To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield. [Patrick Barron]

Football Bits on CCCP1: Offense Comment Count

Seth April 26th, 2021 at 3:51 PM

“The rules are simple: they lie to us, we know they're lying, they know we know they're lying, but they keep lying to us, and we keep pretending to believe them.”
― Elena Gorokhova, A Mountain of Crumbs

Let’s wrap up spring practice, shall we?

We didn’t get a spring game—I’ve said enough about that—and all of the information these days is filtered through Pravda. It’s a bummer, but as long as this stance lasts you need to add three layers of negativity to everything the program releases to feel half-reasonable. I’ll lead each section with the tiny bit of insider information then share what the program’s saying.

Quarterback

image

BA life. [Patrick Barron]

What we want to hear: Soviet passing economy strong like Comrade Putin rectus abdominis muscle. Comrade McNamara is people’s chain mover. Comrade McCarthy has talent that is bigger than Soviet Union. Ha ha is joke, nothing is bigger than Soviet Union.

What we’re hearing: If you heard one thing from the spring game it’s that passes were batted at the line…a LOT($). Cade’s got a much better command of the offense, but gets a lot of passes batted down due to his height; ITF’s guy compared him to Ian Book($), which, uh, yeah, that guy gets a lot of passes filed BA. McCarthy’s talent is evident but he’s making lots of true freshman in his first spring practice mistakes.

A guy I spoke to thinks quarterback will be a limiting factor again this year and “you didn’t miss much” about Cade’s spring game performance, a sentiment echoed by ITF’s source($). Sam Webb shared on our podcast that McCarthy’s just a matter of when($):

That being said, the excitement about JJ McCarthy ’s future is palpable. Physically, he is just on another level compared to the other quarterbacks. One source offered the same assessment of McCarthy that he’d offered previously about Donovan Edwards… “he is what a five-star is supposed to look like.”

Jansen’s In the Trenches podcast said Cade was better at directing his offensive line and knowing where the rush is coming from. He does a great job of letting his receivers make a play. As for JJ: You saw what you’d expect from a 5-star recruit with regards to ability, and he’s faster than he expected.

New QB coach Matt Weiss was featured, and they summarized his bits:

So, what does Weiss think of the Wolverines' three scholarship quarterbacks?

On McNamara: "You can say he's not enough of this or not enough of that, but at the end of the day, he's really smart. He makes great decisions. He processes things very fast, and his accuracy and arm strength are more than enough to win with."

On Villari: "He has arm strength. He has mobility. I love working with him. He's a guy who, for sure, could develop into a really good player for us."

On McCarthy: "Arm strength, mobility, great athlete -- all that stuff is obvious as soon as you step on the field with him -- but I've been even more impressed with his approach to things. His maturity is far beyond his years."

Gattis also went on the Jansen pod, and Isaiah Hole of WolverinesWire painstakingly typed up and organized all the things the OC said. From that: the players believe in Cade, who moves the ball and commands the offense well. JJ’s working on “understanding every day is a new day.”

Gattis also pointed out Villari was the scout team QB last year so he’s getting in his first reps as well.

What it means: We’ll have to keep an eye out for the batted passes thing—those tend to stick to certain QBs because of release points and styles of play.

Read nothing into J.J. McCarthy’s struggles this spring, or the suggestion in Gattis’s comments that the true freshman is frustrated with his play. I strongly disagreed with Sam when he suggested on WTKA last week that you might as well roll with the kid if it’s a lost season. Quarterbacking is about comfort, so yes, game reps are important. Reps when you have no protection however are counterproductive, and can ruin a guy. Unless McCarthy himself gives you a timeline, I prefer to take it slow.

Projected depth chart McNamara, [Bowman], McCarthy, Villari

[After THE JUMP: No CCCP2 jokes today]

Running Backs

image

Puny linebacker I crush with thighs [Patrick Barron]

What we want to hear: Industrious backfield where all comrade abilities join in great communist system for many yards. Comrade Haskins break through tackles like shackles of capitalist oppressors. Corum is hero of Soviet Labour. Komsomol Edwards will be great Octoberist.

What we’re hearing: Corum and Edwards have been “really explosive”($) according to Balas’s source, with more in there about Edwards, who’s “blazing fast” according to one of their guys. Several people reported Edwards looked worn down at the end of spring, which is understandable since he went right from winning the state championship to spring ball. Corum is Lorenz’s breakout candidate, and the backs are his pick for

Jansen’s observation was Hassan Haskins is “going to be a stud.” Corum going to be a star. Edwards and Dunlap you could see the scouting come through.

Gattis admitted it’s hard to get a feel for Haskins in a no-contact scenario, but that they’re seeing the patience in Corum that wasn’t there last year:

I think one of Blake’s biggest challenges last year is he relied so heavily on speed. He didn’t have patience going to the hole.

Gattis echoed the sentiments above re: Edwards. Tavierre Dunlap also had a “solid spring.”

What it means: We’ve seen these guys on film enough to know the scouting matches the tape. I think we’ve got more questions about how they’ll be used, but on paper this is a perfect mix.

Projected depth chart: Haskins, Corum, Edwards, Dunlap, with AJ Henning in the old Giles Jackson role.

Wide Receiver

image

Pinkies at the ready. [Bryan Fuller]

What we want to hear: Three-year Cornelius Johnson plan was genius policy, Michigan now leading receiving power. Soviet passing architects will use AJ Henning to punish ugly capitalist aggressors. Ignore party traitor Xavier Worthy, future of party is strongest ever, evil fat cat Texans will be punished very much by people’s national collegiate athletic association.

What we’re hearing: Everybody seems to have their own version of “Cornelius Johnson and ______ are doing stuff,” followed by “Oh yeah, Ronnie Bell of course.”

We’ll lead with Gattis, though his admission that he’s accumulated enough speed may be the biggest lie of the offseason:

We entirely have the speed needed and now I feel better that we’ve come along with the details. We’ve got some guys right now that are playing at a high level from a details standpoint. Cornelius Johnson and Mikey Sainristil — those two guys stand out when you walk out to our field. Seeing the level of consistency that they’re playing with, plays that they’re making are plays that they’re making because of their details. Not because of how athletic or how fast that they are. They’re applying the whole toolbox to allow those guys to be open.

This was before the Worthy news, of course.

While Gattis talked about Mike Sainristil, some of the practice reports were really excited about Andrel Anthony, whose ability to get deep was a common silver lining when the Xavier Worthy news dropped. The [blank] in my guy’s case is AJ Henning, which it isn’t hard to deduce he was part of the reason Giles Jackson bailed—Henning got the end-around in the highlight video. He, Bell, and Roman Wilson were all on the maize team, IE the one getting McCarthy pressured all day, so it was hard to tell with any of them.

ITF’s read on this situation was the receivers were having a hard time getting open, and that Gattis coaching the blue team (hence better play-calling) was part of that. Chris Balas had the most interesting fill in the blank($): Cristian Dixon, which I think is just reflection of the spring game events.

What it means: I think we were expecting them to say nice things about Cornelius Johnson, and Ronnie Bell is basically an avatar of the program right now in that they’re careful not to say anything nice for risk of getting all the boo birds on their backs that they haven’t had a breakout receiver since.

We all knew Gattis likes Sainristil—that was a camp theme last year. Roman Wilson and AJ Henning getting mentioned in the back end of comments says they’re not quite there on the details aspect.

Projected depth chart: Bell, C.Johnson, Sainristil are the 1s, with Henning #2 at the slot and Wilson, Anthony, Dixon in that order outside. I think they like the first three a lot better than the freshman backups.

Tight Ends

What we want to hear: Backbone of Soviet economy.

What we’re hearing: The most recent ITF was mostly basketball stuff, but one football bit is Matt Hibner could have a role this fall($). My guy said Erick All really came on in the second half of spring, and finished spring on a streak of catching literally every target. He also said that’s important because none of these guys save Honigford is much of a blocker but All can make some plays there with his athleticism.

ITF was hinting hard about an impending transfer($) a month ago, but that threat seems to have gone away.

Gattis kind of said the quiet part.

We got a handful of guys that we would consider great practice players, but we now gotta find a way to allow those guys to be great game players. Erick (All) is another one of those guys, his talent really hasn’t displayed itself in game-like situations. The catches, the ability he’s displayed each and every day in practice, we gotta build that confidence up with him, making sure we don’t let him hang on a negative play.

I like Gattis’s approach, which is to give a guy a second shot after a flub, and it sounds like that’s now more All’s career than a series against Rutgers. Carter Seltzer gets a mention after Schoonmaker, Hibner, and Honigford.

What it means: A series of drops was all we saw of Erick All and it’s not hard to guess this affected the guy deeply in the course of the spring. Like the program, the only way to tell is in games.

Projected depth chart: All, Schoonmaker, Hibner, [Hansen], Selzer, with Honigford a sixth OL.

Offensive Line

image

More might. [Barron]

What we want to hear: Our magnificent Kossaks have no names, all are now Yuri. All Yuri interchangeable specimens, consume many ribs.

What we’re hearing: I’m going to start with my own source because I didn’t know this:

You guys keep talking about Ed. You guys know that [the 2019 OL] was Juan Castillo not Ed Warinner right? The kids love Sherrone. He’s in there with them. He’s been there and they respect him.

Castillo was an analyst who took the Bears job last year. The gist was Warinner was more of an unnamed run game coordinator, and that those duties are passing now to co-OC Sherrone Moore.

Grad transfer Willie Allen didn’t stick. The Daily Hoosier also learned why Zach Carpenter transferred—his mom has Lupus.

The staff loves true freshman Greg Crippen, who’s up to #2 on the center depth chart($) over Reece Atteberry, who missed part of spring with illness according to Chris Balas on Inside the Fort. They were both on the blue team, which made it on the short highlight reel:

image_thumb

That’s Zak Zinter at center. The blue OL here is (L->R) Ryan Hayes, Trevor Keegan, Zinter, Chuck Filiaga, and Griffin Korican, with Matthew Hibner at tight end. Projected starting Andrews Stueber and Vastardis were on the maize team; Vastardis started for the maize team but came out early($) for Raheem Anderson to get a lot of snaps.

We’ve heard they’re cross-training Zinter at center so it’s not too odd to have him getting reps there.

Ryan Hayes gave a presser, likes Moore’s energy. Jansen of course had his own guy on In the Trenches:

I’m like “Who’s this 75?” It was Nolan Rumler.

Nolan is just one of those kids I kept waiting for that light to go on because he’s so strong, and moves well, bends well. He’s starting now to play with that natural awareness of what’s going on around him. As a former tackle, he endeared himself to every tackle that has ever played this game of football because … he went and found some work. He found some ribs. He went out there trying to help his offensive tackle and just absolutely demolished—he found work, and that’s what I love. And there were other times when he’d come in and he would help his center. It was just a thing of beauty. I’m excited about it because that tells me that’s a conversation that’s being had by Sherrone Moore. I’m excited for [Rumler] but it also makes me excited for this offensive line because that is something I need to see more from every single individual.

Moore went through his guys on In the Trenches. To summarize, Vastardis understands the game, on and off the field. Stueber’s versatile. Filiaga has to “continue to learn and grow.” Ryan Hayes is getting stronger, close to being really good. The 2019 class—Barnhart, Trente Jones, Trevor Keegan and Nolan Rumler—could be four hits. Zinter’s been great. Grad assistant Grant Newsome is money.

What it means: This is the spot on offense where the lack of a spring game bothers me the most, because I do think there’s reason to be positive about the offensive line if we can back it up with some film. Last year’s new-built line was so devastated by injuries, and so backed up against the wall by playing from behind all the time, I give them a pass in pass protection. The guys who messed up blocking assignments most were either a true freshman or a guy who seems to be third on the depth chart this year.

Willie Allen transferred to play immediately and decided that’s not here, which says only good things about Trente Jones, Karsen Barnhart, and/or any guards who are pushing Stueber back into the tackle conversation.

Zinter at center probably isn’t the final form, but if something happens to Vastardis I believe that’s where they want to go before the freshmen. It does lend credence to the spring reports that Atteberry and Crippen are not ready to play yet, which is understandable.

I think losing Zach Carpenter really messed with their plans, and it’s also quite plausible they’re not sold on Vastardis over some of their options at guard. If you can shoehorn one of them into center—and Zinter would be the guy they want on the field regardless—you have now have three spots (RT, RG, LG) you can fill with your best two of Stueber, Filiaga, Keegan, Nolan Rumler, or Karsen Barnhart.

Speaking of Rumler, I love that we’re getting something nice about him, but I also know the program often starts saying really nice things about a guy when he’s thinking of leaving. Sometimes it works too.

Filiaga feels like he’s fading—his shot was to seize the job last year, not lose snaps to Keegan.

Projected depth chart: Zinter, Stueber, and Hayes seem like locks, Vastardis leads at center but if Zinter can pick it up they might move him out to get both of Keegan (at guard) and Barnhart (at tackle, moving Stueber to RG) on the field. Trente Jones is the next guy at tackle, and then there’s another drop to Filiaga and Rumler, who remain ahead of the freshmen. If I’m making an NCAA 2014 depth chart it looks like this:

LT LG C RG RT
Hayes Keegan Vastardis Zinter Stueber
Barnhart Stueber Zinter Stueber Barnhart
Jones Filiaga   Rumler Jones

We’ll see how things shake out in fall. A Hayes-Keegan-Zinter-Stueber-Barnhart line seems like it’s got the highest upside.

Comments

DennisFranklinDaMan

April 26th, 2021 at 11:44 PM ^

I can't get past the feeling that this is all rearranging deck chairs on the Titanic. We all debate experience, and skill -- is this the year Gattis's scheme starts paying off, now that he has had years to implement it?, etc. etc. But ... at least for me, the take-away from the past few years has not been about talent (or the lack of it) at various positions, or whether our players are primed for one scheme over another. It's been ... a bewildering and incomprehensible lack of creativity among the coaching staff and a frankly indefensible failure to take advantage of the assets we have on the field. No pace on last-minute drives. Failure to throw to Nico Collins. A rejection of McAffrey. The list goes on and on and on.

I don't buy that it takes good coaches years to implement schemes, or to get the right players to run them. The best coaches make immediate impact -- they just do.

Even conversations about what our record should be this year seem to miss the point. Damn it, are we going to play with tempo, distribute the ball to the playmakers, and look like we're actually having fun out there? At this point, I'm honestly willing to accept mistakes, as long as it looks like everyone involved is playing with energy and optimism and confidence. I'm not looking for perfection, either in play or record. But ... I want to feel some energy and have some confidence that the coaches actually know what they're doing. For the last few years all I've felt from them is confusion and floundering, hoping that *this* time their game plans will work.

I think we can compete with OSU for the best players -- I do -- but recruits have to believe this is a fun place to play, and not one where they're either run into the ground or ignored. C'mon, Jim. Coach with energy and excitement. They're young kids. Help them win.

Dr. Funkenstein

April 27th, 2021 at 12:59 AM ^

pretty much this.....while it may take some coaches a year or two to adjust, Harbaugh and Gattis have had the time and have little to nothing to show for it.....NFL quality receivers other than Ronnie Bell not getting the ball....no pace or urgency in a "speed and space" offense, nothing that would make you think "oh that was really clever" like in Harbaugh's first few years (and at previous stops) with all the innovative running sets he used to be known for (that Harbaugh could have done a lot with the current RB lineup).... just a blah, uninterested team running blah sets and giving blah effort....

MaizeBlueA2

April 27th, 2021 at 12:23 AM ^

The OL is the only thing that can save this team.

If they're above average, the RBs are good enough to carry the offense and the QB will have enough to play game manager.

It's not going to win you big games, but an above average or better OL can get you 8 wins.

Also keeps a BAD defense off the field. 

 

Sidenote, what's with the USSR stuff? That was weird. 

Broken Brilliance

April 27th, 2021 at 7:32 AM ^

Gentry, Peters, and Mccaffrey all had palpable upside too but none of them really had their era (Peters came close). I am mentally preparing for this to be Cades team unless JJ takes it by force or circumstance.

maizenbluenc

April 27th, 2021 at 9:04 AM ^

Seemed to me that when Cade came in last year, the team's confidence increased a lot - like Cade was the guy they felt could get it done. Then Cade was injured and the team lost heart. So hopefully their assessment is good enough to roll with Cade until JJ gets his feet under him.

 

brose

April 27th, 2021 at 12:07 PM ^

Seth - that soviet stuff killed me - nice work - thanks for the content.  If one QB can be above average B1G, we will be fine on offense, if not - UH OH.

tkgoblue

April 27th, 2021 at 12:20 PM ^

I guess you could call this optimism; but, this reminds me a lot of Harbaugh’s first year. There is talent on this team just like there was talent in places of the 16’ team. I am hoping Harbaugh reverts back to the Jim we saw in the first two years. This secrecy and low profile humbleness is what the team probably needs right now. I remember the quote from Jim on the HBO real sports document-series, “if you don’t like it you can get the F**** out.” Something along those lines was said to Speight. Would be nice to see a team with an edge again. I like the coaching  pieces he added in the off season. My biggest concern is gattis. Not sure he has the chops to make it as a OC at this level. From watching football  around the country, a OC either works right away and makes a big difference or they don’t. Let’s hope my uneducated assessment is wrong in that regard!