[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.

-----------------------------------------------

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

UofM Die Hard …

January 2nd, 2020 at 6:32 PM ^

i mean sure but there are sunshine and rainbows in his piece too, as they should be. The offense is going to be the tits next year. And if people here don’t see that part then i don’t know what to say. If Dylan or Milton is a dude, this offense will hang lots of points up and like Brian/most here say...that is today’s game.  No defense will stop the likes of Osu LSU bama Clemson. Just have to hang with them and catch some breaks. 
 

Im pumped. I want gattis here many moons 

maquih

January 3rd, 2020 at 1:06 AM ^

Yeah, idk I feel like we're a consistent top25 team but we're never touching the playoffs, and maybe if ohio gets hit with ncaa sanctions at some point we'll beat them again. But right now, this is our peak give or take a couple of wins against Wisconsin and penn state each year.

 

TheCube

January 2nd, 2020 at 1:53 PM ^

Brian says in this piece that Peppers is the exception to Michigan’s 5 star curse. I disagree. Peppers got to NYC due to sheer media hype. In reality he didn’t really wow anybody statistically and for how much his “presence” was felt on the field it was much in the same vein as Rashan’s. 
 

This goes without getting into Pepcat. What a waste of time that was. 

jmblue

January 2nd, 2020 at 2:10 PM ^

Recency effect meeting the internet echo chamber:

In 2016, Peppers had 27 carries for 167 yards and 3 TDs.   But he got stuffed on our last possession of the Iowa game and ever since, there has been a recurring narrative here that the Pepcat "never worked." 

dragonchild

January 2nd, 2020 at 2:36 PM ^

He was overutilized.  The offense kept calling Pepcat long after it'd stopped working, without drawing up any plays built off of it.  We kept waiting for it to evolve until we realized it was a one-play gimmick that outlived its usefulness.

But let's all remember that Jabrill Peppers was primarily a defender and, to a lesser extent, a force on special teams.  He didn't get Heisman consideration because of Pepcat.

DealerCamel

January 2nd, 2020 at 2:36 PM ^

74 of those yards and 2 of those touchdowns were against Rutgers.  A walk-on fullback also had a touchdown against Rutgers that game.  What more people remember is the plays against Ohio State and Iowa that went for 2 yards or no gain.

That being said, he was clearly a force on defense.

SHub'68

January 3rd, 2020 at 11:31 PM ^

Peppers was the best punt catcher I ever saw. I'd love to say kick-returner, but he somehow never got fortunate enough to break the big one. On the other hand, he saved a ton of yardage (and scared the crap out of everyone) every time he ran up into traffic to field a kick. Pretty amazing stuff that I'd love to see again.

ERdocLSA2004

January 2nd, 2020 at 2:47 PM ^

Agree.  Brian did comment on that as well. I think the receivers in general were so underutilized.  Do we really think Ronnie Bell is our best receiver?  He’s good, I love the kid, but his production this season came simply because of where he was lined up. DPJ and Black pretty much knew, as did all of us, that unless their numbers were called directly, Shea was never going to look their way.

bluebygod

January 2nd, 2020 at 1:50 PM ^

I hope the boos on the Hutchinson personal foul were heard on television.  I booed for two plays after and the next play coming back from the television break.

stephenrjking

January 2nd, 2020 at 1:51 PM ^

The problem with the Shea struggles is that I don't really think that the next QB will be a significant improvement on Shea. Not because of what I've seen from them, but because of what I've seen from every other Harbaugh QB here.

But, yes, the idea of Michigan receivers actually getting thrown to accurately when they are wide open is enchanting. 

And I like the idea of Giles Jackson getting Percy Harvin-type usage on offense. I thought it was odd, though not actively annoying, that he got a pretty conventional run play early. But after they used him again for that wheel route two possessions later, it made all kinds of sense. And he's the kind of guy that could actually break a big run or two if they give him 2-4 regular handoffs a game. 

There's a chance that the offense could really come into its own next year. We've been saying it for years, but Gattis is the man now. I really want to retain Warinner, at least one of the junior receivers (both would be great!) and Ruiz. Hang on to them, and luck out on McCaffrey developing better than any previous Harbaugh Michigan QB, and things could be legit special. 

If.

EMBA21

January 2nd, 2020 at 3:00 PM ^

It's not just the happy feet - it's the default decision to run backwards 8-10 yards and try to outflank the rushers while hoping someone in the secondary fell down.  I can't believe this wasn't mentioned to Shea once or twice or 5 million times as not the way to put defense in conflict.

tspoon

January 2nd, 2020 at 3:23 PM ^

I agree that there are several Shea-specific issues that shouldn't necessarily be an issue for his successor.

Multiple times yesterday I saw him lean backward or even step backward when making a throw, rather than stepping into the throw.  For a guy who doesn't have a howitzer of an arm to begin with, this was maddening. I couldn't tell if it was just sloppy/lack of concentration, or a technique that he's convinced himself he needs in order to compensate for his height relative to what he's seeing/sensing in front of him at the line. It certainly is one factor contributing to his brutal inconsistency in throwing deeper routes.

The lack of progress in RPO decision making could be a coaching thing. Or it could be a Shea thing. That will be fascinating to watch. Let's hope it was the latter.

While his out-of-pocket athleticism and gunslinger mindset does result in some fancy highlight reel plays, a steadier hand might do well to recognize and choose the simpler play in some of those situations.

Those seem like thing the next QB might improve upon immediately, which would likely have a significant positive impact on our downfield game. If I was DPJ and Nico, I bet I might have some view on Dylan and Joe on those fronts, and it might one significant factor influencing whether I stay or go....

 

 

SC Wolverine

January 2nd, 2020 at 2:50 PM ^

I don't agree, though I understand your concern.  The mere fact that Dylan is likely to pull when it is wide open will benefit our offense enormously.  I have a feeling that the promises JH had to make to get Shea to commit made him feel morally obligated to stick with him even when it was obvious that he wouldn't run and couldn't make reads.  Dylan has thrown a lot of nice deep balls, and he can really run.  My hope is that Dylan and Joe will be close enough that we are willing to risk injury to the one who is playing.  The whole "Shea won't pull" meme was killer this year.  Meanwhile, Trevor Lawrence and Justin Fields were playing like there was a football game going on.  In today's football, we need a QB whose running game is a big part of the offense.  Next year, there's reasons to hope we'll have that.

JFW

January 2nd, 2020 at 3:04 PM ^

"Not because of what I've seen from them, but because of what I've seen from every other Harbaugh QB here."

This is maybe the biggest thing that baffles me. Until the Speight Iowa game Harbaugh seemed to live up to his rep as a QB whisperer. Ruddock improved and Speight IMHO was the best version of Speight he could be.

Since then? Speight crashed. O'Korn never seemed to develop. Peterson left after Patterson came on and Patterson regressed. 

There are some points to consider: O'Korn may never have been all that. Patterson had multiple OC's and never had a chance to get his feet. But still... I have no answers.  

WFNY_DP

January 2nd, 2020 at 3:20 PM ^

FWIW, Speight's regression came timed with the complete collapse of the offensive line under Drevno, which directly led to Speight getting his neck/back cracked in a game the season after playing the back end of the schedule with a busted up shoulder.

Gulogulo37

January 3rd, 2020 at 12:41 AM ^

O'Korn had already gotten passed up at Houston before he came to Michigan. No one should have suspected anything close to a Heisman candidate. As for Shea, I think the golf stuff is legit. Sometimes I think the leadership thing gets overblown but it just never really felt like Shea was intense enough or much of a leader. With how competitive elite football is you need to ultra competitive yourself. Shea always seems really quiet and reserved and we hear about him not being super serious about improving.

Michigan4Life

January 2nd, 2020 at 5:12 PM ^

The biggest difference between DMC and Patterson is DMC will throw the WR open with anticipation and timing. DMC won't hesitate to throw it at the top of his drop and can read coverage quickly. Shea, on the other hand, struggles in that department. He's more of a see it thrower aka if a player is open, he'll throw it. Because of that limitation, the coaches had to simplify the offensive package so if his first read isn't open, he'll go to the other side if they're open. If both are covered, Shea really struggled. The only thing that is holding DMC back is his health. He needs to learn when to slide instead of trying to go for an extra yard.

echoWhiskey

January 2nd, 2020 at 1:51 PM ^

Nitpick, but I think the game (functionally) ending interception was not Jobe.  His was at the real end of the game. 

 

Also, VRBO rebranded an it is supposed to be a word not an acronym (as stupid as that is). 

N. Campus Tech

January 2nd, 2020 at 1:52 PM ^

Special teams and field position. Michigan started on their own 25 and 1 on drives they could only get two field goals. 

Bama's second TD drive was aided by two poor officiating calls. The DPI on an underthrown pass and roughing the passer penalties.

Then throw in the busted route on Bama's first play from scrimmage. If this games 21-0 Michigan at the half, Bama quits, and M wins 35-14. Instead, M's halftime lead wasn't enough, Bama pulled their heads out of their ass, and the team with the better talent won.

Blue_In_Texas

January 2nd, 2020 at 1:55 PM ^

"The culture of the program is such that the starting QB gets called out for golfing too much."

LOL. We are a joke but think we are great because we won some games in 20s before African Americans were even allowed to play. We are the definition of half way crooks. 

 

JFW

January 2nd, 2020 at 3:07 PM ^

"We are a joke"

Come on. That is the Hawt-est of takes. We aren't elite. I don't think there is any real argument against that. I think many (and likely Harbaugh himself) are disappointed in our progress to this point. But a joke? There are a crap ton of college football teams that would be happy with our record the last 5 years. 

MgerBlerg

January 2nd, 2020 at 1:57 PM ^

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

Thank you Brian for calling a spade a spade with the usual eloquence.  Michigan's not going to compete with the elite until it unshackles itself.  And I'll unfortunately watch every minute either way.

MGoBlue96

January 2nd, 2020 at 1:58 PM ^

To add insult to injury the broadcasting crew said the explanation they got from the booth on why they didn't buzz down to review for targeting on Bell was because the contact was incidental to them. That could not be farther from the truth of what actually happened. Just frustrating to see a bogus roughing penalty when the defender even made sure to not land directly on the QB, but yet launching your forearm into someone's head is ok somehow. Both the NFL and college need to be more consistent with player safety efforts in terms of actually focusing on plays that are dangerous and not on calling phantom penalties for daring to touch a QB.

As far as Brian's other thoughts they pretty much echo my own 100%. QB play is not good enough, the weaknesses on D got exposed against better teams and not having a true home run threat at RB really hurting the offense. UM needs to find a way create more big plays consistently next year, still too many methodical type of drives this year that can easily be short circuited with one mistake. Big plays are the name of the game in modern college football.

Hotel Putingrad

January 2nd, 2020 at 2:41 PM ^

It was incidental contact. Bell slipped. That's why he got hit in the head.

I'm not saying it shouldn't have been called. I'm just saying it's obvious why they didn't call it.

The Hutchinson penalty was called because if how Jones' neck got twisted as he hit the ground. It looked much worse than it actually was. The refs make these calls based on appearances (see the Lawrence play in the semifinal).

mGrowOld

January 2nd, 2020 at 3:20 PM ^

In both the NFL and college the #1 problem in officiating is that they call the result of the play-not what they actually witnessed happening.

Alabama's QB, like Clemson's, "sold" the roughing call by laying on the ground and acting like they were about to die.  Bell, on the other hand, jumped right up.  The officials threw the flag on the QB hits because roughing MUST'VE occurred right?  See how hurt he is?  And in Bell's case no targeting because he jumped right up.

Same thing happened in the Packers Lions MNF game with the 2 hands to the face penalties.  The official never actually saw hands to the face (because it never happened) but they saw the GB Packer player react like he MUST'VE gotten hands to his face and threw the flag both times.  And both times incorrectly.

Wanna fix officiating?  Tell officials to only call what they actually see happen and not the end result.  Otherwise football will become soccer or any game Lebron James plays by encouraging acting.

MGoBlue96

January 2nd, 2020 at 3:26 PM ^

I mean that might account for what the refs saw on the field but in the Bell case the booth had a chance to buzz down and look at it is as well. Real time is one thing but the booth had a chance to slow it down to see the clear forearm contact directly to the head. I do kinda of agree with your overall point though that often times the on field officials make assumptions based on the end result. I thought there a couple times Uche, etc got held trying to get around the edge for example, but because they kept going and didn't flop they didn't get the call.