I brought you here, for I am Spartacus. [Marc-Grégor Campredon]

Upon Further Review 2021: Offense vs Northwestern Comment Count

Seth October 27th, 2021 at 9:00 AM

Formation Notes: Northwestern kept their safeties down all day so the “Hi” metric is doing more work than normal. I started giving safeties +0.5 in the box if they got within 8 yards within a second after the snap, and +1 in the box if they got closer than that.

Michigan had a formation where the slot receiver and tight end switched spots. When they did this I denoted it with “Flip” then the position headers, so this is Gun YH Flip.

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Substitution Notes: Filiaga (RG) and Barnhart (LG) went all day for injured Keegan and Zinter. Just one snap for McCarthy until Michigan had a comfortable lead in the second half. Roman Wilson returned but his snaps were mostly soaked up by the debut of Andrel Anthony as a rotation guy, so by snap count the current order is Johnson, Baldwin, Sainristil, Henning, Anthony, Wilson. Hibner came in before Seltzer when they decided they were up enough to save the mileage on All, and Edwards got a drive until he fumbled it.

[After THE JUMP: This was a long one, and I charted them all since they had relevant starters and JJ in late]

Ln Dn Ds OForm DPack Front Hi Type Box Play Player Yards EPA
M2 1st 10 Gun Covered 4-3-4 4-3 Over 1 Run 8 ZR Belly Give Haskins 2 -0.11
Normally I would give a read minus because there's no thought in this OLB's mind that it's going to be a keep, but given the danger of a safety here I get why not. Filiaga(+1) does most of the work of the DT double himself, Schoonmaker(-1) can't get anything on the DE, and Honigford(-1) gets shoved way back so there's help coming from there too.
M4 2nd 8 Gun Y-Flex 4-3-4 4-3 Even 2 Run 6.5 Speed Option Corum 2 -0.15
RPS-2 since NW is overplaying the edge. McNamara(read+) does at least get the extra guy to commit, Corum(+2) should be dead but cuts inside and gets a couple by literally spraining this guy's ankle.
M6 3rd 6 Gun Y-Flex 4-2-5 Nk Even 2 Pass 5.5 Dig Johnson 6 0.51
RPS+1 as this plays on a previous tendency to only read one side. NW overloads frontside coverage with 5 vs 3 and McNamara comes backside to the well-run dig by CJ(route+). CA+, 3, Prot 1/1, McNamara+1)
M12 1st 10 Gun YH Flip 4-2-5 4-3 Ovr 1 Run 7 End-Around Henning 5 0.07
NW is overplaying the edges so they have an extra safety hawing down on this. Schoonmaker(+1) escorts the CB out of the way and Henning(+1) turns the corner on the safety and drags him for a couple to get a solid gain anyways. RPS-1.
M17 2nd 5 Gun Bunch Tight 4-3-4 4-3 Even 2 Pass 7.5 Bubble Johnson 12 0.88
Most of this play is All(+2) ejecting the grabby CB. CJ(+0.5) turned on the jets to get around the SAM. (CA, screen, prot n/a)
M29 1st 10 Gun Ace 4-3-4 4-3 Over 2 Run 7.5 Counter Trey Read Haskins 3 -0.34
NW blitzing at this but DE sets up to contain so McNamara(+1, read+) gives correctly. Stueber has no angle on one LB (RPS-1), and Barnhart(-1) goes to kick the DE instead of the DT, whom All(+0.5) passes up to get the LB in the hole. The DT gets Haskins down.
M32 2nd 7 Gun Trips 4-2-5 Nk Over 1 Pass 7 Sack McNamara -10 -1.18
Protection breakdown as Filiaga(-2) slides all the way out on an LB while letting the safety who started very low blitz down the hash. Cade is focused on the flare for a long time, doesn't see the S or Henning wide open because of it. I know Brian disagrees but (BR, n/a, Prot 1/3, McNamara-2)
M22 3rd 17 Gun Wk 3-1-7 Prevent 4 Pass 4 Dumpoff Corum 6 0.03
Give up and punt. M has one route anywhere close to the sticks and doesn't wait for him to clear the CB before dumping it to Corum who adds six yard of field positioning. (TA, 3, Prot 0/0)
Drive Notes: Punt. 0-0. 9 min 1st Q.
Ln Dn Ds OForm DPack Front Hi Type Box Play Player Yards EPA
M26 1st 10 Pistol FB 3w 4-2-5 4-3 Even 1 RPO 7.5 Split Flow Counter All 7 0.62
The play I hate. McNamara(RPO+) makes the correct read but the SAM is shooting at it (RPS-1) but takes an awful angle and All(+1) gets around him for a decent gain. CJ(+0.5) and Henning(+0.5) have their DBs controlled. (CA(screen), 3, Prot n/a)
M33 2nd 3 Pistol Ace 4-3-4 4-3 Over 2 Run 7 Split Duo Haskins 14 1.29
New take on SZ where they double the DT and catch a LB outside and a safety barreling down into the gap (RPS-2). Vastardis(+2) ejects a DT who wants to squeeze this gap, and Haskins(+2) whirls through that guy like George Jewett.
M47 1st 10 Gun Twins 4-3-4 4-3 Over 2 Play-Action 6.5 PA Fade Sainristil Inc -1.15
Just two guys in a route and PA takes care of all but a safety who's in good coverage. I think Sainristil(route-) misjudged it and slowed when his only chance is to try to keep running. I also think CJ was wide, wide open for a first down. (BR, 1, Prot 1/1, McNamara-2)
M47 2nd 10 Pistol Wk 4-3-4 4-3 Over 2 Pass 7 Post Johnson Inc -0.96
This one was bad. Line picks up a six-man pressure, CJ has all the room and Cade puts it barely inside the seam where CJ has to break it up instead. (INx, 0, Prot 3/3, McNamara-2)
M47 3rd 10 Gun Trips 4-2-5 Nk Over 2 Pass 6 Slot Out Sainristil 6 0.23
Sort of a dumpoff but throw gives Sainristil some room to slip a tackle. He doesn't. (CA-, 3, Prot 1/1, McNamara+0.5)
Drive Notes: Punt. 0-0. 5 min 1st Q. At least they took a shot.
Ln Dn Ds OForm DPack Front Hi Type Box Play Player Yards EPA
M21 1st 10 Gun 2TE 4-3-4 4-3 Even 2 Run 7 Bash Corum 1 -0.49
Bash is a read play that flips the read so the QB is the dive and the RB is the outside threat, but NW is guarding the edge. McNamara(-1,read-) gives when the DE sets up well outside. Hayes(-1) got dodged by a LB so the unblocked edge and that guy combine to TFL. RPS-1 they were looking for this outside as well.
M22 2nd 9 Pistol Ac3e 4-3-4 4-3 Under 2 Run 7 Split Duo Corum 4 -0.06
Hayes(-0.5) gets bent back and so does Vastardis(-0.5) to squeeze shut the gap that Corum can only wriggle through until the safety gets under him.
M26 3rd 5 Gun Twins 4-3-4 4-3 Over 2 Pass 7 TE Snag All 7 1.45
All sits between zones after he clears the ref and twists forward. (CA, 3, Prot 1/1, McNamara+1)
M33 1st 10 Pistol Heavy F Flex 4-3-4 4-3 Over 2 Run 7 Split Duo Haskins 19 1.74
This is the rugby melee. Double from Stueber(-0.5) and Filiaga(-0.5) can't get movement, so Haskins(+2) meets an unblocked LB at 2 yards, keeps going, and going, and going, and going, and going, with most of the push then pull coming from Honigford(+2), who deserves most of the credit here but Vastardis(+0.5) was a secondary engine.
O48 1st 10 Offset Ace 4-3-4 4-3 Over 2 Run 7 Counter Trey Haskins 5 0.10
Barnhart(-1) doesn't kick or turn but just kind of impacts the DT, and Schoonmaker(+1) has a job to get him gapped and get around on the MLB. Stueber(-1) can't get down to the WLB but Haskins(+1) arms his way past them all.
O43 2nd 5 Gun Twins Tight 4-3-4 4-3 Under 1 Run 7.5 Jet Sweep Henning 14 0.80
Vastardis(+2) got around an LB, Hayes(+0.5) and Corum(+0.5) got effective kicks, but the SAM is gunning for this and Filiaga (RPS-1) has no shot to pick him off. Henning(+2) breaks that guy's tackle as the kicks are fighting back, then dances for 10 more and does a flip on the sideline.
O29 1st 10 Gun Y-Flex Bunch 4-3-4 Nk Over 2 Pass 5.5 Dumpoff Corum 6 0.21
Drop a DE and bring the SAM, picked up but Hayes(-1) gets caught not planted on a power rush so no more waiting. (CA, 3, Prot 0/1, Hayes-1, McNamara+1)
O23 2nd 4 Pistol FB Twins Covered 4-3-4 4-3 Even 1 Run 8 Power Corum 2 -0.30
All(+1) gets a solid kick but Barnhart(-1) hits the same guy Honigford(-1) is losing and the unblocked MLB sticks.
O21 3rd 2 Offset Y Covered 4-3-4 4-3 Even 1 Run 8 Dive Haskins 3 0.29
Z covers the Y so there are two WRs on the backside in the backfield. Vastardis(-1) whiffed on the LB he's releasing to, Haskins(+1) runs through him.
O18 1st 10 Gun 2TE 4-3-4 4-3 Under 2 Pass 7 Fade Johnson Inc -0.35
Put exactly where it needs to be, and the CB has to maul CJ to prevent a TD. Fitzgerald is already kicking sand until he realizes the refs-2 were the only ppl in the building who weren't expecting a flag.
O18 2nd 10 Pistol Bone 4-3-4 4-3 Even 1 Run 8 End-Around Johnson 6 0.12
Schoonmaker(-1) can't control the SAM blitzing and gets away with a little grab as CJ(+1) edges the unblocked DE and Schoonmaker's LB. Barnhart(-1) can't get to the MLB then is looking back and lets a safety charge in unmolested. All(+2) removed grabby CB so one more block springs this all the way.
O12 3rd 4 Gun Trips Covered 4-2-5 4-3 Split 1 Run 8 F Insert Corum 11 1.88
Run right into the gap they invited with the unblocked safety that Corum(+3) hops around all Hart-like, then jukes the next safety and gets down to the vulture zone.
O1 1st Goal Pistol Trips Tight Covered 4-2-5 Goal Line NA Run 10 Dive Corum 1 0.89
Tempo(28) to keep the same personnel on the field. NW slanted and put guys on the ground in the backfield but Corum(+1) goes up and over.
Drive Notes: Touchdown. 7-0. 12 min 2nd Q. McCarthy was just eye-candy.
Ln Dn Ds OForm DPack Front Hi Type Box Play Player Yards EPA
M43 1st 10 Pistol Trips Covered 4-2-5 4-3 Over 1 Play-Action 7 PA TE Seam Schoonmaker Inc -1.16
Schoonmaker is breaking wide open with all the space on that side of the field, Cade puts it on the numbers where he has to fight the CB. Hater tanks are full now. (INx, 1, Prot 2/2, McNamara-2)
M43 2nd 10 Offset Y-flex Bunch 4-2-5 4-3 Even 2 Pass 7 Flash Screen Wilson 4 -0.15
All(+2) wipes out one defender, WLB is flying out there though. RPS-1. (CA, screen, prot n/a)
M47 3rd 6 Gun Str F-Flex 4-2-5 Nk Split 2 Pass 6 RB Flare Corum 6 2.16
Corum(-1) got upfield and can get the 1st but puts on the brakes, then regrets it and gives himself up. Refs give him forward momentum. (CA, 3, Prot 1/1, McNamara+1)
O47 1st 10 Offset Str 4-2-5 Nk Under 1 Penalty 6 False Start Vastardis -5 -1.12
Line goes, Vastardis(-1) does not. Would have been a PA off Counter Trey that got CJ open under soft coverage for 10 and maybe lots more.
M48 1st 15 Offset Wk 4-2-5 Nk Even 2 RPO 6 Bubble/F Insert Wilson 0 -1.04
Orbit motion to a bubble. Henning(-2) whiffs his block and that safety makes the tackle at the LOS. (CA, screen, prot n/a)
M48 2nd 15 Offset Wk F-Flex 4-2-5 Nk Over 2 Pass 6.5 Scramble McNamara 4 -0.15
Drop a DE and blitz and Stueber notices it and they pick it up. Cade can step up and hit Sainristil on the deep cross but runs for a minimal gain instead. (TA, n/a, Prot 2/2, McNamara-1)
O48 3rd 11 Gun Wk 4-2-5 Nk Wide 1 Pass 8 Deep Out Johnson 12 2.91
CJ(route+) cuts this off sharply and the bailing CB is dead. Good read by Cade and ball is out before CJ makes his move, though there's a half a beat as it sails out there that Carr-era howitzers find offensive. (DO, 3, Prot 2/2, McNamara+2)
O36 1st 10 Gun 2TE 4-3-4 4-3 Under 1 Run 7.5 F Insert Haskins 3 -0.23
I think this is on Schoonmaker(-2) who tried to intercept a LB that Vastardis(+1) picked up. The SS is replacing (RPS-1) and he and the free MLB that Schoonmaker couldn't get to when he got stuck bring down the back.
O33 2nd 7 Pistol FB Twins 4-3-4 4-3 Over 2 RPO 7 Read Counter GT/Bubble Edwards 6 0.24
This is meant to hit big. McNamara(+1, read+) gets the DE to form up. Barnhart(-1) has a kickout doubling Schoonmaker way wide (RPS+1) and doesn't get much of him. He's being replaced by an LB Hayes(+1) shoves by with just enough space to scoot inside the DE they read but no more. Stueber(+1) got down to an LB so this had potential.
O27 3rd 1 Pistol Heavy Ace 4-3-4 4-3 Even 2 RPO 7 F Lead Haskins 6 0.37
They line up All as a Z receiver then turn him into a lead blocker while kicking the edge, and reading the MLB but McCarthy(-1, RPO-1) lets this LB step down without a throw. Fortunately Hayes(+2) and Barnhart(+1) violently ousted the DT and picked off the MLB in the process so Haskins has a big cutback lane, assisted by Honigford(+0.5) burying a DE who was trying to shoot inside him.
O21 1st 10 Offset Bunch 2TE 4-3-4 4-3 Under 2 RPO 7 Stretch/Bubble Haskins 5 0.07
Some #SpeedinSpace, sorta. Bunch the formation and read if the SAM goes with the bubble. He does McNamara(+1, RPO+) and that freezes the DE on a false zone read (RPS+1). Zone blocks aren't well-practiced however. Honigford(-2) is sealing the guy that Vastardis(+1) kicks instead of going after a free CB, and Barnhart(-0.5) leaves his combo early to get an LB but this works out as Hayes(+0.5) gets a shoulder and Haskins(+1) can shrug off an arm tackle from that guy. He then gets submarined by the CB Honigford ignored and the unblocked DE's pursuit. Trying not to be too mad at Honigford because Haskins vs a safety is a TD.
O16 2nd 5 Pistol FB Twins 4-3-4 4-3 Even 2 Run 7 Dbl Split Zone Corum 2 -0.23
It's basically counter with a WR and a TE—same play they started the Washington game—but they're trying to run it to backside. NW crashes the DE and Schoonmaker(-1) doesn't turn him so Corum is trapped inside with an LB in a fairly big gap thanks to a good kick from Barnhart(+1) on the backside DE. LB has a 50/50 shot to guess which way Corum is going and guesses correctly.
O14 3rd 3 Pistol Ace Heavy 4-3-4 4-3 Over 1 Run 7.5 Split Zone Haskins 6 0.47
NW's doing that same blitz again (replay) and it delivers an LB to the backfield that Barnhart(-2) doesn't pick up, and Haskins(+2) runs through. All(+1) has a good kick to dislodge the DE they were pinching, Hayes(+2) donkeyed a DE, Honigford(+0.5) sealed a S, free SAM slips in to stop this nonsense and gets dragged a yard into an LB that Vastardis(-0.5) harassed but couldn't get around and Barnhart didn't bother with. Miss you Keegan.
O8 1st Goal Pistol Ace Heavy 4-3-4 4-3 Under 2 Run 7 Split Zone Haskins 4 -0.01
Same play. Hayes(+1) again ejects this DT, All(+1) digs out a crashing DE, Barnhart(-1) gets nobody which might induce Haskins(-1) to barrel into the SAM and SS who are stacked outside instead of cutting behind a dig out by Honigford(+0.5). Don't often see him miss a lane inside.
O4 2nd Goal Gun Heavy 4-4-3 Goal Line NA Run 9 End-Around Henning 1 -0.29
Getting cute and when NW is overdefending the edges, with 4 guys for two blockers: RPS-3. Haskins(+2) makes room by blasting an LB trying to shoot at this to the ground but there's still two more guys even after the unblocked DE was run by.
O3 3rd Goal Pistol Ace 4-4-3 Goal Line NA RPO 9 Split Flow Counter All 1 -0.23
RPS-2 as NW sends their SAM to chip All on his way across, which blows up the play because it's all about the TE beating a LB to the edge.
Drive Notes: FG(20). 10-0. <3 mins 2nd Q. Hate the playcalling, don't like the field goal. Next drive starts with 2:16 and two timeouts.
Ln Dn Ds OForm DPack Front Hi Type Box Play Player Yards EPA
M23 1st 10 Gun Str 4-2-5 Nk Under 2 Run 6 Counter Trey Corum 20 1.75
I guess RPS+1 since NW not expecting a power run to start this drive and catch NW in a trap 2 coverage that removes a safety and sends a CB uselessly. Hayes(+2) donkeys the DE away, Filiaga(+0.5) erases the edge, Barnhart(+1) puts an LB outside, and Corum(+1) dashes past another who was caught behind that.
M43 1st 10 Gun Str 4-2-5 Nk Even 1 RPO 6 F Insert/Slant Corum 7 0.68
McNamara(-1, RPO-) reads the nickel who steps inside but maybe not enough—want Henning to run that route deeper instead of trying to block that guy. Filiaga(+1) and Vastardis(+1) double a DT away and get to the LB level and Schoonmaker(+0.5) gets an effective insert block so this is going to the safety if the nickel stays outside.
50 2nd 3 Offset Str 4-2-5 Nk Under 2 Run 6 Counter Trey Corum 4 0.24
Vastardis(-0.5) got rocked back which doesn't affect the pull. Filiaga(+0.5) correctly turns the DE diving inside but leaves his butt in the way of Schoonmaker(-2), who gets hung up on this when he's supposed to arc around that when he sees the DE coming in. That wipes out a lead blocker so Corum(+1) hops over Filiaga to cut inside the waiting LB and get a clock-stopping first down.
O46 1st 10 Gun Wk 4-2-5 Nk Even 2 Pass 6 TE Out Schoonmaker 10 0.53
Tempo(30) gets NW not yet set (why is NW not set on a 2-minute drill?) so there's barely any pass rush and their safety is playing WAY high so Schoonmaker can turn this up to the marker. Easy yards. (CA, 3, Prot 1/1, McNamara+1, RPS+2)
O36 1st 10 Gun Empty 4-2-5 Nk Even 2 Pass 5 Z Out Baldwin Inc -0.72
Running three routes across the middle vs a three-man rush and Cov2 (RPS-2). Cade has time to vamp but sees a CB comes up to thunk Baldwin(route-) at 6 yards past LOS and tries to draw a flag as Baldwin goes to the ground. They don't get one because contact occurred before the pass (there's no chuck rule in CFB). (TA, 0, Prot 1/1)
O36 2nd 10 Gun Str 4-2-5 Nk Under 2 RPO 6 Counter Trey/Slants Corum 6 0.24
This time the Nk stays away when McNamara(+1, RPO+) reads him but that's because NW is sick of getting hit by this and blitzes the puller's gap, crashes the backside DE, and slants into the intended gap so RPS-2. Barnhart(-1) turns back instead of going for the other LB. Stueber(+1) is supposed to kick that backside guy but sees the blitz and decides that's the more dangerous option, crushing him inside so can Corum(+2) might have a chance to slip by the crashing DE. He does but gets tripped and meets the safety who was late replacing the blitzer. A lot of this is on bad NW defenders but this was really close to turning a big defensive RPS victory into a huge offensive play.
O30 3rd 4 Gun Wk 4-2-5 Nk Under 1 Pass 7 TE Out All 3 -0.30
Tempo(34) and I think Cade is a titch late to throw this after All's break outside, and All can't turn and stretch to the marker until after he's run OOB. Wrong fans boo good spot. (MA, 3, Prot 1/1, McNamara-0.5)
O27 4th 1 Offset Bone 4-2-5 Goal Line 1 Run 9 Iso Haskins 2 1.09
Stalemate at the LOS and Haskins(+1) dives over it, ball first, then crucially doesn't fumble as he's Battle of the Bastards'd atop the melee for a few seconds. After the play Adebawore knocks the ball out of Haskins's hand as he tries to hand it to the ref and Bergin sticks his junk in HH's face, so let's try to enjoy the rest of this.
O25 1st 10 Gun Wk 4-2-5 Nk Wide 2 Pass 6.5 TE Out All 16 0.28
Junk boy blows this as he's lazy to get out on this when NW is doubling Baldwin. All(+1) turns it up the sideline and stiffarms Bergin for extra.
O9 1st Goal Pistol FB Demi 4-2-5 4-4 Over 1 RPO 9 Split Flow Counter Schoonmaker 3 -0.10
RPS+1 I guess since NW overplays the run and puts no pressure on Cade. Schoonmaker(-1) is not All and can't shake a safety in space. (CA, screen, prot n/a)
O6 2nd Goal Offset Wk 4-2-5 4-4 Under NA Run 8 Split Zone Corum 3 -0.10
RPS-1 as they slant against this. Schoonmaker(-0.5) can't dig out a pinching DE and Hayes can't get an LB because of the slant but Barnhart(+1) wedges out a small crease for Corum to duck for some yards.
O3 3rd Goal Offset Wk 4-2-5 Nk Even NA Pass 8 Swing Sainristil 1 -4.40
This should have been a wheel. Baldwin(-2) misses a block on the safety he's supposed to pick (legally since pass is behind the LOS) but it's also playing right into their hands (RPS-1) to make the WR gear down to collect the pass instead of just putting it where he can run under it. Anyway it's about to be 4th and 2 again when Sainristil(-3) fumbles.
Drive Notes: Fumble. 10-7. 17 seconds 2nd Q. At least we didn't show MSU any of our good redzone ideas amirite?
Ln Dn Ds OForm DPack Front Hi Type Box Play Player Yards EPA
M26 1st 10 Pistol Ace Covered 4-3-4 4-3 Over 2 Run 7.5 ZR F Insert Haskins 1 -0.61
M fans are bitter about how the last half ended so let's start this one with our Let's Burn a Down on Fire play. Fake read or not I chart so McNamara(-2, read-) turns down a keep on a crashing DE. Hayes(-1, RPS-1) loses the DT who started and slanted inside him so All(-1) has to use up his lead block on that and still can't stop him from squeezing in. Filiaga(+1) ran the other DT upfield, but Stueber(-1) released into nobody and doesn't come back for the unblocked LB that All never got to. Good block by Vastardis(+1) and an extended Honigford(+1) kickout while getting an extended hands to the face meant there was a big gap if there isn't a guy immediately in the RB's legs from our fake reads.
M27 2nd 9 Offset Stacks 4-2-5 Nk Even 2 RPO 6 IZ/Flash Screen Haskins 3 -0.19
SAM seems to be the guy being read but he's obviously entering the box at the mesh and McNamara(-1, RPO-1) gives. Barnhart(-1) can't get around the guy Vastardis(+0.5) set up for him before releasing to the MLB so this goes down in a heap. A 3-yard heap because of Haskins(+0.5) naturally.
M30 3rd 6 Offset Str F-Flex 4-2-5 Nk Under 1 Pass 7 Slot Fade Sainristil Inc(Pen+10) 2.05
Sainristil(route+) runs by the nickel, who starts grabbing and continues to do so until the ball arrives, yanking him down by the wrist as he goes up for the pass. Sideline judge is willing to let all of this go, but another ref throws a holding flag, which is 10 yards instead of 15, so still refs-1 and also yeesh this sideline judge. (CA, 1, Prot 1/1, McNamara+1)
M40 1st 10 Pistol Ace 4-3-4 4-3 Under 2 Run 7 Dbl Split Zone Haskins 0 -1.12
Safeties rolled to 8 yards before the snap and 6/7 at the mesh point. Doesn't matter since Barnhart(-2) is rocked back at the snap so Haskins can't access the frontside. Backside is overloaded (RPS-1) so there's nowhere to go.
M40 2nd 10 Offset Str 4-2-5 Nk Even 2 Run 6 Counter Trey Corum 5 0.07
We are good at this. Barnhart(+1) turns a crashing DE inside, Schoonmaker(+1) kicks the SAM who replaced, Stueber(-1) was a little late getting down to the MLB but Corum(+0.5) stiffs that guy and hops for a few extra.
M45 3rd 5 Gun Wk F-Flex 4-2-5 Nk Over 1 Run 6.5 Arc Read Give Corum 24 2.97
We've got a new record for how much a DE can crash to prove McNamara(-1, read-) will give. This guy comes so hard that Schoonmaker(+1) turns him inside without trying to, but also with enough force to keep the backfield clean. Also Barnhart(-1) is getting rocked backwards. Corum(+3) bounces out into the sprawling acres they were begging Cade to take while Hayes(+1) gets down to a safety. They are rolling down a safety but Corum jukes that guy down. Another safety steps up, and he dives at air as well. I am capping this at +3 because it's not a touchdown but yes, the shield is well overdue.
O31 1st 10 Gun Wk X tight 4-2-5 Nk Under 2 Pass 6 Fly Johnson Inc(Pen+15) 0.27
Tempo(25) and catch NW in tight Cov3. Grabby CB is beat by CJ(route+), grabs a wad of jersey, and prays the stripes will bail him out. Side judge almost doesn't but back judge throws his and then side guy takes his out. Dude. We don't chart these but the throw looked good enough that Klatt says so, so I'll give Cade his due in the points. (Not charted, 0, Prot 1/1, McNamara+1)
O16 1st 10 Gun 2TE 4-3-4 4-3 Over 2 Run 7 ZR Buck CG Corum 11 0.68
Reminder that "Buck" = "Pin & Pull" and we're still good at this but it helps that NW was slanting backside and that makes for an easy give read for McNamara(+1, read+). All(+1) and Honigford(+0.5) combo the DE to the SAM who gets ridden outside then sealed: Dog 1 is open. A safety goes outside of him and Vastardis(+1) ejects him. Barnhart(-1) got playside of the DT and an LB who shot inside of Hayes(-1) on a blitz but Barnhart doesn't seal the LB for some reason. He'll factor as Corum(+2) sets up the last LB for Filiaga(+0.5) to harass, and then chaser gets a dive at his legs and he runs through Filiaga's diving LB and Vastardis's now-recovered safety to get the 1st down.
O5 1st Goal Pistol Trips Tight Covered 4-3-4 Goal Line NA Run 11 Dive Corum 5 1.83
Tempo(28). NWern's LBs are focused on the side with all the TEs and WRs (RPS+2) so Vastardis(+1) kicks and seals a DT, Barnhart(+1) seals all the LBs on the inside, Filiaga(+0.5) locks a CB who wants no part of this and Corum(+1) scoots in before a safety can get there to make it interesting.
Drive Notes: Touchdown. 17-7. 11 min 3rd Q. The XP hangs in the netting. Fitzgerald doesn't like his headset.
Ln Dn Ds OForm DPack Front Hi Type Box Play Player Yards EPA
M21 1st 10 Offset 2TE 4-3-4 4-3 Over 2 Pass 7 Flood Mid All Inc -0.59
The almost INT and it's because a DE who came high to chip Haskins out of the backfield then shoved in Vastardis(-1) and got his hand on McNamara's arm during its follow-through. All(+2) has to come back to prevent a CB playing deep off Wilson from picking it off. If accurate this guy still had a chance but had 10 yards to close on Wilson and Haskins was breaking open, so this is still a (BR, 1, Prot 1/1, McNamara-2)
M21 2nd 10 Pistol FB Demi 4-3-4 4-3 Over 2 Run 7.5 End-Around Anthony 6 0.14
NWern shoots a DE into this (RPS-3) which should end it but Anthony(+2) bends all the way around that guy and the LB who shot into the backfield. Loss prevented, there's still a lane from Sainristil(+2) blocking the SAM until he bumps into the DL pursuit and Baldwin(+1) running his CB upfield until that guy collides with the LB Anthony just turned. All(+1) got down to a safety so there's just the recovery from Sainristil's SAM to beat, but that guy runs it down. Better effort from Hayes(-1), who's a lineman I get it, would have sufficed.
M27 3rd 4 Gun Str F-Flex 4-2-5 Nk Under 1 Pass 6 Hitch Baldwin Inc -0.35
Cade sees a CB draped all over Baldwin and throws it at him expecting the obvious flag, which never comes. Refs-2...same guy. (CA, 1, Prot 1/1, McNamara+1)
Drive Notes: Punt. 17-7. 7 min 3rd Q. Next drive starts on the NW 24 after the blocked punt.
Ln Dn Ds OForm DPack Front Hi Type Box Play Player Yards EPA
O24 1st 10 Gun 2TE Covered 4-3-4 4-3 Under 2 Run 7 ZR Buck CG Corum 9 0.64
The DE forms up at this so give is the read and McNamara(+1, read+1) is all too happy to oblige. Hayes(-1) lets the DT he's blocking down get into the backfield but got enough to avoid a big minus (might not be true with a better DT). Honigford(+1) crushed his DE with help from Schoonmaker(+1) who moves on to kick out the MLB. Barnhart(+1) got a perfect kick on the OLB setting the edge, but Vastardis(-1) and Stueber(-1) can't seal a couple of overpursuing defenders. Corum(+1) has to turn back inside, goes around a safety, and drags the pursuit for a couple.
O15 2nd 1 Pistol FB Covered 4-3-4 4-3 Over 1 Run 8 Power Lead Haskins 2 -0.50
This becomes an accidental trap as Filiaga and Stueber(-2) let a DT in unblocked. You can tell whom I blame, but that's also because he stops instead of rolling with it. Barnhart(-1) also doesn't roll with it, kicking this guy but then letting him come around to tackle. Wish they just rolled with it because it's a good trap if they do.
O13 1st 10 Pistol FB Twins 4-3-4 4-3 Under 2 Run 7.5 Counter CF Haskins 13 2.49
My mood perks up considerably when they run power. Vastardis(+1) turns the crashy DE. Two LBs shoot up to the edge and All(+2) kicks the inside on so hard he hits the other. Stueber(+0.5) picks off the third LB. Filiaga(+1) removes the frontside DT. All this escorts Haskins(+1) the first ten yards and he drags what little remains of NWern's defense with him the rest of the way. Replay.
Drive Notes: Touchdown. 24-7. 4 min 3rd Q. Power. Power. Power. Power.
Ln Dn Ds OForm DPack Front Hi Type Box Play Player Yards EPA
M44 1st 10 Pistol Bone Covered 4-3-4 4-3 Even 2 Run 8 Arc Read Keeper McCarthy 23 1.47
McCarthy(+3, read+) enters and keeps as the DE overplays the RB, then weaves and dodges, breaking a tackle from Josephs then outrunning pursuit. All(+1) gets a good kick and Schoonmaker(+1) rides out an LB then seals him. Downfield blocks from Anthony(+1) and CJ(+1).
O33 1st 10 Gun Str 4-3-4 4-3 Even 2 Play-Action 7 PA Deep Out Johnson Inc -0.64
I think JJ takes an extra step or two instead of setting up after the PA. He's got CJ but wings it low and wide and uncatchable. (IN, 0, Prot n/a, McCarthy-2) McNamara reenters so JH can talk to JJ.
O33 2nd 10 Gun Str 4-3-4 4-3 Over 2 RPO 7 Hitch/Counter Trey Anthony 9(Pen-14) -0.91
SAM comes hard and McNamara(RPO+) pulls and guns to Anthony(-1) who's got the first then gives it up in a failed bid for YAC. Comes back because Barnhart(-1) and Hayes(-1) both were 4 yards downfield when the pass was thrown. It's close--like by an inch--and they never call this, but it's the correct call and they've been pushing it all game, though it didn't affect the play. (CA+, 3, Prot n/a, McNamara+1)
O38 2nd 15 Gun Wk 4-3-4 Nk Under 2 Run 6.5 QB Draw McCarthy 13 1.42
Filiaga(+1) escorts a DT way outside, Vastardis(+0.5) sells a fallback, and Haskins(+1) thunks the MLB. Barnhart(-1) can't get to an OLB that McCarthy(+1) whoops for a few extra, and takes some punishment for it. RPS+2.
O25 3rd 2 Pistol Heavy Covered 4-3-4 4-3 Under 2 Run 8 Split Zone Haskins -1 -0.92
They reinsert McNamara and run Split Zone. WTF! NW blitzes the backside CB and Hayes has to handle, which leaves Barnhart(+2) blocking two guys, and he pulls it off! Unfortunately on the frontside Honigford(-2) got shoved 2 yards deep by a slanting DE, and Haskins(-2) tripped over him in a way that made me momentarily terrified he hurt his ankle, and there were two more unblocked LBs out there because it's split zone and they're RPS-2'ing it. HH is fine, but M elects to kick instead of go.
Drive Notes: FG(44). 24-7. <1 min 3rd Q. For the record, the 3 points they got was less than the 3.0551 expected points this drive if they went for it. Next drive starts after the Turner pickoff.
Ln Dn Ds OForm DPack Front Hi Type Box Play Player Yards EPA
O15 1st 10 Pistol FB Twins Covered 4-3-4 4-3 Under 1 Run 8 Split Duo Haskins 6 0.18
Back to the split that goes frontside and it works again (RPS+1) as the LBs are shooting backside where they're already overloaded. Vastardis(+1) gets a LB as Filiaga(+0.5) has the DT handled and Barnhart(+0.5) got movement but not position on his DT. If either gets a full block (or a little hold) this might break loose to the sideline, but both can fight back and fall to trip up Haskins(+1) who hops through them into the last LB.
O9 2nd 4 Pistol FB Twins Covered 4-3-4 4-3 Over 1 Run 8 Buck CF Haskins 2 -0.22
I know the first guy is the first kick but I want Vastardis(+0.5) to go for the first of two edges who show here so the other can't get so far inside. All(-1) seems to think he's going to and comes around too late to turn the 2nd guy. Haskins(+1) stays on his feet but now the safety who was already in the box is up as well and he can only fight them all to stretch for 2 yards that are the difference between 3rd and 2 and 3rd and 4. RPS-2 since NWern was overplaying this edge and brought down both safeties. Hayes(+1) and Honigford(+1) had good blocks on the edge. Cutback was sorta open but not dinging that.
O7 3rd 2 Pistol FB Twins Covered 4-4-3 Goal Line NA RPO 9 Hitch-Slant/Split Zone Haskins 3 0.91
The read is only if they leave a guy wide open but McNamara(RPO+) since they're in m2m. All(+1) gets a thunkin kickout, Stueber(+0.5) and Honigford(+1) combo to the safety and make a mess the too-low LBs can't get around but Stueber's guy chucks him and shoulders Haskins(+2) who fights through that, stays on his feet, and gets the first, at which point Honigford's guy needs a teach tape perfect wrap-up to prevent more damage.
O4 1st Goal Pistol Bunch Covered 4-4-3 Goal Line NA Run 11 Dive Haskins 4 1.64
Tempo(31) and they line up in what I like to call a sea of gaps. Each NW guy hops one over, Vastardis(-1) can't prevent his from getting directly in the RB's path. Haskins(+2) jump cuts around this and the rest is gravy as Filiaga(+1) and Stueber(+1) all won the backside blocks, and Barnhart(-0.5) got just enough that his guy can only arrive in time to tackle as HH is scoring.
O4 2PC Goal Offset 2TE 4-4-3 Goal Line NA Run 10 Split Zone Haskins   -1.05
What is it with them and this play? At least nobody saw their real 2pt play. RPS-2 as NWern has a scrape on the backside and a slant into this. Stueber(-1) misses his block and that was the only hope of a crease. QB rollout was unchecked fwiw.
Drive Notes: Touchdown (missed 2pt). 33-7. 13 min 4th Q. RPS is getting turned off now.
Ln Dn Ds OForm DPack Front Hi Type Box Play Player Yards EPA
M32 1st 10 Pistol 2TE 4-3-4 4-3 Over 2 Run 8 Counter Trap Edwards 8 1.02
It's Couter Trey but they let a DT in the backfield on purpose this time. (RPS is off) Filiaga(+0.5) and Vastardis(+1) double the NT way out of the gap. Barnhart(+1) gives him a good wham, Stueber(-1) turns out the DE but lets him upfield and this wastes All(+1) who thunks pretty hard. Want Stueber to move on to the CB if that's going to happen. Hayes(-1) got bad-armed by his DE who fights through to be relevant. Edwards(+0.5) runs through Hayes's guy but now everyone's regrouped and he goes down.
M40 2nd 2 Offset 2TE 4-3-4 4-3 Under 2 Run 7 Buck GC Edwards 0 -1.31
Stueber(-1) is having a bad day but this is also a slant (RPS is off) that makes it hard for him to block down before the DT is in the backfield. There he causes all kinds of havoc, bending Edwards(+1) who escapes, but also ruining Vastardis's pull. Advanced power teams will flip the jobs here and leave a high kick for the second puller but Filiaga goes for him and Vastardis(-1) picks off Filiaga and blocks the gap so Edwards has to bend around that guy too. After all this bending a safety is there to run this out for no gain.
M40 3rd 2 Offset 2TE 4-3-4 4-3 Even 2 Run 7 F Insert Haskins 5 1.53
Honigford(+1) clonks the MLB, double from Vastardis(+0.5) and Barnhart(+0.5) does its job to make a lane and get to the LB, and Haskins(+1) no doubts it as he runs into the last LB and two safeties who know there's no passing going on here.
M45 1st 10 Pistol Bunch Tight 4-3-4 4-3 Over 2 Pass 8 Flare Screen Edwards 11 -5.35
I said RPS is off but they get NWern outmanned here. Solid blocks from CJ(+1) and Sainristil(+1) escort this 10 yards, at which point Edwards(-3) fumbles. On further review the ass chewing stands. (CA, Screen, Prot n/a)
Drive Notes: Fumble. 33-7. 10 min 4th Q. There's one more drive and the starters are in so I guess we're going to line #100 in this excel.
Ln Dn Ds OForm DPack Front Hi Type Box Play Player Yards EPA
M49 1st 10 Pistol FB 4-3-4 4-3 Under 2 Run 8 Counter Trey Edwards 3 -0.40
Safeties now rolled to 7 and 8 yards. Vastardis(-2) lets a DT come through who's harassing Edwards(+0.5) who's staying just outside of his grip as Filiaga(+1) turns the end and Hibner(+1) turns the next edge who shows. Those safeties who stepped down to LB level at the snap are now part of this so Edwards falls forward.
O48 2nd 7 Offset 2TE 4-3-4 4-3 Over 2 Pass 7.5 Slot out Sainristil 8 1.13
DBs playing off so Cade checks into this. Room to turn up if it's thrown faster, instead he makes Sainristil come back to the 1st down line and catch it near the sideline. You checked into this man! McCarthy comes in. (MA, 3, Prot 2/2, McNamara-1)
O40 1st 10 Pistol RB 4-3-4 4-3 Over 2 RPO 8 Power GT/ Bubble Edwards 1 -0.65
Freshman vision. Barnhart(+0.5) realizes a bit late he has to turn the crasher but does so. Hayes(-1) got caught up behind that then goes around anyway. Edwards(-2) isn't patient enough for all this turn and bounce crap and runs into the LB who's shot up unblocked because the lead blocker is outside.
O39 2nd 9 Gun Wk 4-3-4 Nk Under 2 Pass 6.5 Slot Out Sainristil Inc -1.00
Fake five-man pressure, bring four, Vastardis(-1) loses his DT so this has to be thrown. It's at the right matchup with Sainristil matched on a SAM playing nickel but it's chucked to Tacopants, which everybody please rise and welcome back our good friend Tacopants. Anthony was wide open under soft coverage in front of JJ's face fwiw. (IN, 0, Prot 0/1, McCarthy-1)
O39 3rd 9 Gun Trips 4-2-5 Nk Under 2 Pass 8 Deep Out Sainristil 18 2.21
Just when I thought I was out. Three man route so protection for days but also lots of coverage. JJ finally sends a missile to Sainristil coming back so he can go down and get it. Freak. (DO, 2, Prot 2/2, McCarthy+2)
O21 1st 10 Gun 2RB Twins Covered 4-3-4 4-3 Over 2 Run 8 ZR Power GT/Arc Z Corum 0 -0.39
Why are they pulling this out NOW? It's a Power GT to one side and an arc read behind Sainristil on the other. DE forms up so McCarthy(-1, read-) gives and oh man this is some #SpeedinSpace I want to explore further because they've got an LB and DE vs JJ and Sainristil on that side with nobody else for days. Frontside has the DL slanting frontside AND the LBs remaining there so Filiaga(+0.5) can turn an edge late and Stueber(-1) get his after running by him and letting him get a futile arm on Corum, but the safety is at the LOS already. RPS is off I said.
O21 2nd 10 Pistol Bunch Tight 4-3-4 4-3 Over 1 Pass 9 Flare Screen Corum 5 0.04
Hibner(+1) gets a good kick but Sainristil(-1) had an LB who threw him off. Corum(+1) burrows for the rest. (CA, screen, prot n/a)
O16 3rd 5 Pistol Bunch F-Flex 4-3-4 4-3 Even 1 Run 7 Counter Trey Corum 2 -0.26
They blitz the LB and safety at this (RPS off). Barnhart(-1) gets blasted back into Hibner when he tries to turn a DE who's coached to defeat this block. Safety blitz is in this gap too but Corum might be able to bounce around that. Instead he hits it up inside for 2 which is fine in the circumstances.
O14 4th 3 Gun Empty Trips 4-3-4 4-3 Under 2 Pass 6.5 JJ’s Wild Ride Seltzer 7(Pen-22) -2.67
Here we go. 3-man rush but Seltzer comes open and should be the read. Instead JJ bails, runs back to the 36 (this started on the 14), turns the corner on all three of these dudes, then Buttzones it to Seltzer. The refs-4 wipe it out with an absolute horseshit "blindside block" on Filiaga who put a shoulder into this guy's chest. I don't know how to chart this so here's a +2 for a bad read I guess. (BR, 2, Prot 2/3, McCarthy+2) I guess?
Drive Notes: Missed FG(47). 33-7. 4 mins 4th Q. End of game for the offense.

I don’t think the offense is as good as it should be.

How good should it be?

Two Heisman contenders at running back, a deep offensive line, fast receivers who don’t mind blocking, and enough tight ends to stock a Jim Harbaugh roster at Stanford. And yet.

And yet.

Admit it, you hate our 7-0 comrade too.

I do not. McNamara’s 4.8 YPA and 129 yards includes a nine-yard jet sweep but does not include two 30-yard passes that went into the books as 10- and 15-yard penalties. Give him those and the atrocious non-call in the corner of the endzone and you get a statline of 21/28 for 197 yards, 7 YPA, and 2 TDs that seems more representative of his actual performance.

That fake statline also demands some context, because Northwestern’s linebackers were flying up at the first sign of play-action, and the OL graded out a 24/28 (86%) when he was in the game in protection, which is superb. Northwestern’s defense is not good, and was setting up its safeties at 7 or 8 yards to prevent Corum and Haskins from gashing them on the edges. The receivers got charged for just two bad routes. Put 2016 Wilton Speight in that environment and you get 300 yards in a half. Here’s what we got:

CADE MCNAMARA

  Good   Neutral   Bad   Ovr   Reads
Game DO CA SCR   PR MA   BA TA IN BR   DSR GRADE!   RPOs ZRs
W. Michigan 3+ 3(3)-           2     1   67% +5   4/5 2/7
Washington 1 3(2)-     2 (1)     3 1(1) 2   40% -8   5/5 4/9
NIU 2 7+ -     1 1             100% +11   1/2 1/2
Rutgers 3+ 5-     1 1       5xx 1   57% +2.5   2/2 1/6
Wisconsin 6 13 1   1 2   1 1 4x 2x   71% +10.5   2/3 1/2
Nebraska 3+ 13(2)-     3 6   3 3 6 1x   55% -1.5   1/3 2/2
Northwestern 2 11(5)+     2 2   1 3 4xx 1   59% -1   5/7 5/8

JJ MCCARTHY

  Good   Neutral   Bad   Ovr   Reads
Game DO CA SCR   PR MA   BA TA IN BR   DSR GRADE!   RPOs ZRs
W. Michigan 1+++ 2       3   1x   1     60% -2   0/0  
NIU   4+             1   1   67% +4   2/2 3/3
Wisconsin 1                       100% +2   2/2 4/6
Nebraska   1                     100% -   1/1 2/2
Northwestern 1 (2)               2 1   25% +2   0/1 1/2

Basically a repeat of the Nebraska game, except instead of the ball falling too far or short, plausibly due to wind, McNamara was putting the ball in the one spot where the defensive back was most likely to break it up. That was a one-time problem (the Edwards wheel) in Lincoln; two weeks later it was a major issue on downfield shots. The most egregious one was this, which was a likely touchdown if he throws the post towards the post, because all the space from this far hash to the sideline was his.

It makes no sense, because he’s already on the hash he should throw it down. The throw he made is further than the one he should have. We can’t even fall back on the “Well, he’s safer with it” on this throw because where he put it forced Johnson to make an excellent defensive back play to break up an interception.

image

Fine, one throw. Then it happened again:

Schoonmaker has that guy beat and all the room down the seam. McNamara shorts it outside(!) the seam, which is still catchable but gives the cornerback his only shot at breaking it up. Of all the regressions we’ve seen from Harbaugh’s starting quarterbacks at Michigan, this might be the most frightening, because it’s taking the one reason any of us had hope that McNamara could keep pace with Ohio State’s mercenaries was his previously on target deep ball.

It’s a bad trend, but also a short one, and could right itself this Saturday. As long as his best attribute remains a negative, however, all the other parts of McNamara’s game are more relevant to talk of when (it’s not if) McCarthy replaces him. Because the running game is still having to carry the fact that his zone reads are just an invitation for a DE to crash Michigan’s split zone game.

The cyan wars all started because Michigan seemed determined to keep with their Arc/Zone Read/Split Zone run game, which makes sense if you’re constructing your roster with dual-threats. It was never about “McNamara sucks” just like this video isn’t anti-U-Hauls:

Guy in the comments mad I didn't give Cade credit for the fact that the clean water in the pipes washed away all the dirty sludge that came out first.

He just doesn’t go there. It’s telling that best answer for it so far has been to have Blake Corum just bounce around the crasher and run where McNamara should have.

And some of his RPO reads remain so baffling. The SAM here is making his intentions clear, and the safety to that side is in no position to do anything about a throw to Anthony.

His reputation for bad reads after the snap is now extending deep into the passing game. The almost INT wasn’t as bad on review—his arm got hit on the follow-through—but that DE never should have had the opportunity because this ball should be out when All is at midfield.

The one to a bracketed Sainristil had a small window that he might have put the ball through if Sainristil hadn’t stopped, but it’s a two-man route thrown to the one who’s double-covered instead of the one who isn’t covered.

That’s some O’Korn shit, and it was way more visceral from a fan perspective than all the good stuff that the coaches are using to decide he’s the starter. He is a smart Pre-snap reader. He knows what he wants to do with it before the snap, and that is usually correct.

And his accuracy has been a plus. The fan brain way to show all of this is how you feel when Michigan goes five-wide on 3rd and medium. Pretty good right? Well it’s actually getting better. Earlier in the season he wasn’t making the backside read when he had a route combination to the frontside. Northwestern bet on that, putting extra dudes frontside. Cade checks there to make sure it’s the 5-on-3 they showed pre-snap, and comes back to the 2-on-2 snag on the backside.

People still throw around “Game Manager” like it’s a bad thing to play the thinking man’s wargame with a brain. But if you give him a cushion he’s going to spot it and take it.

He checked into that, and makes 30 more checks a game that have probably borne out in the very good running game but no fan can or will be able to see on tape. You talk about having a QB who can go to East Lansing or State College (or Nebraska/Madison) and give you a chance to win, and virtually guarantees that against a Northwestern or what’s happened to Indiana, even without the deep shots.

But then some football happens and you can’t help wondering what life would be like with the other one.

 

THE OTHER ONE!

Right, we got some JJ in this game, but didn’t learn anything we didn’t know or suspect already. Like…yeah he can run.

That’s the arc read, which is the play that pairs with split zone directly, and led to some huge gains in 2018-’19 before Shea Patterson too developed Harbaugh Starter Keeperphobia. It’s not just the prospect of McCarthy doing the McCaffrey dance through opponents…

image

…but that the threat of McCarthy’s legs should allow zone reads to function as they’re supposed to, and stop defenders from crashing the edge when they see a tight end flow across the formation. Imagine Corum and Haskins if they didn’t even have to dodge a defender at the line of scrimmage first. Right?

Those legs would later lead directly to points, when they ran a draw with him on 2nd and 15 to set up 3rd and 2 in field goal range.

McNamara returned for the 3rd and 2, and it was the first time I was like “NO LEAVE IN THE FRESHMAN!” because I survived the Urban Meyer years with JT Barrett, who only ever came up short the one time. Meyer won his championship at Florida by using the game manager until the safeties no longer had to defend deep threats (short situations/redzone), when he could insert freshman Tim Tebow.

The upside was on full display, viscerally. This was a failed play where I marked McCarthy for a bad zone read, but it’s a gray area the way the defensive end and the LB behind him are playing the edge. But just look at the potential if he can get out backside while the rest of the defense is freaking out about a power run the other way:

And herein lies the quandary: POTENTIAL is not performance. This is just as true with his one downfield completion in this game, which was freaky:

But he’s also got the Freshman Devin Gardner tendency to miss a simple open TE on mesh then go on a grand adventure. I marked this Bad Read for the tight end thing, but also +2 because he did, ultimately, find that same tight end.

He also set up too late on a play-action and missed a wide open receiver on his other downfield throw. When do you want to introduce that kind of gamble? Right now what I see in McCarthy is a guy who’s going to be a third insane awesomeness, a third forgettable badness, and a third insane variance. Not to sound too much like the super conservative coaches of my youth, but with McCarthy, two-thirds of the things that can happen any play really are bad, and his limited opportunities do not yet show a guy who can do the ho-hum things you don’t remember after a game except throw screens.

The component I can’t see on film is how does it affect the team? Would McNamara stick around to be a backup? Would Michigan stop using McCarthy’s legs the minute he became the starter? Gun to my head, I’m on Team McNamara, provided he doesn’t regress further. If the last few years of Michigan football have taught us anything, that’s just as if not more likely than him getting better. Also this was about the last opportunity—unless you want to do it against Indiana—to let McCarthy take the offense out of the garage, and Michigan stuck with Cade to the last drive. If you get a McNamara implosion against MSU this weekend, gambling on JJ is an option. Ideally they can carve out a larger role, or have already but masked it against Northwestern so they could spring the good stuff on the rival.

How much did we miss the starting guards?

Filiaga has more or less been a co-starter with Keegan this year, and filled in often enough for Zinter that the transition was seamless. Zinter can really maul guys in the run game, but his hand was a pass pro problem. Filiaga has limitations in agility but matched against a team that doesn’t have the talent of Nebraska or Washington he was stellar—in fact he might have played the best game of his career.

What about the one sack?

It says something that sacks are such rare events for this offense. This one was caused by leaving the safety out of the protection.

Brian’s probably right in expecting Filiaga to have a spidey sense for when they’re adding a blitzer. The “that’s not their job” (it’s the QB’s) perspective comes mostly from former players or coaches who’ve had football assignments hammered into their brains or done the hammering for their specific systems, but fan brains have more room to treat the game as a game. Offensive line is hard precisely because you’re expected to make snap decisions outside of the framework of the offense.

Filiaga wasn’t really the one I was asking about.

Barnhart was more of a mixed bag. On the up, he had one play where he found himself having to block two guys, and pulled it off:

To the bad, Barnhart does not have Keegan’s uncanny sense for running blitzers out of the play, and didn’t know what to do after he let one go by.

Okay, you missed a blitzer. That’s Hassan’s problem now; don’t just stop and castigate yourself for it. Get a guy. (Also shout out to Joel Klatt. Gus Johnson is hype and I love him for that, but this is the third time this game that I’ve written up the play only for Klatt to do a replay and explain graphically what I was just trying to convey.)

To be clear, Barnhart is a downgrade only because the starters have been so good. I’m used to them wrecking (non-Wisconsin) linebackers when they get a free release on them, but “good enough” still works.

And Michigan was all too happy to run off Barnhart’s back; in fact I think he had the most scored plays of anybody, which shows he was a big part of the gamplan.

Scores? As in, in a…

Chart.

Chart!

Offensive Line
Player + - T Notes
Hayes 11 9.5 +1.5 Thunkin on combos, deep blockdowns slipped inside him.
Keegan     0 DNP
Vastardis 15.5 9.5 +6 DTs pushed him around in pass pro, he got them in the run.
Filiaga 10.5 2.5 +8 Ladies & gentlemen, The Backup. "Blindside" was BS.
Stueber 4 10.5 -6.5 Playing hurt? Didn't have his normal agility, blew an assignment.
Zinter     0 DNP
T.Jones     0 DNP
Crippen     0 DNP
Barnhart 11.5 19 -7.5 Busy day, learning on the job.
Atteberry     0 DNP
All 20.5 2 +18.5 He's going to be All-Big Ten this year.
Schoonmaker 6.5 8.5 -2 Secret reason M is better at power than zone stuff (he is).
Honigford 9 6 +3 Targeting issues, clonks returned. Main hero of the rugby melee.
Hibner 2 0 +2 Welcome to the chart, TE#3.
Seltzer     0 DNC because late backs were skipping the outside.
TOTAL 90.5 67.5 +23 All day.
Backs
Player + - T Notes
McNamara 6 6 0 Half the time the give read was right.
McCarthy 4 2 +2 Rushing contributions from a QB!
Villari     0 DNP
Haskins 21.5 3 +18.5 A fitting tribute to George Jewett.
Corum 19 1 +18 Which jump-cut of a guy in his face/safety shuck do you mean?
Edwards 2 5 -3 Fumbled.
Dunlap     0 DNP
TOTAL 52.5 17 +35.5 They're just that good. I capped two runs at +3.
Receivers
Player + - T Notes
C.Johnson 4 0 +4 Got to show his own jets this game.
Sainristil 3 4 -1 Solid mountain goat blocking and one fumble (-3).
Henning 3.5 2 +1.5 Tries to block, but is still easily sloughed off.
Wilson     0 Was back, got the ball, but DNC.
Baldwin 1 2 -1 Was on the field with Anthony so he wasn't giving up snaps.
Anthony 3 1 +2 Not THAT Anthony, but that is some SPEED.
TOTAL 14.5 9 +5.5 Quietly become a strong receiver room.
Metrics
Player + - T Notes
Protection 28 33 85% Just the one bust on a safety Filiaga didn't see.
RPS 12 33 -21 Hope this means Gattis used the bye to prepare for MSU.

 

Brian said he’s coming around on the idea that your running back scores are more a reflection on the charted than who’s doing the charting.

I feel a little bad that he toiled for years in the mines of Shaw and Green and is missing this. But only a little. Because when I’m watching Michigan games these days I can think things like “Oh man, I can’t wait to see if that deserves a +3!” Maybe it’ll help if I give some examples that are totally not just an excuse to dump Blake Corum highlights all over the UFR.

This was a borderline +1 or +2 to me.

It’s well-blocked but it’s a counter play so he has to downshift a bit to let the blocking develop, specifically for the Barnhart block to clear the linebackers outside. We’re still at zero, but the patience to do that is an attribute that a lot of backs I’ve scouted for FFFFs didn’t possess, and their versions of this run ended at five yards. The burst of speed at the 25 yard line earns the +1, because he goes right by that LB, turning an 8-yard gain into a 15+. It’s borderline +2 because he extends it to 20.

Here’s a +2 run. Northwestern is doing the Wisconsin thing here to overload where Michigan wants to attack, having the frontside (bottom) of the line slant that way with a blitzing linebacker adding to it, then having the (top) DE outside to force a give into that meat. Stueber gives him a little room but it’s Corum who turns a certain loss into another rushing down. Just slithering past the DE when he’s D-E-D-dead is an accomplishment, but then there’s a tiny extra hop that turns a 3-yard gain into a 6-yard gain.

The two +3s in this game were also making up for other issues in the offense. This is the crazy run I was talking about on the podcast, where Corum bounced into the space that any kind of read offense would have the quarterback running into:

Where does a mortal running back go down? Does he bounce out of the backfield at all? Fall forward for two when the safety meets him at the line of scrimmage? What about the safety he met 10 yards downfield? It wasn’t a touchdown so +3.

Now here’s the one brian was talking about on the podcast.

Unblocked guy in the hole? Whoop. Unblocked guy at the first down marker? Diddle diddle whoop! And then when there’s nowhere else to go, he still leaps forward to make sure the goal line situation is easily Haskinsed.

Speaking of Haskins

He was also making up for the issues with the offense, or other guys’ mistakes. How many Mo Hurst plays like this ended with a flattened back in the backfield?

WHOOP!

I remarked, because I had recently read all the Daily archives that mention him, that this was George Jewett-esque when it happened:

Little did I know the announcers were talking Jewett at that very moment. What they didn’t bring up was when Albion fans lost it and tried to storm the field after a Black man’s spin-o-rama ruined their perfectly sound defensive play. We have come a long way since then in many ways, but the Michigan halfbacks of 130 years later are just as dangerous to a safety standing in the right spot as the first great one. Pro Football Focus has Corum and Haskins #1 and #4 in the country in their RB scoring, so it’s not just me.

Speaking of 1890s football, the rugby maul I thought was a +2 for Haskins but just as much credit was due to Joel Honigford for pushing it and pulling it and cajoling it forward any way he could.

TE#84, second from the bottom on the line:

I was wrong; you’re not a running back slappy; you’re a tight end slappy.

The dirty secret to Michigan’s excellent running game this year is the tight ends are doing as much or more than the official hogmollies. Of them, Erick All is an All-Big Ten player who had an All-American caliber game. The reason Michigan loves to run split zone and counter in the first place is it usually ends with Erick All kicking out a stationary defender of some kind.

 

His receiving has also been reliable, albeit disrespected by more than fans. The two-minute drill at the end of the half was a lot of rushing, but also took its last few chunks with tight end outs that Northwestern didn’t bother to cover.

That was dumb because unlike Schoonmaker or Honigford, All can turn this up and keep going. Later in this drive we had another of those split flow counter plays I don’t like, because All’s speed versus a linebacker is a matchup they want to keep exploiting. I would like to remind them that a crosser can also become a wheel route. Hint hint.

I feel like we always ask about the receivers at the end.

They were more of a sideshow in this game than usual, not by design, but because whenever the ball went downfield they were wearing Northwestern DBs.

As a result the charting was littered  with passes I didn’t know whether to mark “1” (circus catch opportunity) or “0” (not a chance in Columbus). I mostly went with “1” so please don’t go using words like “drop” to describe them:

  THIS WEEK   THIS YEAR
Player Uncb Circus Tough Routine   Uncb Circus Tough Routine
Johnson 2 0/2   3/3 7 1/10 4/5 12/12
Baldwin 1 0/1     4 0/5 6/8 5/7
Sainristil 1 0/2 1/1 3/3 1 2/7 1/2 8/8
Henning         3   1/2 1/1
Wilson       2/2 1 2/3 1/1 8/9
Dixon         1 0/1   1/1
Anthony       1/1       1/1
x Bell x           1/2 1/1  
All   0/1 1/1 4/4 2 0/3 4/5 11/11
Schoonmaker   0/1   2/2 2 0/2   6/6
Honigford         2   0/1 1/1
Seltzer             0/1  
Hibner                
Corum       4/4 1 1/1 1/1 16/17
Haskins         1     2/2
Edwards         1 0/1   1/1

Routes: Johnson+3, Sainristil+1/-1, Baldwin-1

Also Carter Seltzer made a tough one (at the end of JJ’s Great Adventure) if he ends up needing to be added to the chart. It is interesting that Corum continues to be the guy who really sticks out, but he’s not catching them downfield. That was true for a lot of the receivers this game as well, however. Between Wildcats and McNamara fouling all the downfield opportunities, the receivers did much of their work in the quasi-run game, ie screens and end-arounds/jet sweeps.

AJ Henning did more than run fast, breaking a tackle to put Michigan into scoring range for the first time.

Johnson got one as well. Here’s the Andrel Anthony run:

It would appear he is fast.

It would also appear like he had to bend around a guy who was looking for this play.

It would appear that way.

It would appear Gattis got taken to the woodshed by a first-year defensive coordinator.

Yeah, coming out a bye week we had another entry in the top ten worst RPS scores in MGoBlog history. Remember that I normalized this list for 53 plays, not the 92 charted for this game.

  1. 2013 Michigan State: -22.5 (+6/-25 on 57 plays)
  2. 2013 Nebraska: -20.1 (+16/-35 on 64 plays)
  3. 2021 Rutgers: -17.8 (+16/-30 on 53 plays)
  4. 2014 Utah: -14.3 (+6/-20 on 66 plays)
  5. 2014 Penn State: -13.5 (+6/-17 on 55 plays)
  6. 2020 Michigan State: -12.9 (+7/-24 on 89 plays)
  7. 2020 Wisconsin: -12.3 (+5/-13 on 44 plays)
  8. 2021 Northwestern: -12.1 (+12/-33 on 92 plays)
  9. 2012 Nebraska: -11.9 (+14/-26 on 68 plays)
  10. 2013 Penn State (“27 for 27”): -11.4 (+18/-33 on 89 plays)
  11. 2014 Michigan State: -11.3 (+7/-15 on 48 plays)

I would rather Gattis offenses stop making this list, but I’m not too mad. I went in saying Michigan should attack the edges and run play-action, which is what they did, but the Wildcats did a good job of scouting this game and their own weaknesses. The Anthony end-around is one example of their commitment to staunching the bleeding on the edges. They did it again when Michigan ran Bash, which is the play where the RB and QB threats flip. It’s been money this year because defenses have crashed the edges without fear of a QB keep. Suddenly that’s Blake Corum bypassing the DE and it’s a problem. Northwestern did not crash.

There was a tradeoff: You will note that McNamara had his beast zone read game yet this season. Those were all correct “give” reads that defenses heretofore were taking away. The give read above was wrong because Michigan flipped it and Northwestern still set up outside. Not every time—there were still crashes. But they varied it, which left fake-reading Michigan guessing very wrong instead of expecting to be wrong and ready to make something out of it anyways. Mind games.

Doubling up the edges also took away the counters to split zone. I mentioned Split Flow Counter earlier. I knock how Michigan usually runs this play but it should work if the defense is overcommitting to the gut. Northwestern brought an extra edge guy up to chip All on his way outside, which ruins the whole “get outside faster than a linebacker” thing that’s supposed to make this play go:

Northwestern changed their tendencies for this game—Michigan always gets your best shot—and Michigan came off a bye sticking to the things they’d already put on film. They have gotten better about adjusting to the ways opponents are attacking them, however. I think Gattis recognized that their tight ends were a key, so he put all the potential flow blockers to one side then ran a quick dive on the other side.

They also targeted gaps away from the split flow. The Haskins spin-o-rama play was a “split zone” but instead of trying to run off the tight end they had the tight end run off the defenders backside then hit a gap behind a double-team on the frontside.

Just look at all those defenders waiting where Split Zone usually goes.

image

But Gattis got no RPS for this because they also blitzed the safety into that gap. Charting is harsh, but the RPS rule is I attribute to the players everything I can, then RPS balances out the ledger. Haskins got the points, so the coach who put him in a position to do so doesn’t get the credit. Macdonald excels at that kind of RPS win, and he’s getting good press because of it, and in this case the same is true for Gattis. It’s not as bad as the number.

I would also be way more upset about it if we didn’t go into this game expecting Michigan to look past Northwestern. The end of the first half was extremely annoying, however, because by then the Wildcats’ tendencies were apparent and Michigan played into that by trying to run the clever things they prepared for the old tendencies. It came off like Scott Frost, and the result was a Scott Frost-ian three points from two drives that got to extra points range. I would also jump for joy if Gattis pulled some Scott Frost cleverness and it worked.

I think Northwestern also knew Michigan likes to use its play-action to attack deep but not intermediate routes, so they just let their linebackers and safeties play aggressively against the run, and told their cornerbacks to take as many penalties as they needed to live another day.

Michigan noticed and adjusted. While the first half featured their standard edge attack plans and bombs, the second half was much more about attacking between the tackles. Here again they chose to skip the gambles and run the new old base play. Welcome back good ol’ Pin and Pull!

Sam Webb had Jake Miller on his show yesterday morning, and they discussed this play as quintessential Michigan football. I…agree. You can do a search above for how often I used the term “turned” on one of these power plays. That’s what Vastardis did here, and it solves that whole issue of what to do about Northwestern varying what the edge defender is going to do. We won’t option him with the actual option game, but all of Michigan’s blockers (including Barnhart) were versed on optioning the edge, turning him inside if he ducked there, or kicking him out if he didn’t.

If I had to guess, they probably used the break to rep their power stuff against all kinds of looks. They were doing some advanced stuff with it again. Like here Honigford is letting the DE decide if he wants to be the one kicked or turned. Vastardis heads outside with this lead block and Corum doesn’t follow, because he likes All’s block better.

That kind of mid-play adjustment is what base plays are made of. It’s not an RPS win to run your base. You’re just good at it. You win matchups. Between getting good at running Power variants against any look, and planning clever things to do to Northwestern, which would you prefer they rep over the by week? I know my choice. I’ll also point out they made the same transition in 2019 (via my 2020 HTTV feature):

image
Go blue!

It’s too early to tell if they’ve made the same decision this year, but if so I very much support it. If they make the worst RPS score chart again next week, it will be a very different conversation.

Heroes?

The running backs, Erick All, and Chuck Filiaga.

Maybe not so heroic?

Barnhart, McNamara, Gattis vs teams Michigan can overlook.

What does it mean for Michigan State and beyond?

Cade until they can’t. But working in more stuff built just for McCarthy. If an insider told me that JJ isn’t ready I’d believe it, but I don’t have enough data on him yet, and that says something too.

But he can’t keep regressing. The bad reads went up, and the downfield throws weren’t just inaccurate; they were thrown to the wrong spot. And this wasn’t a defense that likes to confuse your reads.

That’s a pair of All-American-caliber RBs we’ve got there. I asked Brian on the podcast if he would rather have these two or Wheatley and Biakabutuka. I don’t think there’s another comparable duo in recent Michigan history, though I maintain this site would have been huge BJ Askew stans.

Erick All is our best tight end since Butt. I remember McKeon, who was an excellent player, struggling to make the blocks that All is making consistently. After the running backs he deserves the most credit for the consistent running game.

They could use a fullback. They’ve having the tight ends do it, but it’s not the best use of them.

The line is deep, let’s not go deeper. Barnhart is not where the top three guards are. Stueber looked shakier than his normal self, and they played Barnhart instead of moving him inside again, so they may not think Jones is ready to play tackle after all.

Now we’re playing with power. This game had the highest power to other stuff ratio yet, though it’s not quite on par with the 2019 offense. There were many variants, too many for them all to be called plays, which means who pulls is based on how the defense aligns, like how Vince Lombardi did it.

Hello Andrel Anthony. Looking forward to seeing the East Lansing native again.

Your Moment of Zen:

It’ll be basketball season for someone very soon.

Comments

M_Born M_Believer

October 27th, 2021 at 12:00 PM ^

No it is not.  On those throws, the WR is taught to come back to the ball to prevent exactly what you are alluding too.

The CB was in a backpedal drop coverage, he would not have the time to stop, plant and reverse direction to cover that play, let alone make a pick six.

This is just another example of Cade locking in on his first read and throwing it, albeit is a place he believes will be a low risk INT.

 

EDIT: Just watched MMQB with Devin and he highlighted this play specifically as well as "Bad Cade" (FYI he also noted several good plays that Cade did as well).  But he noted this was a Cover 4 defense and yes all for NW players (Safeties and CB) were backpedaling and the correct read was to come off it and go to Johnson in the flat.  As Devin noted a Cover 4 defense is specifically designed to take away the deep throws....

MGoBlue96

October 27th, 2021 at 12:13 PM ^

Do you think that the db is The Flash or something? There is no way in hell he is coming anywhere close to a pick on that play unless Cade throws an absolutely wounded duck. Also you can't say for sure what yardage completion that could have been because its a tackle in space situation after that could have been missed. Like I am not sure what is so complicated, Cade has a tendency to lock on to his first read, he did on that play, and threw to him despite not actually being open. 

Pumafb

October 27th, 2021 at 12:35 PM ^

There is a 0% chance that's a pick 6 in that still with an on time ball. The coverage looks like 1/4 1/4 Half. The corner is loose an bailing for his deep 1/4. The flat defender is the LB/nickel. He bites hard on the run action. That should be an immediate throw to the hitch in this hitch/seam concept they are running. His pre snap should have brought his eyes there first and a post snap should have confirmed. We have high school QB's who can throw a hitch to the field so I'm sure Cade can do it. It's a missed read, period.

wavintheflag

October 27th, 2021 at 1:27 PM ^

Hey, I basically agree with you here. It is really not that complicated of a play/decision process. Cade wanted to go deep. He had time. Saw the corner plant his foot to at least stay close to short guy and so in his mind that is a green light so he went for it. Was short more open? Yes but to Cade the first read looked viable and like all the math it is a low risk and greater reward. Seth may have called that throwing into double coverage. I don't think so. The corner was flying back but not relevant to catching the ball. Calling it John O'Korn shit ... Really? 

Watching From Afar

October 27th, 2021 at 11:07 AM ^

Both things can be true? Though 2015, 2016, and 2018 were all good starting QB years without much of a call for the back up.

2017 there were injury problems and apparently that also was the case to some degree in 2019.

So that leaves 2020 and kind of 2019 (if Shea was limited due to an injury then people were looking at McCaffrey).

Regardless, I am in general agreement that there is a fundamental disconnect with the scheme/approach.

Watching From Afar

October 27th, 2021 at 11:27 AM ^

Yeah, like I said apparently the "injury" to Shea impacted his abilities which is in part some of the reason why he played poorly for long stretches of that season.

I don't necessarily buy that the injury is what led him to be meh for the entire season, but it maybe impacted him marginally.

I personally don't believe in Gattis + Harbaugh. I'd take Harbaugh + Fisch at this point because I understood their scheme better because it actually made sense. Hell, Harbaugh + Pep is basically what we're getting now with less ability to hurry up and do 2 minute drills even remotely successfully.

Watching From Afar

October 27th, 2021 at 2:01 PM ^

I can see that. However, when it was Fisch and even Drevno/Pep for a bit, the offense made more sense and had an identity. They were going to line up in the I, maybe with a FB, and come downhill at you 1,000mph to push your teeth in. When they passed, it was a traditional drop back pro passing attack.

Now? They're trying to run downhill out of the gun while making it look like a ZR type offense that has a fundamental flaw built in. The passing game is kind of clunky and not really built from the running game on up. So you get this hodgepodge offense that struggles in short yardage/the red zone (I don't even think they need a FB so much as they need to stop with the "read option" run inside the 5 because it takes too long) without a significant step up elsewhere.

We don't see Henning/Wilson/Sainristil running open underneath drags or Corum out on the edge with just 1 guy between him and a TD. We see a glob of guys a yard downfield, hoping Haskins/Corum can squirm out of the pile and do it mostly themselves. Or we see Sainristil running a slot corner covered by 2 guys. It's not what was originally discussed from Gattis and it's not Harbaugh-y enough to take advantage of the teams who have gone smaller and lighter on defense to compete with the speed and spread of the OSU's of the world.

chronic

October 27th, 2021 at 11:06 AM ^

I'm worried that Staae will simply stack up the box and dare us to throw, the way they did with Denard...it seems inevitably simple and obvious...

bronxblue

October 27th, 2021 at 1:36 PM ^

I mean, that's a defensive plan most teams have adopted thus far and none of them have been particularly successful.  Michigan has the #1 and #3-rated RBs in the country per various measures for a reason.  

Also, I could say the exact same thing about UM's approach to MSU - force Thorne to make plays downfield and sustain drives without Walker.  The two times he's been held to under 100 yards purposely (I don't consider YSU a game here because he averaged 8 ypc on 7 carries) the rest of MSU's offense has produced 324 yards passing, 2 TDs, 3 picks, and 6.5 ypa.  

ak47

October 27th, 2021 at 11:06 AM ^

Even as a team see what you've got with JJ supporter its still now too late in the season and the opportunity is passed to make a switch that isn't dictated by injury or a drubbing, neither of which are good things. This is the type of game that absolutely calls for JJ in the red zone since that is where MSU's defense has done its best work and where we need to turn drives into touchdowns.

On the Haskins whoop TD, it was a great move but that is also the type of play where this blog would be screaming about the lack of holds that Hutchinson and Michigan don't get called.

M_Born M_Believer

October 27th, 2021 at 11:25 AM ^

I am still in Camp McNamara for now, but it is not only the missed downfield throws that are cropping up more and more.  It is the tendency for Cade to make the Pre-snap read, then lock on to that first read a beat too long.  

On NW only sack, yes Chuck misses the Safety coming through.  But Cade is locked into the outside receiver too long (DB sitting on top of the route) and misses Corum arm waving open in the flat.  And you can tell that is part of the pattern because ?Johnson? is set to block the only guy within 10 yards of Corum that has any leverage on him and that guy is 10 yards away.  FYI - the third option running down the middle of the field is also wide open.  Not shown in the screen shot is the safety 12-15 further down field from him.

This is the frustrating part.  Is Cade the Game Manger (I say that in a good context)....yes

Is he safe with the ball.....yes, 99% of the time.

Does he get the team lined up correctly and functioning the offense...yes

But does he lock in on his first read and has the tendency to stay on the read too long...yes

With the sound defense that Michigan has, a 10-2/11-1 season seems to be very plausible and 97% of the fanbase would have taken that in a heartbeat back in August (I was an 8-4 guy, but I see myself as an optimist).  However, there is the actual goal of winning championship and the question will linger about Cade until A) He does it in a critical game (MSU/PSU/OSU), or we realize that Cade has some limitations.

MGoBlue96

October 27th, 2021 at 11:32 AM ^

Yep, Cade definitely has the good commander of the offense sort of vibe presnap and is generally very accurate when his first read is there but definitely has a lock on first option tendency. Patterson honestly had the same problem. But yes I would agree Cade is still the guy right now and one of two things is going to happen. Either he proves people wrong and plays well in those games or UM finds themselves down and you might see JJ if things get bad enough. You also point out another issue, that yeah preseason 10-2 would have seemed great, but it won't feel particularly good if UM loses to both rivals and is held back by QB play again as one of the issues in a year you have a great backfield and a vastly improved defense.

M_Born M_Believer

October 27th, 2021 at 12:11 PM ^

Agreed on the 'feel' for the record.  In August 10-2 would have been celebrated (and everyone would have bagged on anyone that would have tried to predict that).  But now, expectations have changed. 

The defense (a huge question mark before the season) has exceeded expectations. 

The TE room has excelled beyond expectations.

The OLine has exceeded expectations.

The RB room has come through as expected.

And Cade has done enough (even at Madison and Lincoln) to raise the bar on the expectations for this season.

The underlying angst for the past 15-20 years is pushing to the surface...... Beating our rivals and winning a championship.

So the bar has been reset and now this team (and Harbaugh) will be judged on whether or not they can finish the season with a championship.

Hab

October 27th, 2021 at 4:00 PM ^

So the bar has been reset and now this team (and Harbaugh) will be judged on whether or not they can finish the season with a championship.

Very much appreciate your post, and it's spot on.  But let me attempt to change the tone of your last sentence, the portion I quoted.  Before the season started, expectations were based purely upon wins and losses.  The idea of championships was laughable. 

But you're right, the expectations have changed.  The expectation isn't to win championships, but that is now the goal--a real goal, as in, in the realm of reasonable possibility.  It isn't just a fanciful notion.  This is where we were in the '90s.  I lived it.  The majority of Cooper's years, OSU was the same death star then that they are now, relatively speaking.  Many of UMs wins in those years were upsets.  And in the '97, there were complaints all along the way that this team didn't have enough offensive firepower to win anything.  But they did.  I'm not saying that this will translate to results now.  Certainly the landscape has changed significantly since then.  But I see no reason why fans shouldn't take solace in and be proud of the progress this team has made to date.  Nor should they dismiss out of hand the possibility that the team can still achieve the same goal its had year in and year out -- B1G championship and more.  Beat State, and then move forward.  For one, I'm very excited about what this imperfect team might be able to accomplish this year.

bronxblue

October 27th, 2021 at 1:31 PM ^

I do think Cade was looking at Henning when he saw the rush but he hadn't turned around yet so it's hard to know if he's going to react quickly enough if the ball comes out.  I do agree he locks onto his first read, but so do most QBs.  McCarthy would be even worse in this situation, though I guess he might try to scramble a bit.

McNamara has limitations; he's just the least-limited guy right now on the team.

Hugh White

October 27th, 2021 at 11:33 AM ^

In the Gif that features All’s block kicking out the DE, All lined up essentially as a Fullback, not in a traditional TE position, not in an H-back alignment. I think the better and more inclusive terminology for All and his ilk is “Blocky-Catchy Guy” which used to be de rigueur on this website but which has recently fallen into disuse. 

Spitfire

October 27th, 2021 at 11:35 AM ^

Cade's going to have to step up this week. Doesn't have to have a great game but hitting a couple big plays would go a long way to help the running game as I'm sure Staee will stack the box daring Cade to throw

bronxblue

October 27th, 2021 at 11:55 AM ^

Good stuff, as usual.  The Cade/McCarthy discussion was reasonable, though I do think people assuming the QBs will get worse the longer they're at UM ignores the fact that the guys who have transferred have all been demonstrably worse at the places where they land than they were in A2.  McCaffrey looked halfway-decent at UM before he got hurt; he's been awful at Northern Colorado.  Wilton Speight was fine at UM before he got crunched by Purdue, then was significantly worse at UCLA.  Brandon Peters hasn't stayed healthy at Illinois but even when he was he looked like a worse player than he was at UM.  QB development hasn't been great at UM but two weeks ago McNamara went something like 9/14 on 3rd downs against Nebraska on the road and was instrumental in them emerging with a win there.  He's not been THAT bad, and perhaps the incredibly high success rate he had on deep shots early has evened out a bit but that doesn't presume a loss forever.

What bothers me in general is this almost palpable sense that doom HAS to be around the corner with the QB, and so every bit of success is tinged with a "oh man, it's going to suck even more when it falls apart", which has to be incredibly tiring.  If McCarthy supplanted McNamara my guess is the runs drop dramatically and you're left with a mediocre passer who doesn't know the offense.  It would be like Joe Milton last year with more upside.  

Beyond the QB I'm really happy with how the offense looks.  I am more underwhelmed by the receivers than this site is, but that's been a consistent trend so I think it's just different perspectives.  But this team can do one thing at an elite level offensively and the other parts are coming together.  MSU will be tough but this feels like a team coming into its down a bit.

bronxblue

October 27th, 2021 at 12:09 PM ^

I will admit to only watching him once (I think it was against Oregon, but I don't remember) but I came away unimpressed, and his season stats were a significant step down from his 2016 season.  I had DTR on a fantasy team and I remember a lot of UCLA blogs thinking Speight wasn't bringing much to the field, though it also wasn't the most talented WR group.

I did forget to include Joe Milton, who promptly went to UT and struggled to pass the ball against Bowling Green.  The fact he looked like a viable P5 QB at UM is pretty impressive to me given how he's struggled elsewhere.

ShadowStorm33

October 27th, 2021 at 2:42 PM ^

Speight was never right after he got hurt at Iowa in 2016. He played hurt against OSU and FSU to end that season, but by the time the 2017 season rolled around and he was (presumably) healthy he still looked off. Something wasn't right, he looked broken, until Purdue truly broke him. Go back and look at his games prior to Purdue; he was not good.

So no, I am a 100% believer that we needed to move on, because steady, functional pre-2016 Iowa Speight was gone and was never coming back, and what was left was a shell of his former self.

antonio_sass

October 27th, 2021 at 11:58 AM ^

You're far too easy on the receivers. On all three of Sainristil's deep routes, he inexplicably mistimes the ball.

If you ask the coaches, CJ and Schoonmaker should come down with those balls where they have position on the defender and both hands on the rock. They're not circus catches.

plaidflannel

October 27th, 2021 at 1:03 PM ^

Getting PIs called against the defense is a WR skill that many seem to hand-wave away.

Nico was AMAZING at this.  He always got his body in the right position and timed his jumps perfectly.  The only way for the defensive player to make a play was a blatantly obvious PI, forcing the ref to throw the flag.

Watching From Afar

October 27th, 2021 at 12:59 PM ^

With you on Sainristil. He seems to want to leap and make some awesome catch instead of running under the ball.

The CJ one could have been caught, but don't excuse the DB tying an apron around his waist and limiting his ability to high point the ball. The Schoonmaker pass was 100% on Cade. That's a TE running all out up the seam, having to turn around and almost stop to try and come back through the trailing defender. His only hope was the defender gets there too quickly and gets DPI.

ShadowStorm33

October 27th, 2021 at 2:51 PM ^

I hate to be too harsh on Sainristil, because he does come up with a good play or two most games (don't think he had one this game, but he definitely had a clutch catch against Nebraska), but he seems to leave a lot to be desired as a receiver. Bad routes, mistiming jumps, etc. He's inconsistent for sure. But he's certainly not the first WR under Harbaugh to under-develop (or not develop at all--I remember Kekoa Crawford, who was a WR that had that rare combination of being seemingly unable to run routes or catch the ball). I had hoped that Gattis's track record with WRs would turn around our issues there, but I've definitely seen others suggest that we need a true WR coach that isn't trying to be a coordinator on top of it (didn't work out for Drevno either), and there may be something to that...

bronxblue

October 27th, 2021 at 1:28 PM ^

Yeah, I like Sainristil with the ball in his hands but he absolutely does seem to mistime passes.  He did this a bit last year as well, so it's not new.  Part is probably just timing issues but even earlier in the year he would slow down on a couple of deeper throws and then have to speed up and leap at the last second.  

colonel

October 27th, 2021 at 2:19 PM ^

Unscientifically, I would say that the throws to Sainristil feel like Cade was putting the ball up, hoping his receiver could run under them and make a play. Perhaps a bigger, more talented wide-out would have done so. 

The throws on the Schoonmaker seam and the Johnson deep posts are concerning. Those throws were terrible. They looked like the throws of a guy who has no confidence in his ability to accurately place a ball more than twenty yards downfield. They look like the throws of a guy of limited arm talent, who just doesn't have the strength to throw the ball downfield with touch.

bronxblue

October 27th, 2021 at 3:58 PM ^

The Johnson throw was off and should have been inside.  I think the Schoonmaker throw he's made a number of times this year; I think he just mistimed it.  It happens.  But he also threw a dart to Johnson that got called for DPI and his throw to Johnson in the endzone that should have been a DPI was also on point. 

I also find it annoying that on the two DPIs McNamara gets a +1 each but McCarthy, who absolutely misses two wide-open guys, runs backwards so far that he momentarily puts them out of FG range, then runs around leading to one of his linemen having to race over and deliver an illegal block, gets a +2 because he finally completed a ball that was 2 yards 5 yards pass the line of scrimmage.  

I will cop to sometimes being less critical of McNamara than others (and I probably should), but I do think this place also dwells extensively on the missteps and minimizes the successes.  College football has a lot of QBs who are worse than McNamara and yet it always feels like he's given all the blame for things not going well and not, say, WRs who fail to run proper routes or make contested catches.  I get that the company line is McCarthy should be starting and he would be if only there was a time machine that could speed up McCarthy into a 2nd-year player with a full season to prepare, but constantly pointing out the flaws of McNamara while minimizing the flaws in others (and completely ignoring the context that lots of college QBs are worse at this stuff and do make mistakes) isn't going to make this happen any faster.

MGoBlue96

October 27th, 2021 at 4:21 PM ^

Why do you keep repeating the field goal thing on JJ's scramble? It was fourth down there is no push your team further out of field goal range part to that equation. The only consideration on that play is in fact keeping it alive to get any score out of the possession. Like I get you think McNamara is being harshly judged by then you go and do the same to JJ by finding fault on a 4th down scramble to keep the possession alive and are doing so by talking about some hypothetical field goal that does not exist on the next down. Also I think more posters than not are in fact on the start Cade train of thought unless things starting going really sideways in a game.

colonel

October 27th, 2021 at 6:20 PM ^

I will cop to being in the JJ camp, and being too antsy. His first throw to Johnson that was way off (because he tried to throw on the move) seemed like a play that explained why he's not yet the starter. Felt like a classic "this isn't high school, bud" kinda play. You have to set your feet for that kinda out route. I'd love to see more of JJ, but I get why we have to be patient.

And I have probably been too critical of Cade, but his misses concern me. They communicate the general message that his cieling is low, and that there are certain throws he just can't make. This doesn't feel like Jake Rudock throwing a nicely lofted deep pass that's just a yard too long for an open Jehu Chesson. Those throws made me think that Rudock could dial in the touch once he got his confidence up. I just don't see that with Cade. The timing might have been off on the Schoonmaker play, but why? Wasn't the TE his first read? Everything else about that play was perfectly executed, including the playcall itself. How could he miss it that badly?

 

 

 

OldSchoolWolverine

October 27th, 2021 at 11:59 AM ^

I recall on the radio that Dierdorf was saying that NW is edge disciplined and NOT to attack the edges, and was criticizing Gattis... maybe it was regarding passing, not running.

I root extra for All, because he is an Ohio guy and we need exposure there, to get back in.  An All-American All would go a long way there.

yossarians tree

October 27th, 2021 at 12:01 PM ^

An interesting play not talked about much here is that RPO that Cade failed to get out to Andrel Anthony. That play was going to be a big hitter. I can't be sure who the WR is out blocking (think it must be Baldwin), but he was locked up on his man and Anthony was dangerous. Hard to blame Gattis here. The play was there and everyone was executing except that quarterback.

stephenrjking

October 27th, 2021 at 12:05 PM ^

I love the wide camera angle we got today.

One of the frustrating things about deep analysis of Michigan football in the Harbaugh era is that our passing game has been, largely, underwhelming. And it is really difficult to really grasp what Michigan is doing in the passing game because we lack all-22 angles that could tell us a lot more about how Michigan's route combinations work and what receivers are doing.

But there are a few nuggets here that are helpful.

The Sainristil bomb showed some stuff, for example.

Watch how the play develops. I think we can agree that the throw wasn't to a great place. But in QB play as you make a read progression, you don't look to another read once you know you have the first read you've made. Cade knows he's got Sainristil singled on a safety, so it is no longer reasonable for him to check to see if the weakside CB is bailing 25 yards downfield before he releases the ball. 

You get a downfield guy singled on a safety, you take the shot. Remember the first TD Bama scored against us? Jerry Jeudy got single coverage on a deep safety and torched him, touchdown.

The differences are that Michigan has Cade, *and* that Michigan doesn't have receivers that can just torch guys in single coverage. If Sainristil completely nuked the safety, he can run unimpeded and have a better shot at the pass. But when the camera picks him up at roughly the 25, the safety has dominated the route, and there's nowhere to go. 

Now, there is a scheme component to this: As Seth has rightly observed, Michigan doesn't do intermediate stuff on PA. That both contributes to the CB bailing, since he has clearly been taught not to expect the underneath pass, and to the safety staying on top of the route, since they don't expect Sainristil to cut the route off.

Could there be some intermediate plays baked into the gameplan against a rival with the word "State" in its name? Maybe.

Another play that I found fascinating: The first pass Seth clipped. Mostly for educational purposes.

What I like about this clip is that we see the whole field and everything the QB sees. A complete route combo. Northwestern is playing a cover-2 zone, and Michigan is running 5 passing routes. On the strong side you have 3 guys running what might be a snag concept (correct me if I'm wrong, I understanding of route combo terminology is pretty shallow). Your outside WR parks at 5 yards downfield, your TE slot curls at the line to gain, and the slot receiver runs a post behind them. This combo stretches an undermanned defense both laterally and vertically if they are undermanned. Weak side you have the outside receiver running a square in and the RB running a route out to the flat, stretching the defense laterally and creating a man coverage conflict, with the deep slot post route providing vertical threat behind. 

Northwestern coverage rules convert the outside CB coverage to man, as Michigan is clearly expecting. They wind up with 4 guys covering the strong side, plus the weak safety dropping and shading the post route. Cade watches what that weak safety is doing; the weak safety is drifting strong side and supports coverage against the slot post route (if the safety was headed weakside, the post is open and Cade can theoretically throw an easy pass to the middle of the field), so Cade zeroes in strong side, sees what he expects from Johnson, and hits the pass. 

 

I'm not saying that this is some remarkable play, just that it's a great look at a basic concept in totality. 

And I'm not saying that JJ couldn't do the same thing, but it is worth noting that Michigan's playbook is filled with various different concepts and reads pre and post-snap that require a fair amount from the QB, and it is likely that JJ doesn't have nearly the understanding of these that Cade does, because JJ is a true freshman. I will mention, also, that I'm a bit pessimistic about how Harbaugh prepares his QBs for this stuff. 

Mostly, though, it's just nice to get the whole picture. YMMV.