?  Wouldn't you rather get Gordon out there with Beyer than Clark at this point?

Thanks,
Daniel

(This was sent before Clark played well against UConn.)

If Michigan was going to put out its best line for one particular play against an I-formation that might well be it, but with opponents running out all kinds of spread packages and Michigan responding by lifting their nose tackle, Black's snaps are mostly going to be spent as an interior rush-type against shotgun formations. It's probably not worth moving him midseason to get a marginal improvement. While I like what I've seen from Henry so far, there was a play against UConn where he got obliterated. (Michigan was fortunate that UConn didn't block the second level well and held the gain down.) He's a work in progress.

Meanwhile on Cam Gordon: for whatever reason they're not playing him, and it's to the point that his lack of playing time speaks to a lack of performance. Beyer's been good, but mostly as a guy with his hand in the dirt. When Beyer's been put in coverage he's shown some flaws. Gordon's not getting more time is probably just his fate at this point.

I don't get it, either. They've been giving him seemingly genuine praise for years now and when it comes down to it they just don't put him on the field.

[After THE JUMP: evaluating Michigan's coaching staff, plus Bo Pelini axe murder.]

Subbing side effects.

Given Mattison's preference for subbing regularly in the front seven, could the coaches be doing this in part to mitigate the dropoff after guys graduate? I was surprised when a preview said Michigan lost 4 starters in the front 7 coming into this season (Campbell, Roh, Demens, Ryan) because their backups got a lot of run in '12, especially late in the season. Obviously Mattison mainly likes to sub to keep guys fresh, but could it have ancillary benefits for a college program by grooming the younger players for when they start, at which point they'll rotate with still more young guys? Could this an intentional part of player development?

Andrew S.

That is a salutary side effect, yes. If you know you're going to get at least a few snaps it's a lot more likely you are focused in practice than if you know the only way you're getting in the game is through injury typhoon. That helps development. It also helps with recruiting when you can point to players X and Y getting time as freshmen.

At some point—probably this point—there will be a time to cut down on that rotation and focus on the guys who are giving you quality time. I think we've seen that process start, as Glasgow hardly got a snap against UConn.

The obligatory coaching Q.

Brian,

Out of all the post-game analysis I have read or heard, your comment that there is nothing that the Michigan line does particularly well scares me the most. I was feeling that DB made a great hire, that this staff could recruit at a high level, teach and develop talent well and had great football minds in Borges and Mattison. I know it is just one game, but  I am now questioning the latter two points. I am worried about Hoke's ability to keep up with Urban Meyer. What is your overall opinion about this staff?

Peter

The defensive staff is unimpeachable. They immediately turned around GERG's clownfraudshow and have maintained a high level of performance without having anything resembling a player the NFL is highly interested in except Mike Martin. (I'm not counting Will Campbell, who is now an OL.) They developed JT Floyd from one of the worst corners to ever see the field at Michigan into a guy who got the maximum out of his ability.

Even now they're dealing with a talent level far below the one they'll have in the near future. Michigan's starters-plus-nickelback on defense are still mostly unheralded recruits. Only Quinton Washington, James Ross, Blake Countess, and Jarrod Wilson are consensus four-star types (Black and Taylor got one four star rating apiece from 3 and 4 services, respectively), and Washington was supposed to be an offensive lineman. They're still very young: they bring back all but five guys on their two-deep next year. And they pulled in Jabrill Peppers and are likely to grab Da'Shawn Hand and Malik McDowell. The trajectory here is looking excellent.

On the other side of the ball the jury is still out. Hecklinski seems to have done a fine job with Gallon and Dileo. Chesson is still a work in progress, and his other charges are Reynolds and Jackson. Running back coach is usually a place you stash a recruiter because playing running back is something you do or do not. Fred Jackson's probably retiring in the near future anyway. Ferrigno is the TEs guy, and he is going to get an incomplete for at least another two years. Funchess and AJ Williams both would have redshirted on a team that had any other scholarship tight ends, and Michigan would be gingerly working them both into the lineup behind Jerame Tuman types in any normal situation.

But this entire question is probably about two guys: Darrell Funk and Al Borges.

I still think Funk is in a similar situation as Ferrigno is: he's still trying to dig out of the bomb shelter. In retrospect the Braden-as-guard thing this spring was a major warning sign. Bryant can't stay healthy so your collection of non-freshman, scholarship options on the interior line is Jack Miller and Jack Miller. You know, the guy they were trying to replace. He's hamstrung by Borges's desire to run pretty much the opposite kind of system as they did last year and the lack of coherence in Michigan's running offense, but more importantly he's still in a situation in which he pretty much has to play three and only three guys on the interior OL. Bars is obviously not ready, Bryant is in and out of the lineup, and past that it's Joey Burzynski and true freshmen. When that's your fate sometimes you get stuck with guys who can't play.

In that vein: Funk should be given major points for acquiring and developing Glasgow, who I think is Michigan's best interior OL right now and will be a three-year starter. Where's Michigan without that? Starting Kyle Bosch, probably.

Next year is the real test for Funk. He'll get both guards back, but he will be replacing both tackles with guys he recruited and possibly the center. If there's not significant progress then, caterwauling should begin in earnest.

As for Borges, I find him maddening a lot but when I go check things out I often find that the stuff he called was open but his players biffed it. Still, you never know if you're going to get something like 40 points on Notre Dame or an inexplicable fart. I watch opponents tee off on Michigan's run game without getting punished for it. One of the fun things about breaking down Rodriguez games was waiting for the knockout punch when RR figured out what you were doing to his run game and tweaked something that left you holding your guts and choking on his dust. I got how that system worked.

Borges… I don't know, man. Half the time I think he's great, half the time I think he's a goober. He, too, is stuck with one and only one quarterback.

Whoah.

I can't believe I never noticed this before, but I think Bo Pelini has a long lost twin.  

Sincerely,
Chris Banish '96

HungrynowPelini

Whoah. (Also you know that Pelini has killed someone with an axe and put them in a woodchipper.)

Comments

M-Wolverine

September 24th, 2013 at 4:24 PM ^

That we scored 32, 38, and 34 against. 

You keep cherry picking the one game with a freshman QB thrown in, a hurt Hart, horrible weather, vs. the #1 defense in the country. No one in 2010 was as injured as they were in 2007. That's just horrible memory on your part. (Like Illinois where you complain we only scored 27! when Henne had to come in heroically to lead us to the victory barely able to move). Which is understandable, it doesn't fit your agenda. Which is clouded by a cult like true believer status that has you picking some and discarding other examples with no logic or reason.  Give it up. It's over.

Space Coyote

September 24th, 2013 at 4:32 PM ^

"You don't know what it's like. I'm the one out there every day putting his ass on the line. And I'm not out of order! You're out of order. The whole freaking system is out of order. You want the truth? You want the truth?! You can't handle the truth! 'Cause when you reach over and put your hand into a pile of goo that was your best friend's face, you'll know what to do! Forget it, M-Wolverine, it's Chinatown."

Hannibal.

September 24th, 2013 at 4:06 PM ^

Or maybe it's the section of the fan base that understands that the offense has no control over where they get the ball, how often they get the ball, or whether the kicker can kick the ball through the goalposts?  It's a little bit easier to score a touchdown when you get the ball at the opponent's 10 yard line then when you get it at your own ten yard line, don't you think?  It's also easier to amass higher point totals when you can rely on your kicker for 3-6 points every game, which is something that we could not do three years ago. 

The effectiveness of the offense is not the sole determinant in how many points are scored (a concept that some people, such as yourself, have a lot of trouble understanding for some reason). 

SirJack II

September 24th, 2013 at 12:55 PM ^

Um, I think that one of the primary focuses of this blog is to analyze playcalling critically. If all Brian et al. did was throw their hands up and say, "Oh well, they're the experts" anytime the team's strategy seemed to be flawed, would you keep coming back to this blog?

 

InterM

September 24th, 2013 at 1:49 PM ^

I keep coming back to this blog so I can read ad nauseum the "insightful" comment that a blogger with an engineering background can't possibly analyze football in a helpful and informative way, and can't possibly hope to understand why the experienced and ingenious coaches are doing what they're doing.  Since the readership numbers here are so high, I can only assume that everyone else is here for the same reason I am.  Brian performs a valuable service by allowing us all to feel superior and confirm our biases.

Space Coyote

September 24th, 2013 at 1:54 PM ^

I'm an engineer. So if people weary of respecting Brian's football knowledge because of his schooling background, but they respect mine, well, yup... there's that whole we're both engineers thing. In fact, I think I'm actually more engineering than Brian, I'm a "Master of Engineering" with degrees in two different engineering fields, so, engineers, we can know other things too despite are oddities.

And yes, I understand there are other circumstances where I may have a better understanding of certain things than Brian, but there are things he certainly understands more than I do (statistics, writing in general). I'm just saying being an engineer doesn't make it so he doesn't understand football.

TwoFiveAD

September 24th, 2013 at 2:05 PM ^

You aren't only an aerospace engineer SC.  You understand the coaching aspect of the game.  That makes an enormous difference having hands on experience.  Your commentary reflects this. 

It's like people who bash Teachers but wouldn't last a week in their classroom.  Just because a parent is intelligent, doesn't mean they have a clue what it takes to control a classroom. 

InterM

September 24th, 2013 at 2:33 PM ^

on the background and credentials that enable you to tell us why one guy is better than another in analyzing college football?  So far, what you've given us is "former player > guy with an engineering degree who has studied the game and watched a lot of film."  There are plentiful examples of former players working as TV/radio analysts on football broadcasts who would seem to disprove your rule.

TwoFiveAD

September 24th, 2013 at 3:25 PM ^

Former player or coach > guy with an engineering degree who has studied the game and watched a lot of film

This needs an explanation?

There is not a single former player or coach on TV or radio host that Brian knows more about football then.   Not one.  You put both of those guys in a room and throw on game film, and if Brian was smart, he'd sit there and listen.   That's not meant to be a shot at Brian either.

I'm not saying former coaches or players say things on the air that make them look half retarded but every single one of them know more about the game.  It's not even remotely close.  

 

 

Space Coyote

September 24th, 2013 at 3:35 PM ^

They hire these extremely smart and capable people, and then tell them to treat the audience like idiots and provide no real insight into the game. Now I know to at least a degree, these players/coaches are taking these jobs so they can do minimal thinking and get by on hardly working and getting paid well. But if ESPN wanted to do something productive, it would take these guys, stick them in a film room for an hour, go over a couple games, and just have them talk and watch, rewind when they want, and have nothing else. No graphics, just them and the film.

Fans would be so much more informed and it would actually make good TV. But we don't get that. I've said it multiple times this week already, but it's one reason I like Spielman on TV, he doesn't treat the audience like they're idiots. You'll learn something from him most of the time you watch. As much as the NBC and SEC CBS guys annoy me, they are better than almost all non-Spielman (and at times Gruden) commentators on ESPN about actually giving something useful. It's the point of my personal blog: treating fans like people that are actually interested in the game and want to learn about it instead of idiots that can only digest broad, meaningless crap.

InterM

September 24th, 2013 at 4:29 PM ^

Believe me, I wholeheartedly agree with you that the TV broadcasters treat us like idiots.  However, I question whether the networks have whole rosters of "extremely smart and capable people" who offer stupid analysis only because they are told to "treat the audience like idiots and provide no real insight into the game."  With a lot of these guys, I'm confident that what you see is what they've got to give.  Let's not even take the obvious examples (e.g. Lee Corso), and instead look at a guy like David Pollack.  Given the number of times he doesn't even get his facts right, I think we can safely assume that he's not hiding his secret genius and insight derived from his experience as a player.

Space Coyote

September 24th, 2013 at 4:39 PM ^

I mean, people make fun of Madden, but Madden knew so much more than what he ever showed in a booth. Then people saw that, he because popular, and that became the way to talk about sports.

A lot of recently retired coaches are in the booth and they just talk about crap or something barely deeper than a facade. Then they let Saban talk for a couple minutes, then hurry him up when he's just getting starting, and quickly cut to someone else on College Football Live. I think almost all the former coaches and players could give much more in depth analysis if they were told to do it, if they were tasked with sitting down in a film room and just talking about real things. Let's look at a single play for more then 10 seconds because we aren't all so ADHD. Because the stuff they talk about now, give me some interns and a coffee and I could talk about stuff more informative than what they do now with the resources they have, and I could come up with more content to boot.

It's not because they aren't capable. Part of it is because they took the job under the knowledge that they wouldn't really have to think like that. It's an easy job. They are a figure head, they aren't putting in work like they did when they were players or coaches. Part of it is because ESPN dumbs down everything. It's their mantra. The dumber the better. I just find it insulting that they think it actually makes better TV. But I'm not in that world, maybe for the masses it does.

egrfree2rhyme

September 25th, 2013 at 3:44 AM ^

this is like the only place on the internet to get legit schematic analysis of college football and you guys are really criticizing brian for his insightful posts?!  I'm not saying that he's always right but it's really refreshing to get to read some actual analysis of our x's and o's rather than the typical, nearly substance free, analysis that even most former players or coaches offer - stuff like "the line isn't blocking well" or "the quarterback needs to make better decisions" - that's true but that doesn't provide much true insight into why what were are doing works or doesn't work.  

ish

September 24th, 2013 at 11:38 AM ^

I disagree re Funk.  The jury may still be deliberating, but they're pretty close to reaching a verdict, and it isn't good.  Last year he had an All-American LT, a good to great RT, 2 4-stars on the interior (Barnum and Mealer), and Omameh, who had previously played pretty damn well.  All three interior OL played terrible last year.  Perhaps they were recruited to play in a different system, but that excuse only goes so far. 

This year, he has Miller, who also was recruited for a different system and seems to be pretty bad.  But Kalis was a 5 star and even though Glasgow was a walk-on, the talent is clearly there.  Yet he can't seem to milk good play out of them.  So that's Mealer, Barnum, Omameh, Miller, Kalis and to a lesser extent Glasgow and he hasn't even been able to make a MAC level line out of them.  Never mind that he has two stars for tackles, which one would think should help paste over poor play on the interior.  Although Lewan actually seems to have taken a step back this year.

Unless Funk suddenly takes talented players and makes them awesome, I think it's pretty clear that he's just not a good OL coach.  I'm all for not waiting to find out if he can do that.

Space Coyote

September 24th, 2013 at 11:43 AM ^

That last year, outside of Omameh, that none of those guys had any real game experience?

On top of that, you are writing off a RS FR offensive lineman? Really? You say the potential is there for Glasgow, but do you realize how far Glasgow has come to even be able to show that potential? Then you admit that Miller doesn't really fit, but Funk is being forced to use him, and some how that still falls on Funk? On top of that, three completely new players playing side-by-side that aren't experienced enough to mask some of the inconsistencies by the other players, did that theory come to mind?

Look, I think the jury is still out on Funk. I thought that year one, I thought that especially year two. But this year is less an indicator than either of those years, especially last year. This year pretty much means nothing with regards to Funk, as we don't realize how far he's come to even get the line to where it is. The next two years will prove his worth. Next year he actually has some depth. The year after that he has depth that aren't still FR. Like it or not, that means a ton for the OL.

UMaD

September 24th, 2013 at 12:02 PM ^

Barnum was always bothered by injury but he had meaningful playing time under his belt.  He started a few games, played in a bunch, and had practiced with the first team when healthy for a while.  Experience comes first and foremost through practice. Mealer didn't play much, but his problem was talent not inexperience.  He had worked at every position on the line - he should have known what he was doing better than he showed.

Last year Funk had experience, this year he did not.  The OL struggled in both cases.

I don't get the idea that next year things will magically be better when we lose two NFL tackles.  You'd hope the experience of this year would help with the interior, but the downgrade outside will be significant - especially given that neither Braden or Magnuson are able to break through inside.  I know, I know, they're tackles not guards, but we've seen many players move around.  To some degree, OL just need to block and that is that. It may not be perfect, but when you have problems you adjust. 

People made the same excuses for Miller when he couldn't break into the rotation last year.  People made the same "now that he has his guys" argument for the OL being better this year.  These proved to be wrong.

Funk's had nearly two years coaching Kalis and over a year with Bars, Braden, and Magnuson (not to mention Bryant, Miller, Lewan, Schofield).  I don't think he should be fired, but giving him a free pass for this year doesn't make sense to me.  He deserves a critical evaluation at the end of the year, like anyone else.

 

Space Coyote

September 24th, 2013 at 12:08 PM ^

And I don't think the point is that the OL will be better everywhere. But if the players show improvement from this year, then they will be more consistent, and then you see an improved unit. That's the goal, and it is real. That's the test that he needs to start passing.

People that thought this OL was going to be better because it couldn't be worse are incorrect. The line has shown flashes of being better than last year, but has been completely inconsistent, which you expect from youth. That's why it appears worse. Last years group was consistent, as older players tend to be, they just weren't very good.

UMaD

September 24th, 2013 at 12:18 PM ^

Agreed that consistency is where we CAN improve.  But will we?  I'm not sure Braden and Magnuson won't still be responsible for a good deal of inconsistency, and Kalis is still going to be a sophomore too.  Furthermore, it's possible that MIller and Glasgow get passed over for talent reasons once Bosch and Kugler (or others) are up to speed.  I'm not yet convinced they're more talented than Mealer-Barnum.

Right now we have 5 years of starting experience on the OL, next year we'll have 3.  Two guys vs three guys, yes, but I'm not sure that pencils out to a net gain.

I was shouted down in the offseason for arguing that the OL even COULD get worse, let alone that it would.

ish

September 24th, 2013 at 12:37 PM ^

i am absolutely not writing of RS Freshman.  quite the opposite.  i'm saying they should be great, but it may require a better OL coach to get them there.

re miller, the reason that some of that still falls on funk is that most colleges have players that aren't even as good as miller and still make it work better than our OL has.  and regarding inexperience, this is college - there are players inserted onto OLs every year that have little to no experience.  all of those factors (inexperience, miller being a bad fit for the system, new players side-by-side) can make a line bad.  but many schools have those issues.  what i'm saying is that even with those issues, the OL should be better and its possible that they would be if they had a better OL coach.

Sten Carlson

September 24th, 2013 at 12:44 PM ^

"...most colleges have players that aren't even as good as miller and still make it work better than our OL has."

For example?  How do you know how good Miller is as compared to other players?

"...the OL should be better and its possible that they would be if they had a better OL coach."

Should?  Based upon what imperical evidence?

dellis

September 24th, 2013 at 11:52 AM ^

Maybe I am making something out of nothing, or just don't know quarterback techniques very well, but has anyone else noticed that Garnders pocket footwork looks really weird?

Especially on shotgun snaps, it appears that his feet are glued to the ground, just standing flat-footed.  I wonder, does this make it more difficult for him to come off his primary read and get squared up to make an accurate throw?  I know that happy feet like Peyton Manning has is not necessarily coached as the gold standard (even though he obviously makes it work quite well), but it just seems to me he needs to be able to change the positioning of his feet quicker and not have his hips so square to the line, which would allow him to step into his throws more.

 

stephenrjking

September 24th, 2013 at 11:57 AM ^

Here's one of the things that I think I notice about Borges, related to Brian's observation: His schemes are technically fine, but they require a higher level of talent/execution to succeed.
Brian says "the play is open, the players biffed it." This is true. Isn't it also possible that it is more likely for players to biff it because the plays require a higher level of athleticism or execution?
One of the pluses to the spread offense was that it took limited players and put them in positions to succeed--the classic example being the Denard-to-Roundtree QB oh no. It used Denard's strengths as a runner to get Roy open, and mitigated Denard's accuracy problems.
Borges has counters for the same defensive action, but it seems like they require a receiver who can run a sharp route or win a jump ball, or a quarterback who can hit a tight window further downfield.
There's not much margin for error.

Space Coyote

September 24th, 2013 at 12:14 PM ^

He used it against UConn, but DG's footwork went to crap and it was incomplete. He doesn't use it off of QB action, which I'm sure he has his reasons and theory behind that, but people tend to forget that defenses generally took away that QB Oh No from Rich Rod toward the end of his tenure. Those seam routes generally turned into out routes that were good for 5 or so yards.

Now, I'm sure there was going to be progression onto that, and the game was going to become much more of a chess game as Rich Rod exposed some of his changes and concepts, but all teams will adjust to what you're doing once they have tape on how to do it. It's just a matter of time.

As an aside, the reason people like that play is because the concept, the read is so simple. It's a great play, don't get me wrong, but it's also so obvious, so people understand it and that's exciting. I love understanding what's going on, I'm no different, and what often went on with that play was easy TDs, which was great. But it's also a very simple adjustment that is relatively easy to take away once defenses figured out how to do it, which they did.

stephenrjking

September 24th, 2013 at 12:35 PM ^

Quite true, the accessible simplicity is attractive. But if it's accessible to us, it is also, presumably, more accessible to the players--and with a hard limit of 20 hours of practice per week, that's important.

I'm not arguing that Borges is automatically a problem, but I appreciate schemes that account for the fact that most teams have to deal with transition to newer, less-talented players at some position or another in almost every season.

It must be said, though, that some of the things that are difficult to execute are just plain difficult to execute. On Gardner's long INT to Chesson, for example, the ball was thrown slightly inside, by only a foot or so--but it mattered. Chesson was taller but did not reach out to get the ball--and it mattered. Chesson was not able to lose his cover man--and it mattered. All of these things need to work right for a deep ball to work properly. But, of course, that is true in every offense in football.

Also, I think one of Al's problems is that he is countering a very specific weakness that is difficult to cover for: a disastrous interior line. Notre Dame was charging the LOS before the line's true weakness was exposed, and the counters to that were fairly easy to call and execute and resulted in touchdowns. Now that teams know they can stop the run without stuffing the box (and they know that Michigan does not have a receiver who can physically overpower his defender to win deep balls) things are much tougher.

Space Coyote

September 24th, 2013 at 1:50 PM ^

By simplifying it, indeed, you will probably be more consistent. You will be good at that one thing. But pray that the defense doesn't figure out how to stop that thing, otherwise you're in trouble.

On the flipside, install too much and you're good at nothing. But if you're stopped at something, you can switch it up and hope the defense isn't prepared to defend the other thing.

Obviously neither extreme is good. Borges, while more complicated, could certainly make it a lot more complicated (hello: Jon Gruden). But it certainly is something to take heavily into consideration with the practice limits and what not. Rich Rod much more slowly tried to implement his scheme, which is why you tended to see completely new wrinkles week-to-week. Borges may be doing it quicker, and he is certainly still installing different things, and it's certainly possible he just has a different philosophy with how to approach it. We saw a different philosophy with how to use players that don't fit your system.

I think, at the end of the day, every OC is looking for that perfect mix. But that perfect mix is constantly moving, from year-to-year with different players, from week-to-week with the same players. They are all looking for the same thing, even if they're taking different paths to get there, but in the end they are constantly trying to find the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow. 

bubblelevel

September 24th, 2013 at 12:03 PM ^

I guess it should be emphasized that Gardner also is truly not Borges' QB (I mean that in the sense he did not recruit him).  Would Al have recruited DG out of Inkster?  All of the narrative about "Borges finally has his QB in Gardner" is not exactly true.  Devin is talented AND suffering currently from the mental side of the position's pressures.  Borges I would contend is truly responsible for the QB's he chose (not inherited) and developed based upon his criterion for success.  So give him some space with Gardner as he works through this.  I'm not sure Garder has demonstrated his issues on the field in practices so it's a matter of working through them since he is still the best QB available.  My sincere hope is that Devin calms down and gets in his groove and becomes very consistent through Borges' teaching. I also hope we have a very much improved Gardner next year.  Look at the huge turnaround Mettinburger (sp) for LSU had from last year to this year...

wolverine1987

September 24th, 2013 at 12:05 PM ^

That could be a problem both legal and PR wise. Which is unfortunate, becasue I agree that athletes should be compensated for the revenue, if any, generated by their likeness. So the misguided, counter-productve and just wrong (IMO) Title IX strikes again.

eschaton811ydau

September 24th, 2013 at 12:06 PM ^

Re: Compensation Plan

I think its important to look at the tax implications for the NCAA and the players. That system sounds like some new type of deferred compensation that hasn't been vetted by the IRS.

1) Amateur status - gone (what does this do to the NCAA and its tax-exempt status?)

2) I can see a few ways in which the athletes might have to pay taxes on earnings they haven't even seen yet. That makes the situation worse in the near-term. Can you imagine the tax bill that Denard would see if he had been paid either through endorsements or performance incentives?

Sten Carlson

September 24th, 2013 at 12:14 PM ^

From reading/listening to the comment Borges has made in the past about play calling, I think it cannot be stated enough how much turnovers disrupt the flow of play calling -- especially when they lead to scores.  OC's have calls, for the most part, that have situational element to them, i.e., calls that are made when the team is up, tied, down, and even a home/away varient.  Space Coyote aptly pointed out "set-up" or counter plays.  However, when you're turning the ball over at the rate that Michigan's offense has been in the last two games, it's impossible to have the flow and number of plays necessary to set those plays up -- every time it seemed like we had something going, the ball was turned over. 

Then, add the fact that you're on the road, at night, and your QB is looking a little rattled, and you have a severely hamstrung OC, IMO.

stephenrjking

September 24th, 2013 at 12:56 PM ^

Yep. Unfortunately, this largely falls on Gardner. I love Devin and believe he will excel this year, but his TOs at key moments have turned "eh" games against patsies that should have been more impressive into nailbiters that make everyone question everything.

Akron, for example, featured TOs that swung at least 17 points (option fumble and Gallon INT on plays that could have easily produced TDs, and at least one probably would have, plus the screen pick-six) and would have left Michigan up 21 if all other things are equal, with no excitement late.

Against UConn the sneak fumble was a worst-case event, and Michigan basically controlled the rest of the game, albeit in conservative fashion.

Blue Mike

September 24th, 2013 at 1:12 PM ^

And the other part to the turnovers is what it does for momentum and opponent's confidence.  You could see pretty clearly that UCONN (and Akron to some extent) was a little flat, the offense was stagnant.  Then turnovers start, and you can see them think "hey, we've got a chance if they're going to give us the ball!" and suddenly they start being more agressive.  

Just like we started taking it to them at the end when they started making mistakes.