This Week's Obsession: How Borges is Nuss? Comment Count

Seth

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Fuller

Question: Did you notice any appreciable difference in the Spring Game between the Borges offense and Nussmeier's? What are hoping to see by fall, and do you think they appeared to be heading in that direction?

Ace: Well...

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I might not be very useful in this roundtable.

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Brian: Well... it wasn't much different in person.

And the stuff they did show was the usual vanilla business that is designed to be as basic as possible, so I'm not sure there's a whole lot to glean. It looked a lot more compact than last year's offense, sure. All spring games look compact as the bells and whistles are stowed away for use on a two-point conversion in the bowl game after you're down one billion points.

Michigan did seem to have a dedication to the inside zone with a side of power, and the linemen seemed more focused on making sure the defensive tackle was good and beat up before trying to get to the second level. That led to a lot of runs that made it to the line of scrimmage (hooray!) and didn't get much further. And that's fine. You don't dig out of a hole as big as the one Michigan's in quickly. Michigan looks like it's going to be mostly an IZ team that mixes in power to keep opponents honest, and as long as they look like that through the nonconference season and don't start flipping people about all willy-nilly, that is the first step towards competence.

So that's what I think we'll see: a boring-ass offense that tries to keep errors to a minimum and punts a lot. People will complain about its predictability and simplicity and they'll be right. Michigan doesn't have much choice, unfortunately.

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Seth: It's impossible to compare Borges's Michigan offense to anything, because Michigan's offense wasn't anything under Borges for more than a few games. The three things I was looking for were 1) personnel, 2) a concept, and 3) how well those things could complement each other.

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If you flup this up, Doug, so help me Bo…

Personnel was heavy, which was discouraging. For one Michigan has little in the way of tight ends. I didn't see anything from A.J. Williams, who was behind Heitzman, or Khalid Hill, who was behind Houma, and that was discouraging for hope of TE production before Butt's back. Houma is a fullback who lined up at the U only to motion back to fullback.

The operating theory on the OC hire was that Nussmeier at Bama was forced to use heavier formations than he wanted, however that compromise came down to 65% of snaps with three or more receivers:

Team Big 2 WR 3 WR 4 WR
Bama (Sugar Bowl) 3% 31% 58% 7%
Michigan 2013 8% 54% 29% 9%
Mich 2011-'12 7% 41% 43% 9%
Mich 2008-'10 1% 7% 76% 15%

Eyeballing it, the spring game was closer to Michigan in 2013. If there was a difference it was more Ace as opposed to I-form, but that's less relevant because those second TEs were usually Houma and Kerridge, i.e. the fullbacks. There's a fear shared by every Michigan fan with a functional nervous system that the run-and-shoot-yourself-in-the-face offense under Borges was, despite protestations to the contrary, a mandate from the top. If Nussmeier compromises for Hoke more than he would for Saban, well, that would be insane. If that was all just a bunch of spring practice hooey, well, why are they spending spring practice on hooey when every countable hour is precious?

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Great scott Doc, this is too heavy. [Fuller]

On the upside, there was a concept. The running was mostly zone, with some power mixed in only because you need to pull somebody to sell play-action. The passing game was a slight departure from Borges, who used a lot of 5-step patterns last year. These were 7-step patterns with an outlet, matching what we saw from Nussmeier at Alabama. The difference here can be overstated; Borges used lots of longer routes with Denard but went to the quicker stuff in 2013 because he couldn't get protection to last longer than that.

How do I feel about that? Well it fits the receivers' abilities. There's no Gallon to turn every 7-yard cushion into an easy 5 yards, but there's Canteen and the Funchise and lots of leapy things who can reel in a desperation heave. I have serious doubts the offensive line can hold up that long, but that's why there's an outlet. On the play I drew up it was Funchess running what appeared to be an option route; with Alabama it was usually an RB.

Zone is good. It's what Funk knows, it's easier to teach to young linemen, and we've already established his charges' total inability to pull correctly. My guess is the tight ends are in there because the OTs need help, though any time you have Heitzman/Williams/Houma in there instead of Chesson that's a talent downgrade.

I think the great hope for an offense that can finish in the top half of the conference is Gardner. I think Nussmeier is building an offense that is simple for everybody but him.

Comments

mGrowOld

April 16th, 2014 at 2:14 PM ^

Go back and read what i originally wrote.  I said I "wondered" how much of the offense was directed by Hoke.

My central point is that Funk = Gibson and it's Hoke's instance on keeping his friends employed (just like Rich did) that may lead to eventual undoing.  My concern is that Nuss, like Robinson before him, has been shackled to a support staff he did not choose and that does not report to him, but rather the HC.  I am tring to reconcile how we get substantive change in performace with the same people leading the same position groups as last year with the exception of Nuss.

That is the core of my concern.  Not Hoke's involvement in play-calling or game planning for the offense.

CompleteLunacy

April 17th, 2014 at 11:49 AM ^

Who Hoke employs isn't itself evidence that he's meddling with the OCs autonomy over the offense. That's a weak argument.

Hoke may have a philosophy that he wants to adhere to, but that's a Far cry from forcing his coach to run a specific offense. He didn't hire Nuss and immediately tell him to run Borges' offense. That's my point.

CompleteLunacy

April 17th, 2014 at 11:54 AM ^

And certainly that's possible. However you look at the numbers, before and after, and you see that Nuss has overall done well. Past success isn't necessarily a predictor of future success (...cough Rich Rod cough...), but Nuss brings a record with him that is better than Borges. Shoot, better than Kiffin, the guy they just hired to replace Nuss at Bama.

Don

April 16th, 2014 at 1:36 PM ^

Ehh, I'm not so convinced that Robinson was a miracle worker. TX still gave up large amounts of yardage to Iowa State, WVU, Okie State, and Baylor.

Regardless, I've been bothered myself by possibility you've been mentioning: that Funk = Gibson. One thing the firing of Borges and hire of Nuss has done is remove whatever cover Al gave the OL coaching: if the line struggles mightily again this season, then the issues go beyond play-calling and reach into OL coaching, and maybe even S&C.

markusr2007

April 16th, 2014 at 1:42 PM ^

teaching freshmen and sophomore lineman at the college level how to pull properly is so goddamned difficult?

Jesus, pulling should not be a completely foreign concept for most guards and tackles coming out of high school.  I get that mastering the technique of pulling is critical, but why is it hard? 

I'm sure they pull in practice frequently, but if they suck at it, then I just don't understand why more effort and time isn't dedicated to perfecting this aspect of the blocking schemes/plays?

 

Space Coyote

April 16th, 2014 at 2:12 PM ^

Frankly, it's mostly about the speed. Getting the footwork correct and doing it instinctively and quickly enough to get out of a stance, straight down the line as tight to the other OL as possible, and then properly identifying the target (that's also moving much faster) through the wash.

The first parts you can improve more in position drills (though even then game speed and game intensity of those surrounding you is different), but learning where/how/what to find is a part that simply takes experience at that level and in game type situations, which are much more infrequent to come by.

For those wondering "then why would anyone deploy a man blocking scheme?", the same is essentially true for coming off first level blocks and move to the second level (identification is a bit simpler, but timing on when/how to come off is the difficult part).

Don

April 16th, 2014 at 2:43 PM ^

Which makes what Fritz Crisler was able to achieve with the Mad Magicians in 1947 all that more remarkable. What his players were forced to master was choreography on the football field combined with sleight-of-hand that's still hard to follow if you watch the old grainy films.

So, how many hours of practice did Crisler have available to get his players to achieve such a high level of blocking proficiency?

Seth

April 16th, 2014 at 9:24 PM ^

Way less than now according to Jack Weisenberger. The players back then didn't have practice limits and splitting defense and offense was new, so they got an advantage by the offensive guys getting together and having extra practices. They also ran fake plays in their dorm hallways and on the train. Thanks for the excuse to ask.

BradP

April 16th, 2014 at 2:24 PM ^

Rather remarkable that we have reached the point where Seth refers to Freddy Canteen as if he had 40 receptions last year, and everybody just kinda nods their head and goes with it.

uminks

April 16th, 2014 at 11:30 PM ^

We may have a boring ass offense that punts a lot. Who knows may be Gardner will find enough time to throw this year? And our RB may actually get positive plays, even though they may not go for much yardage. We'll see after September how well the offense plays.

Decatur Jack

April 17th, 2014 at 9:05 AM ^

Zone is good. It's what Funk knows, it's easier to teach to young linemen, and we've already established his charges' total inability to pull correctly.

I don't think we can say it's reached the point of being "already established" considering that most of these guys were freshmen or redshirt freshmen, and their ability or inability to pull is not a foregone conclusion. However, if it's true that no offensive lineman under Funk has ever been able to pull correctly, then I'm sorry but Michigan needs to fire that guy by lunchtime.

Seth

April 17th, 2014 at 11:37 AM ^

I mean, Patrick Omameh was one of the best linemen I've ever seen at releasing and finding and pulverizing a guy downfield on a zone block, but he was the worst puller football's ever had.

Barnum couldn't pull. Mealer couldn't pull. Taylor Lewan couldn't pull.

It is true: no offensive lineman under Funk that I can think of has EVER been able to pull correctly. As to your conclusion from that, well, um...