[Bryan Fuller]

Preview: Washington 2021 Comment Count

Brian September 10th, 2021 at 2:17 PM

Essentials

WHAT Michigan vs Washington

600_Row-One-Brand_vintage-washington-uw-husky-mascot-cartoon-art-remix-row-1

WHERE Michigan Stadium
Ann Arbor, MI
WHEN 8 PM Eastern
THE LINE Michigan -7
TELEVISION ABC
TICKETS exist
WEATHER

partly cloudy, mid-70s,
~0% chance of rain,
10 mph wind

Overview

What looked like a crucial early-season bellwether game against a high-profile Pac-12 foe now looks more like a trap in which Michigan can stick its foot after the Washington Huskies lost their opener to FCS Montana, joining an exclusive club of ranked FBS teams to lose to lower-level competition. (As of press time, information on other members of this club is unavailable.) The Huskies averaged 4.9 yards an attempt with 3 interceptions and no touchdowns en route to seven (7) points. Washington was missing its top three receivers and lost a fourth during the game, but… I mean… dude.

Meanwhile we know essentially nothing about Montana since their 2020 schedule was canceled.

[Hit THE JUMP for why the Husky is so sad]

Run Offense vs Washington

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meep meep [Bryan Fuller]

Jury is still out for the Huskies, obviously. FWIW, Montana's main backs combined for a respectable 119 yards on 24 carries—4.5 a pop. This largely came on the edges as UW's very very Polynesian DTs won their battles on the interior. They're going to be hard to move. Alex:

The first two features meet you right in the middle up front, and they are not small boys, Tuli and Taki. A fearsome pair of space-eating defensive tackles, they're not here to pass rush, but sometimes they still get into the backfield and make things happen.

In better news, Washington rotates a bunch of guys outside of the tackles, and they don't seem to have a complete DE. They've got some rushers, some more run-oriented guys, but no Hutchinson. Alex clipped a number of questionable plays on the edge. This may be more of a Blake Corum game than a Hassan Haskins game—not that Haskins can't get to the edge, but I mean… Corum.

Since your author's personal headline here is "ooh Blake Corum" after Corum's absurd +16.5 game, per Seth's UFR, that suits me just fine. (For the record I think Seth is more generous with points than I have been historically, which is fine but there is going to be a bit of a recalibration.) One thing to watch for is how much stuff Michigan pulls out of the Bag Of Harbaugh here. Michigan's ground game against WMU was understandably vanilla, and while I'm guessing we're not going to see Michigan's QBs pulling the ball much, if at all, that doesn't mean Michigan doesn't have misdirection up its sleeve. Ask Notre Dame from a couple years ago.

I, uh, wish I had something more to say here? Early season preview content is going to be extremely annoying as we try to extrapolate from games that are (supposed to be) massively unbalanced and do our best to ignore all data from the stupid COVID season. Washington will probably be tough up the middle but has some edge weaknesses, and we don't know much else.

KEY MATCHUP: BLAKE CORUM vs NOT AT ALL GRANDIOSE EXPECTATIONS PLACED UPON HIM BY A CADRE OF INTERNET WEIRDOS. Honestly Seth is the biggest offender here at this point. That UFR grade is taunting fate.

Pass Offense vs Washington

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can someone step up in Bell's absence? [Barron]

Washington has one bonafide all conference and maybe All-America corner in Trent McDuffie, who's fielding the requisite NFL draft hype:

McDuffie’s physical traits are often the subject of awe. This past June, he put up a 41.5-inch vertical jump. Even in high school, he had elite athletic traits relative to his counterparts, with a 4.47 40-yard dash and a 35.5-inch vertical jump at the time. However, what truly separated McDuffie might have been his composure and mental quickness.

Montana had just as much difficulty throwing on Washington as, uh, Washington did on Montana. Camron Humphrey averaged 4.6 YPA on 23 attempts. Unlike Dylan Morris he didn't throw three picks. Humphrey did miss a number of makeable throws as holes popped up in various zone coverages; hopefully Cade McNamara will follow up on his accurate outing against WMU.

The two DTs don't get a lot of pass rush since they are in the Bryan Mone mold, and Washington lost spectacularly-named Zion Tupuoloa-Fetui to an achilles injury in the spring. That's a major loss since he had seven of Washington's ten sacks in their abbreviated 2020 campaign. OLB Cooper McDonald picked up UW's only sack in the opener. This doesn't look like a situation where Michigan's OL will be overwhelmed, but Alex did point out Washington's predilection for corner blitzes. New OL coach, early season, some injury issues—pickups could be an issue.

Also these sections are basically Shruggie Dot Emoji. We've got some indications that Washington has talent in the secondary and not a whole lot of pass rush but we're basing it on even less than we usually do.

On Michigan's side of things, the loss of Ronnie Bell is a major blow. Bell looked set to break out as one of the Big Ten's best WRs, and now he's on the shelf. That leaves things to Cornelius Johnson, Daylen Baldwin, Roman Wilson, and then some freshmen. Those guys have potential but haven't turned it into a lot of production yet—in Baldwin's case, production at the FBS level—and how big of a dropoff there is without Bell is an open question.

Also, Cade McNamara had a promising start last week but had only 11 throws. This will be a relatively stiff test, at least as far as coverage is concerned. Time he should probably have.

KEY MATCHUP: MICHIGAN WIDE RECEIVERS vs PICKING UP THE BELL SLACK. Suddenly this is one of the team X-factors. Performances could range from "no problem, see you next year Ronnie" to a version of Washington's opener.

Run Defense vs Washington

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big test for Hinton [Fuller]

This Washington team doesn't do any of the things that give Michigan fans hives when it comes to modern up-tempo spread football. QB Dylan Morris is very much a pocket guy; there's little QB run game to speak of. Washington's pace is best described as glacial—as Alex pointed out, UW's median plays per game over the last five years is 102nd. There are a lot of two-tight-end sets, and a third of UW's snaps against the Grizzlies were under center. #chaosteam Indiana this is not.

It is in fact a John Donovan team. You may remember Donovan as "the guy at Penn State before Joe Moorhead," and while Donovan was saddled with the kinds of offensive lines that give up infamous sacks to a two-man rush from the Temple Owls this is just straight up goofy:

 

As a quick hint as to what went wrong for Washington in this game, this chart may provide a pretty big window:

Formation Run PA Pass Total
Shotgun 8 - 42 67%
Under Center 16 8 1 33%

The predictability of formation wasn't something I honestly picked up on until compiling the data and holy cow. 

You'd think they'd self-scout out of this if it's smacking Michigan bloggers in the face, but, uh… I remember Christian Hackenberg.

Anyway, there's going to be a relatively heavy dose of two tight end formations and beefy-ish runs. Normally this would be a cause for optimism against anyone not named Wisconsin, but going into the season Michigan's main concern was their defensive tackles and what happens when they're in a base formation with approximately all of their functional guys on the field at the same time. WMU did not provide an answer to that since Michigan was almost always in what was functionally a 4-2-5 nickel. We're going to see an actual 3-4 happen a lot more here.

The good news is that Washington's offensive line, which returned all five starters and was hyped in some corners as the Pac-12's best, massively disappointed. Alex has the grisly details in FFFF; the high-level summary:

After allowing just 0.25 sacks per game last season in the PAC-12, Washington allowed Montana to sack Dylan Morris three times in this game. After averaging 4.5 yards per game on the ground last season in the PAC-12, they rushed for 2.41 yards per carry in this game. They had a small bit of success running to the outside, but between the tackles it was a horror show.

Washington actually rotated out its guards, with equally dismal results. The Husky RBs combined for 70 yards on 21 carries, with one run longer than ten yards.

FWIW, Richard Newton is the primary back. So far he looks like Just A Guy, with 4.2 YPC on about 100 carries in 2019 and limited reps since.

KEY MATCHUP: MICHIGAN DL vs THE STANDARD SET BY FCS MONTANA. This is a lot lower bar to clear than it looked like preseason. Still, clearing it is a bare minimum to maintain the cautious optimism coming out of the WMU game.

Pass Defense vs Washington

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i need this shot but with Hill-Green also in it [Barron]

The aforementioned WR injury situation makes it difficult to project here. UW head coach Jimmy Lake is the kind of guy who says nothing about anything, but these sideline observations from the Montana game make it seem like returns are unlikely for any of the missing:

Odunze was in pads, but he kept his head tucked under a hoodie while McMillan had some sort of cast or bandage on a hand that's been surgically repaired and Bynum hasn't practiced for a couple of weeks now.

Seems like losing to an FCS team would be a time you would break glass in case of emergency so I doubt any of the three are particularly close to the field. Ditto Ja'Lynn Polk, a Texas Tech transfer who got hurt on the first snap.

Compounding problems for Washington is that five(!) WRs transferred out this offseason, with Old Friend Giles Jackson and Polk transferring in. They have a total of eight scholarship WRs, and half of them are potentially out. Ouch. The remainder: Jackson had four catches for 15 yards*; Taj Davis had 6 for 59, and that was about it when it came to WR production. Washington does have a highly touted tight end, Cade Otton, who led the team with eight catches for 82 yards.

Meanwhile, QB Dylan Morris did not impress Alex. His bullet-point summary:

    • He threw a good number of catchable balls to easy, low-stress targets who were rarely more than 10 yards past the line of scrimmage (The Rutgers Offense) 
    • He also threw a solid number of plainly inaccurate balls that were uncatchable, some of which were also on bad reads
    • He had a tendency to make life harder on the receivers than it needed to be
    • He was also without any viable outside downfield targets and faced considerable pressure due to a leaky OL.

Questionable accuracy, questionable arm, limited mobility, may be better in a different context. One that probably isn't coming this week, or this year. The Washington message boards were clamoring for a QB change and may have been right, except insofar as their is someone to replace him.

Add in the OL coming in well below expectations and this looks way more comfortable than it did preseason. Caveats about first game to second game transitions are warranted, particularly for the OL, but Alex caught UW throwing the 4'7" Jackson a sideline fade that landed about five yards short. Washington is not in a good place.

Michigan is in a slightly better one, with Dax Hill excelling as a spacebacker/nickel against WMU and the cornerback situation looking tentatively improved. (Guys are still getting behind Vincent Gray too much for my taste.) Michigan threw a bunch of zones at WMU and looks set to diversify their schemes; this will be another opportunity to work on their drops without getting punished too extensively for their failures.

*[If it took four injuries to get Jackson 15 yards we may have an explanation of his place on the depth chart at WR and thus his transfer. Still a shame because he was electric on special teams.]

KEY MATCHUP: AIDAN HUTCHINSON vs FEAST WEEK. I'm not betting on Michigan's interior DL getting a lot of pressure even against some wonky guards. This would be a nice week for Hutchinson to get most of the playing time and establish himself as a consistent down-to-down problem.

SPECIAL TEAMS

You know all about Giles Jackson on kickoffs. Hopefully Michigan can put the ball deep enough to dissuade return attempts. I find it somewhat inexplicable that Jackson's not returning punts; Trent McDuffie had the sole return (for nine yards) against Montana.

Washington's punter got in some work; he averaged 45 yards a punt but UW got tagged for a couple 20+ yard returns. They gave up a 60 yard PR TD to Oregon State in the abbreviated 2020 schedule. Kicker Peyton Henry missed his only attempt against the Grizzlies but was 19/21 in 2019, that's unlikely to be a major problem. (But not impossible, #collegekickers.)

KEY MATCHUP:  AHHHH YOU CONTINUE DOING EVERYTHING WELL

INTANGIBLES

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this is what happens when you type "cat that looks like a dog" into google

CHEAP THRILLS

Worry if…

  • A bunch of their WRs get healthy.
  • The OL thing was a weird week one issue and they're back to expectations.
  • McNamara's 11 attempts last Saturday aren't representative.

Cackle with knowing glee if…

  • They're throwing sideline fades to Jackson because that's their best option.
  • John Donovan is doing John Donovan things.
  • Denard appearance? Come on make it happen.

Fear/Paranoia Level: 3 (Baseline: 5; –1 for To State The Obvious, Losing To An FCS Team Is Not Good, –1 for Home Night Game, –1 for Washington WR Injury Catastrophe, +1 for Spooky Transfer Revenge Juju, +1 for General Suspicion, –1 for John Donovan's Very Boring Offense, +1 for Should The Line Be Higher Here For A 2? Yes.)

Desperate need to win level: 7 (Baseline: 5; –1 for We're All Gonna Die Eventually, +1 for All Of A Sudden We Could Have A Good Vibes Empty Calories Fall, +1 for Is Denard There? Win For Denard,  -1 for I Mean This Season Probably Doesn't Have Capital-S Stakes, +1 for Something Good Happen To Football Please, +1 for Keep The Night Game Record Intact)

Loss will cause me to… pivot even harder to basketball. ("Not possible" –everyone.)

Win will cause me to… wonder how big of a dog an 11-0 team can be.

The strictures and conventions of sportswriting compel me to predict: 

One does not want to get too cocky just because a team had a bad, stupid opener. This happens to teams all the time. Hell, the Horror team got off the mat and ended up finishing that year by beating Tim Tebow in the Citrus Bowl. However, that was a talent-laden team hideously unprepared to deal with modern football. Washington just looks… bad.

That doesn't mean Michigan is good, but a home night game three time zones away from Pacific is a nice boost and if you're looking at the skill players for both teams this is no contest. Washington has better answers at DT and CB, probably, but also looks like they're going to be scrapping for any sort of pass rush.

If the teams look like they did in their openers this should be a game where Michigan can play it relatively close to the vest and still ease out to a win. "If" is doing some work there.

Finally, three opportunities for me to look stupid Sunday:

  • Blake Corum crests 100 yards in total offense.
  • McNamara takes a small step back as he's asked to do more and dampens the hype from the opener a bit.
  • Michigan, 23-11.

Comments

gopoohgo

September 10th, 2021 at 3:09 PM ^

This is what you get when you type "cat that looks like a dog" into google  

It's a Vietnamese H'mong dog.  

This one is named Dui (he went viral in the past).

Blue Middle

September 10th, 2021 at 3:29 PM ^

This game scares me.  A bad game and it is the beginning of the end for Harbaugh.  UW will be coming out guns blazing after an embarrassing week one loss.  They have a good defense.  Can our defense keep their not-so-great offense in check?  Can we stop any early momentum from the Huskies and establish control?

It's time for UM to step up and prove they can put the hammer down on teams that are pretty good.  But a close game feels like a real possibility.

ClaudeTee

September 10th, 2021 at 3:39 PM ^

I am terrified.  Does anyone remember last year's second game?  After an opening week, in which our boys trounced then-#21 Minnesota 49-24 at Minnesota, while Michigan State was losing at home to Rutgers, we were all looking forward to an old-fashioned stomping of Sparty in Week Two.

The sting of that loss lingers still.

 

Goggles Paisano

September 11th, 2021 at 7:02 AM ^

I get the vibe from this Washington team that they don't have many guns to blaze.  They don't seem to be a very cohesive group and don't seem to be buying into what the HC and OC are selling.  When you have a lot of holes on offense and in particular don't feel confident in your QB, it is tough to feel confident coming into a game like this, especially on the road.  

Snake Oil Steve

September 10th, 2021 at 4:07 PM ^

A couple of factoids:

  • Washington has one of the youngest teams in America (something like 4/5 of their scholarship players are underclassmen per a graphic on last week's TV broadcast of the Michigan game).
  • the Saturday night game at the Big House will be:
    • the first road game of Wash QB Dyal Morris career
    • the first road game of HC Jimmy Lake's career
    • the first time that Washington has played a road game - or outside of the state of Washington - since 2019.

Derelicious

September 10th, 2021 at 4:13 PM ^

Each time I see reference to Dylan Morris, I immediately think, "wait, a Michigan transfer is their QB?"  My mind has created some mashup of Dylan McCaffery and Shane Morris to represent their QB.

BuckeyeChuck

September 10th, 2021 at 5:59 PM ^

HOORAY FOR BRIAN!!!

One thing to watch for is how much stuff Michigan pulls out of the Bag Of Harbaugh here. Michigan's ground game against WMU was understandably vanilla

Yea, speaking of vanilla, I'm expecting play-calling on 1st down could be a bit different than against WMU...what, were 13 of the first 16 first-down calls a running play?

...or maybe it won't be much different.

KRK

September 10th, 2021 at 7:38 PM ^

So everyone on here seems to know little about Montana or is crapping on them as a FCS team. But I grew up watching them and my dad has had season tickets for over 40 years so I guess I'm an authority on them in these parts.  Before NDSU rose to power, Montana was the dominant power for the previous 20 years.  And Bobby Hauck was a big part of that.  He went to UNLV and the program hit a low point under Stitt and Mick.  But Hauck came back and the guy can flat out coach.  Most of the fans knew this team would be really solid upfront because Hauck always gets lineman on both sides, and his kids play so hard.  My dad thought they would at least beat the spread against UW and make it respectable, given how solid they would be up front and running the ball.  So while a lot of people around here don't know much about Montana football, they're a legit FCS school who is back on the rise and could contend for the national title at that level.  Plus, if you ever want to see a crazy atmosphere, check out their home games.  A friend of mine is a diehard Seahawks fan and thought the 12th man crap was the be-all end-all of atmospheres.  He went to a game there and called me drunk at kickoff yelling "HOW DO YOU PEOPLE DO THIS EVERY SATURDAY! THIS IS INSANE".  Seriously, if you're ever in Missoula in the fall, try and catch a game.  Anyone at a tailgate will hand you a beer and welcome you in.

letsjoeblue

September 10th, 2021 at 7:43 PM ^

agreed, I grew up in Missoula and the level of hero worship the Grizzlies have in western MT is similar to the gravity the Cornhuskers have in Nebraska.  the question with the Griz always seems to center around qb play and the competency of the offense.

good for the Griz, that W over UW will be a program defining game for them for a long time.

Firebirddl

September 10th, 2021 at 8:37 PM ^

“It’s the hope that kills you,” I feel like this site  should watch Ted Lasso

 Take me out back and kill me in 3 months, because Michigan is going undefeated, I can feel it in my bones.

MGoStrength

September 11th, 2021 at 8:39 AM ^

I'm not betting on Michigan's interior DL getting a lot of pressure even against some wonky guards. 

I know that although recruiting rankings are correlated with playing success and wins, it's not exactly 100%.  But, I for one cannot understand why having the composite #31 and the #105 are not better DTs.  I'd guess that's the second highest ranked recruits starting at DT in the B1G behind only OSU's Haskell (#68) and Vincent (#20).  Hinton is UM's all time 16th highest rated recruit.  There was an argument once about their age.  Mazi just got his very first start last week and we have very little data to make judgements on his development, but that in and of itself is telling for a borderline top 100 recruit.  I've long said that Hinton did not look or perform like a 5-star and got shit for it because he was still an underclassman, but he's not any longer.  A 5-star DT in his third year should do better, yet we routinely comment on their lack of holding up to double teams and generating a pass rush.  Will they ever perform up to their recruiting rankings and turn into All Conference players or are they just overrated HS recruits that will be solid/serviceable P5 players at best and struggle against the better interior o-lines in the conference?  Maybe this is a pipe dream, but unless you're freshman going up against a 3rd or 4th year player I'm expecting the higher rated recruit to win on field battles the vast majority of the time, which means Hinton should be beating pretty much every o-lineman he faces minus OSU's Paris Johnson (RG) who's slightly higher ranked, but a year younger.  I don't think there's another interior o-lineman in the conference that was a higher ranked recruit starting in the conference than Hinton.  He should be dominating them.

maquih

September 11th, 2021 at 2:15 PM ^

I'm guessing W had some discipline problems the night before the Montana game, stayed up too late in the hotel pranking each other or something.  So yeah, I wouldn't look at last week's game as anything but a fluke, BUT it does mean they threw away last week as a chance to try some things and iron out some wrinkles. 

We have the benefit of having taken week 1 seriously so can hope the players take a step forward this week and give us a solid if not comfortable win!