The OFFICIAL MICHIGAN TEAM 136 THREAD: THE CONQUERING HEROES

HNIC973

R.I.P Bandana P
Joined
May 16, 2012
Messages
24,238
Reputation
2,512
Daps
47,330
Reppin
Brick City,New Jerz
Jim Harbaugh has built a terrifying Michigan defense
Here's how.

Sam Monson | 11 hours ago
AP_800947457023.jpg

(AP Photo/Tony Ding)

The University of Michigan is rolling right now. After suffering a Week 1 loss to Utah — a loss which is looking increasingly understandable as the weeks go by and Utah remains legit — the Wolverines have notched five straight wins. The last three have been shutouts, and they have scored 97 points while conceding none in those games. In their five-game winning streak they have outscored opponents 160-14 and haven’t allowed more than one score in any of the games.

Scoring that many points is reasonably impressive, but this is college football, where points fall out of the sky and touchdowns grow on trees. What is far more impressive is the defensive display — especially notching three straight total shutouts while understanding the point just made about offensive production.

The average number of points conceded (or scored) in this week’s FBS schedule was 29.5, including Michigan’s shutout-featuring game. Almost all of the other games featuring single-digit scores involved bad teams with losing records, but Michigan did this to a Northwestern team that was 5-0 coming into the game and ranked higher than Michigan in the AP Top 25.

You don’t need to look much further than the opening Northwestern drive to see what the Michigan defense is all about. In 34 seconds of game time they forced a three and out, showing quality play at every level of the defense.

  • 1st down: With just six men in the box they stuffed an inside zone run, winning all across the line of scrimmage and just squeezing the holes, leaving the runner with nowhere to go.
  • 2nd down: Jabrill Peppers covers a slant and breaks the pass up as it arrives to force an incompletion.
  • 3rd down: Michigan brings the blitz and the pressure forces an early, off-target pass to come out (Peppers again was in tight coverage even if it had been accurate).
This was all as Michigan was already sitting on a 7-0 lead with the offense yet to take the field after the opening kickoff had been taken back to the house. Games don’t begin much better than this if you’re a Wolverines fan.

Perhaps the most remarkable thing about this defensive run isn’t the results, but the grading at the heart of it. Of 26 players that Michigan has used on defense this year just two of them have a below-average grade, and none is worse than a -1.8, which is still closer to average than disastrous.

16 of those 26 have strong positive grades and of the players that are left, five of them have played fewer than 20 snaps. In fact, the Wolverines have just one player on defense that has played 100 or more snaps and doesn’t have a significantly positive grade.

There is no doubt at this point that Jim Harbaugh is a quality coach. The University of Michigan now marks the fourth football program that he has catapulted to respectability after falling on hard times, both in college and the NFL. His coaching and schemes are having an impact, but what leaps out from the tape is that the players are taking that coaching and applying it on the field to just dominate and win in their individual roles on each play.

Take this play from Northwestern’s second drive:



Lined up in the pistol, Northwestern run an option to the left, away from the Michigan defenders crowding the line of scrimmage and towards the open side of the field. This play on paper should work – they have the numbers advantage, especially with one defender accounted for by being optioned and left unblocked.

Despite that it ends up a loss of several yards because the Michigan players, Peppers in particular, just dominates in his one-on-one encounter and torpedoes the play in the backfield. From his spot covering the slot he just defeats the block of the receiver and fires in on the running back to take him down for a loss before the run can get anywhere.

Even without that play the rest of the defense has played it well enough that there was no guarantee of success. DE Chris Wormley played the quarterback before sliding out in pursuit of the running back once he forced the pitch. LB Desmond Morgan was into the flat quickly and rode the attempted lead block pretty effectively to cut off the intended area of attack so on a play that should have been successful pre-snap, the Michigan defense was able to blow it up based on just out-executing on an individual level. That is the story of their season at this point.



As seen above, Northwestern even tried to test this, executing elaborate pre-snap shifts to try and cause confusion in the defense and force a screw up in assignment. The fact that Michigan was so quick to adjust and still lock everything down, forcing a marginal throw that fell incomplete, is another testament to how well-drilled this unit is.

The final thing that really stood out from the tape of Michigan’s defense is the speed with which they flow to the football, especially against the run. They are happy to leave defenders in man coverage and attack with overload blitzes up front, and that too happens with speed, but watching any time Northwestern tried to gain the edge against this team was an incredible display of hustle by the Wolverines.



Take the play above, which was not in any way held up or delayed. A simple option trying to stretch the defense and the running back ends up facing five separate defenders all converging on him behind the line of scrimmage. That should not happen, and does not happen with most defenses. There wasn’t even a catastrophic breakdown in blocking assignments to create it. The Wolverines just read, diagnose and attack the football like a pack of hungry dogs chasing after a wayward ribeye steak.

Michigan was able to get pressure all game long, whether they were coming with the blitz or just rushing with 3-4 guys. Northwestern QB Clayton Thorston was actually okay when he had the time to throw: with no pressure he completed 61.5 percent of his passes and gained 6.2 yards per attempt and his NFL passer rating on those plays was 79.3.

However, when Michigan pressured him (more times in this game than he had a clean pocket to work from) he completed just 35.7 percent of his passes, gaining 1.8 yards per attempt and had a passer rating of 14.6 — and that doesn’t count the negative plays the sacks generated.

There was a similar story when Michigan dialed up the blitz. It caused Thorston’s passer rating to drop to 7.6 and he completed only a third of his pass attempts.



They certainly weren’t afraid to trust their coverage guys and dial up overload blitzes, almost ensuring pressure by sending more players than the offense could block, but they certainly did not rely on that to generate pressure in this game.

One of the things Michigan did regularly was employ a variety of stunts and twists up front. Of their pass-rushing plays almost half (20 of 41) employed some kind of stunt on the play. Even late in the game when they were rushing just four guys and being as conservative as this defense gets, they were able to generate easy pressure and confuse the Northwestern protections by lining up the fourth rusher behind the nose tackle and not showing until after the snap which side he would be coming. This worked time and time again, and it was just one of the multiple combination rushes that Michigan used during the game.

Rushing the passer is made so much easier if you can employ stunts to mess with the blockers, and the Michigan Wolverines have become masters at it in a short amount of time.

It’s no secret that the Wolverines are looking like contenders again, but this defense is looking terrifying. Sterner tests will come for them this year, but right now they are playing lights-out across the board. There may not be a finer combination of talent, execution and coaching in the country right now.
 

dh86

Superstar
Joined
Jun 4, 2013
Messages
23,426
Reputation
861
Daps
52,906
Reppin
Detroit
2016 noteworthy targets:

WR Dylan Crawford
ATH Lamar Jackson
TE Isaac Nauta
CB David Long
CB Lavert Hill
K Quinn Nordin
WR Donnie Corley (he says he doesn't know, I think he's there)
DE Terrell Lucas (unofficial visit; holds offer)
LB Chase Pine (no offer; Pitt commit)

2016 Commits:

QB Brandon Peters
ATH Chris Evans
OL Michael Onwenu
LB David Reese
OL Devery Hamilton (possible)
OL Erik Swenson
CB Sir Patrick Scott (possible)

2017 commits:

TE Carter Dunaway

2017 targets:

QB Dylan McCaffrey
RB Chase Hayden
RB Kurt Taylor
LB/DE Corey Malone-Hatcher
CB Ambry Thomas
WR KJ Hamler
LB Josh Ross
WR Donovan Peoples-Jones (possible; I'm betting he makes it)
OL Ja'Raymond Hall
ATH Allen Stritzinger
ATH Antjuan Simmons
LB Derrick Hubbard

2018 offers:

OL/DL Marquan McCall
OL Emil Ekiyor Jr.

2018 targets:

OL Antwan Reed
OL Zac Darwiche
ATH Kalon Gervin

2019

OL Nolan Rumler (offered)
QB Sam Johnson
QB Dwan Mathis
LB Tyrece Woods

Huge recruiting weekend a win could really help with Jackson Nauta Long Crawford elite guys
I
Given we can't over sign in the big ten, some of our current commits HAVE to be out
 

HNIC973

R.I.P Bandana P
Joined
May 16, 2012
Messages
24,238
Reputation
2,512
Daps
47,330
Reppin
Brick City,New Jerz
Michigan's trust in Jim Harbaugh's system and each other has it looking ahead of schedule
18965143-mmmain.jpg

Don't look now, but Michigan's 5-1 ... with every trophy still up for grabs. (Melanie Maxwell | MLive.com)
Print Email
By Nick Baumgardner | nbaumgardner@mlive.com
Follow on Twitter
on October 14, 2015 at 5:01 AM, updated October 14, 2015 at 5:05 AM
0


Reddit
image.jpg

All Stories

ANN ARBOR -- Jim Harbaugh was in the midst of a self-skit when he said something that sums it all up.

At times, during Michigan team meetings, Harbaugh will act out a lesson or a message he's trying to push across. Literally. At first glance he appears to be talking to himself, but he's really playing two parts.

This lesson was about choices. One Harbaugh voice represented an educated decision, the other played the poor choice. But the delivery really isn't the important part here.

The subject matter was far more valuable.

"Don't take advice from somebody who isn't successful (on their own)," tight end Jake Butt recalled. "You don't want to take advice from the guy who cheated on his test, take advice from the guy getting a 4.0, getting A's in all his classes."

Harbaugh was the story nationally prior to the start of the 2015 college football season. His personality, his love for Michigan, his quirks, his resume and everything in between.

But through the first six weeks of the year, his Michigan football team has taken that baton without missing a stride. Led by a punishing defense, efficient special teams and a physical offense, the 12th-ranked Wolverines are the biggest surprise of the season's first half and still the talk of the sport.

At 5-1 with surging confidence, Michigan's program appears to be far ahead of schedule during year one of the Harbaugh era, and nowhere near their overall potential.

So, the logical question comes next, right? How has this happened? How has a 5-7 team without any on-field discipline to speak of turned itself into arguably the hottest team in America in one year?

Easy. They listened to the guy who gets all the A's, wins all the trophies and has achieved his own success.

"Nobody actually thought it would come this quickly," junior corner Jourdan Lewis admits. "But we just do the process that (Harbaugh) teaches us.

"He's a football genius."

Michigan's roster was faced with a choice back on Dec. 30, when Harbaugh was hired.

Either listen to the new coach, who had just finished a record-setting four-year tenure in the National Football League and was viewed as one of the brightest minds in the game, or don't ... and continue to lose.

The initial decision was easy, because there really wasn't one at all. Michigan's locker room was tired. Tired of losing. Tired of coming up short. Tired of being booed inside its own stadium. Tired of it all. So, as one, they decided they were going to do whatever Harbaugh asked of them to the best of their ability, and listen to everything he had to say -- even if it got a little weird from time to time.

They put their heads down, and went to work. There were no questions. One day turned into one week. Then a month. Then an offseason. Then fall camp. And now half a season. Just get out of your own way, and listen to the person who knows what success looks like -- and how it's achieved.

Harbaugh calls it a battle rhythm. Michigan players don't care what it's called.

It's producing wins, and they're not about to challenge it.

"We believe in the system that they put in front of us," senior fullback Joe Kerridge says. "We're going to do whatever they can in the practice room and the film room to be the best team Michigan can field this week."

There's also the bond developed by fire between the players left inside Schembechler Hall. Every player on this roster came to Michigan because he wanted to play and win at the highest level. And prior to this season, none of that happened. Last year, it was quite the opposite.

Most of these guys were there two years ago when the Wolverines rushed for negative yardage during an embarrassing disaster in East Lansing. They were there when the team fell apart in the Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl, got shutout at Notre Dame, lost to Rutgers and Maryland, struggled with "entitlement," went through a concussion/public relations saga and constantly seemed out of sorts.

Michigan's had plenty of reason to celebrate so far this season. Dominic Valente | MLive.com
No one needs to teach this locker room about adversity, because they've seen it all ... together. True character shines brightest during moments of adversity, and everyone left standing inside Michigan's program knows what the person sitting next to him is all about.

"We're playing together and we're playing for each other," linebacker Desmond Morgan says. "I've seen guys rally (around each other) more, in a lot of ways. Mario Ojemudia took a bit hit against Maryland, going down (for the season). That's something I know a lot of guys took personally.

"That kind of describes this team. Playing for one another more than themselves. That's continued to grow and strengthen."

Michigan's 5-1 start is a team effort, to be sure. The entire coaching staff has a role in this. Every member of Michigan's dominant defense -- from Ryan Glasgow to Jarrod Wilson to Desmond Morgan to Chris Wormley -- has a role. Michigan's improving offensive line, led by Graham Glasgow -- and last week, "an ascending" Ben Braden -- has a role.

So does De'Veon Smith, a running back who appeared to have little idea which way he was running a year ago, but now hits holes with explosion and drags defensive backs through fake grass all afternoon. You could go on and on, of course.

But it all starts at the top. If you're following a leader who is unsure of himself, things fall off the tracks.

Harbaugh hasn't been unsure of himself a day in his life. And after 10 months of seeing their new coach day in and day out, Harbaugh's maniacal passion for the game and "the right way to do" something is rubbing off on his team.

In January, players were nervous around him. They didn't know him. But now, when he's screaming at an official on the sideline with a 31-0 lead in the second half of a Big Ten game, they're screaming, too. No play is meaningless. No rep is worthless. Every piece to the puzzle has equal value. And it's all for the taking.

"He makes me love football more than I ever thought possible," Butt says. "It makes my passion grow for the sport. He just rubs off on everyone else around him." :wow:

How far this hot start carries Michigan in 2015 is anyone's guess at this point. Right now, the Wolverines still have every trophy attainable still in front of them. They're absolutely in the hunt for the Big Ten title heading into Saturday's pivotal home matchup with No. 7 Michigan State. Win that game, and you now find yourself in the College Football Playoff conversation. Perhaps on the edge, but a part of the discussion nonetheless.

But even if Michigan misses on those two milestones this season, Harbaugh's impact on the program is very real, and should only strengthen from here.

Some cultures take years to develop, like a slow-moving stream.

Harbaugh's culture arrives the first time he walks into a room, like a tidal wave.

"All we ask for," he says in a tone that suggests his request is basic, "is everything they've got."

Why is Michigan ahead of schedule in year one of the Harbaugh era? Harbaugh would tell you they're not. He doesn't have a schedule. He just wants to win. Everything. Every time.

But then again, he's the guy who has always been at the head of the class. The guy who sells success from personal experience. The guy who is just as intense at 3:30 p.m. on Tuesdays as he is at 3:30 p.m. on Saturdays. The guy Michigan's listening to.

None of it's easy, sometimes it's not pretty. But, as Michigan's figuring out each day, it all works.

And none of them want it to stop.

"I think I'm addicted to winning," Butt says with a laugh. "We just want to do whatever it takes to get another one."
 

HNIC973

R.I.P Bandana P
Joined
May 16, 2012
Messages
24,238
Reputation
2,512
Daps
47,330
Reppin
Brick City,New Jerz
Michigan cornerback Jourdan Lewis was named the Jim Thorpe player of the week, given up to the nations top defensive back weekly.

Lewis had a stellar game in Michigan's third consecutive shutout last weekend, making four tackles and one tackle for loss and returning an interception 37 yards for a touchdown in the second quarter. The honor is the second award for Lewis this week as he was named the Big Ten Defensive Player of the Week on Monday (Oct. 12).

A Detroit, Michigan, native, Lewis has eight pass breakups this season, which ranks second in the conference. In his career, Lewis has 16 pass breakups and four picks.

The Jim Thorpe Award is awarded annually to the nation's top defensive back. The award winner will be announced at The Home Depot College Football Awards on Thursday, Dec. 10, 2015, on ESPN.

Every week throughout the season, Phil Steele helps in selecting the Thorpe Player of the Week from candidates submitted by schools, conferences and committee members.
:salute:
 
Top