Unverified Voracity Pokes The Bear Comment Count

Brian

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No mercy. I'm completely fine with John O'Korn throwing garbage-time bombs into the endzone with Michigan up multiple scores:

This is poking the bear. Colorado, consider the bears poked.

Meanwhile, the bear. PFF's early-season take on Michigan is off-the-charts optimistic. Notes from a meaty piece:

  • Michigan is their top defense so far. The competition has not been great, obviously.
  • The OL is second(!) in pass protection.
  • Kyle Kalis was one of PFF's worst returning guards nationally. (I wonder what PFF would have thought about Michigan's 2013 line if Kalis's shaky 2015 was that bad in their eyes.) He's up to seventh nationally(!!!) in their grading. That's sure to slide backwards as Michigan's schedule gets tougher, but as I mentioned UCF actually has a player or two on their DL. If Kalis manages to hang onto a top 30 spot it's time to buy Tim Drevno an above-ground outdoor pool.
  • Newsome's been great as a pass protector and okay on the ground; I'm seeing more or less the same thing. Newsome's having some mental issues on plays to the edge and he has a tendency to pull so deep that he runs himself out of any chance to block someone.
  • Speight is well ahead of Early Season Jake Rudock, which is 1) not a surprise and 2) faint praise. OTOH, PFF has him accurate on 28 of 36 opportunities from the last game and I think they're grading as harshly as possible there—I wouldn't knock Speight for that attempted dumpoff to Evans that Evans couldn't get out on, for one.
  • Speight's efficiency has gone through the floor when he gets pressure.
  • In a separate article on their top 25 they note that Ryan Glasgow has posted bonkers 86 and 84 grades so far; they rank Glasgow as one of their top five NFL draft risers: “Glasgow’s consistently defeated one-on one blocks, and opponents haven’t been able to move him off the line of scrimmage on double teams. In addition to his dominant run play, he’s averaging a pressure once every seven pass rushes, an impressive ratio for a nose tackle.”

All of that is very positive, especially Kalis. In the season preview I mentioned that he was the one returning player on the line who could take a major step forward. Early indications are that he has, and again since so many of his problems last year were mental the kind of improvements he's made are ones that translate to tougher competition.

I'm not sure there's much to read into Speight's issues against pressure yet. I'd expect that he remains iffy in that department because he's not that mobile; eight attempts is not a sample size worth getting exercised over.

I'm over it. I'm mostly over it. Speight on the fading days of the Hoke era:

"When I came in during the winter (of 2014) and redshirted that season, I didn't know what was going on that year and not many people did. It was kind of a messy year, it didn't end well at all," Speight says. "I just kind of skated through that year without much discipline (with) football. It was kind of a rude awakening when (the new staff) came.

"I realized I needed to change some things."

While he tried to soften it…

Speight wants to make it clear. Brady Hoke -- the coach who recruited him to Michigan -- and his staff gave him plenty of coaching in 2014. He says he just wasn't in the mood to listen.

…I mean come on. It wasn't just Speight who wasn't in the mood to listen. It was team-wide. A couple weeks ago Kalis said something wistful about how he wished that he'd had five years under Drevno instead of two.

I'm a little surprised that guys are throwing the old staff under the bus in press conferences, but also… not surprised. I was there, and bitter. I can't imagine how bitter I'd be about the Hoke chaos if it was eating through my eligibility with nothing to show for it.

Anyway, Speight's starting now and good at throwing balls.

ALSO IN WILTON SPEIGHT TALKING.

“There was one UCF player who was trying to talk smack at me, and I just started dying laughing, because we heard him from the huddle. And there were other times that we’d be up on the line of scrimmage and I’d think something was funny.”

Speculation on what this laughter-inducing smack was:

  • "Got my crampons on, gonna scale your ass"
  • "I am going to camp out halfway up your surface."
  • "Ed Davis got a sixth year"
  • "I may be the size of a flying squirrel but sir, I propose to embark on a climbing expedition lo these many months. And yea, I will harvest your acorns. Mark these words. Acorns. Harvested. Eventually."

Now in something other than Speight talking. Rich Eisen talking:

Injuries. As near as I can tell:

  • Probably back Saturday: David Long.
  • Could be back Saturday, could be another week or two. Taco Charlton, Jourdan Lewis. Lewis's injury was described by Harbaugh as a "muscle strain" unrelated to the issue that kept him out of the opener. He "did some things" and ran around on Monday. Charlton had a slight limp after getting his ankle rolled. Michigan could keep both guys on the bench in a game they expect to win.
  • Definitely another few weeks: Bryan Mone.
  • Unknown but doesn't look great: Noah Furbush and Drake Johnson. Radio silence on Furbush's issue probably isn't good. Johnson has similarly been out of uniform without much in the way of explanation.

Etc.: Ross Fulton on OSU's early offensive struggles against Tulsa: didn't want to get the QB hit and Tulsa banked on this. Won't apply for M. Chase Winovich on his first start. Matt Godin on his last go-around. NCAA removes events from North Carolina. Colorado plays fast and has a good secondary. When you have two quarterbacks and one of them is a Purdue transfer, you have zero quarterbacks. Possibly negative one quarterbacks. Urban Meyer on his brain and how he fixed it.

Comments

Glow Blue Mike

September 13th, 2016 at 2:59 PM ^

The speech that Rich Eisen gave was so powerful it gave me goosebumps.  That is what Michigan is about.  I bleed blue like everyone being born and raised in A2 and then attending and graduating from our beloved university and that kind of speech is gold.  

Trader Jack

September 13th, 2016 at 3:20 PM ^

Brian didn't comment on the political side of the decision one way or the other. He just used one sentence to link to an article about the story at another site, where you can comment all you want about it. That's far different from starting a thread or opening a political-based discussion here.



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jmblue

September 13th, 2016 at 3:00 PM ^

It's strange, but even though we beat CU in Boulder in '96 and then demolished them in '97, it feels like we still have a score to settle over '94.  I guess that's just the Michigan-fan nature of having losses stand out more than wins.

 

lakeside

September 13th, 2016 at 5:44 PM ^

You're looking at a guy who just got an 18 mph speeding ticket in Oregon (MI drivers license). Anyone want to comment on the sponsor or other ways to remove points?

Benoit Balls

September 13th, 2016 at 8:54 PM ^

I JUST (15 mins ago) got a ticket for expired tags. Has just picked my son up after an 11 hour day and cop pulled me over because my tags expired Sept 2nd. The cop was a huge jerk. When I have him my license, I told him I didn't have a paper insurance card on me but an e-card on my phone. He told me that was ok, show it when he got back. When he got back, he had already marked the ticket that I didn't show proof, and told me he wasn't interested in my e-POI. I pulled over in a parking lot, and during the stop my son unbuckled himself, so after the Cop went back to his motorcycle and said I was free to go, I waited a couple minutes and got out of my minivan to buckle him back in. The Cop flipped out, put his hand on his holster and told me to stop approaching him. I tried to tell him what I was doing and he made me get back in my minivan. It's guys like that that give police officers a bad reputation.

Benoit Balls

September 14th, 2016 at 12:20 AM ^

not sure if any MGoLegalEagles can offer any insight...when he was giving me the ticket, he asked if I had a job, and when I said yes he asked for the name of my employer. Is this standard protocol? I've gotten my share of speeding tickets over the past 20 yrs (not Iately, but back when I was young and invincible) and have NEVER been asked that before. Just curious if that is indeed odd, or if it was just me? Also also, when he first came to my window (car in park, hands on wheel, radio off) he looks in the back of my van sees my son (5, strapped in his booster) and said, "Whats going on back here?" Like I said, it was all very strange, especially given the fact it was for a $35 fine

G Money

September 13th, 2016 at 10:04 PM ^

Put together a national championship caliber team in four years after the preceeding coach had won about 40% of the games.

And did so without many decommits, Juco's, 5th year senior transfers or a hint of rubbing recruits/coaches/parents the wrong way.

In some future iteration, this will be appreciated for what it was. The guy's last years were characterized by heavy talent in underclass years (his recruits that he somehow convinced to come run a pro style offense and actually play defense; amazing given the previous coach) and a dearth of talent in the upperclasses, especially in trenches, double-especially on the OL (mostly Rich recruits and some scramble Hoke recruits from his first season).

The defense was never a significant issue and was generally one year ahead of the offense in experience. The makings for 2015 was in the works. The OL played quite well against a stacked Ohio State DL, and they were all coming back not only for 2015, but 2016! (That's how young they were). 

Better OL, helps qb, rb, and wr. The D was already one of the better ones in the country. Throw in a couple all-americans that missed significant time in 2014 (Jabrill Peppers and Jake Butt) and add a deus ex machina 5th year transfer qb who was actually meant to be a qb, and you have success in 2015.

Richard75

September 14th, 2016 at 1:31 AM ^

Respectfully disagree. This is essentially saying roster youth was Hoke's primary problem. When Mason Cole is walking right in at 275 pounds and starting as a true FR at LT in year 4, the problem isn't youth; it's the inability to produce better options.

Also, it's just totally inconsistent to say Hoke inherited a .400 team and put together a national-championship caliber one. You're giving Hoke credit for what the team has become two seasons after he left, while giving RR none for the season immediately after his departure. How does that work?



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MadMatt

September 14th, 2016 at 7:52 AM ^

"Speight's efficiency has gone through the floor when he gets pressure."

I guess I'll back off on the Wilton Speightlisberger schtick.  Still, that lob to the outlet as he was being pulled down was a thing of beauty.