The guy projected to be the first tackle off the board in a loaded tackle class isn't even on the scary side [via University of Alabama Athletics Communications]

Fee Fi Foe Film: Alabama 2019 Offense Comment Count

Seth December 30th, 2019 at 9:59 AM

Resources: My charting, Alabama game notes (Michigan's not yet available), Alabama roster, CFBstats

The film: The Iron Bowl for all the reasons, including the German one:

Personnel: My diagram:

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PDF version, full-size version (or click on the image)

Yes, Alabama has a lot of star players. That's what happens when you go to the playoffs every year and flaunt the rules to such a degree that paying players through your assistants' salaries is called the "Alabama System" in football circles. Tuscaloosa Football Inc. has had first pick of high school talent for a decade; hanging onto it is a challenge because the NFL takes those who are eligible and those who aren't starting can usually transfer somewhere where they will, however, so there are no seniors.

If you pay attention at all to college football outside of the Big Ten, you know that 5-star QB Tua Tagovailoa pipped incumbent star Jalen Hurts, who transferred to Oklahoma. That left QB Mac Jones, a barely top-400 player, the lead backup when Tua's Heisman campaign was cut short with a hip injury this season. Jones is your standard pre-Hurts Alabama quarterback: a stiff "game manager" who wouldn't look out of place at Michigan State. It's a big deal.

Tight end is the other position causing fret. Nominal starter/former Michigan target TE Major Tennison (+3/-3 in this game) hasn't developed into more than just a guy. He's only on the field a third of the time as they make heavy use of specialists. These are a moonlighting offensive lineman, Kendall Randolph (+6/-2, no bad pass pro events) and still-receiver-sized true freshman TE Jahleel Billingsley, who's rather like Devin Funchess was when he was wearing #19. Backup C Chris Owens will occasionally don a #84 jersey and add to the beef. Owens will also snap a few as a sixth OL, pushing the C, RG, RT, and TE one job to the right.

[Hit THE JUMP for the rest of the breakdown.]

My charting scores for the regular OL have to be considered in the context of the competition—Auburn has one of the best defensive lines in the country, including NG Derrick Brown, who's expected to be the first DT off the board in April. The Tide mostly doubled Brown and left the OTs and the off guard with no help against various projected 3rd/4th rounders. Depressingly, it mostly worked; there's a reason this is widely considered one of the best offensive lines in the country, and after watching it in action I'm not enthused about what they'll do against a banged up Carlo Kemp plus various freshmen and walk-ons.

They got there, of course, by picking first—all of these guys were top-150 players to the two sites paying enough attention, four were inside the composite top 35, and two were top-10. The 2017 Composite's 4th overall prospect LT Alex Leatherwood (+8/-2, –2 pass pro) is a name familiar to Michigan fans from back when Drevno was desperately trying to recruit a start-immediately blindsider. Leatherwood would have sufficed; he's agile, long, strong, still a bit raw at times, and expected to go in the first two rounds of an OT-saturated draft. True freshman LG Evan Neal (+11/-6, –1 prot) was this year's 7th overall prospect, a ridiculously massive freak already developed by IMG into a terrifying offensive weapon. FSU grad transfer (Composite 31st in 2016) C Landon Dickerson (+6.5/-6.5, –0 prot) did a lot of damage as a puller, however his sloppy hard counts appeared to be at fault for most of Bama's five(!) false starts in this Iron Bowl. RG Deonte Brown (+7.5/-8, –1 prot) bore the brunt of Derrick Brown and even drove the big guy a few times. The lone 4-star (177th in the Composite), Deonte's listed "338" comes in quotes; his bench press is the stuff of legends, and it shows on the field. Finally there's (34th, 2017) RT Jedrick Wills Jr. (+8/-5, –0 prot), who has put himself in the discussion to be the first OT off the board in one of the best tackle classes in memory:

As you might imagine, the skill position players are elite, however the receivers have had less opportunity to show it sans Tua. In his place they've leaned on the #1 prospect of 2017, RB Najee Harris (+15/-4, 5.6 YPC and 11 TDs plus 304 yards and 7 TDs on 35 targets in the passing game), a big, do-everything ball of knives who would've been nice to have in a world where Michigan and Alabama play by the same rules. Backup RB Brian Robinson Jr. (4.57 YPC, 5 TDs), gets the other 25% of non-garbage snaps; he's a little less of everything than Harris, except just as patient, and an elite pass blocker.

The receivers Gattis left are about on par with the ones he has now, though with different skills. Slot Jerry Jeudy (959 yards, 71 catches and 9 TDs on 100 targets) is the five-tool superstar, WR DeVonta Smith (14 YPT, 1200 yards, 13 TDs) is the Olave-like deep threat who adds (+6/-2) great downfield and crack blocking to the running game, and WR Henry Ruggs III (14 YPT, 719 yards, 7 TDs) is the slippery weasel who'll turn any underneath catch into a long touchdown. They'll also throw in sophomore slot jitterbug Jaylen Waddle (84% catch rate, 553 yards, 15 YPT, 6 Tds on 38 targets), who's also the most dangerous punt returner in the country. If there's a weakness in this group is there's nobody like (former Bama target) Nico Collins to win badly thrown jump balls—6'6 freshman Tyrell Shavers isn't ready to serve yet. When run-threat southpaw Tua was slinging slants that didn't matter so much, but the dumbed down offense of Mac Jones includes a lot of lofts to guys in single coverage, which isn't what this room was designed for.

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Spread, Pro-Style, or Hybrid? Hybrid.

I forgot to separate regular shotgun snaps from offset gun but it was about 70 normal shotgun with that demi-pistol alignment mostly used for downhill runs, play-action, or RPOs.

Formation   Personnel   Playcall
Down Type Gun Pistol Ace Goal   Avg WRs   Pass PA RPO Run
Standard (61) 70% 18% 8% 3%   2.55   24% 17% 12% 47%
Passing (27) 89% 7% 4% -   2.96   75% 13% 8% 4%
Total (88) 67 13 6 2   2.68   32 13 9 29

The RPO stuff mostly came early—later in the game they shut it down and stuck to runs and play-action.

Basketball on Grass or MANBALL? This is as manball as Michigan's offense, with Counter Trey plus various play-actions and RPOs off of it accounting for almost a quarter of the offense. Pin & Pull (11%), Inside Zone (7%), Outside Zone and some split exotics (6%), ISOs (5%) were the other mainstays. They favored Zone Read Belly in short situations, one time running it with their backup QB/RB/Slot kid on 4th and short. Pure passing was mostly for passing downs. I don't read Bama boards but I bet they've had the same "Is Saban demanding the offense conform to his old school ideas?" arguments we've having.

Auburn had an interesting response to the Pin & Pulls that I clipped because it's certainly something Michigan is going to have to try in this game and because opponents are certainly going to do it to us. You're watching the OLB on the line of scrimmage at the top of the formation:

He sets up outside shoulder, then dives inside. The DT to his side was trying to do the same thing, but failed and Najee found a hole to run through, but note TE#19 (Billingsley) is wasted, and if that weird gap doesn't appear or if Najee doesn't see it, this is one dead Counter Trey.

This will probably be a Neck Sharpies down the line but the short version is the playside DL were setting up on the outside shoulders of their linemen then fighting inside, while the linebackers behind them made sure they were covered.

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LSU used some big dudes for this. Sometimes the puller was able to root them out and make an inside gap, and when that happened Najee usually gashed them. But Bama's tight ends are either 300-pound converted linemen who don't fit in small gaps or quasi-receivers who don't quite know where to go (their TE coach has the profile of a guy on hand mostly for his recruiting). All this fake outside/go inside stuff was too much for the TEs to react to in the fraction of a second they had to do so. Ultimately the best idea they had was to run into the same guy the puller was trying to move.

Hurry it up or grind it out? Grind it out. Saban now acknowledges that the world has changed and his precious defenders can't be rescued from Tempo, but every second at the line of scrimmage has been ceded grudgingly. He'd much rather be pulling pieces on and off the field to create mismatches than locking opponents on the field against a base 11.

Quarterback Dilithium Level (Scale: 1 [Navarre] to 10 [Denard]): You can't throw a meme at the internet these days without coming across an Alabama fan's (usually racially coded) assessment of the difference between Mac Jones and Tua Tagovailoa in the running department. Since it's nearly 2020 and Alabama has finally embraced the 2010s, I was bracing for a guy more on Shea Patterson's level—underrated feet but not quite enough to be called a dual threat. Well:

Ladies and gentleman, we've got a "Pro Style." Bama hadn't changed the offense (yet) so running was often the 3rd read. When it happened, it wasn't that much to worry about beyond what you'd expect a normal football-playing young person is capable of. Let's call it a 4 because I keep getting burned.

HenneChart: They kept things simple:

Mac Jones Good   Neutral   Bad   DSR
Opponent DO CA SCR   PR MA   BA TA IN BR  
Auburn 2 17(8) 3   3 2   2 4 7xx -   63%

Jones was asked to throw a lot of screens and reads that I charitably didn't chart as screens, like second-read dumpoffs to the running back, because the running back is Najee Harris and that's a good idea, and it was also a read. The MSU "TE Fade" that's just OPI to make space for a slant underneath was a popular one. Quite often his line gave Jones plenty of time, but the plays that came out of that were either wide, wide open busts (which then gained many yards because Bama's receivers are mustelids) or chucks that could have been throwaways or just badly overthrown. There were a couple of bombs that landed exactly where they needed to—and the receivers converted those into huge gains—but the majority of the time he unleashed the dragon it flew off to a faraway castle. Also the first pick six was just an extremely awful throw.

I'm not saying he's terrible. He's more like a Speight. You can win with Speight. You don't hate a Speight. On the other hand if you contain everything else and Mac Jones is the thing on Bama's offense that beats you, oh buddy.

Frames Janklin Factor: I'm sorry did you watch the Cotton Bowl I'm sorry I ever doubted you Frames. Unfortunately Saban doesn't make these mistakes, or any mistakes for that matter. There was the one time I thought I was watching a give-up-and-punt when they ran routes a couple yards short of the sticks on 3rd and long, but this set up a 4th and 1.5 and Bama had a Belly play dialed up.

Dangerman: Yes I know the other Tristan Wirfs is on the other side but the left side of the line was the most dominant in this game:

I also came away in fear of any of their receivers getting the ball in space, especially Jaylen "DO NOT PUNT TO" Waddle.

But also Ruggs:

And also Devonta Smith:

I figure by now you already know about Jeudy. You were also dreading this moment, because the engine of post-Tua Bama is, of course Najee Harris.

You may content yourself with knowing had he come to Michigan he probably would have been attacked by a rogue robot turkey the engineering students programmed to assault anyone who says an unkind word about books. You may also feel better knowing this was always going to be his last week in college. You may wish to skip this part now where I confirm he checks all the boxes for a college running back:

☑ Uncanny vision
☑ Outstanding acceleration
☑ Cuts on a dime
☑ Jukes
☑ Really hard to tackle
☑ Super-strong, pile-driver
☑ Just massive
☑ Pretty fast
☑ Plus-plus receiver out of the backfield, can split out and run routes
☑ Totally healthy
☑ Hurdles people
☑ Goddammit he's likeable

The fetters on the Michigan money cannon can't be removed soon enough.

OVERVIEW:

What else did you expect? Auburn won this game with two interception return touchdowns, one of them 100 yards after an underthrown ball bounced off the running back's back. Their other loss was to LSU, a 41-34 sling-a-thon versus Joe Burrow, but that was in the Tua age.

Sans Tua, we're looking at a more vintage Alabama. A Blake Barnett, Jake Coker, Blake Sims, Greg McElroy kind of Alabama where the talent around the game manager is the richest in college football history. Those teams didn't put up 50 points, but even Doug Nussmeier managed to look like a functional offensive coordinator by taking five-star linemen and rolling over anything up to and including elite defensive lines.

Auburn's gamble was they would rather give up 12 yards on first down for a chance to keep it to zero than bleed 4 every down. Let's take a look at the times they managed to force the offense to give up the ball willingly:

  1. Unveil the outside-inside counter to Counter Trey on 2nd and 10 of the first drive. Brings up 3rd and 11, pass batted, field goal.
  2. First blitz of the day brings a safety (named Smoke Monday) outta nowhere. Two dump-offs and a false start later it's a 4th and 16 punt
  3. Najee trips to bring up 2nd and 11. Two incomplete passes and punt.
  4. TE screwup gets an unblocked LB to Harris. Two errant bombs later it's a 4th and 9 punt.
  5. Greater TE screwup leads to 2nd & Goal from the 10. A false start, 5-yard run, and batted pass that probably doesn't connect anyway later they have to try a 30-yard field goal to tie it, and miss.

That's a very Don Brown philosophy but to make it work you're going to have to see hosannas from Hinton or something. Auburn's defense also gave up six touchdown drives, and two more drives that got to the 2 yard line and resulted in zero points because of luck and stuff. I'm sorry to be all doom and gloom, but Michigan's outings against these kinds of monsters this year have resulted in pavings. And we just heard yesterday that Mike Dwumfour couldn't even travel down there, let alone play.

I'm not going to say you can't beat a team of five-stars with three-stars, but you do need pro-caliber players to beat a team that's full of them. You take a Terrance Taylor and Alan Branch against these guys and you're fine. Go into this with Ryan Glasgow and Mo Hurst, or pair a Rob Renes with an Eric Wilson, or a Mike Martin with a Ryan Van Bergen, or a Grant Bowman with a Gabe Watson, and yeah you're in business. I've no doubt Carlo Kemp's going to be a warrior on Wednesday. I've no doubt Chris Hinton, and likely Mazi Smith too, are going to be good or great as soon as next season. Stars don't mean everything.

What they do mean, however, is that if U.S. high schools ever manage to produce a prototypical, ready-made NFL left tackle the minute Michigan desperately needs one, and Alabama wants him, they get to have him; if they ever spit out a perfect running back prospect who loves football more than Harbaugh and loves the Harbaughs more than football, and Alabama wants him, they get to have him; and in the rare instance that the distribution of human genes and secondary education coalesces into a 6'7"/360 being with the agility of a gazelle, the skills of a typical college junior, and the intelligence of a top quartile Michigan freshman who could instantly make literally any team better, the way college football works these days he's going to wear #73 for Alabama.

And I don't think Michigan has the guys to deal with all of that.

Comments

MGoBlue96

December 30th, 2019 at 10:16 AM ^

It's pretty much a given that if UM wants to stay in this game it will take the offense playing their best and most complete game of the year in a shootout type of game. I am not quite abandoning all hope like some are, because the offense moved the ball well against OSU when they weren't shooting themselves in the foot. Just need the offense to play like they did in the first half against OSU sans the mistakes, and maybe they can stay in the game. Don't see any outcome where the D holds Bama to anything less than 35-40 points, I do however see some outcomes where a UM offense playing well without the mistakes can possibly do the same against a Bama defense that is not quite as good as their usual standard this year.

dragonchild

December 30th, 2019 at 11:04 AM ^

And that team couldn't stop Alabama either.  They out-scored them (by the standards of the day).

My only reservation with a shoot-out is that if there's a game-turning botched play or gut-punching bad call in a heavyweight bout, Michigan's always the one with its face in the mud.  We only seem to get these kinds of close calls when we're up three TDs against Northwestern or something.

Michigan4Life

December 30th, 2019 at 3:24 PM ^

Clemson offense finally moved the ball on OSU defense when Shaun Wade was ejected for targeting. Shaun Wade didn't play against Michigan. Not sure if Michigan would've had the same success if Wade was 100% healthy against Michigan.

 

Good thing next year, OSU will have lost Okudah, Arnette, Wade and Fuller to the NFL draft/graduation.

uminks

December 30th, 2019 at 10:24 AM ^

The only question will be Michigan’s offense. Will they be able to keep up with Alabama’s points or will mistakes on offense keep us behind, where we fall way behind, resulting in a big blow out like we experience against OSU at home. My prediction Alabama 52 Michigan 27.

M-Dog

December 31st, 2019 at 9:04 AM ^

This^ 

Alabama is going to score on you anyway, whether they start at their own 20, or on your 40 after a turnover on downs. 

So why even punt on 4th and short?

You'll just tire out your defense while the inevitable happens anyway, and who knows, you might make a few of those 4th and shorts.

 

lhglrkwg

December 30th, 2019 at 12:17 PM ^

Problem is- Bama's defense is just about as talented. Sometimes they've given up 30ish points, but other times they've crushed the other team as usual. This will have to be like how the OSU game would've had to be. We're gonna have to play immaculate on both sides of the ball and hope we can win like 38-35

ih8losing

December 30th, 2019 at 10:28 AM ^

I am very much looking forward to this game. No, I do not expect Michigan to win. Michigan is a good team but not a top tier team, the talent gap is too great and Don Brown hasn't shown he's willing to adjust his defensive plan to offset our weakest point, the DL. Then again, against that NFL ready OL, I don't think it would matter. 

Still, excited to watch the team play one more time in 2019. 

Go Blue!

RockinLoud

December 30th, 2019 at 10:42 AM ^

Don Brown hasn't shown he's willing to adjust his defensive plan to offset our weakest point, the DL. 

This is unequivocally false. He's done more adjusting and frippery that somehow turned this into a decent defense despite not having near the talent he's had in previous years - especially at DT. The difference is those adjustments open up other stuff and the best offenses either take advantage of that, or they're just such an overmatch they just obliterate the defense regardless of any adjustments. 

RockinLoud

December 30th, 2019 at 4:09 PM ^

Also looks like Mattison completely phoned in DT recruiting before he bolted to OSU.

IDK,  UM had one of the better DL classes in recent memory sign last year (this year's true freshman), with Hinton, Mazi, Ojabo. I'd say Mattison did good there.

This year with Nua, outside of McGregor, has been very underwhelming, especially when we really need to get more good DT's.

bronxblue

December 30th, 2019 at 9:27 PM ^

Chris Partridge was the lead recruiter on Hinton and Ojabo; Mattison was co-lead with Moore on Smith.

Mattison was the 167th-ranked recruiter per 24/7 last year; that was (I believe) 6th on the staff.  Michigan's recruiting seems to be more regional than positional (Mattison seemed to mostly recruit MI and OH last year), and it's clear at this point whatever ability Mattison had in bringing in top guys has dissipated (witness the fact he brought in one of OSU's few 3* players this year as his only recruit).

funkywolve

December 30th, 2019 at 4:37 PM ^

The catch is the 2017 recuriting class was loaded on the dline and unfortunately, it has completely dissolved within two years.  Going off of 247:

Aubrey Solomon, DT, 23rd ranked player in the country.

Luiji Vilain, WDE, 57th ranked player in the country

James Hudson, DT, 231st ranked player in the country

Deron Irving-Bey, SDE, 249th ranked player in the country

The only one of those guys who wasn't listed as 280lbs or more coming out of high school was Vilain.  For various reasons, all 4 ended up being whiffs.  That's a huge hole.  Those guys would be juniors or redshirt sophomores on this team.

dragonchild

December 30th, 2019 at 11:26 AM ^

He's the boss, but you can't win a battle without troops.

IIRC he's coaching the linebackers, and we have some good linebackers.  Mattison was in charge of D-line.  The guys he had stagnated until Nua arrived, a good number of them left, and he brought in nobody to replace them.

Harbaugh shouldn't have trusted Mattison, but I figure he didn't expect to be betrayed by a longtime friend of the family.

Ziff72

December 30th, 2019 at 12:30 PM ^

You are correct that it all falls on the feet of the guy in charge, but do you give anyone any breaks for just well bad fucking luck?   I know you can blame the evaluations but consider the guys that are supposed to be playing at DT.    Solomon, Hudson and the other 4 guys who didn't work out in that class.  You can blame Mattison, Brown or whoever but that dline class was an epic disaster of injuries, transfers and disappointing players.  

Solomon not working out for whatever reason is the biggest issue with this team over the last 2 years.   Having an NFL 1st rd player at DT the last 2 years changes everything.     

  

Maize N' Ute

December 30th, 2019 at 2:15 PM ^

::Checks 247::

Nothing, unless you're banking on a kid who weighs less than 240 lbs to pack on another 60 in a year to two.  Looks like Michigan is going with the strategy of recruting small guys, packing on weight, and hoping they can play DT in 3-4 years. 

Sounds like a solid plan to me.

MGoBlue96

December 30th, 2019 at 10:34 AM ^

The problem is there seem to be two unwinnable matchups against Bama's offense. Michigans 3rd and 4th CB's against Bama's WR's and Bama's o-line against UM d-line line. If only one of those matchups was a problem you could do things to help the individual units in the matchups, both means you have to pick your poison. Committing extra bodies to try and help against Bama's run game is just going to get CB's roasted by Bama's receivers in one on one coverage. Not committing extra bodies is going to lead to Bama putting up 300+ rushing yards. It's pretty much a  choice for Don Brown if you want a slow death or quick death on defense. Worst case is both things are happening like against OSU, and you get 50+ scored on you. Have to find a way to only get killed in one of those matchups, can't have a OSU situation where you are getting paved in the run game and still giving up big explosive passing plays on top of it.

DualThreat

December 30th, 2019 at 11:33 AM ^

If it were me, I'd roll the dice on the CB vs WR battle and load up the box.  Force the inexperienced QB to make the throws.  Tell our CBs to take chances on guessing/jumping routes.  Yes we'll be burned a few times, but it may setup a few INTs.  Since we're likely not stopping their offense anyway, I'd rather take some chances on INTs and give up the quick score then just let them methodically drive down the field every possession.

Of course, saying all this means QB Jones will play the game of his career.  sigh

outsidethebox

December 30th, 2019 at 12:08 PM ^

I believe this to be the correct tack. Michigan is going to have to gamble-especially on defense. If Michigan chooses to play Alabama straight up they will get beat everywhere. The gambling is going to have to be very smart, well-disguised. It will be a huge challenge but not impossible. Alabama has exceptional skilled speed everywhere. Do things like using 6 DBs and playing man-zone combos that bring both pressure and coverage from unexpected places.

lhglrkwg

December 30th, 2019 at 12:21 PM ^

I agree. I think the clear best path for us to try to force Bama to beat us passing. More likely to turn out well than Bama running for 300 on us, though that might happen no matter what we do. Gotta try to take advantage of the only weak spot on this team

SeattleWolverine

December 30th, 2019 at 12:56 PM ^

I agree with that approach. But I also don't discount the possibility that they could put 70 on us with that tact. I mean, their WRs are on aggregate more talented than OSU's and will get pretty open. If Jones is serviceable this does not end well for us. But so it goes when facing a more talented team. 

RockinLoud

December 30th, 2019 at 10:35 AM ^

This game is going to be such an ass-kicking that the OSU game will seem competitive in comparison. Maybe they don't score 56, but I wouldn't be too surprised if they scored more either. I'll be shocked if they don't get at minimum 300 yds rushing, maybe even 400.

MGoBlue96

December 30th, 2019 at 10:38 AM ^

See this I don't agree with, UM will most likely be able to score some points on this Bama defense. They are not as good as OSU's defense this year and that was before a couple of their starters decided to sit for this game. UM scored 27 on a better OSU defense and easily left 14+ points on the field with miscues. Most likely Bama will win this game, but it is not a foregone conclusion it will be ugly like OSU because UM's was a top 15 type of offense in the second half of the year.

East Quad

December 30th, 2019 at 10:37 AM ^

Pretty ugly matchup unless no one on AL wants to play and they are immune to the Hurricane Saban will become if they are apathetic.

Go Blue - I am rooting for you!!!