After the Storm: Savannah State

After the Storm: Savannah State

Stefan Adams

Comments (26)

Drastic steps have to be taken on the OL, the lack of physicality is shocking. Donaldson also has no business at tackle. I rather see Scaife get a start at RT with Donaldson at guard.
 
Considering our running game struggles first half do you foresee any changes on OL this week

I agree with whoever brought up moving Scaife to RT and Donaldson back to RG. Seems like it could really help get more talent on the field upfront.
 
Defense missed too many tackles to be an A +
I was going to say the same thing. The defense played well enough for an A, but there were quite a few times when we had a man penetrate and not be able to wrap up the ball carrier in the backfield. One of these times, Pinckney I believe it was, dove and missed in the backfield and the play resulted in one of Savannah State's longest gains of the day.
 
I also wanted to see more from him on the ground (4 carries, -3 yards).

His demeanor running the ball was underwhelming. I like when athletes approach the QB position as pass first but I think in his case, he should make everyone fear his legs (be more decisive), which in turn will open up the pass. He can't not read defenses well enough to just stay in the pocket.
 
Miami took care of business and dominated the Savannah State Tigers in the home opener, 77-0. Here were some of my impressions from the game.


Nothing like an FCS team to stave off the lynch mob for a bit. It was nice to have Savannah State as a safety net to bounce back after the LSU debacle last week. Admittedly, there’s not much to take away from a game when your opponent is an FCS team, but we did get our first look at the freshmen QB’s, as well as plenty of other young players on UM. In a game like this, the biggest plus is when there are no major injuries, and UM looks to be fine on that front. The Canes simply did what they were supposed to do in this one, going 7-12 on third downs, holding Savannah State under 100 yards of total offense, and giving up only 5 first downs on the day. Most importantly for me though, Miami only had one penalty for 15 yards, which came early in the first quarter on an accidental facemask from Jon Garvin. That’s something Miami really needs to carry over to Toledo next week, as penalties were a major issue last season and against LSU in week 1.

QB rotation. Even though Mark Richt has played coy in interviews, the order of the QB’s played out as expected. Malik Rosier started the game and got a little over a quarter of play. With the score 21-0, N’Kosi Perry came in around the 11 minute mark of the second quarter and played almost two full quarters. Then, it was Cade Weldon in with about a minute remaining in the third quarter and he had two short drives of 16 and 32 yards, both of which ended in touchdowns. Williams finished out the game from around the 11 minute mark in the 4th quarter on and had a short TD run. Perry, Weldon, and Williams all scored their first career touchdowns.

The amount of playing time each QB got was telling to me. Perry was essentially getting an extended audition and played with the first team offense around him, while the other two QB’s only got mop up duty with backups. It seems as if Perry has separated himself a bit from Weldon and Williams and will get the first crack at the starting job should Richt make a change there.

Perry played well overall. What most impressed me was how he was able to stay accurate on the run and he delivered a couple of darts during his 9/14, 93 yards, 3 TD, and 1 INT day. I thought his best throw was a sideline out route to Lawrence Cager for about 15 yards in which he threw a strike on the money, a type of throw we’ve seen Rosier struggle with in the past. He also lofted a pretty deep ball 40 yards downfield for Darrell Langham, who was able to reel it in and make the catch over the DB. However, his interception was awful, as Perry did not see the underneath coverage and threw the ball directly at the defender. I also wanted to see more from him on the ground (4 carries, -3 yards). Overall though, a promising debut for the redshirt freshman.

Into the future. I’d like to see Miami utilize Rosier and Perry like Clemson is doing with their QB’s right now in senior Kelly Bryant and freshman Trevor Lawrence, in which both QB’s rotate series even in big games like last night against Texas A&M. If Clemson can do that with a guy like Bryant, who is coming off an ACC Championship and a College Football Playoff appearance, Miami should have no qualms doing that with someone that has struggled as badly as Rosier has at times. I believe Rosier should have to feel some real pressure for his job; let the two battle it out on the field, and when the best player separates himself (as always seems to end up the case), go to him full-time.

A few other young players shined. Brevin Jordan, Will Mallory, and Lorenzo Lingard all scored their first career touchdowns, and Jordan and Lingard both had multiple. Lingard’s second house call was particularly impressive, as he was able to show off his burst and juking ability on the long, weaving 64 yard run. He’s someone that needs to see more reps. Nesta Silvera was another freshman standout, with 5 tackles, 0.5 TFL, and a blocked punt that was returned for a TD. On the blocked punt, Silvera completely overpowered his man and drove him back into the punter. Brutal. Also loved seeing the oft-injured Scott Patchan scoop up the ball and score the touchdown. Cool moment for a guy that’s been through a lot off the field.

We finally got to see the often rumored I-formation... And it was alright. Highlights included Trayone Gray picking up a few short yardage first downs taking carries as a fullback and freshman Realus George even made an appearance as well. Still, UM’s biggest running plays came out of the shotgun and that’s not going away.

The offensive line was just okay. I was still looking for more push up front in the run game, and Miami didn’t have their way as much as you might think when looking at a total like 239 yards rushing. Although Miami averaged 6.5 ypc in the game, that was greatly helped by three second half runs that totaled 133 yards; UM was struggling to get the ground attack going in the first half and only had 44 yards rushing at halftime against a vastly undersized Savannah State front 7. A positive was that the pass protection was on point and there was only one sack allowed, which was on the QB/RB when Perry and Travis Homer collided in the backfield on a miscommunication.


Grades

Offense: B+

Nearly 500 total yards and 77 points will always play well, and UM also went 7/12 on third down, but UM has to be handicapped here when factoring in the level of the opponent. 1st half ground game struggles, Homer’s fumble, and Perry’s INT prevent this from being an “A”.

Defense: A+

UM had a suffocating effort on defense, pitching a shutout on the Tigers as they should expect to. Looking under the hood makes it even sweeter, with 78 total yards given up, 1.3 yards per play, 2/16 on third downs, 4 takeaways, 14 TFL, 3 sacks, and only 5 first downs allowed all game.

Special Teams: A

Any time you put points on the board via special teams, you’re probably getting an “A”, and Miami did just that on Silvera’s blocked punt for a Patchan TD recovery. A tipped field goal attempt by Jaquan Johnson was great as well, and Jeff Thomas also had two huge punt returns of 40+ yards. Bubba Baxa did his job, going 9 for 9 on XP’s and booting 7 touchbacks. Zach Feagles had another shank, which kept this grade from an “A+”, but he made up for it on his second punt, blasting a 55 yarder to give himself a respectable 44.0 average on the day.

Coaching: A

Despite a fumble on the first drive, there didn't seem to be any focus issues with playing a vastly overmatched opponent, and the coaches had the team ready to play. Miami dominated from beginning to end, did pretty much whatever they wanted to in each phase of the game, and went home. Simply take a look to Tallahassee to see what can happen when the coaching staff doesn't have their team mentally prepared to play an inferior opponent.
Too generous with the grading. Especially, the offense.
 
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Into the future. I’d like to see Miami utilize Rosier and Perry like Clemson is doing with their QB’s right now in senior Kelly Bryant and freshman Trevor Lawrence, in which both QB’s rotate series even in big games like last night against Texas A&M. If Clemson can do that with a guy like Bryant, who is coming off an ACC Championship and a College Football Playoff appearance, Miami should have no qualms doing that with someone that has struggled as badly as Rosier has at times. I believe Rosier should have to feel some real pressure for his job; let the two battle it out on the field, and when the best player separates himself (as always seems to end up the case), go to him full-time.
I like this idea. I debated it in my head a little bit because my fear is w/playing 2 QBs is that we don't execute well enough at the other positions to rotate different bodies in at QB...but, it can't get much worse than Bad Malik for a full game. I do think that in a game where we get 12-16 total offensive possessions, if those are split 50/50 or even 75/25 between Malik/Kosi, maybe Kosi can provide a good enough spark to offset some of the bad possessions we have with Malik.

I also think that what we need to do offensively is not start off so conservatively. Open it up on first down right out of the gate. Don't just stick it into Homer's gut and let him run up the back of our interior OL for a loss of 2...especially if he's going to fumble away his 2nd touch against Savannah St.

As for the RBs...it's time to start splitting the carries between Homer/Dallas/Lingard almost evenly. Look at the season stats so far...Homer leads us in total yards, but he has almost 2x the carries of Dallas, and 5x the carries of Lingard. Yes - Lingard's average is inflated by that big 64 yard run against Savannah St...but that speed and vision on that run would translate against any other opponent we have left on the schedule. Play him, and if the issue is pass pro with him, don't play him on obvious passing downs. Split carries evenly between Homer/Dallas and go more to the hot hand...and give Lingard the other carries.

Take away the longest runs for both Homer/Dallas, and the YPC skew this way (tossed in Lo for good measure):

Homer - 19 rushes, 65 yds, 3.42/carry
Dallas - 12 rushes, 52 yds, 4.33/carry
Lingard - 3 rushes, 18 yds, 6/carry.

Here's an idea - establish a consistent run game with Dallas first, then bring in Homer to get the big gainers. Find out which plays Homer is most comfortable with, and give him the ball on those types of plays. Don't just bang him between the tackles - Homer isn't good at those types of runs, so don't set him up for failure. Dallas is better at that...let him do that.

I also think Richt/Thomas Brown need to tell Homer he's not a power back - especially when running in open space. I like seeing physical running and Homer can do that from time to time, but he doesn't have to run that way on every single run. If you're in space against a LB or S, you don't have to truck the guy if you can run around him instead...and Homer can...but it's like he tries to truck someone like he's got something to prove. Just being smarter with your skill set as a RB is going to help Homer tremendously. I mean, we didn't see Lingard try to truck 5 guys on his big 64 yarder, did we?

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