wink martindale

Say it. [David Wilcomes]

Offense was yesterday, but after I was finished I realized I forgot to give a depth chart status. Then I thought we could use the Don Brown Dude Code for depth charting. Then I repurposed the icons that Brian got from some internet Flash game during the blog's distant past.

Icon Name Meaning
Rock Star Player is an All-American/1st rounder/bends the game around him.
Dude Trusted good starter. Probably All-B10 or in the running.
Guy Playable B10-caliber guy, very fine in a rotation.
Iffy Probably don't want him playing extended snaps at this point.

Defense in General

The question we're asking is: Is Wink gonna blitz too much?

But they're acting like it's: What does "blitz too much" mean?

What are we hearing? First off I need to be going on about something again, because I was out of town last week and thus missed my chance to remark on Michigan's hiring of former WMU and Memphis line coach Lou Esposito. If the name sounds familiar to you (you're misremembering famous Canadian hockey players and) you remember this author's longstanding appreciation of Bronco linemen like Ali Fayad (DE on the top).

Fayad was the first but they kept coming. Ralph Holley. Braden Fiske. Andre Carter. Marshawn Kneeland. At one point while UFR'ing the offense versus WMU I decided to look up who was responsible for these guys, and have been hoping Michigan would have an opportunity to pluck Esposito ever since. Can he recruit? I dunno. But he can coach.

Michigan also made the addition of defensive analyst Lionel Stokes official, while Alejandro found Pernell McPhee enrolled as a grad student in the School of Social Work. Stokes was LaMar Morgan's guy at Louisiana and before that an FCS coordinator. McPhee is expected to be an analyst as well, but NCAA rules allow grad assistants to be on-field coaches for a couple of years so maybe he's gonna do that.

Staff set, let's turn back to a bullet defined the offense bits this week, which was the front seven is being rather harsh on the passing game. Henschke:($):

Wink’s pressures and blitzes “handled” the offense thoroughly. … The defense is always ahead of the offense early but the offense needs time to get rhythm and gel, a lot of early pressure by Wink doesn’t necessarily allow that but it’s good practice.

There's also this from Ernest Hausmann:

Jean-Mary is imploring the group to be more disruptive in the pass game.

Wink, while calling himself the system's OG, did little to suppress the talk that he represents a more basal, aggressive antecessor of the Mac-Minter defenses.

I am more aggressive than Jesse and the proof is in the pudding. So we’ll see how it works and if we can get to the quarterback rushing three, we will rush three. That’s the way football is. You just got to see how it changes because people are adjusted to us, too.

What it means? Dear only fanbase in football that wants to hear their DC talk about blitzing *less*: Jesse Minter was able to use a lot of sim pressures without committing that many rushers, but Wink's correct that opponents have this on tape and will adjust. If you want feints to keep working you have to punch too. The pressures will go up, but it'll be in the context of all the sim pressures that Minter was using, not the blitz-to-play-man that he ran in Baltimore with the league's most expensive secondary, or in New York with the league's worst starting field position. Chill. Not you Wink.

[After THE JUMP: Dudes, potential rock stars, and a big bummer.]

[Robert Sabo/NY Post]

[What this is: Cody Alexander is a mainstay of the community of internet coaches who share x's & o's analysis, host of the Art of X Show and author of six books on defense. But mostly he's the guy behind the substack MatchQuarters, which since 2016 has been an invaluable resource for understanding a lot of defensive concepts we talk about.

The article herein, which gets into Wink Martindale's defensive philosophy, was recently published on his site. If you're a fan of Neck Sharpies and want to take the next step, Cody is offering a one-year, 20% off coupon to MGoBlog readers. Take this link. –Seth]

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Wink Martindale, the newly appointed Michigan Defensive Coordinator and former Giants and Ravens DC, is an enigma. Known for his pressures, Martindale is one of the best blitz designers in the NFL. He comes from the ‘old’ Ravens tree, which was blitz-centric and utilized a deep bag of pre-snap presentations and pressure paths.

The Giants finished 21st in DVOA this past season, and their defensive struggles led to Martindale and the organization parting ways. It's a similar situation to the one he found himself in after the '21 season, his last with the Ravens. Once deemed one of the b’s best DCs, Martindale’s units have slowly sunk to the bottom of efficiency metrics.

Though Martindale’s performance as a DC has waned, his defenses still rank at the top of the league in 1st and 3rd Down rates. The boom-or-bust system frustrates many. He is a master at attacking protections, especially on 3rd Downs.

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Per PFF, the Giants had the second-highest Pass Blitz Rate (PBR) at 54.2%, right behind the Vikings (above). On 3rd Downs, that rate rose to 56.4%, enough to unseat Minnesota from the top spot. On those downs, the Giants were 13th in EPA when blitzing (-.123).

[Hit THE JUMP]

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.

image

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).

image

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":

image

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.]

What's the difference?

He's the Ravens guy, unless he isn't.

It's clear they wanted us to sign him and fight them in court.