[Patrick Barron]

Not Technically A Private School Comment Count

Brian January 2nd, 2020 at 1:27 PM

1/1/2020 – Michigan 16, Alabama 35 – 9-4, 6-3 Big Ten, season over

Well, that could have been worse.

The last time Michigan played Alabama I was rapidly drinking a beer in the second quarter because that was the obvious thing to do. I think it was the second play from scrimmage when Roy Roundtree tried to run a route up the sideline and the Alabama cornerback blasted him five yards into the sideline. The outcome was never in doubt, only the exact nature of the humiliation.

This, by contrast, was a football game. It was a football game despite early indicators that it would be another ritual spanking. Michigan had a halftime lead, and it felt like they should have had a bigger lead. This was a correct take since Michigan scored zero second-half points and Alabama covered easily. But until Shea Patterson threw an interception directly at Josh Jobe, it was worth your time.

Yes, this is a low bar to clear. I love low bars to clear. I love stepping over a six inch obstacle and celebrating like I have cured polio. I have successfully breathed in and out several times while writing this paragraph and am high-fiving myself madly. I am an accomplished individual. I clear bars. Do not ask where they are located.

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And heck, almost everything that's relevant for next year was pretty good. Josh Gattis came out with an excellent gameplan that saw Michigan put up nearly 300 first half yards before Alabama adjusted and Michigan had to rely on out-executing the Tide with a crew of people who are mostly not five stars. Zach Charbonnet got a lot of work done on the ground and in one memorable pancake in pass protection. Giles Jackson popped out for downfield completions, and by the end of the game Alabama was popping kickoffs to the 35 to prevent him from getting the ball. Chris Hinton survived as a lone nose tackle, mostly.

If the point of a bowl game is to encourage you about the next season this was about as good as a win. If the point of a bowl game is to win it, well… that was not as good as a win.

This is because the loss largely went back to Patterson, who threw zero passes longer than 15 yards that a receiver could touch, let alone catch. As documented on this site, Patterson's late-season yardage surge was always a false dawn based more on Josh Gattis giving him eight-yard RPO throws that Michigan turned in to great piles of yardage. But even at his meh-est, Patterson was always a guy you could rely on to throw an arcing deep ball that gave his receivers a chance. This was in fact his greatest strength.

In this game his deeper throws were weirdly flat and always off. Early, Nico Collins beat a Josh Jobe jam badly enough that on a ball that hit him in stride Jobe was either going to make a shoestring tackle or give up a touchdown; Patterson zinged a rope that the king of catching radius couldn't get a finger on. And that was pretty much his day until he threw it right to Jobe right after Eubanks had turned his route up at the sideline, wide open. That was the ballgame in a neat little bow.

To a large extent it also was the season. Michigan had two other major issues—defensive tackle and Gattis transition costs—but Patterson dropping from a guy PFF ranked ahead of Dwayne Haskins to a guy nine slots behind the noodle-armed dude Michigan played in the opener (as of week 12) was the biggest single factor in a disappointing season and the one most emblematic of the frustrating spot Michigan finds itself in. A lot of TV stats are weird, cherry-picked, and meaningless, but Michigan going 0-20 against top 15 teams in road/neutral games since Lloyd Carr retired does actually say it all about where it's at.

And while I said it badly right after the Ohio State game, the thing that sticks with me after this season are the two relevant quotes from the OSU/Michigan rivalry. Justin Fields is in the football building so eternally that he described the campus where he is nominally a student like it was a European city he'd like to visit some day. Josh Gattis on Patterson before the season:

"I was a little bit worried about him coming into camp, because he spent so much time on the golf course this summer," Gattis told media Wednesday in Ann Arbor.

Michigan has a recipe for a nice little program that never beats anyone of import.

Michigan is the Papa Doc of college football. Pretty good at its subject matter. Rolls deep. Excellent at beating up on the Cheddar Bobs of the world.

Fundamentally, though, Michigan is named Clarence and went to Cranbrook. They'll let some guys into school but not other guys. If they're bagging they're the worst school in the world at it since they managed to turn the Michigan money cannon into zero guys ranked higher than 92nd in this class. The culture of the program is such that the starting QB gets called out for golfing too much.

Then they pretend to some sort of nobility. But there's no such thing as halfway crooks.

[After THE JUMP: Gattisization complete though]

AWARDS

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when not chasing Jeudy it went well [Barron]

Known Friends And Trusted Agents Of The Week

you're the man now, dog

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#1 Jordan Glasgow. Everywhere when Alabama tried to go horizontal, which they did far too often until it was four-minute drill time. 10 tackles, one for loss, and several others at or near the line of scrimmage to set up long yardage situations. Generally not liable for what happened with the WR crew.

#2 Zach Charbonnet. 84 yards on 13 carries, many of them featuring Charbonnet running over Alabama guys like he was still in high school. Also one murderous blitz pickup and several other good blitz pickups.

#3 Giles Jackson. Michigan's leading receiver with 57 yards, 40 of them on a wheel route catch and run where he popped out of the backfield. Also had an inside zone carry for three yards, which is an interesting wrinkle that helped set up the wheel route. Had kickoff returns to the 50 and 35 and induced Bama to pop another kickoff up to the 35. Should be real fun next year.

Honorable mention: Dax Hill wasn't primarily responsible for the 85-yarder and had 11 tackles of his own, with some almost plays. Quinn Nordin banged through three FGs, including a 57-yarder. Nico Collins had four catches for 48 yards and could have had more if Patterson was more on point. Aidan Hutchinson made several plays on the ground. Cam McGrone had a number of plays in the second half, but did blow a coverage on Bama's TD to go up two scores.

KFaTAotW Standings

NOTE: New scoring! HM: 1 point. #3: 3 points. #2: 5 points. #1: 8 points. Split winners awarded points at the sole discretion of a pygmy marmoset named Luke.

23: Shea Patterson(HM MTSU, #1 Rutgers. HM PSU, #2 MSU, #1 Indiana)
21: Josh Uche (#3 MTSU, #3 Army, T2 Rutgers, #2 Illinois, HM ND, T1 Maryland, HM MSU, #3 Indiana), Jordan Glasgow (HM MTSU, T3 Iowa, #1 Illinois, HM Maryland, #1 Alabama)
19: Nico Collins (HM Rutgers, HM Iowa, #1 PSU, #3 Maryland, HM MSU, #2 Indiana. HM Alabama),  Aidan Hutchinson(#1 Army, HM Rutgers, T1 Iowa, HM Illinois, HM ND, T1 Maryland, HM Indiana, HM Alabama)
18: Zach Charbonnet (#2 MTSU, #2 Army, HM PSU, HM ND, HM Maryland, #2 Alabama)
15: Whole Dang OL(#2 PSU, #1 ND, HM Maryland, HM Indiana).
13: Cam McGrone(HM Rutgers, T3 Iowa, HM Illinois, #3 PSU, #2 ND. HM Alabama), Ronnie Bell (HM Army, T3 Rutgers, HM Illinois, #1 MSU)
10:  Ambry Thomas (#1 MTSU, HM Rutgers, HM Illinois), Kwity Paye (T2 Rutgers, T1 Iowa, HM PSU, T1 Maryland)
9: Khaleke Hudson (#2 Iowa, HM Illinois, HM ND, HM Maryland, HM MSU)
7: Josh Metellus (HM Army, HM Iowa, #2 Maryland), Hassan Haskins (#3 Illinois, #3 ND, HM Maryland)
6: Lavert Hill (HM Army, HM Iowa, HM ND, #3 MSU)
5: Giles Jackson (HM Maryland, HM Indiana, #3 Alabama)
3: DPJ (T3 Rutgers, HM MSU), Mike Danna (T1 Maryland, HM MSU), Dax Hill(HM Rutgers, HM Iowa, HM Alabama)
2: Tru Wilson (HM ND, HM Maryland), Will Hart (HM MTSU, HM Maryland), Carlo Kemp(HM MSU)
1:  Josh Ross (HM, MTSU), Sean McKeon (HM, MTSU),Brad Hawkins (HM Army), Christian Turner (HM Rutgers), Nick Eubanks (HM Illinois), Brad Hawkins (HM ND), Michael Barrett (HM Maryland), Quinn Nordin (HM Alabama).

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

Nordin nails a 57-yard field goal to give Michigan a halftime lead.

Honorable mention: The back half of the first quarter when Michigan was running with abandon and Alabama kept punting. McGrone time.

X4OROG3KOKTIFUY4YU4SNSLDIY_thumb_thuMARCUS HALL EPIC DOUBLE BIRD OF THE WEEK.

Patterson throws an interception directly at Josh Jobe's chest to functionally end the game.

Honorable mention: Several people try to pronounce "VRBO" as a word instead of an acronym. Michigan gives up an 85-yard TD on the first snap. Pretty much any Jerry Jeudy thing. Henry Ruggs makes a shoetops catch on which Dax Hill gets a rake in.

OFFENSE

All systems go. The most optimistic thing about the way the year finished: Josh Gattis dialing up several gameplans that were, as the kids five years ago say, straight fire. Gattis straight up dragged Shea Patterson to a finishing stretch that disguised his season-long regression with a ton of RPS+ plays on which he was able to turn short throws into big gains. Michigan nuked MSU's defense in their Super Bowl and had first halves against OSU and Alabama in which Michigan put up nearly 300 yards but did not convert those yards into points efficiently because of execution errors.

Second halves in those games did not go nearly as well; even so  Michigan put up an average of 400 yards against the SP+ #2 and #7 defenses. Failing to score the way you should is an issue but Michigan's players spurned tons of opportunities that were there. You can't argue with the approach, just the execution.

This was not the case early in the year, to say the least. But the arc here is very encouraging and should pave the way for a very good offense next year.

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[Barron]

The difference. Donovan Peoples-Jones was the #1 WR in the class of 2017. #3 was Jerry Jeudy. DeVonta Smith was #9; Henry Ruggs was #11. All three of the Bama receivers were outstanding. Peoples-Jones had one catch and run for a chunk off Michigan's clever wildcat flea flicker and (IIRC) just one other target, that a deep ball on which he lost the route. Alabama's got some dudes in the secondary, of course, but DPJ was supposed to be the dude of dudes. Bama's guys were getting separation that DPJ hasn't really gotten thus far in his career. Lavert Hill got torched by Jeudy so badly that his intentional PI afterwards was widely regarded as a smart play. DPJ events like that were rare this year.

It's pretty frustrating that Michigan's elite recruits have panned out like Rashan Gary, who was good but some distance from an All-American, and Peoples-Jones (ditto). Even when Michigan's managed to get a big-timer they haven't gotten full measure from them. Jabrill Peppers is the exception.

One potential caveat: I've complained repeatedly about Patterson not taking shots to open guys, and frequently these were Peoples-Jones. Might not be his deal.

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burly but not 80 yards fast [Barron]

Need some lightning. Hassan Haskins and Zach Charbonnet both had quality days against the Bama defense. Haskins didn't have the YPC Charbonnet did but had a number of tough interior short yardage runs that are a burgeoning trademark. Both guys are good backs.

But Michigan again struggled to pop chunk runs. Michigan's long on the day was 12 yards. This has been a season-long issue, one that didn't really go away even as the offense started living up to the "speed in space" offseason chatter. A large part of this seemed to fall on the backs. Michigan presented a thunder and thunder approach.

Next year they'll have quite a bit of lightning. Chris Evans is going to return; Michigan adds turbo jet guy Blake Corum as well. Giles Jackson should continue to have a role as a RB/WR hybrid. This should be the year when the "spread H" spot I keep talking about actually emerges into a big part of Michigan's offense.

DEFENSE

Come on. Aidan Hutchinson's terrible roughing the passer penalty was at least a four-point swing; given Alabama's issues in the kicking game it could well have been seven. The officiating analyst seemed as baffled as anyone about that call. Meanwhile a little bit later Ronnie Bell had his head taken off; you could say that Bell was not defenseless but that seemed more like targeting than any call I'd seen this year.

I don't know what to think. Steve Sarkisian got his QB a 13 YPA day thanks to what seemed like a download of Michigan's defense:

After that he continued screwing around with outside runs and screens and throws while virtually ignoring Michigan's clear weakness up the gut. There was one power play early in the third quarter that went for a chunk and I thought "okay here we go", and then Alabama didn't bother doing it again until their four-minute drive, which went right into the endzone as Najee Harris clubbed Michigan.

In the end I don't think the approach made a whole lot of sense because Bama ended up with 28 points before that drive; sure, take the shots downfield but if you're not taking shots downfield stop dicking around with anything but power football.

This is not in Sarkisian's nature, so Michigan's weak interior barely got tested.

McGrone doing freshman star things. Michigan got a couple of great plays from Cam McGrone to set Alabama up with third and eleven; Bama converted, got another giant catch and run chunk from Jeudy immediately after, and then McGrone got lost on a delay route from the TE for a 20-yard TD. He's going to be very good; that play was a learning experience.

SPECIAL TEAMS

Good field goals. That one from 57 was good from 58 easy.

Good kickoff returns. Jackson's opening kickoff return was a no no no no YES YES YES moment. His ability to pick down the sideline and then cut back has served him well a couple of times this year. Hopefully a prelude to a breakout 2020.

Not so good punting. Why did Michigan insert Brad Robbins—who I thought was no longer on the team—for a 19-yard punt midway through the game? It's filed as a TEAM punt in the stats so I guess it must have taken a deflection. Still baffling.

Comments

freelion

January 2nd, 2020 at 1:38 PM ^

MARCUS HALL EPIC DOUBLE BIRD OF THE WEEK should be the refs with the bogus roughing the passer call on Hutchinson. It didn't cost Michigan the game but sure changed the momentum and feel of the game.

mgoaggie

January 2nd, 2020 at 5:07 PM ^

The roughing the passer penalty was huge. I think one other play that hasn't been mentioned much is the second targeting non-call against Bell running up the middle. Got leveled, defenseless, crown-of-helmet to earhole. I think it was a long second down attempt, I can't remember the exact time, but we had just gone down 2 scores and were hoping to mount something of a comeback. That could have been huge. 

RAH

January 2nd, 2020 at 8:11 PM ^

Absolutely! They kept talking about whether he was defenseless. That was irrelevant. The tackler (who I think was their best defender) led with the crown of his helmet and struck the runner cleanly in the head. IT was particularly easy to see because he struck the side of the runner's head and caused it to spin back. I don't know how they could have missed it. 

Lumpy_wolverine

January 2nd, 2020 at 2:10 PM ^

Agree completely.

The officiating wasn't horrible this game, but every questionable call / no-call went against the good guys (roughing, possible targeting, the weird wide receiver false start, several possible defensive holding / PI).

The small comfort is that the same thing happened to the Buckeyes.  Misery loves company.

joeyb

January 2nd, 2020 at 1:40 PM ^

ac·ro·nym

/ˈakrəˌnim/

noun

  1. an abbreviation formed from the initial letters of other words and pronounced as a word (e.g. ASCIINASA ).

in·i·tial·ism

/iˈniSHəˌlizəm/

noun

  1. an abbreviation consisting of initial letters pronounced separately (e.g., CPU ).

Great Cornholio

January 2nd, 2020 at 11:53 PM ^

Did you not just read the delightfully pedantic post from joeyb indicating that an acronym is meant to be pronounced as a word? Why are people having such a hard time with this?

Question for the sourdough bakers out there: I'm trying a new recipe in which the flour is largely semolina and which includes lots of seeds (fennel, sesame, poppy). The dough feels strange/sticky to the touch and is developing more slowly than what I'm used to. It's almost midnight here in Ann Arbor and I don't feel like dealing with it until tomorrow; is there any harm in sticking the whole thing in the fridge and letting the bulk fermentation play out overnight, slowly, then shaping the loaves in the morning for the final rise? I've done the final rise in the fridge overnight plenty of times, but never the bulk fermentation.

SHub'68

January 3rd, 2020 at 10:36 PM ^

Personal irritant:  GIF.  When it first became a thing in the late 80s, I always heard (and followed suit) it pronounced with a hard "G" as in "Gift."  But some said it was supposed to be with a "J" as in the peanut butter. I don't get why anyone would use the "J" sound, since it stands for Graphics Interchange Format, not Jafics Interchange Format. But, oh well, the originator says I'm wrong, so there's that.

http://howtoreallypronouncegif.com/

Icehole Woody

January 2nd, 2020 at 1:43 PM ^

The way the season started out was mystifying.  The #1s on offense not practicing against #1s on the defense?  IMHO that explained a lot up to and including Wisconsin.

Michigan will get better in 2020.

Go Blue!

Bodogblog

January 2nd, 2020 at 2:25 PM ^

You don't feel the team is better than it was in 2007?  

 

That is factually asinine.  I know what you are trying to say, but if you read again the words you are typing you will understand how dumb it sounds.  9-3, 10-2, 8-4, 10-2, 9-3 are the regular seasons since Harbaugh arrived.  Michigan has set itself up for success next season, since that 2007 season. It's a 9-3 team.  A good to very good team that contended for the B1G/playoff in 2016 and 2018.  


Championship, not yet.  But don't be outright obvious in crapping on the team to make yourself feel better.  Be like Brian - subtly crap on the team in a round about way by distancing yourself to make yourself feel better.  

Bodogblog

January 2nd, 2020 at 3:43 PM ^

This kids is what people mean when they say there are lies, damn lies, and statistics. 


Thoroughly asinine.  And there's nothing wrong with being asinine, everyone's entitled.  The problem is if anyone with actual authority would listen to such thinking.  This guy would fire Harbaugh and hire the 2020 version of RichRod.  


But I get that you're hurt.  And a really immature way of coping with pain is to lash out and hurt someone else.  So go ahead and rip on Harbaugh with obstuse takes, he can bear it.  Hopefully this good-to-great team takes a leap to full-time great in the next couple of years.  And you won't be hurt anymore.  You'll say something like "I'll admit I was wrong" once and wash your hands of all this nonsense you posted.  Then the team will lose the national championship game by 1 point and you'll call them boogers again.  Then they'll win one and you won't be hurt anymore and you'll smile and point at them when they walk by.  And the team won't care and I won't care and no one will care, because this is just sports, and you're a spectator. 

dragonchild

January 2nd, 2020 at 2:21 PM ^

Disclaimer, I don't have inside word into Ft. Schembechler, so consider this speculation.  But based on what I saw, Gattis strolled into town thinking he had it all figured out for a job he'd never held and wasted at least half the offseason on gimmicks that were never going to work and approaches that demanded players do things they're not good at while not building off anything the offense already knew.  Then Shea got injured so he or the coaches got gun shy with the zone read.

The end result was that large chunks of the playbook -- and, more significantly, all the hours of practice spent on it -- had to be tossed into the trash or nerfed to futility.  What was left was simple and predictable.  From there, drawing up a new playbook was the easy part; the offense had to rep them after the season had already started.  It was basically Jake Rudock, the Offense -- the entire team in effect didn't have a summer camp and had to start re-learning the offense in September.  So it took half a season for them to start clicking.

The encouraging thing is that Gattis adjusted.  I hope that was a learning experience as opposed to Harbaugh forcing him to do the right thing.  The last few weeks of the season are good evidence that Gattis is actually quite talented at running an offense; the only thing in his way was his own damn ego.  If he's killed that demon then the offense should be productive from the drop next time.

imafreak1

January 2nd, 2020 at 2:57 PM ^

This seems like the most likely explanation. I was terrified after the bizarre and pointless 2 QB plays against Memphis and then the mind numbingly repetitive and un-creative play calling against Army. Two games in and I was like. Holy shit. Did Michigan hire a guy who has one play (the basic slant RPO) and some silly back yard plays and nothing else?

But the end of the season was nearly as good (from a play calling and design if not an execution standpoint) as the start was alarming. 

Whatever the problem was at the start it got fixed. Which is good. Change and adaptation seem to be very rare in football coaches who mostly seem to want to do what they do but just do it better.

yossarians tree

January 2nd, 2020 at 3:31 PM ^

That's a plausible take. I think Gattis had to be humbled before he could really learn the job, which was entirely new to him. Remember the anecdote that went around about Gattis telling his realtor "I'm only going to here for two years anyway." He didn't know what he didn't know, but to his credit he was able to self-critique.

What should be the mantra around the building all off-season is "let's hit the ground running in 2020." No excuses about a new QB or new OL. The new guys were here repping all season. Come out of the box swinging in the first game and let's turn our athletes loose from Day 1. We should beat Washington and then turn up some blowouts against the non-conference cupcakes (whoever they are). This team should not be trying to find it's identity halfway through the season. There is only one identity in football--attack and destroy or die trying.