defense! [Patrick Barron]

Michigan 51, Colorado State 7 Comment Count

Alex.Drain September 3rd, 2022 at 4:38 PM

Michigan Football's 2022 campaign began with a routine pummeling of a completely overmatched non-conference opponent, but one that did nothing to calm the fire of a fanbase already teeming with takes about the QB competition. Cade McNamara was often shaky; JJ McCarthy, when on the field, was crisp. It really didn't matter: Michigan annihilated Colorado State in the trenches and cruised to a 51-7 victory. Let the debate begin. 

Michigan got the football to begin the game and much of what will be discussed coming out of this game with regards to the QBs took place on the first few drives. After a four yard Blake Corum run opened the game, Cade McNamara rolled out and had Cornelius Johnson open, but he put the ball too low for Johnson to do anything with it and it fell incomplete. On third down, McNamara again looked for Johnson on a comebacks route, but the pass was well wide. The Wolverines punted. 

After a rather prompt stop by the Michigan defense, the Wolverines got the ball back. A 19 yard run for Blake Corum opened the drive and then McNamara threw a screen pass to Roman Wilson. The speedster got a couple good blocks from his fellow receivers, and then was gone. 61 yards to the house, all of it YAC. Michigan led 7-0.

[Patrick Barron]

The Michigan defense would quickly force an interception, snagged by Rod Moore and returned all the way to the Ram 13 yard line. With McNamara given a short field, he was unable to punch the ball in. A throw behind a receiver and possibly tipped fell incomplete. Blake Corum was tackled by the shoelaces on second down and then Erick All stumbled and McNamara's throw did not seem accurate for where All would've been and landed in the arms of a Ram defender, although the call was changed to an incompletion upon review. Jake Moody kicked a FG to make it 10-0. 

The next drive was a similar story. McNamara threw a ball to Ronnie Bell, the receiver's first catch since the ACL injury last season. A strong rushing game and a slant to Cornelius Johnson marched Michigan down the field and set up the Wolverines with 1st & Goal from the 6, but again they failed to convert in the red zone. A missed block by Zak Zinter led to a distressing four yard loss on 1st down, then a one yard run, and a throwaway from McNamara under pressure led to another Moody FG. 13-0. 

It was around that time that offensive line injuries began to play a notable role in the game narrative. Ryan Hayes, starting LT, missed the game with an injury deemed by one insider to be "precautionary", leading to Karsen Barnhart starting at that position. But during the goal line series, Barnhart himself was nicked up, forcing LG Trevor Keegan to slide outside and RS Fr Gio El-Hadi to slide in at LG. Combined with Trente Jones getting his first ever start at RT, the line in front of McNamara was more rickety than expected. On the other hand, McNamara did not seem particularly comfortable relying on his legs to evade pressure. 

[AFTER THE JUMP: More recap]

[Bryan Fuller]

The next drive for the Michigan offense was another punt after a drop by Ronnie Bell and a poor pass protection set from Trente Jones, leading to a drive-ending sack. Perhaps upon seeing those developments, Jim Harbaugh decided to call off the pass altogether. The next series saw not a single passing play, as Michigan paved the Rams right down the field. Four rushes for Donovan Edwards and two rushes for Blake Corum later, the Wolverines were in the end zone. The final drive of the McNamara half was a two-minute drill after Michigan got the ball back with 49 seconds left on the Ram 47-yard line. McNamara made two nice throws to Erick All and Cornelius Johnson but wobbly pass pro and McNamara's conservative nature led to two throwaways. Moody booted his third FG of the half and Michigan led 23-0 at the break. 

While all the chatter on social media was about the offense, the defense was dominant in the first half, shutting CSU out and holding the Rams to under 100 yards of total offense. The game was won in the trenches for the defense. Despite the questions at EDGE, Michigan's crop of pass rushers abused a poor-for-a-Mountain-West-team offensive line on basically every snap. Colorado State's Air Raid offense attempted to get around the deficiencies, trying to stretch the field laterally, but the coverage from the Michigan DBs and tackling in space was terrific. Mike Sainristil, in his first game as the nickel, stood out in that regard. 

But back to the pass rush, it was dominant. The first CSU drive ended with a blitz that saw RJ Moten and Sainristil converge to sack Rams' QB Clay Millen. The second drive saw DE Braiden McGregor provide good pressure, forcing the Millen INT to Moore. The third drive saw Rashaun Benny stuff a run up the middle and Jaylen Harrell get off the edge to sniff out a screen. The fourth drive saw McGregor nearly collect a sack, and Junior Colson pounce on another play. 

[Patrick Barron]

It just kept going. Eyabi Anoma and Mike Morris met in the middle for a sack, Derrick Moore's pressure forced an incompletion, RJ Moten sacked Millen for a turnover on downs, and on and on. Drive after drive, snap after snap, was marred by CSU's total inability to hold up in pass protection for even a couple of seconds. It blew up all downfield passing attempts, and the speed of Michigan's defense in space handled the screen game well. Arguably the best offense for Colorado State in the first half was Clay Millen scrambling when contain broke. 

The second half started the way the first one ended. CSU moved the ball a bit but quickly the protection broke down again. Going for it on 4th & 7 on their own 41, the Rams were unable to block Mike Morris or Jaylen Harrell off the edges, who got to Millen before his arm was going forward and produced a strip sack. DJ Turner scooped up the loose ball and ran it back 45 yards for a TD, which made it 30-0. 

McNamara came out to lead the next drive and got Michigan into CSU territory when JJ McCarthy entered. McCarthy's entrance helped open up a running lane for CJ Stokes on his second collegiate run, and then the very next play saw McCarthy keep the football for 20 yards and a score. 37-0, and Michigan Twitter was ablaze. 

[Patrick Barron]

The defense continued to do their job, letting CSU get a bit of yardage before slamming the door on the line. This time it was Mazi Smith with the sack on 4th down. McCarthy stayed in the game on offense with a few more QB keepers, rifling a dart on 3rd & 5 to AJ Henning, and then giving way to Donovan Edwards to punch the ball in for another TD. 44-0. 

That drive more or less ended the game in terms of regulars being on the field... the 2nd/3rd team defense and offense would take it the rest of the way. The defensive reserves finally ceded points on a great ball from Millen to Tory Horton, who had a small step on freshman Will Johnson. The 34-yard TD strike was a very similar play to one that Johnson broke up earlier in the game against Horton, so the final count was one victory apiece in that matchup.

Michigan responded with a long and grinding drive that ate up seven of the remaining ~nine minutes of game time. Alan Bowman took over at QB, throwing passes to such receivers as Hunter Neff, Colston Loveland, and Payton O'Leary, and Tavierre Dunlap and Isaiah Gash both got to carry it. Michigan went for it on 4th & Goal from the four, with Alex Orji executing a zone read alongside CJ Stokes, plunging forward and into the end zone for the final score of the day. CSU ran three plays to milk the remaining clock and the final score sat at 51-7. 

[Patrick Barron]

This was an extremely lopsided game that can only tell us so much. The Michigan offensive line was down a couple guys, and Michigan was going up against a cobbled together offensive line on the other side of the ball, stitched together through cast-off transfers. The edge question marks showed some promise, McGregor and Anoma in particular showcased good burst, but Michigan needs to play a much better offensive line to say more. Unfortunately that may not come for a few weeks.

It's also a game that will be more revealing on re-watch, especially for the defense. The defensive personnel shuffled constantly and it was hard to keep track in real time. Johnson's aforementioned pass plays were about the most I could glean from the DBs, and the LBs seemed fine. Whether that is true on re-watch will be determined in the coming days. 

On offense, I was surprised that Michigan ran it as much as they did. Of course, this is still a Jim Harbaugh team. It shouldn't be surprising, but I figured they would air it out more given the attention on the QB competition. A common talking point was about whether McNamara would push the ball downfield more. He took no deep shots and deprived us of the chance to learn much about the WRs. Whether that changes next week during the "McCarthy game" will be fascinating.

[Bryan Fuller]

It's hard to say whether this is who Cade is. He was better than this last year and may have just had the yips. We heard in camp he had improved, but it was not seen today. McCarthy looked more locked in, accurate when throwing the ball and of course, the legs can't compare. McNamara will need to play better when he gets his next chance or else the QB job may be gone from his control before long. This was the "McNamara game" and he was not the best QB on the field. Never what you want to see. 

In total, Michigan outgained Colorado State 440-219. They had 24 first downs to 14 for CSU, but held Colorado State to 2/11 on 3rd down and 1/4 on 4th down. Michigan's defense recorded a fumble recovery TD, an INT, and seven sacks. Michigan gained 6.5 yards per play on offense, to 3.7 for CSU. The Rams may not be a bad offensive team for the MWC when it's all said and done, but today they were overwhelmed. A tomato can game, and Michigan took quick care of an easy opponent. 

Next week is perhaps an even easier opponent in Hawaii, who are 0-1 to begin the season, with a game scheduled tonight against Western Kentucky. Next week's game will be at 8:00 pm EST on Big Ten Network. 

Comments

Communist Football

September 3rd, 2022 at 5:21 PM ^

I admire Cade a lot. But as Comrade Alex says, not his best game. Maybe he’ll be better in relief next week. But he tried to do a number of throws on the move, JJ style, and they never worked. 

JonnyHintz

September 3rd, 2022 at 8:51 PM ^

I don’t think a returning starter that played in the some biggest games of the last 20 years for this program gets a first game nerves mulligan in a home game against a terrible CSU squad. 
 

Especially when the biggest credit to Cade’s name is his steady hand and ability to calmly manage the game.

 

This was Cade’s game to show his stuff and he came up short in that endeavor. No mulligans when everything is on the line.

Solecismic

September 3rd, 2022 at 5:28 PM ^

The result is what you want to see against an overmatched non-conference opponent. I hope next week settles the quarterback question, because McNamara didn't look good enough to get the necessary points against top Big Ten defenses. Last thing we want is to get locked into a 5-3 battle against Iowa. Iowa thrives when the score is 5-3.

1VaBlue1

September 4th, 2022 at 9:52 AM ^

I don't care about Iowa - make the start time 8:00PM and put it on ABC.  Pee on the pink locker room walls and tell the Kinnick Curse to kiss off.  That is going to be another body bag game.  Sure, they have a good defense that plays fundamentally sound football and keeps everything in front of them with a solid 2-high zone.

So the fuck what?

They don't have any players that would start for Michigan's defense and lack the speed to cover 7 WRs, 2 TEs, and 2 RBs all over the field.  It'll be a repeat of a certain game from December.  And don't get me started on their offense!  When your best offense is both strategic and tactical use of the punter, you're not going to win a game where you have to score 20 points, let alone 35.  Also, Iowa had it's once every 4-yrs run last season, they won't sniff 10 wins for another 4-5 years.

Modern football wins with an offense that can outscore the other offense.  

The Oracle 2

September 3rd, 2022 at 5:52 PM ^

The “competition” was already decided. McCarthy will be the QB because the difference in ability is dramatic and there’s no way Michigan would risk losing him. Letting it play out this way is about respect for what McNamara did last year and making the switch a bit more palatable to anyone who might be offended by someone getting replaced even though they were doing a decent job.

WayOfTheRoad

September 4th, 2022 at 1:36 AM ^

This has been my view all along short of Cade being a completely different guy this year and he wasn't. Same guy. You don't sit a now Sophomore JJ for that guy. This is all about handing the reigns over as politely as possible out of respect and hope that it doesn't scare anyone off.

The only caveats and circumstances I do want to mention are that it is different playing from 0-0 than it is 23-0. JJ's minutes were against a team that had already quit for the most part. That accounts for something with regard to nerves and the quality of the opponent but in no way do I think that is the cause for what we saw. It should be mentioned and why I'll wait until next week to male full personal judgement but it should be stated in fairness.

Cade is Cade. If his predetermined 1st option isn't there he doesn't know what to do and he is incapable of seeing the field/defense post-snap. Still.

The worry about JJ is that in a starting role he will be a bit of an unbroken stallion out there doing Johnny Football improvs before throwing into triple coverage. We'll see. Yet, I think everyone can see that Cade probably isn't the guy anymore.

Blake Forum

September 3rd, 2022 at 5:54 PM ^

Great piece, Alex. Eyabi Anoma making an impactful play, even against a weak opponent, puts to rest speculation that he would be a Jordan Whittley-type guy. Whittley never did anything that I can recall. Anoma figures to be a contributor

WayOfTheRoad

September 4th, 2022 at 1:43 AM ^

The two Brian takes that have bewildered me are his take on Anoma being a Whittley-type guy and CJ turning into a 1st round pick. 

Anoma was a bit more about the fact that I have info on the dude that Brian likely didn't. Still, he was always a super-athlete and not a 375lb dude without much more to offer on the field (I'm sure he's a good dude). If Anoma stays on his current path, I knew UM got a steal.

As for Johnson, he's a good WR but he's just a good WR. He's kinda poor at contested balls, seeming to lack the tracking and vertical needed to win a lot of those balls. His hands are ok, not good. He's solid after the catch. I mean, he's a good WR but I don't see a 1st round pick and definitely not if Cade is his QB. Then again, it may just be the offense in general. With JJ he may be the same guy if we're just not throwing it much.

Those two specific opinions kinda threw me in his previews.

steviebrownfor…

September 4th, 2022 at 10:42 AM ^

IIRC, the CJ in the first round was a *hot* take, in other words it's meant to be controversial.

His Anoma take was based on film and PFF grades, and I don't think one sack against a terrible CSU team proves this wrong.  Anoma's sack did make me more optimistic about his M career than I was before the game, to be fair.

rice4114

September 3rd, 2022 at 5:55 PM ^

CSU beats Hawaii by at least 14 pts. CSU had some strong defenders in the middle. The defense continues to be my favorite part to watch. Maybe JJ will change that.

UgLi Eric

September 4th, 2022 at 3:10 AM ^

My take on CSU defense- they are not a team, yet. They are a bunch of good skilled players, so they are making tackles, generally being in the right place, and winning some one on one battles. They are not yet making reads, covering one another, and doing the little things that need to be done instantaneously due to the different looks the offense gives you. They will probably perform better with real game experience and some confidence. The mountain west should give them all of that. 

Hail-Storm

September 3rd, 2022 at 5:59 PM ^

My favorite play from the QB position was a throw by JJ. It looked like he was going to throw to the TE, then looked off to the outside receiver, then a quick hard pass back inside to the TE. It was subtle and only gained a few yards, but looked elite when a QB opens up a receiver like that. I’m a huge Cade fan, so was very frustrated to see him play so underwhelming. The Qbs and Wrs had a on off game. Some drops and bad throws. I’m hoping this is a full fledged air attack by game 4 to match the ground attack. 
 

Defense outplayed my expectations for sure. They looked fast. 

OkinawaGoBlue

September 3rd, 2022 at 7:16 PM ^

Perhaps Cade is experiencing the pressure of staying QB1. Maybe it showed today. JJ doesn't have that pressure yet, so he can come in and play more relaxed. Regardless, JJ brings more to the fight. 

BlueHills

September 3rd, 2022 at 7:44 PM ^

Agreed. Michigan was already up 30-0 when JJ came in, and the game was out of hand as far as Colorado State was concerned. Fact is, over half the points were scored with Cade.

Obviously JJ is an incredibly talented guy. We'd all hate to see him get frustrated and leave. But the most popular QB is always the backup QB, until he isn't.

I'm not saying people shouldn't have an opinion - these discussions are always fun. However, it's amusing that everyone seems so damn certain about everything.

What's the rush? Let's give it time and see what happens when the tougher games are played.

WayOfTheRoad

September 4th, 2022 at 1:51 AM ^

Definitely needs to be said and I'm glad a few of us are. I'm not saying it is THE reason why one guy looked so much better but starting from 0-0 and being up 20 to 30pts are very different things.

Cade still looked poor out there! I'm not making an excuse. I'm just waiting until next week to cement my view. If JJ lights it up, it's his. If he doesn't and then Cade comes in with UM up by 30 and plays great there may be more to consider.

I'm long on record that JJ should be the guy if Cade hasn't progressed mentally and it doesn't look like he has. Yet, none of us have seen JJ start a game so I'm shutting up until I have. I don't expect it but for all I know the kid will go out and show everyone that there was a reason for all this, that there IS something we couldn't know. We'll see.

outsidethebox

September 4th, 2022 at 7:11 AM ^

Cade throwing the coaches under the bus in the post-game was the most stunning part of his otherwise very bad day.  He may have played and talked himself into being the 4th string QB-or even worse. Cade has a lot of back-tracking to do here. That there is a group that is insisting upon excusing everything about this day in this regard is quite remarkable. What Cade did after this game is deeply concerning-and potentially harmful for this team. "No person is...the team, the team, the team"...it was pointedly violated today.

zapata

September 4th, 2022 at 2:47 PM ^

I was also very surprised to hear Cade say he wasn't expecting a rotation, and imply he deserved better. I mean, if there's one thing Harbaugh has always been about, it's competition for spots. So that was shocking for me and is not a good luck for him.

That said, I think it's way overreacting to say he could end up 4th string or worse - come on. That would be vindictive as hell and a HORRIBLE look for JH.

AlbanyBlue

September 3rd, 2022 at 9:39 PM ^

Thanks for a solid game recap.

IMO, JJ will get his chance to solidify his hold on QB1 in the next two weeks. If he plays well against Hawaii, he presumably will get the start in Week 3.

The defense thus far is a pleasant surprise. We need to get the starting OL back healthy and to keep building and improving. Next week, I'd like to see more of what JJ can do throwing the ball.

Dean Pelton

September 3rd, 2022 at 11:31 PM ^

A season starts but it just wasn’t the same. My wife would never admit it but I know she kept track of the Michigan game every week. If I was at the game with my Dad I would always text her. Sometimes happy and sometimes pissed off and venting. She never replied because she knew it was just what I did, but I know she read them all. With her gone the it just didn’t feel the same. 

Go Blue Beat T…

September 4th, 2022 at 9:51 AM ^

#teamJJ

 

mccarthy heisman odds: +5000

would get in early on the bet. 
 

cade’s odds: nonextant 

I watched about ten plays yesterday and saw one throw from #9 and the first few drives from #12. #12 very clearly was not the guy, and I was concerned that “if you have two qbs you don’t have one.”

 

turns out we’ve got one…#9 is legit. No need to overthink this. The fumble was on #2 against St., so I think it’s time to go after our goals which include playoff competition and beating the crème de La crème. 9 can take us there and we’ve only got two shots (at best) with him in the mix. Time to let him loose 

maquih

September 4th, 2022 at 1:29 PM ^

If im allowed to stretch a bit, I think the QBs were under orders not to go deep.  The way CSU plays they dare the opponents to go deep leaving their corners 1-on-1.  

So McNamara is instinctively seeing these juicy deep routes but then forcing himself to not throw those, can mess up his thinking.

Dnt crucify me i know the simpler more likely explanation is he was just off today but idk trying to give the young man some credit.  We'll see what hapoens next week and have more data.

JonathanE

September 4th, 2022 at 2:48 PM ^

Michigan's First 3 Possessions

Run
Pass Inc
Pass Inc
Punt

Run
Pass - TD

Pass - Inc
Run
Pass - Inc
FG

By the end of the first 3 possessions Michigan was lucky to be up 10-0 instead of 7-0. There really wasn't any chance to go deep on the second and third possession but by that time it was obvious the Cade was having trouble completing pass. As the author stated, I think Michigan switched and started going with a more heavy run game just to move the chains. Even on their 4th possession, which again ended in a field goal it was 8 - 5 run vs pass. If Cade is completing those early passes then maybe Michigan is looking to go deep.