Preview: 2016 Orange Bowl Comment Count

Brian

10324460 (1)Essentials

WHAT Michigan vs
Florida State
WHERE The Orange Bowl,
Miami, FL
WHEN 8 Eastern
December 30th, 2016
THE LINE M -7
TELEVISION ESPN
TICKETS From $184
WEATHER clear, 60-ish
 
Many numbers herein courtesy Pro Football Focus.

Overview

Michigan and FSU are both vying to prove to the world that they are the top five team they were purported to be before the season, so the Orange Bowl has some stakes. You know the picture above, and you know that it came after Michigan beat a very good Alabama team in this game. Playoff or not, there will be a flaming spear in the field tomorrow and that means quite a bit.

Not that I have to tell anyone who's playing under Jim Harbaugh that.

Run Offense vs FSU

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Tupou 2.0?

FSU has a good-but-not great defense prone to breakdowns. S&P+ has them 18th in the country overall; they're 31st against the run. FSU is relatively good at preventing "successful" plays and bad at preventing big ones. They rank 103rd in S&P+'s explosiveness metric, though the raw numbers are more positive. They're middle of the pack in the ACC at 20+ yard runs ceded.

A whole season picture may be excessively harsh, however. FSU was bombed in back to back games by Louisville and South Florida early in the season; since they've crushed various bad ground games and suffered the likes of North Carolina and NC State to squeeze out four yards a pop. Michigan's rush offense is 42nd in S&P+, not in the same class as UL (1st nationally) or USF (8th), and they can expect a struggle.

DT Derrick Nnadi drives the bus for FSU; his PFF +24 as a rush defender came in just 480 snaps. That's about 50% better than any of Michigan's diverse and sundry interior DL on a per-snap basis. FSU's production falls off after that, with a couple of guys around +10 and then some other folks who have scraped above zero. Brian Burns, a five-star recruit rushed to the starting lineup, is the weak point. This is because he is a 220 pound WDE.

The rest of the defense has been decidedly meh, especially with starting safeties Derwin James and Ermon Lane ruled out. LB Josh Sweat has been up and down, offsetting a solid run grade with dismal pass rush; fellow starting LBs Matthew Thomas and Ro'Derrick Hoskins are almost perfectly average. The secondary is poor in rush D, and with some young or inexperienced players trying to fill Lane's shoes there's a decent chance a run that reaches the third level finds air.

Getting there is rather the trick for a Michigan rushing offense that's scuffled late in the year. Michigan has two good OL in Mason Cole and Erik Magnuson; the remainder of the line has been sketchy at best. While FSU presents a couple weaknesses OSU didn't have, Nnadi is about as good as Iowa's Jaleel Johnson, and Johnson dominated his matchup on the interior.

Michigan will move the ball in fits and starts; expect some big plays and some second and thirteens.

KEY MATCHUP: BEN BREDESON versus A MONTH OF PRACTICE TIME. Best bet for Michigan is for Bredeson to get radically better a la a few players from last year's bowl game. Nobody else has the kind of upward mobility he does, and if Michigan doesn't get a better performance out of their OL than they did against OSU it's going to be a lot of grunting for little product.

[Hit THE JUMP for oh man this OL versus Michigan's DL]

Pass Offense vs FSU

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Walker is coming for you

Absurd person DeMarcus Walker has 15 sacks on the year, a +40 PFF grade, and a fringe first round NFL draft grade. At a burly 6'4", 280, he's a strongside end that brings an incredible amount of pass rush and is hopefully a preview of what Rashan Gary will be next year. As far as this year goes, you're going to find out what it looks like when Taco Charlton goes up against Michigan's tackles in practice. Projection: not well for the tackles.

Nnadi and Burns are also impact rushers, though Burns's sack numbers (10) appear to exceed his current ability. He's +6.5 as a rusher to PFF and doesn't have the same kind of ancillary hit/pressure numbers that Walker or the various Michigan DL do. He looks to be feasting off of sacks Walker is forcing but not collecting.

Add it up and this is the #3 team in adjusted sack rate. Michigan's not bad at protecting—27th—and Wilton Speight has proven that he's got a knack for buying time in the pocket. It is still reasonable to expect Walker and company to disrupt a number of drives.

When Michigan can protect Speight they should have a good time. FSU is a bottom-tier ACC team when it comes to surrendering long passes—they're about Wake Forest's equal at 20+ and 30+; they're 95th in the PFF explosiveness metric. That was with Lane, a freshman converted WR who wasn't good but was significantly better than FSU's alternatives.

Top CB Tarvarus McFadden is a quality player with a Stribling-like PFF grade; Marquez White is a little better than average, and then things get hairy. Whoever ends up playing at safety or nickel corner is going to be a middling-at-best player who has to check Jake Butt or whoever Michigan throws in the slot. Grant Perry's absence will hurt, since he had a breakout bowl game and was productive against Ohio State. In his stead Michigan will look to one of their three freshman slot types or possibly Drake Harris.

Most of Michigan's offense will come through the air; it's critical for Michigan to get Walker thinking screen or run or draw and give whoever ends up with him the requisite amount of help. Michigan will look for a healthy Wilton Speight to have the same kind of eye-opening performance Jake Rudock had a year ago. The outcome of this game largely rests on whether Speight is the flamethrower he was after the bye week or the guy who clunked around against Iowa and didn't even attempt a deep ball against OSU.

KEY MATCHUP: EVERYBODY versus WALKER. Kori the Cord Guy will be involved in some protections.

Run Defense vs FSU

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This is Dalvin Cook versus the world. Cook is, in a word, ridiculous. Youtube is littered with totally rad and unwatchable Cook highlight videos; here's a relatively demure set of highlights from this year's Clemson-FSU game:

If you let this man get the edge you will be lining up for an extra point block. He carries a +22.4 rushing grade from PFF and is possibly the best back in the country.

The problem for Florida State is everyone else. No FSU regular grades out positively as a run blocker other than left tackle Roderick Johnson, who's +5. The rest of the OL ranges from –11 to 0 save Cole Minishew, who we're projecting as a starting guard amongst considerable uncertainty. Nine different Seminole OL have seen at least 150 snaps; only Johnson and Minishew are positive, or anywhere near it. Center Alec Eberle is –14; RT Rick Leonard is –12, and both of those guys have racked up those numbers in 50-60% of FSU's snaps. There are OL playing for Rutgers who would press for playing time on this line.

Compounding matters is poor peripheral blocking. FSU's outside receivers are both in the red; TE Ryan Izzo is about even, and he's been hit with a bunch of holding calls.

So this might look oddly familiar. Michigan's played some electric scatback types saddled with terrible offensive lines this year. Games against Penn State and Maryland saw Saquon Barkley and Lorenzo Harrison struggle to find anything between the tackles. Barkley got a couple chunks on short passes, and Harrison beat Mike McCray to the edge for a first down here and there. FSU will probably emulate these teams. They'll attempt to avoid Michigan's defensive tackles at all costs and hit Michigan on the edges or try to exploit their linebackers in space.

The good news for Michigan is that Don Brown is familiar with Cook and Florida State. Last year's Boston College-FSU game was a great defensive performance that was, as usual, ruined by the BC offense. FSU gained just 217 yards; Cook was held to 3.6 YPC on 15 carries. Brown won't be caught out by the things FSU tries to do, except for the usual we-had-a-month-to-prepare stuff that both teams will be armed with.

QB Deondre Francois is an athletic guy who could help balance things out for FSU but the Seminoles are loathe to put too much more on his plate. FSU's called just 45 QB runs this year. That's about 4 carries a game.  He might get Michigan for a chunk or two on a called play. He won't be JT Barrett.

Given the matchup between Michigan's DL and FSU's OL this should be an exercise in discovering how much Dalvin Cook can make by himself against an elite defense. Survey says: some. Cook's going to get stuffed a ton and end up in a very dangerous situation two or three times. Michigan needs to keep those latter events to 20 yards instead of 70.

One thing to watch out for here: Cook has fumbled six times this year, losing four.

KEY MATCHUP: MICHIGAN SAFETIES, INCLUDING JABRILL PEPPERS, versus 70 YARD COOK TOUCHDOWNS. If it comes to it, Michigan should repeat Dymonte Thomas's approach against Barkley: give up an extra ten yards to make sure you can live to fight again after a 30 yard chunk.

Pass Defense vs FSU

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the past and hopefully the future

Chances are that when you turned on an FSU game this year you saw one of three things: 1) Deondre Francois getting obliterated, 2) a replay of Deondre Francois getting obliterated, or 3) a montage of various times during the game when Deondre Francois got obliterated.

This is slightly misleading. FSU is by no means a good pass-protecting line, but they're not totally horrendous. Francois got sacked 32 times this year; FSU ended up 85th in sack rate allowed.  PFF charged FSU blockers with 24 hits above and beyond those sacks and 72 hurries. Francois dropped back 450 times this year, and got some form of pressure 29% of the time. This is about NCAA average. You remember Francois getting obliterated because the FSU games you turned on were probably Louisville and Clemson. Those elite pass rushes combined for 11 sacks.

Speaking of elite pass rush, here are Michigan DL PFF grades in that department: +20, +19, +17, +13, +10, +6, –1. Matt Godin is the only Michigan DL with 150+ snaps who doesn't have an excellent grade in that department, and Ben Gedeon and Mike McCray did a bunch of damage themselves. Michigan had 48(!) sacks, 69(!) QB hits aside from those, and 169(!!!) hurries.

That is 286 pressure events on 301 passes, and now we know that PFF will hand out multiple pressure events per play. Francois will be running for his life. Like Cook, he might be fumbling as he does it. He's put it on the ground eight times this year.

When afforded opportunities to do anything else Francois has an excellent receiving corps. #1 Travis Rudolph has been omnipresent for FSU this year, and if his raw numbers aren't amazing (53 catches, 798 yards) that's mostly because FSU spreads the ball out more thoroughly than anyone in the country. Seven different players have 30+ targets; Rudolph leads with 88. His 60% catch rate and 9.1 yards per target are both excellent. Funchess-esque Auden Tate is the deep threat and even more efficient; Jesus Wilson, Nyqwan Murray, and Kermit Whitfield are all interchangeable slot types. FWIW, Tate was spotted in a no-contact jersey a few days ago and may be dinged or unavailable.

Meanwhile, Cook pops up again here as a lethal threat. 10.7 yards per target is an insane number for a running back. He's got 31 catches on the season and figures to add another half-dozen tomorrow.

Michigan matches up well against this unit. They can expect to win most of the battles on the outside without help and the two primary safeties have been excellent in coverage against slots much of the year. Meanwhile, pass rush. The chief dangers are broken plays when Francois escapes the pocket and the threat of a screen, checkdown, or wheel route to Cook.

KEY MATCHUP: LINEBACKERS IN SPACE against DALVIN COOK AGAIN. Akrum Wadley and Saquon Barkley had a ton of success on quick throws. Michigan DL will probably search out Cook and chip him coming out of the backfield, slightly blunting the pass rush in exchange for what they hope will be the neutralization of FSU's top threat.

Special Teams

FSU is undergoing a #collegekickers period here. Freshman Ricky Aguayo was yanked from the Florida game after a miss (from 49) and a block; it looks like fellow freshman Logan Tyler is set to replace him. Tyler's 1/2 on the year but that make was from 53. Aguayo is 17/24 this year  with a clear bifurcation. He's 11/11 from within 40 and 6/13 outside of 40; S&P+ has him slightly above average.

Tyler is also the punter. Typically Ruthless PFF Special Teams Grader has him –22.4 and this makes sense. Only about a quarter of his punts are returned but FSU is giving up 21 yards a pop on those 13 returns, with huge chunks ceded in multiple games. His net of 34 yards is Not Good.

FSU has gotten little from their return units aside from an 89-yard punt return TD against Charleston Southern; they have suffered the punt coverage follies described above and have been solid on kickoffs. Tyler puts two thirds of his kickoffs into the endzone.

Add it up and FSU is 125th in FEI's special teams metric, with punting both ways killing them—FEI disregards FCS games so the Noles don't get credit for that TD. Michigan is second. With Kenny Allen seemingly over his early-season slump Michigan should have a clear advantage here. How much of one depends on how many returnable punts Jabrill Peppers gets, how far away from him FSU defenders are, and if Michigan gets its hands on another punt.

KEY MATCHUP: AHHHH YOU PUT IT THROUGH THE UPRIGHTS.

Intangibles

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Cheap Thrills

Worry if...

  • Dalvin Cook runs a wheel route.
  • Dalvin Cook breaks contain on the edge.
  • Dalvin Cook DeMarcus Walker is bearing down on Speight's blindside.

Cackle with knowing glee if...

  • Francois looks like Devin Gardner about halfway through the game.
  • Speight looks like a killer after another opportunity to regather himself and absorb some Harbaugh coaching.
  • The huge gap in special teams metrics pays off.

Fear/Paranoia Level: 5 (Baseline 5; +1 for Oh God Dalvin Cook, –1 for Don Brown Kind Of Owns Him Though, +1 for Oh God DeMarcus Walker, +1 for And Some Other Dudes, –1 for Harbaugh Bowl Motivation Edge Theory, –1 for Seriously, Rutgers-Class OL, +1 for Quasi Road Game, –1 for You Can Feel The Peppers Special Teams Play Coming.)

Desperate need to win level: 8 (Baseline 5; +1 for This Is An Important Bowl, +1 for When Do We Ever Play FSU?, +1 for So Are We A Top Five Team Or Not, +1 for Many Farewells Will Go Well Or Badly, –1 for Lingering Bitter Hangover).

Loss will cause me to... block/mute scathing hordes of #FSUtwitter.

Win will cause me to... get blocked by all of #FSUtwitter

The strictures and conventions of sportswriting compel me to predict:

A defensive game dominated by the respective DLs that will be hard to pry apart unless 1) Cook blows up and through 75 tackles or 2) Speight looks like unkillable robot Speight again. If neither happens this will be frequent punting and a lot of quarterbacks looking for help.

Michigan should have the edge there. Both pass rushes are killer; FSU has a below-average pass pro line versus Michigan's good one. Meanwhile FSU has been shredded on punt returns and does not have Michigan's punt block chops; they're also enduring turmoil at kicker. A field position game favors Michigan. Unless it doesn't in the low-sample, high variance world of special teams, but I can only project the past into the future no matter how many times that's seemed dumb.

Finally, three opportunities for me to look stupid Sunday:

  • Speight passes for 300 yards and looks like the kind of guy who can carry a young team next year.
  • Francois is sacked 6 times.
  • Michigan, 25-18

Comments

tlhwg

December 29th, 2016 at 9:13 PM ^

Rutgers having OL who could start for FSU. Rutgers O is #127 (of 128). FSUs O is #6. The last 2 games (’Cuse, UF) with Rod, Minshew, Eberle, Bell & Leonard have been the best games of the season for the OL. Expect these 5 to start tomorrow night. They're big & athletic. Can't wait to watch this game.

Bill22

December 29th, 2016 at 9:33 PM ^

I will be happy if Mich is half as motivated for this game as they were for Fla in the Citrus last year. 17 starters are heading to the NFL and the OSU game is a lot to over come. Just feels like they may not be very motivated. I hope I'm wrong. Also, if I were Jabrill Peppers' Mom/Coach/Friend/etc I will strongly recommend he not play in this game. What's the point? If you're a top 10-15 pick in the NFL, hang out on the sidelines and let someone else play. We won without him last year.

harmon98

December 29th, 2016 at 10:04 PM ^

Threw up a lil bit in my mouth watching that Dalvin Cook Clemson reel. Good grief.

Heard a FSU blogger say he's the best back FSU has ever had. Hard to argue. 

Amaznbluedoc

December 29th, 2016 at 10:35 PM ^

It's interesting that no one is discussing the angle that this is for all intensive purposes a home game for fsu. Like the CA bowls where the B10 was always at a disadvantage, the OB is home turf for these guys. Our kids come down are dazzled by Disney and all of the other stuff whereas for the fsu kids it's just another, albeit high profile game. Plus we haven't been playing well on the road this year. Harbaugh and Co. should be coming in with a chip and I'm hoping for a B10 beat down. M 34 - FSU 13. Go Blue!

tlhwg

December 30th, 2016 at 10:45 AM ^

And most players from FL. FSU has played in the OB stadium 6 times (including one this year already) and is 6-0 there. They're very comfortable there. Fun fact: the stadium is (currently) called Hard Rock stadium. In FL the Seminole Indian tribe owns the Hard Rock casinos. There's a reason people call this stadium "Doak South". ;-)

TrueBlue2003

December 30th, 2016 at 11:44 AM ^

The LA teams have a huge advantage in the Rose Bowl because they are literally playing in their home town, able to practice exactly the way they do all year, able to sleep in the same beds they do all year.  Proximity is one thing but routine is also a huge part of home field advantage.

FSU doesn't have their home routine in Miami, so the location isn't much of an advantage for them.

ST3

December 29th, 2016 at 11:39 PM ^

Two second team all big ten linemen and a freshman all American are "sketchy at best?" It's sad to see how divorced from reality some people's opinion is of our offensive line. Third highest YPG and fourth highest YPC in the last 25 seasons is sketchy at best?!? (Without the benefit of Denard or Tyrone Wheatley.) Ask yourself if our inability to grind out first downs against OSU has anything to do with our QB who could not throw more than 10 yards downfield. Frankly, "sketchy at best" is one of the most asinine things I've read on this blog. I'm done. Peace out.

MaizeAndBlueWahoo

December 29th, 2016 at 11:46 PM ^

Next time someone tries to tell us bowl games are "meaningless exhibitions" I'm pointing to "Desperate Need to Win Level: 8" and basically every quote our players have put out there in the last two weeks talking about how badly they want to win the damn thing.

Blue in PA

December 30th, 2016 at 8:21 AM ^

A healthy Wilt who has been thinking of and working for redemption since 11/26 will have one of his best games.  Knowing Free Shoes U will be stacking the box to stuff the run, JH and Drev will use the passing game to set up the run..  

 

Jim 34 Jimbo 17 

Bill22

December 30th, 2016 at 10:21 AM ^

The most recent mock drafts have Peppers in the top 5 or 6 overall picks, how much could he really improve his stock? I think we underestimate the importance of having high 1st rd draft pick picks toward recruiting five star types. Look at what OSU is doing. They had 3 picks in the top 10 this year and now are looking to sign 6+ five star recruits. I think it actually benefits Mich more long-term if we don't risk a Jaylon Smith type injury with Peppers and let a Khaleke Hudson get this playing experience for next year.

mgeoffriau

December 30th, 2016 at 12:21 PM ^

Good grief, Cook turns the corner so quickly and smoothly. It looks like he's just trying to get a few extra yards before going out of bounds and then all of a sudden he's moving upfield.

rkjjeep

December 30th, 2016 at 12:30 PM ^

Harbaugh is PISSED, and he has a knack for getting his team PISSED in just the right way to play well.  I believe they want to finish #2.  Beat the hell out of FSU and pass everyone but BAMA.  Go BLUE!!

tlhwg

December 30th, 2016 at 3:44 PM ^

Who has the better starting 4 DL: Michigan or Clemson?

Just to be clear, here's the starting 4:

Clemson -

DE Wilkins, Christian SO
DT Watkins, Carlos RS SR
DT Lawrence, Dexter FR
DE Ferrell, Clelin RS FR

Michigan - 

DE Wormley, Chris RS SR
NT Godin, Matthew RS SR
DT Glasgow, Ryan RS SR
BUCK Charlton, Taco SR

Last, Clemson has very good LBs and a great DC (who won the Broyles award this year).  Obviously, your secondary is better than Clemsons'.

The reason I ask is obvious.  FSU's O had a good day vs. Clemson, e.g., FSU outgained Clemson's O on a YPP basis, was up by 8 points in the 4th, etc.... then the best player in CFB (at least according to Nick Saban), Deshaun Watson happened :(

JBE

December 30th, 2016 at 4:08 PM ^

I'm not sure what the hell you're talking about, or what your point is. FSU had a good day against Clemson on offense, which isn't surprising because Clemson's defense isn't good, and far less talented or complete than Michigan's D. Not sure what you're getting at here. Edit: Response to the post above mine. Not the OP.

JBE

December 30th, 2016 at 5:34 PM ^

I've seen all their mediocre, middle of the pack numbers. And I've watched pretty much every Clemson game this year. Their defense is not so good. It's not terrible, but it's not good either. FSU has the better defense by far. Michigan blows Clemson out of the water in every defensive metric as well, in a tougher conference.