in your face charlie murphy [Patrick Barron]

Vroom, Vroom, Vroomy Vroom Vroom Comment Count

Brian September 5th, 2023 at 11:44 AM

9/2/2023– Michigan 30, East Carolina 3 – 1-0

Well, here we go.

The best kind of thing to take from a game against a solid G5 program that's just turned over the vast majority of their personnel is one that is opponent-invariant, and the most opponent-invariant thing in football is quarterbacks dropping dimes. This space has long maintained that if the offensive executes perfectly, they just get to win. Via that lens the most important development from the opener is the prevalence of "nice try, I win" plays. ECU had some moments of excellent coverage that just did not matter.

McCarthy started out hot, casually dropping in an NFL-level 15-yard out to the field on Michigan's first drive that featured passes:

In addition to the Here Look At My Arm Talent plays he also moved opponents with the power of his mind. Folks have already pointed out the little pump fake on the third Wilson touchdown but this one is probably even better. Wilson isn't open until McCarthy focuses on Loveland:

ECU CB to bottom

Live I thought that was a weird coverage bust; no, it was just McCarthy manipulating the defense. This is something he did last year, particularly early, but it was an occasional thing. That felt like promise; here it felt more like a preview.

There is a warm blanket of a feeling you get when you are suddenly a fan of a football team with a quarterback who is obviously an NFL dude. The ability to drop back and rifle in lasers to guys who are sort of open changes the feeling of third and seven from "yikes" to "you have insulted my family by creating this third and medium situation and now I will exact my vengeance."

McCarthy did a version of this early last year as well, turning in 100% downfield success rate performances against Hawaii and UConn. This was different, though. ECU might not be good but this did not feel like the rote walkovers from last year. ECU asked McCarthy some questions, and he answered them. In addition to the two plays embedded above there was the throw to Loveland where ECU sent the house; McCarthy backpedaled to the left a bit to buy another half-second of time, then formed up and delivered a dart. This was not the McCarthy who went on a couple endless sojourns against Maryland last year. He was decisive. He was confident. He was in command.

He was locked in to the point where we can individually consider his incompletions:

  • Wilson has the ball punched out early.
  • McCarthy throws behind Johnson on a quick out during the one-minute drill.
  • A linebacker with freaky long arms gets his hand on a ball that's arcing towards an AJ Barner touchdown in the back corner of the endzone.
  • McCarthy breaks the pocket and can't quite get it to Wilson.

I don't think 1 and 3 are negatives, but just good plays from the defense, and 4 was a difficult proposition. I did think he'd broken the pocket enough that he did not need to pull the trigger immediately and could have run closer to the LOS. At that point the throws are easier and you can just run if necessary. So that is my complaint from this game. He's going to come in for a silly UFR grade.

The season preview said that if Michigan was going to Beat Georgia the McCarthy training wheels needed to come off, and they did. After the first drive 11/16 McCarthy first downs were passes. Michigan ran all the play action we begged for over the offseason, because ECU came in with an aggressive, OSU/TCU game plan.

Michigan said no, that's not going to work anymore. Try another idea.

AWARDS

Known Friends and Trusted Agents Of The Week

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schwangle! [Barron]

you're the man now, dog-2535ac8789d1b499[1]

#1 JJ McCarthy. See above.

#2(T) Roman Wilson and Cornelius Johnson. Wilson was more prominent in TDs but Johnson had the best catch of the day, a leaping stab of a ball a bit behind him to pick up a first down. Between them they caught everything that could be caught and seemed to be on the same page as McCarthy in a Jeremy Gallon sort of way.

#3(T) Ernest Haussmann, Kenneth Grant, Mike Sainristil, and Josh Wallace. It is extremely difficult to come up with a defensive player for this game because of the huge amount of rotation. Only Keon Sabb and Keshaun Harris had more than 36 snaps and 25 different players had at least 10. But also ECU was held to three points so lets sprinkle some holy water on the D, too.

Haussman led Michigan in solo tackles and had a couple of legit sticks; Sainristil had a pick and shut off the outside; Grant induced the Sainristil pick; Wallace almost had a stunning INT of his own but for the vagaries of fate and gave up zero completions on his two targets. Two points each to distinguish them from the clawing pack.

Honorable mention: Tommy Doman blasts some balls, including a That's Bait Kickoff. Kris Jenkins and Mason Graham delete all interior runs at them. Blake Corum and Donovan Edwards both flash their ability in mercifully limited opportunities.

KFaTAotW Standings.

(points: #1: 8, #2: 5, #3: 3, HMs one each. Ties result in somewhat arbitrary assignments.)

8: JJ McCarthy (#1 ECU)
4: Roman Wilson (T2 ECU), Cornelius Johnson (T2 ECU)
2: Ernest Hausmann (T3 ECU), Kenneth Grant (T3 ECU), Mike Sainristil (T3 ECU), Josh Wallace (T3 ECU)
1: Tommy Doman (HM ECU), Kris Jenkins (HM ECU), Mason Graham (HM ECU), Blake Corum (HM ECU), Donovan Edwards (HM ECU).

Who's Got It Better Than Us(?) Of The Week

JJ McCarthy looks off a flat defender and lays in a gorgeous touchdown to Roman Wilson in the corner of the endzone. 

Honorable mention: Replay official has the over and lets the first Wilson TD stand. Blake Corum bursts off the left side, giving us some of them good Blake Corum feelings. Mike Sainristil picks off a pass that's a duck because the quarterback is trying not to be flattened by Kenneth Grant.

imageMARCUS HALL EPIC DOUBLE BIRD OF THE WEEK.

Michigan runs dive after dive in an attempt to get Edwards a touchdown, resulting in a goal line stand after a fumbled exchange on fourth down.

Honorable mention: Michigan's first drive is three runs under the shadow of their own goal line that gets stuffed. ECU's punter is annoyingly good at dropping in line drives just inside the sideline that roll forever. XP is missed.

[After THE JUMP: hire a Big 12 coordinator, get a Big 12 defense]

OFFENSE

Quarterback takes have been expressed. Moving on.

Tackle: I continue not to get it. I'll have to UFR everything to get a definitive score but when I went over Michigan's busted runs Myles Hinton came up a lot. The frustrating first drive had multiple examples. On second down Zinter chips a DT and moves on; Hinton doesn't pick him up because he's doubling a DE with the TE. On third down ECU has a DT/LB twist on that's pretty clever and delivers a linebacker to the POA, but that guy is only cleanup after the backside DE slants under Barner:

Bad job Barner, I guess, but historically I cut guys some slack when they're trying to block a guy who 1) starts inside of him and 2) slants away from him. And:

image

Look at that gap in the line. Someone's filling it, and in this situation it is highly likely that the hand-in-dirt DE, who's shaded outside of Hinton instead of inside of Barner, is shooting inside. Hinton needs to help his TE out here; instead he releases to nobody and doesn't touch a Pirate on this play.

Contrast that to Trente Jones getting a late shift from a DE, anticipating the slant inside, and putting that guy on his ass:

"TE" #53 to bottom of line

Jones was also the point-of-attack blocker on Corum's long power run and blew a guy halfway across the formation.

This appears to be a consensus view since Hinton came in for PFFs lowest M OL grade in this game and Hinton himself told the assembled media that he "didn't play very well." He also said he "didn't play like [he] practiced," which is a thing that happens when people are in new situations. Jones should get the start next week if Michigan's following the same pattern they did last year, and if he performs like he did a year ago I'd imagine he holds onto the job.

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do something about… that guy [Fuller]

Run blocking: withholding judgment. I tweeted something during the game that asserted that Michigan's shotgun runs weren't very effective because JJ keeps were off and ECU got to shoot unblocked guys at the ballcarrier repeatedly. On review this was only true a couple times, but there's a reason that the gun was generally regarded as a passing formation before the dawn of the zone read, and Michigan did little to control backside ends. When they did pop Bredeson into the flat it was an easy chunk gain, and I'm pretty sure that Edwards run that popped all the way out the backside was an intentional cutback. They ran a few things like it a year ago.

Anyway: new center, still figuring out the tackle situation, going up against some serious blitzballers. It'll get better. The weak YPC isn't the whole story because 1) a couple of successful Edwards runs were those touch handoffs that are very very technically passes and 2) Michigan decided to run the all dive redzone offense again when they tried to get Edwards a touchdown instead of just running plays that would score.

I'm not too concerned.

Heck yeah catchy guys. On review the first incompletion to Wilson was a PBU, not a drop—Wilson was just about to complete the tuck into his elbow when the ECU defender punched it out—so there's virtually nothing negative to report from the wide receiver corps. They helped McCarthy out a few times and there were no routine drops. Sometimes you take this for granted, and then you watch FSU-LSU and are suddenly very grateful that Michigan receivers have not regularly dropped throws in their facemask for a long, long time. The last guy who was an inexplicable drops guy was… Braylon Edwards?

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Fred Moore unexpectedly prominent [Fuller]

Notable depth chart items. First game, actual depth chart reveal:

  • Fred Moore appears to be WR #4, give or take O'Leary. He was in front of Derrius Clemons based on snap counts and targets. Clemons did get in earlier but there's a bullet about this in a sec.
  • Backup OL was T/El-Hadi/Crippen/Gentry/T. This seems like good news for Gentry, who appears to have booted Reece Atteberry to defense, at least temporarily, because he was clearly on the two-deep.
  • Kalel Mullings is indeed RB3.
  • Davis Warren is QB2, although Harbaugh said the competition between Warren and Tuttle is ongoing.

 

Self-scouting ho. Michigan had some serious personnel tips in this game. Colston Loveland was 80% pass. Cornelius Johnson snaps were almost 70% pass; ditto Roman Wilson. Max Bredeson was the inverse, as was Trente Jones. Jones, ok, bonus OL whatever, but the starting WRs were very heavy pass tips and anyone else at WR was a heavy run tip. Clemons was two passes, 11 runs. Other guys were less extreme but third and fourth quarter snaps play into that.

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hoss [Fuller]

Still on team Mullings. Mullings has kept his nose in front of Ben Hall for RB3 and he had a couple of late runs on which he was able to escape tacklers with nimble feet and then plow a rugby scrum forward for significant YAC. Mullings also intrigues as a second back with either Corum or Edwards, because he's big enough to be a reasonably good fullback and a good enough runner to be a lone back. Michigan ran out a few plays featuring both Mullings and Edwards; will be something to keep an eye on going forward.

DEFENSE

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that kind of day [Barron]

Rotation items. Game one always gives you a chance to find out the actual depth chart. This is what it looked like to me:

DE DT DT DE
Braiden McGregor Kris Jenkins Mason Graham Jaylen Harrell
Derrick Moore Kenneth Grant Cam Goode/Rayshaun Benny TJ Guy/Josiah Stewart

Goode and Guy actually got the first snaps when the second team rotated in, which was constantly. No DL had more than 27 snaps; 10 had at least ten. Guy and Goode, despite getting in first, look like third string options based on snap counts.

No need for a linebacker chart as only three guys got in before garbage time. Ernest Hausmann actually led Michigan in snaps and rotated through both MLB and WLB. Jaydon Hood and Micah Pollard are apparently third string, assuming that Jimmy Rolder is in front of them when he's back from injury.

The secondary:

CB CB NK S S
Will Johnson Josh Wallace Mike Sainristil Rod Moore Makari Paige
Keshaun Harris Jyaire Hill Ja’Den McBurrows Keon Sabb Zeke Berry
DJ Waller Kody Jones   Quinten Johnson

There had been rumors that Berry was practicing at nickel but McBurrows got all the non-Sainristil snaps there. I assume Amorion Walker factors in the CB depth chart somewhere but I have no idea where.

FWIW. Johnson warmed up with the ones and at that point I assumed he was playing. Sitting him was a very narrow decision, it appears. One dollar he's back for UNLV.

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under duress [Barron]

Pass rush: ask again later. ECU did not suffer any sacks but they resorted to tactics that indicated they didn't think they could block Michigan at all. A large majority of plays that went downfield were quick fades, especially after ECU faced down the terrifying possibility of a Kenneth Grant stunt up the gut:

There were a lot of plays where ECU barely avoided disaster despite the gameplan. I think it'll come out decently in UFR.

Rooster Uche issues. Josiah Stewart came in after TJ Guy. He ended up with almost twice Guy's snaps so I think Michigan wants Stewart to blow up and get through the WDE depth chart until he's obviously the guy after Harrell. This implies there is a reason Guy got in before Stewart and in the limited time we got it seems pretty clear: Stewart's not very good at setting an edge. Almost the only ECU success on the ground all day came when guys bounced outside of Stewart. This only happened ~2 times, but that's not good relative to the other options unless you're ripping the quarterback's spine out of his body. That's pending.

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you have our attention [Fuller]

About those fades. Michigan defended all of them, with Josh Wallace one ill-placed foot from an eye-opening interception:

Keon Sabb got tested on a slot fade on ECU's first drive and got a PBU; on the podcast there was some debate about how good this defense actually was. Sabb didn't get his head around but he didn't get lucky; instead he looked at his guy and got a hand between his mark's arms. I'll take that from a sophomore safety.

Hello Hausmann. I was a little skeptical that Hausmann was deserving of his #1-in-the-portal-until-Travis-Hunter-shows-up status midway through the offseason transfer cycle, but after one game featuring a couple of thunderous sticks and scattered plays between he looks like a keeper. This is another scouting win for a program that has them coming out their ears; despite the fact Hausmann was the #6 kid in Nebraska he was a "top target" for M, per Lorenz, and when things went south with the hometown school they leapt on the kid.

SPECIAL TEAMS

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sproing [Fuller]

It's all new, so by relative confidence level:

PUNTER. Tommy Doman booted 44 and 45 yard punts that were obvious fair catches as soon as they came off his foot, one of them on a snap from the one yard line. He booted all of his kickoffs into the endzone aside from one James "Doug" Foug memorial pop-up to the two that had so much hang time that I was actively hoping the ECU returner would take the bait; he did and ECU started at the sixteen—actually the eight thanks to a penalty.

Doman looks like a seamless transition to another Brad Robbins tenure of approximately four opponent punt returns per season.

KICK RETURN. There was only one and it went in the endzone.

KICKER. A missed extra point isn't a banner way to start your Michigan career but Turner, previously 1/6 from 50+ on his career, was 2/3 in this one, although one of the makes didn't count because ECU had called timeout. His career record under 40 is such that I'm not worried about XP goofery.

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English was not one of the four potential PR guys Harbaugh mentioned [Barron]

PUNT RETURN. Jake Thaw probably didn't have a shot at the first punt since it was a line drive that was just down the sideline, but other attempts were iffy. This feels like the brief Caden Kolesar experiment a couple years back, where the guy who did the best job at not putting the ball on the turf in practice got early-season snaps until the fast guy people wanted to take the job got it. In that case it was AJ Henning; here Karmello English got the last one and might be the long term solution.

MISCELLANEOUS

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hang the red hat, hang the red hat, hang the red hat [Fuller]

Hope you like ads. All of that offseason garbage about how games needed to be shorter was just that. Through week one the new clock rules have cut off somewhere between four and 15 plays per game—there are a lot of competing claims out there—and all of that time has gone directly into commercials. Somebody crunched the numbers on the FSU-LSU game:

In this game, Peacock—a streaming service that is making basically nothing off ads if their rotation is any indication—went to timeout with 19 seconds left in the third quarter and 46 seconds left in the fourth quarter.

What's the other thing that's on Peacock all the time? The EPL. NBC got six years of EPL rights for "more than $2.5 billion" two years ago. As of a year ago their all-time record for viewership for an EPL game was 1.4 million. College football absolutely dwarfs that. There are ways to make this less miserable, but no one is interested in exploring them.

Corporations should figure out that at some point your brand is being associated with "I hate you, give me the football back."

Harbaugh tribute o'clock. JJ McCarthy got off the bus with a "FREE HARBAUGH" shirt on, several other players wore Harbaugh-themed T-shirts, and Michigan's first snap not on the shadow of their own goal line was a train formation where the players held up four fingers—for the Alex Drains reading this, Harbaugh wore #4 at Michigan*. None of this really matters, but I guess it's nice to see that the players are upset about this in a way I bet one dollar no Brian Kelly team could ever be. Team seems tight-knit.

*[This is completely unfair to Alex, who has watched far more 1970-80s sports than I have, but in my defense I am very upset that he is so young.]

New scoreboards. I imagine they'll work out the kinks, but one man's initial impression:

  • What's the point when replays don't take up the whole board? Make the football guys bigger for that bit.
  • I do not need to know the score of a game that happened three days ago or that is scheduled for tonight. Keep it limited to ongoing games and the Saudi Premiere League.
  • The stats were poorly presented. They were about 50% too large, forcing various drill-down stats to take up two pages. Attempts were presented on two different lines instead of "12/13," which was a thing that actually happened, and all of it was maize, which is a horrible background color. Shrink the stats, only rotate through the drill-downs during commercials. Make it look like a webpage, and when was the last time you tried to read something with a lurid yellow background? This isn't Geocities, baby.

HERE

State of Our Open Threads:

There were only 19 fucks given the entire game, and several of those were about the portions of the game hidden from view by Xfinity's wondrous creation. The same really goes for the mere 24 shits given as well, although a few of those were from people who were already in mid-season form in the open thread. I do wish some of you wouldn't take the first game quite so seriously, but whatever. For a bit of contrast though, we managed 34 fucks and 30 shits in last year's Colorado State open thread, so by first appearances, we enter this season in a slightly more serene state, relatively speaking for Michigan fans.

With pics:

We were all excited about JJ's performance, and rightly so, but what jumped out to me on rewatching was how easy so much of it was. Here's a capture I took at random from later in the game:

Look at all that space in the middle. Michigan's receivers were running dig routes into the middle of the field all afternoon; this one is notable because you can actually see defenders on the screen, something that did not always occur.

Best and Worst on the Fingers Aloft:

It was a bit cheesy but in a season where we already saw Northwestern players wear shirts saying “Cats Against the World” because their coach got fired for (checks notes) allowing a locker room culture of sexual humiliation and hazing to fester for decades, it was a harmless sign of support for their suspended coach.  Most people seemed to agree in this assessment, though a couple of the usual suspects such as Steven Godfrey, whose entire personality appears to be just the physical manifestation of Calvin pissing on a Chevy logo and has a burning hatred for Michigan that seems to emanate from some time when Brian called him an idiot online, tried their hardest to make it some convoluted, premeditated middle finger from Harbaugh to the NCAA, as if Jim doesn’t have access to a pulpit (and used it) when he wants to roast his enemies.  Regardless, we’ve got two more weeks of this insanity before Harbaugh returns to the sideline, but at this point it remains a bit surreal that a team as cocky (and good) as Michigan helmed by the deeply-weird and sometimes off-putting Jim Harbaugh would be receiving so much public support, but apparently the NCAA was able to mine deep enough into the core of the world in their search of continued relevance to cause that type of tectonic shift in public perception.

And your Michigan War Dad content of the week:

In 1844, the United States looked nothing like the country we know today. Texas was still in its brief period of independence, and nearly everything west of the Mississippi was unsettled, untamed, and and incredibly dangerous. Despite the images of the West subsequent decades were to produce, both the technology of the 1840’s and the strength of the local native populace put the settlers at a huge disadvantage.

In the summer of that year, Comanche war chief Yellow Wolf launched another in a stream of seemingly unending raids into Texas, hitting remote Bexar County. Yellow Wolf’s war band was large, around 80 warriors, and the Comanche were the dominant mounted force in the Americas. Captain John Coffee Hays of the Texas Rangers set off with just fourteen men to find Yellow Wolf and stop the raids.

Jack Hays

War on the frontier had taken up a more or less familiar formula by 1844.

Comments

bronxblue

September 5th, 2023 at 2:25 PM ^

DPJ also had a penchant for either dropping a ball or not always getting to balls he probably should have even if they weren't direct drops.

Again, catching a ball is really hard so I don't blame any of these guys but there have been a number of guys with questionable hands, at times, at UM.  And then you've got Jason Avant who basically velcroed every ball that got to him.

VintageRandy

September 5th, 2023 at 12:25 PM ^

You’ll probably note this in the UFR, but my minor gripe with the play action was that JJ didn’t always sell the fake handoff well. In fact there was one play where Edwards was to his left and he faked the handoff to the right just as a DE was crashing the edge. Small stuff that will be cleaned up but worth pointing out. 

matty blue

September 5th, 2023 at 1:23 PM ^

i thought the same thing about selling the play fake.  the only thing i'd say is that, given his accuracy and arm strength, he really only needs to freeze a defender for a moment, especially when the defense is totally selling out for the run.  he doesn't need much of a window, is what i'm saying.

a steve deberg-level play fake would be great, and he might need to do that against anyone playing straight defense.

PopeLando

September 5th, 2023 at 12:30 PM ^

The Book on Michigan still has to be “stop the run and dare McCarthy to pass”, right?

This was a game that we haven’t seen a lot of. ECU made damn sure that the line of scrimmage numbers favored them…and Michigan actually switched strategies!  That happened almost zero times last year.

But the caveat is that this was without Harbaugh on the sidelines. I’ll believe that Harbaugh is capable of deploying a pass-first offense - even when the opponent waves a huge “please pass the ball” flag - when I see it. Because the next time he does so, it’ll be the first time. 

So I’m anticipating a couple more games of opponents trying their version of the OSU/TCU/ECU defense. Greg Schiano - who I think is one of the better game planners in the conference - will undoubtedly have his version of it.

goblu330

September 5th, 2023 at 12:40 PM ^

A lot of teams played Michigan in a similar fashion last year and they still ran the ball successfully.  I don't think the offensive line is the same kind of dominating unit this year.  I don't think Michigan should be reactionary on this.  I think they should come out slinging the ball and forcing teams to respect the pass to open up the running game.

MGoBlue96

September 5th, 2023 at 5:30 PM ^

Eh, I am going to hold off on saying this o-line won't be a dominating unit until the starters are settled and have a chance to show what they can do with a larger sample size. Nugent was an all conference level player last year, not worried about him and if Crippen were to take the job at some point it is likely because he is pretty darn good. As noted by Brian I think Jones is better than Hinton and will help sure up the RT spot. At the end of the day this is a still an offensive line that still probably ends up with three all conference or better players at the end of the year. 

lhglrkwg

September 6th, 2023 at 10:34 AM ^

My hope is that this here we're finally sidelining OC-by-committee some as Sherrone is being groomed for a head gig. Hopefully this means he is the OC period and we get more of this. Obviously he wasn't calling the game Saturday, but if the rest of the offensive staff under him were just following through on the same philosophy then hopefully it is a harbinger of good things to come

goblue2121

September 5th, 2023 at 12:34 PM ^

Extremely fortunate to have this kind of depth on the offensive line. Hopefully they establish the starting 5 in the next game or two and start building some cohesion in that group. Pretty confident they will be able to run it on just about anyone once they rep it enough.

mGrowOld

September 5th, 2023 at 12:43 PM ^

*[This is completely unfair to Alex, who has watched far more 1970-80s sports than I have, but in my defense I am very upset that he is so young.]

Dont cry for me Argentina.  

1VaBlue1

September 5th, 2023 at 12:48 PM ^

I'm still not convinced that the ECU WR touched the ball while OOB on Wilson's pick.  I cannot see any touch, nor did ball change its movement other than when its obvious that Wilson was reeling it back in.  Maybe that was a make-up call for JJ's over the line TD?

Whatever - easy win.  NEXT!

1VaBlue1

September 5th, 2023 at 2:01 PM ^

Yes - Wallace...

Saying "abundantly clear" is an overstatement!  Wallace's hand was under the ball when it hit, and it's not clear at all that it touched the ECU players hand.  Certainly not clear enough to overrule the call on the field, IMO.  It's clear that he reached out for it, and may have touched his thumb.  But not clear at all whether it actually did.

The Maize Halo

September 5th, 2023 at 12:58 PM ^

The stats on one side and the out-of-town scoreboard on the other side are taking way too much real estate.  Use the humongous video boards to show humongous full-screen video and replays of the game.

the_dude

September 5th, 2023 at 1:02 PM ^

Respect to Alex for watching Old Time Hawkey. I enjoyed the part of the pod that were basically 'if this is all we have to criticize about JJ's performance, we are going to be in really good shape'.

Credit to ECU, I suspect they have some pretty good coaching and our next two opponents are going to get flattened much worse than what happened to the Pirates. Speaking of pirates, so long pirate references, they definitely added some entertainment to the mix.

 

njvictor

September 5th, 2023 at 1:04 PM ^

A few points to this write up:

  • I still think Hinton starting was more just a live reps barometer to see where he is
  • I think the heavy personnel tips were more about getting guys live reps. Getting younger guys blocking reps and getting JJ reps with the starters
  • I had the same takeaways in regards to the DL. There were so many almost sacks/QB hits

MGlobules

September 5th, 2023 at 1:07 PM ^

Ten percent less game time, ca. 10% fewer plays is--as far as I can see--ten percent less of the freaking product I am there for. Ticket buyers are being straight up ripped. Stretching it over the same amount of time? They think we're dumb.

We need to come up with ways to let them know it. A boycott of one of the playoff games could be interesting. 

Needs

September 5th, 2023 at 1:09 PM ^

The call on the first JJ touchdown was, of course, extremely funny, because it began the cascade of disagreement between Terry McCauley and the game officials, and it was extremely close (like "Peacock needed to borrow the EPL VAR offside lines" close) but the existing rule is just terrible. The ball should have to be released (ie in the air) before the line of scrimmage. That's similar to the standard on the goal line, it should be the standard for passes.

BlueTimesTwo

September 5th, 2023 at 1:58 PM ^

Yes, if any part of his body has not crossed the LOS at the moment of the release, it is a legal play.  So when it looks like his heel is touching the line (or very close to it) when the ball was released, it was enough to uphold the call.  And I am fine with going back to the original replay standard of upholding the call unless it is very clearly wrong.  And I can't say it was 100% wrong in this case.  More likely than not, maybe, but not indisputable.

abertain

September 5th, 2023 at 1:29 PM ^

I hope they go back to the old clock rules. Ten plays are sometimes the only ten plays a guy will get in all season. I think it's worth it for the larger rosters on college football teams. And relatedly, they need to limit commercial times and use more in-game ads like soccer. I know they will still want large blocks, but they are absolutely going way too far right now. 

matty blue

September 5th, 2023 at 1:29 PM ^

nary a mention of the targeting call, but that's okay, at least as far as the peacock crew was concerned. 

i didn't catch the name of the dingbat doing the "let's check with our rules expert" crap, but boy - i don't know what he was watching.  dude launched into JJ as he was going down and hit helmet-to-helmet.  players have gotten seriously injured on far less scary-looking hits. 

but peacock guy seemed to think it was a clean tackle.  very weird.

HenneManCrush

September 5th, 2023 at 1:30 PM ^

for the Alex Drains reading this

Alex out here catching strays just because he's younger. Although I'm not going to lie: I hope this becomes an ongoing and ever-evolving shtick this entire season. So far, so good.

MGoRedemption

September 5th, 2023 at 1:36 PM ^

is there an easy way to access old Brian game columns? it's hard to search for when each title is unique (like Three Folding Chairs from OSU 2023, Vroom - today). The tags at the top don't help much either. You click Brian's name and it just goes to his old MGoBoard comments 

ppudge

September 5th, 2023 at 1:44 PM ^

I’ve long thought the solution to commercials is just to make each break a little longer and have less breaks.  The fact that there could be 7 commercial breaks during one quarter of football is insane.  Limit it to 2 breaks per quarter and just add 1 minute to each break.  It’ll still get the tv advertisers the same amount of time but I’m convinced the less breaks will make it seem better for us viewers.