Job-doer. [David Wilcomes]

Neck Sharpies: Eleven Men Doing Their Jobs Comment Count

Seth November 8th, 2022 at 10:30 AM

GO VOTE! I'm out all day working the election. Vote.org has information if you're wondering where/if you're registered. Michigan accepts same-day registration at your Clerk's office. Also your absentee ballot can be turned in there at any time before 8PM today (if you got an absentee but want to vote in person, please bring that). Democracy forever!

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People have been getting the wrong idea about how we feel about Pro Football Focus. I get folks in my mentions wanting to make them out to be utter fools. Au contraire they are an extremely useful site for many things, and I am happy to keep subscribing. The problem we've been having lately is that their run blocking grades are uncanny. They have Michigan's run blocking about on par with Michigan States. These two running games however are not performing anything like each other. It doesn't pass the sniff test.

The problem, I've been led to believe, is that they mark a "0" for a "got the job done" block, with minuses if you mess it up or pluses if you do something extra.

The thing is that's now how blocking really works. If you're completing your assignment every play on the offensive line you are the most incredible offensive lineman who ever lived. The legends of our charting—Long, Lewan, Molk—were guys who were executing things that are hard to do. Offensive line is a HARD job, and that job can change on you so swiftly that you can't process most of it. And offensive line at Michigan is especially hard.

Let me show you an example.

[Hit THE JUMP for the breakdown.]

What Michigan is Running

This is a standard Pin & Pull, or Buck, with two guards pulling and the rest blocking down. The guys pulling varies not on the playcall (usually) but on how the defensive line set up. We've been over this before many times but a refresher: on power runs you…

  1. Block down on any defenders you have an angle for.
  2. Kick out the defender setting the edge (usually) to set one side of the gap.
  3. Pull a lead blocker around from the backside to hit the first defender who shows.

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The rest is up to your back and the play design, and what the defense does to you. The next level of running this stuff is to adjust to all those things a defense does on the fly. This is when we start raising the difficulty level, which is bound to happen if you're running this as your base stuff. Some examples of things that could happen:

  • The DL slants to the direction of the play? Win the blockdowns you can, cut or zone block what you can't.
  • The Edge comes underneath the kickout? Turn him inside so he's now a blockdown and run out the open edge with the free blocker.
  • A Linebacker blitzes a backside gap? He's still the puller's responsibility. Pull up and cut him off, or if he gets across you kick him out.
  • A Linebacker blitzes a frontside gap? Kick him out and run inside.
  • The Safety blitzes the intended gap? He's probably replacing a linebacker. Treat him as such.

It's funny how this can all break down into a zone play after all, but that's what's really going on. The defense is going to come at you from weird angles, and it's up to you to make sure the ones who angled outside stay outside of the gap and the ones who angled inside stay there. Let the RB worry about finding the lane.

The more of these you get the greater the difficulty of the execution. Technically if the defense is 100% selling out against this play you should still be able to get it blocked up. That's what your coach claims at least. Easier said than done, coach.

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What Did Rutgers Do?

They're bringing a run blitz that simulates a slant towards both edges (where Michigan loves to run), adds a blitzing linebacker to the middle to blaze into anything going through there, or across. Two defensive backs on that side are activated against the run, the strong safety replacing where the MLB was, and the cornerback, cornerback, who's got that TE in man coverage. If Michigan was running left they have the WLB doing the same thing.

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Pin & Pull should be dead against this. And sure enough, things look bad at the beginning.

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Michigan has an RPO on the backside (top) of the play that should rid them of the WLB when Loveland heads out into the flat. Yay, one less thing to worry about. However Rutgers is happy to take that since they should have lots of defenders in the right position against Pin & Pull:

  1. The guys who needed to get blocked down are slanting playside.
  2. If the first puller tries to kick any of those no-longer-blockdowns, the CB is a free extra defender on the edge.
  3. The MLB is blitzing the backside gap where there's no way to block him down to intercept the lead blocker.

Doing your job isn't going to be enough here. Let's get to the handoff.

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We've got trouble. Barnhart has his guy inside of him but outside of the hash marks, IE where the run wanted to go. Schoonmaker released to find no linebackers to block down. Zinter is arriving on the edge to find the DE he expected to be the edge and another guy besides. Keegan has it the worst—he was supposed to get all play to get through the intended gap and keep a defender out of there, but now the blitzing MLB is going to be set up right where we don't want him to be: IN the gap, and deep in the backfield besides. In fact he's on a direct trajectory with Edwards. Also the safety is rolling down and nobody had him in their plans.

So What Did Michigan Do?

What everyone does is their jobs, modified for what they got. Schoonmaker found the safety and made him his downblock. Barnhart couldn't get his downblock sealed after all so he adjusts by starting to zone block that guy outside where he wants to be. Zinter is doing the same with the DE.

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Keegan IDs the MLB in the backfield, and has nowhere else to put him, so he starts shoving the guy outside in hopes that Edwards can find a lane in there. And you know what? He does.

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Things

This is what a well-trained, good offense does. Just about nobody ended up running the play "Pin & Pull" as it was put on paper. Two of the downblocks become kickouts as Barnhart adjusted to his slanting DT and Keegan had to find somewhere to put the blitzing MLB. Zinter had to choose between two edge defenders and managed to get a full kick on the most dangerous one. Schoonmaker didn't panic when he stepped down to an empty second level and found the guy replacing the missing linebacker, removing a safety. Meanwhile that cornerback took himself out of the play because he didn't believe Edwards had the vision nor the agility to hop back inside of all of those blocks. Who could blame him, when most backs just end up eating that MLB blitz.

Ultimately everybody did their jobs, even if it wasn't the original assignment. That would be a "pass" if you're grading on a pass/fail of execution, and a zero if you're starting with the expectation that everyone does his job. Executing at this level when the defense has called the play to beat the play you're running is additive, not neutral, for the simple reason that run plays are designed to get everyone blocked to the secondary.

Michigan's running game isn't just doing their jobs. They're giving every other running game coach in America evidence that it's okay to ask this of their players.

Heh. Good luck.

Comments

Spitfire

November 8th, 2022 at 1:21 PM ^

Great breakdown. That cut by Edwards is a thing of beauty. That's how you get a great running game. OL doing their job (and more) plus great backs to take advantage of it.

bighouseinmate

November 8th, 2022 at 1:51 PM ^

This reminds me of the difference between “regular” forces and “special” forces in the army/marines.
 

Regular forces can be trained very well to do whatever the battle plan is. They can be highly successful doing that plan, as long as the enemy does the basic things, too. Once an enemy starts to deviate from those basic things, however, the regular forces can often be stymied, and fought to a draw, or have that battle plan completely blown up by the enemy and lose ground, no matter how well they execute the battle plan. 
 

The special forces, though, have that extra ability to shift the battle plan on the fly, based on whatever the enemy is doing. They are highly successful not only because they are trained to near perfection in the basics, but also because they have adaptability beat into them. They don’t have to pull back and regroup like the regular forces, but can maintain contact with the enemy while changing assignments and/or points of attack in the enemy lines so that the objective is met, no matter what the enemy throws at them. 

dragonchild

November 8th, 2022 at 5:44 PM ^

I mean, sure. But a lot of that is unit size and mobility. Even a basically trained unit has some flexibility at the squad level, and a lot of Special Forces’ flexibility is in the context of them operating like light infantry. I don’t care if you’re the most dangerous man in the world; if the enemy doesn’t show up where you’re expecting, you’re not hoofing a howitzer or constructing an airstrip with your fingernails.

sharklover

November 8th, 2022 at 5:38 PM ^

It's amazing to see that last still frame with the arrow that shows the route that Edwards takes. At the moment that he decides what direction to go in, Schoonmaker has only just engaged with the safety, and the hole is still closed. Edwards has to recognize that there is a size mismatch and that Schoonmaker has leverage enough to clear out a running lane in the next half second. He also had to make that recognition while avoiding the defenders that have sealed the edge and are now in the backfield in the direction that he was running at the point where he accepted the handoff. It just looks like chaos to me at full speed, but he's reading the whole field.

bighouseinmate

November 9th, 2022 at 4:05 PM ^

That run by DE was a Corum level read and cut. Edwards didn’t start the season making those but now he’s had a few in the past couple of games. If he ever gets close to Corum’s consistency in making those quick read and cuts I don’t think Michigan’s run game will take any kind of step back next year, and might just take another leap forward. 

Double-D

November 8th, 2022 at 9:38 PM ^

This is just an awesome neck sharpie. It shows how well these guys are coached and what good players they are. This shows up in the run game over and over.

 

 

YoOoBoMoLloRoHo

November 8th, 2022 at 10:18 PM ^

Excellent analysis and explanation. The complexity and subtlety of great OL play is the best part of film study.

Truly incredible that this group executed so well with Persi & Barnhart both subbing and UM running fairly “vanilla” plays. Just more proof that Moore does a great job implementing Harbaugh intricate run game.

AlbanyBlue

November 9th, 2022 at 4:47 PM ^

Observations:

Seth, amazing job breaking this down. You get the rare +3 here (+1 for breakdown, +1 for excellent meme, +1 for thought bubbles, especially "safety imposition").

My God, our OL is talented....basically everyone reads and reacts and kicks ass here. Edwards also rocks it by choosing the right lane. It seems like he is doing that more and more and that bodes well for next year.

The strongest impression I got from this is that I hope we have pass plays that start by looking like this in the book, ready to use when needed. Admittedly I might not be right here, but it looks like Schoon can start to block and then leak out and he should be pretty open. In fact, didn't we see something like that on Saturday? I think we did....

Totally amazing job here. Thanks for this.

redjugador24

November 10th, 2022 at 8:34 AM ^

Great Breakdown.  This is why I've always struggled with teams being labeled as "power" or "man" run blocking teams.  That's all well and good until the defense tries to, you know, stop you, by running slants, twists, blitzes, etc.  At that point everything becomes zone blocking on the fly - even if there are pulls, traps, etc. incorporated into the play call. This is also why OL requires a high IQ and trust for the guys around you. The health of your backfield relies on not leaving anybody unblocked.