Unverified Voracity Is In The Computer Comment Count

Brian

Radio mishap. Sorry to streaming listeners who ended up getting a nonstop pile of ads about halfway through the show. We don't know what happened there; we've reached out to WTKA and they say that should not recur. Podcasts should be coming, possibly tomorrow. We're still working out the kinks.

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[Eric Upchurch]

RAGE now comes with official approval. The Big Ten said "whoops" on the punt flag:

Harbaugh asked the Big Ten for an explanation on the call, and during his radio show Monday night, said the league basically offered an apology for an officiating error.

"You just want to be able to know what to tell your team, that's why we ask, that's why we inquire," Harbaugh said. "Once the punter goes outside the tackle box, you don't know if he's a runner or he's going to punt the ball. He's afforded the same protection a quarterback would be when he's outside the pocket. If he throws the ball, he can be hit like a quarterback.

"They would've rather not thrown a flag on that. ... That's what they said."

They have not as yet apologized for the various other errors this crew inflicted on Michigan: the opening-play PI against Darboh is blatant, as is a hold on James Ross that sprung one of Oregon State's big runs on their touchdown drive. Michigan got hoooooosed on Saturday and still won 35-7.

Chris Brown on Power. An excellent primer on something Michigan's going to be running a ton of for the foreseeable future:

“There is nothing magical about the Power play,” Paul Alexander, the Cincinnati Bengals’ longtime offensive line coach, said at a coaching clinic in 2012. Almost every NFL team runs Power, though some (like the Seahawks, Vikings, Steelers, and Bills) will emphasize it more than others, and it has produced some of the most dramatic plays in recent memory, including Marshawn Lynch’s infamous Beast Mode run. The idea behind Power is as old as football itself, as having an overwhelming force at the point of attack was an obvious strategy as soon as someone first picked up a football; versions of the play pop up as far back as in Michigan coach Fielding Yost’s playbook from 1905. But NFL coaches have spent the past 20 years tweaking and adjusting the play, and now the proper form is gospel.

Brown details the various responsibilities the players have. This one in particular is something De'Veon Smith had trouble with in week one:

Running back: Veteran NFL offensive line coach Mike Solari, who’s currently with the Green Bay Packers, says he prefers to tell the running back to “read the alphabet: Read from the playside A to B to C to D gaps for a running lane.” But the running back’s real key to success on Power is to let the blocking develop. “People ask me what I tell our running backs,” said Shaw at the 2013 clinic. “Mostly what we tell our running backs is [have] patience.”

He improved a considerable amount in week two.

Staples on the State of Michigan. SI's Andy Staples took in the doubleheader this weekend:

Graham Glasgow has just finished explaining the importance of pad level as it relates to play along the line of scrimmage—short version: the low man wins—when the Michigan fifth-year senior center says something telling. "I felt better in this loss," Glasgow says, "than I would after some of our wins last year."

Five days earlier, the Wolverines lost their season opener at Utah. Four days from now, Michigan will make its home debut under coach Jim Harbaugh against Oregon State. As Glasgow says those words, he stands in the Towsley Family Museum in Schembechler Hall. He is a few feet from the "Win Wall," a massive glass enclosure that, on this particular Tuesday, features a football representing each of Michigan's 915 all-time wins. In another part of the room, the words of former Michigan coach Fritz Crisler are carved into wood.

"Tradition is something you can't bottle. You can't buy it at the corner store. But it is there to sustain you when you need it most. I've called upon it time and time again. And so have countless other Michigan athletes and coaches. There is nothing like it. I hope it never dies."

Glasgow's words suggest that in 2014 Michigan's football tradition was dying.

Whole thing is worth a read.

This week in good quotes. Blake O'Neill quizzed about his modeling career:

"All sorts of things,"he said Monday at Michigan's weekly news conference. "Fashion modeling, catwalk, anything.

"I was a little budding Zoolander."

He does not have a "Blue Steel" look.

Who will I scoff at now? Texas deep-sixes Brandon 2.0:

University of Texas President Gregory L. Fenves is expected to fire embattled athletic director Steve Patterson, and the move could come this morning, a Houston-based source with knowledge of the situation told the American-Statesman.

Fenves and Patterson are meeting Tuesday morning, the Statesman learned.

It could bring an end to a tumultuous 22-month journey for the athletic department during which fans grew outraged over higher ticket prices and Patterson battled the perception that his cool demeanor simply does not fit UT’s style.

"Cool demeanor" is the nice way of saying it.

Good on Texas for dumping their version of the buzzword-spewing Emperor's New CEO after less than two years. That Patterson got himself fired after making what look to be excellent hires in both football and basketball speaks to just how hated he was by just about everyone. Justifiably. Hell, I have no connection to Texas whatsoever and I hated him because he was bad for college football, all of it.

Hopefully they've got a Hackett hanging around.

That would be a terrible idea, but on the other hand I would no longer have to listen to him relentlessly praise every coach in every situation. ("Not many coaches would feed their quarterback to an alligator at halftime, Rece, but Tim Beckman is an innovative thinker.") I approve.

Oh right. The legend:

I'm sure that will last.

Injuries and more injuries and Rutgers. Michigan's gotten through the first couple weeks of the season without anything serious happening to their players; other than Bryan Mone they're as close to completely healthy as a group of people playing football can be. This is not the case for a number of upcoming Michigan opponents.

BYU is of course down Taysom Hill and relying on freshman-ish Tanner Mangum, who was a big recruit a couple years back and is just off his Mormon mission. On the other hand, that linebacker who bingle-bangled a Boise State player right in the dingle-dangle will somehow not be suspended—nice to not have a conference sometimes. Michigan players will have to keep an eye on the family jewels.

Minnesota has a number of guys out with relatively minor issues but may have lost WR KJ Maye to a broken rib.

And then of course Rutgers. Star WR Leonte Caroo was the latest Scarlet Knight to get arrested. He's been suspended indefinitely for an "altercation" outside the stadium Saturday night that resulted in a domestic violence arrest. What exactly went down is still unclear, but if you poke around On The Banks the impression their comments give is that Rutgers insider types think it's pretty serious and we may not see Carroo for a while. Oh and they didn't list Darius Hamilton on their most recent depth chart because he has an undisclosed injury of some variety. And of course five guys got arrested for armed robbery and transferred to Michigan State before the season started.

Rutgers fans are now calling this "their darkest hour," which may be true if the history of Rutgers football started with Greg Schiano. It does not.

Speaking of Rutgers. Julie Herrmann has a job! Still! She is employed and everything! She probably has a company car and a dental plan!

Unhappy Moeller. Via Dr. Sap:

How the Norfleet thing went down. Via the man himself:

“To be honest, everything caught me off-guard,” Norfleet said. “It just happened. (Harbaugh and I) weren’t seeing eye to eye. Nothing real big. We had disagreements but nothing serious. He thought I was going to be ineligible, and I wasn’t. He is real big on academics. That’s one thing I can say about Jim Harbaugh — he’s going to make sure these players are going to class.”

Norfleet said Harbaugh never told him he wanted him on the team.

“I never got that at all,” Norfleet said. “The only thing I got was, come back a semester to get a degree. Not play football. He wanted me to use my scholarship. I still love Michigan, though, as a whole. Sometimes, you’ve got to move on.”

Unfortunate all around, but it seems like Michigan was willing to have him around even if he wasn't going to play. That seems to have smoothed over things with Detroit King.

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whoops

It's not a crisis if you complain about it every year and things are just fine. The only person more prone to complain about spread offenses than NFL scouts and coaches is Gary Danielson, and the arguments the NFL has are about as good as Danielson's:

…if current trends continue, NFL insiders say, quarterbacks who have the sophistication to outfox NFL defenses to deliver the ball to open receivers are “going to be on the endangered species list,” said Cleveland Browns coach Mike Pettine. “The quarterback may not be gone yet,” he added, “but if you have one, protect it.”

“It’s doomsday if we don’t adapt and evolve,” said St. Louis Rams general manager Les Snead.

These people are just in charge of things for no reason and should be given the Patterson/Brandon treatment. Half of the top ten rookie QB seasons in NFL history have come since 2011. Those five seasons came from Robert Griffin, Russell Wilson, Teddy Bridgewater, Cam Newton, and Mike Glennon. Three of those guys came from out-and-out spread offenses. After one game Marcus Mariota looks set to join them.

I mean:

A parade of general managers, like Pittsburgh’s Kevin Colbert, think that if the current model holds, the notion of drafting a quarterback to start right away will need to be scrapped.

And:

Cleveland’s Farmer has one idea: What if you could design an offense to minimize the passing deficiencies of modern quarterback prospects?

WHAT WOULD THAT EVEN LOOK LIKE?

Etc.: Mike Riley literally has his team yelling "hip hip hooray" after games. Flanders, the coach. Local news talking with El Harberino. Jake Lourim with a longform on ECA, Freddy Canteen and Brandon Watson's school. Wide pin down. Harbaugh profile (autoplaying audio warning). SMH NCAA. UNLV is not good. Holdin' The Rope.

Comments

readyourguard

September 15th, 2015 at 1:12 PM ^

That 49ers power play is defined by A) that tremendous block by the TE and H-back, and B)Gore's wrecking ball run through 2 alleged tacklers.

If we could get our TEs and H backs to block like that, we're gonna do great things.

bronxblue

September 15th, 2015 at 2:30 PM ^

I enjoy the Clevand Browns bitching about college QBs not working out, as they may have the most experience in drafting busts across the offensive spectrum.  They busted with Tim Couch, Brady Quinn, 94-year-old Brandon Weeden, Johnny Manziel, and I'm sure they'll draft someone in the first round this year (Connor Cook?) who'll disappoint as well.

At some point, when everything you touch turns to crap, maybe keep your hands to yourself.

BradP

September 15th, 2015 at 2:44 PM ^

I don't think you are very good on the NFL stuff, Brian.  I'm pretty sure those top 10 seasons are generally a factor of rookie QBs starting for horrible teams in a pass happy era of the NFL.

I mean:

Robert Griffin - laughing stock who lost his job to pro-style JAG Kirk Cousins

Mike Glennon - Backup QB for TB

Cam Newton - completely stunted after rookie year and currently heading up one of the worst offenses in the NFL

Teddy Bridgewater - one season with as many turnovers as touchdowns.  I do expect him to have a good career, but not enough there to make an argument either way yet.

Russell Wilson - Only QB on this list that is a true success, but he made his draft profile at one of the most devout "pro-style" programs in the country.

 

The no-huddle, get to the line and get the playcall (of a very short list) from the sideline causes QBs to be very limited in the ids and reads.  

Tex_Ind_Blue

September 15th, 2015 at 3:51 PM ^

RG III's career was sabotaged by Mike Shanahan. He should never have been put back in the game with his knees already shot. Shanahan pushed him to play and in turn aggravated the injury. RGIII with functioning knees and better coaching would have been much better than his present "unable to run - can't throw accurately" self. 

Bodogblog

September 15th, 2015 at 9:09 PM ^

it was more than that though. if you listened to Gruden's (the Washington head coach, not the guy looking for houses in Ann Arbor during the last 3 coaching searches) press conference when he went off on him last year, he said, among other things: that his footwork was bad, he took 3 step drops when they should have been 5, took no (!) drop steps when it should have been 3, and read the wrong side of the field on terms of his initial progression. this actually does sound like a problem with a system like Baylor's, where he did none of this.

MGoCombs

September 15th, 2015 at 5:08 PM ^

Good points, but I think part of the problem is the expectation placed on QBs right out of college and it seems to be getting worse. They're placed on awful teams, thrust in the game as starters immediately, with no substantial mentoring, and expected to turn the team around. If they don't do that in two or three seasons, they're tossed and the cycle starts over again--before some of these guys even hit 25.

To me, it's no shocker that QBs who get drafted a little later tend to sustain longer careers. Only 13 of the 32 starting QBs were drafted in the top 10 and 5 of them were drafted in the past four drafts. 12 of the remaining 19 were drafter after the first round. These guys get more time to develop and oftentimes more veteran mentorship.

TL;DR: Let these high drafted QBs have a little time to develop before throwing them in as starters, and maybe we wouldn't have this QB problem.

Needs

September 15th, 2015 at 9:17 PM ^

The prime example to back this notion up is Aaron Rodgers. Bob McGinn, who's the main Packers' beat writer for the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel has said numerous times that he thought Rodgers was going to be a total wash out after watching him practice and talking to scouts during his rookie and second seasons. It was only after a couple seasons in which he changed mechanics, studied the offense, and practiced as a backup that the light really went on for him.

http://www.jsonline.com/sports/packers/rodgers-made-a-career-audible-wi…

Given the potential upside that a great qb can bring (a decade plus of playoff and championship contention) and the at least anecdotal evidence that playing too early on a bad team can harm a qbs development, I would think that more franchises would hold off on playing high picks so early.

And even if this article is totally off-base, the Michigan recruitment office should be circulating it to every high end offensive recruit that's considering UM vs. a spread team.

Needs

September 15th, 2015 at 9:19 PM ^

Long quote from that article:

 

 

As a rookie, Rodgers' six substantial outings included a scrimmage against Buffalo, four exhibition games and the fourth quarter of a December night game in Baltimore.

He was brutal every time out.

In each of the exhibition games, Brett Favre started before turning it over to Rodgers. Until his 20th and final series, when the Packers scored a touchdown in Tennessee with the aid of a 33-yard penalty for pass interference, Rodgers had not generated a point. Sixteen possessions ended with punts, two on interceptions and one on a fumble.

If the No. 2 quarterback job had been awarded based on performance in training camp and games, it would have gone to Craig Nall hands-down.

Against the Ravens, Rodgers threw an interception, fumbled twice and was sacked three times.

As the 2006 draft drew near, Rodgers told NFL Network that he had heard the rumors of the Packers possibly selecting a quarterback with the No. 5 selection in a move that would likely end his career in Green Bay. Ted Thompson, the general manager who had drafted Rodgers with the No. 24 pick the year before, didn't rule it out.

A month before the draft, a panel of 18 personnel men were asked to compare Rodgers against that year's quarterback pool led by Matt Leinart, Vince Young and Jay Cutler. Not only didn't Rodgers draw any first-place votes, he had only one second and three thirds. Eleven scouts put him fourth, and three others even had him behind Brodie Croyle and Charlie Whitehurst.

SirVigorous

September 15th, 2015 at 3:10 PM ^

You say "It's not a crisis if you complain about it every year and things are just fine". 

However as I survey the league, things are not fine. These new crop of QB's seem pretty bad. Gino Smith has been masquerading as a QB for years with nothing being done about it. 

Tex_Ind_Blue

September 15th, 2015 at 3:47 PM ^

I think it's the fitting square peg in round hole problem. Draft someone who is suited for your offense. But many NFL teams draft the most well known QB name and then act surprised when they are not a good fit for their offense.

And then there are the Texans.