[Patrick Barron]

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Brian September 11th, 2023 at 1:24 PM

9/9/2023 – Michigan 35, UNLV 7 – 2-0

I thought about copying and pasting last week's column and seeing if anyone noticed. It would have various references to ECU instead of UNLV, but acronyms are acronyms and maybe it would slide by. The accounting of JJ McCarthy's incompletions would be off by one and factually inaccurate, sure. I was banking on the nuclear glow coming off of McCarthy's arm obliterating all detail and leaving nothing but a crater of Buddhism (but fun!). I could have gotten away with it, I'm sure.

The pattern of this game was the pattern of the other game: big long Michigan drives on which some disappointing run plays are washed away in a torrent of third and medium conversions. JJ McCarthy's eyes glow white and he starts levitating. The opposition can do nothing on the interior and cannot pass protect and is only able to eke out a first down or two. Michigan irritatingly turns it over on downs due to over-reliance on a dive play. They lose the shutout when the backups to the backups get in. The final score doesn't reflect the statistical bombing that has just occurred.

Same, game, same column. It could work. I could scurry off and sip a mai tai or something. Wave to Dan Aykroyd, who is on a boat. Sort of thing.

-------------------------------------------

But no. No, I shall not do that. I shall stand and deliver because there is another thing that is more or less JJ McCarthy-level that should be addressed, and that is what is happening on the interior of Michigan's defensive line. You may have caught this from John Duerr on Twitter:

What the cropping somewhat obscures is that right next to Mason Graham, Kris Jenkins was doing the exact same thing to the tackle. Jenkins is not a 20-year-old sophomore but he does play for Michigan at this moment, so we've got that going for us. Meanwhile Kenneth Grant is rumbling around stunts like he's not 340 pounds, then impacting people like he is.

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[Bryan Fuller]

This is a long way away from converting Ben Mason and Jess Speight to DT and then playing them. The turnaround here is incredible; I remember a distinct sense of relief when Michigan was able to land George Rooks, a bonafide four-star defensive tackle. Rooks is now at Boston College because he would be the #6 DT on this roster, tops.

And there is no more important position on defense to have both depth and dudes. Georgia's recent run was built on talent everywhere, yes, but the most talent was at DT. When Michigan brought their Joe Moore award OL up against the Bulldogs they got shown what "generational talent" meant. There is nothing more dispiriting than watching the middle of your offensive line get shredded, and nothing more bloodlust-inducing than watching the middle of their offensive line get shredded.

To be sure paragraph: to be sure, Michigan has to sustain this level of production against better opposition. But even this objection is fairly weak when we've already seen what Kris Jenkins and Mason Graham looked like against the Big Ten. In Jenkins's case that was 20 pounds ago; in Graham's case he was a true freshman. It is not at all unreasonable to project the big gap ups they've demonstrated this year into the season-ending gauntlet. Grant is more speculative, but only just. And the big issue we projected, conditioning, isn't that relevant when you are DT option #3 on a defense that immediately boots teams off the field.

Michigan might have three first-round picks at DT out of no top-100 guys. That's a confluence of luck, development, and scouting that doesn't come together very often, and it's got Michigan pointed towards the biggest goals.

AWARDS

Known Friends and Trusted Agents Of The Week


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the same [Barron]

you're the man now, dog-2535ac8789d1b499[1]

#1 JJ McCarthy. While I did not copy and paste last week's column I absolutely could have. 22/25 a week after 26/30 is crazy cuckoo banana nuts, as were a healthy subset of McCarthy's throws in this game. Drop eight? Don't care, eat this dig. Lift the coverage? Here is Donovan Edwards. Single coverage? Catch and run to Roman Wilson. Also, Jay Harbaugh took his head coaching opportunity to run the guy twice. Elite. LFG.

#2(T) Kris Jenkins, Mason Graham, and Kenneth Grant. Naturally. 14 tackles, 2.5 sacks, and 4.5 TFLs between the three in limited snaps. See above about the rest. 4 points each.

#3(T) Braiden McGregor and Derrick Moore. 2.5 TFLs and a sack between them, with both guys playing excellent run defense while providing organic pass rush.

Honorable mention: Roman Wilson and Cornelius Johnson both had good days catching the ball but got slid down here because of blocking issues. Tyler Morris emerged into that chain mover he was projected to be and had what's likely to be a +2 block. Jaylen Harrell cleaned up a couple of blitzes for sacks; Mike Barrett's blitzes created one of those and he was otherwise solid. Blake Corum did average 5.3 YPC despite getting a bunch of wedges.

KFaTAotW Standings.

(points: #1: 8, #2: 5, #3: 3, HMs one each. Ties result in somewhat arbitrary assignments.)

16: JJ McCarthy (#1 ECU, #1 UNLV)
6: Kenneth Grant (T3 ECU, T2 UNLV)
5: Mason Graham (HM ECU, T2 UNLV), Kris Jenkins (HM ECU, T2 UNLV), Roman Wilson (T2 ECU, HM UNLV), Cornelius Johnson (T2 ECU, HM UNLV)
2: Ernest Hausmann (T3 ECU), Mike Sainristil (T3 ECU), Josh Wallace (T3 ECU), Blake Corum (HM ECU, HM UNLV), Braiden McGregor(T3 UNLV), Derrick Moore (T3 UNLV)
1: Tommy Doman (HM ECU), Donovan Edwards (HM ECU), Tyler Morris (HM UNLV), Jaylen Harrell (HM UNLV), Mike Barrett (HM UNLV)

Who's Got It Better Than Us(?) Of The Week

McCarthy hits Wilson with a strike that turns into a 47-yard touchdown just as the broadcast is talking about the reason McCarthy has 47 on his hand.

Honorable mention: Derrick Moore gets a pure edge rush sack; McCarthy does just about anything; play above where Graham and Jenkins simultaneously teleport into the backfield; Myles Hinton obliterates a guy.

imageMARCUS HALL EPIC DOUBLE BIRD OF THE WEEK.

Fourth and two wedge is stuffed.

Honorable mention: McCarthy gets up a little gimpy after a QB draw ends with a helmet to his thigh; Colston Loveland jet sweep gets crushed as Johnson whiffs a block; Tommy Doman puts a kickoff out of bounds?

[After THE JUMP: now we can talk more about McCarthy]

OFFENSE

Hey let's talk about McCarthy in this bit. For the second straight week we can individually consider McCarthy's incompletions:

  • Unblocked blitzer up the gut bats a pass down.
  • Well-covered corner route to Wilson is overthrown.
  • Miscommunication between Fred Moore and McCarthy results in a throw to no one.

That's it, that's all. Everything else was caught.

The McCarthy themes in this game were twofold. Fold the first: pinpoint third down conversions against eight man coverages. No better example than his first, when UNLV dropped eight and JJ found the window provided by an underneath route to hit Tyler Morris:

Look at that window:

image

This is in a similar vein where it's play action and he gets a tiny window but the LB is not facing him because PA, and then bang:

McCarthy has been nailing dig routes in the first two games no matter how many guys are in underneath coverage, and I keep going back to Michigan quarterbacks past who were told to avoid the middle at all costs. McCarthy's got the greenest of all lights here.

Fold the second was moving around in the pocket to find time and/or pull defenders up to create openings for wide receivers. Sometimes this was fairly basic "nobody is in front of me, I should move up" stuff but he also pulled off another one of those pocket drifts he had in the first game, buying just enough time against a blitz to get the ball out.

BUT! No, not really. I do wonder about the throw everyone's gaga about, this dart to Johnson:

That's fit in there but do you want to fit it in or do you want to dump it to Loveland for an easy second and two? I dunno. That's going to be a DO in UFR but last year Sam Webb had an animated discussion about a slant that went in one window instead of the other with Al Borges and there's an argument to be had there.

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McCarthy knows where Morris is going [Fuller]

Option routes. Michigan has them now, in spades.

This requires a level of trust in both receiver and QB; mostly QB since the WR can pretty easily decided to break it out against an inside leverage defender. But here this is Morris and McCarthy and McCarthy seems to know his footwork and know what he's going to do and etc etc etc. Mind meld is not proven but is suggested by McCarthy's confidence in throwing to Morris on third and medium against seven and eight man drops.

Also in doodads. Michigan's touchdown before the end of the half was a purpose-built convert from this distance play. Johnson's route runs off a zone defender; Wilson breaks down to imply a hitch and then when he breaks inside the defender isn't agile enough to tackle:

Michigan's using Wilson's speed for YAC opportunities, as they did on the 47-yard TD.

He runs! McCarthy got two carries in this game, one a zone read keep, the other a draw. Both were chunks. I continue to believe that you need to incorporate McCarthy's legs in these games to be able to run at maximum efficiency in the big ones. But, yeah…

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[Barron]

…after you get to the sticks you can get out of bounds if the sideline's right there.

Run game issues are multifarious. So the thing about the ground game is that there is no one quick fix. Flopping out the tackles for (at this point very hypothetical) upgrades isn't going to do it by itself. Last week's UFR dwelled a bit on wide receiver blocking; that cropped up a few different times in this game to nerf what were otherwise well-blocked plays. It seems unlikely that any of the inline TEs are going to match Luke Schoonmaker's blocking from a year ago. Both Hinton and Barnhart had instances where they didn't get a guy blocked; Edwards and Corum were once again not really performing at the levels we expected them to last year. Here's an interesting tweet from Michael Barret's dad:

That would mean that both Edwards and Corum haven't been hit in a long time; the rust seems apparent. There were a couple of opportunities for Edwards to gear down and burst inside of a force player like he started doing midway through last year that he did not take.

But yes wide receiver blocking is a problem. Cornelius Johnson just has to do better than this:

WR #6 to top

That airball sets up the play that we're just about to talk about.

Wedgin' it. Michigan's failed fourth down conversion in the third quarter was part of a story. Part #1 was Michigan's first touchdown; they got down to the three and then went tempo to prevent UNLV from subbing on a goal line package. Conversion: easy.

Then they wedged it in on first and goal from the two on the next drive. Hooray, wedge. But also we remember the Rutgers game last year, right? RIGHT?

Apparently we do not. When Michigan was faced with a similar redzone situation in the third quarter they ran the "anything else" play, got a UNLV DE to splort himself upon the ground, and got a walk-in touchdown to go up 35-0. Fool me once, fine, fool me twice, fine, fool me three times nope even if you're UNLV.

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big [Fuller]

The tackle situation. Very strange: Michigan announced preseason that the four "starting" tackles would alternate in the first two games. As late as Friday Rivals was reporting that was still the plan… and then they quickly flipped that report. As a result another game with Barnhart and Hinton. Hinton improved considerably but was still inconsistent on the ground; Barnhart seemed to be about what he's been.

You can see why Michigan might be giving Hinton a longer leash. On one play he took a DL lined up over him and blasted him back eight yards. He has more upside than anyone else on the tackle depth chart. But we got a lot of One Guy plays* in this game and Hinton was the guy a fair bit. UFR will obviously spend a bunch of time on this.

*[These are plays where everything is blocked well… except for one guy, and then the play goes nowhere.]

Cumong man. One thing UFR probably won't spend a lot of time on is PFF's vendetta against Trevor Keegan, because he graded out as Michigan's second-best run blocker behind Barner. I choose to believe that I have scared PFF straight.

DEFENSE

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[Fuller]

Hello, defensive ends. In addition to the defensive tackle items above, Michigan got some output from their DEs. The guys who stood out were Braiden McGregor and Derrick Moore. McGregor had a shoestring TFL when he slashed through a double team and then had multiple events where UNLV thought they could leave him unblocked only to find out that, no, you cannot option Braiden McGregor. At one point he played both sides of a mesh point for a TFL, and plays that attempt to run away from the backside defensive end are free run stops for him.

Derrick Moore did this:

standup DE #8 to top

We talked about this on the podcast; I assert that this is opponent-invariant burst. Look at that guy get off the LOS. Many, many LTs are going to get got by that.

Jaylen Harrell got a couple sacks in the first half but once you watch the film this doesn't seem like a paradigm shift; Harrell wasn't blocked on either play. He got through via UNLV OL miscommunication and clever Jesse Minter blitzes.

Linebackers? Barrett and Colson tied for sixth in tackles with four each; Haussman had three. Nobody registered a stat outside of that, and in the aftermath of going over the game again I realize I had exactly zero takes about them. This is a side effect of the DL play. LB's can't fill gaps when there are no gaps.

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[Barron]

Grand cornerback battle. Will Johnson got in for one series so he must be on the verge of a full-time return. The guy opposite him is likely to be Josh Wallace, but the other contenders appear to be:

  • Keshaun Harris. Harris has started the last two games and has not looked particularly out of place. He ran a fade route for the WR in this game and was otherwise largely untested.
  • Ja'Den McBurrows. McBurrows has exclusively played as a nickel so this configuration would see Sainristil move to the outside. This feels like a contingency plan.
  • Jyaire Hill. Michigan rotated in DJ Waller, Kody Jones, and Cam Calhoun at about the same time they rotated Hill in; in your author's opinion the other guys don't look like they'll be ready this year while Hill's athleticism pops.

Wallace seems like the bet since he's the least likely to make a big mistake and it seems unlikely many teams are going to drive the field against this DL.

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[Barron]

Safety depth. With both starters out it was again Quinten Johnson and Keon Sabb at safety. Sabb looked like a promising sophomore, alternating mistakes with nice plays. Both guys had issues tackling, with four misses between them. Nobody is getting Wally Pipped here. The guy who actually stood out amongst the great safety morass was Caden Kolesar, who got twenty snaps and had an excellent anticipatory PBU along with another coulda-shoulda PBU. Kolesar does have the option of a sixth year, FWIW.

When the defensive line is this dominant there does not appear to be a whole lot else to say. Back seven takes are minimal because the number of plays where they had to do anything was similarly minimal. I was disappointed that UNLV's touted go-go offense did not, you know, go. They had one triple option that got Mike Sainristil and picked up a chunk but other than that the promised weirdness, frippery, and explosiveness was not present. I assume UNLV is saving that stuff for teams they're more likely to beat?

SPECIAL TEAMS

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stop practicing kick coverage [Barron]

Le boom. I was happy enough that Michigan took a penalty on a Tommy Doman punt late because that meant we got to add another blast to our sample size. The ones that counted saw Doman average 46 yards with plenty of hangtime; the long UNLV return was only possible because a gunner with a clean shot at Jacob De Jesus missed. Meanwhile all of his kickoffs were touchbacks aside from one that would have been a touchback if he hadn't pushed it out of bounds at approximately the two.

If you're the guy who catches the punts you have to catch the punts. Experienced some light irritation when a punt that was about 40 yards did not get fielded by Jake Thaw, who was about ten yards away from a punt that went approximately an average distance. When you're the steady caretaker punt return guy that's job one.

Tyler Morris looked like an intriguing option when given an opportunity.

MISCELLANEOUS

CBS Big Ten is weird. It's weird. Nessler and Danielson had an aside during the game about how they used to call games from the old Michigan press box and Bo would yell at them not to screw it up. Bo has been dead for almost twenty years. It's weird.

Also weird: why do Brad Nessler and Gary Danielson have no idea what a catch is? They spent a ton of time in this broadcast grousing about the incompletion Mike Sainristil forced where it's clear the WR doesn't have possession and doesn't survive contact with the ground. It has always been the case that it is an incompletion if you catch the ball, immediately hit the turf, and the ball pops out. It was not at all close. And yet.

I miss last year when half of Michigan's games were Big Noon Johnson/Klatt things.

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using more of the screen for replays [Fuller]

Some scoreboard progress, but… still way too many useless/inefficiently-presented stats up there. Fumbles zero fumbles lost zero interceptions zero should not be 60% of one of your slides.

Commercials! This week's indignity was a commercial one play into the second quarter.

HERE

Photos. Recap. Best and Worst:

Michigan’s starting defense remains un-scored upon in 2 weeks, and rarely even challenged during what could loosely be called the “competitive” portions of these games.  For example, Michigan gave up 10 first downs and forced 7 punts in the first halves of games against ECU and UNLV, and 3 of those first downs occurred on a single ECU drive to start the 2nd quarter…which ended in a punt.  They’ve given up a shade above 150 total yards of offense over those 4 quarters, and nothing even resembling a viable scoring attempt by either opponent.  Yes we’re talking about two middling G5 teams but…Delaware scored a TD against PSU’s starters, and OSU gave up an 11-play, 75-yard TD drive to Youngstown St., so being that comprehensively stout against anyone shouldn’t be overlooked just because UM’s deep backups gave up shutouts late.  And that’s the thing – despite what the announcers kept saying that UM still had their starters in the 4th quarter, here are the players who made all of the tackles in said quarter: Waller (4), Goode (2), Guy (2), McBurrows (2), Hausmann, McGregor, Stewart, Hill, Pierce, Jones, and Etta.

The State of our Open Threads:

One thing that was substantially lower was the "suck" though - only six instances this week, primarily because the game was not on Peacock perhaps. There was a marked decrease in the amount of "Harbaugh" talk, with only 19 instances this week, which is down from 30 last week. I suppose that we are at peace with this temporary self-imposed inconvenience then.

There was a slight increase in "fire", 22 mentions to 28 mentions, although this time it was mostly in jest as opposed to being directed at someone or something, like Peacock.

Comments

Watching From Afar

September 12th, 2023 at 9:43 AM ^

This staff has shown a historical tendency to just light plays on fire

Exactly. That 4th and 3 wedge/dive play is what Michigan does in those situations. It wasn't a watered down play or simply not taking the opponent seriously. Again, not every play can go for 40+ yards and a TD, but in certain situations it seems as though the play design maxes out at 3 yards not counting plays that are ran to specifically convert 3rd and 3s.

njvictor

September 11th, 2023 at 2:34 PM ^

I'm excited and nervous to see JJ against better competition. He's obviously lighting it up, but I do wonder if some of these throws work against better secondaries. Definitely feels like he's whipping throws past unaware LBs and safeties and I wonder if that will work against better teams

Vasav

September 11th, 2023 at 2:34 PM ^

Bill Connelly is worried that we are only scoring 35 points in these games instead of 50. I'm not because we generally didn't punt the first X drives - TDs on 3/4 first half possessions (the 4th and 3 being the 4th) and 5/6 successful possessions to start against ECU is great. Mild annoyance in both cases on 4th down stops keeping that from being 4/4 and 6/7. Also we did punt twice with the starters on Saturday.

His other worry is the run game. I am a bit more worried about that - but considering the RBs, and the interior OL - I'm confident it'll get mostly worked out. May not be as explosive as last year tho if WRs don't block better. But with this D and this QB, I'm not sure it has to.

Vasav

September 11th, 2023 at 2:44 PM ^

Figured I should add - Penn St went 4/5 in the first half on Saturday, having to punt to Delaware once. Ohio State punted twice in the first half, their 4 first half touchdowns included two big play TDs, which many Buckeye fans seem to believe shouldn't count in evaluating the game.

I do think Penn St looked impressive against WVU and, while noting the competition, looked good against Delaware.

mwolverine1

September 11th, 2023 at 2:48 PM ^

We're playing a slow pace that is exacerbated by a lack of explosive plays and a lack of short fields. 

But when you combine that with the step back in the run game, you do have to wonder if things will get harder against tougher competition. Obviously those things can turn around - we had the same question last year regarding explosives yet we had plenty against PSU, OSU, and TCU

Dodort

September 11th, 2023 at 3:11 PM ^

It's a little weird, because, by his own system, our expected margin of victory in both games was significantly higher than the actual margin because of the reasons you said.  So we are beating up on these teams (I should note that the same is true of OSU).

Goggles Paisano

September 11th, 2023 at 3:29 PM ^

Corum and Edwards look 1/2 step off so far.  They will get that worked out as the season goes.  Because of their injuries, they didn't get the spring/summer reps to stay in peak playing condition.  Just like a hitter needs live at bats to get their swing and timing worked out, same with these guys in getting more game speed reps.  

Tacopants

September 11th, 2023 at 5:29 PM ^

Pace is somewhat of a concern. Michigan looks to be affected far more by the new clock rules as our drives are somewhat grindy. The new clock rules look to be worth about a minute of game clock on an 3-4 first down type drive, over the course of the game this might be 1-2 ancillary posessions.

 

On the other hand the foot has come off the gas very early. Blowouts tend to accelerate late as you hit big plays you've set up with other actions early. Michigan is getting games over with as fast as possible with backups.

Durham Blue

September 11th, 2023 at 10:10 PM ^

I can't imagine a universe where this amount of talent and experience on the OL and in the back field ends up being mediocre running the football over a full season, especially considering nearly everyone from last year's dominant OL and RB groups is at it again this season.  I am willing to give this thing until game 6 before I commence freaking out.

The first 2 games has the feel of the coaching staff preserving player health by being vanilla and slow playing (limiting total number of plays per game) because there is essentially zero threat of losing to these tomato cans.  If we are still seeing this against the better teams on the schedule then I might worry.  But right now as a bettor I wish the lines would start reflecting this reality because 0-2 ATS has busted my balls.

txgobluegirl

September 11th, 2023 at 2:37 PM ^

Speaking of weird TV coverage, has anybody else noticed that FOX is using stupid cartoon-like graphics?  Like, for False Start, Flag, just about anything?  I feel like I'm watching a Bugs Bunny cartoon.

MH20

September 11th, 2023 at 3:02 PM ^

Their new scorebug is an atrocity. It really feels like whoever designed that thing actively hates the people who watch FOX/FS1/BTN broadcasts. From the bigger-than-it-needs-to-be school name colorblock, to the pointless inclusion of the school logo (which is way too big and for some reason tilted at an angle), to the childish font used for the also-pointlessly-included school nickname...And then to top it off the damn thing isn't even anchored to the bottom line ticker! So much fricking TV real estate being needlessly wasted.

I mean, what the fuck?!

Wolverine In Exile

September 11th, 2023 at 2:42 PM ^

You want to know why that OT from the KC Chiefs was playing slot receiver against Hutchinson last week? That Derrick Moore highlight is why. Great googily moogily that guy had no chance against Moore on that rush. 

dragonchild

September 11th, 2023 at 2:43 PM ^

It’s hard to discern the state of the run game because it’s clear Michigan doesn’t respect these opponents and has no reason to. They’re taking calculated risks in terms of using JJ’s legs, which linemen to use, keeping the playbook small, and relying on JJ’s arm to keep drives alive. How much of it is tinkering and conservatism vs. real problems? We don’t know.

Ollie Williams

September 11th, 2023 at 2:43 PM ^

I didnt mind Danielson and Nessler being nostalgic. Neither has been in the big house since 2005 and were clearly happy to be back. Dont blame them for reminiscing what michigan football was like 20 years ago.

kyle.aaronson

September 11th, 2023 at 5:43 PM ^

To me, it looks like instinctive reactions from very good players who both happen to do the same thing. Both of the offensive linemen look like they're slanting slightly to the right to try to open up a read for the QB and RBs near the LT, so they're coming at Jenkins and Graham from the DTs' right. So the DTs use that momentum to swim in that direction. I'd call it an understandable coincidence from two heady, skilled players.

DY

September 11th, 2023 at 3:00 PM ^

It's weird having Nessler and Danielson back doing B1G games because they spent the last 18 or so years on CBS shilling for the SEC. In particular, the week after Michigan lost to OSU in 2006 comes to mind, as they spent the entirety of the SEC Championship Game blowing Florida and Meyer, saying how Michigan shouldn't get a rematch with OSU. It only got worse when Tebow took the reigns.

I do wonder how many times Danielson recounted his glory days playing with the Lions handing off to Billy Siims while doing Georgia-Florida or the Iron Bowl. He's probably happy he gets to dust off those stories again.              

imafreak1

September 11th, 2023 at 3:29 PM ^

Why despite the apparent domination is Michigan not scoring more points, is a good question. They scored in the 50s in every non-conference game last year. So offensive structure does not appear to be an obvious culprit.

There are several factors at play.  The clock rules are clearly limiting Michigan possessions. I wonder if there isn't money to be made betting against these very long lines before the market corrects. But PSU put up 63 on Delaware so. What?

I think you have to divide the game into halves because it is clear Michigan is not as interested in scoring in the second half of these games. And also, are not lucking into them as a result of a wilting disinterest opponent. For comparison, Michigan scored TDs on 3/4 first half possessions. PSU scored TDs on 5/6 first half possessions. One of the reasons PSU had 2 more possessions was because Delaware was not using up the clock at all. Delaware had the ball for about 5 minutes of the first half. Michigan was just as successful at stopping UNLV but UNLV did manage to run clock. These very high scores are also aided by lots of opponent turnovers. But Michigan has only got one TO in the first two games. No help there.

But having explained all of that. Something does feel weird about the offense. Clearly, the running game isn't working as well as it did last year. A concern. Maybe just a minor one. This means that JJ has to convert a lot of third downs with his arm. Which is great! But, so many third downs. If JJ wasn't perfect it feels like the drives would end. You can't expect your QB to be perfect every week. Right now, Michigan isn't making offense look easy. They are moving down the field converting 3rd downs not ripping off giant chunks on early downs with lots of run after catch. Somehow, it feels like the defenses have contrived to take away the run game and also keep their safeties back to avoid giant plays. I don't know why or how.

So it is weird. And I feel Bill Connelly's concerns. I just don't quite know if they are legitimate.

mwolverine1

September 11th, 2023 at 5:09 PM ^

Michigan has started one drive in opponent territory this year: the first drive of the 4th quarter vs ECU (when the score was 30-0 and backups were in).

Michigan ranks 88th in the country in plays of 30+ yards (three, and one came in garbage time vs UNLV).

Michigan ranks 81st in the country in red zone scoring percentage (80%, though all of those are touchdowns which is good for 27th).

Michigan ranks 105th in the country in plays run per game (61.5).

Those factors plus the turnover thing you mentioned, and we're not exactly hitting the formula for maximizing our scoring output.

 

Durham Blue

September 11th, 2023 at 10:26 PM ^

Right, this year our 2/3/4 string has been outscored by its opponents, I think?  Sure feels like it.  And as I glance at the 4th quarter points I do see that ECU and UNLV have combined for 10 points to Michigan's zero.  So yeah.  But then again ECU and UNLV are probably maybe better than Hawaii and CSU were last season.

All will be well once the running game opens up.  So, running game open up, I say.

Blake Forum

September 11th, 2023 at 3:57 PM ^

I don't know what this team will achieve in the end, but I will say say this: Over the past several years, we've gotten used to seeing teams such as Alabama, Ohio State, and Clemson wreck opponents because they had interior DLs that were simply unstoppable. This year, none of those three teams appear to have an interior DL like that. But Michigan does

Hugh White

September 11th, 2023 at 4:20 PM ^

Trading Places: nice movie references. Perhaps a better one would be LA Story, in which Steve Martin plays a Los Angeles weather man who pre-records his weather segments because they’re always the same, then skips town. 

CLord

September 11th, 2023 at 5:16 PM ^

JJ was a % completion beast last season in non conference as well. Hope to see it translate into more consistency in the big games this year.  He was godly vs OSU as well so there's that, but then some scary throws vs TCU and PSU.  He cleans that all up and sky is the limit!

Just Win

September 11th, 2023 at 5:48 PM ^

"There was a slight increase in "fire", 22 mentions to 28 mentions..."

I've noticed an uptick in this particular grammatical mistake in recent posts to the point that it can't be a typo. Commas generally belong inside of the quotation marks, such as "fire," 22 mentions....

https://www.thesaurus.com/e/grammar/does-punctuation-go-inside-or-outsi…;

Just mentioning for posterity's sake and Brian's presumed grammar OCD. 

You guys are the best. 

stephenrjking

September 11th, 2023 at 8:02 PM ^

A lot to be excited about here.

Michigan has multiple positions on both sides of the ball where the talent appears to be, not merely terrific, but elite. Elite DTs. Elite QB. Elite RBs (yeah, things aren't perfect, I'm not exactly terrified here). Elite CB. 

Also exciting:

Just pulled the trigger. After three girls (whom an mgoblogger generously helped me bring to a game together) our fourth child is a boy. He's 9 and starting to get really interested in football.

And I just bought our pair of tickets for Michigan at Minnesota next month. I'm taking him to his first Michigan game. To see one of the best Michigan teams of my lifetime.

Let's go. 

BlueBrad

September 12th, 2023 at 7:44 AM ^

Paranoia

 

What are the chances Paige or Moore have an almost back all season long like Hill Green last year? I sure hope it's close to zero. Excited to have those two back.

burtcomma

September 12th, 2023 at 1:16 PM ^

The constant complaints about Michigan’s play calling this year are a bit premature given the first three opponents.  We are at/near a 50/50 run/pass split so far.  Is that not what these blog posters have clamored for?