Upon Further Review 2018: Offense vs Northwestern Comment Count

Brian October 4th, 2018 at 5:31 PM

[Patrick Barron]

image-6_thumb_thumb5_thumb_thumb_thuSPONSOR NOTE: Reminder that Matt is hanging out at the Charity Tailgate at 327 East Hoover (if you were at the preseason MGoEvents this year and last it's the same place). Food trucks, beer, TVs, and also those things. When not tailgating Matt is also a person who will get you a mortgage right quick from the comfort of your own home. If you need one, he's the man, man.

FORMATION NOTES: Even more gun/pistol than usual. Up to almost 70%, and a number of the exceptions were short yardage/goal line stuff. I have just 11 snaps with a fullback on the field, and here's something I never thought I'd say: that's probably not enough.

SUBSTITUTION NOTES: At this point this is all as expected. OL, QB, RB, FB the usual given Chris Evans's injury. Wilson got scattered snaps and nobody else saw the field at RB; Wangler got a few snaps but it was Mason when there was a FB. The most notable item was dearth of McKeon snaps after his drop. Usually one drop doesn't get you exiled. I wonder if something else was going on.

DPJ, Perry, and Collins got the large bulk of the WR snaps, with Martin and Bell getting the remainder. There was a distinctly Carr-ish thing where Michigan tended to tip run when Martin and Bell were in.

[After THE JUMP: a bit of a festivus]

Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Box Type Play Player Yards
M17 1 10 Shotgun 4-wide 1 1 3 4-3 even 6.5 Pass Hitch DPJ 4
DPJ(-1) catches this with some room about three yards from the first down and can probably set up third and one if he just goes directly upfield. Instead he tries to dodge a linebacker and gives half of it back. (CA, 3, protection 2/2)
M21 2 6 Ace twin TE 1 2 2 4-3 under 7 Run Jet sweep Bell -1
OLB over Gentry goes right upfield and is able to bend Bell around him. Nothing Gentry can do other than kick out, which he does. McKeon releases to the CB; S at 8 yards is reading this and attacking it; the bend allows him to TFL. Bell(-1) should have taken the hint Gentry provided and cut right off his butt. I wish they’d come back to this with instructions for the WR to cut immediately upfield, as the LBs are gone gone gone; RPS –1. Half the lack of a cut and half Michigan not teaching the cut, IMO.
M20 3 7 Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 Exotic 7 Pass Sack N/A -4
M goes with max pro as Northwestern sends three, so those three guys all get brackets, more or less. Perry might be breaking open by the time Patterson decides to move. Both Gentry and Higdon leak out after their services are not needed. Shea pumps the dumpoff to Gentry but changes his mind as he sees that it’s doomed. He then tries to get out of the pocket and is sacked. (TA, N/A, protection 1/1, RPS -1)
Drive Notes: Punt, 0-0, 12 min 1st Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Box Type Play Player Yards
M14 1 10 Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 4-3 over 7 Run Power O Higdon 1
Tackle over with JBB next to Runyan. They run a power at it. M has no playside double. Runyan(-1) gets stood up by a DT. JBB flares for the Gaz on a kickout. Onwenu is trying to pull around tight and gets knocked off by Runyan, and Fisher’s blitzballing it. RPS -1. I want to minus other OL because this is a zero yard run but I mean, no. Higdon(-2) on the other hand has an opportunity to bounce this around Onwenu(+0.5), who does get the block, and try to test JBB’s kickout. Instead he runs right into the LB.
M15 2 9 Ace 1 2 2 4-3 even 7.5 Pass Waggle comeback DPJ Inc
No bite, drop to zone. Both TEs in flat and on cross are covered. Patterson’s only option is the comeback. He’s got a guy coming to him and has to load up for a throw on the run that’s well downfield; DPJ is blanketed and he’s trying to hit a tight window. He misses. (IN, 0, protection N/A)
M15 3 9 Shotgun empty 1 1 3 Dime even 5 Pass Improv DPJ Inc
Ruiz(-1) passes off a DT and then looks away from the Gaz to find someone else. He looks back and gets hit and run through. He does knock the guy off balance and allow an escape. Patterson escapes. He’s got a lot of time to find someone on the edge; DPJ breaks deep for him and he misses again, Fairly tough throw but DB is in panic mode; has to give DPJ a shot. (IN, 0, protection ½)
Drive Notes: Punt, 0-7, 9 min 1st Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Box Type Play Player Yards
M31 1 10 Shotgun twin TE twins 1 2 2 4-3 over 7.5 Pass Scramble Patterson 3
Patterson makes this tough on himself as instead of setting up at seven yards he drifts back to ten, giving the Gaz an angle to pressure him despite Runyan putting him around pretty deep. He then has to move up when he needs a moment for Perry’s deep out to get far enough outside and is reduced to scrambling. (TA, N/A, protection ½, Patterson -1)
M34 2 7 Shotgun empty twin TE 1 2 2 4-3 over 6.5 Pass Dumpoff Higdon 9
Motion out Higdon to the boundary and they’re trying to split a safety with the TEs. Patterson doesn’t like the look and checks down quickly. Higdon(+1) is in space with a DE that NW dropped into coverage and has an easy time dusting him for the first down. (CA, 3, protection 2/2)
M43 1 10 Shotgun twin TE twins 1 2 2 4-3 even 7.5 Run Down G Higdon 8
NW has this scouted and is hammering the Gaz down, but they forget to set the edge. Blitzball LBs go straight upfield; the Gaz is squeezing and not setting, and Higdon(+1) has an easy bounce read he takes. RPS +1.
O49 2 2 Ace 1 2 2 4-3 even SAM 7 Pass PA TE corner McKeon Inc
Jet fake, up the middle fake. The jet sucks a safety up past the LOS(!) and with DPJ running off the playside corner McKeon is wide open. Hit. Dropped. F. (CA, 3, protection 2/2, RPS +2)
O49 3 2 Shotgun trips 1 1 3 Nickel even 5.5 Pass Flash screen Collins 1
This playcall is downright strange… but it still should have converted. Perry(+0.5) is able to just get a charging CB. Collins(-2) steps around him and gets past a LB DPJ(+0.5) gets a finger to. He’s got the last guy forming up at the line to gain and if he just runs to the outside he is going to get it. Instead he tries to juke the guy on third and two and gets stuffed. Cumong man. (CA, 3, screen)
O48 4 1 Goal line 2 2 1 Goal line 10 Run Power O Higdon 0
McKeon(-2) gets chucked past the play by an overhang LB. He ends up doubling the guy Gentry is on. Fatal. Mason has to kick that guy. Guy Mason should be kicking in free. He hits, another guy hits, three inches short. Onwenu run under by a LB, so Higdon has to go outside, but I think that's fine? He's only able to go under because a guy slanting away got kicked way down the line. Onwenu(-0.5) did let that guy get into Higdon's ankles a little.
Drive Notes: Turnover on downs, 0-10, 1 min 1st Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Box Type Play Player Yards
M21 1 10 Shotgun 2-back TE 2 1 2 4-3 under 7 Run Iso Higdon 18
Superficially similar to the Down G trap from last week with Mason plunging to the backside of the play. No pull, though, and we’re going straight NS. This action pulls a NW ILB playside for two steps and gives M an angle on him. Mason(+2) crumbles the other ILB. On the other side of the LOS and everything. Ruiz(+1) and Bredeson(+1) move and seal the NT with Ruiz climbing to the LB who took some false steps. Onwenu(+2) blasts the other DT downfield. Higdon goes straight up the gut. RPS +1, LB bait.
M39 1 10 Pistol 2TE 1 2 2 4-3 even 7 Run Pin and pull Higdon 4
Blocked well in tough circumstances. NW appears to slant to the play or just is real good at IDing this. Bredeson(+1) doesn’t get a reach but wins against his guy, driving him downfield as they flow. McKeon(+1) blocks down and finds his guy slanting across his helmet. He follows him out, is losing him upfield, when Runyan(+0.5) picks him up with nothing better to do. McKeon then goes and gets the overhang LB. Ruiz gets hammered by a LB charging. Higdon(-1) is able to run by that guy and because of Bredeson and McKeon appears to have a lane directly up the middle of the field; he hesitates, bouncing out then back in, getting a decent gain but passing on the direct knife upfield.
M43 2 6 Shotgun 4-wide 1 1 3 Nickel under 6.5 Pass Hitch Collins 5
Patterson late on this read; Collins hitches up a yard past the sticks and is open. Ball should be out; Patterson waits and throws a ball upfield and high that Collins is able to bring in, but yardage ceded. (MA, 2, protection 2/2)
M48 3 1 I-Form Big 2 2 1 4-4 even SAM 8 Run FB dive Mason 2
M gets it. Motive force by Mason(+0.5) and Onwenu(+0.5) mostly.
50 1 10 Ace tight 1 2 2 4-3 even 7.5 Pass PA TE corner Eubanks 21
PA, cornerback sucks up hugely, Eubanks wide open. Hit, not dropped this time. (CA, 3, protection 2/2, RPS +2)
O29 1 10 Ace twin TE 1 2 2 4-3 under 7 Run End around DPJ 24
Jet motion from Thomas, fake up the middle, DPJ the other way. Action fools NW. JBB(+1) is able to get all the way over from RT to harass a corner who spends much of the play focusing on the interior run. Ruiz(+1) also gets out, first hitting the Gaz to sell interior run and then letting him go; he gets to a secondary member(!). Runyan(+1) turns in the DT. DPJ(+1) runs around the Gaz and eats up yards. RPS +2.
O5 1 G I-Form Big 2 2 1 4-3 under 9 Run Iso Higdon 5
Another A-gap iso. Bredeson(+1) stands up and turns out one DT. Ruiz(+1) hits another; LB buries self in that double. Other LB gets Mason(+1) in his face and goes down. Higdon has it easy.
Drive Notes: Touchdown, 7-17, 9 min 2nd Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Box Type Play Player Yards
M12 1 10 Pistol twin TE 1 2 2 4-3 under 7.5 Run Pin and pull Higdon 30 + 10 pen
Another pin and pull; this one doesn’t catch a slant. Gentry(+0.5) stands up a DE. He gets shed but to the inside, which is fine. Runyan(+1) does a good job to recognize his pull is going to be short and effectively kick the OLB. McKeon(-0.5) releases free to an ILB and gets hammered back on contact. He gets driven all the way back to Ruiz, who’s pulling through, and almost gets the play fouled. He does stay attached. Other NW LB blitzballs and runs himself out for free. Higdon(+2) effectively bends to the outside; Perry(+1) gets a good block to help spring him; Higdon runs through a couple tackles to make it a big gain. Defensive holding tacks on ten. RPS +1, LB ate itself.
O48 1 10 Pistol 2TE 1 2 2 4-3 under 7 Run Down G Higdon 3
Man. Soft corners and safeties at 6 and 8 yards and Michigan still runs it. You have to check this. It’s a giant opportunity. M runs down G and gets it blocked; McKeon(+1) pins his guy inside; Runyan(+1) IDs the LB and does the same. Collins(+0.5) gets to that S but that contact is at the LOS and forces a bend. CB is able to fill as a result, also at the LOS. Higdon(+0.5) grinds out some yards. RPS -2.
O45 2 7 Pistol twin TE 1 2 2 4-3 over 6.5 Run Down G Higdon -3
You just ran down G and now you’re running it again except there's no Down bit. NW tips slot blitz and heavy slant playside, M gets crushed by it. Gentry(-1) leaves immediately. Ruiz(-1) leaves. Runyan(-2) loses his guy. McKeon runs by the Gaz to get a CB; Bredeson is kicking him out but Higdon has no choice but to bounce into the kick. RPS -1.
O48 3 10 Shotgun trips 1 1 3 Exotic 6 Pass Drag Collins 7
Man, M aligns in trips and then motions Perry under Gentry in a stack. That brings a slot defender closer and then he blitzes. Line unprepared for this. JBB’s picking which guy to let through and does pick wisely, letting the outside guy through. Patterson has to get it out and hits Collins(-2) on a drag. Collins clears the LB and has a DB coming up really trying to keep contain. If he goes straight upfield this guy probably gives up the first down. Instead Collins tries to juke him to the outside and gets tackled. Wooooooof. (CA+, 3, protection ½, team -1)
O41 4 3 Shotgun empty 1 1 3 Exotic 6 Penalty False start Gentry -5
Patterson is FURIOUS about this. Like four different guys move. Also the Gaz moves.at exactly the same time; he must have been giving a hard count, which worked! And also did not. FFS
Drive Notes: Punt, 7-17, 2 min 2nd Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Box Type Play Player Yards
M39 1 10 Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 4-3 even 6.5 Pass Slant and go Collins Inc
M looking for a chunk; Patterson pumps the slant and then Collins breaks deeper. Patterson holds onto this way too long. The CB bites on the pump and Patterson should immediately reload and fire. Instead he waits almost two seconds to fire, which gives the S time to get over. Ball is OOB anyway. (IN, 0, protection 1/1) Just one on the protection because NW rushes just three and drops the Gaz. RPS +1.
M39 2 10 Shotgun 4-wide 1 1 3 Nickel even 6 Pass Scramble Patterson 15 (Pen -10)
Runyan(-1) sort of beat around the corner. Patterson could step up and find someone like Perry open over the middle; he takes off instead. He’s able to eat up 15 yards and we’re results-based charting but I do feel like this is a symptom of Patterson being generally uncomfortable reading this D. Runyan gets called for a hold which I won’t minus him for separate from the pass pro minus above for obvious B10 ref reasons. How this is a hold and Winovich didn’t get held in this game is a mystery. (SCR, N/A, protection ½)
M29 2 20 Shotgun trips 1 1 3 Nickel even 5.5 Pass Flash screen Collins 17
NW way off and backing off on the snap so this is easy. Bell(+1) and Perry(+1) get blocks, Collins(+0.5) runs straight upfield, notably running over a DB for a few extra yards instead of trying to juke him unsuccessfully. RPS +1. (CA, 3, screen)
M46 3 3 Shotgun 4-wide tight 1 1 3 4-3 even 5.5 Pass Out Collins Inc
Patterson is again late on this throw, which should be out by the time Collins is in his break. It’s not, DB can drive on it. Collins is too far outside because the timing is bad here and comes back to the ball, but leaps unnecessarily and allows the DB to shove him out before he can get a foot down. (MA, 2, protection 1/1)
Drive Notes: Punt, 7-17, 1 min 2nd Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Box Type Play Player Yards
M26 1 10 Pistol 2TE 1 2 2 4-3 even SAM 7.5 Run Inside zone Higdon 7
Eubanks to back of line but not as a split zone blocker, he’s arcing to the S for a potential QB keep. DE shuffles tight, give. JBB(+1) grinds against this DE for a bit before releasing to the second level. Onwenu(+2) one on one with DT, puts him two yards downfield. Ruiz(+1) slams a LB on the second level. Higdon(+1) finds the backside gap and runs over a safety at four yards. RPS -1; NW safeties at 6 and 8 and the guy at 6 was relevant.
M33 2 3 Pistol 2TE 1 2 2 4-3 under 7 Run Inside zone Higdon 2
Ruiz(+1) digs out the NT, moves him downfield. Gentry(+1) gets a good kick; JBB(+1) is able to read an exchange and blocks a LB shooting inside. Gap is between those guys. NW again inserts a safety. Onwenu(-1) gets out on an ILB but doesn’t seal him or move him. But also Higdon(-1) runs right into him and falls over. There is maybe room inside and definitely room outside. Running into the 350* pound guy seems suboptimal.
M35 3 1 I-Form Big 2 2 1 4-3 under 8 Run FB dive Mason 3
Ruiz(+0.5) and Onwenu(+0.5) get the requisite push. Mason(+0.5) stays on his feet and adds a couple more.
M38 1 10 Shotgun empty twin TE 1 2 2 Nickel over 6 Pass TE hitch Eubanks Inc
Klatt gets this exactly right. Patterson’s stepping up, reading zone, and expecting Eubanks to sit down. Instead he continues running into a three-deep corner and the ball wings well short of him. (MA, 0, protection 2/2, Eubanks route -)
M38 2 10 Pistol 2TE 1 2 2 4-3 under 7 Run Pin and pull Higdon 4
This is getting ridiculous. No NW S is deeper than six yards. FFS, throw a post. On TE motion one safety come down to three yards off the LOS and the DTs both signal to the LB level. They slant hard to the play and swamp it. Asking a ton from the OL to get guys who are shooting hard playside; you don’t get to tell DL where to go all the time. M gets lucky as a backside DT falls; Higdon(+1) cuts back and salvages disaster. RPS -3. Throw a post!
M42 3 6 Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 Exotic 7 Pass Scramble Patterson 14
Bell goes in motion and draws a CB with him. Man implied. M runs mesh underneath and Patterson reads this; it’s a mess of zone defenders as NW drops eight. Meanwhile DPJ does have man and sells outside before breaking in… and then starts jogging? WTF? Patterson(+2) takes off and gets it. (SCR, N/A, protection 1/1)
O46 1 10 Ace tight 1 2 2 4-3 over 7 Pass PA Post Collins 36
And NW is bailing hard on this first down PA. Did they see Wilson? I don’t know. But they’re playing 85 guys in the box on runs and back off on this one. Doesn’t actually matter since M gets good time and Collins(route+) is one on one with a S. He smokes the dude and only a throw behind Collins prevents a TD. (CA, 3, protection 2/2)
O10 1 G Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 4-3 even 8 Run Split zone Wilson 7
Seems like NW DE doesn’t get the message. LB flies outside of him to contain QB so he should be able to crash down hard. He doesn’t; Gentry(+0.5) kicks him, barely. Bredeson(+1) drives his guy; Ruiz(+1) gets a LB thunk.
O3 2 G Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 4-3 even 8 Run Split zone Higdon -2
Same play from both teams. This time the DE dives inside hard and crushes it. Tactically. Bredeson(-1) driven back into the gap as well. RPS -2.
O5 3 G Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 4-3 even 8 Pass Fade Perry Inc
Man to man rub on the edge gets Perry a step or two. Patterson misses. Why is this to the corner of the endzone instead of front corner? (IN, 0, protection 1/1)
Drive Notes: FG(24), 10-17, 7 min 3rd Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Box Type Play Player Yards
M38 1 10 Shotgun 2-back TE 2 1 2 4-3 even SAM 7.5 Run Iso Higdon 6
DT dives inside Onwenu(+1) to make this look different; Onwenu drives that guy through. Ruiz(+1) and Bredeson(+0.5) hit and move the other DT with Ruiz getting to a LB. Mason(+1) has no angle to the other LB charging hard but hits him anyway and he starts going down. Higdon can run through. He gets a solid gain with meh YAC.
M44 2 4 Ace tight twin TE 1 2 2 4-3 even SAM 8.5 Run Inside zone Higdon 3
Some counter action as Patterson makes a show of handing it one way and then Higdon goes straight upfield. Playside slant is handled OK. Higdon must cut back and does. JBB kicks the Gaz but starting giving ground; Gaz can reach out his arm and affect Higdon. Push. Everything else is also push? Onwenu and Ruiz both get decent blocks but nothing amazing. This is a successful run with a loaded box. Ruiz(+0.5), Onwenu(+0.5). Higdon(+0.5) did read the blocks and get to the gap.
M47 3 1 I-Form Big twin TE 2 2 1 4-3 under 9.5 Run Down G Higdon 2
At least Mason’s on the field? Gentry(+1) and McKeon(+0.5) down block effectively to pave the way; Ownenu pulls and his guy dodges but irrelevant. Mason(+1) puts his guy on the ground. Higdon meets last LB. Runyan harassed him but has no angle; he does prevent the kind of stick that might prevent a first down. Lot of blocking to get right when you can just wedge it.
M49 1 10 Ace twins twin TE 1 2 2 4-3 even 7 Pass Scramble Patterson 0
PA, safeties gone, one on one for DPJ and Collins. Patterson has all day, and I don’t care what kind of coverage those two guys have, throw the dang ball. Collins is 6-5, let him go make a play. Instead Patterson holds it forever and tries to scramble, no yards. (TAX, 0, protection 2/2)
M49 2 10 Shotgun 4-wide 1 1 3 4-3 over 6.5 Run Power O Higdon 4
Light box with M spread out. M wants to run a tight power that hits inside JBB but NW slants to it. JBB(+0.5) moves the guy a bit; Bredeson(-1) does not re-gap. If he climbs over JBB and gets to the outside maybe this happens, maybe MLB doesn’t scrape over and Higdon gets a big play. Higdon(+0.5) does hop outside JBB and attacks; slot LB comes down to tackle.
O47 3 6 Shotgun 4-wide 1 1 3 Exotic 7 Pass Improv Gentry 17
NW sends five. Picked up. Patterson has time to execute this and routes appear to work, with Perry popping open in a giant pocket of space for a big chunk play. Patterson does not have the patience. He scrambles. Gentry, whose initial route was a nothing jog to the corner that is not a valid option, sees the movement and comes back to the ball to convert. (CA, 3, protection 3/3)
M36 1 10 Ace tight 1 2 2 4-3 over 7 Pass PA TE corner Eubanks 24
Man, I don’t know about this one. M goes to TE out PA for the third time and this time NW has a CB running specifically for this route. He’s under Eubanks and in dominating position. Patterson throws the Back Shoulder Corner made famous by Mitch Leidner and hits it. This is either an awesome NFL throw or a struggling QB getting lucky. (DO, 2, protection 2/2)
M12 1 10 Ace 3TE 1 3 1 4-3 under 10 Run Power O Higdon -3
No chance as M leaves the Gaz unblocked and hopes to get him with Onwenu(?). This isn’t on Onwenu; no OL is fast enough to get out on this. Eubanks(-2) probably missed an assignment, but this could be a bad idea play.
M15 2 13 Shotgun empty 1 1 3 Dime under 4.5 Pass Hitch DPJ 9
Pitch and catch with NW playing off. Probably should have been doing this all day. (CA, 3, protection 1/1)
M6 3 4 Shotgun empty TE 1 1 3 4-3 over 7 Pass In Collins Inc
This really could have used a real replay. All I have is the regular angle. IMO: this ball is a bit high but clearly catchable by Collins, who doesn’t even try to catch it. (CA, 3, protection 1/1)
Drive Notes: FG(21), 13-17, EO3Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Box Type Play Player Yards
M37 1 10 Shotgun trips TE 1 1 3 4-3 over 5.5 Run Inside zone Higdon 2
Another read nobody play. As soon as Gentry blocks instead of releasing the OLB over him fills on the running back and tackles unblocked and un-optioned. RPS -1.
M39 2 8 Shotgun 2TE 1 2 2 4-3 even SAM 7 Run Zone read keeper Patterson 21 (Pen -10)
The worst holding call in football history. Been discussed already. NW blitzes off edge; Gentry(+0.5) gets enough of that guy. Patterson(+1) pulls and heads outside; S doesn’t even think this is a possibility. Patterson gets 21; called back. RPS +3.
M29 2 18 Shotgun trips 1 1 3 Nickel even 6 Pass Flash screen Collins 7
M borks the blocking with both WRs headed to the same guy. I think this is DPJ(-2) as they usually twist and DPJ does not . Collins(+1) is able to get a solid chunk of YAC. (CA, 3, screen)
M36 3 11 Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 3-2 dime 5 Pass Dig Collins Inc
Patterson wings it high and wide of Collins; he has to knock it down to prevent an INT. (IN, 0, protection 2/2)
Drive Notes: Punt, 13-17, 11 min 4th Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Box Type Play Player Yards
M33 1 10 Shotgun 2-back 2 0 3 Nickel even 6.5 Pass Dumpoff Wangler 9
Patterson checks down. It looks like DPJ is open beyond the LB level, FWIW. This is a questionable decision to dump it to a FB who takes contact a two yards but Wangler(+1) breaks a tackle and rumbles near the sticks. (CA, 3, protection 2/2)
M42 2 1 Ace tight 1 2 2 4-3 even SAM 8.5 Run Inside zone Higdon 3
Jet motion passes, big elaborate I’m giving it to this person motion; LBs react and flow; designed cutback. Onwenu(+0.5) turns it one guy; JBB(+0.5) kicks the other. Higdon has unblocked guys on the second level but LB had to redirect and other guy is a corner so the conversion is there. Not much more.
M45 1 10 Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 4-3 over 6.5 Run Inside zone Higdon 1
Just dialed in. NW LBs are charging on runs and dropping on passes; an RPO would be real nice. Here NW lines up a safety at 7 yards and charges him. MLB blitz is picked up by Onwenu, but no one in the world has an angle to this safety, who tackles for a minimal gain. RPS -2. (Tough to judge blocking here as NW is setting this up to happen.)
M46 2 9 Shotgun empty 1 1 3 Nickel over 5.5 Pass TE corner Gentry 13
Three man rush. Patterson finally feels like a guy who knows what he’s looking at here with a quick, confident throw to Gentry that is a second read; he comes to Gentry and bang, it’s out. (CA, 3, protection 2/2)
O41 1 10 Shotgun 2TE 1 2 2 4-3 under 7.5 Run Split zone Higdon 1
I mean, they’ve got the safeties at 6 and 8 again. You’re not taking a shot at a smoke to a WR with a CB eight yards off and nobody else in the building? M tipping run with their WRs here: Martin and Bell. Anyway, 9 guys run pell mell at the LOS. Runyan(-1) tries to wall and go to a LB; LB runs outside and DL goes through. Ruiz goes direct to a LB because he has to because nobody’s slowed them down all day; Bredeson(-1) loses against the other DT. Onwenu(+2) clobbers the other guy two yards downfield and seals him and it doesn’t matter because a S coming from six yards is there at the LOS to tackle, RPS -2.
O40 2 9 Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 4-3 over 7 Pass Scramble Patterson 3
Runyan(-1) beat on STP by a non Gaz. Patterson doesn’t really have anyone because of great depth by the dropping LBs, who had no interest in the token PA. Patterson rolls out and gets what he can. (PR, 0, protection ½)
O37 3 6 Shotgun empty TE 1 1 3 Exotic 5 Pass Scramble Patterson 9
Ruiz(-2) goes with a guy slanting way outside and the loop around is way too easy. Pressure up the gut. NW drops a DT into a spy zone, which kills them because their rush is too permeable and the DT is useless. Patterson finds a lane and runs past the DT. (SCR, 0, protection 0/2)
O28 1 10 Pistol 2TE 1 2 2 4-3 even SAM 7 Run Inside zone Higdon 1
7 man box but a corner blitz to make it eight. DT slides to Onwenu; JBB releases to LB level and has no angle. Onwenu(-1) driven into the backfield. Runyan(-2) gets ripped through pretty badly and that guy tackles at the LOS. No read, FWIW.
O27 2 9 Shotgun empty 1 1 3 Nickel under 4.5 Pass Seam Gentry 21
Patterson takes his shot against the zone, finally, and hits Gentry just before the CB can come under it. A matter of inches here; results. (DO, 2, protection 1/1)
O6 1 G I-Form Big 2 2 1 4-3 under 10 Run Iso Higdon 1
Blocked pretty well on the first level. Onwenu(+1) gets a dude jetting hard upfield and kicks. Mason(+1) buries a LB who’s already falling. Higdon hits a gap and gets a safety in his grill. NW’s check on the WR motion put this S right in the zone. If M leaves that WR over to the left this might be a TD. RPS -2, there is no possible blocker for this S that M invited to the party.
O5 2 G Shotgun trips H 1 1 3 4-3 under 9 Run Split zone Higdon 5
Quads, Mason motions in. Very illegal seeming formation but apparently it checked out (refs +1). A simple split zone sees two LBs bury themselves in the line, the Gaz checks the QB, and the line slants away? Broke ass D. RPS +1.
Drive Notes: Touchdown, 20-17, 4 min 4th Q.
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Box Type Play Player Yards
M34 1 10 I-Form Big 2 2 1 4-3 under 8 Run Iso Higdon 1
Damn near the same thing that happened on the goal to goal first down on previous drive. S moves to middle on motion,unblocked. Also Gentry(-2) fires out a DE that Runyan has and lets a DB through free. He tackles in the backfield. S finishes. Higdon has a shot at more yards without that. Onwenu(+1) put a guy on the ground; Mason(+1) wiped a LB; Ruiz(+1) chipped and got to a back. That S, though, RPS -2.
M35 2 9 Shotgun trips TE 1 1 3 4-3 over 5.5 Run Inside zone Higdon 3
Patterson sees the Gaz step down hard and gives. He’s got an arc block from Gentry and a DE stepping the wrong way. Pull? He doesn’t. Gaz redirects to the QB after the step down but Higdon can’t see that, not reasonable to expect him to. He’s got to go to the interior. Rest of NW’s play works because they ignore . the QB. Onwenu(-1) does get more or less beat but the LB is flying in past JBB who has no angle; jammed. Bredeson(+0.5) and Ruiz(+0.5) do blow out a DT and reach an OLB way out of position.
M38 3 6 Shotgun 3-wide H 1 1 3 4-3 over 7 Run Zone read keeper Patterson 8
And the keep. Whole D is gone except for the one CB they keep outside, who’s just trying to hold it down man. Patterson(+2) keeps and if he didn’t this time I’d just assume that there’s no such thing as a post snap run read in M’s whole offense. He then gives that CB the business for the first down. RPS +1.
M36 1 10 I-Form Big 2 2 1 4-4 even SAM 9 Run Split flow counter Higdon 0
M now in a situation where running is very profitable and RPS is off. And M digs out a last year play for the first time this year. Onwenu(-1) driven back by a DT; Bredeson(-1) controlled by and shed by the Gaz; no room, immediate tackle.
M36 2 10 Shotgun 2TE 1 2 2 4-4 under 8 Run Split zone Higdon 5
This should not work, with a bunch of mediocre push blocks at best. Higdon(+1) dodges a free LB and flings himself forward.
M41 3 5 Shotgun trips TE 1 1 3 4-3 over 7 Run Inside zone Higdon 4
A must pull from Patterson(-2), who has absolutely nobody bothering with him on the edge. Handoff, possibly called Higdon(+1) cuts back to the giant acres of space Patterson spurned but can’t quite get there. Gentry(-1) got blown back by the Gaz. Can’t blame him but that’s a minus.
Drive Notes: Punt, 20-17, 1 min 4th Q. EOG for O.

WELL AREN'T I MR CROTCHETY BONES

yep

BLAAAAR PLAYCALLING

yep

I AM—wait, yep?

Bolded Alter Ego, you're not always presenting an argument I want to knock down. Sometimes you are the writhing id of the Michigan fanbase and kinda sorta on point.

HOOGRAY I AM GOOD NOW. BUT THE DERPY DERP?

I did not like the outcome of this RPS matchup, which was a solid L at –6 with high amplitude. The go-go-go nature of the Northwestern defense contributes to the high numbers and that is somewhat unavoidable. When you play a team that at one point sent a safety who's supposed to be checking a 20-yard throw across the line of scrimmage, you're going to have a day heavy on the RPS:

NW safety creepin'

The loss was not inevitable. I wonder if the week off gave Northwestern an edge here, because they seemed to have Michigan downloaded late. When they ran, Northwestern linebackers flung themselves at the line of scrimmage.

NW LB level

When they passed nobody bought Michigan's token play action and the linebackers achieved terrific depth on their zone drops:

NW LB level

Northwestern did have a couple of plays on which they didn't guess run or pass right but spookily few. So Michigan set downs on fire running into what were legitimate nine-man boxes with safeties at six and eight yards. What are you even looking at here? This is reminiscent of the 27 for 27 Penn State game when the opposition was playing in the parking lot against Jeremy Gallon and Al Borges didn't care:

Those CB have zero safety help and know it and are backing off on the snap. Allowing the opposition to align like this is a major tactical failure. You have one on one matchups with the whole field available, and when you run the ball with a safety at six yards presnap you get what you deserve. Northwestern did this over and over again and not once did Michigan punish them for it. They only tried to once, I think. What are you doing running into this? On second and ten?

image_thumb[17]

You think Not Even Montre Hartage is likely to win one on one here? You think Nico Collins can't get eight yards on an immediate throw? FFS.

But they got 370 yards against a pretty good defense?

This game felt short but was 11 drives, which is pretty average. 370 yards isn't great, and I thought the team played better than that.

Many of the things that worked were a little janky. I strongly prefer winning touchdown drives that aren't cobbled together with scrambles and passes that are a foot from a PBU or worse. How many times did Patterson have an obviously open guy to throw to? How many times was he looking at a bunch of covered WRs? How many times did Michigan get something easy? Not much. The end around. A couple passes. Some Northwestern dorfs.

Michigan's pass protection was excellent, their run blocking very good, and it was still a struggle to get up and down the field. The two main drivers of that struggle were Patterson, who had an off day that he made up for a bit with his running, and Northwestern's significant RPS win.

It was a generally frustrating game to chart, one in which Michigan's playcalling seemed to put Michigan behind the eight-ball in various situations. The failure to Ben Mason still sticks out. His two short yardage conversions were dead simple:

Wedge with the right side of the line and Mason falls forward. Until someone stops it, run it.

The two-play sequence that resulted in the turnover on downs was less bad on review—both plays probably should have gotten the first down but for a critical mistake on each. It still seems like you're risking those errors in a way that the dumb little FB dive does not.

On the other hand, the second and goal from the three looks much worse. Michigan got seven yards on first down because they got lucky. Northwestern has a gap exchange on with a LB looping outside to contain. This gives the DE free rein to go hammer the TE, but he screws it up:

NW DE #83 to bottom

There's your gap. On the next play, Michigan runs the same thing. Northwestern runs the same thing. The DE doesn't screw up this time:

NW DE #83 to bottom

You have three cracks at Masoning it into the endzone. Instead a playcall on which Michigan's blocking doesn't even get to apply.

And they keep pulling Onwenu?

Er.

I see our détente has come to its end.

Weren't you just some sort of slavering e-Troll who talks in all caps?

Well, I never.

In any case: I don't think it's a problem. Northwestern linebackers blazed into him twice, but on both occasions he managed to make the block. This is not a LB knifing into the backfield such that the play is dead. It's just that Higdon runs directly into the LB when gaps to either side are available:

He's even bouncing to the gap between Onwenu and JBB before redirecting directly into the LB. The story was similar on the failed fourth and short, except Higdon did go outside and got stuffed because of a different issue. If Onwenu is able to get around enough against Northwestern, which has some of the most aggressive linebackers in the country, it's fine.

The third incident is highly likely to be a Eubanks MA. First level defenders like this don't get left alone on the playside for reasons that are immediately apparent:

DE #97 to bottom, also M TE #82 to bottom

Nobody is getting to the Gaz there. Onwenu is fine. When allowed to go forward he's rooting people out.

Okay but PFF thinks we can't run block at all.

I don't know what they're looking at. It's possible I'm just overlooking some bad technique stuff that they're negging. I try to keep this results-oriented since I am not an OL or an OL coach and the intricacies of the position are not known to me. I (usually) don't evaluate blocks that are too far away from the ball to be relevant because their results are unknown.

The

lurking... lurking beneath

chart is a bit of a mixed bag but Michigan again hit our 2:1 positive ratio on the ground—this is probably a consecutive games record—and got a solid day from Higdon. 

Offensive Line

Player + - Total Notes
Runyan 3.5 6 -2.5 Gaz was a tough matchup.
Bredeson 5 4 1 Faded a bit late.
Ruiz 9.5 1 8.5 Clubbed DTs and climbed to LBs.
Onwenu 11.5 4.5 7 Graded some dudes.
JBB 4   4 Don't get why they're not running to him more.
Spanellis       DNP
McKeon 2.5 2.5 0 Critical whiff on fourth and one.
Gentry 3.5 4 -0.5  
Eubanks   2 -2 MA on Gaz TFL, I think?
Mason 7   7 +6 blocking.
TOTAL 45.5 22 68% Can't block safeties at six though.
Backs
Player + - T Notes
Patterson 5 2 3 Gave 'em the Forcier to convert.
McCaffrey       DNP
Higdon 9.5 4 5.5 Impressive grinding YAC.
Evans       DNP
Samuels       DNP
Wilson       DNC
Turner       DNP
TOTAL 14.5 6 8.5 Couple of missed cuts/pulls. 
Receivers
Player + - T Notes
DPJ 1.5 3 -1.5 Screen dorf.
Collins 2 4 -2 Not Steve Breaston.
Perry 2.5   2.5 Downfield blocking.
Martin        
Thomas        
McCurry        
Bell   1 -1 Jet should have cut up.
TOTAL 6 8 -2 First downs shunned.
Metrics
Player + - T Notes
Protection 36 6 86% Ruiz –3, Runyan –2, Team -1
RPS 15 21 -6 Did not get after NW for their aggression.

What I saw was a bunch of blocks that got made and not a whole lot of payoff because of the hyperaggressive nature of the Northwestern defense. As we saw the last few weeks, when you run against blitzball programs you need to break some long ones to keep up statistically. Michigan didn't have a super long run and had a big chunk taken off the board with the phantom holding call. Many runs that didn't go anywhere weren't blocks getting beaten but safeties allowed to camp out almost in the box.

Let's revisit that Higdon run above against the safeties at 6 and 8. Every block on this play is made. Every one. McKeon, Runyan, and Collins all get their guys, but Higdon has to bend because of the safety's presnap positioning and the CB can fill. There's literally nothing else that the blockers can do here.

That's why the RPS metric exists. It is possible to grind through these nine man fronts but even when you do  your upside is limited. Higdon has to run through a safety at four yards on a play where Onwenu and JBB both definitively win blocks up the gut:

When Michigan was able to put a NW linebacker in the wrong gap they paid it off pretty well. That A-gap iso Seth covered sees Mason, Onwenu, and a Ruiz/Bredeson double all crunch guys:

interior line and #42 FB

Ditto on the TD:

What draws negs from me are missing blocks entirely (usually –2), missed assignments (usually –2), getting driven back to close a gap or force a bend (usually –1), and failing to get movement on a double (usually –0.5 each). And that didn't really happen much. Michigan didn't get swamped in the backfield much and when they did it was usually a tactical thing, like Michigan failing to recognize a highly likely slant:

I threw out a bunch of minuses on that play but the original sin is not recognizing that slot LB creeping down. Once that guy comes down you know you're getting a slant to the play and need to block down instead of having guys release immediately. This is a different kind of error. As always, YMMV.

This was a high level of opposition that Michigan's blockers got a W against. A narrow one, but a W.

I have this gold star burning a hole in my pocket.

While we're on the subject, one Gold Star for Cesar Ruiz on that end around. He's hitting the Gaz two yards behind the LOS when Peoples-Jones turns the corner and is still able to get out on a lead block:

He had a couple of pass protection hiccups but was otherwise dominant.

I'll take pass protection hiccups. I would have taken any sort of gastrointestinal distress that kept the tubes inside.

Yes, this was pretty encouraging. 86% against a real team is nice. There is an important caveat: Northwestern was playing to contain virtually all day. Blitzes were extremely rare. The Gaz was dropped into coverage repeatedly. Northwestern chose, fairly wisely, to sit back and tackle. An important step forward that leads to this faintly ludicrous stat...

...and even if that's generous if you told me anyone would be saying nice things about Michigan's pass protection after the Notre Dame game I would have been very drunk and disinclined to reply. If you told me the next morning I would have permitted the brief flickering of hope.

Patterson's day was... gritty? He ran some? And Led Us Down The Field To Rescue Us From Defeat?

Gritty is about right. There was sand in his gears, and then he got onto Northwestern's carpet and took his shoes off. The chart here is still fairly good, devoid of major errors:

SHEA PATTERSON

  Good   Neutral   Bad   Ovr
Game DO CA SCR   PR MA   BA TA IN BR   DSR PFF
Notre Dame 2+ 18(4)+ 1   5 1   1(1) 2 2 1*   77% -
WMU 3++ 9(2)++     2 1     1 2     77% -
SMU 3+ 9(1)+ 3     1     2 1 2*   74% -
Nebraska 2 11(2)+     1         2 1   79% -
Northwestern 2 12(2)+ 3   1 3     3* 4     68% -

But there's a clear drop in Patterson's efficiency. Some incidents were understandable. On Michigan's first drive their third down saw Northwestern drop eight against Michigan max pro; all three downfield WRs were bracketed. There is really nowhere useful to go here:

Maaaybe Grant Perry is getting open past the LB level but it's hard to tell.

Others were not. This is self-inflicted pressure by Patterson, who drifts back to ten yards deep and has to move because even when you win an edge pass pro event the DE often comes around at... ten yards:

Instead of finding Perry as he breaks open to the edge of the field, Patterson is moving around and trying to direct traffic. That was a trend: Patterson didn't like various looks and didn't trust his pass protection—which fair enough even if they were very good in this game—and resorted to running around trying to make something happen.

Even when sitting in the pocket and firing things didn't go so well. Michigan toasts a cornerback on a slant and go here, but Patterson has a "loading" swirly thing pop up mid-play and inexplicably waits:

Michigan got the look they wanted. Let it rip. If that's out as soon as Patterson reloads it's a chunk. This attempted third and short conversion is also late:

That ball has to be out when Collins breaks out. That could still be a conversion but the ball is behind Collins, who decides to jump, possibly unnecessarily. Later the deep shot to Collins was a completion... but coulda shoulda been a touchdown if the ball led him. The one time Michigan did go with deep play action against an absurdly safety-free Northwestern lineup he just held the ball:

Collins and DPJ are one on one. If DPJ is covered you have Collins on a fly route and should throw the ball. There is no CB against which tossing Collins a one on one arm punt is a bad idea. A few plays later it looks like Perry is popping open as Michigan runs a zone-beater, but Patterson exits the pocket and relies on improv. It's hard to tell on these without downfield replays, but this is a guy who's open as Collins draws that LB to him:

image_thumb[22]

Patterson has bugged out of a clean enough pocket.

All of this points to a quarterback who was very uncomfortable. This kind of timing throw that's out in rhythm was unfortunately rare:

Northwestern plays a ton of zone, almost never blitzed, frequently dropped eight, and rarely bit on play action. The reads and windows were tight. Patterson didn't make them quickly enough in many cases; in others he didn't trust his protection and exited a clean pocket before his WRs broke open.

He offset this with some effective scrambling, a fair number of completions despite the above, and two throws that were either brilliant or lucky. We try to be a results-based charting system here but you have to wonder how much of this was on purpose:

The chart says DO. It also says DO for the throw to Gentry that set Michigan up for the winning score. That was a nervy moment too:

You wonder. Arguing in Patterson's favor is the fact that no Northwestern pass defender touched a ball in this game. Dangerous throws were limited to the two completions embedded just above.

Northwestern provided a very different challenge than opponents to date and there was a settling in period; Patterson's efficiency peaked late and hopefully that will continue going forward against teams that might try the same kind of thing.

And he pulled the ball some! Woo!

He did. These were close to uncontested. Michigan is running the kind of offense where the QB pulling the ball is a seismic event that sees all eleven defenders collapse to the ground. The 21 yard run that the Worst Holding Call Ever eliminated was an example. So was the third down conversion on Michigan's four minute drill:

And the third down that didn't quite make it. Look at this mesh point:

image_thumb[28]

Patterson does not pull; Higdon in fact cuts into the gaping nothingness on the backside of this play but because he's got to kill his momentum to do so he doesn't get to the line. It seems like Patterson is passing up on opportunities to pull a few times per game. The old Rich Rodriguez rule is that if you got four yards you made the right decision. That is obviously not the cutoff for Harbaugh.

There are many possibilities here. Maybe Patterson just doesn't to run if he doesn't have to. Maybe the coaching staff wants to keep him away from hits as much as possible. Maybe they're not repping mesh points enough to have confidence to make this a real read and it's all presnap. I don't know. I do prefer the sort of offense that makes you respect the QB on a down to down basis than the sort that allows you to ignore him until they take their 20 yard chunk one to three times a game.

McKeon lost a fair amount of PT. Was it just the drop?

I think the fourth and one was probably the reason he sat more. A lot of people are muttering about Mike Onwenu not pulling fast enough, but it's McKeon getting batted past a linebacker immediately that really submarines the play.

#84 TE to top

Mason has to kick out the guy who flung McKeon past him and that allows a cornerback in free. If Higdon is hit by one guy instead of two he powers out the first down—as it was he was about three inches short.

I don't think this is going to last. Eubanks had a couple of issues of his own. There was the previously discussed Gaz TFL; he also failed to settle against the zone on an incompletion he got a route minus on.

Speaking of: receivers?

[0 = uncatchable, 1 = circus catch, 2 = moderate difficulty, 3 = routine]

  THIS WEEK   SEASON
Player 0 1 2 3   0 1 2 3
DPJ 1     2/2   2 0/1 1/1 15/15
Collins 1   1/2 3/4     0/1 3/4 8/9
Martin           2 1/3   4/4
Perry 1         2 0/2   6/6
Bell     1/1         1/1  
McCurry               1/1 1/1
Black                  
McKeon       0/1   1   1/1 5/6
Gentry     1/1 2/2   3   3/3 10/12
Eubanks     1/1 1/1   1   1/1 2/2
Mason                   
Evans                 4/4
Higdon        1/1          2/2
Wilson                 1/1
Thomas       0/1            0/1

I charged Collins with a straight up drop for the in route he did not attempt to catch, FWIW. I general his game was a weird, up and down thing. He had a number of important catches, including a 32-yarder that set Michigan up for a shoulda-coulda TD. But also:

That's catchable, I think. We never got a real replay. Collins either doesn't see it or thinks it's for DPJ or has a severe case of footsteps. No idea.

Collins also frustrated with a couple of crucial, bad decisions on the ground. That third and short WR screen I was cranky about actually turned out to be a first down waiting to happen if Collins just runs outside, or directly into the last defensive back:

image_thumb[5]

There is no way Collins, who is two yards long, isn't falling forward for a first down if he understands he is a large burly man and this is no longer high school. When he goes straight north and south he grinds out impressive quantities of yards. He got hit about a yard downfield on a screen that ended up in a Katamari ball of receivers and defensive backs seven yards downfield.

When he tries to dodge guys it doesn't go well:

Again, this really looks like a first down if Collins just veers slightly left but mostly plows ahead:

image_thumb[11]

Two steps and then indirect contact with a DB keeping leverage. Fourth and one at worst, right?

Collins coughed up a first down and (at least) an opportunity to go on fourth and short with decisions like this. DPJ had a similar incident on the first snap where he turned 8-9 yards into 4 by trying to dodge guys he could not dodge. I imagine that will be a focus in practice.

Also in this category is Ronnie Bell on the early jet sweep:

If he cuts this up behind Gentry instead of bending he's got a big play. This is also a slight tactical beef: you'd hope someone in the box saw this and came back to it later after explicitly instructing Bell that if Gentry is kicking a guy out you need to cut off his butt.

Got some things to work on.

Heroes?

Ruiz and and Onwenu did a lot of moving of folks. The pass protection was excellent. Gentry should have got more targets. Ben Mason was a hammer.

Maybe not so heroic?

Not throwing against zero coverage. Collins's mistaken belief he is a slot.

What does it mean for Maryland and beyond?

We might survive this crazy train ride after all. 86% protection, minimal Gaz incursions. LFG.

Someone get a smoke check in the offense. If a DB is eight yards off, throw the ball to Collins and you will get a nice gain. Or, like, go deep.

Either add some RPOs or work on more convincing PA. At no point in this game with the super aggressive LBs did they key run or pass wrong. There were some run plays that put them in the wrong gap, but the easy chunk to Gentry over the middle just did not exist.

Maybe we should run over the right side more? Michigan's run game is weirdly left handed, preferring to pull Onwenu instead of Bredeson and rarely clobbering people with the Big Big Boys on the right. Michigan's late surge last year was built largely on grinding people over the right side, and IMO those guys are performing better overall.

More Mason. Mason for all the short yardage. Mason for the mashing of faces as well, he was a perfect +6-0 when doing that against a really good LB. They should try to get him up to half the snaps.

Run straight upfield please, outside WRs. Probably blew three first downs between them. Game might be a lot different if Michigan converts a second and one on the first drive.

Comments

4th and Go For It

October 5th, 2018 at 9:34 AM ^

True they were, and as I said, the game's changed. That said there's really be a small handful of games where teams have put up significant points on this team in recent years. Our losses last year we surrendered 14, 24, 26, 31, and 42  points.  In 2016 it was 14, 30 (in OT), and 33.  in 2015 it was 24, 27, and 42 for the losses.

So scoring 24 points isn't going to get you wins anymore but 28-30 should keep you in most any game. The defense needs to step up in big games (which it hasnt in done enough in the Harbaugh era and really stop a good team - most of those larger point totals are OSU). I think at this point expecting this offense to win a big game and score at will on a tough defense is asking more than is realistic given its composition. NU game was not encouraging but second half of the season will reveal what this team has. Find a way to win the game you're playing that week and move on.

 

bronxblue

October 5th, 2018 at 9:39 AM ^

With regards to PFF and run blocking, they might also just be wrong.  Brian spends a lot of time evaluating these games; PFF probably has an intern who played D3 for a year reviewing a couple dozen plays and then moving on.  It's very likely they are just not doing a great job, because I think the run blocking has been fine this year and the pass blocking, after some struggles has looked solid.

turtleboy

October 5th, 2018 at 10:40 AM ^

So now that we can officially stop pretending the play calling was fine, and there were just a few execution problems, my question is why? Why didn't we torch them repeatedly for selling out against the run? Why didn't we throw a couple dump off passes for easy touchdowns instead of running into an overloaded box over and over and over and over again while we were still losing? I can understand playing like that when we're up a few scores, but we were playing borgesball trying to climb back into the game on the road. 

imafreak1

October 5th, 2018 at 10:46 AM ^

This piece hits well on the two issues that stood  out to me with the offense in this game. These are likely related issues.

1. The play action doesn't appear to be working very well. Neither does the passing on early downs. When this offense is working correctly, play action and early down passing is supposed to get easy chunks. That is why they do all the predictable down burning running into stacked lines. Which I think they are still doing a little extra because these are games are supposed to be more easily winnable and that's fine. Say what you want, NW still lost to Akron and Duke. But when they do run the play action and the first down passes those plays are supposed to rip off chunks of yardage and they didn't really.

2. Very little is easy in this offense. Which is likely because of the first point. Good college offenses make things easy so they don't have to rely on back shoulder fades to TE's and when a TE does drop a pass it isn't the end of the world. Too much in this game, small issues loomed large because nothing was easy. Should Nico Collins get that first down? Yes. But in a good offense things are much easier and much less reliant on a young WR making all the right choices.

Maybe there were a thousand tiny cuts that kept the offense down. But to me it is starting to look like the offense is making everything too hard so that one play, one dropped pass, one mistake, becomes huge. They need to have more good plays that can go right. More easy plays that can't go wrong. That is how good college offenses work.

That is how Harbaugh's offenses have worked in the past. Hopefully, this one will start working that way again.

Ron Utah

October 5th, 2018 at 1:44 PM ^

There are some very, very good clips in this post that show both what Michigan is trying to do and what the potential of this offense is...but they also show that we are not tapping that potential like we could:

  • The first clip, "part 8," shows the magic of jet action and a good route combination against a zone defense.  Alas, the drop.  Wish we'd use more jet action, as you can see the LBs hold a beat longer than they do in most of our play action.
  • In the "part 37" clip, Shea keeping seems like the right choice.  As Brian has indicated, I'm not sure how this play is supposed to work--is it really a read for the QB?  Have we just no practiced this enough to know what we're supposed to do, or is Shea being told to only pull in certain situations?  Not sure what's going on here, but it looks like some easy yards were left on the field, and no one is being optioned.
  • Part 16 is frustrating.  The play is generally well-blocked, and it's asking a lot from Collins to do a better job on that safety when the safety is so close to the line of scrimmage.  This absolutely should be a smoke, or an audible to a play action pass--the one-on-one coverage on the outside is obvious.  Heck, a hitch route probably gets an easy 7 yards here with that gigantic cushion.  Not long ago, we used smoke and hitch routes quite a bit...not sure where those have been since Jed left.
  • I've already written agreement about using Mason more.  "Part 26" is an RPO where Shea makes the right decision but the play is not blocked well and goes for a loss.  Expecting Gentry to get across the formation in time to blow that DE out is asking a lot, and I'd rather see some fullbackian plays from the three than this fancy stuff that we aren't that good at yet.
  • If "Part 21" truly is an option play, Shea has to keep.  That could have been a big gainer.  We know this is not an RPO, because the receiver never looks back.  So who is being optioned and for what purpose?  Are they just using Shea's eyes to try to hold the safety for a beat?  And if so, why not let him pull when it's obvious that the path of least resistance is right where Shea is looking?
  • In Part 3, Shea needs to throw that ball to Higdon.  Let your play maker try to make a play.
  • In Part 7, the ball should go to McKeon.  Yes, he's likely to get tackled by the LB, but a three or four yard gain is fine there, and McKeon's speed might get him to the second LB and make for a six or seven yard gain, which would be a great result on first down.
  • The throw to Collins in Part 19 is a difficult throw for even an NFL QB.  Patterson can definitely hit it, and should throw sooner if he's going to try, but DPJ is the better choice here, as Michigan has flooded the first level of the zone and DPJ is uncovered.
  • Part 20--yep.  Throw the damn ball.
  • Part 28--either take a shot on these plays or run a damn hitch.  I don't understand why we didn't use hitches more this game; they were open all day.
  • Part 43 is only frustrating because it demonstrates Patterson's potential as a runner.  Why don't we do this more?  Losing late in a game that eliminates us from B1G contention is not the time to save plays for OSU.
  • Part 33--throw is a bit late and a touch behind Collins, still think it was for him.  It certainly was not too high.

There were a lot of yards left on the field.  The frustrating thing is that the offense appears primed to take advantage of these opportunities, but isn't doing it.  I'm not sure if that's how it's being coached, but those option plays would really work if there was, you know, and option.  As for the passing game, Shea was just a bit off (and so were some of the routes and receivers) and that will happen.  He stepped-up and ultimately won the game for us, so these are ultimately just quibbles, but my eye sees about 75 easy yards that were left on the field.  Why weren't we using hitches against soft zone coverage?  Why isn't the QB actually optioning?  Why aren't there more smoke plays to pull the CBs up if we aren't going to run hitches anyway?

This offense is modernized, and is opening opportunities.  Now we just have to start taking more of them.