Weiss marked safe. [Bryan Fuller]

Report/React: Offensive Assistants Shuffled Comment Count

Seth February 8th, 2022 at 2:00 PM

While we wait to hear about a new DC, as Sam Webb reported($) yesterday and then publicized on WTKA today, Michigan will be shuffling around their offensive assistants in the wake of Josh Gattis’s departure. In a nutshell:

  • Matt Weiss promoted to co-OC with Sherrone Moore
  • Ron Bellamy (safeties) to wide receivers
  • Grant Newsome (analyst) to tight ends, a promotion to an on-field role.
  • Jay Harbaugh (tight ends) to a defensive position TBD.
  • Moore (co-OC/OL) and Hart (RB) remain in place (for now?)

Let’s discuss.

OFFENSIVE COORDINATOR

Changes: Matt Weiss, who was brought on board last year from the Ravens, and was Harbaugh’s top lieutenant during the Vikings saga, has been raised to co-OC, the position previously held by Josh Gattis. Sherrone Moore, who gained the title last season with his promotion to OL coach, will remain co-OC and share the play-calling duties with Weiss.

On-Field Impact: Weiss is an analytics dude who was supposedly a big part of the success of the Ravens’ running game, and was basically brought in as a co-OC with Gattis and Moore. The title bump allows him to take a more active role in shaping the offense around his quarterbacks’ various strengths and weaknesses. They already did a lot of that last year, anyways.

I believe however that people are overestimating how much of that is going to be Weiss and how much of a role Sherrone Moore’s plans are going to shape the kind of offense Michigan runs. Moore was a real part of the play-calling brain trust last year, and appeared to have a major hand in gameplans, which featured subtle changes in blocking while other aspects remained static. That’s partly because Harbaugh learned offense from Schembechler, and has been a feature of Harbaugh offenses throughout his career. But it’s also meant that his OL coach has been a chief officer of the head coach—usually with Drevno, but certainly with Warinner too. Moore may not be getting a title bump, but I think it would incorrect to assume that Weiss has been promoted to the primary OC of the pair. It’s probably going to be even more of a collaborative effort, with Moore and Weiss and Harbaugh taking on some of the roles that had been consolidating under Gattis the last three years.

Make no mistake: More than any OC ever under Harbaugh, Gattis was the one running the collaboration. His fingerprints were all over the offense, his history evident in the interesting things they tried (there were 10x as many ideas stolen from Penn State or Vanderbilt than from Stanford), his #SpeedinSpace philosophy forming the basis of its function, and he was deciding what plays they called. My guess is those duties are going to be spread around, not simply passed on to Weiss, because giving over to Gattis in the first place was a huge concession by Harbaugh.

Recruiting Impact: OC is not a position group. We’ll come back around to this with the receivers.

Hit THE JUMP for the rest

WIDE RECEIVERS

Changes: Josh Gattis to Miami (yes THAT Miami). Ron Bellamy will move from safeties.

On-Field Impact: I’m supposing that Bellamy, a former NFL wide receiver, will be competent in developing the talent on hand. Gattis was superb at this, however, so treading water would mean that Bellamy turns out to be one of the best WR coaches in the nation. What that looks like is a natural progression of Michigan’s receiver room to elite. Ronnie Bell’s first game was a Heisman season if he kept it up (remember the catch the refs wiped out?) Cornelius Johnson is one step from being a top-3 Big Ten receiver. Roman Wilson was breaking out. Andrel Anthony could be better than all of them, and should make the greatest jump. Sainristil and Henning were excellent in their roles and often featured in them. Bellamy would have to meet the highest expectations for a new position coach that I can ever remember.

That’s…possible. Bellamy did an extraordinary job with the safeties last year even though that’s not something he did before. He also built the worst football program in the state of Michigan into the best football program in the state of Michigan, producing more WR prospects than anything else in his West Bloomfield tenure. And lest we forget, Bellamy was going to be the WRs coach when they hired Helow and Macdonald. Helow moved down to linebackers when Brian Jean-Marie departed for Tennessee, which precipitated the hiring of Weiss. So it stands to reason that Bellamy’s a better wide receivers coach than he was a safeties coach. And he was an excellent safeties coach.

Recruiting Impact: Again, you’re losing one of Michigan’s best recruiters, and replacing him with one of Michigan’s best recruiters. Gattis was one of Michigan’s top recruiters, but fortunately he built a deep receiver room with disparate eligibilities. Any group like that which lost its position coach is going to be more subject to poaching, and with the new transfer rule and the NCAA a functional non-entity in preventing tampering, I’m sure every Michigan receiver up to and including Ronnie Bell have been receiving calls.

Fortunately Bellamy is an even more effective recruiter than Gattis. Remember, Sainristil and Johnson were recruited before Gattis came to Michigan, and some of the younger guys, like Andrel Andrel Anthony, Darrius Clemons, and Amorion Walker, already had Bellamy involved in their recruitments (remember Bellamy was going to be a receivers coach during the cycle). That leaves just Roman Wilson, AJ Henning (who’s JJ McCarthy’s dude) and Cristian Dixon who might feel like the guy they committed to has gone. As for recruiting future receivers, Bellamy is loved in Detroit, very well respected around the coaching community, and trusted by players. There’s been talk this offseason of Bellamy taking on Courtney Morgan’s role in addition to his coaching duties. So you’re going here from strength to strength here.

The bigger question is what happens to safety recruiting, including the extraordinary class that just signed here. Since Bellamy’s on staff still, Michigan isn’t totally pulling the rug out from those guys, but they should definitely make sure whomever they bring in on defense is liked by Dent, Berry, and Sabb.

TIGHT ENDS

Changes: Promoted analyst Grant Newsome to TEs coach. Jay Harbaugh will be moved to defense, position TBD.

On-Field Impact: Grant Newsome has been a constant presence and by many accounts a major asset to the program since his career was ended by a freak leg injury. I’ve met him a couple of times, but people who know him well absolutely rave about Newsome, a certifiable genius who could have thrived at an Ivy League school had he chose. It’s something of a coup that Michigan has been able to bring him into the coaching ranks—the guy could be a senator one day—and it was past time to give him an on-field position.

That he’s getting tight ends—if you recall he played offensive tackle at Michigan—is hardly weird. Sherrone Moore was an offensive lineman who coached tight ends, and the path to OL coach usually runs through the position where the larger part of stuff to learn is blocking. Erick All is at the point now where he can start mentoring guys, Schoonmaker’s more advanced right now as a receiver than a blocker, Honigford is a 6th year 6th OL and unlikely to become much more than that, and Newsome has been around all of these guys as long as they’ve been here, so the transition should go smoothly. If you think an OT can’t teach passing, there are few guys I would worry about learning new skills less than Grant Newsome. Tight end also functions as a shared position, not a separate unit, so time with the offensive line won’t be much different than it has been, and since the WRs coach is no longer also the OC, Bellamy should have more time than Gattis to help develop the tight ends’ routes. Michigan probably has an “analyst” around who can keep developing Hibner, Hansen, Loveland, and Klein on fundamentals when the current generation is taking snaps with the 1’s. Tight ends should be in good hands.

It’s still a transition, however, and it should be noted he is filling some big shoes. As with Bellamy, Jay Harbaugh can coach a number of positions. Also like Bellamy, Jay has done a superb job at the position he’s been coaching. Moore was a good TE coach in between, but it’s hard to improve on Harbaugh’s work there. In his first two seasons Jaybaugh coached Jake Butt to a Mackey, recruited Asiasi, and left his successor underclassmen Gentry, McKeon and Eubanks the most effective part of Michigan’s 2017-’18 passing game. In his second stint Harbaugh turned Erick All into a star (he should have been 1st team All Big Ten), and got Schoonmaker to a late breakout with Honigford also developing before our eyes. Again he leaves a loaded depth chart, and two very high upside prospects signed to the 2022 class.

In the interim he built the Haskins-Corum-Charbonnet-Edwards running back room, and the #1 special teams unit in the country, so he’ll probably have success wherever they put him. But Jay’s only been an offensive coach in his time here, and Michigan has to replace quasi-coach senior starters at linebacker and safety, so I’m a bit nervous. Long-term, coaching both sides of the ball bodes well for Jay continuing the family tradition of great head coaches. Short-term, I think whatever role they choose for Jay is going to be supplementary to start; they have George Helow who can coach LBs or safeties, so however the titles work out, most likely they’ll have the defensive coordinator take one of those groups with Jay as his understudy, and Helow the other.

Recruiting impact: Here is where the loss of Jay could be felt most keenly. Recruiting is less about raw brain power, and we haven’t seen Newsome do it yet, so it’s a complete question mark. The good news is they can have an excellent tight end room for years if they only hold onto the guys they have. Thanks to the free COVID year, Schoonmaker and All are technically juniors (though one or both will probably head to the NFL next year), Hibner has eligibility through 2024, Hansen can go to 2025, Loveland and Klein could redshirt and get to 2026, and Rappleyea would go to 2027. I don’t expect Newsome to be one of the most effective recruiters of his generation like Harbaugh, but Harbaugh left him so many toys that Newsome has time before he even has snaps to peddle.

RUNNING BACK

Changes: None, however Hart was not mentioned in Sam’s writeup, and there are credible rumors that Hart is the other assistant who put out feelers when Harbaugh was in the wind and got back some interest. I know Hart was told he wasn’t going to be head coach if Jim Harbaugh went to the NFL, but I’m sure that he wants to be a head coach someday, and he gave up an associate HC title to come home last year, so it’s not unreasonable to assume he’s going to be interested in any offer—including one from Michigan—that continues him on that path. Without movement there, we have to assume Hart will be back for another year as Michigan’s RB coach. If he isn’t, they can quite naturally shift Jay Harbaugh back to running backs.

On-Field Impact: None for now. If they lose Hart, one of the few knocks on Jay Harbaugh is how he deployed the RBs in 2019, when they couldn’t find enough touches for Charbonnet, Haskins, Corum, and Chris Evans, and severely under-utilized the latter two as receivers. The room isn’t as crowded now, and it’s silly to think that they’ll go to less RB-as-receiver stuff with Edwards and Corum taking over most of Haskins’s snaps. That Michigan has another good option on staff should not be taken to mean that Michigan wouldn’t be losing something if they lost Hart. There’s a reason a lot of people in Schembechler Hall were putting forward Hart’s name as a potential head coach, even this early in his career. He’s a legend at this University, but also a universally acknowledged rising star in his profession. The RBs room played an outside role in the attitude turnaround last year, and while that’s mostly a credit to Haskins, Corum, and Edwards themselves, it’s not like any Michigan fan over 30 can pretend the confidence, will, and focus emanating from Mike Hart’s wards has nothing to do with Mike Hart.

Recruiting Impact: Hart just secured a commitment from Cole Cabana. If we lose Hart, it may affect that, but again it’s too early to say. If they have to replace Hart with the guy who recruited Haskins, Charbonnet, Corum, and Edwards, I think we’re going to be okay.

OFFENSIVE LINE

Changes: None.

On-Field Impact: As mentioned, Moore may take a more active role in game-planning based on how his line is shaping up. I expect, for example, that they’ll be running behind Zinter an awful lot.

Recruiting Impact: None. All of the OL principles are still in place.

Comments

bronxblue

February 8th, 2022 at 2:59 PM ^

I don't want to undersell what he did; Gattis clearly saw the benefit of running the ball as much as they did and bought into it being effective, and I was actually really impressed with the MSU gameplan because it was so against UM's preference to throw the ball that much even against an atrocious passing defense.  But yeah, it did feel like the parts of the offense that worked better last year were ones with new voices leading them, and that's why I'm not as worried about his departure provided those guys stick around.

Erik_in_Dayton

February 8th, 2022 at 2:47 PM ^

I didn't want to be a downer at the time, but I was also not blown away by the offense (other than in the OSU game).  That said, last year's offense generally wasn't frustrating.  It was usually a happy mix of Harbaugh-ball with a spread.  And I wonder who brings spread knowledge to the current group.  

bronxblue

February 8th, 2022 at 2:56 PM ^

Absolutely.  I defended the offense in the earlier part of the year and thought they were doing a ton of interesting things along the line and with the RBs and TEs that really put defenses in a bind.  I just don't know how much of the spread elements Gattis brought in that were some secret sauce unique to him.

I'm interested to see what Weiss does with the co-OC role.  

stephenrjking

February 8th, 2022 at 3:06 PM ^

What is spread knowledge, though? Gattis is the engineer behind a lot of the cool end arounds and flares. But just having three or four split wide or running from the shotgun isn’t really notable anymore and everyone on the staff is familiar with it.

It remains an open question how much of Michigan’s run/pass balance was Gattis and how much was Harbaugh. I still favor the explanation that in games like Washington there was Harbaugh influence in the sharp reduction of passing calls; but then, when Michigan faced defenses that were solid against the run, they opened up and passed as much as they needed to, and it was fine.

It should be noted that there are generally going to be multiple sources of input in offensive gameplans on football staffs. My belief about Harbaugh’s involvement is not unique to him; good teams have different voices that contribute. 

Erik_in_Dayton

February 8th, 2022 at 3:45 PM ^

That's a good question.  I suppose I'd define it as the knowledge of various ways to take advantage of spacing, but I am rapidly entering the I don't know what I'm talking about zone.  Also, I don't think of Harbaugh as very knowledgeable when it comes to spread concepts, but maybe I'm wrong.  You are certainly correct that they are hardly novel anymore.  

1VaBlue1

February 8th, 2022 at 2:57 PM ^

Agree...  RPS aside (it's largely a feels thing, anyway), the WRs made some huge strides this year without Bell, which was nice to see.  But each game felt a bit iffy when the ball was thrown, and that was as much on Cade's arm as it was on the WRs actually catching the dang thing.  It seems like they made very few catches in traffic, instead needing to be wide open.  I wouldn't call Gattis the best WR coach Michigan has ever seen...  I do look forward to improvement under Bellamy.

The other thing with the offense is the running game.  That run game had absolutely nothing to do with Josh Gattis.  Nothing.  All of those runs came from Harbaugh's scrapbook or the Warinner memory bank.  A few reads popped off them that are a probable result of Gattis' work, but that's it.

I just don't feel that Gattis will be that big of a loss in the grand scheme...

jdraman

February 8th, 2022 at 5:12 PM ^

I just don't get the dismissal of Gattis as a WR coach; he was pretty good at bringing in talent and then developing that talent. If you want to criticize Gattis for not getting more out of DPJ and Nico Collins in 2019, I would completely agree. However, that was his first season at Michigan and he had a heavily-regressed Shea Patterson at QB.

In Gattis' first year as OC/WR coach, Ronnie Bell had his true breakout season and he continued to play excellent football in 2020. During the first game of this season, prior to the injury, Bell looked primed to be an All-American-caliber player as Seth alluded to. 

You say Johnson is too inconsistent, but at what? Looking back at the UFR chart, the kid was 23/26 on "routine" catches and 12/16 on "tough" catches. Not elite numbers, but certainly a lot better than inconsistent; much closer to being a top-tier receiver in fact. Johnson has also developed a pretty nasty double-move that he used effectively against quite a few secondaries this year. 

You say that the receivers have been inconsistent holding onto the ball. According to the UFR chart, the entire main receiving room (for the purposes of this discussion will include Johnson, Sainristil, Wilson, Henning, Baldwin, Anthony, All, and Schoonmaker) were 119 out of 126 on "routine" catches (94% success rate) and 40 out of 57 on "tough" catches (70% success rate). And this leaves out analysis of individual catches that could have been broken up by defensive players. So I don't think criticism of the receiving room having a 'drop' problem holds up to scrutiny. 

Does Gattis not get credit for the year-to-year development of guys like Erick All and Roman Wilson? All had severe drop issues in 2020, but this year was lights out when making catches of any sort. Wilson became a much more technical route-runner with better releases off the LOS and he even burned one of UGA's 5-star corners in the Orange Bowl (who must have just been a slower corner). 

Seth has consistently raved about WR blocking on the edge almost all season. Guys like Johnson, Sainristil, and Bell (prior to injury) were all good blockers. I do agree that Wilson and Henning both struggle to block, but they are also not exactly built for that role.

I don't think losing Gattis will result in a serious decline in Michigan's offensive abilities nor the abilities of the WR room. But Gattis did a pretty good job of stocking that room with talent, and getting a lot of the players in that room to a pretty good standard of play. Maybe Bellamy transitions over to that position and takes a few of the guys (Andrel Anthony please) to an absolute elite level. Gattis will have laid the foundation for that though. 

Gulogulo37

February 8th, 2022 at 7:53 PM ^

Mostly agreed except I wouldn't say the WRs have been underwhelming. They're still quite young. They probably had a whole offseason planned around getting Bell the ball and then he went down in the first game. And yes they all had potential, but few of these guys were that highly ranked. Johnson was basically a mid 4-star, Henning is a 4-star too but had 1 very weird COVID year so was not much more than a freshman, and everyone else was a 3-star. Gattis got Worthy to commit here, and he tore it up at Texas. I'm assuming the rumor isn't true and that's not why Worthy left.

bronxblue

February 8th, 2022 at 10:05 PM ^

I guess my issue is that when he had Collins, DPJ, etc. the passing offense struggled, then he recruited some guys and they also struggled in many of the same ways.  I've always felt that the WRs need to have a dedicated coach for them; McElwain's one year at UM was why everyone was excited about Collins, DPJ, etc.  But since then I've seen guys who drop way too many catchable balls, seem to not always run their routes properly, and have sub-standard blocking on a lot of plays.  It got better as the season progressed last year but I got my hackles up way too often when I'd see people complain Cade missed someone getting open and then you'd re-watch the play and the guy was sorta breaking open after running a sloppy-ish route or dropping a ball that he really could have dug out to help his QB who was throwing under pressure.

And I looked back at the recruiting at WR and it's...fine but not what I sort of expected.  The top WR Gattis brought in was Henning and Worthy, and that Worthy recruitment was obviously weird and I agree the rumor is probably not true (though there are enough rumors around Gattis that it's hard not to believe something was up).   For someone described as a great WR coach you'd hope he had been a bit more influential on the recruiting trail.

Anyway, this isn't designed to knock Gattis as a coach - he's really good.  But I think that Broyles award distorted the body of his career at UM and I think made it a bit more outsized than it was in reality.

Erik_in_Dayton

February 8th, 2022 at 2:41 PM ^

When we say that Weiss is an analytics guy, what does that mean (other than that he relies on stats)?  What does an analytics guy look at?  The success of certain plays against certain formations and/or personnel groups?  The airspeed velocity of various swallows? 

Kilgore Trout

February 8th, 2022 at 2:45 PM ^

I feel like the Hart stuff I'm hearing doesn't really add up. He gave up an associate head coach job at Indiana where he was making $416k for a RB coach at Michigan where he is making $415k (from my googling at least). If he's not in the Harbaugh circle of trust to move up and he wasn't the guy to take over if Harbaugh left (I have heard varying things on that), then why is he here and why did he come here? Because he "loves Michigan?" He doesn't strike me as the type to make his personal goals and ambitions secondary to doing something for Michigan. It seems like whenever someone brought up Hart as a possible HC, there was pushback that was out of proportion with the idea itself. Anyone have any insight or thoughts?

1974

February 8th, 2022 at 2:49 PM ^

You wrote: "It seems like whenever someone brought up Hart as a possible HC, there was pushback that was out of proportion with the idea itself. Anyone have any insight or thoughts?"

Perspective is important, I guess. From the other end, I couldn't understand why it made sense to hire a RB coach as head coach of Michigan football.

I know that he had the "Associate Head Coach" title at Indiana. I still think jumping from that to head coach at Michigan after a single year doesn't make sense. Pretend he played at Auburn instead. Would his candidacy have been pushed as hard?

yoyo

February 8th, 2022 at 2:49 PM ^

Being the RB coach at Michigan is more prestigious than being RB coach at Indiana. He also has more respect/recognition in the state which would help him with recruiting and raising his profile. Besides Dan Campbell, I have never heard of an assistant getting more head coach hype because of holding the associate position.

befuggled

February 8th, 2022 at 2:49 PM ^

If they lose Hart, one of the few knocks on Jay Harbaugh is how he deployed the RBs in 2019, when they couldn’t find enough touches for Charbonnet, Haskins, Corum, and Chris Evans, and severely under-utilized the latter two as receivers.

Minor quibble: Corum was playing for IMG in 2019, and wasn't 2019 the year that Chris Evans had to sit out? I do agree that Evans was criminally underused as a receiver, though.

Otherwise, nice analysis!

LloydCarr97

February 8th, 2022 at 2:53 PM ^

I have some thoughts on this question I’m about to ask but I’ll save them. Does anyone know the status of Mike Hart and Jim Harbaugh’s relationship? Are they close or do they just coach together?

Australopithecus

February 8th, 2022 at 3:14 PM ^

I wonder if Gattis's departure was prompted by an impending Matt Weiss promotion. Weiss seems like a natural fit as offensive/passing game coordinator. The following situation could have played out: 

- All coaches anticipate Harbaugh to NFL, taking Weiss along as an OC/passing coordinator. [Harbaugh likely thinks Weiss may be schematically stronger than Gattis. After all, offensive play calling did seem to improve a lot after he came on board. Remember, our very talented offense in 2019 was often crippled by questionable scheme, especially early in the season].

- Gattis happily knows he's the lead candidate to take the M head position and expects a promotion.

- In an about-face, Harbaugh declares his return to M. Of course this means his head coach plans are cancelled, but the return of Weiss means a shift in responsibility. The two will become co-offensive coordinators or similar titles with Weiss taking a big role in scheme and play calling. With the rise of Sherrone Moore, this is effectively a demotion for Gattis

- Gattis takes off for Miami

Wolverine 73

February 8th, 2022 at 3:35 PM ^

It was a little puzzling to read the praise for Gattis as a recruiter after reading on this blog that he had been pulled off recruiting earlier this year.  Ditto the praise of Gattis for running the offense when for two years it lurched around until finding its footing after Moore became co-coordinator and Weiss joined the room.  

Don

February 8th, 2022 at 3:46 PM ^

after reading on this blog that he had been pulled off recruiting earlier this year.

FWIW, Sam Webb directly addressed this rumor—and the rumor of why he was allegedly pulled off—and basically said it's all complete bullshit (my words, not his).

He went on to say that during the time period he was allegedly "pulled off" he was down in Florida recruiting.

 

Gulogulo37

February 8th, 2022 at 8:00 PM ^

"after reading on this BOARD"

Fixed it. I have no idea if the rumors are true or not, but they're just rumors and I haven't heard them acknowledged by any insider types. It also really seems Gattis waited around because he thought he may be the head coach, and that doesn't mesh well with him being pulled off the recruiting trail and in the doghouse.

LabattsBleu

February 8th, 2022 at 3:50 PM ^

All this stuff makes sense.

There are definitely some shifts we don't have a lot of data points on: Newsome at TE, Jay to the defense, Ron to the wide receivers, Weis from analyst to co-OC

that said, there were a lot of unknowns last year too...not saying it'll work out like last year, but all we can do is wait and see how it turns out

SanDiegoWolverine

February 8th, 2022 at 11:57 PM ^

I absolutely adore Seth first of all. However, his unwavering love for Gattis Isa bit weird. He is constantly being depending and the absurd suggestion that the "fan base" had anything to do with Gattis leaving is just bizarre. Brian seemed confused by Seth's takes on this week's podcast too.