we don't have photos this year so here's john shuster (for a good reason! at least an okay one!)

Wondering If The Fire Is Still Hot Comment Count

Brian November 23rd, 2020 at 1:02 PM

11/21/2020 – Michigan 48, Rutgers 42 (3OT) – 2-3 Big Ten

If there's one thing I've tried to incorporate into my brain over the course of writing about sports it's this: performances are not consistent.

Over a relatively long span of time a player can be expected to do X. Over shorter spans a player can wildly exceed or underperform his true level. And "shorter spans" can be astoundingly long, from the perspective of someone drawing meaning from a single game. The best example I can throw at you now is Strauss Mann, who has ~120 games of .930+ goaltending bookending a brief season-long disaster:

image

Mann also had 14 USHL playoff games at .932 for people double-checking the ~120

In basketball, Tim Hardaway Jr is a career 35% three-point shooter in the NBA. At Michigan his performance there went 37%, 28%, 37%. Duncan Robinson has a solid case for the best shooter on the planet in the Year of Our Lord 2020; through the first 10 games of his senior season he was shooting 30% from deep and everyone was writing him off.

You want curling examples? I've got curling examples. USA Curling more or less explicitly told John Shuster to die in a fire after finishing 10th and 11th out of 12 in consecutive Olympics. Shuster cobbled together a crew of ne'er do wells, won the national championship repeatedly, and then won an Olympic gold medal.

Football? Let me google some details about this obscure sport. [typing sounds] …interesting… [more typing] …it's like rugby except discrete… well. Let me show you some idiot talking about a Foot-Ball Quarter-Back replacing the starter mid-game during a year of worry and discontent:

Basic stuff... that felt like a revelation. O'Korn's quick, open throws stood in contrast to Speight's struggles to identify open guys the last few games. Twice Michigan picked up catch-and-run conversions on outs that had to be thrown with accuracy and timing to provide YAC. They were. Ditto Gentry's mesh touchdown, which O'Korn knew was open before he even turned around off of play action. This is basic quarterbacking being executed very well. That's huge progress for O'Korn, and apparently the offense.

And then he got dialed in. I gave him 6 DOs in this game, which is a lot on just 26 throws, and I shorted him one on his scramble escapades. The others were no-doubters. This throw is not only between two guys in a tight window but leads Gentry upfield and cannot be better placed for a catch and run:

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wd7-D0sd9bE&feature=emb_logo

One 15 yard penalty later, Michigan faces first and 25 with Purdue breathing down O'Korn's neck. O'Korn stands in, takes the hit, and gives Gentry a chance to make a play.

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=moYO8YubAYw&feature=emb_logo

1) Yes, throw it at the Ent. 2) He even puts this outside of the defender. Given the circumstances this about as good as it gets.

O'Korn leapt off the bench in relief of an injured Wilton Speight, completing 18/26 passes for 10.4 YPA, was the future of the position for one (1) week, and was thereafter a small child lost in a department store. Bet you wish I stuck with the curling examples.

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Now we must consider Cade McNamara. McNamara came off the bench, sparked the offense, and led Michigan to a win. He was calm; he sprinkled in some tough throws in the face of pressure. He looked pretty good. I think we should hold off on expectations that he will continue being pretty good until we see some more. Let's play Pick The Box Score Against Rutgers:

  1. 31/43, 319 yards, 7.4 YPA
  2. 27/36, 260 yards, 7.2 YPA

Door #2 is McNamara. Door #1? Rocky Lombardi. (Lombardi did have two interceptions. One was his WR running the wrong route; the second was Lombardi forcing the ball in desperation mode.) Rutgers may not be very good at football.

To be explicitly clear, this is also what I was advocating after the Minnesota game:

Now tell me about Milton. Be EFFUSIVE.

First I want to pump the brakes

I TOLD YOU TO BE EFFUSIVE

This was a beautiful way to break in a new quarterback against a team that didn't really know what was coming and the number of different things Michigan asked him to do was relatively limited. We don't know how good he is at throws that aren't screens and wide open slants/posts across the middle.

Post snap reads were minimal. These days it's extremely hard to tell if something is a genuine RPO or a called pass …there weren't even many opportunities to puzzle about it. They kept it simple.

Michigan never put in any reads, presumably because Milton wouldn't execute them consistently. Maybe McNamara can. Maybe he's the answer. But expecting QB3 to suddenly blow up when the rest of the program is in the shape it's in… well, it's optimistic. We literally just did this. Water status: holding.

[After THE JUMP: we soldier on]

 

AWARDS

Known Friends and Trusted Agents Of The Week

you're the man now, dog

-2535ac8789d1b499[1]#1 Cade McNamara. See above. Did lead Michigan to all of their points, give or take some special teams adventures.

#2 Hassan Haskins. Grabbed hold of the RB1 job in the second half by grinding out tough yards in unlikely situations. 25 carries(!) seems like an impossible number given the way things have gone thus far this season. 4.4 YPC against Rutgers doesn't sound amazing. Unfortunately, it kind of is.

#3 Giles Jackson. The foremost amongst Michigan receivers because he did not fumble one, as Johnson did, and also chipped in a kick return touchdown. Had one tough back shoulder opportunity he did not bring in but otherwise very good. Needs more touches.

Honorable mentions: I'm dubious anyone on defense qualifies. Johnson does despite the fumble thanks to the sell-job he put on the safety for the wide-open TD; Bell caught a few passes and had some critical blocks that were either on screens or not technically OPI.

KFaTAotW Standings. (Scoring: 8 points for first, 5 for second, 3 for third, 1 for HM. Points from ties adjudicated by an ankylosaur named Sharon.)

14: Joe Milton (#1 Minnesota, #3 MSU, #3 Indiana)
11: Giles Jackson(#1 MSU, #3 Rutgers)
10: Dax Hill (#2 MSU, #2 Indiana), Ronnie Bell (HM Minnesota, #1 Indiana, HM Rutgers)
8: Cade McNamara(#1 Rutgers)
7: Hassan Haskins(HM Minnesota, HM MSU, #2 Rutgers)
5: Kwity Paye(T2 Minnesota, HM MSU, HM Indiana)
3: Aidan Hutchinson(T2 Minnesota), Michael Barrett(#3 Minnesota)
2: Cornelius Johnson(HM Indiana, HM Rutgers)
1: Ben Mason (HM Minnesota), Jaylen Mayfield (HM Minnesota), Roman Wilson (HM MSU), Brad Robbins(HM Indiana),

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

Michigan intercepting Rutgers on fourth down to win a triple overtime game. Wait, come back!

Honorable mention: Johnson torching a Rutgers DB and McNamara hitting him; the untouched Jackson return; the semblance of a run game.

image?MARCUS HALL EPIC DOUBLE BIRD OF THE WEEK.

Rutgers getting to overtime when their stick QB dragged multiple Michigan defenders into the endzone.

Honorable mention: All field goals; the fourth-down TD to set up the two point conversion; playing with no free safety against a post

OFFENSE

Changing what you call. I'll get into this in more detail but McNamara's entry coincided with a change in playcalling. Michigan ran a lot more quick stuff to the outside and found a ground game. With limited exceptions it didn't seem like the QB switch enabled those changes. (McNamara scoring a short touchdown on a bonafide zone read stands out as an exception.) The QB certainly benefited from them.

Haskins finds the cutbacks. McNamara also benefited from the Michigan ground game ceasing to be nonexistent. First half rush yards: 33. Second half: 129. Much of this was Hassan Haskins finding himself surrounded in the backfield and squeezing through cutback lanes while batting away arm tackles. Other parts were bonafide RPS+ plays, like a counter trap:

That may be the first time since the Minnesota game that Michigan got rushing yards based on play design.

And then things get put together. Michigan followed that up with a little pop pass for a TD:

These are not opportunities afforded to you when you can't run the ball one iota.

Imprecision, eventual improvement. Michigan's pick game has been weak all year, with missed opportunities early in this one. Things did get a better. Bell executed a perfect pick on a slant touchdown where he located a defender and turned around, butt out, to eliminate him.

Then he jumped up and down like Pat Fitzgerald about it. So we value these improvements.

It happened! Chris Evans. Split wide. Gets a linebacker.

Michigan borfs the pick route(see above) and Evans still barely gets touched by that linebacker. I can now fade into oblivion. It took five years, but it happened. o

DEFENSE

Also in performances are not consistent. Ye gods, Dax Hill had a disaster. He was directly responsible for both of Rutgers's longest pass plays. On the first he tried to catch an arm-punt in his chest instead of high-pointing the ball or running through the wide receiver.

go get the ball

On the second he was Bartleby the Free Safety: asked to play the deep middle against a post he said he would prefer not to. He also got victimized on the Vedral completion from the sideline. He did do better at high-pointing the ball on the final snap.

It is notable that almost all previous Dax Hill events have been Hill in man coverage and not Hill trying to play a deep zone. This doesn't mean that he's incapable of doing so—when you play a deep zone correctly the ball generally does not get thrown at you. But yeesh.

Various walk-ons. Michigan played Jess Speight at DT, Adam Shibley at LB, and Hunter Reynolds at safety. All acquitted themselves fairly well. It's still a major issue that Michigan's top backups at DT, LB, and S are walk-ons because this team has almost no experienced depth. The only scholarship backup linebackers are true freshmen. It's not quite as raided at safety, but the only non-true freshman scholarship backup options there are German Green and Quinten Johnson, who is coming off a serious injury and may as well be a true freshman.

I don't have to tell anyone that Michigan's roster management has been a disaster, but here's the latest manifestation of it.

Reynolds did a thing. He got over the top of a slot fade to Bo Melton.

This has not happened in a long time. You can only get over the top of route on the edge of the field if you cheat to it; that's what Reynolds did. Since the color guy was saying "this is going to be a slot fade to Bo Melton" and I was thinking "oh man this is going to be a slot fade to Bo Melton" this wasn't the most out-there thing to anticipate. Still nice to see a safety make a play over the top.

Now it's slants. Rutgers's tying drive was a boatload of slants on which almost every member of the secondary got beaten so badly there was no contest on the catch. Green, Gray, and Hill all gave up first downs on third and long. Not great.

Not even mad about this one though. Rutgers's tribute to Vincent Smith could not have been better executed.

If that ball doesn't force the running back to catch it while going flat out Michigan likely tackles that in the backfield.

SPECIAL TEAMS

image

Well, he is fast. Giles Jackson had the world's easiest kick return touchdown. He caught the ball on the five, angled towards the sideline, and then ran straight. This is as close as you're ever going to get to a 100-meter dash in football pads and Jackson crossed the goal line at 14:50.

Maybe make some field goals? This is my advice. Kick it through, not around.

MISCELLANEOUS

A horrible spot. FWIW, the fourth and one attempt where Milton was ruled down was a preposterous spot. He easily made the 42. I can't complain that Michigan didn't challenge that, because they literally never overturn spots that aren't on the goal line.

The usual clock management. Michigan's two-minute drill:

This is a full-on Dead Dove Do Not Eat situation. Michigan ran four plays in the first 90 seconds of their two minute drill. This is never changing.

Frames Janklin of the week. Greg Schiano had a third and ten on his twenty five in OT; field goal wins it. So he has his quarterback kneel down for a two yard loss so he can center the ball. The ensuing field goal fades wide. 1) If it was kicked from the right hash it's good. 2) If the field goal is five yards closer because you ran for three yards on third down, it's good.

I'm supposed to have a joke about this or something but instead I can only gape at it.

Comments

CompleteLunacy

November 23rd, 2020 at 2:35 PM ^

Cade's play of the game won't ever show up in the stat sheet or highlight reels. I believe it happened in 2OT. It was a play that would have resulted in a sack 9 out of 10 times, but Cade managed to just get out of the pocket and throw the ball in the vicinity of a receiver. He saved at least 10 yards on that play.

The other snap I remember was another play that was dead to rights immediately by pressure, but Cade managed to find a way to throw the screen pass to his RB or TE (or whoever it was). 

Basically, he didn't panic under pressure, and it was so refreshing to watch. Considering our OL that might be one of the most important keys to success to our offense going forward. 

Mgoczar

November 23rd, 2020 at 3:04 PM ^

Great point. He didn't take negative play and THAT was real pressure. Don't care about Rutgers, they were bringing pressure. Down 17. How is that for pressure ?? Come on. It was a heroic performance and I haven't seen that from a QB here at M since I graduated. May be Henne to Braylon against MSU ?? 

 

Look at the offensive line. A patchwork and Cade pulled it off. Fantastic performance only to be crapped on with useless caveats on Mgoblog that called Milton performance good or Ok. Sorry but Cade wins MSU game. No doubt. Reason ? Have him pass 52 times...he'd have 450 yards on msu 

jmblue

November 23rd, 2020 at 2:12 PM ^

"But Rutgers" is a perfectly fair point - but I will note that McNamara also looked really good in his brief outing against Wisconsin, going 3-3 and then throwing a perfect fade for the 2-pointer, before the rain came.

As for Schiano, he also called that little swing pass that lost yardage on 2nd down.  They had picked up two yards on first down and then lost four on the next two plays - and then missed a 45-yard FG that probably would have been good from 41.  

Eschstreetalum

November 23rd, 2020 at 2:21 PM ^

So look at it this way, if you count in the missed field goals, we hung about 60 on Rutgers, which is what you would expect.  So maybe the offense will be in decent shape with a new QB.  There are lots of good players there. 
 

The defense? Well now I understand why Don Brown was interviewing with Temple last year. If we are in any games at all for the rest of the year, they will all be shoot outs. Don’t see much hope for the near future on DL or corner either. I guess Mattison knew the ship wasn’t right when he left. 

lhglrkwg

November 23rd, 2020 at 2:43 PM ^

To be fair on the 2 minute drill, if my memory serves me correctly I thought the first few plays were clearly in the territory of 'I don't know if I'm gonna try to score or not. If I get a first down I'll go, if not I'm afraid of punting back to the other team' so I think your drill starts at 1:14 or so

so then after that we obviously wasted 30 seconds and were slow to call a timeout after that, but it's not accurate to lol at the first 2 plays as Rutgers was still hoping to get the ball back and our defense hadn't stopped squat so we weren't sure whether to hurry or not yet, especially considering we were getting the ball after the half

DoubleB

November 23rd, 2020 at 6:50 PM ^

The 2-minute drill tempo and plan early made sense. Going 3 and out after 15 seconds with that defense is good strategy either.

That being said, everyone around here is familiar with Harbaugh's "2-minute drill" down 2 scores in the 4th quarter and you could time the urgency with a sundial. It's a legitimate problem.

Blue Mind and Heart

November 23rd, 2020 at 2:48 PM ^

It's not a tap the breaks on Cade situation but how did we end up with Milton for 4.25 games.  Struggling processing the field in front of him and definitely not a runner. 

4 and goal & 4 and 1 his first step is outside.  Bounce bounce bounce.  Straight north gets both.  Ugh.  

I expect more from a coaching staff.  It's like seeding John Isner #1 cuz he has a big serve.  

spiff

November 23rd, 2020 at 2:49 PM ^

I don’t know. I think that Ronnie Bell pick looked more like a box out than him running a route. But we are due for a few breaks from the refs.  

jabberwock

November 23rd, 2020 at 3:05 PM ^

Cade WILL regress.  We've seen it before with Harbaugh.  
Once he starts coaching him with the 1s it all starts falling apart.  
Too much pressure?  Too much 80's QB disinformation?  Exhaustion from over-work?  Who knows.

One thing after 6 years of Harbaugh I'm certain of is that he is a QB whisperer . . . and he whispers like Grima Wormtounge.

Nothing Special

November 23rd, 2020 at 4:23 PM ^

Listen, we are all nearing the end of our rope with Harbaugh. That being said, it is not a forgone conclusion that Cade with get worse. Sure, there will be some regression to the mean, probably. But that will have more to do with the opponent than Cade I think.

Lets not pretend that Rudddddock didn't improve vastly over the course of his season here. Wilton Speight certainly improved as well until a broken collarbone and back derailed his career here. Has Harbaugh been the QB whisperer we dreamed of? No. He has shown the ability to improve some of the QBs who have come through this team though. So it is not a forgone conclusion that Cade will get worse. 

KC Wolve

November 23rd, 2020 at 3:09 PM ^

Agree on the pump the brakes. I was excited watching and think CM should probably be the starter, but every time I start to get excited about it, I think of two things.

 

1) If he is named the starter, the coaches will most likely turn his brain to mush and next time out he won't make basic reads and

2) Rutgers.

Don

November 23rd, 2020 at 6:26 PM ^

Why do people say "pump the brakes" when they mean *tap* the brakes? Pumping the brakes puts you through the windshield.

I learned from my dad about pumping the brakes... which was exactly what you describe as tapping the brakes. It's just variations in lingo.

What you call "pumping the brakes" is what I'd call "slamming on the brakes"

Nothing Special

November 23rd, 2020 at 4:16 PM ^

The pain of seeing the top point earner for the season so far is our QB, who got benched for poor play, feels like a Chuck Norris round house kick to the gonads. 

I laugh to keep from crying...nope, I am actually crying too now.

Don

November 23rd, 2020 at 6:30 PM ^

I didn't watch every one of Shea Patterson's games at Michigan, but in his admittedly very limited action McNamara has impressed me far more in throwing the football than Shea ever did.

b618

November 25th, 2020 at 6:46 AM ^

A thing I really liked that Cade said.

He was asked about the pressure of being down at half time.  It was a line of questioning with implications about how some teams get discouraged by a deficit and then fall apart worse.

"In my career, I’ve been down bigger at halftime."

I love that answer.

Dude threw for 12,800 yards in his HS career.  146 touchdowns.  More than a thousand passes in games.  Thousands of passes in practice.  He's seen some stuff.

^For any fans of Outliers, by Gladwell.