Monday Presser 9-21-15: Jim Harbaugh Comment Count

Adam Schnepp

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[Upchurch]

News bullets and other items:

  • Harbaugh made it abundantly clear that there’s no QB controversy. He said Rudock’s the best QB on the team, and “not by a small margin.”
  • Kyle Kalis graded out as the best offensive lineman on Saturday.
  • Harbaugh was very impressed with Channing Stribling, saying no one in the secondary has shown more improvement.
  • Chesson was the offensive and special teams player of the game, and Lewis was the defensive player of the game.
  • Kerridge could possibly play Saturday. He’s “working through something.”

“Whaddaya got? I’m ready to go! I’m excited about my team!”

Can you talk about what you’ve seen out of BYU? What impresses you most about their offense?

“Well, good receivers. Big receivers. Good quarterback. Big, physical team on both sides of the ball. Very athletic. They play extremely hard.

“I think this will be a great test for our team. Very excited about the competition this week and what’s in store. It’ll be a great gauge for where our team is at right now.”

Now that you’ve had a chance to look at the film, what did Ty Isaac do that got the running game going versus maybe somebody else, and how- I kind of asked you about this a little big Saturday- but how big is it that you can have different guys that you can throw in there if one guy is not playing well and one guy is playing well?

“Well, I wouldn’t look at it as throwing guys in there. I mean…we’ve got football players that are hungry, that want to be in there, that are improving and making contributions to the team, and there’s something about not just throwing a guy in but strategically putting a player in to be successful. That’s the way I would phrase it.

“Ty did a nice job. We talked about it. I think he’s an improving player and still has some work to do. You know, he’s going to miss one and then made the big one. That was great to see.

“The offensive line is improving. Offensive line is getting better. Probably the guy who made the biggest jump is Kyle Kalis. Graded out for the ballgame 90% [or] a little above 90% along with Graham Glasgow, who’s been consistently very good and been our best offensive lineman. Kalis is ascending fast, so it’s great to see that. The other one is Ben Braden is playing better. Still has work to do, but he’s improving as well. Thought Mason Cole and Magnuson both improved. They’re playing more physical and they’re finishing. They’re really making an effort to finish right now. So, all five of those guys. What’s helping our running game right now is them and the contribution by the backs, but also the receivers.

“The receivers are making a real effort right now to block downfield. They’re blocking in the box, they are coming to get safeties, and they are blocking sometimes 30-40 yards downfield. Jehu Chesson was our player of the game offensively and on special teams, and a big reason was he contributed to the passing game, contributed to the running game, contributed putting points on the board, and his blocking was making a real effort at it. Along with all our receivers…Amara [Darboh].

“There’s a lot of things contributing to us improving in the running game.”

[After THE JUMP: Dennis Quaid comes up and if that doesn’t get you to read the whole thing I guess we just don’t have a similar sense of humor]

You’ve had Jabrill Peppers moved around a bit in that secondary. What from the first three games have you learned about him, and how has he grown through these first three games? 

“It’s time on task for Jabrill. He’s a very explosive football player, a talented football player. And learning the game, learning the angles, the pursuit angles, understanding spatial relationships and then letting his talent show even more because…he’s got good instincts, but just time on task, especially for a safety. That’s very important.

“And he’s played a little bit at corner and nickel as well, so he’s playing a lot of football. He had the most snaps for our team again this week. Both the Utah game and Las Vegas game he first in amount of football that he’s playing. It’s really good for him. It’s good for his- you get better at football by playing football. I’ve always thought that.”

You mentioned Ben Braden. Where does he need to improve and where has he improved? I know he was listed at 331 last year and is listed at 322 now, so wondering if you’ve seen conditioning leaps and bounds?

“Yeah, I mean, better. Better. I wouldn’t call it leaps and bounds, but he is progressing and playing more physical and has room to get better, but of the five linemen I think he was…he was…he was the fifth, and now he’s striving to be the fourth or the third and he’s narrowing the gap on that. You know, because he is playing with better pad level. He’s playing more physical. He’s trying to finish blocks.

“He is a real try-hard guy. [I] don’t question that. Don’t question his toughness at all. I mean, he practices…there’s a difference between- he’s not always 100% healthy but you have to take him out. We’ve had to do it a few times. But he’s coming. He’s coming. He’s improving. That’s what he’s doing.

“He’s sustaining. He’s playing with better pad level. He’s working to get more athletic in space on his pulls and blocking guys in space, but yeah, he’s getting better. He’s closing the gap.”

Jim, when you watched the tape and you looked at Jake Rudock’s play, where are the areas he can improve his game?

“Uh…”

/shrugs

“Just, there’s areas.”

What are they?

“Uh, I don’t know. Just, the question, to me- just the way you started the question off after the game, it’s like questions to divise and divide and compare. We’re all working. We’re all working to get better, so…”

/SID points to another reporter, but Harbaugh isn’t done

“I sense sometimes the questions to compare and be divisive, so I’m quick to turn those off.”

Maybe you’ll turn this one off too, but I was going to ask about Jake. There is a perception-  I won’t name names- that he’s struggling a little in the offense. Why is that the wrong perception? To you he does look like the starter; is that fair?

“We’re all working at it together. He’s thrown to 13 different receivers. That’s good. We’ve spread the ball out. The timing in the passing game, the detail, the precision that’s required; it takes time on task.

“To be clear, Jake Rudock’s the best quarterback. Not by a small margin. He’s our best quarterback. And when it comes to precision of the passing game and timing, that’s something that we’re all working together at, and it’s the responsibility of everyone. I feel it’s divisive when you just pull out one name to just keep hammering; there, there, so hope that’s clear. He’s our best quarterback.”

Going to the defensive side of the ball, James Ross had four or five of his nine tackles on Saturday. What have you seen out of him?

“He had a couple flatback hits in this game. He played very physically. Two in particular were big hits.

“If you looked at our defense, the areas where they’re improving: more physical, bigger hits, bigger presence on the defensive side when they arrive at the ball and make contact. We’re better in the secondary getting our hands on the ball.

“Jourdan Lewis was the player of the game defensively. Had four pass breakups. Defended the deep ball well. Clark got an interception. Stribling got an interception. And we talked about that was a point of emphasis we wanted to get better at [and] we’re improving there. We’re going to have to be good this week. BYU is really good throwing the football. Big receivers that will challenge you downfield.

“And we’re being more physical. James Ross is one of those guys contributing to big hits. We’ve got to tackle better. We’re playing with more physicality, but we’ve got to make sure that we’re tackling, seeing what we hit, wrap it up, and not allowing yards after contact.”

Last year there were 27 pass breakups; this year there are 10. Last year there were two interceptions; this year you’ve got three. What else have you seen improvement on from the secondary?

“Uh, what I just mentioned: getting our hands on the ball, breaking up passes, intercepting passes, and defending the deep ball. I think we’re doing a better job at that.”

You mentioned BYU’s quarterback. He’s had a pretty eventful start to his career. What have you noticed from watching him?

“He’s a playmaker. Went in there with no shyness whatsoever. Already being in big situations and prevailed; sometimes it takes years before something like that happens, but he’s already been through it so he’s already been battle tested and won in those situations. Impressive.

“And a great group of receivers to throw to. Big guys that go up and get the ball. That’ll be an area of emphasis for us this week, defending the ball downfield.”

The only other time Michigan’s played BYU you were the starter. Do you have any memories of that game?

“Yeah, I remember it was the Holiday Bowl. I missed it. Broke my arm in the fifth game, I think, and wasn’t playing, so I remember it. We lost. I remember that.”

MGoQuestion: What’s the biggest key to successfully running Power, and what do you tell the pulling guard and running back to look for?

“The biggest key is to stop penetration…by the defense. What you teach the running back to look for is to make the puller invisible. Not follow the puller. Not look at the puller sometimes.

“It’s wherever the hole is, so if he can make the puller invisible and see the hole, wherever it is; A gap to backside A gap to the B gap or even bounce to the C gap. You know, his eyes and the timing and to allow no penetration is the key. Or some keys; there’s others.”

Jim, you mentioned Jourdan Lewis earlier. What’s it about him that’s separating him? He’s making plays; what’s his greatest strength?

“I think he’s got really good instincts. He’s got initial quickness. He’s got long speed. He’s got the ability to play the ball, and you know, got a little dart; things you look for in a corner, and he’s willing. He’s a willing tackler. And he can improve in that area in terms of technique, etc., but he’s coming. He’s coming and improving. Excited about him.”

Opposite him, what have you liked this year out of Channing Stribling. In a game like Saturday with the interception, pass breakup- how much can that do for his confidence?

“Well, I hope it does a lot. You don’t know until you do something right. Went two ballgames where he was practically tentative if the ball was in the air, and very late to break on balls and not confident to go after a ball in the air and he has…he has improved I don’t know how many percent, but a lot in just three games.

“I think Michael Zordich and Greg Jackson have done a really good job coaching all our players in the secondary, and none have shown more improvement than Channing Stribling. [He’s a] tall, rangy, long-armed corner that could be great. Could be really good, and you hope now that somebody- once they’ve done it now they can expect themselves to do it. That should help his confidence, so excited about big things from him and Jeremy Clark as well. Continue….and Jabrill and his improvement. Who else? There’s others. Secondary’s coming together.”

Do you have an update on Joe Kerridge?

“Uh, nnn- he’s going to be working through [something].”

Do you think he’s going to play this week or is it hard to tell?

“Don’t know yet.”

It’s a possibility?

“Possible.”

The other thing, you mentioned Jake hit 13 different receivers. Is that something where you guys have encouraged him to spread the ball to that many guys, or is that his way of operating?

“No, that’s something we’ve encouraged. We’re playing multiple players right now in an attempt to find out who our best players are; three tight ends have caught balls and been thrown to, two or three fullbacks, seven receivers. That’s how it adds up to that number. It’s been the design of the offense to have balance between the running game and the passing game, to spread the football, to have a good pass/run ratio and get players involved and see what they can do and how they can contribute.”

You’ve had a lot of success early on with bubble screens in the offense. How has that aided in your running game, and how much has that been able to stretch defenses horizontally?

“It’s been effective, and it’s…it’s been good.

“How has it? I mean, we’ve completed them. We’ve completed them, we’ve gotten yards, moved the chains, picked up chunks of yardage. That’s how.”

Has there been a-

“But obviously good, to be the master of the obvious. It’s been a good part. I don’t know what else to say about it.”

But, I mean, has there-

“What do you want me to say about it?”

/leans in on podium

Has that been helping to-

“It’s helping. Yeah, it’s definitely helping.”

You mentioned BYU’s big receivers. What’s the most important thing Jourdan, who’s 5’10”, can do to sort of negate the height difference there in coverage?

“It’s technique, it’s position, it’s fundamentals, it’s leverage, it’s eyes.”

So you’re saying- I know it’s sort of a cliché, the offensive identity thing, but too soon to say because you’re trying so many pieces of the puzzle?

“Yeah, I don’t have a word for the identity of the offense yet.”

Is that how you went into the season thinking it would be until you can figure out who you’ve got and where they fit?

“Yeah.”

My second question’s kind of off topic, but Rob Lytle’s going to be honored Saturday and I would imagine you saw him quite a bit growing up. What were your impressions of him as a player, and if you got to know him later those impressions also?

“Just always a great guy. I mean, everybody liked him. He was always nice to us kids, coaches’ kids that were around the building. Somebody that nobody ever has a bad word to say about, at least that I’ve ever heard.

“It was also fun to watch him play with the Broncos, because we knew him and he played at Michigan. That was always my impression. Just a hard runner. I mean, if I think about backs going through the line of scrimmage and lowering their pads; you know, the way he would run low off the ground, helmet like an arrow going through snow. That’s what I visualize a running back looking like, with that number and those elbow pads he used to wear. Yeah, he was a real running back.”

And his helmet was so banged up.

“Huh?”

His helmet was so banged up.

Yeah, it was great, you know. I love that movie Everybody’s All-American. He was…I can’t remember who played that? Who played…the great actor…”

He was married to Meg Ryan, I think.

“Yeah, he was married to Meg Ryan. Dennis Quaid. Yeah, Dennis Quaid. And then when he was playing pro ball Rob Lytle was the back that they used footage of Dennis Quaid being. I always thought that was really neat.”

A lot of coaches discount polls and especially early polls, but with Ohio State and Michigan State #1-#2 in the AP, maybe your thoughts- early thoughts- on the strength of the Big Ten?

“It’s well documented right there. It’s a strong conference. Yeah, deservedly so. Both those teams have played well and won big games. Three weeks in; one and two. I think they’re right where they should be.”

Comments

CRISPed in the DIAG

September 21st, 2015 at 6:32 PM ^

Didn't Spurrier - at the height of his superpowers - toss QB's under the bus with regularity?  

I think Harbaugh has been honest about QB play to this point.  Jake will get better or he won't. I am more confident in the OL, RB's and power than at this point last year. Which is nice.

kzoomgr

September 21st, 2015 at 6:35 PM ^

... Harbaugh tells it like it is.  From a fan perspective, he's refreshingly transparent.  Tough to be a reporter, and probably tough to play for him, but he sort of can't help himself from telling it like it is, even when he knows he should deflect.  Fun stuff.

dragonchild

September 22nd, 2015 at 6:40 AM ^

He was all over them.  Perry was single-handedly blamed for the first pick, and Rudock was blamed for the second.  Chesson was partially blamed for the first long incompletion.  Etc., etc.  It's not throwing them under the bus; it's holding them accountable.

But in this case, note Rudock barely threw to his go-to guy.  Butt was practically invisible, and I don't think he had an off day against UNLV.  Rudock's comfortable throwing to Butt, but he only did it twice on Saturday.

I speculate this was Harbaugh trying to make Rudock uncomfortable.  It's Harbaugh's MO.  Not that they did anything crazy or put the game at risk, but the first TD drive felt conventional, the second and third felt a little out of character, and then the second half felt like a scrimmage, with heavy player rotation.

I think Harbaugh went into this game telling Rudock to throw to Butt only if nothing else was there, knowing with UNLV he'd have time to throw.  He threw to a bunch of different guys.  But that's naturally going to make Rudock a little out of synch, and Harbaugh knew full well the reporters would ask about it, so he's shutting down the QB controversy nonsense with "swirling wind" excuses and whatnot.  Rudock had a bad day by design.

TL;DR: Harbaugh pushed Rudock out of his comfort zone on a day it was OK to take that risk, predicted he wouldn't play as well, and is now taking the media heat for it.  The dividends will pay off against BYU.

The Man Down T…

September 21st, 2015 at 6:50 PM ^

Our offense is improving in the line, receiving and running backs.  We're getting better there.  Our defense is improving.  Our QB will improve.

 

Players improving is something we rarely, if ever, saw in a Hoke coached team and we're seeing it already in 3 games.  We have a very bright future down the road this season and beyond with this coaching staff.  

dipshit moron

September 21st, 2015 at 6:50 PM ^

this really is a great football coach speaking. great coaches are like great athletes, there is just something different about the way they talk and the way they carry themselves. never do you get the feeling that he is unsure of himself or what he is trying to build. thank god michigan is now building an identity of who and what they are going to be. i have enjoyed this first 3 games so much more then the last 7 years of clusters because of that very reason.

erald01

September 21st, 2015 at 8:36 PM ^

Isnt it funny how in 3 games you can kind of make the identity of this team by looking at the stats..just pounding the other team by running down their throats....last 4 yrs we could never figure out what we were all kinds of offenses: QB read option, QB scramble, spread options, running game which was horrible and when that failed we abonded it and threw over 50 times a game...its sad but last coaching regim never established an identity...



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Cranky Dave

September 21st, 2015 at 7:09 PM ^

You’ve had a lot of success early on with bubble screens in the offense. How has that aided in your running game, and how much has that been able to stretch defenses horizontally? “It’s been effective, and it’s…it’s been good. “How has it? I mean, we’ve completed them. We’ve completed them, we’ve gotten yards, moved the chains, picked up chunks of yardage. That’s how.” Has there been a- “But obviously good, to be the master of the obvious. It’s been a good part. I don’t know what else to say about it.” But, I mean, has there- “What do you want me to say about it?” /leans in on podium

McSomething

September 22nd, 2015 at 12:52 AM ^

By far my favorite part of the presser. 1) because bubble screen. Holy shit, we can run those! I just got a kick out of how defensive the old regime was about using that play, or not using it more like, only now for it to be showing up with some regularity. I don't know, call it what you want, I just love this new staff and the differences between then and now are striking. And 2) him wanting the reporter to pretty much spell out what s/he was hoping to get Harbaugh to say. /leans on podium. God, I see that becoming a staple response on here when people respond to stupid comment.

OC Alum91

September 21st, 2015 at 7:19 PM ^

the answer to the Isaac question, he answers how the OL grades out, and Chesson was offrnsive player of game. after summer of getting coach speak from harbaugh, nice to get detailed, answers of substance.

erald01

September 21st, 2015 at 8:28 PM ^

JH is doing what a really good coach does, get a feel for the players on these "glorified scrimmages' non conference games...this way he will identify who does what and most importantly who has chemistry with the QB and the offense...we as fans are being a bit impatient because we want to see 100% out of everybody but dont forget this is a new system and the coaches have to identify their play makers. The real test is on the field, not offseason training.
This is something that last coaching didnt do, they always played the players based on seniority and experince not based on skills or play making.



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tolmichfan

September 22nd, 2015 at 9:12 AM ^

I would like someone to give me an example of where Hoke played older guys when younger players were clearly better than the older ones. I can come up with all kinds of examples of younger players getting playing time over older guys, just from last year. (Peppers, Hill playing over Clark and Thomas, Mone got a ton of playing time over older guys, Lewis over Blake). Morgan is going to be a 4 year starter. Ryan as RS freshman played over older guys on the team.

On offense we are going to have damn near the same Oline for 3 years, that's unheard of in college football. Smith and Green both played as freshman over Rawls and Hayes. Funchess played over older guys as a freshman and sophomore.

I am having a hard time of coming up with examples to support this theory that just because a player is older he got more playing time under Hoke.



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Mr. Yost

September 21st, 2015 at 8:34 PM ^

#WishfulThinking

He never improved from his junior year of high school and this fall Alex Malzone was catching him as the #2 QB. What is the obsession with Morris?

He's played for what, 3 different coordinators and 2 different head coaches...and STILL can't sniff the field. Like I said in the open thread this weekend - Jim Harbaugh would play Andrew David at QB if it gave him a .000001% better chance at winning a football game. We all know he would - so why do we question Harbaugh when it comes to Morris?

I want the kid to succeed...no question. But I also want Ross Douglas and Allen Gant and Terry Richardson to succeed too.

1of12MattDamons

September 21st, 2015 at 8:43 PM ^

for some reason it makes me laugh so hard when he shuts people down for asking dumb questions. Awesome stuff. I quit watching the pressers last year because all they did was piss me off. These are just gold.

Don

September 22nd, 2015 at 6:38 AM ^

It's so we don't know what dimwit asks incredibly lame questions like this:

"but how big is it that you can have different guys that you can throw in there if one guy is not playing well and one guy is playing well?"

It's a stupid fucking question in its very nature. Does this journo actually expect Harbaugh to say, "No, it's not a big thing at all, irrelevant, doesn't matter." No, he's asking a question to which he expects to get the response he's already mentally written in his write-up of the presser: "It's huge, amazing, wonderful that I have so many guys who can get in there at RB."

I love the fact that Harbaugh refused to confirm the basic premise and essentially told that numbskull to GTFU.

The Oracle

September 21st, 2015 at 9:33 PM ^

No matter what Harbaugh actually thinks about Rudock, he'd never publicly say anything negative about him, or any other player. You'll never hear anything like that out of Harbaugh. He hasn't even said anything negative about Jed York.

BornInA2

September 22nd, 2015 at 12:01 AM ^

But, I mean, has there-

“What do you want me to say about it?”

/leans in on podium

At what point is he going to come *over* the podium, grab some mindless media type asking the same question for the third time in a row by the neck and throttle him like Homer does to Bart Simpson? I can see it in my mind's eye, and I do not weep.

M-Dog

September 22nd, 2015 at 12:14 AM ^

The only other time Michigan’s played BYU you were the starter. Do you have any memories of that game?

Um yeah, the memory that Chris Zurbrugg was the starter and not Harbaugh who was out injured.  Nice research there.