2024 national championship

[Patrick Barron]

Matt Demorest, Realtor and Lender and I have brought back our (sometimes-)weekly video short. The purpose of these is to show you something on film that you as a fan will be able to pick up on when you see it in the future. Or to just show you what people are talking about.

This week we get into the Single-Wing. Why was it a big part of football in the first half of the 20th Century, how did defenses adjust to it, what more can you do with it, and how can Michigan use this offense in 2024 to maximize hybrid skill player like Orji, Mullings, Bredeson, Edwards, and Loveland? We go back to 1904, 1948, and examples of Alabama, Michigan, and Washington running it in this year's Playoff. If you're in the housing market, Matt's the guy.

There is nothing after the jump because it's video content.

Can you read my mind? [Patrick Barron]

FORMATION NOTES: The UFR Glossary is here and you may want to brush up because DeBoer made me bring out rare formations like a true under-center Single-Wing, and weird notations like Z->Y means the WR and TE have switches spots. This is the Go Go setup (aka Single-Wing RB) that UNLV was running way back in September.

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I put covered players in parentheses, but Washington also managed to get away with some illegal formations where nobody was covered, in which case I just put a question mark in there, e.g. Go Go Right (?).

"Hide H" was a trick where Rome Odunze hid out at tight end and got M to align in a mismatch. That's him trying not to be noticed as the H-back on the top of the formation (where all the Michigan players are pointing).

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I'm using "Flex" for a TE split out wide for a 2x2 set. "Demi" means the TE isn't tight but neither is he in the slot (see #37 on the left). Also we were treated to a skycam version of this game, so I can provide a few canonical examples of terms we're often flinging around, and some new ones. Michigan in the above is in an G front, which means the nose is head up over the guard. Sometimes he was over the tackle, which I call Wide, where the DT is lined up over a tackle.

Letters or numbers (A, AA, 0) in the defensive front that means they've added LBs on the line of scrimmage in that alignment (A gap, both A gaps, head up on the center, etc). Another nuance I can capture with greater accuracy than usual is the difference between Kirby Smart's "Mint" front and a true 404 where the DL are heads up on the tackles—I think a lot of the Tites I charted this year were actually Mint. Michigan got creative too. This is "Crable":

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I'll also try to note in the text when Michigan used sim pressures, since that's going to be relevant.

[After THE JUMP: Winning a natty.]

Splat. [Bryan Fuller]

Matt Demorest, Realtor and Lender and I have brought back our (sometimes-)weekly video short. The purpose of these is to show you something on film that you as a fan will be able to pick up on when you see it in the future. Or to just show you what people are talking about.

This time, even though we already did a Neck Sharpies on it, Matt wanted to get further into what happened on the two Donovan Edwards runs, so we zoomed in on the thing Washington was doing, which was to have the DTs be the read instead of the MLB. Of course, they also screwed it up. If you're in the housing market, Matt's the guy.

There is nothing after the jump because it's video content.

First comes love, then comes marriage, then comes our DT up your undercarriage.

If Washington was Boris Gishenko this was the exploding pen.

the onslaught of diaries 

it happened, and now it has always happened 

the Michigan Wolverines are the national champions of college football 

the much more vulnerable side of the Huskies 

if you love offense, you'll love this 

LFG