UCF Postgame Presser: Jim Harbaugh Comment Count

Adam Schnepp

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[Upchurch/MGoBlog]

How impressed were you with Rashan Gary and what kind of progression have you seen from him just from week one to week two?

“It’s been very good, very outstanding. Tough guy. He’s been—he got a finger dislocated about the first week of practice and they took him in, put him under the x-ray, and the trainer was like, ‘Man, what is that?’ or something to that effect, and Rashan was like, ‘That’s football.’ Taped it up and went back out. Another time he was cramping and I took him out of practice, and then about six plays later saw he was back in there. He’s really good like that. Real football player. Doing a great job. Played the whole game today, looked like, most of it.

“And along those lines I felt the lines really took care of business today. That was something we felt was gonna be necessary and could get accomplished. Wouldn’t call it dominating but it was—took care of business, both the offensive an defensive lines. Did a very good job.”

Just asked Wilton about [how] in week one he didn’t really get hit; barely touched. Today he did get hit a few times, sacked a couple times. Just as a quarterback, what can that do for you? He said it’s not like he wants to get hit all the time, but it kind of gets him in the mode. Curious your thoughts on that.

“I thought, first of all, quarterback throws for four touchdowns and over 300 yards, that’s a great performance. Would not be going out on a limb to say he’s probably going to be our offensive player of the week, of the game. Had some good courage plays where he had to stand in the pocket and either a blitzer or a rusher was coming. Even made an improv play, improvise and adjust, to kick it out to Poggi in the flat. Thought that was a smart play. Hit two post routes. I mean, the hardest routes to hit, in my opinion. I played the position and watched for all my life [and] it’s a hard route to hit, and both Chesson made a great catch and so did Darboh for a touchdown. For the quarterback to hit those, that’s the toughest route, I think.

“And also the backs. I thought the backs--right from the get-go our backs were getting hit. Big hits and really good formed-up tackles by UCF and they hung onto the ball. It was a hard-hitting game all the way through, and also feel like we’re building up a callus with our team. Didn’t come out of this game with any injuries. And we delivered some blows, too. It was a good, real football game.”

How do you balance getting a running back in a rhythm versus keeping him fresh and getting other guys carries?

“Um…by getting him in there every couple. Today we were rotating backs. De’Veon had some unbelievable runs, especially the one drive—I think we ended up getting a field goal out of it—breaking tackles and pickings up the first downs. Two first downs he picked up by extra effort, and running with the ball, getting hit, three, four, five hits on the same play. Always thought it was smart to put a fresh back in when you have a run like that. But I thought he was exceptional. There were definitely drives we don’t get points on the board without the extra effort he was making out there.”

What’s your concern level on the quarterback scrambles, and is that something that’s pretty easy to clean up?

“Yeah, we made the adjustment in the second half. We were getting behind the quarterback. We’ve got to either retrace or spin back into the lane to keep the quarterback from leaving the pocket and getting all those rushing yards that they got. I thought Don and the staff did a nice job of making adjustments in the second half.”

[After THE JUMP: special teams, Speight under pressure (from the opposition), a minor injury update, and the wonder of the MRI from a non-doctor’s perspective]

Did you like what Wilton was doing with his feet? We don’t talk much about his speed or feet or escapability, but seemed like he moved away from rushes a little bit today.

“Yeah, that’s something that he’s been adding to his game that’s really helpful, moving in the pocket, getting to the quiet spot in the pocket, and also evading rush. He had a couple where he had to bail out of the pocket and made some really good throws on the run. Good decisions out of the pocket today. Yeah, that’s the one that’s really come the last couple weeks that he’s been working on, making those subtle moves in the pocket to get to the quieter spot in the pocket.

“Two weeks ago he started to get some nice loft on the screens and flares out of the backfield. Yeah, just—it’s coming together. Doing a nice job, and when he really focuses on something to get better at he goes right to work on it and he gets better at it every day.”

You mentioned the tackle-breaking run De’Veon had, but for much of the day it seemed like they were slowing your tailbacks down. Is that things they were doing or things you guys weren’t quite--

“Yeah, they—we had a lot of run blitzes to stop the running game, and we took advantage of it with the play action pass. We just--especially in the first half and the second half, with numbing repetition just kept going back to the play action. It worked well for us today.”

You guys got your hands on four different kicks on special teams. Is that something schematic or it that just individual guys making plays?

“Both. Wormley doing a great job getting push up in the middle. You just don’t want to ever concede points on the board, whether it’s an extra point or a field goal. It’s been an eight-, nine-play drive or six or seven and guys are tired but they just commit themselves to one final push to keep points off the board. I thought guys did an excellent job. Our special teams has really performed well. Been very pleased. Get those blocks…but also had a very big return today. Jabrill got it all the way down to about the 12. Get the turnover with the kickoff team, some big tackles on the kickoff team, thought it was really good. One mistake. One dropped punt by Kenny, but keep your chin up. More games to play. We can improve that.”

Since the bowl game, what have you seen Wilton Speight do to develop chemistry and consistency with his receivers?

“Um, he’s just gotten better. It’s like we were talking about earlier, he gets something to work on, he works on it. Gets improvement made really fast. He’s a smart guy that’s very dedicated to getting better at something, so anything we’ve given him, Jedd or I have talked to him about in terms of improving his play, he’s been all ears and he goes right to work on it.”

Chase Winovich has played three positions since he’s been here. He seems to have found a home. Talk about his progression and the ability to start here today.

“Yeah, it was really good. I think he played most of the ball game today and, yeah, it was—going from linebacker to fullback/tight end to now defensive end, I think that’s his spot. Glad we found it for him. Glad he found it for himself. Always known he’s a very talented athlete, very physical, high motor, aggressive guy that’s a good football player. Think he’ll keep blossoming. Feel good about where he’s at right now.”

You sounded very optimistic about Jourdan’s health earlier in the week and he didn’t play today. Is that again your call and is there a regression in his health?

“Uh, yeah, something different came up. Just a muscle strain. So it was different. Different location.”

Longer term, do you expect?

“I don’t—I don’t know. I didn’t get my doctor’s degree. We’ll see. We’ll see. Not going to take any chances with him. Did an MRI and there was a signal there, and it was a near type of pull. You know, he’s just too good of a player and he’s worked too hard and we’re not going to put him out there in a position where it’s just kind of silly to just go ahead and get the muscle pull. That’s where it’s at. It’s called a near pull but it shows up on the MRI.

“Glad that we can do MRIs around here. Glad that we can do that for our players and give them the best treatment available. Shoot, man, when it comes to their health and their welfare, it costs what it costs. Happy that we’re doing what we’re doing.”

David Long, did he dress today?

“No.”

Is that a serious thing with him or is it just a minor injury?

“You know, it’s just—as you know, I’m not going to come in here and have the ‘health of the team’ meeting with you guys every week or every day. Talk about the ballgame? I’d love to.”

This past week when we spoke with Rashan he said that his first start, he was nervous, he was excited. What have you seen from him just in the past week? He was able to get in the backfield, TFLs, and not just him but the defense in general was able to get in the backfield. Specifically with Rashan, what do you like about his ability?

“I like everything about his ability. I thought our lines played extremely well, both the offensive line and the defensive line. We were getting knock back from our defensive line. They did get some runs out on us. Maybe four runs accounted for most of the yardage today.

“That was legitimately—they ran a lot of plays. They were getting them off about 15-17 seconds a down, which is great for our team and our offense. When you’re getting those stops, those three and outs you’re getting the ball right back. That’s what our defense was doing. They were getting the knock back. They were stuffing the run early for most downs, and I thought our defensive line had a huge hand in that. They really got the job down physically.”

Did you sense any nerves with Rashan at all?

“Uh, I didn’t, no.”

Is Bredeson earning his way into a bigger role with this offensive line?

“He is. And Ben Braden was playing today, and that was great to see. Had held him out last week. Same kind of precautionary type, being proactive kind of thing. Just felt that it was best to go rotating [and] rotate Ben today. Glad that Ben got a part of a game under his belt and feel like we can go forward from here. But Ben Bredeson is also doing a really fine job as well.”

[pause]

“Okay, good? Onward.”

Comments

boliver46

September 12th, 2016 at 10:00 AM ^

with Rashan - and Harbaugh as well:

I’m not going to come in here and have the ‘health of the team’ meeting with you guys every week or every day. Talk about the ballgame? I’d love to.”

Keep it about football.  We will deal with injuries internally.  Love it.

 

GO BLUE!

Ball Hawk

September 11th, 2016 at 12:54 PM ^

One thing that I was really pissed about was that drop punt snap. I get that your nerves can make you do some things but when the snap is perfect, you gotta catch the punt. That's twice now and he has to get it right.

lhglrkwg

September 11th, 2016 at 2:01 PM ^

Seems like Harbaugh saw what a lot of us suspected- UCF was selling out to shutdown the run game and force us to pss. Well pass we did and Wilton led us to victory. Still saw some busts in pick-ups but I'm hoping yesterday was not indicative of our OL

treetown

September 11th, 2016 at 3:03 PM ^

At the game, when Michigan didn't get much yardage on the initial running attempts and later didn't even call many running plays, a lot of us were worried and wondered if this was a bad sign (shades of years past where a 1 yard per carry running game did occur). After getting home and reflecting on the 31-0 score at one point despite at that time only having I think 40 yards or less rushing it struck me while Harbaugh seemed quite calm about the issue:

1. As you noted he and his staff were aware that UCF was calling run-blitzes and stuffing the line with 8 to 9 men.

2. In response, with a team with a pair of capable senior WRs, and  a capable senior TE and capable slot receivers, it was clear someone was going to be open and capable of getting deep. UCF was burned for some big scoring passes and that was that.

3. Finally, in the NFL there are a lot of games where one team just has around 100 yards of rushing and wins easily - the Michigan box score actually looks like that. Is this the NFL experience of Harbaugh?

So how does this not make me as worried - because in previous years, when faced with 8-9 men in the defensive box, the offense coudln't pose a deep or even medium threat consistently. If teams try this now, I think they'll be burned; not every time but enough.

PS:

the offense has run that WR man-in-motion sweep now two games in a row; perhaps we'll see a counter action of that in a later big game.

wahooverine

September 11th, 2016 at 4:30 PM ^

Darboh, Chesson and Butt are all more than capable. They are all big time players who will be drafted by NFL teams. Perry, our sophomore 4th/5th option is capable. And yes in light of this fact, overcommitting to stop the run will get you burned against a good team with a great coach.

SWFLWolverine

September 11th, 2016 at 8:42 PM ^

I think the biggest thing is the QB. Denard and Devon were not capable of what you saw Jake do last year and Wilton do yesterday. Cool under pressure and accurate with the ball. We had decent receivers, just not a QB to get them the ball, throw them open, hit them in stride to extend plays, etc. It didn't help that our OL was horrendous those years because KDefenses were able to get pressure without selling out, but could sell out because our QBs couldn't make them pay when they did.

SWFLWolverine

September 11th, 2016 at 8:34 PM ^

When the defense sends more guys than you can block, it is not the fault automatically of the OL. WIthout knowing their rules on a particular scheme, we cannot assertain where the fault lies. Sometimes the back goes to the wrong side, and sometimes the QB just doesn't read the pressure to get the ball out. When there are 5 OL blocking 7-8 rushers, its not their fault. Even if the back does his job, there are still 1-2 guys unaccounted for. UCF rolled that dice and left 3-4 guys in coverage to cover 5-6 eligible receivers, sometimes the blitz got home, but 312 yards for 4 td's and hitting guys wide open deep down the field was the answer. The OLine did its job, it may not have looked good because the pressure,  but they gave Wilton enough time to hit on several long balls.

Richard75

September 12th, 2016 at 7:11 AM ^

Agreed, although it's impossible to have 6 eligible receivers. On every non-kicking play, the offense must have 5 guys wearing 50-79 (who are permanently ineligible) plus a QB. That leaves a maximum of 5 eligible receivers.

NFL rules are slightly different but you can still only have 5 eligible. Even when the Patriots were messing with the Ravens that one game by making a lineman eligible and a WR ineligible, they still had only 5 eligible receivers. (The Ravens just were struggling to identify them.)



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jakerblue

September 11th, 2016 at 2:54 PM ^

I thought that was what I saw on some of their big runs. We got pressure on the qb but just overran him. That's something that they'll figure out how to clean up, like harbaugh said spin back into the lane or something like that. When you are getting that much pressure against an athletic qb they are gonna break contain every once in a while

MichiganSkeptic

September 11th, 2016 at 3:22 PM ^

Jourdan suffering a new injury is bad news. We will really need him against Colorado. I wonder if practicing while recovering from the first injury led to the second. Sometimes when you start compensating you hurt another area.

mgomiller

September 12th, 2016 at 8:40 AM ^

Any update on Hank Poggi and his job description? It doesn't look like any of you slacker reporters are even trying to get to the real story of the season. Not a single Poggi question asked??? Journalism is definitely in a downward spiral!