Write this down: 'Sometimes you get...' [Patrick Barron]

Upon Further Review 2021: Offense vs WMU Comment Count

Seth September 8th, 2021 at 12:43 PM

If you hadn’t heard I’ll be your new UFR guy.

Formations:

WMU responded to Michigan’s heavy stuff by setting up with their MLB down off the butt of the NG. Usually that resulted in that guy eating a face full of guard several yards downfield. I called this “3-4 Mike.”

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Michigan’s 4th and 1 formation had 3 TEs and 6 OL: Trente Jones was the rightside TE, Honigford and Schoonmaker were on the left, and All is the H-back.

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I called it “Beef.”

[After THE JUMP: Beef.]

Ln Dn Ds OForm DPack Front CovLook Type Box Play Player Yards
M25 1st 10 Gun 2TE Twins 3-4-4 3-4 Mike 2-high Run 8 Power Haskins 4
TEs are Zinter(+.5) and Honigford(+.5) and they run Power there. They and Filiaga(+1) blow out one edge and ILB who set up inches off. Keegan(-1) has to kick edge who set up inside and whiffs. HH(+1) runs through that guy for 4 yards. RPS-1 there's a safety coming down to hit too because everyone knows M wants to run here.
M29 2nd 6 Pistol 2TE Unbalanced 3-4-4 3-4 Mike 2-high Run 8 Split Zone Haskins 3
All back in for Zinter. Unbalanced with Honigford covered on the short side will All(-1) lined up wide. He and Honigford(-1) get wiped out by that WMU DE I like after Hayes chipped him as well. Vastardis(+.5) and Keegan(+.5) wiped out the NG with a double. HH(+.5) fights for a couple extra.
M32 3rd 3 Gun 5-wide 3-3-5 Okie 1-high Pass 6 TE Slant All 11
DE in coverage and McN(+2) sees it and slips it to All(route+) before that guy can back out. Or safety over him can react. Sain(+) had Nk beat on a fade; file that away. (DO, 3, Prot 1/1)
M43 1st 10 Pistol 2TE Twins 3-4-4 3-4 Mike 2-high Run 7 Power Lead Haskins 2
Same as before, the FS DE isn't read so he crashes and Keeg(-1) can't dig him out. Leaves little room for Honig as lead to squeeze through and HH can only dive into the mess. (RPS-1)
M45 2nd 8 Gun 2TE Twins 3-4-4 3-4 Mike 2-high Pass 8 Comeback C.Johnson 10
WMU jumps but no downfield routes. McN(+.5) puts it high so CJ has to jump when he comes back. Still a 1st down and since it's a free play I don't mind that this is a beat late in case something opened. (CA-, 2, Prot 1/1)
O45 1st 10 Pistol 2TE 3-4-4 3-4 Crowd 2-high Run 7 Split Zone Corum 18
M motions Bell and then brings Schoon as well (RPS+) WMU has entire front rolled close to the LOS and a LB loses track of his gap with all the motion. So Ravens! Vastardis(+.5) and Keegan(+.5) help by making big walls and Corum(+2) blows by this guy and a safety until guy C.Johnson(-1) lost gets him.
O27 1st 10 Gun 2T Flex 3-4-4 3-4 Mike 1-high Run 6.5 Zone Read Give Corum 2
Think this is a real read? WMU brings down a S and McN(read+) can't test him. WMU has 6 guys at LOS and slanting hard frontside, Honig(-1) doesn't recognize he can pop the S so Corum can only burrow.
O25 2nd 8 Gun 3-wide 3-4-4 3-4 Mike 2-high Run 7 Power Lead Corum 3
Fake read of the PS DE doesn't stop him from crashing the kick. (RPS-2). Filiaga(-1) can't budge him, Corum(+.5) cuts back into the extra LB in the box and falls forward. Some room because Vastardis(+1) cleared out the NG.
O22 3rd 5 Gun 4-wide 2-4-5 Eagle 7 1-high Run 7 Arc Give Corum 4
McN(RPO+) gets S to stay outside, Vastardis(-.5) takes a shot from NG and can't redirect to blitzer. Corum(+1) runs through that guy into air created by Stuebs(+1) then gets stuck by MLB 2 yards short. Refs(+1) give them one.
O18 4th 1 Beef 3-4-4 3-4 Crowd 1-high Run 9 Split Zone Haskins 4
All(+1) shoulders edge, Schoon(+1) blows out the edge, not academic bc Filiana(-2) thrown back and lets a DT under him. HH(+1) runs through him and unblocked edge (no read).
O14 1st 10 Pistol Tight 3-4-4 3-4 Mike 2-high Pass 8 Flare screen Corum 14
“That's a Touchdown!” we collectively thought the moment it was thrown, on target by McN(+1). Bell(+1) and Sainristil(+1), erase blockers, Corum(+1) has a safety he eludes. (CA, screen, prot n/a)
Drive Notes: Touchdown. 7-0. 10 min 1st Q. Corum and his Sainristil escort also set up M on the WMU21 next drive.
Ln Dn Ds OForm DPack Front CovLook Type Box Play Player Yards
O21 1st 10 Pistol Heavy 4-4-3 4-4 Under 2-high Penalty 8 False Start Vastardis -5
Everyone goes on the clap, Vastards(-1) didn't snap it. Oops
O26 1st 15 Gun 3-wide 4-3-4 4-3 Even 2-high Pass 7 Curl Bell Inc
Clean pocket, Bell is getting harassed and McN(-1) might see a free flag. Batted at the line so must of the grab ends up legal. (BA, 1, prot 2/2)
O26 2nd 15 Gun 3-wide 3-3-5 3-3-5 Even 2-high RPO 7 RPO Power Haskins 0
RPS-3 they have this play dead to rights with a S high over the slant and all three LBs blitzing the frontside. Filiaga(-.5) for letting a well-coached DE get low and spin off I guess. McN (RPO+) I guess.
O26 3rd 15 Gun 4-wide 3-2-6 3-2-6 Eagle 1-high Run 6 Split Zone Corum 8
Give up and kick. Bring All(+1) all the way across to pop the HSP. WMU WLB tracks this and is in his gap but Corum(+2) dodges and picks up most of the long yards to shorten the FGA.
Drive Notes: FG(37). 10-7. 4 min 1st Q. Know you like to run coach but feel like you're a bit too committed to the bit.
Ln Dn Ds OForm DPack Front CovLook Type Box Play Player Yards
M17 1st 10 Gun trips tight 4-3-4 4-3 Even 2-high RPO 8 OZ/Bubble Corum 0
This is #SpeedinSpace but McN(read-1) gives on shuffling end when he has numbers outside to the S to CJ. Honig(-1) stood up by DE, unblocked Fayad tracks him down.
M17 2nd 10 Gun 5-wide 4-2-5 4-2-5 Over 2-high Pass 6.5 TE Snag All Inc
Keegan lets a DT inside him and ball has to get out. Other DT gets arm up. All is crossing a LB and getting a little interfered with, ball loops over him. McN(-2) low arm angle is going to cause some INTs (BA, 0, Prot 0/1, Keegan-1)
M17 3rd 10 Gun Flex 3-3-5 3-3-5 stack 1-high Pass 6 Fade Bell 33
Worst officiating crew of all time ruins one of the greatest catches of all time. McN(+2). Refs-4. (DO, 1, Prot 2/2) Replay so they can’t memory hole this.
M9 3rd 18 Gun 5-wide 3-2-6 Dime 1-high Pass 5 Slant C.Johnson 5
GUAP. Slant underneath connects, gets no YAC. McN(+.5) (CA, 3, Prot 1/1)
Drive Notes: Punt. 10-7. 13 min 2nd Q. Announcers fill time while waiting for Robbins punt to land by continuing to go off on that call.
Ln Dn Ds OForm DPack Front CovLook Type Box Play Player Yards
M17 1st 10 Gun flex trips 4-2-5 4-2-5 Under 2-high Run 6 Zone Read Give Corum 1
Rich Rod ZR with ignored Bubble. End shuffles, McN(Read-1) gives, DE tackles because you're supposed to read him. Honig(-2) gets stood up to smush this dead. Bubble was open, WMU was slanting playside. Do I RPS this? Does Michigan read?
M18 2nd 9 Gun flex trips 4-2-5 4-2-5 Even 2-high Pass 7 TE Bash All 6
Calling this a screen in the charting but really it's M running bash with a flip to the TE instead of a jetting RB/WR outside. McN(+.5) (RPO+) never looks at Henning coming wide open because there's an unblocked DE he's probably reading. He does throw off his back foot and put it where All(+1) can twist to turn upfield, then grind out yards bc guy who left Henning arrives immediately. (CA+, 2, screen)
M24 3rd 3 Gun Trips 2-4-5 Eagle 6 1-high Pass 8 Slot Fade Bell 76
The guts to throw this on 3rd and 3. WMU shows 8 and sends 3, Bell gets a step on the Nk and McN(+3) launches it right where it needs to be. 111,000 people send "Don't you dare OPI that" to the line judge...he does not OPI that, nor DPI the late shove from a dying DB that makes this a bit harder of a catch. Bell celebrates with the basketball team, who had their shot and can't have him back. (DO+, 2, Prot 1/1)
Drive Notes: Touchdown. 17-7. 9 min 2nd Q. Bell's season ends on the next punt return.
Ln Dn Ds OForm DPack Front CovLook Type Box Play Player Yards
O31 1st 10 Pistol 2TE Unbalanced 3-4-4 4-2-5 Over 2-high Run 7 Power Haskins 9
Well look at that: WMU's safeties aren't lined up in our nose hairs anymore. Zinter(+2) as covered inline TE inside Hong(+1) and they obliterate edge. M trying to lure WLB into backside gap but he doesn't bite (RPS-1). Huge win on frontside doesn't matter. Filiaga(+1) solid kick and HH (+.5) runs through one guy for a few extra.
O22 2nd 1 Pistol TE Twins 3-4-4 3-4 Over 2-high Pass 8 Dumpoff Haskins 0
Zinter gets crossed, immediate pressure. WMU bust downfield has Wilson SCREAMINGLY wide open but McN(-1) dumps to HH who's immediately tackled. Harsh since this could be PR or even CA for saving a sack but that's for people who can get Wilson running all alone out of their heads. (BR, 3, Prot 0/2, Zinter-2)
O22 3rd 1 Beef 4-4-3 4-4 Under 2-high Run 9 Split Zone Haskins 22
Honig(-1) lost on edge to the DE I like but backcut is open bc Keegan(+2) reached a DT, Vastardis(+1) locked out his, and Zinter(+.5) and Stueber (+.5) moved theirs. 1st down achieved, HH(+3) trucksticks a safety, keeps his footing, and walks in.
Drive Notes: Touchdown. 24-7. 6 min 2nd Q.
Ln Dn Ds OForm DPack Front CovLook Type Box Play Player Yards
M35 1st 10 Pistol Trips Tight 4-3-4 4-3 Even 2-high Pass 7 Flare screen Corum 8
Works again. McN(+.5) on target, Zinter(+1) reached Fayad, Sainristil(+2) escorts CB to the sideline, Wilson(-1) loses his guy and gets away with a grab (refs+1). That stretches it out so WMU DBs can rally. (CA, screen, Prot n/a)
M43 2nd 2 Pistol FB Unbal 4-3-4 4-3 Even 2-high Run 7.5 Split Zone Corum 10
Keegan(-1) gets spun by Holley, Corum(+1) bursts past that into a lane created by Vastardis(+.5) and Filiaga(+.5), and through an ankle grab by the SAM. Hayes(+.5) watched his LB go outside and turned around, and this helps bc Fayad was coming back.
O47 1st 10 Pistol FB 4-3-4 4-3 Even 2-high Run 7.5 Power Lead Corum 5
Extreme #EstablishingTheRun (note the clock). WMU expecting exactly this and it works anyway, which makes Harbaugh happy and gets an RPS-2 for delivering an unblocked LB to the hole they're attacking. Vastardis(+.5) does a better job against Holley, Filiaga(+1) and Stueber(-1) double a DT but Stuebs turns around instead of trying to get out at the trailing WLB. Schoon(+.5) halts the MLB, All(+1) thunks the crashing DE inside this time (adjustment!) and Keegan(+.5) kicks a CB. Corum(+1) sidesteps the MLB and turns the corner. Stueber's guy and S arrive to hold this down.
O42 2nd 5 Pistol 3-wide 4-3-4 4-3 Under 2-high Run 7 Belly Corum 8
Fake read (block read?) of the SAM who chucks Henning(-1) after setting up outside. All(+1) blew out DE but WMU LB exchanges. Corum(+2) bounces off that guy, carries AJ's guy through a safety for 3 yards. RPS+/- here since "read" wrongsided SAM but gap exchange should have worked.
O34 1st 10 Gun TE Flex 4-3-4 4-3 Over 2-high Run 6.5 Arc Give Haskins 12
McN(read+) as WMU tries the Army flip without the slant. Filiaga(+1) controls Holley who tried to slant by him, Vastardis(+1) locks out a LB who waited for it. Big gap.
O22 1st 10 Gun Twins Tight 4-3-4 4-3 Over 2-high Run 6.5 Dive Haskins 2
This could be IV and McN reads the safety who's coming down but I think the read is 100% fake because that S and everybody is focused on the RB. Nobody blocks backside (RPS-2) so HH has Fayad on his back and can't get outside despite Schoon(+1) crushing his DE, and a run support S if he did get out of that. My apologies to Drain: M did have all 3 timeouts. 1:18 left and they don't use one.
O20 2nd 8 Gun 3-wide 4-3-4 4-3 Over 2-high Run 7 Counter Trey Haskins 7
Timing of this is messed up. There's a fake backside read and no counter step, so All and HH(+2) collide while Keegan(+1) is turning in his DE. All is wasted but exchange LB guns for that gap and Haskins stomps that dude then hurdles a fool. 2021 Fools Hurdled Count: 1. RPS-1.
O13 3rd 1 Goal line 4-3-4 4-3 Over 0-high Run 9 QB Sneak Cade 2
Tempo. They get it. Vastardis(+1) gets to LB, HH pushes McN over.
O11 1st 10 Gun Trips 4-3-4 4-3 Over 0-high Run 9 Counter Trey Corum 7
Counter Trey with Sainristil motioning to become the TE. Fake read on the other side, shuffle, Keegan(-1) gets two-side by DE and Corum(+1) has to stop then cut past a safety behind Filiaga(+2) who kept feet moving and pancaked DT he and Vastardis doubled. Walk-in TD if Hayes(-2) didn't stop blocking and turn upfield instead of locking out the S. Guessing that one gets called out in film session. RPS-1, and hat tip to how the WMU DEs are coached (by DC Lou Esposito (not THAT Espo)).
O4 2nd 3 Pistol 2TE trips 4-3-4 4-3 Even 0-high Run 9 Dive Haskins 3
No read, WMU slanting. Filiaga(+1), Vastardis(+1), Keegan(+1) go to the IHOP buffet, HH gets what's there. No RPS because goal line.
O2 3rd 1 Gun 2TE Flex 4-3-4 Goal line 0-high Run 9 Arc Give Haskins -1
McN(read-3) or RPS-3 depending on whether they told him to read or burn a down. Unblocked DE gets a free shot at the handoff. Only excuse is 4 points don't matter in this game.
Drive Notes: FG (20). 27-7. 6 seconds 2nd Q. Good thing our coaches only do this against WMU amirite?
Ln Dn Ds OForm DPack Front CovLook Type Box Play Player Yards
M20 1st 10 Gun TE Flex 4-3-4 4-3 Even 0-high Pass 6.5 TE Bash All 6
Works better because Sainristil(+2) is lead blocker. Puts a S into the sideline then goes looking for more. Other S has arrived though so All runs into the first one. McN(+.5) (RPO+). (CA, Screen, Prot n/a)
M26 2nd 4 Pistol 2TE trips 4-3-4 4-3 Even 2-high Run 7.5 End Around Henning 74
My first day on the job I +3 two guys on the same play. Looks like P&P with C and BS TE/WR all crossing the formation after the snap. WMU LBs are focused on RB. Vastardis(+3) reaches and cuts LB, Hayes(+.5) takes out the other. CJ(-1) loses his CB and All(-1) whiffs on S but Henning(+3) leaps over that and jets past CJ's guy and last LB and puts on the afterburners. HH(+1) hustled downfield to make the last block.
O3 2PC 3 Villaricat 4-3-4 Goal line 0-high Run 8 QB Split Zone Villari 2
Villari and All in the backfield, Keegan(-2) tries to do too much, gets only a glancing blow on his LB and can't really help on the S coming in. Block your guy and let Villari deal with the DB; that's the point right?
Drive Notes: Touchdown (2PC failed). 33-7. 10 min 3rd Q. Backups come in, end of serious charting.
Ln Dn Ds OForm DPack Front CovLook Type Box Play Player Yards
M23 1st 10 Pistol 2TE 4-3-4 4-3 Even 2-high Run 7 Arc Give Edwards 5
Sainristil(+1) leads outside followed by Honig, JJ(Read-1) has a 3-on-1 outside but gives to Edwards(+1). WMU is pinching so he patiently gathers, then Vastardis(+1) and Hayes(+1) create a late backside gap to the S.
M28 2nd 5 Pistol FB Unbal 4-3-4 4-3 Even 2-high Run 8 Power Lead Edwards 4
Honig(-.5) chucked on his kick, Filiaga(+2) heady play to pick up the DT who slanted past Keegan and turn. Edwards(+1) steps around a blitzing (RPS-1) LB. CB blitzing but can't arrive in time.
M32 3rd 1 Beef 4-4-3 4-4 Under 0-high Run 11 Power Lead Haskins 3
Honig(+2) drives DE so well Stuebs(+.5) gets an LB, All(+.5) gets his kick, Keegan(-1) misses but Haskins(+1) cuts decisively and leaps between the now-closing gap between 84 and 83. (Gap 83.5!!!) for an academic 1st down.
M35 1st 10 Pistol Trips TE 3-4-4 3-4 Crowd 0-high Pass 10 Flare screen Edwards 3
WMU S's at 7 yards and one blitzes. All(-1) turns around when his blitzy LB won't matter, refs(-2) miss a nasty both hands to the face on Sainristil(+1) who still made room to the sideline while carrying this guy clutching his face like a zenomorph. Last S runs it OOB. RPS+1. Seriously, Big Ten, this line judge needs to be taken out of the rotation immediately. McN(+.5) (CA, screen, Prot n/a)
M38 2nd 7 Pistol FB 4-3-4 4-3 Even 2-high Run 7 Split Zone Edwards 3
JJ changes play at the line. Stuebs(-.5) and Filiaga(-.5) get hung up on DT and let MLB in unmolested. Edwards(+.5) mostly dodges that guy to turn a loss into a short gain.
M41 3rd 4 Gun 2TE trips Unbal 4-3-4 4-3 Even 2-high Pass 7 Bubble Screen Sainristil -3
RPS-3 M takes a lot of yelling to get set up in unbalanced and WMU is laughing. They run the world's most obvious bubble screen and WMU blows it up. Arm strength sort of an issue here perhaps. McN(-2) bc he should have called TO.
Drive Notes: Punt. 33-7. 2 min 3rd Q. Robbins's punt is still up there as far as I know.
Ln Dn Ds OForm DPack Front CovLook Type Box Play Player Yards
M13 1st 10 Pistol 2TE trips 4-3-4 4-3 Over 2-high Run 8 End Around Wilson 43
RPS+1 DL crashes on RB, Wilson started in a TE spot so no idea this is coming. Hayes(+1) escorts a DB to the backfield, Schoon(+1) kicks the edge, Vastardis(+1) bodies a LB, Corum(+1) got downfield to block. All(+.5) and Baldwin(+.5) doing work downfield bleeding yards as their guys just want to end this. Wilson(+1) also turned on the jets for a second to make the LBs give up.
O44 1st 10 Pistol Heavy 4-3-4 4-3 Over 2-high Run 7.5 Power Corum 3
RPS off. Fee edge and slant gets a DT past Vastardis(-1). Zinter(+1) turns edge and Schoon(+1) turned out LB, but unblocked guy and Hayes(-1) whiff on another LB close this down.
O41 2nd 7 Gun trips tight 4-3-4 4-3 Under 1-high Pass 7.5 Curl Henning 11
A PASS! This is the first non-screen since the Bell toss. Pocket clean-ish, JJ(+1) (results-based) can step up as Filiaga runs his DT upfield (Prot+1). Could find a screaming wide open Wilson but this probably sped him up so he rips it to AJ Henning under the safety who let Wilson go. (CA, 2, Prot 1/2, Filiaga-1)
O30 1st 10 Pistol FB Twins 4-3-4 4-3 Under 1-high Run 7.5 Arc Give Corum 30
WMU slants frontside and this puts an unblocked LB Zinter couldn't get to. RPS-1. Corum(+3) makes that LB look like me out there. Hayes(+1) picks off a safety and speed does the rest.
Drive Notes: Touchdown. 40-7. 13 min 4th Q. Garbage time, but one more drive for the Sickos.
Ln Dn Ds OForm DPack Front CovLook Type Box Play Player Yards
M20 1st 10 Gun Heavy 4-3-4 4-3 over 1-high Run 8 Split Zone Corum 12
Line is (L->R) Barnhart-Filiaga-Crippen-Zinter-Jones, for you depth chart watchers. Fake read of DE of LB who's way out there, WMU gets three guys to playside, don't care RPS is off. Also Filiaga(+1) authoritative kickout, Honigford(+1) buries a LB, Seltzer(+2) holds two guys outside while Trente Jones rides a DT's back right in front of the refs(+1) for pancake #3. Corum(+1) runs through that and then an arm tackle. White flags.
M32 1st 10 Pistol Heavy 4-3-4 4-3 Over 2-high Pass 7.5 TE Bash McCarthy -16
Huge def hold (refs-2) as DE isn't going to let the Schoon get loose and yanks him in a circle. Arm is sorta moving forward but can't because there's a defender's arm in the way so Brady/Woodson call on the forward pass (personally I side with Woodson). JJ(-3) wants to throw it at this but waits too long for guy he read to get into his chest and throws it backwards. (BAx, screen, Prot n/a)
M16 2nd 26 Gun 3-wide 3-4-4 3-4 Mike 2-high Run 6.5 Counter Trey Edwards 2
Fake Read, Zinter(+1) turns edge, Seltzer(-1) overruns, Edwards gets what he can.
M18 3rd 24 Gun flex 3-wide 3-3-5 3-3-5 stack 2-high Pass 6.5 Deep cross Henning 15
Offsides, free play. Three man rush vs six is all day. Prot+1. Has Seltzer quite open on the other side but instead goes to Henning, who gets tackled by the safety. Refs throw the flag so late I'm sure the crowd reaction caused it. (Not charted, 0, Prot 1/1)
M33 1st 10 Pistol 2TE Unbalanced 4-3-4 4-3 Under 2-high Run 6.5 Split Zone Edwards 9
A-gap blitz and Filiaga(-1) (RPS-1) doesn't pick it up. Edwards(+2) goes around Zinter's guy and drags him along until the guy can't hold jersey any longer. SPRONG! 9 yards. Rootin for ya in UCLA Zach.
M42 2nd 1 Pistol 2TE FB 4-3-4 4-3 Over 1-high Run 7.5 Power Lead Edwards 4
Safety at 9 yards. Zinter(+1) crumples the end w Jones(+.5) who comes off late but does take down his LB outside when Seltzer(-1) can't get movement on his kickout. Filiaga goes outside instead of clogging that up further, pile lurches for a couple.
M46 1st 10 Gun trips tight 4-3-4 4-3 Even 1-high Pass 7.5 Deep cross Henning Inc
CB blitz but JJ doesn't see Anthony immediately wide open on the fade. Does see AJ but AJ stops and JJ(-1) zings outside his body. (MA, 2, Prot 2/3, TEAM-1).
M46 2nd 10 Gun 3-wide Flex 4-3-4 4-3 Even 2-high Pass 6.5 RB Flat Edwards -15
Barnhart knocked a guy's helmet off and also got shoved by that guy. JJ(-2) chucks when a gentle wheel could be a chunk. Coming back anyway. (IN, 0, Prot 0/1, Barnhart-1)
M31 2nd 25 Gun 3-wide Flex 4-3-4 4-3 Even 2-high Pass 6.5 PA Seam Seltzer Inc
JJ(-1) puts it a little behind Seltzer—wrong side of the same hash actually—and Seltzer has to turn around. Drops it. (MA, 2, Prot 2/2). Anyway we're just here for...
M31 3rd 25 Gun 3-wide Flex 3-3-5 3-3-5 stack 2-high Pass 6 Henson Special Baldwin 69
The Unicorn. Zinter's club hand is useless, RB Leon Franklin should stay bc not like a dumpoff can do much. JJ(+4) sheds the LB, drifts to within 5 yards of the sideline, and puts it 5 yards inside the numbers and 7 yards past the line to gain. Baldwin(route+2) adjusts to a thing we've never seen before. (DO+++, 2, Prot 1/3, Zinter-2)
Drive Notes: Touchdown. 47-7. 8 min 4th Q. Last drive starts at 3 min and is Villari and Leon Franklin so we're done here.

Mike Hart but fast!

My aren’t you chipper this week.

I got some good football feels back; just don’t show me anything negative.

Well I’ve got some good news re: The running backs. MAC caveats need apply but Corum’s tape was even better than the feels. When coach types talk about “bring your own blocking” they usually mean setting up defenders so your linemen can clear them out. Escaping a linebacker who’s sharing your phone booth without him getting a hand on you is a thing we have not seen much of.

It’s impossible to avoid invoking the Great Little One’s name. The way Corum stutters his feet so the linebackers can’t figure out where to attack (nope, not there!) was a vintage Mike Hart trait.

As is the acceleration. If you get a little bit out of your lane he’s going to take it from you, at which point your only solace is you’re not going to be the only back seven defender called out in this film session.

And then he is fast. The first touchdown was THE THING we’ve been pining for from this offense (other than reads with the starting QB), a quick swing pass that puts Corum in space. Watch how fast he gets from the 15 yard line to the 10 yard line. As soon as that happens it’s ovah!

MAC caveats apply—big running back days correlate with bad linebacker play and the Broncos have a few very bad linebackers. But that caveat takes us from “You can rely on Corum to score all the points” to a mere “defenses are going to have to do unsound things to account for this guy.” Star goes on the FFFF chart.

So you’ve already moved on from Hassan Haskins? I thought he was your dude.

Hassan Haskins remains my dude. There is a Magic: The Gathering concept called “Trample” where if you manage to sacrifice one of your poor creatures to stop the other player’s rampaging beast, they still do damage after your pawn’s been run through. If Haskins was a MTG monster he would have Trample.

This isn’t just a BRRRUUAAH strength thing. Haskins sees things before they happen, and uses Step #2 to set up what he’s going to do on Step #8. THEN he is too strong to bring down. He also uses that and tools like his lethal jump cut to time his attacks just right. The holes look bigger than they are because the moment the pulling guard impacts the guy setting the edge is the moment Haskins uses to pop through. This ability saves Michigan from getting bottled up when the blocking gets messed up, or the timing of the play is thrown off.

I used to watch the MSU games with my Sparty little brother and some local HS coach friends of his, and during Le’Veon Bell’s years they had a “Fools Hurdled” tracker. I’m starting one for Haskins in 2021. Fools Hurdled: 1. Haskins also hustled downfield to make the final block that sprung AJ Henning.

As Brian wrote in the game column yesterday, Haskins and Corum are going to get about even carries and I’m happy with that. A thunder-lightning duo is one of those football tropes that actually comes from a real thing. Getting hit sucks, and the more it happens the more mental effort it takes to convince your body to go through it again. It physically wears you out. And then when you need that extra juice to make an all-or-nothing grab at the Lightning, you don’t have it.

Speaking of Lightning-Thunder combos, how was Donovan Edwards’s debut?

Delicious. When Edwards came on the field Michigan was already up 33-7 and had not thrown the ball past the line of scrimmage since the Ronnie Bell fade 18(!) offensive snaps prior. The WMU safeties had retaken their positions nine yards off the line of scrimmage, Michigan’s QB read game was completely off. Almost all of his 4.5 YPC this game was also YAC.

Michigan also had him moving around the offense in various wideout roles, which he did in high school as well. No need to show what their plans are in this game, but there are plans.

So are you ready to declare the running backs the greatest in modern history?

You know what rhymes with Hart?

HARTCHART.

Offensive Line
Player + - T Notes
Hayes 4 3 +1 Blocked backsides they never ran off.
Keegan 5.5 6 -0.5 Puller, WMU was coached to beat his kickouts.
Vastardis 12 1.5 +10.5 Reached a LB on the Henning end around. OL of the day.
Filiaga 10.5 3 +7.5 His kind of game.
Stueber 2 3.5 -1.5 Quiet day in the downblock mines.
Zinter 7 0 +7 Can't pass pro one-handed but can club people.
T.Jones 0.5   +0.5 Extra TE sometimes.
Crippen     DNC Center #2.
All 6 3 +3 Used as a fullback. Good at Mason things.
Honigford 3.5 4.5 -1 Pointman, no pass threat, got beat up by (good) WMU DEs.
Schoonmaker 4.5   +4.5 Caved a few edges.
Seltzer 2 2 +0 Blocked 2 guys.
TOTAL 57.5 26.5 +31 Beat up WMU inside.
Backs
Player + - T Notes
McNamara     DNC Zero carries.
McCarthy     DNC Not here either.
Villari     DNC Villaricat 2PC
Haskins 9.5   +9.5 Solid jersey investment.
Corum 16.5   +16.5 Mike Hart but fast.
Edwards 4.5   +4.5 Enticing debut.
TOTAL 30.5   +30.5 Enjoy Pasadena, Zach.
Receivers
Player + - T Notes
C.Johnson   2 -2 Not Bell.
Sainristil 7   +7 Michigan's best tight end.
Henning 3 1 +2 Zooooooom!
Wilson 1 1 -1 Fast. Also not Bell.
Baldwin 0.5   +0.5 Did work on Wilson end around.
Anthony     DNC Didn't get to block much.
TOTAL 11.5 4 +6 Sainristil is a Weapon. Bell was +1/-0 fyi.
Metrics
Player + - T Notes
Protection 15 23 65% Zinter—4, Filiaga, Keegan, Barnhart, TEAM—1
RPS 3 22 -19 Didn't have to be clever, definitively wasn’t.

Thing is I think I believe that.

So I’m not just an insane homer who buys running backs’ jerseys?

That +30.5 for the RBs is some kind of record right?

I looked it up. For sheer volume of things plussed (since 2008) this game came in 7th all time. It is the only one in the top 12 that wasn’t a Denard game.

But those games had offsetting negatives. By half a point, this one edged out the +38.5/-8.5 of the Fritz/Denard Jet game vs Minnesota in 2011—the one where Vincent Smith threw a touchdown--for the highest total ever. Corum’s +16.5/-0 is up there with Toussaint vs 2011 Nebraska and Higdon vs 2017 Indiana in greatest RB days in charting history.

It’s also half a point under the contribution from the offensive line.

Here I get to eat my crow, because all offseason my downer takes about Michigan’s OL were:

  • Filiaga should be replaced by a younger OL.
  • Vastardis is a weak spot.

Those guys were Michigan’s best linemen in this game. With Zak Zinter wearing a club on his right hand, Filiaga got the start at RG and got to do his thing, which was blow up a puny MAC DT on doubles or moving with slants. Trevor Keegan got the start at LG and went off when the rest of the ones did. He also got the majority of those kickout pulls when WMU was setting up their DEs inside and making them hard to kick. He also reach a DT on the truckstick Haskins touchdown.

#77 the LG

That was the very bad non-Holley DT so extra MAC caveats apply. Overall it was a pretty solid debut, and I can see why the race between him and Filiaga was so tight.

The guy who passed expectations and then left hopes in the dust was Andrew Vastardis. The key block on the AJ Henning end-around wasn’t Haskins at the end; it was Vastardis reaching a linebacker.

Only a few of his points were from doubling the afore mentioned nose. WMU was slanting a lot and Vastardis was picking up what was happening and finding his guy on the second level or locking out Holley to give his RBs a shot.

Zinter couldn’t play much pass pro—he had two –2s when he couldn’t do anything about a DT going to his right to account for the bulk of Michigan’s low protection day—which I attributed to the club on his hand. He rotated with Filiaga some, and this probably figured into why they chose not to pass at all for long stretches of the game. They also used him as a sixth OL in their heavy and unbalanced formations, since they couldn’t exactly use him as a full-time OG. That sucks because in the run game he is…well he’s the kind of guy the coaches notice because when he blocks a guy the guy ain’t there no more.

#65, the second “tight end” from left.

There was a weird lack of scoring for the tackles.

Yeah that was weird. Most of the action on the OL took place at the tight ends and the trenches. This came down to the two teams’ game plans I thought. I’ve been going on about WMU’s DE#1, Ali Fayad, since I was so impressed with that guy in 2018 I walked down to give him an ovation (only other time I’ve done this was for Antoine Brooks Jr. of Maryland in 2018). It took just two snaps for Fayad to make his presence felt, beating three(!) blocks to shut down Michigan’s attack.

DE#1 on the top

Michigan’s main rushing strategy was to try to run off tight end, bringing a puller from the backside to kick out the edge. WMU’s strategy was to keep the ends outside where they could crash on the running game and make sure those kickout blocks took place where there was no space to escape, replacing the DEs inside with roving linebackers. Michigan often had the quarterback fake reading that DE to try to get him to hold up, but the Broncos quickly realized the Michigan “reads” were as fake as unofficial forty time. The result was a lot of cutbacks into the interior blocks.

Later on Michigan adjusted by looping around the DE and sealing him inside:

Watch #83 Erick All, who lines up at fullback

The WMU response to that was to start doing the Army thing where the one DE crashes and the other reads that block and exchanges gaps.

image

Michigan’s running backs were routinely turning these LB collisions into solid, clock-draining four-yard gains, but they too adjusted to this adjustment by having the backs start cutting into the A gaps, where 3T Ralph Holley kept trying to blitz the backfield and Filiaga/Vastardis did a good job of sealing him.

But I saw a lot of tight ends.

Right, this too was stra…[eyes narrow].

What?

You were making a sophomoric Honigford joke there.

Guilty.

Yeah, so dropping down to 259 from 300 didn’t do him any favors I think. Michigan still didn’t use him at all in the passing game—he was ignored by the QBs and defense alike the few times he ran a route—and his past effectiveness as a sixth OL was nerfed. Michigan’s RUN BY GOD game plan meant to feature Honigford heavily, but WMU’s decision to put the DEs on edge duty was the kind of matchup that should have gone Michigan’s way if they were running out a Hoss and didn’t because Honigford was just sort of a tight end:

#84 at the top of the formation

I thought Erick All did a much better job at the violence—his shoulders came with ferocity and budged guys. Schoonmaker didn’t get as many kickout opportunities as the other guys, but he was more effective as the end guy who blocks down the inside of those plays. He got his man, and his man stayed put. He still hasn’t been used in the passing game; by the time they even bothered to have one he was off the field for walk-on Carter Seltzer.

All was also the designated target on Michigan’s odd take on BASH. Bash is a counter for teams that run a lot of arc/zone-read/split zone, which looks like the above at first but flips the QB/RB jobs so the running back is speeding out the backside while the QB gets the inside keep. Michigan’s “Let’s not have our QBs run ever” take on this was to use a quick throw to the TE in the flat as the “outside run” read and a handoff as the dive. The best it got was a play where All had to make most of the yards himself, and at worst it put a guy on top of McCarthy while the guy they were supposed to be reading was towing the intended target around by the shoulder pads.

[Hot take voice] MIKE SAINRISTIL IS MICHIGAN’S BEST TIGHT END

That’s what I should have gone with. The guy is a Matchup Problem™ because he does this to your CBs:

#5 WR at the top

This could be Michigan’s base play this year because these guys are so dangerous. Bell’s blocking made it lethal; their other receivers don’t really have that capability.

Michigan already recognizes what they have here. That TE Bash play that worked was essentially using the TE as a slot receiver and the slot receiver as a TE, because Sainristil blocks like one.

#5 the slot receiver on the top hash

Opponents are going to have to adjust for Sainristil mountain goat contributions or get screened to death by Michigan’s RBs, and that should open up other things.

Didn’t we have a guy who was the highest-graded player in the country this week or something?

Oh right, the passing game.

In fairness, there were a few people who forgot we had one this week.

I guess a chart?

CADE MCNAMARA

  Good   Neutral   Bad   Ovr   Reads
Game DO CA SCR   PR MA   BA TA IN BR   DSR GRADE!   RPOs ZRs
Western Mich 3+ 3(3)-           2     1   67% +5   4/5 2/7

Not a lot to grade here. The low sample size messes with us but Cade was efficient when he wasn’t getting the ball batted because of his low release point, though that’s an issue that probably isn’t going away. What you get in return is a guy who knows the offense well enough to feel where there’s going to be an opening, and gets the ball there before the defense can react. Here the defense shows an Okie alignment on 3rd down. McNamara recognizes one of those LBs at the bottom has to be the guy responsible for All and gets it there before that guy can recover from threatening blitz.

Game. Managed. That is until he showed a Michigan quarterback can actually throw a slot fade.

Let’s stay positive by not remembering all the games that could have been altered the last several years if any of our quarterbacks could make that throw consistently. McNamara also placed the other THE BELL CATCH where his receiver had room to grab it on the sideline and the cornerback didn’t have a chance to do anything more than interfere.

As for the seven “reads” I think they were fake anyways—the two “correct” ones were early handoffs (more on that later). The little we saw of the passing game showed why McNamara’s been out ahead.

However the little we saw of his backup showed why that might not remain the case forever.

JJ MCCARTHY

  Good   Neutral   Bad   Ovr   Reads
Game DO CA SCR   PR MA   BA TA IN BR   DSR GRADE!   RPOs ZRs
Western Mich 1+++ 2       3   1x   1     60% -2   0/0  

Other than THAT, what we saw of McCarthy was a ton of zip and a lot of JJ Hearts AJ, to the point where McCarthy was ignoring wiiiide open receivers to lock in on his fellow Chicagoan.

Two were productive (11 yards and a DPI) and the other a miscommunication. Those were chosen over open bombs to Roman Wilson, Carter Seltzer, and Andrel Anthony. In all three instances Henning was the guy to McCarthy’s left (frontside) while the ignored routes were on the backside, so it’s reasonable to assume he was working sideways and threw the first thing open. It’s still a very quick trigger for a favorite. Here’s the All-22 on the pass interference. AJ Henning is the 2nd WR from the top and about to cross this safety with a LB hanging out in the lane. Look down however and the next two reads are Carter Seltzer ten yards from anybody, and Andrel Anthony behind all those guys who realized they let Seltzer get that open.

2021010054-Western Michigan-quite open

Perhaps an icebreaker is in order?

There was also THAT:

Wide receivers?

The scale still goes like so: [0 = uncatchable, 1 = circus catch, 2 = moderate difficulty, 3 = routine] but I changed the headers.

  THIS WEEK   LAST YEAR
Player Uncb Circus Tough Routine   Uncb Circus Tough Routine
Bell   1/2 1/1   12 0/2 4/7 20/20
Johnson     1/1 1/1 6 0/3 2/5 12/12
Sainristil       1/1 4 0/6 2/3 3/5
Henning 0   1/2   1 1/1 1/2 4/4
Wilson         3 0/1 5/7 3/3
Baldwin     1/1          
Anthony                
All 1   1/1 2/2 2 1/5 0/2 9/12
Honigford                
Schoonmaker                
Seltzer     0/1          
Hibner                
Hansen                
Haskins         2      
Corum       2/2 1     6/6
Edwards 1     1/1        

It really REALLY sucks to lose Ronnie Bell.

Depending on your view of referees, that side judge deserves to be Clockwork Oranged to a chair and forced to watch Ronnie Bell’s catch replayed for him every half hour for the rest of his life, or something worse.

Daylen Baldwin’s adjustment to his route portends good things. Roman Wilson got past the second level so fast that safeties won’t be able to play that far up in a real game. That’s about it. Michigan got its two long TDs through the air and those kept them on schedule to keep playing clugball.

Routes: Baldwin++, All+

So speaking of clugball, why is “Punch Self in Face” still in the playbook?

Right, so Michigan was not going to run the quarterback in this game. What they wanted to do was have the defense THINK they might run the quarterback so the DE would form up outside and get clonked by a kickout. Early in the game that was still a possibility.

By the end of the second half WMU wasn’t going to be fooled. Which okay, you can run offense without reading guys. You can’t run offense by fake reading guys, however, because once they know what you’re up to that guy is just a dude you’re not blocking.

WMU DE#1 on the far left

That was the penultimate play of the first half on 3rd and 1 at the three. Your chances there of a first down or a TD are extremely high if you just block everyone and send Haskins into a safety. I don’t get the point. If you’re not going to read, why are you running it? If you are going to read then why can’t your quarterback get it right on the most obvious plays? If you’re practicing getting it wrong why do you think they’ll get it right when four points matters? If you’re converting these into RPOs then why isn’t your quarterback at least throwing those?

And yet here they are, running Rich Rodriguez’s base play: spread them out, check the alignment for a bubble screen so that SAM can’t bother the QB, then read the edge. That’s part of the play.

I don’t know man, but if Jim Harbaugh ever asks me what’s the #1 thing he needs to fix about his coaching I’m going to tell him to stop being afraid to get his QB hit. If this was 2015 we could say “Oh, it’s just WMU why risk it?” and if they didn’t do this sort of thing all the time it would even be fair. Michigan has their QB read guys who are being blocked. They have his back turned to guys they leave unblocked. They stopped their end-of-half MANBALL drive dead in its tracks. I agree with Brian (on the podcast): If Michigan was a read offense they would be using the tune-up game to practice their read offense.

Best guess—and this is just a guess—is that Greg Roman seems to get away with making his reads pre-snap instead of options, so Harbaugh thinks he can do the same. I don’t know what Gattis thinks or how involved he is in those decisions, but he coached under James Franklin for a long time, and Franklin makes this same miscalculation. You can say these guys all make way more than me, and that Shea Patterson got hurt on the first play of 2019 on a QB run, and McNamara probably isn’t near the athlete that Shea was, and the fact that the players were often able to overcome these disadvantages is also attributable to their coaching, and yeah I’ve grasped at all of those things too. I’m not smarter than these people and won’t pretend to be. I just grade the plays and try to understand why they worked or didn’t, and when I graded their gameplan against WMU the broken read option game was the one major thing keeping the score closer than the play deserved.

Also Michigan’s coaches told Sam Webb we’ll probably see more read option stuff from the backup QBs. Since they did that with Patterson, and did it with Milton, and now they’re doing it with McNamara, the most likely explanation is Michigan’s coaches have convinced themselves that it’s better to have their starters make fake reads than actual reads. This layman with a computer thinks this makes Michigan worse at football.

Any Ravens Stuff from Matt Weiss?

Yeah, I really like how they had multiple guys motioning across the formations. They put the fancy stuff away as the score got out of hand, but this play was created by messing with this linebacker (#6) by having Bell’s motion be followed by a tight end pull. Watch that LB freak out as all the bodies are flying to one side, then realize his mistake at the same moment he realizes Blake Corum is entering his world.

WMU#6 the LB on the bottom

The Roman Wilson end around also did this, but Wilson was the trailer and he took the ball.

Heroes?

Blake Corum and Hassan Haskins. The interior OL especially Vastardis. Ronnie Bell was starting to put a Heisman reel together before it.

Maybe not so heroic?

Harbaugh/Gattis burned a lot of downs by fake reading people, paying off a popular preseason take that the offense’s biggest issue is the coaches are trying to run a modern offense without running a modern offense. Andrew Stueber didn’t get to mash face. Zak Zinter couldn’t pass pro with his club on. I ignored Brian’s advice not to clip too many plays for these.

What does it mean for Washington and beyond?

The fact that they did that with absolutely nothing from the quarterback running game is insane. Interior OL might be good. Zinter should be a terror once he’s healthy again. The coaches really do like to run. All the stories you heard about the running backs? They’re real (against a MAC foe).

Comments

Brian Griese

September 8th, 2021 at 2:04 PM ^

Thanks Seth, appreciate the write up. I too remain confused why an offense that calls itself ‘speed in space’ won’t use but 1or 2 RPO’s a game or have QB’s take free yards from DE’s that are crashing down at the snap.

bronxblue

September 8th, 2021 at 2:11 PM ^

Nice write up.  I do leave reading these early on in the year as we all sort of figure out how the team is shaking out.

I will say that I understand coaches not wanting to run their QBs a lot - Patterson in 2019 and Milton in 2020 both got hurt and it hurt the offense, and my guess is the staff doesn't feel the need to test their paper-thin QB depth against WMU.  I don't think they're ever going to be a read offense but I do think we'll see runs from the QB in bigger games or more high-leverage spots.

atticusb

September 8th, 2021 at 5:21 PM ^

Ok, fine, don't run the QB... but then why not line up and run plays *designed for the QB not to run*?  TLDR:  Fucking drives me nuts.  

For any that care, here's my rant in full:  First of all, even if you refuse to run the QB, why not RPO??  RPO's don't "run the QB", so why not actually take the free yards like on the wide open bubble clipped above??

Second, if you're going to just hand it off every time, then why the hell not line up in formations/run blocking schemes that are optimized for "just handing it off"?? Simply leaving an unblocked defender to crash the play (a la repeated zone reads when *everybody* knows they're not keeping) is NOT better than simply lining up under center and handing it off.

Third: for those who say "Well, let's keep the ZR's in so we can steal a nice gain on a keeper 1-3 times PER SEASON", yes, those few plays will work AWESOME... but at what cost? How many plays are you willing to throw away *every game* to "set up" 1-3 plays in *a season*??  If we were regularly 11-0 doing this (throwing away 5+ plays a game to set up 1-3 plays a season) and just needed a trick or two to get by OSU, then FINE. But that is NOT where we are.

Fourth, as far as not running the QB... *somehow* everybody else (ok, lots of other teams) manages to run their QBs, and either manages to get their QB to survive, or has back-ups who step up. Why the fuck can't Michigan? If McCarthy is so ready to step in, then why the hell not not let McNamara run?

Last, to all those who are like "fine, but why risk it against WMU?"... Ok, but do you seriously believe they are going to suddenly start reading and running? And, wouldn't WMU have been perfect to at least test whether the QB can make good reads?  A weaker team with a good/very good DE?

Bottom line: I think Michigan does not allow QBs to make reads, I think it's a coaching decision, I think it's the wrong decision, and (as you can see) I can't even come up with logic to defend the decision. Further, I don't think it's going to change, I see no reason to conclude otherwise. So I'll throw some foam bricks, enjoy this win for what it is (a pretty vanilla sMACkdown), write a fucking manifesto as an mgoblog comment, take my negs like a man, and divest myself another small degree from Michigan football.

AlbanyBlue

September 8th, 2021 at 7:11 PM ^

+1 from me -- +100 if I could -- for saying what I said a couple pages down. It's stupid to structure the offense around a read, leaving a defender unblocked, and then not have a read. You're gifting the D a free hitter every play. And it's on tape that Michigan hasn't run read much under Gattis, so it's not even a fake -- it's just stupid.

stephenrjking

September 8th, 2021 at 2:13 PM ^

Regarding the fake read thing:

It is frustrating. I agree with others, if this were a team that had an offense that incorporated reads, they would use the game against WMU to work on those reads. 

I disagree that this is somehow unique to Michigan. I'm afraid I lack the documentation at the moment, but after watching a number of teams using shotgun mesh handoffs with this in mind, I was struck by how often the mesh was paired with a non-read play. Either the QB just wasn't reading, or (often) there was nobody left unblocked, demonstrating that there wasn't even the appearance of a read on a play that otherwise would seem to include one.

Thinking aloud in real time, not having seen the pass routes, I wonder if there may be reads here... that are not keep reads, but run/pass reads. Honestly, I'm just guessing right here because I haven't looked closely at the plays to try to figure that out. 

bronxblue

September 8th, 2021 at 2:52 PM ^

Yeah, I do think there's reading going on here but it's not of the keep/handoff variety.  Other offenses look like Michigan's - I feel like one of the big blindspots every fanbase has is to focus extensively on their own team and assume any idiosyncrasies are unique to them, both good and bad.  UM has, at various points, talked up running their QB as part of the overall offense; they haven't this year, almost pointedly, and that seems intentional and purposeful.  That may hamstring the offense a bit but I do think the offense we saw McNamara and co. run was the "right" one for the playcalls.

rice4114

September 8th, 2021 at 3:36 PM ^

Let JJ go in one play a drive predicated on a read option or maybe a quick RPO pass. We burn so many downs why not let him be the runner (if the read calls for it) 4-5 times a game? We cant be so risk averse that we wont even run our backup can we? Imagine 3 long runs a game and what that does to the DEs for the rest of the game.

bronxblue

September 8th, 2021 at 5:08 PM ^

I mean, if you only run/deploy specific RPOs with McCarthy then the defense isn't going to be caught off guard or anything - they're going to know that when they switch QBs they're either going to run a relatively small number of plays that will likely hinge on the QB, so you're exposing him to hits and a keyed-off defense for no great gain.  And he's not a burner - last I saw he reported a 4.7 40 yard dash, which is about as fast at Joe Milton.  You say "3 long runs a game" but it's just as likely that it would be 2 meh runs and one hurried throw that just sets downs on fire in a different way.  

They aren't risk-averse; Joe Milton had the most carries the first two games of last year.  But you can deploy your QB in ways that best optimize his abilities and I just push back against the idea that Michigan's coaches have to run this particular flavor of offense with everyone.  Michigan will succeed on offense if they run the plays they are most comfortable and effective at running, and throw in wrinkles when it makes sense.  They may well run the ball more from the QB spot against Washington so we'll see.

mwolverine1

September 8th, 2021 at 3:18 PM ^

My brother is a fan of a bad college football team and watches a lot more bad college football than I do, and he also believes that fake reads are a big part of the game. 

I see a few reasons:

  1. Most teams have unequal threats and have a desired touch distribution. In Michigan's case, we do not want Cade McNamara to run the ball as he's much worse at this than our RBs. Hence we can't allow the defense to dictate what our touch distribution is. Any scenario where McNamara is running 10-15 times is likely disastrous, especially against WMU.
  2. It is incredibly difficult to make these reads live at game speed. You're gonna mess up, and so having a default option allows your team to play fast and avoid any big negative plays.

It is much easier on everyone to have fake reads and default plays with "alerts." I do think it is important to prevent a team from cheating too hard on one option. I can see why in some of these missed reads that Cade looked at these as more of times where we had some leverage instead of where we had a wide open play. Against WMU we probably don't have to be as aggressive in seeking the leverage, so we don't. The play with the backside bubble to Cornelius Johnson that was instead an OZ to Corum is probably a good example of this, as WMU technically had it covered with 3 defenders, though the safety would have to come up and make a play one on one from depth. We had good leverage, but not a clear uncovered option. Against a good opponent I think we would expect a pull and throw, but it's not like the safety was in the box really begging us to throw the bubble.

I see the goal line handoff at the end of the 1st half as a true missed read. WMU crashed hard with reckless abandon and McNamara should have pulled.

Overall, I would expect to see the fake reads to continue but for us to see a few more reads in more competitive situations. I just think it's a difference in philosophy between us fans and the coaches. Devin Gardner had a good point in that Michigan's defense is better than Western's, so our practice reps are actually better than the game reps in this case. We as fans would never think so since we can only see the game reps, but this may be some insight into how a team (especially one that is usually a favorite like Michigan) thinks. 

jsquigg

September 8th, 2021 at 7:44 PM ^

This take is nonsensical. You can get your desired touches without setting a down on fire by not blocking the edge and also not reading the edge. Run inside or outside zone and just block everybody. Also, if they ran that many read plays and Cade is making the correct read and that means he runs 12-15 times, it means he is having a big day on the ground. The last thing you want in football is unblocked and not fooled defenders. This is worse than simplistic, it's asinine offense and it's going to bite this team.

UofM Die Hard …

September 8th, 2021 at 5:14 PM ^

Well thought out comment here, thank you.  Reading through the post commentary and the comments are so frustrating. M just drubbed WMU 47-14 and now that triggers a bitch session about reads and how we left downs/yardage on the field (every freakin team does that every Saturday)...and the people complaining have no idea what exactly is happening/being called.  It for sure could be run/pass reads like you mention...but lets please continue to focus on the negatives and keep filling that BPONE cup up, that always works well here. 

 

drives me nuts

 

NJblue2

September 8th, 2021 at 2:18 PM ^

I hate the fact that it seems the coaches just have this weird mental block about fulling committing to this speed in space offense and doing what these modern offenses do (including the video game numbers that QB put up. Good stuff Seth.

Sam1863

September 8th, 2021 at 2:20 PM ^

Getting hit sucks, and the more it happens the more mental effort it takes to convince your body to go through it again. It physically wears you out. And then when you need that extra juice to make an all-or-nothing grab at the Lightning, you don’t have it.

That's got to be the most crystal-clear explanation I've read in a long time. Well done.

imafreak1

September 8th, 2021 at 2:40 PM ^

I know Devin Gardner claimed these were all reads. He even presented pretty good evidence with how hard Bell was blocking on the fake read bubbles. 

But there is zero chance that hand off at the end of the first half was a read. The DE is practically past Cade on his way to Haskins when Cade gives it.

I'll believe the fake bubbles are reads when they throw one. Which they will at some point. But the only explanation for now is they aren't really reads and the coaches don't care. They must figure when they need them all this will make the read work that much better. 

Even still, there weren't that many plays that looked like they even had fake reads built in. Fewer than in 2019 it seems.

Which then makes one wonder why you brought in an RPO wizard and then convinced him not to run RPOs. Mgoblog should buy Gattis' video and see if it explains why you would build and package RPOs and then not use them?

https://www.championshipproductions.com/cgi-bin/champ/p/Football/Michig…

Watching From Afar

September 8th, 2021 at 3:57 PM ^

That goal line play your referencing was even more annoying when I watched it a 2nd time. WMU has 8 guys in the box (have to, it's the goal line) and all the standing LBs/S are walking towards the LoS on the snap (Michigan's snap mechanism annoys me). Michigan also has 8 guys in the box if you count Cade. So, you have to find the numbers advantage.

WMU has 3 guys head up on the LT or outside of him, so they run away from that side kind of, but more just up the middle/RG, which is still ok. But, no one blocks the 2 most outside guys. Schoonmaker is assigned to cross the entire formation and knock the furthest DE out to keep the hole from collapsing. Schoonmaker isn't going to cross 5 horizontal yards from a 2 or 3 point stance with bodies flying around as quickly as the DE can cover 3 yards with a head start and no one to slow him down. Add in the mesh point, which just slows the exchange down, and you get 1-2 guys catching Haskins from behind before he has a chance to get going. Plus, the DT with his hand in the dirt got skinny and shot the gap on the backside and caused a bigger clog at the POA.

Point being, they had the numbers advantage on the offense's right side. Even if that DT doesn't shoot the gap, they don't run to the offense's right enough to get away from the crashing defenders, nor do they try to slow any of them down. What's the role for the LT who just blocks down with the LG? He creates a bit of a wall on the left side, but that's only helpful for a quarter of a second and doesn't address the biggest problem.

In the old Harbaugh offenses, they go under center and run full speed at the right side of the line (hopefully a gap or 2 further outside) and that DE probably doesn't have enough time to close the gap. If he does, he has Haskins running almost full speed already so good luck taking that in the teeth. Or they pull an interior OL instead of a TE from the other side of the formation (or Ben Mason).

That's where I'm at. Either run the actual read option, or get downhill. The slow motion mesh point and pitter patter in the backfield is cumbersome and gaps collapse quickly.

Gohokego

September 8th, 2021 at 2:58 PM ^

No need to run Cade against western. Last time he ran he separated his shoulder against Penn st. 

This is the first time where if the starter goes down I'm not dreading who's coming in.  Cade is a gamer and when the competition goes up I think/hope he'll pull it a few times.  Even when you pull it you can get down before you need to take a hit.  Just showing it will open up the middle for the rb's. 

 

MGlobules

September 8th, 2021 at 3:06 PM ^

Hey, I've got an idea: How about, instead of wondering about/speculating about/fulminating about why we don't run the quarterback for FOUR YEARS RUNNING we ASK? I mean, isn't that what the press is for? Why we R the press? Fifth estate kinda thang? This constant issue boggles my mind. 

PopeLando

September 8th, 2021 at 4:00 PM ^

The lack of reads is a problem. I remember that part of Shea's Infinite Regression (TM) was attributed to his complete inability/refusal to read a defense.

First the coaches took away half the field. Then the whole field. By the end of 2019 it looked like Shea was 50% "I don't know what I'm looking at" and 50% "fuck it I'm throwing the post no matter what." Dude was still a sniper when he knew where the ball should go, but since he wasn't reading anyone...it didn't happen very often.

My theory is that Harbaugh's lizard brain thinks that taking away reads is an auto-win. IIRC (and I might not RC), when Kaep started struggling Harbaugh simplified the offense, and I think I remember that sight adjustments - a basic, basic strategy which is a blitz-beater - were one of the first things to go.

I don't get it. Scheming to make someone always wrong is not a new concept.

Watching From Afar

September 8th, 2021 at 5:20 PM ^

The lack of reads is a problem. I remember that part of Shea's Infinite Regression (TM) was attributed to his complete inability/refusal to read a defense.

If 1 thing has borne out in my mind over the last 3 seasons, it's that it wasn't a Patterson problem (though he had many). Their foundational approach to offense does not use RPOs or ROs. They are specific play calls. Use whatever terminology you'd like, but 1 play is shotgun - HB dive/P&P/whatever. The QB "reads" the DE but it's just a hand off. Then they'll call shotgun - arc keeper and the QB is supposed to keep no matter what. Or they actually do call a read option in that one instance when the QB happens to keep.

Regardless, when the call a run play, the QB's default is not, "ok, I'm going to read the end." The default is just give it even if no end exists. The defense could run out 10 guys, missing the DE to read, and the QBs would still give.

It's not that Milton couldn't do it. We saw him do it (or something that resulted in him keeping on a mesh point) against Minnesota and then all of a sudden it was gone. We saw Patterson run probably 5 RPOs against MSU in 2019 and cut them to shreds. Then it just stopped being ran.

JHumich

September 8th, 2021 at 4:00 PM ^

SO happy to have a UFR! Thanks for stepping in, Seth. All the best to Brian. Lots of things make this blog unique and great, but UFR is one of those things that give it separation from everything else.

abertain

September 8th, 2021 at 4:02 PM ^

I’m less bothered by not running the QB than I am by the aversion to RPO as a staple. Cade ran a ton of RPO against Rutgers last year. Ie, it’s not a practice issue. They just don’t seem to see it as a core or even regular part of the offense. 
When Saban started to complain about RPO’s four or five years ago that was a good sign yiu should incorporate them ASAP. Michigan didn’t. Here we are. Love the team and the win!!

ERdocLSA2004

September 8th, 2021 at 4:10 PM ^

Michigan’s coaches have convinced themselves that it’s better to have their starters make fake reads than actual reads. This layman with a computer thinks this makes Michigan worse at football.
 

+1000.  The only argument against this is that Michigan’s coaches also might be really bad at coaching actual reads.  They may have come to this realization like the rest of us have.

ajchien

September 8th, 2021 at 4:22 PM ^

I have a question regarding the QB option run game. When deciding whether it’s a correct decision to pull/give … are you analyzing the actions of the DE only, or are you taking into account the LB action (scrape exchange?)

I wonder if the use of the QB option runs as a play is made pre game or in game. I got to believe some of it is predicated to pre game personnel matchups. I’d probably not use the QB run if I had Tom Brady running vs Aiden Hutchinson and Josh Ross. I’d probably give Denard Robinson the green light if he was matched up against those two no matter what defense was run. On the other hand, if the defense decides to consistently crash the DE without a LB replacing the edge then it might be an in game decision to allow the QB pull no matter who the QB is. 
 

I also wonder how much the Don Brown effect is still with us. Brown’s defense really snuffed out the read option, often times by switching assignments to make the QB read the wrong defender. Sometimes practicing against that a lot makes you reluctant to use it in a game. 

Hail to the Vi…

September 8th, 2021 at 4:39 PM ^

*approaches dead horse* >> *starts kicking*

I watched Bell's one handed snag about 5-6 times in a row, and man.. that OPI call literally (read: figuratively) feels like a a crime against humanity. I just don't understand how a person paid, and supposedly trained to officiate a P5 football game can look at that play and deduce that offensive pass interference is the only correct call to be made. 

Bell beats his man off the line, the corner knows he's beat and gives a quick tug at Bell's jersey to attempt to get back in position, Bell hand checks to regain his balance, and the two exchange a few handchecks until Bell reaches his right hand out to snag the ball out of the air as he's running out of bounds... every football game I've ever watched has some version of this exchange between a receiver/corner. Sometimes officials let them play, sometimes they call DPI for the initial reach from a beat corner. I have NEVER seen that translated into an OPI, nor should it.

All I can figure is that O'Neill's crew are employed by the conference to serve as OSU slappies and troll the shit out everybody else in the league, or they're a collection of quidditch officials trying their damnedest to fill in as football officials while the league backfills for openings.

Alright, I'll finally move on; that play reminded me that occasionally, watching football can spike one's blood pressure.

yossarians tree

September 8th, 2021 at 6:04 PM ^

I'd like to see them get the ball to Sainristil more. I know this game was about crushing Western's soul on the ground and mission accomplished, but Sainristil deserves more touches just based on his tremendous blocking. They tried to get him on a bubble but the DB blew it up. Mikey is really, really fast. On the Henning TD Sainristil was running along and then kicked in another gear to catch up to make another block. 

And oh my, Wilson twice just streaking alone downfield and they did not see him. They have to get some designed deep balls to this guy, especially with Bell out now.