Unverified Voracity Should Run The Option Comment Count

Brian

30050897815_417f1dd4dd_z

[Eric Upchurch]

The best quote. ESPN was offered full and frank access to a Wisconsin DBs meeting before the Ohio State game. This was kind of a questionable decision since ESPN published some takes on OSU's personnel that would seem to have a negative impact on Wisconsin's ability to use said takes. For example, Jim Leonhard's take on Curtis Samuel would seem ripe for Samuel to break tendency:

"You watch him, the thing that he gets guys on is if he kind of goes lazy in a route, don't believe it," Leonhard said. "He'll stem you. He's going to break hard as hell. Everything he's going to do, he's going to be patient at the top of routes. But if he starts just kind of bending into something, he's going opposite. Don't fall for the trap."

I almost always think coach secrecy is absurd paranoia but I was shocked Wisconsin let this get published, especially before the game even happened.

Anyway, at the end of the piece there is a quote directly relevant to your interests:

"You just have to communicate, which you've done a really good job of," he said. "Is that nearly as hard as Michigan last week? Michigan was something new every single snap. These guys are almost the complete opposite. You'll watch the game and be like, 'Damn, they did exactly what we saw.' We'll just have to see early recognizing the formations that they're going to be in, then we'll motion."

I can't tell you how many times during the Carr era that we'd be on the other end of that quote, with teams playing Michigan and then stating that M did exactly what they saw on film and nothing else. I love the alternative.

Meanwhile the other side of the ball just got the same makeover. I love that Michigan went out and got Defensive Jim Harbaugh in Don Brown. Michigan's gone from a very simple defense under Durkin to a blizzard of different looks. Craig Ross mentioned on WTKA that a Power 5 offensive coordinator told him that he spent most of BC week just trying to figure out what the hell Brown was doing.

Michigan is now an incredibly difficult opponent to prepare for on either side of the ball.

101616-CFB-Spack-LF-PI.vadapt.767.high.69

Brock Spack's best attribute is his mustache. This is a compliment.

Exit Darrell Hazell. Purdue pulled the trigger on their head coach after nine wins in 3.5 years, and is now on the Lowered Expectations dating scene. Everyone's got a list. Hammer and Rails has one, and here's a sad commentary on where they're at:

Name: Brady Hoke

Position: Oregon DC

Why?: Ya, Oregon isn’t very good right now. Hoke was up and down at Michigan. But, he has head coaching experience and is looking for another head coaching job. Getting back into the B1G isn’t easy, but this could be a chance for him as he could take over a Purdue program in shambles.

Chance: With how Oregon has looked this season, I don’t think we take a chance on him. But his head coaching experience in the B1G makes him appealing a little bit.

At least they're unenthused.

The candidates drawing the most mention seem to be WMU's PJ Fleck, former LSU HC Les Miles, and Illinois State HC Brock Spack. Fleck's probably going to get better offers this offseason and should wait on a less difficult opportunity; Miles is probably a real bad idea since by the time he'd have his players in he'd be close to retirement; Spack hasn't lit it up on the FCS level.

If those aren't the names, Purdue might repeat their Hazell move:

Hazell had been a head coach at Kent State for two years, but he was close to a "close your eyes and throw a dart at the OSU assistant roster" move. It would be uninspiring and very Purdue to replicate their failed process from last time.

Bill Connelly points out that Purdue's only successful coaching hires in the past 30 years have been relative outsiders, and he suggests a selection of creative offensive minds at smaller schools. He's correct. This is the pool Purdue should be selecting from. They need something weird to overcome their talent deficiencies, and they have the financial resources to grab a guy from Tulane or Air Force or wherever.

Personally, I would loathe playing a triple option version of Purdue—never schedule Air Force!—and co-sign this tweet from Jane Coaston:

Ken Niumatalolo may not be poachable after he turned down overtures from BYU last year, but if the problem there was BYU's reluctance to go flexbone Purdue might not have a shot. Connelly mentions Air Force's Troy Calhoun, who's won eight games a year two-thirds of the time at a service academy and gave Michigan all it wanted a few years back, and he seems like a good idea. Willie Fritz ran a deeply weird pistol triple option thing at Georgia State; I mentioned him offhandedly during the portion of Michigan's most recent coaching search where I threw out every candidate who was even vaguely plausible. He'd be a good idea.

In non-option options: Jeff Brohm at WKU has assembled Tiller-esque explosive offenses. I'd at least kick the tires on Chris Klieman, the third-year NDSU head coach who's kept Craig Bohl's train running without a hiccup.

For your sake, Purdue, don't close your eyes and grab a manball retread or an assistant who's operated with an embarrassment of riches. Look to someone scrabbling up from down below.

SLEEPER THOUGH. Charlie Strong.

Michigan assistants? Drevno and Fisch draw mention from Feldman in the Others Receiving Votes section of his list. While I think both guys are good coaches and will be HCs somewhere down the road, neither seems like a good fit for perpetually undermanned Purdue, and both guys can find themselves jobs less likely to end in termination. If Purdue's smart they won't focus on either guy; if either guy is smart they'd wait for something like Maryland or Cincinnati.

Another Endzone excerpt. The Postgame runs a piece from Bacon on Harbaugh's long-term prospects in Ann Arbor:

As one of Harbaugh's closest associates, attorney John Denniston, told me, "Jim doesn't like to recruit. He loves to recruit." If that sounds like hyperbole, you might consider the 22-state, 38-stop satellite tour, which Harbaugh described as "more fun than you can possibly imagine, like a pig in slop."

The only issue on that list that would seem to present a compelling reason for Harbaugh to leave is the health of Michigan's athletic department. When people on the book tour asked me to predict how long Harbaugh would coach Michigan, my answer was simple: It depends on his relationship with the next athletic director.

Quinn on Rahk. MAAR's development is probably the second-biggest key for Michigan this year behind that of Mo Wagner:

"For two years now, I've seen a great evolution in his game," Beilein said. "I want to see much more. He's capable of being a superior athlete."

A few things need to happen.

Abdur-Rahkman's jump shooting needs to improve. He raised his 3-point percentage from 29.3 percent (12-41) to a respectable 36.5 percent (31-85) from his freshman to sophomore year, but another jump could elevate Abdur-Rahkman among the best guards in the Big Ten.

His playmaking also needs to improve. Despite playing in 21 more games than LeVert last year, Abdur-Rahkman finished with 13 fewer assists for the season. His 3.7 assists per 100 possessions ranked below Duncan Robinson and Kameron Chatman. While his 27 turnovers in 1,001 minutes played were impressively meager, they also speak to a lack of facilitating for others.

Ian Boyd on OSU. This piece went up before the Wisconsin game and looks fairly prescient right now. It's SBN's Ian Boyd on certain flaws that OSU has demonstrated so far this year:

So if the Buckeye run game were stopped or slowed?

An opponent that knew how to line up against Urban Meyer’s arsenal of formations and variations on option run schemes would undoubtedly have a chance to force this particular team into some obvious passing situations.

The Buckeyes have had 40 TD drives so far this season and 14 of them (35%) required 10 plays or more. They’re very used to having to grind their way down the field with the run game and if you stopped up the works they’d be forced to rely more on their passing game.

Venturing back up to our handy chart, we notice that against the three toughest opponents on Ohio State’s schedule that Barrett threw 63 passes for 394 yards at 6.3 yards per attempt with five TDs and a sole INT. He’s been good at avoiding turnovers, though that may be partly due to simply not throwing many passes in the first place, but simply hasn’t been that threatening throwing the ball. If not for the four touchdown passes he threw to big Noah Brown in the red zone against Oklahoma, those numbers wouldn’t be too impressive either.

Barrett had a good second half against Wisconsin and managed to get OSU to 23 points in regulation. It was a struggle the whole way, though. Michigan's defense is another level up from Wisconsin's; that game gave me great hope that Michigan can turn the Game into a defensive slugfest.

Illinois week. The Illini probably won't be much of a challenge—they got outgained by Rutgers last week and Michigan is a whopping 35-point favorite. But it is an opportunity to point out Illini Board, which is a good Illinois blog/community. Their take on Rutgers:

Because this is just year one. The idea is 2019, with Michigan in Champaign, with the roster rebuilt, and that defense taking the ball away from the Wolverines and stopping them on fourth and one. I flipped the switch to rebuild mode last week, so watching this game in rebuild mode, it was great to see those plays from Milan and Watson. Bodes well for the future.

Remember the Minnesota game in 2008 when we outgained them something like 550-310 yet we lost because we kept turning the football over? That was a few months before I started the blog, but if I was blogging that fall, that game would have been my first “Turnovers Are Football” post. So many times, being on the wrong end of turnovers cost us.

And today, being on the right end delivered a win.

Lovie Smith is the most credible head coach they've had in a while, but it's going to take a long time to get out from underneath the Beckman denouement.

We've been there. Georgia lost to Vandy and their irritating athletic director hasn't crossed the line to get axed, so Get The Picture is feeling pretty gloomy:

It dawned on me leaving the stadium Saturday that one thing is really missing from Georgia football — it’s not fun to watch.  By that, I don’t mean losing sucks.  It does, of course.

What I mean is that watching a Georgia game feels like more of a chore these days than entertainment.

Man, did I write a column or two like that a few years back. It must be frustrating to be UGA and always be good but seemingly never be great—oh right, we know what that's like too. Throw in the fact that Ann Arbor and Athens are almost the same city and the UGA and Michigan fan bases are the most golf-apparel-friendly ones in the country and the parallels go deep between the two schools.

Anyway, this season is super fun and let's be sure to savor it.

Desmond Morgan gets into coaching. He's a GA at Wayne State:

Q: What are some of your responsibilities at Wayne State as a graduate assistant?

Morgan: One thing that’s been really interesting is that playing at Michigan, I was really used to the Division I level, where there’s resources and funding. There’s almost a paid position for everything.

At the Division II level, the resources are very limited. The money isn’t there. Something that I learned quick is that you’re not just a GA who helps an assistant. You do a bunch of other things on top of it.

Here, I spend 8 to 10 hours a week making sure highlight films are done on Friday nights, and we do all of the importing, editing and transcribing of the film. We help coaches with their daily responsibilities, like making copies, making sure meetings are set up to be run.

Juan Harris is single again again again again. The enormous IA DT decommitted from Indiana after three separate Iowa commitments. I can't wait to see where this rollercoaster goes. Hopefully back to Indiana twice more.

Etc.: The Big 12 probably isn't expanding because the TV networks will pay them not to. This might seem like a fiasco but could it actually be a bit of Machiavellian brilliance? What went wrong under Hazell other than everything. Nigel Hayes visited Gameday to protest not getting paid. Fred Jackson is the head coach at Ypsi High now. Indiana's struggles in the redzone dissected. The playoff looks all but set, so of course things will implode over the next month.

Brian Kelly Blames Things Dot Com. Recommend Go Iowa Awesome's weekly "Hybrid" column. Harbaugh eats a steak.

Comments

Mr Miggle

October 17th, 2016 at 3:18 PM ^

There's no transition cost while he brings in his players, even though he has always brought in his own system. Here's his first two seasons at each stop. The only two at BG and Utah.

Bowling Green 8-3, 9-3

Utah 10-2, 12-0

Florida, 9-3, 13-1

OSU 12-0, 12-2

evenyoubrutus

October 17th, 2016 at 4:32 PM ^

Fair enough, I'm not arguing the guy is an average coach.  Clearly he gets the best out of his players, but I don't think you could say that Florida, Utah or OSU had inferior talent to the teams they beat in the first few seasons he was there, and the MAC is such a shit show in terms of coaching and talent that it's hard to really draw a reasonable conclusion from that one. 

Big Boutros

October 17th, 2016 at 1:26 PM ^

I think, as with many spread-to-run offenses, most of Meyer's rushing innovations peaked six or seven years ago. The way he has stayed ahead of the curve is with evolving route trees, RPOs, and even tinkering fundamentally with the skill positions (Jalin Marshall/Curtis Samuel spread H). But I agree that the handoffs themselves are not elaborate.

jakerblue

October 17th, 2016 at 12:49 PM ^

 If Purdue's smart they won't focus on either guy; if either guy is smart they'd wait for something like Maryland or Cincinnati.

 

Is that a shot at Durkin? LOL

mgoblue0970

October 17th, 2016 at 3:54 PM ^

I don't get the need to pile on Durkin though... He left.  He's got his own gig now.  It's not like he went to Cbus or EL.  Best wishes to him.

Such a comment is lamer than people who still say is Oakland in play.  Move on folks.  Celebrate what we have.

FatGuyTouchdown

October 17th, 2016 at 1:17 PM ^

Was a last minute Carson Wentz drive away from winning the FCS national championship game a couple years ago. Struggled a bit this year but he beat Northwestern, who's a pretty solid team.

JFW

October 17th, 2016 at 1:17 PM ^

I'm bummed that they'e tanked so badly since Tiller left. I hope they can make this work. While I don't want to see triple option Purdue either.... they would be fun to have in college football. 

reshp1

October 17th, 2016 at 1:42 PM ^

(Sarah Harbaugh)"Stanford has good fans, the 49ers have great fans, but Michigan football is a way of life here. They've been doing it for years, and they get it from their grandfathers, and their great-grandfathers. They have these memories that stretch back generations. It's great, but to be honest, it makes me sad that I don't have that past with it.'
"Our kids will," Jim said.

This is my favorite part of the Endzone excerpt. I'm not saying Jim Harbaugh stays forever, but leaving is the farthest thing from his mind right now.

1VaBlue1

October 17th, 2016 at 1:57 PM ^

You (probably) snark, and others scoff.  But the fact is that Frost has his team - who sucked balls the last several years - playing pretty good football.  They didn't stand a chance against UM, but they played hard and fast.  They out-hit UM, remember?

I think Purdue would do well to pick up Frost, even with his darth of head coaching experience.  He proved innovative as OC at Oregon, and is doing well with a collection of unrecruited players at a school whose football legacy (as it were) smells of fecal matter.

1VaBlue1

October 17th, 2016 at 1:57 PM ^

You (probably) snark, and others scoff.  But the fact is that Frost has his team - who sucked balls the last several years - playing pretty good football.  They didn't stand a chance against UM, but they played hard and fast.  They out-hit UM, remember?

I think Purdue would do well to pick up Frost, even with his darth of head coaching experience.  He proved innovative as OC at Oregon, and is doing well with a collection of unrecruited players at a school whose football legacy (as it were) smells of fecal matter.

MGoLaw16

October 17th, 2016 at 1:39 PM ^

I certainly don't wish ill on Purdue, but I don't really want to see them run a triple option type offense. That route is probably their best option, but that feels like the Spoilermakers' final form. I don't want to be nervous to play Purdue.

jimmyshi03

October 17th, 2016 at 2:20 PM ^

In recent weeks on PAPN and the Audible. The question seems to be whether you're happy with essentially a base level of 7-5 or 6-6 on a yearly basis with occasional great seasons (ala the two Orange Bowl years Paul Johnson has had), to go along, less often, with a wretched season. 

I think Purdue would sign up for that, though they did let Hope go after delivering in his worst season a better record than Hazzell ever achieved. 

markusr2007

October 17th, 2016 at 1:53 PM ^

I don't want this to happen. I really don't.  And neither do you.  The planet will collapse in on itself if there are three chaos teams in the state of Indiana.

But....

Stitt's Montana Griz are 5-1 and absolutely clubbing opponents with 60pts a game,etc.

That Montana @ Eastern Washington game is the same weekend at Michigan @ Michigan State. Should be a barn-burner.

They will probably finish 9-2 or 10-1 before post-season.

http://gogriz.com/schedule.aspx?path=football

The good thing is this: why would anyone in their right mind leave Montana for Indiana?

Blueverine

October 17th, 2016 at 1:49 PM ^

Yeah, he could recruit at Michigan, but he'll be battling bottom B1G and top MAC schools for the same talent. The problem there is he can't develop the 3* guys he will get.

I'd focus less on a candidate's scheme and more on a guy like Dantonio who took a step up to the B1G and then developed the guys who M and OSU didn't prioritize (mostly). Then got them to embrace the "we're not M and OSU" attitude and play tough.

ST3

October 17th, 2016 at 2:01 PM ^

The amazing thing about the latest ND loss is that Kelly went with Zaire for a large portion of the 2nd half. With about four minutes left and the Irish having their last chance at tying the score, he went back to DeShone. This late into the season, Kelly is clueless about who is the best option at QB. The same could be said of D'antoni in EL. If Connor O'Tyler had played that whole game, maybe sparty wins.

I've been a Brock Spack fan ever since I discovered that Brock Spack exists. What a glorious name. It's Ditka-esque.

Njia

October 17th, 2016 at 2:34 PM ^

Maybe I've missed it, but I haven't heard Dantonio say, "It's not MY fault we're losing! It's those stupid, worthless players! They don't have any heart! They keep doing all the wrong damn things!"

And in one of the videos, Brian Kelly called one of his players a "fucking moron." That's definitely not something I would expect to see Dantonio do.

Dantonio is many things - but he's not really anything like Brian Kelly.

C Tron

October 17th, 2016 at 2:37 PM ^

I agree with all your points above, and it befuddles me as to why a coach would do it.  I do think Mork is a good coach, but it took me a bit longer to get there than most.  I always have the ND game in the back of my head when he took out Cook for the last drive and put in Maxwell (who failed miserably). It made no sense then and it still doesn't.

With Kelly, I think it's possible he pulled Kizer to show him who the boss was.  Saying, "Look kid, I know you think you're great, but I control you and your future, not you". 

corundum

October 17th, 2016 at 2:41 PM ^

In fairness to Mork, he doesn't really have the right answer as both options aren't going to win many football games. Kelly's situation is different where he has two proven winners and still can't decide on who he wants to throw the ball 30 times in a fucking hurricane.

charblue.

October 17th, 2016 at 2:11 PM ^

our coach eating milk with meat at a high-priced steakhouse left me with a side-splitting reaction. But seriously on the subject of our coach and eating steak, I remember an interview he gave in which he was asked about a Michigan Rose Bowl appearance during the 80's when he was playing for Bo, and because of injury couldn't play, and was quite disappointed about the whole trip, noting that the Beef Bowl experience put on by Lawry's was perhaps a highlight, or was it just his biggest takeaway, because he said he went for the steak without a personal stake in the game itself. I'm not sure, but eating steak was apparently a key aspect of this not so memorable trip down memory lane.

Harlans Haze

October 17th, 2016 at 2:15 PM ^

the failed Michigan  coach route, why not richrod? I think the arizona experiment is over. You'd think purdue would be better off losing games 49-42, instead of 30-10. Or, if you're going to another recently-fired coach, you'd have to take a look at brian kelly. Don't know that he's going to get  overwhelmed with better offers. He's a proven program-builder, with midwest ties. Not sure if nd is on purdue's schedule, over the next few years. If so, I'm sure he'd love a shot at facing them, again.

matty blue

October 17th, 2016 at 2:32 PM ^

great story.  i love those stories of longtime D1 guys that drop down to high school...i'd love to see ypsilanti playing elliott uzelac's benton harbor team in a state final some day.

Paps

October 17th, 2016 at 3:10 PM ^

Note to Brian:

Georgia State =/= Georgia Southern.  You got this flipped on the podcast as well when Georgia State played Wisconsin.  

GaSt is a new football program who's total butt and made their first bowl game last year and don't look likely to replicate it. 

GaSouthern was a really really good FCS team and made the jump with App State, and have been really good so far at the FBS level.  They are the ones that run the option/Fritzbone/Flexbone attack.  They are quite good, and Purdue should get their old coach. 

PeteM

October 17th, 2016 at 3:23 PM ^

I think that the Georgia Michigan analogy is a good one, and that it especially applies to the Mark Richt/Lloyd Carr eras of the early 2000s.  While Lloyd did make it over the hump in 1997, during the years they overlapped both teams always had lots of talent, won a lot of games, but always seemed destined to come one or two games away from being great.  I suspect as a result that both Richt and Carr weren't appreciated by their schools' fans until they were gone.

I agree that the fan culture and campus towns seem to have some overlap as well.  In my experience Bulldog fans are, like Michigan fans, intense but not over the top.  I haven't been to Athens but with its musical heritage my guess is the comparison to Ann Arbor works in this sense there's a lot going on there beyond college football Saturdays.

I realize playing home and homes in the nonconference is going to get more and more rare but I do hope someday the Bulldogs make it onto Michigan's schedule.

Epic-Blue

October 17th, 2016 at 9:49 PM ^

What about Art Briles at Purdue? Not sure if they're that desperate to win though? We all know he's a hell of a coach. Turning that perennial B12 dumpster fire into a National contender was impressive. If they load up on safety compliance officers and more thorough criminal background checks. It might not be a bad move.



Sent from MGoBlog HD for iPhone & iPad