Michigan Pass Blocking Woes in a Chart

Submitted by EastCoast Esq. on

I'm no expert, but I think this may be part of the problem with our passing game.

h/t Garrett Fishaw

 

Here's how Michigan's offensive line has fared in pass protection this season, based on our Pass Block Efficiency Rating pic.twitter.com/WMszBtimgy

— CFB Film Room (@CFBFilmRoom) September 18, 2017

 

Indiana Blue

September 19th, 2017 at 11:17 AM ^

Air Force blitz was rather obvious, yet I never saw a receiver break off into a quick slant or a stop route to give WS a quick throwing option ... is WS not seeing the blitz ?   Also - WS missed Ty on at least 2 obvious dump off throws with Ty having plenty of space.  I'm certain the coaches see this ... so I hope it's fixed by Saturday.

Go Blue!

ak47

September 19th, 2017 at 11:43 AM ^

Having wr's break those routes off, and in the correct way, and having your qb know it will happen is part of where massive inexperience in our receiving core is a big problem.  This isn't madden, that doesn't just happen overnight and Speight has been working with most of these guys for under a year.

quigley.blue

September 19th, 2017 at 11:28 AM ^

There is just no way in hell this is accurate.  I mean, even if the IDEA is accurate, and 3 of the 5 of them are truly bad, there is simply no way that we are 3-0 with the right side of the line THAT bad.

LSAClassOf2000

September 19th, 2017 at 11:28 AM ^

That distirbution is....interesting but not surprising and I think it meshes what we've seen in-game really - the right side of that offensive line needs to figure something out and hopefully soon. I kind of wonder what the mechanics of this analysis are though - I question just how big this difference may be.

As someone kind of touched on above, I wonder what the compression is between #1 and #2 at a couple of these spots, or rather, what the competition has been like, especially on the right side. 

tbeindit

September 19th, 2017 at 11:30 AM ^

Maybe this is just me, but a 0.5 rating for a starting offensive lineman at a Big Ten school seems unbeliveable. While I admit to having no idea how they calculate these numbers, that just doesn't seem possible to me.

Like, in the grand scheme of college football, how could someone earn a starting job at a school like Michigan with a 0.5 score? There are 128 FBS teams. I know run blocking isn't included here, but I have serious questions about the scaling here. Are we seriously to believe that Ulizio could only start at six or seven schools in FBS? While, I get everyone has concerns about his play so far, that seems unbelievable to me.

 

 

taistreetsmyhero

September 19th, 2017 at 12:01 PM ^

Brian documented just yesterday how terrible Hoke was at recruiting OL, and how comprehensively barren the cupboard was when Harbaugh returned. That was compounded by some extremely untimely recruiting misses.

Ulizio was a 3* flyer. He seemingly lost a year of weight training and practice development to mono. And now, as a starter, he is making mental errors. So he doesn't really seem to have size, talent, or football IQ.

I agree with others that sample size issues are massive with this chart so early in the season. But, to this point, it makes sense to say that Ulizio has probably been one of the worst starting tackles of any team so far this season.

YoOoBoMoLloRoHo

September 19th, 2017 at 12:17 PM ^

performers Harbaugh recruits while Cole and Kugler are Hoke's? Or, is the argument that Harbaugh's recruits are still too young to perform and the OL will be much better? My biggest concern is the last two classes have only produced Onwenu and Bredeson - the rest are a complete unknown (Ruiz has shown potential in his few snaps). If we were starting 3 frosh and could see high potential, then it would indicate forward improvement. The OL has to replace the two best players next year AND develop the current 3 underclassmen. It seems like 2018 will be a mixed bag and the OL won't become top tier until 2019 at the earliest.

Jasper

September 19th, 2017 at 12:53 PM ^

First, elephants in the room (in no particular order):

* Newsome's injury was *really* unfortunate.

* Devery Hamilton's last-minute decommitment (coupled with the miss on Jean Delance). If you want to judge Harbaugh harshly for anything, it may be his '16 O-lineman class.

* Runyan was a "legacy" recruit. BoMoCarr and Hoke all did that. He may still work out fine, as he's a good athlete.

* Harbaugh had only a few weeks to get the '15 class together. If Ulizio ends up as a miss, well, I'll accept it.

As for '17, "the rest are a complete unknown." Well, no shit. Of course they are. It's too early to say much of anything. Really, Bredeson and Onwenu (and Spanellis) shouldn't be judged yet.

 

tbeindit

September 19th, 2017 at 12:28 PM ^

Look, you could convince me that Ulizio is Michigan's weakest offensive starter. You could even convince me that he's one of the weaker starters in the Big Ten and among all Power Five teams.

But, from a numbers perspective, a 0.5 rating just doesn't make sense. As a few people here have mentioned, this site offers little as to how they get these numbers (which should raise even more doubt). However, 0.5 implies Ulizio doesn't even crack the first percentile of FBS football.

Maybe this is obvious, but think about the last percentile of FBS football for a second. Last year's S&P bottom six teams were UConn, Nevada, Charlotte, UL-Monroe, Buffalo, and Texas State. There were 14 (!!!) teams that finished behind Rutgers. We're not talking about "down recruiting" for a Big Ten team. Three-star recruits should blow away a 0.5 rating. Hell, a major recruit should be able to beat that number as a freshman or first-year player.

My issue here isn't with negatively rating the offensive line. My issue is that a 0.5 rating doesn't make sense and, as such, I'm not sure what these "ratings" tell us. 

 

 

taistreetsmyhero

September 19th, 2017 at 1:58 PM ^

you keep saying 0.5 "rating" and that you don't know what the rating tells us. They explicitly say it is a percentile, so they are saying he is in the bottom 0.5%ile of starting tackles (it says they group tackles separately from interior OL).

Second, Ulizio was not a major recruit, or even a high-end 3 star recruit. He was a last minute scramble addition during the transition year.

Third, Ulizio lost a year of development to mono.

Fourth, Ulizio has looked pretty terrible in every single game. So this definitely passes the eye test.

However, the inherent flaw with this metric is that it is based on a small sample size of games, as you and other users have pointed out, and Michigan has played relatively more games against better defenses than many other teams.

Leaders And Best

September 19th, 2017 at 11:39 AM ^

The one issue with this graphic: Michigan has played a schedule with no cupcakes. Their data could be skewed by the fact that other teams have played MAC and FCS opponents in the first weeks of the season and such a small sample size. If 50-100% of your data is from teams outside the Power 5 or AAC, you are going to look a lot better and be more efficient.

It is not a good sign for the right side of the OL, but it is hard to take too much from this without seeing more of their data and more games against equal competition.

Leaders And Best

September 19th, 2017 at 11:54 AM ^

Cincinnati is better than most FCS, Sun Belt, CUSA, & MAC teams. How do you define a cupcake?

And part of my point is that Cincinnati is 33% of our schedule. Compare that to MSU who has played 100% MAC teams. Because the sample size is so small, having an FCS team or avoiding top-30 teams through the first 3 weeks could skew results significantly.

I'm not saying there isn't a problem. UFR has showed that the right side of the line has been suspect against the pass. I just don't think it is nearly as bad as that graphic makes it out to be.

HarbaughsLeftElbow

September 19th, 2017 at 11:55 AM ^

To play devils advocate: The team historically recruits better than a MAC snack and could end up a bowl team if they continue to improve (Michigan is their only loss right now). Their play in the first game of the season could be a bad representation of the team as a whole. 

 

 

 

mgowill

September 19th, 2017 at 12:05 PM ^

#41 in S&P+ defense which is slightly above average.  The cupcake portion of their team is the offense.

Florida is #8 in S&P+ defense.  

Compare that with Penn State who hasn't played a team with a defense ranked above #80.  I'd venture to guess their OL would grade out well in this exercise. 

ScooterTooter

September 19th, 2017 at 11:46 AM ^

How is this figured? I went to their site, these stats aren't listed, there are no comparisons to other teams and no explanation for how they got these numbers. 

I'm gonna say this is probably bullshit. 

pescadero

September 19th, 2017 at 1:35 PM ^

Counting redshirt as 0.5 and non-redshirt year as 1:

 

2017 Michigan experience: 15 (SR, SO, RS SR, SO, RS SO)

 

2016 (S&P Offense rank)

#1 Oklahoma. Experience - 11.5 (RS SO, RS FR, JR, RS SO, SO)

#2 FSU. Experience - 16.5 (JR, RS SR, RS SO, RS JR, JR)

#3 Pitt. Experience - 15 (SR, SR, JR, SO, SO)

#4 Texas Tech. Experience - 12.5 (SR, FR, SR, SO, RS FR)

#5 California. Experience - 20.5 (RS JR, RS SR, RS SR, RS JR, RS SR)

#6 Clemson. Experience -14.5 (SO, RS SO, RS SR, RS JR, SO)

#7 USF. Experience -15.5 (RS FR, SR, JR, JR, SR)

#8 Ok. St. Experience -16.5 (RS SR, RS FR, RS JR, RS JR, RS JR)

#9 Alabama. Experience -13 (JR, SO, JR, SR, FR)

#10 Louisville. Experience -16 (SO, SR, RS SR, JR, RS SO)

 

ChuckVegasGoBlue

September 19th, 2017 at 1:58 PM ^

Ruiz seems to be our best hi floor-hi ceiling prospect combo on the line. With Kugler's very solid play at C (a pre-season q-mark), how about moving Braedenson to RT and Ruiz to LG? Braedenson is better equipped for LG but is experienced at RT and has another year in the offense. He is likely to be improved over last year which looks to be a big improvement over Uluzio at this point in his career. I am typically not a proponent of messing with a teams strength (left side of line) but this could be a clear case of addition by subtraction.