[Patrick Barron]

Upon Further Review 2020: Offense vs Indiana Comment Count

Brian November 11th, 2020 at 4:24 PM

FORMATION NOTES: All gun, and the vast majority was three-wide with Eubanks and three WRs in.

snap the ball

Indiana responds by having a box that looks light and then sending someone down to either blitz off the corner or adding a safety to the linebacker level. Or just running a light box and hoping to get away with it.

SUBSTITUTION NOTES: With Hayes and Mayfield out the line was Barnhart/Filiaga/Vastardis/Zinter/Stueber. Eubanks returned and got the large majority of snaps; Erick All was involved somewhat but after another drop he barely saw the field.

The usual at WR with Bell leading the pack; felt like Cornelius Johnson slid into the #2 role both by targets and snaps. Sainristil, Wilson, and Jackson were tightly bunched behind. Henning continues to get snaps; here he had more than his previous bare handful.

Same near-even four-man rotation at RB. Ben Mason's role was significantly reduced.

[After THE JUMP: Milton is legitimately promising, at least]

Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Box Type Play Player Yards
M21 1 10 Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 Nickel over 6.5 Run Split zone Evans 0
M has Bell tucked in tight to the boundary; IU blitzes off the boundary with a CB. Bell(-1) steps like he expects the guy to be force and then he’s gone because there’s a two yard gap between him and the OT. Dude tackles at LOS. RPS -2. Vastardis(+0.5) and Filiaga got some depth on a DT but Filiaga(-0.5) never gets off the DT and a LB flows through to help tackle. If no CB this was probably enough to send Evans through the other side and get a solid chunk.
M21 2 10 Shotgun 2-back TE twins 1 1 3 4-3 even 7 Pass Flare screen Jackson -2
Jackson motions to backfield, flare action and screen. Bell(-2) gets driven four yards into the backfield so when Jackson tries to go around a safety who started at eight and was always coming up on this flare he loses yardage. RPS -1, this S is coming for this. (CA, 3, screen, dot)
M19 3 12 Shotgun trips 1 1 3 Exotic 5 Pass Fade Johnson Inc
This is lofted, which is a first; Milton sticks it in the cover 2 hole pretty well. IU S is able to get over and get a PBU largely because Johnson does not attack and high point the ball; instead he keeps running so that it hits him in the chest. Zinter(-1) and Vastardis(-1) fail to pick up either part of a DT stunt and Milton’s gotta get this out (CA+, 2, protection 0/2, Johnson -1, Milton +1.5)
Drive Notes: Punt, 0-0, 13 min 1st Q.  
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Box Type Play Player Yards
M25 1 10 Shotgun trips tight bunch 2 1 2 4-3 over 7 Run Crack sweep Corum 3
Crack sweep is back. Eubanks turns in the end, or rather that guy just kind of wanders away into the pile. Mason cut to the ground, nothing he can do. That opens up the corner for Corum but IU is tearing hard for the edge and M doesn’t have angles on the LBs; S comes down and hits after three yards. There’s a counter step here, I’m surprised IU didn’t bite even a little. RPS -1.
M28 2 7 Pistol Offset 2 1 2 4-3 even 7 Run Zone stretch Corum -6
M eats another CB blitz. No room on the interior because IU front seven abandons force; they can because of the CB blitz. Stuber(-1) gets thrown past the DE and DE surges up; Corum goes wide of him and then the cornerback takes his legs out. RPS -3.
M22 3 13 Shotgun 4-wide 1 1 3 3-3 stack 6 Pass Scramble Milton 10
Three man rush; pocket is okay. Milton can probably stick another second or two. He bugs out. We get about 20 yards of downfield on the screen and it looks like IU covered all of this four verts. (MA, N/A, protection 1/1)
Drive Notes: Punt, 0-7, 7 min 1st Q.  
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Box Type Play Player Yards
M22 1 10 Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 Nickel over 6.5 Pass Slant Johnson Inc
Milton wings a slant way wide of Johnson. He’s mostly accurate but when he misses it’s often by miles. He got lit up by a delayed blitz Vastardis(-2) missed. (IN, 0, protection 0/2, Milton -1). Probably should have gone with Evans in the flat as this is cover 2 and the CB is going with Johnson.
M22 2 10 Shotgun TTE tight 1 2 2 Nickel even 6.5 Pass Improv Bell 24
Good pocket; Milton looking left and it appears that all three guys over there are covered. He bugs out at about the right time on a five man rush and keeps his eyes downfield. He finds Bell and hits him for a chunk. (CA+, 3, protection 3/3, Milton +1.5)
M46 1 10 Pistol TTE 1 2 2 Nickel over 6.5 Run Zone stretch Evans 2 + 15 pen
Evans(-1) doesn’t have patience here; it looks like Barnhart(+1) is securing a reach on the playside end and that All(+0.5) has a good kickout, so if he pushes outside into the gap he might have something going there. He cuts back and a LB is able to cut back with him to tackle. Why are we running stretch? We have a line of giant people. This just looks awkward all around. IU punching ejection happens here.
O37 1 10 Shotgun twin TE 1 2 2 Nickel over 6.5 Pass Post Johnson 37
Barnhart(-1) beaten on the edge but does give Milton the two beats he needs to make this play. IU safety jumps up on a Y cross from Eubanks, opening up the post after Johnson stemmed inside against off coverage and got inside position. Milton takes the shot and puts it about on Johnson’s facemask. (DO, 2, protection ½, Milton +2)
Drive Notes: Touchdown, 7-7, 5 min 1st Q.  
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Box Type Play Player Yards
M25 1 10 Shotgun trips TE 1 1 3 Nickel even 6.5 Pass Deep out Wilson Inc
Stueber lets his guy around but at ten yards and this is relatively comfortable. I’m conflicted about the throw here, which is a little upfield and glances off Wilson’s fingertips. This is a flood concept where Johnson is also breaking out deeper and it feels like he should probably be beyond this; also this hits about the exact midpoint between the zone defenders. Wilson is a FR and may have run this a little wrong; on the other hand if he puts it a yard or two further upfield this is a completion. (MA, 1, protection 2/2, Milton -0.5)
M25 2 10 Shotgun 3-wide 2 0 3 Nickel over 6 Run Split zone Charbonnet 5
IU shooting down on this and using a S to contain the QB; really wish they’d come back to this look and run arc, because there’s no gray area stuff here. Aggressive DE/backside LB mean that no gap on the backside despite Mason(+0.5) stalling out the DE. Charbonnet plunges frontside. Stueber(+0.5) stands up and turns out DE; Zinter(+1) gets movement on a solo block on a DT. Filiaga and Vastardis(+0.5 each) get some push as well; Charbonnet(+0.5) grinds out YAC.
M30 3 5 Shotgun 3-wide tight 1 1 3 Exotic 6 Pass Hitch Jackson Inc
Milton has this at first but is on another read; he comes off it and hitches up twice; IU is able to rally and PBU. Had Bell on a corner route if he got to read #3. (BR, 0, protection 2/2, Milton -1)
Drive Notes: Punt, 7-14, 1 min 1st Q.  
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Box Type Play Player Yards
M17 1 10 Shotgun trips tight bunch 2 1 2 4-3 over 7.5 Run Inside zone Haskins 11
Mason(+1) in a wing TE spot and gets a standup DE shooting inside of him, which is a tough situation. He’s able to get on the guy and move him enough that Haskins can cut back behind him. Barnhart(+1) fires out on a double and then disengages to kick out a LB. Filiaga(+0.5) doesn’t do a whole lot else with the DT but gets enough. Vastardis(+1) gets a chip on the other DT and then moves a LB on the second level. Eubanks(+0.5) gets a bit of a freebie as his guy jumps outside; Haskins(+1) runs through all this traffic for the single successful run of the day.
M28 1 10 Pistol 3-wide 1 1 3 Nickel over 6 Run Zone stretch Haskins 1
Slot CB blitzes and M doesn’t pick it up. This is what IU does, and yet. Stueber(-1) spends too much time on a DE flying outside for force and gets beaten to the inside by the slot CB. Haskins has cut up into a promising hole and then has to spin outside of this block after taking contact. Delay. Zinter(-1) airballs on a guy going upfield of him; Vastardis(-1) also gets zipped by; various Hoosiers rally.
M29 2 9 Pistol 2TE tight 1 2 2 4-3 over 7 Pass Waggle cross Bell 12
America’s PA rollout with three options. IU is playing two very conservative safeties. The LB who’s probably supposed to be checking Bell decides to blast at Milton, which means Milton gets lit up but has an open Bell. He stands in and throws a strike. (CA+, 3, protection N/A, Milton +1)
M41 1 10 Pistol twins 2 1 2 Nickel over 7.5 Run Power O Haskins 1
IU moves a safety down late to put M -1 in the box since Milton isn’t reading anything. Since this S is on the backside the MLB can be aggressive away from that guy and he beats Filiaga over the top; don’t really think he can do much about it. Zinter(+0.5) kicks the DE; Mason(+0.5) kicks a linebacker; MLB chops down Haskins.This is tactical, RPS -1. Also Barnhart(+1) got a good driving seal on a DT.
M42 2 9 Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 Nickel over 6 Pass Seam Henning Inc
Milton zings a bullet to Henning that glances off his hands. This is much more in the should-catch range than not. (CA, 2, protection 2/2, Milton +0.5)
M42 3 9 Shotgun trips TE 1 1 3 Nickel even 6.5 Pass Fly Wilson Inc
This is likely the play that Wilson was talking about when he said he messed up a read. IU S comes up to press late, Milton seems to notice, M must have an auto-check to a fly route here; Wilson runs a hitch. IU gets late pressure through as a DE drops out short and an LB comes. (not charted, N/A, protection ½, TEAM -1, Wilson route-)
Drive Notes: Punt, 7-14, 11 min 2nd Q.  
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Box Type Play Player Yards
M25 1 10 Shotgun 2TE tight 2 1 2 4-3 even 7 Run Split zone Haskins 3
Vintage MSU stuff here as Michigan blocks this and Haskins gets chopped down by a safety at 3 yards. Zinter(+1) moves and finishes a DT mostly by himself, although I think the DT trips. Stueber(+0.5) almost loses his kick but does get him and puts him down. S backs up and then charges hard, putting Haskins(-0.5) down immediately, no YAC.
M28 2 7 Shotgun 2TE twins 1 2 2 4-3 over 7 Run Inside zone Haskins 2
M motions Bell tighter to the LOS and then watches the CB blitz off this guy and that more or less nerfs the play. Also every Indiana player except one is charging at the LOS at the mesh point type substance. RPS – one million (actually 2)
M30 3 5 Shotgun empty twin TE 1 1 3 Exotic 6 Pass Hitch All Inc
Milton hits All in the chest and it’s dropped. (CA, 3, protection 1/1, Milton +0.5).
Drive Notes: Punt, 7-17, 4 min 2nd Q. Next drive starts with 56 seconds.  
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Box Type Play Player Yards
M25 1 10 Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 3-3 stack 7 Pass Dumpoff Evans 23
Milton has a read or two and then checks down to a wide open Evans; Vastardis(-1) came off a DT as Filiaga secured against a stunt and he comes through. Evans(+1) just runs around a LB coming up hard. (CA, 3, protection ½, Milton +0.5)
M48 1 10 Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 Nickel even 6 Pass Seam Jackson Inc
M picks up a four man rush; Milton fires at a bracketed seam route. LB under it almost intercepts; Jackson has a vague chance at a catch after he deflects it. (BR, 0, protection 2/2, Milton –1.5). Given the time I’m willing to not give this an X.
M48 2 10 Shotgun trips TE 1 1 3 Nickel even 6.5 Pass TE post Eubanks Inc
This is a strike from Milton, directly on Eubanks’s faceplate, more or less. Really good coverage from the IU S as he gets a rake in and I think forcibly PBUs this. Eubanks still has a shot; he does not take it. (DO, 1, protection 2/2, Milton +2)
M48 3 10 Shotgun trips TE 1 1 3 Nickel even 6 Pass Sack N/A  
M sets right when the dangerous blitzer is the overhang CB; slot guy is four yards off the LOS. IU sends overhang and a LB and it’s academic. (PR, N/A, protection 0/3, TEAM -3)
Drive Notes: Punt, 7-24, EOH.  
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Box Type Play Player Yards
M20 1 10 Shotgun 2TE tight 1 2 2 4-3 over 7.5 Run Arc read give Charbonnet 3 (Pen -10)
Genuine arc attempt that IU has defeated. End goes straight upfield underneath the pulling TE and forces a give. MLB times the snap and charges at Vastardis(-1), who holds the guy but I get why this is a bear. Charbonnet cuts away from this guy and into an unblocked LB. RPS -1.
M10 1 20 Shotgun trips tight bunch 1 2 2 4-3 under 7 Pass Quick post Bell 23
IU bails a safety late; the LBs suck up on underneath routes and Milton fires a strike to Bell in between. Bell(+0.5) is able to slip most of a tackle and get some YAC. (CA, 3, protection 2/2, Milton +1), RPS +1.
M33 1 10 Shotgun trips TE 1 1 3 Nickel over 6 Pass Improv Bell 47
Another strike. IU sends a corner and a LB, backing out a DT for screen purposes. Barnhart and Corum get enough of their guys to allow Milton to move up in the pocket, and he finds Bell on a Y cross that he puts on him in stride for a giant catch and run. (DO, 3, protection 2/2, Milton +2)
O15 1 10 Shotgun empty 3TE 1 2 2 4-3 over 7 Pass Scramble Milton 1
Milton’s other non sack run starts off as QB PNP and then he bails out of it to throw a slant. LB is under it. He bugs out; he just needs to wait another beat and then throw. Instead he breaks to the backside of the play. After a lot of fooferaw he’s got a yard. (BR, N/A, RPO, Milton -1)
O14 2 9 Shotgun TTE 2 1 2 4-3 over 7.5 Run Inside zone Haskins 1
No read, this sucks. IU MLB shoots the gap in an instant as soon as meh M doubles happen. DE dives inside of Eubanks because he’s got an overhang guy that has no thought to keep or flats.LB forces into DE. RPS -2.
O13 3 8 Shotgun trips tight bunch 1 1 3 Nickel even 7 Pass Post Wilson 13
IU brackets Johnson, who is still open on a corner; they send 5. That means everyone else is 1 v 1; Wilson (route +) wins and Milton makes no mistake. (CA, 3, protection 2/2, Milton +1, RPS +1)
Drive Notes: Touchdown,14-24, 9 min 3rd Q.  
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Box Type Play Player Yards
M18 1 10 Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 Nickel over 6 Pass Out Johnson 22
The NFL throw™. Cover 3 from IU so CB is bailing hard and LB takes a minute to check an inside route; that is enough for Milton to rifle in an out for an easy first down. (CA, 3, protection 2/2, Milton +1)
M40 1 10 Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 Nickel even 6 Pass Quick post Bell Inc
Max pro, two hole shots at cover 2 available and then Bell over the middle. Milton throws to Bell. Throw is on point. Bell can’t bring it in; he is getting the subtle yank from the DB. Flag is thrown but appropriately overturned as contact was with the arrival. (CA, 2, protection 2/2, Milton +1)
M40 2 10 Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 3-3 stack 6 Pass Sack N/A -2
Same thing! IU has safeties back off at the snap and bracket; Bell doesn’t seem open, M picks up a blitz mostly but Milton gets flushed. I’d say take a shot but there is literally no one sort of open. RPS -2. (MA, N/A, protection 2/2)
M38 3 12 Shotgun trips bunch TE 1 1 3 3-3 stack 6 Pass Post Bell Inc
The great betrayal. IU blows a coverage; Bell is open for a TD. Milton finds him, steps up, and overthrows him. Furk. This pocket is okay but may have affected him a little. (INX, 0, protection 2/2, Milton -2) RPS +3, I guess.
Drive Notes: Punt, 14-31, 3 min 3rd Q.  
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Box Type Play Player Yards
M36 1 10 Shotgun trips TE 1 1 3 3-3 stack 6 Pass Post Henning Inc
Henning does have a pocket of space here as he is able to run past one safety before the other comes over. Milton loads up and puts it just past his outstretched hands. Three man rush picked up. I don’t mind this decision, it’s open enough. (IN, 0, protection 1/1, Milton -1)
M36 2 10 Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 Nickel even 6 Run Split zone Evans 3
Six man box and can’t get anything done. Vastardis(-1) gets fired back by a blitzing LB; twist gets a DE free as Zinter(-1) and Stueber(-1) fail to ID it and switch. Cutback for Evans is mandatory. DE shuffles down tight to prevent backside gap; Eubanks(+0.5) is able to carve out a lane. Barnhart(-1) never gets off his double so there’s a free LB. RPO threatened FWIW. RPS +1.
M39 3 7 Shotgun trips TE 1 1 3 Nickel even 6 Pass TE fly Eubanks 22
Double A twist blitz not really picked up. Vastardis gets the first guy but Filiaga(-1) doesn’t come over to help so he can’t leave for #2. #2 runs too vertical and hits Filiaga, slowing him. Also Milton drifts backwards to buy time and then fires a throw-him-open rocket to Eubanks. Yow. (DO, 2, protection 2/3, Milton +2)
O39 1 10 Shotgun trips TE 1 1 3 5-1 nickel 6 Pass Flat Charbonnet 4
Looks like M is trying to high-low a cover two corner and gets cover 3; Indiana drops a standup end who’s probably a LB into the flat. Still complete but a meh gain. (CA, 3, protection 1/1, dot)
O35 2 6 Shotgun trips TE 1 1 3 5-1 nickel 6 Pass Dumpoff Charbonnet 14
Good time here as M is able to pick up a twist and give Milton a shot to step up. Milton doesn’t like downfield reads and checks down to a wide open Charbonnet. (CA, 3, protection 2/2, Milton +0.5)
O21 1 10 Shotgun trips 1 1 3 Nickel even 6 Pass Slot fade Bell 21
Its powers for good, finally. One high look and M gets straight man so Bell is on the slot corner; he gets over the top and Milton gives him the perfect ball to go get. (DO, 3, protection 2/2, Milton +2). This is away from the defender and in a spot where Bell can go high-point it.
Drive Notes: Touchdown, 21-31, 13 min 4th Q.  
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Box Type Play Player Yards
M35 1 10 Shotgun 4-wide 1 1 3 Dime even 5 Pass Hitch Johnson 12
Filiaga(-1) swum through but stays attached and keeps pushing. Milton powers through a jersey pull and steps up in the pocket; tight space and awkward throw he can’t step into but he’s got Johnson open and hits him. This is a little high and wobbly but given the circumstances it’s a solid throw.(CA+, 2, protection ½, Milton +1)
M47 1 10 Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 3-3 stack 6 Pass Deep comeback Johnson INT
The dagger. Milton has all day on a three man rush and tries to throw a bullet to Johnson on the sideline. This is a bit late but more importantly this throw looks like it’s way way off; Johnson goes from running flat out to a dead stop as he reads the ball out of the QB’s arm; if this is more accurate it’s getting past this guy and then the safety may or may not get over in time. (INX, 0, protection 1/1, Milton -3)
Drive Notes: Interception, 21-31, 12 min 4th Q. IU scores, so it’s desperation time next.  
Ln Dn Ds O Form RB TE WR D Form Box Type Play Player Yards
M25 1 10 Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 3-3 stack 6 Pass Screen Corum 21
A screen! To a running back! Against, uh, eight guys in coverage. Stueber(+0.5) in space and does enough on a charging LB; Bell(+1) harasses another into falling after he tries both sides of that block. Zinter(+0.5) and Johnson(+0.5) in the area getting stalk blocks; Corum weaves through traffic ably. (CA, 3, screen, RPS +2 as this had a ton of space despite the coverage drop.
M46 1 10 Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 3-3 stack 6 Pass Dumpoff Corum 7 (Pen -15)
Another three man rush with deep zone drops; Milton checks down. Milton should be taking shots down 3 scores with 8 minutes left but he just threw a pick trying to take a shot. (CA, 3, protection 1/1, Milton -0.5) Barnhart(-2) gets a PF for jumping on a fallen player so at least they’re calling that now.
M31 1 25 Shotgun trips 1 1 3 Dime even 5 Pass Hitch Johnson 11
M sets wrong as CB blitzes. Corum ends up picking between the CB and a LB; he correctly picks the LB and knocks him over(!). Milton has enough time to find the guy the corner left, safeties playing super soft. (CA, 3, protection ½, TEAM -1, Milton +1)
M42 2 14 Shotgun trips 1 1 3 Nickel even 6 Pass Hitch Wilson Inc
Cover 3; Wilson sits down and if Milton can get it out to him such that the LB trying to get to the flat can’t tackle this will be a good gain and OOB. Milton wings it a couple yards upfield; LB stumbles and this could be okay still but Wilson is concerned about turning upfield before he’s got the ball. (IN, 2, protection 1/1, Milton -1)
M42 3 14 Shotgun 4-wide tight 1 1 3 3-3 stack 6 Pass Deep out Bell 17
Inside leverage from IU on tight splits so this window is going to be there; weird coverage decision or maybe a bust. Milton fires a strike. (DO, 3, protection 1/1, Milton +1.5)
O41 1 10 Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 3-3 stack 6 Pass Drag Jackson 6
Ball snaps at 15 on the clock, cumong man. Eight man drop again; Milton checks down. He’s reading an eight yard hitch, which is certainly a first read down 17. He comes off it to a drag for Jackson, which he throws late. Jackson gets lit up. (MA, 1, protection 1/1, Milton -0.5)
O35 2 4 Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 Nickel even 6 Pass Flat Charbonnet 10
Snap at 15. Another high low but IU playing so far off that this dump is productive. OOB saves some time. (CA, 3, protection 1/1, +0.5 Milton)
O25 1 10 Shotgun 3-wide 1 1 3 Nickel even 6 Pass Dumpoff Charbonnet Inc
CB blitz as IU sends six and M does not pick up the CB at all because they again set away from the slot CB. Milton still has time to come off a read and see Charbonnet wide open in the flat but bizarrely waves him downfield instead of immediately throwing him the ball; he gets lit up on the throw and it is barely determined that his arm was moving forward on what is other wise a sack/strip fumble. This is hard to put in a bin. (PR, 0, protection 1/3, TEAM -2, Milton -0.5)
O25 2 10 Shotgun 3-wide tight 1 1 3 Nickel even 6 Pass Drag Bell Inc
Four guys in this route and all are within 12 yards of LOS. Milton does not want to take a shot at Sainristil on an out, so he dumps it down to Bell on a drag route where he’s likely to get killed. Milton zips it hard and behind Bell. (IN, 1, protection 2/3, Milton -1) Vastardis(-1) gets hit with a hold as he follows a blitzer all the way outside and doesn’t let go; tough ask.
O35 2 20 Shotgun trips 1 1 3 3-3 stack 6 Pass Sack N/A -5
Love the turn-around PA on second and 20. Barnhart(-2) beat around the edge clean, sack, Milton could have moved up but you took away a second of processing to run a fake no one in the world was going to bite on, RPS -1. (PR, 0, protection 0/2)
O30 3 25 Shotgun trips TE 1 1 3 3-3 stack 6 Pass Improv Sainristil INT
It’s third and twenty five and M sends two guys more than five yards downfield. Both get bracketed. Milton has no options, gets eventual pressure as LBs in short drops come up, and eventually heaves a prayer that’s intercepted. (BR, 0, protection 1/1, Milton -1, RPS -2)
Drive Notes: Interception, 21-38, 5 min 4th Q.  

Well. Here we are again.

Here we are. I cannot tell you how sick I am of pointing at a flailing Michigan offense and pointing out the various things that make no goddamn sense. Called QB runs in this game: zero. RPOs: maybe two or three. Zone reads: one, I think.

There was a screen, so there's that.

What is going on?

I don't know. I don't know how you can see Milton run against Minnesota, and see the easy touchdown it should have generated, and then completely drop that from the offense. I don't know how you go back to turning your back on the line of scrimmage like it's 1984. Michigan ran play action on second and twenty on which Milton turned all the way around and popped up to find a DE in his face that he could have avoided if he wasn't looking at the wrong endzone for half the play.

You lost to an abysmal MSU team. You're down the whole game against a team you haven't lost to since 1987. Run the goddamn quarterback.

So this was not a tactical win?

God. No, the team averaging under two yards a carry against Indiana is not coming in for a big RPS number. Most disturbing: Michigan was unprepared for Indiana's corner blitzes, which is like playing Dantonio-era MSU and not being prepared for double-A gap blitzes. CB blitzing is Indiana's thing. And the first snap saw a CB invited into the box by a tight split:

IU CB to bottom

That's an RPS item there; Bell is not at all likely to make that play. Second drive featured a six yard loss on another corner blitz:

IU CB to bottom

They ran a stretch right into it, so there's no cutback available, realistically.

At no point did Michigan either block this or punish it. Milton got obliterated on a play that was about 49.9% a fumble:

There weren't any attempts to catch this tendency out. There really wasn't much of anything. Do you remember one notably positive play where you said "huh that's new"? No.

There were no reads?

Michigan is making its life much more difficult on the ground because they are not even threatening to have Milton keep. This manifests in various ways: a step here, an angle there. Here's a no-read power play. A sequence of events:

  1. Indiana moves a safety into the box late
  2. He acts as a third linebacker since there's no need to contain the QB
  3. Since the MLB knows he has support for a backside cut he's able to climb over Filiaga quickly and get to the point of attack.

IU MLB

There is no indecision in this guy. Michigan has not put a player in the wrong gap in the last two games. They have not optioned off a defender. They are back to running Hoke sludgeball in year six.

Remember RPOs? Yeah no bye

Just running minus one in the box with no RPOs, no zone reads, no nothing. Indiana has ten guys moving to the line of scrimmage at the mesh point.

image_thumb[12]

Nobody has any doubt this is a run. Mesh points are supposed to be uncertain. This is a team that runs CB blitzes all the time; Michigan did not anticipate one and take the easy yards by reading it a single time. So much for "a read on every play."

When you don't do this you start getting a lot of blitzball linebackers.

IU MLB

I did not expect to be making the same complaints about Josh Gattis that I had about Al Borges.

So… what's the deal?

I do not believe that this is an issue with Milton making decisions. He is being asked to read zones 40 times a game and has done well enough to believe he can see whether or not one guy is moving forward or backward. I also don't believe that Josh Gattis has decided that post-snap reads aren't worth having in his offense. I have no explanation.

I'm going to grate my face off. Talk me off the ledge.

The ledge is the right spot to be, in regards to football. Happy grating.

Is there anything?

I mean, yeah, Joe Milton looks great, for the most part.

JOE MILTON

  Good   Neutral   Bad   Ovr   Reads
Game DO CA SCR   PR MA   BA TA IN BR   DSR GRADE!   RPOs ZRs
Minnesota   17(6) 1     1     1 2 1   75% +4   2/2 2/2
MSU (Pending)                            
Indiana 7 19(2)++++     3 4       6** 4   71% +10.7
Wisconsin                            
Rutgers                            
Penn State                            
Maryland                            
OSU                            
Bonus                            

Note that the "grade" for Milton was 25.5 – 15 plus a couple dots, so this was eventful both ways.

Milton's game really held up after detailed review. He is regularly uncorking wow throws, even when some of them are incomplete. This is a 20-yard dart that is heroically PBUd by the Indiana DB:

This slot fade is against Taiwan Mullen, who is a legit NFL prospect, and he has no shot at anything because the ball is high and away from him, but right in the sweet spot for Bell:

He is prone to zing balls nowhere near his WRs but he offset that with 7 DOs, which is a ton.

Meanwhile, Milton's pocket presence is one of the most surprising things about him. There are no TAs—throwaways—on that chart, which are often issued for plays on which the QB didn't find an open guy whether there's literally a throwaway or not. Meanwhile there are four + events that I hand out when a QB either stands in against a rush or moves around to buy time productively.

He took a few sacks, one of which is referenced above. That was a guy beating Barnhart around the corner at eight yards while Milton was executing a nonsensical play action fake. A second came on a play where the "nobody's open" announcer canard was actually true. He did not run himself into one. He moves around the pocket to buy time, keeps his eyes downfield, and maximizes his blocking:

Other pocket presence incidents were beyond Milton's years. He sticks in this pocket as long as he can and then goes to make something happen:

Also we got a wide enough shot to make some judgments about whether folks are open. Here Milton's checking a triangle to his left that Indiana covers all of.

This strike to Eubanks sees Milton re-set his feet and throw a guy in relatively tight man coverage open:

There are a lot of quarterbacks whose accuracy goes to hell as soon as they move off their spot. Milton shows little indication of that. Also here he drifts back three yards in the pocket because Indiana has a blitz on that's getting through; he's actively buying time, and his arm lets him do that.

He also made some throws that were like… can you do that?

Milton's arm strength is not just useful on the traditional NFL 15-yard-out to the wide side of the field:

He was also able to fire stuff on a line without stepping into throws. These tended to be a little high but were completions. Here he gets a charging LB on his face and is able to stop and get the throw off:

Here he moves around in the pocket and then casually flicks a bullet while moving opposite his throwing arm:

The potential here is off the charts.

But he missed Milton and threw that terrible interception!

He did. When he misses, hoo boy. Some of his misses are off by yards and yards. He winged a slant nowhere near his WR that was fortunately not near a defender; that interception was probably at least five yards off line, and he added to Poor Damn Ronnie Bell:

That's the closest throw of the bunch but he's just so wide open that you absolutely need to err on the side of slowing your dude up.

The other main issues is that like most young quarterbacks he has his moments where he doesn't read his progressions fast enough. He's got Jackson here but waits on the throw:

If that ball is out when Jackson hitches up it's a conversion.

He is also a little prone to throwing it into coverage. This is a deep shot at a bracketed Jackson; he's got two open options underneath:

At other times he'll have the opposite issue. One of the few RPOs saw him bail and scramble because there was a linebacker underneath the slant. He just needs to wait a second for his WR to clear it:

He's doing a very good job of reading stuff out for a redshirt sophomore, but that qualifier is important when he's the entire offense and the defense is giving up 38 points.

I was torn on a couple of incidents. One was this incompletion at Wilson:

That is outside the frame of Wilson's body and inaccurate relative to the WR. It also splits the zone coverage down the middle.

image_thumb[6]

I wonder if it's the WR in the wrong spot, not the ball. Especially since the WR is a true freshman. I provided a small ding in the grading here.

But if you told me that Milton was going to look like this I would have told you that Michigan's functional ground game and sack-heavy defense were sending Michigan to 3-0.

I suppose there is another chart, a less happy one.

Sort of? When you have under 20 RB carries and many of them are shoved off into RPS land grading on the line gets extremely thin.

Offensive Line

Player + - Total Notes
Barnhart 3 3 0 -2 was for a PF for jumping on a guy, not in total.
Filiaga 1 0.5 0.5 Ceased pulling.
Vastardis 2 3 -1 Had issues with blitzball LBs.
Zinter 3 2 1 Not bad for true frosh, also we're playing a true FR
Stueber 1.5 3 -1.5 Difficult transition to edge.
All 0.5   0.5 Minimal deployment.
Eubanks 1   1  
Schoonmaker        
Mason 2   2 In about 8 snaps.
Honigford       DNP
TOTAL 14 11.5 55% Bleah
Backs
Player + - T Notes
Milton       **QB IS UNUSED ON GROUND**
McNamara       DNP
Charbonnet 0.5   0.5  
Haskins 1 0.5 0.5  
Corum 1   1  
Evans        
Turner       DNP
TOTAL 2.5 0.5 2 No carries, no blocking, no points
Receivers
Player + - T Notes
Bell 1.5 3 -1.5 Couple bad moments early.
Sainristil        
Wilson        
Johnson 0.5   0.5  
Jackson        
Henning        
McCurry        
TOTAL 2 3 -1 speed in NOPE
Metrics
Player + - T Notes
Protection 33 18 65% TEAM –7, Vastardis –5, Barnhart –3, Filiaga –2, Zinter -1
RPS 9 18 -9 Corner blitz never addressed.

There is almost nothing here except a middling to bad pass protection performance on which M had no one attempt to block a blitzer (most TEAM minuses are this) and an RPS item similarly about not blocking guys off the edge.

Wide receivers?

[0 = uncatchable, 1 = circus catch, 2 = moderate difficulty, 3 = routine]

  THIS WEEK   SEASON
Player 0 1 2 3   0 1 2 3
Bell 1 0/1 0/1 6/6   3 0/1 0/1 10/10
Johnson 2   2/3 2/2   2   2/3 2/2
Sainristil 1         1      
Jackson 1 1/1   1/1   2 1/2 1/2 2/2
Wilson 1 0/1 0/1 1/1   2 0/1 1/3 2/2
Henning 1   0/1     1   0/1 1/1
McCurry                  
Eubanks   0/1 1/1       0/1 1/1  
All       0/1   2   0/1 2/4
Schoonmaker                  
Charbonnet       3/3         3/3
Haskins                  
Corum       2/2         3/3
Evans                 1/1
Mason                 2/2

Wilson: +-

So Cornelius Johnson went from no targets against Minnesota two a strong #2 behind Bell. He had the TD embedded above and a couple more catches. He did have one issue on Michigan's first third down. Milton puts this in the cover two hole but Johnson lets the ball come to him instead of going to get it:

WR #6 to top

That should have been a eyebrow-cocking conversion for Milton as he fits it in between the CB and S; instead it's a near-INT.

Meanwhile, Wilson is consistently getting open. His touchdown saw him matched up one on one with a safety and that was easy pickings:

WR #14 to bottom

That's a nice bit of separation.

Jackson was relatively quiet but he had another catch where he got lit up afterwards and held on:

He's a real receiver, unlike a number of other waterbug types who've been in the program over the past decade.

Heroes?

Milton had it all put on him and did about as well as could be reasonably expected. Bell and Johnson had good days at WR.

Anything on the running backs?

Michigan's only successful called run—Jesus—was this from Haskins:

Wing TE #42

Michigan had a ton of blocking ID issues last week, many of which were Mason's deal. I get why he got eight snaps in this game, but here he takes a guy shooting inside of him and executes a tough job. I can't blame him too much when nobody else knows what they're doing.

There is nothing else to say about the running backs because none of them had an opportunities to gain yards except for some checkdowns and a screen to Corum. I would like to point out that Corum did this to an Indiana LB coming free on Yet Another Unblocked CB Blitz:

RB #2

Add a notch to the Hart comparison belt. Now start running for 200 yards a game.

Heroes?

Milton did about as well as could be reasonably expected since the game was all on him. Bell and Johnson had good days as his targets.

Maybe not so heroic?

Harbaugh and Gattis. The OL as a whole struggled.

What does it mean for Wisconsin and beyond?

If Milton can improve half as much next year as he did last year he's a superstar. Whang.

Right now he's a B+ QB with issues. The dagger INT and the miss to Bell are both crushing errors.

Our offensive philosophy is once again a confused muddle that throws away everything that worked in the opener and replaces it with standard zone plays Michigan can't really block. If this was a Broadway show it would be Cats because it doesn't make any sense and never goes away.

Johnson looks like he'll be a strike. Just go high point all the balls.

Losing both starting tackles is not good. #analysis

Comments

DoubleB

November 11th, 2020 at 6:39 PM ^

So the overrated QB whisperer is also the guy who's coached Milton for 2+ years and is also the guy screwing him up?

You can't criticize Harbaugh for screwing up Milton and then praise Milton for the great job he's doing. Harbaugh may be screwing up the team, but he's also coaching the QB you're praising.

And FWIW, I don't agree about Milton. First, this isn't a murderer's row of defenses he's throwing against. He's better than I expected, but the inconsistent accuracy is a very hard thing to improve upon. My guess is that his ceiling is "just good enough to get you beat."

UofM Die Hard …

November 11th, 2020 at 7:37 PM ^

Milton is making chicken salad out of chicken shit...the chicken shit being play calling and setting him up to fail. Did you actually read/view the UFR or this all gut?  They are putting this all on Milton, in the shittiest way, and yet he is still making really amazing plays.    

And Ben McDaniels coaches the QBs not Harbaugh. And if you are going to argue against that, then why have a QBs coach...

and FWIW if you cant see the talent he is right now and what he can be, as a true JR. starting his third game...then I dont know what you are looking at.  And give me a break with the murderes row junk....its 2020 and there is little defense out there across the country. 

 

DoubleB

November 11th, 2020 at 11:01 PM ^

I watched the game live and then I rewatched both sides of the ball. Defense is easy to figure out--they don't have the talent to run the scheme they are running--end of story. Offense is jumbled, but Milton is missing open players, some wide open. The miss to Bell is inexcusable and the first pick was just a terrible, terrible throw. You throw 3 bad throws like that a game, you probably lose because it immediately effects the scoreboard. 

To his credit, he has been better in the pocket than his experience would have you believe. And he's done a nice job creating some plays by scrambling. 

TrueBlue2003

November 12th, 2020 at 12:32 PM ^

Have you watched college football?  He threw 50 passes.  That three of them weren't great is excellent.  They can't run the ball against IU. Which makes his job even more difficult.

He's not Trevor Lawrence or Tua, but dude is plenty good enough to put up 40+ on these teams if the coaching had any clue.

Blue Middle

November 11th, 2020 at 5:37 PM ^

Our offensive philosophy is once again a confused muddle that throws away everything that worked in the opener and replaces it with standard zone plays Michigan can't really block. If this was a Broadway show it would be Cats because it doesn't make any sense and never goes away.

One of your all-time great comments.  Perfect.

I am also puzzled about Gattis.  Minnesota looked like the SiS was actually happening.  Now what?  Did we just give-up gameplanning because of the OL shuffle?

In Baugh we trust

November 11th, 2020 at 5:48 PM ^

I have a theory: McNamara got hurt in the Minnesota game or in practice the week before MSU. It would explain the lack of a QB run game the last 2 games, because the staff is afraid of Milton getting hurt and being down to Villari at QB. Plus Villari didn't travel to Minneapolis but did make the trip to Bloomington which tells me something happened to the QB room between the 2 games.

Pumafb

November 11th, 2020 at 5:59 PM ^

Absolutely not and if that is the case then Harbaugh is worse than I think he is. No coach, at any level above youth football, is going to "protect" a player due to depth issues at the expense of winning games. I keep seeing people suggest this and it is possibly the most insane suggestion I've ever read. What exactly are you protecting Milton for? The potential losses because you have to use a back-up down the road? Do those matter more than the losses right now? Good lord. I don't know a single coach that would do that so if Jimmy is, he get f right the hell off and he's one of the dumbest coaches of all time.

funkywolve

November 11th, 2020 at 10:38 PM ^

This.  It'd be one thing if they were squeaking out wins over MSU and trying to protect Milton.  At least with MSU they were never more then one score behind until the 4th quarter, but shit, they were down 17 to IU at halftime.  You sure as heck better not be saving your QB from getting hits running the ball at that point in the game.

andrewgr

November 12th, 2020 at 6:19 PM ^

I think your injury theory is super interesting.  I had not noticed, thanks for pointing it out.

I also agree with some of the responses you received; if they really did reign in the QB run portion of the gameplan in response to a backup QB getting injured, that's pretty inexcusable.  Like, maybe it was okay for MSU, who they had every reason in the world to believe they could beat even if they just ran out of the wildcat with a WR at QB for the entire game; but for a 2-0 Indiana team that had just knocked off PSU and was ranked in the top 20, it's madness.

And I'll point out again-- I sometimes feel as if it's the only value I bring to this board, just continually reminding everyone-- that there is no evidence supporting the idea that running QBs get injured more often than pure drop-back passers.  It was studied at the NFL level within the last decade, in a serious way, and they found no statistical correlation between number/percentage of runs and getting injured.  It's been analyzed by various amateurs at the college level, using many years of data, and they've never turned up a correlation, either.  If there is an effect, it's exceedingly minor.

azee2890

November 11th, 2020 at 6:34 PM ^

Really love Milton and our receivers. I also love our RB's. The offensive line has talent but they will need time and experience. Erik All needs to be in front of the ball machine for the entire week. 

On defense, Dax Hill will be the Joe Milton on defense. He's been as good as advertised and more. Can't wait for Milton and Hill in year 4 and 3. We know Paye and Hutch are good but they are being asked to do too much (play DT and DE). Hinton needs to show up otherwise we are truly doomed at DT. Gemon Green flashes potential and might just need some time. I expect good things in 2021. Vince Gray is not a CFB CB. He is just wayyyy to slow. Maybe we could play him like Richard Sherman but he needs a lot of work. I really want to see some of the freshman DB's get some PT so they can be ready in 2021. Seldon, Green-Warren, Paige, Moten, Morant. Too much talent for one or two of these guys to not emerge as a serviceable to good player by 2021. 

With a year of experience for the offensive line, I think our offense could be our best offense ever, as long as the play calling looks more like Minny and less like the last two weeks. At least we know we are capable. 

Defensively is much less encouraging unless we start seeing glimpses from Hinton or the freshman DBs. I've given up on Kemp, Jeter, and Gray. If next year isn't a 9-10 win season, there is really something wrong schematically because we should have the talent and experience to contend. If that is the case, that should be the nail in the coffin for the coaching staff. But i'll give the COVID, totally revamped roster a pass this season. 

Blueto

November 11th, 2020 at 6:38 PM ^

Hurt McNamara theory is the only one that makes sense to me.

Alternative Theory:

Harbaugh: "Hey Josh those QB runs worked great against Minnesota, but I'm bored with them"

Gattis "Me too boss, not going to call any more of those."

lilpenny1316

November 11th, 2020 at 6:49 PM ^

Milton is enough reason for me to watch Michigan when they're on offense and...

...404 - Not Found when they're on defense.

OSU has had the upper hand in the QB play in The Game. Maybe we finally found our guy to give us the advantage there (in 2021).

1VaBlue1

November 11th, 2020 at 8:08 PM ^

The Cats reference is perfect...

I wish that the blog would investigate the play calling bullshit a little deeper.  Having Ace (or someone else with a press pass) at a presser would be a good idea.  Not sure how any of that works, though, especially during Covid.  I mean, not that we'd get any answers...  We've been asking that question since Pep was OC.

AlbanyBlue

November 11th, 2020 at 8:12 PM ^

First, thanks for doing this, Brian -- it's the best thing on the blog and I'm thankful for it.

Anyway, here we are in year six, still befuddled about the Michigan offense. The one constant is Harbaugh. Now, to add to the pain, our defense -- always good in the past against all but the top teams on the schedule -- is hot fucking garbage.

For a lifelong Michigan fan with Bo/Carr expectations of a boring but functional offense 95% of the time and a lights-out defense, it's literally horrible again. We're back to RR / Hoke level.

That's why I'm not watching. Fool me once, shame on you....fool me twice, ok, yeah, still shame on you.....three times though, and it's on me. Not gonna happen

[EDITED: Thanks to Zapata for pointing out my gaffe!]

But on the plus side,  men's and women's basketball and hockey!

bronxblue

November 11th, 2020 at 9:40 PM ^

I would like an explanation why people believe the running QB-based offense we all saw against Minnesota isn't happening right now, because it seems pretty obvious.  I know the glib response around these parts is something to the effect that Harbaugh + Gattis are idiots and infighting and whatever other palace intrigue makes for lengthy discussions, but there has to be more than "they forgot to run it" at this point.  I know we keep hand-waving this away but you have a first-year starter at QB, a slew of new receivers, and an offensive line that for all the hype replaced 4 of 5 starters from last year and in this game were without their two tackles, the only guys with much experience.  Yes, the offense didn't run anything new; I'm guessing there were concerns the guys didn't have it all down so they tried to at least execute the stuff they assumed was installed, and even that was to limited success.  That's not an excuse but I mean, look around college football and teams starting a lot of new guys at key spots and also dealing with injuries/unavailability haven't looked all that good.

I actually don't think Milton as a consistent running QB gives you a ton of upside.  He looks...about as fast as I expected, which is to say competently fast but not someone who's going to outrun a ton of guys to the edge (he did it a couple times against Minnesota but that appears to be a Minnesota-based deficiency).  He should be a running threat but it really feels like people are reading WAY too much into that Minnesota game as proof there's more there than there really is.  

On re-watch I saw a team that ran into an experienced defense and struggled to compensate in that first half, especially with a reshuffled line.  But there's this weird bias toward the positive examples of something without recognizing that they might be the outlier; assuming Minnesota was the norm for this offense and not a fortuitous meeting of semi-irresistible force with very movable object.  Milton has done a good job at QB but it's unlikely he's going to be more than an above-average QB this year, and at times against good defense probably a bit below that mark.  He'll improve but everyone's expectations need to be ramped down a bit.

Gulogulo37

November 11th, 2020 at 9:58 PM ^

This is ridiculous. He's faster than Andrew Luck and Harbaugh was running him.

"not someone who's going to outrun a ton of guys to the edge (he did it a couple times against Minnesota"

As you note, he did! More importantly, if you read right and keep it, you're not outrunning anyone to the edge because they're inside trying to get your RB. That's the whole point of the read game, to make things easy, not to run an offense that requires a Denard. That's why almost every team runs the QB some. 

funkywolve

November 11th, 2020 at 10:33 PM ^

Did Harbaugh really run Luck on a consistent basis though?  Lucks rushing attempts at Stanford were:

'09, 12 games 61 attempts, 5/game

'10, 13 games 55 attempts, 4.2/game

'11, 13 games 47 attempts, 3.6/game

In college sacks, scrambles and kneel downs count as rushing attempts.  Looking at those numbers, Luck maybe got 1, possibly 2, called runs a game.

bronxblue

November 12th, 2020 at 9:32 AM ^

Yeah, this idea that Luck was being used as a consistent run threat and not just a decent athlete who they ran sometimes when it made sense seems to be pulled out of the ether.  Joe Milton is averaging 8 rushes a game but most of those are scrambles, which honestly feels like a better use of Joe Milton's legs right now. My guess is the staff would probably want to run him a bit more if they had (a) a better backup situation in the event he got dinged up, and (b) had more confidence in the line and him to execute it properly.    

 

bronxblue

November 12th, 2020 at 9:42 AM ^

Andrew Luck ran a combine-timed 4.67 40; the only numbers we've heard that are close to this is the unsubstantiated 4.62 someone claimed in camp, which is also where we heard a ton of other things about players that are dubious.  Milton is perfectly athletic enough to play college QB, but nothing in his performance or profile reads as a dynamic runner in short distances.  Once he's got a head full of steam he can leg it out a bit.

Like I said, he beat maybe the worst defensive line UM is going to see this year to the edge a couple of times.  If Michigan wants to create the rest of their schedule out of Minnesotas, have at it.  

Also, the read game absolutely requires a certain level of athleticism and speed even if you read it correctly; college ends are fast enough to correct and chase guys down even if you "read" them properly.  College football has been running this type of offense for over a decade; defenses know how to compensate for it.  Yes, if Milton ran the read offense better maybe they pick up some chunk plays here or there, but his strength isn't running the ball and exposing him to hits when you have exactly 1 backup QB who hasn't seen the field before isn't optimal.

bronxblue

November 12th, 2020 at 9:44 AM ^

I thought the going wisdom around here was that Patterson was a lazy POS who secretly wanted to destroy Michigan football?  

It could also have been that they called the offense and he didn't execute it properly but because Michigan's backups kept getting concussed they didn't have another option so they were sorta stuck with him and his inefficient running of the offense.

 

brad

November 11th, 2020 at 11:31 PM ^

Here's the explanation:

Offense run aggressively with superior talent wins, it wins almost with certainty.  Offense run out of fear tends to fail regularly.

It's not just our players who are young and imperfect.  When we make the entire offense available, the little imperfections in our opponents are revealed and they become much easier to attack.

bronxblue

November 12th, 2020 at 9:49 AM ^

They did try running some of these concepts in this game - the results were uninspiring.  As Brian noted, IU had 10 guys near the LOS literally pointing at the mesh exchange and it got blown up.  They tried a zone read where Milton absolutely didn't read the end and Haskins got a yard.  That was down 24-7 but in the red zone - exactly the type of place you could get some hay out of misdirection.  But when you don't execute, it's just an easy tackle for the defense.  So if you're calling plays and they aren't being executed or audibled out, you might as well not try running them and instead go with things you feel more comfortable wth.

Tex_Ind_Blue

November 12th, 2020 at 8:21 AM ^

This is a valid line of thinking. College Teams are not (edited) good at running a new game plan every week. But what they have run once should have little problem being run again? I admit, I turned off the commentary and stopped following the game after halftime. 

Did you see any play calls from the Minnesota game? I would assume that those plays should have been easier to re-run than doing something completely new, right? 

My frustration is complete (apparent) 180 in game planning/play-calling from game to game and not (apparently) doing anything to mitigate whatever adversity they face in the game they are playing! Being unpredictable from week to week is great. It seems that other teams can pull that off against Michigan, but Michigan lays a big egg when they try it. 

IheartMichigan

November 11th, 2020 at 10:13 PM ^

"I did not expect to be making the same complaints about Josh Gattis that I had about Al Borges."

 

We sure complaining about Gattis is correct here? The PA 7 step drop is something that has been going on for years, I just don't think that's Gattis, hate to say it.

LewisBullox

November 11th, 2020 at 10:36 PM ^

My main takeaway is Brian thought we had a brilliant melding of Harbaugh power and Gattis speed in space two weeks ago and now we don't. Seems more like maybe fearless leader has no clue what he's looking at more than anything else. Paging Space Coyote.

andrewgr

November 12th, 2020 at 9:36 PM ^

That's unfair.

People that live and breath football every day of their lives, who are coordinators and head coaches and analysts for decades, can't look at game film and accurately predict the outcome of an upcoming game with enough accuracy to make money betting against the spread.  That should tell you everything you need to know about how much randomness and uncertainty go into individual football games.  Brian had been skeptical but hopeful about this coaching staff, including Gattis, even before this season.  The week one performance, against a team that everyone thought was going to be in the top-20 come the end of the year, was pretty inspiring.  A lot of people, including professional analysts, were giddy after that game.

Blue Vet

November 12th, 2020 at 7:59 AM ^

In the midst of all the gloom glimmers this one bright moment: a reference to Cats, cleverly apt.

"But that's not football," you say.

Football? Why mention football? Let's talk of other things — of shoes — and ships — and sealing wax. Of Cats — and kings...

Fezzik

November 12th, 2020 at 12:39 PM ^

Milton's average DSR through 2 charted games is 73. Mertz goes 20/21 with 5 TD and 0 INT (5 carries for 2 YDs) gets a 74. Miltons stats through these 2 games...

15/22 for 225 YDs with 1 TD and 0 INT. 8 Carries for 52 YDs and 1 TD

18/34 for 344 YDs with 3 TD and 2 INT. 5 carries for -9 YDs and 0 TD

Mertz threw 4 more TD passes than he did incompletions, insanely great game. How are their grades almost identical? Might want to re-evaluate the QB grading system.

Mertz 74

Milton 73

My Name is LEGIONS

November 12th, 2020 at 2:05 PM ^

Question.  

Why the FUCK don't they send Wilson deep early and often and chuck it, even if only to out the fear in the dbs so they have to keep safeties far back, after they feel his speed?  It would open up alot.    As Urban says, he is "fast fast".  Haven't seen a deep ball to him yet. I just dont get the turtling by our coaching staff.  Milton supposedly can wing it like none other.  Put the fucking fear of it in the defense !!!  And early.  

Sultans17

November 12th, 2020 at 2:27 PM ^

I wonder at what point RPS losses become statistically significant?  Both the MSU and IU games made me think our opponents were incredibly lucky to be in certain calls at certain times. We throw one screen this week into a blitz happy d that suddenly drops 8 into coverage. Last week MSU runs a screen on 3rd and goal from the 15...directly over the blitz we order up. Granted IU's blitzing likely caused a few more RPS losses (and wins) with their gambling. But it really feels like we're tipping plays off somehow. 

jsquigg

November 12th, 2020 at 5:23 PM ^

How can anyone watch this and not be apathetic in regard to coaching? They have weapons and they are running an offense that signals what it is doing. Abject failure would almost be an upgrade.