I'll take another McGrone please [Patrick Barron]

Mailbag: Transition Costs, Wendy's Chili, Next Year's McGrone Comment Count

Brian November 7th, 2019 at 12:48 PM

Bye week! Mailbag time!

There were style transition costs, but these were mostly self-inflicted. Michigan's transition costs were larger than expected largely because they 1) went away from last year's running game for no apparent reason and 2) installed a bunch of stuff they barely or never used and then threw that away. Everyone's still waiting for that orbit motion to generate a QB pull with a pitch phase, except they ditched it.

I do think the first time play-caller stuff had an impact. Gattis moved from the box to the sideline after a couple games, which is evidence enough, but also: Michigan ran a ton of arc read stuff early in the season and almost never ran split zone, the play the arc read fakes. Speed in space was just a rumor until Penn State. It wasn't until Notre Dame that Michigan actually got sufficient RPS wins to come out significantly positive.

Also a transition cost: it feels like Gattis, who wasn't around Patterson last year, spent half the year finding out what didn't work well with him.

[After THE JUMP: slurry, but in a good way]

About two-thirds of them. There are some personnel issues that seem unrelated to anything that can be coached up—Patterson leaving pockets. There was also the spate of fumbles that were well out of Harbaugh's historical range; that was just bad luck.

But, yes, Michigan is still finding what it wants to do midseason after panicking when their offseason plans turn out to be bad. This is seemingly every season.

Contrast that with the D. Michigan's had the same DC for four years. Chris Partridge and Mike Zordich have been around that whole time. Greg Mattison had been there the whole time until his departure last offseason. There have been a couple spots that have rotated frequently but for the duration of Brown's tenure you've had a 3-4 man core that has provided a steady hand.

When you maintain this you can shift much more easily. Michigan's defense is a lot different than it was last year, but it's all the same playbook; Michigan is now emphasizing different parts of it. They were practicing these plays last year, with the same terminology. That gives them a leg up when they evolve the D. That D currently sits 3rd in SP+ despite having a lot of personnel turnover and a lot of philosophical shift. They can do that because of the continuity with their coaching.

Meanwhile on offense: Ben McDaniels and Josh Gattis are in year one. Ed Warinner and Sherrone Moore are in year two. The only guy who's been around is Jay Harbaugh, who's a good recruiter but appears to have no strategic input. That's not a situation in which you smoothly evolve your offense because you have a core of guys who know what's worked and what hasn't worked in the past.

I do think the outlook is better going forward, largely because the limitations of turning over your offensive staff over and over again have to be clear. Also one of the main problems was Tim Drevno wandering around the offenses like Mr. Bean, knocking quality tackle recruits into neighboring states while looking for his glasses. The prospect of having Ed Warinner around for the long term is great for 5 of your 11 starters.

The obvious candidate is Dax Hill, a five star who's playing well in limited snaps and is a holy lock to succeed Josh Metellus as a starting safety. The main problem with that theory is that when a safety plays well you don't see him nearly as much as you see Cam McGrone. True impact safeties are pretty rare, and it's asking a lot of Hill to be one even if he is the athletic prototype.

The second bust-out candidate on D is Michael Barrett. Barrett looked very good in the spring game and has carried that over to special teams play. He's the odds-on favorite at viper next year.

Offense is much harder to project. They get back every skill position player aside from Tru Wilson and whichever WRs enter the draft, so it'll be hard for anyone to bust out. On the OL you're looking at a number of different candidates for what's probably three jobs; the answer is thus "whoever is the best of those guys." Ryan Hayes and Nolan Rumler are the best bets to be excellent out of nowhere, or close to it in Hayes's case.

I don't know? Surely there was another bodybag team Michigan could have scheduled that would not have caused two extended tangents about The Horror. I was expecting Warde Manuel would be much better at Dave Brandon at being a likeable human being. Check. I was hoping his athletic department would feel meaningfully different than Dave Brandon's, and I don't think that's the case.

Milton has a shot. He was always going to be a project you needed to check up on after two or three years in the program, and it seems like he's made good progress. However, it seems pretty clear what the depth chart pecking order looks like right now and it would be an upset if that changed next year.

I do think Michigan should have a real competition, and if Milton is at all plausible they should get him some early meaningful playing time if that's what it takes to keep him around. I do not want to go into next year with just McCaffrey, McNamara, and a currently unknown and possibly nonexistent 2020 QB commit.

On the WRs: the good thing about Michigan's inability to get their receiver troika the ball is that it increases the chance Michigan gets some of them back. Black is the most likely to come back of the three, because he's had less opportunity to demonstrate NFL skills.

I bet Collins is gone. It's impossible to hide that talent even if Michigan is trying. Peoples-Jones talks a ton about being a doctor and maybe hasn't quite proven himself in NFL eyes; solid chance he comes back. Black I think needs to come back because he won't be on NFL radars with his current level of production.

I don't know.

I think we forget that Michigan felt like the better team for about 85% of the JT spot game and felt better at 21 of 22 spots in the O'Korn game. It's not going to take a miracle to beat Ohio State—though this year ain't looking good. It's going to require a modicum of luck and a gameplan W Michigan's had about half the time. Getting to parity is a tall order; actually winning some of these games is not nearly as impossible as Michigan's made it seem.

No. I mean, maybe. I don't know what kind of standards your kid's PreK has, but if this is a cookoff, sir, your own dignity demands real chili. Wendy's chili is not chili. It is ground beef soup. It's pretty good ground beef soup, I'll grant you, but it is not chili. Chili involves the ritual assassination of collagen molecules one by one over long periods of time until you have a pile of delicious meat gelatin. Ground beef cannot do this no matter how long you cook it.

Actual chili is stupid easy anyway. Also it may be the case for you that sometimes you walk into a grocery store and someone points as gun at you and says "this nine-pound pork shoulder is 1.50 a pound" and then you end up with nine pounds of pork shoulder. This happens to me at Busch's about every three months. Nearly free-pork shoulder disposal is an increasingly serious problem.

A chili recipe is almost beside the point but here's what I do:

  • create a CHILI SLURRY, capitalized for its importance, out of good-quality dried chilis—I get mine from this place in Colorado—by steeping them in hot water for 15-20 minutes and then giving them the stick blender until it's a uniform consistency. Use a bunch of ancho/mulato chilis for a solid base without heat and then ramp it up with hotter ones as per your preference.
  • cut the shoulder into long slices against the grain and brown it in an enameled dutch oven, drain most of the fat after you're done
  • chop up a couple onions and throw them in, scraping so that the brown stuff ends up on the onions instead of the pot
  • return pork to dutch oven, dump in a bunch of canned diced tomatoes and kidney beans (if you want) and the slurry
  • cook it until the pork is falling apart, 6-ish hours
  • salt to taste, maybe add some fish sauce or Worcestershire if it lacks a certain something
  • hell yeah

Note that this is a great platform for heat because the rest of the chili tends to knock it off your tongue.

Beans are fine in chili. Don't even start. Don't be a prescriptivist.

Comments

mgobaran

November 7th, 2019 at 4:17 PM ^

As someone who makes mediocre ground beef/chicken/turkey chili pretty often, I completely understand. Brian's recipe seemed to complicate things a bit more than his "stupid easy" line suggests. I'm fairly certain the gentleman thinking of bringing large quantities of Wendy's chili to the party doesn't have a dutch oven, fancy chiles, or the patience to cook a pork shoulder instead of just pan frying some ground meats.

S.G. Rice

November 7th, 2019 at 2:30 PM ^

Wait, wait, wait, a pork chili recipe?  PORK?  I mean pork is delicious and all that but pork CHILI?

C'mon man.

BEEF.  Low and slow.  Chilis.  Wait, wait, consume.

MGoStrength

November 7th, 2019 at 3:29 PM ^

On the OL you're looking at a number of different candidates for what's probably three jobs; the answer is thus "whoever is the best of those guys." Ryan Hayes and Nolan Rumler are the best bets to be excellent out of nowhere, or close to it in Hayes's case.

Now that Ruiz has drastically underachieved compared to expectations can we expect him back next year?  If so are we assuming we go Hayes, Filliaga, Ruiz, Rumler, & Mayfield?  And, what are expectations for the offense with McCaffrey, DPJ, Black, Bell, & Charbonnet behind that line with another year of getting used to Gattis? 

Alumnus93

November 7th, 2019 at 3:50 PM ^

A few notes with this write-up....

Drevno tried but got hammered with the negative recruiting, being a west coast guy with no midwest ties and contacts. This was Harbaugh's biggest overlook, not realizing that he wouldn't cut it here, nor getting any of the midwestern OLs and not leaving him in Ca, or at least having him coach another position.  Our OL was the biggest problem area and our rivals did well against him, and was the position we could least afford a continued setback.  You can knock Drevno for Swenson if you like, but even there, the kid wouldn't camp, and Drevno is entitled to see what he brings in.

Rumler was mentioned as a breakout above, but Warinner didn't mention him at all recently, when discussing the progess of the young guys... instead, he mentioned Barnhart, Keegan, and Carpenter...so unless its Ruiz leaving and Rumler inheriting it, the other guys are ahead.

I don't want to see Milton go, which is likely, because I do wonder if he isn't the better option in this offense.  As much as I like McCaffrey, Milton seems right there too. The talk of playing two qbs this year now seems like a motivation for Patterson to step up more...  I'd like to hear Harbaugh play both next year, that way Milton stays.

And I take huge exception to reading above that this years OSU game isn't looking good....  we have them right where we want them... we are playing at home, and have nothing to lose... and this is our season here....I think it'll be Harbaugh's finest hour, knocking them off the top perch. And quite frankly I'm surprised on everyones take with the Game.

TrueBlue2003

November 7th, 2019 at 4:56 PM ^

The takes on the game come from the fact that this OSU team is playing as well as any during the Meyer area, up there with the playoff winning 2015 team and it took that team a bit to ramp up.  They are just so good and don't seem to have a weakness unlike the previous couple of years.  Yes, Michigan is playing well and is at home and they certainly have a chance, but it's not looking good based on how good OSU looks.

Alumnus93

November 7th, 2019 at 6:19 PM ^

And recall that Woody's 69 team was the one ranked team at the time too and nobody thought we had a shot.....  It's time fellas.    Gotta get the sentiment to change now, because the fans and student do affect the players albeit minor, but they do, they're young and human.   We win this year.  

legalblue

November 7th, 2019 at 4:04 PM ^

"drain most of the fat after you're done"


And this exactly where we see heresy against doctrine in it's most obvious form.  Fat is both flavorful and texture...ful.  Perhaps instead of draining away the fat: 

- add a tablespoon or 2 of flour at the end of the browning process, and stir as if the fate of the universe depended upon it.

- Let cook until the flour has absorbed most of the fat, coated the meat, and turned a pleasantly brown color. 

Continue with the cooking process as described above.  Your chili will be slightly thicker, but a bit of your favorite cooking liquid additive can balance this out.  I take no position on the previously raised bean issue. 

MichiganTeacher

November 7th, 2019 at 4:39 PM ^

Is it just me or was that a pretty serious indictment of the athletic department just sort of slipped in there?

njvictor

November 7th, 2019 at 4:59 PM ^

Brian, you need to 100% have some sort of weekly food post about your new favorite restaurants, new favorite recipes, or just anything food related. I enjoy your food takes

Jhow

November 7th, 2019 at 6:06 PM ^

It feels like the transition cost was a combination of a) Harbaugh giving TOTAL control to Gattis and b) Gattis wanting to prove himself, therefore, choosing to install his own ideas in lieu of using what worked for M last year.  
 

Then, halfway through the season either a)Harbaugh had enough and “suggested” using stuff from last year and/or b) Gattis realizing his mistake and resorting to stuff from last years productive portions of the run game.  I suspect it was a combo of both. 
 

I predict the offense will continue to evolve and improve (despite Shea’s shortcomings) and give OSU a good finale.  We may not be victorious, but it’ll be close.

DMZBlue

November 7th, 2019 at 6:37 PM ^

I like your chile recipe; I'm more of a ground beef guy, but the pork shoulder is an interesting approach; and the chile slurry is spot on.  I generally add some coffee (redeye flavor) as well as masa harina, but like your approach.

BornInA2

November 7th, 2019 at 9:07 PM ^

"They get back every skill position player aside from Tru Wilson and whichever WRs enter the draft"

Ding-dong, Shea Patterson at the door asking "WTF?"

RHammer - SNRE 98

November 8th, 2019 at 10:03 AM ^

appreciate all the discussion of the advisability of whether to consider eating Wendy's chili at all, but i want to underscore the crucial point that Brian made in that first portion of the discussion:

"sir, your own dignity demands real chili."

you simply cannot show up to a chili-cookoff by peddling fast-food fare as your own... it just isn't done.