TonyLiebert
Well-known member
- Joined
- Aug 18, 2020
- Messages
- 569
- Reaction score
- 1,149
- Points
- 93
Time of possession.If Mo has 418 yards and 4 TD's, I really like our chances.
Big difference between Minnesota’s offense and Michigan’s.
Michigan split those RB stats between two great RBs. Mo is great but not superhuman.
Michigan didn't have to throw much but they were efficient when they went to the air. Looks like most of it was short stuff as their average completion was just 6 yards. Would guess we will try and attack their defense in a very similar way.PSU will sell out to stop the run. Run blitzes, stack boxes. If we can’t loosen their D up with some high percentage passes, it could be ugly. Unless or D suddenly becomes a turnover machine …
McCarthy was 17-24 for 145 yards, which is enough to keep PSU’s defense honest. If Tanner/Athan could have had a nice little day like that against Illinois—all other things being equal—the game would have played out much differently.Michigan didn't have to throw much but they were efficient when they went to the air. Looks like most of it was short stuff as their average completion was just 6 yards. Would guess we will try and attack their defense in a very similar way.
Question will be if we can execute at a high enough level to pull it off.
Good call, put the ball in Mo's hands for 60 minutes and let the chips fall where they may.Time of possession.
All of it.
That's really interesting as I would've expected his numbers to be more gaudy. I wonder how PSU was playing them on D. You know what MN will get: aggressive man coverage w/ mostly single high safety and defenders flying downhill at the snap. Usually the ways to get teams out of that are:McCarthy was 17-24 for 145 yards, which is enough to keep PSU’s defense honest. If Tanner/Athan could have had a nice little day like that against Illinois—all other things being equal—the game would have played out much differently.
I think who we need to have a big day is going to depend on what PSU's focal point is. If they play us straight up, we need Mo to produce big. If they are going to stack the box and sell out to stop the running game, QB and receives need to be able to make them play. Either way, our game plan needs to adjust based on what PSU does.
A good blitzing strategy fills all running gaps and, simply by the numbers, normally insures that a player is unblocked for a pass rush. It also concedes a momentary advantage to receivers to get to an open spot (remember Bateman’s TD in 2019). But that advantage is usually momentary, exploitable if there is mutual recognition by WR/TE/RB and the QB, and a quick, decisive response. Slow response in a collapsing pocket = fail. Have to have a “counterpunch” plan in place and practiced during the week. Tough to ask 11 college age kids to adapt to an unpracticed strategy while they are being pounded in a game. I agree that PSU might follow the IL model in defense. It has great athletes and great cover corners. Will we have a workable passing game response strategy installed?The recipe to beat MN is to not only stack the box, but blitz with a numbers advantage. No way PSU plays the Gophs straight up until/if a successful passing game forces them to.