What Kirby Smart said about Michigan football the Wednesday before the game

He’s particularly leery of Aidan Hutchinson and David Ojabo. #GoBlue

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DANIA BEACH, Fla. — Michigan football vs. Georgia in the Capital One Orange Bowl is but days away now, and both teams are gearing up for what looks to be a perpetual fist fight in the trenches.

Being that it’s the College Football Playoff, both teams will look to use whatever they can to find an advantage, and both the Wolverines and Bulldogs are heavy when it comes to utilizing the tight end position.

On Wednesday, Georgia coach Kirby Smart met with the media to discuss the matchup and noted that while the Bulldogs love using Brock Bowers, the Wolverines have a cadre of tight ends at their disposal that they like to use as well.

“Yeah, size, speed, match-ups,” Smart said. “You’ve got to be careful, you can’t put a little guy on a size-speed guy. He can get overpowered, overmatched. You’ve got to have the personnel to match the offensive personnel. I don’t care if that’s five wides or if that’s 14 personnel, and they’ve got a back and four tight ends in there.

“Everybody can control the match-ups they want to try to emphasize to what the strength of their team is, and Michigan does a tremendous job of utilizing those tight ends.

“They’re easier to use in play action. They’re good match-ups for intermediate routes. They’re really good for the play-action game off of wheels, off block and release. They do a tremendous job of that. I think both these teams utilize their tight end skill sets really well.”

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But perhaps the great equalizer on the Michigan side of things is the pass rush. While tight ends may be used to chip, with players like Aidan Hutchinson and David Ojabo, Michigan has still managed to get home, no matter what other teams throw at them.

Smart spoke about the challenge that the Wolverines’ formidable pass rushing duo present, saying that he’s learned a lot by talking to coaches of other teams who have already faced Hutchinson and Ojabo. What he hadn’t realized is that it isn’t just talent as much as it is the drive that both have.

“Yeah, the first thing you have to do is match their intensity,” Smart said. “Regardless of the talent they have, the strain, the desire, the want-to leaks through on the film.

“You talk to people that have played them, it’s one of the first things they talk about is man, we didn’t take into account how hard they played, how much effort, how much want-to, how much desire. That has to come from within. That doesn’t come from a star that was given to you out of high school. That doesn’t come from a reputation you got. That comes from like within, what do you have inside you, what stamina do you have in the fourth quarter to pass pro or run block, whatever it requires in the fourth quarter, to outwork the player, out-strain the player in front of you. Those two guys just are tremendous want-to — you can tell they push each other. They go against a really good offensive line every day in practice, so those guys are really good competitors, and they’re a huge challenge for our offensive line.

”Our offensive line embraces challenges like this. They want these opportunities. It’s what you come to college to go play against is the best in the country, whether that’s the best in the country at run defense or best in the country at rushing the passer. You want to play against the best. You want to be measured against the best, and that’s what the playoffs allow you to do.”

Michigan and Georgia are set to kick off on Dec. 31 at 7:30 p.m. EST at Hard Rock Stadium.

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Michigan edge rusher David Ojabo could be latest trade-up target for Packers GM

Packers GM Brian Gutekunst loves trading up in the first round to get premium talents. Could Michigan’s David Ojabo be an option in the 2022 draft?

Brian Gutekunst carries a big stick. The Green Bay Packers general manager has shown that he’s not afraid to swing for the fences.

In the 2018 NFL draft, his first year as general manager, Gutekunst traded up in the first round to snag star cornerback Jaire Alexander. The following year, Gutekunst moved up in the first round to select safety Darnell Savage Jr.

His boldest move came in 2020 when the Executive of the Year candidate traded up to select quarterback Jordan Love. It was a move that sent shockwaves around the NFL universe.

Since replacing the late Ted Thompson in 2018, Gutekunst has proven to be a general manager that will attack weaknesses on the roster with aggressiveness.

No greater example of that was when Gutekunst signed Preston Smith and Za’Darius Smith in free agency during the 2019 offseason. Gutekunst then used the 12th overall pick on Rashan Gary. A trio of moves that bolstered the edge rusher position for the Packers.

With one or both Smiths possibly on their way out in Green Bay this offseason, Gutekunst could use that same aggressiveness to address the edge rusher position once again in the 2022 NFL draft.

A player that Gutekunst could try and trade up for this April is Michigan’s edge rusher David Ojabo. The Wolverine edge rusher is projected to go in the middle of the first round and will be on center stage during the College Football Playoff on Friday, Dec. 31, against Georgia.

The former four-star recruit enjoyed a breakout season this fall playing alongside likely No. 1 overall pick Aidan Hutchinson. Ojabo has recorded 12 tackles for loss and 11 sacks.

Ojabo is a twitched-up athlete that possesses an explosive first step. He runs the arc with speed and shows great burst to close on the quarterback.

With his blend of length and athleticism, Ojabo is a terror off the edge for offensive tackles. He’s made plenty of offensive linemen look silly with a spin move that would make the great Dwight Freeney proud.

“Ojabo wins by using pure athleticism and explosiveness,” Mason Thompson, an editor for Prime Time Sports Talk said. “It seems like he has a first and second gear, and he flips into that second gear when he sees any glimpse of the quarterback. He has a few moves he particularly uses, including a rip and dip and spin move that he’s already using.”

Ojabo started playing football five years ago. He’s unpolished but has all the tools in the shed to develop into a game-breaker.

The Michigan edge rusher is a little reminiscent of last year’s first-round pick Odafe Oweh. The former Penn State edge rusher only had four years of football experience under his belt. Oweh, like Ojabo started just one season at the collegiate level before being drafted in the first round by the Baltimore Ravens.

Both edge rushers were dynamic athletes that were short on game experience. However, you can’t teach the type of rare athleticism both edger rushers possess.

“I’d draft Ojabo because he has so much room still to grow,” Thompson said. “He’s only been playing football for five years and is already a fantastic player. His athletic traits are insane, and he has plenty to work with. His only real concerns come in the run game, which can be figured out with more experience. Ojabo already has absurd athleticism and explosiveness, which you can’t teach. The other traits that are concerning could come to him with more development, but having an edge athletically gives him a huge advantage to develop at the next level.”

If the Packers are going to trade up in the middle of the first round, it’s likely going to be for an edge rusher that possesses rare traits, like Ojabo.

The Packers have shown that they can turn a raw edge rusher like Rashan Gary into a star. Gutekunst could once again take a big swing at acquiring a potential difference-maker to help address a premium position.

Giants land offensive tackle, edge help in latest PFF mock draft

In the latest PFF mock draft, the New York Giants select an offensive tackle and edge rusher, but the names are somewhat new.

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The New York Giants are now officially in offseason mode and for many of us, that means several months of 2022 NFL draft talk, speculation and rumor.

It also means a steady flow of mock drafts, including from those over at Pro Football Focus.

In the latest PFF mock draft, the Giants own selections No. 5 and No. 6 overall. And in keeping with recent tradition, those picks are spent on two areas of need: offensive tackle and edge rusher.

With their first first-round pick, the Giants nab N.C. State offensive tackle Ikem Ekwonnu.

Take one look at Ikem Ekwonnu, and you can safely assume it will be a long day at the office for anyone standing in his way. Listed at 6-foot-4 and 320 pounds, he not only has the size, but he also has the tape that evaluators will love. He’s a true eraser in the run game and has some of the most punishing blocks of the 2021 season for any offensive lineman.

Size and strength have always been Ekwonu’s game, but he really took his pass protection to the next level this year. He’s really started to hone in on the finesse part of his game, and that combo will likely spell a top-15 selection.

With their second first-round pick, the Giants select Michigan edge rusher David Ojabo.

If we’re talking about traits, Ojabo is one of the first players to come to mind. His rare combination of size, speed and power were put on display as a total package this year, and while his teammate Hutchinson got most of the publicity, it was Ojabo’s presence that forced teams not to run away from Hutchinson as much as they wanted to.

Ojabo’s 11 sacks were tied for the 10th in the country in 2021.

Ojabo is certainly an interesting choice and not one we recall seeing in any previous mock drafts. And that pick comes with George Karlaftis still on the board.

How would you feel about this Round 1 mock, Giants fans? Let us know in the comments below.

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2022 NFL draft: Saints are at No. 13. Here’s who’s likely to be available

2022 NFL draft: Saints are at No. 13. Here’s who’s likely to be available

There’s still four games left to play this season, but the 2022 NFL draft order is beginning to take shape. And with so many hurdles between the New Orleans Saints and the playoffs, it makes sense to start taking stock of where they might stand on draft day.

New Orleans is scheduled to pick at No. 13 overall after Week 14’s games wrapped up, per Tankathon’s latest projections. It’s not an easy road to get there, but that sort of draft positioning could lead to some high-quality talent landing in New Orleans — the last time they drafted that highly (at No. 11, in 2017) they left with cornerback Marshon Lattimore, the Defensive Rookie of the Year who reached three Pro Bowls in his first four years in the NFL.

But who are some realistic targets at No. 13? To find out, I surveyed recent 2022 mock drafts like this one from ESPN’s Todd McShay, or this projection from Austin Gayle at Pro Football Focus, as well as models from Pro Football Network’s Cam Mellor and Ryan Wilson with CBS Sports. I found six different players who were slotted in between picks No. 13 and 19, which suggests they might be evaluated on a similar tier together and be worth an early selection.

Ohio State Buckeyes wide receiver Garrett Wilson was the only player in the group to fall in this range in every mock draft sampled; the others either went too high, too low, or weren’t in the first round at all. Here they are:

Todd McShay has Wolverines edge rushing duo in top 10 in latest mock draft

This would be very impressive if both #Michigan stars go that high!

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At the Heisman Trophy ceremony on Saturday, Michigan football head coach Jim Harbaugh proclaimed that finalist, consensus All-American, Big Ten Championship Game MVP, and team captain Aidan Hutchinson would be the first pick overall in the 2022 NFL draft. It turns out that ESPN draft guru Todd McShay agrees.

In his latest mock draft ($), that’s precisely what McShay predicts. With the Detroit Lions having the inside track to that No. 1 draft choice, ESPN is saying that Hutchinson won’t even have to move to start his NFL career.

1. Detroit Lions (1-11-1)
Aidan Hutchinson, DE, Michigan

The Lions are a one-win team for a reason and have holes all over the place. The biggest concern long term, of course, falls at quarterback — Jared Goff joins four rookies at the bottom of Total OBR this season –but there isn’t one in this class worthy of the top pick. And you aren’t taking a receiver or cornerback here, also glaring issues. Detroit has another pick later on Day 1 to address one of those problems.

Instead, the Lions need to take the best player available, and right now, that’s Hutchinson. The production speaks for itself: He has 14.0 sacks, 73 tackles, 19 tackles for loss and a pair of forced fumbles, and he tends to play at his best in the biggest spots. Detroit is in the bottom five in yards allowed per play (5.9), points allowed per game (27.2) and sacks (20), and while Romeo Okwara, Julian Okwara, Trey Flowers and a host of others can be impact players, Hutchinson could be the guy on the edge for the Lions.

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But that’s not the only Michigan football player that McShay predicts will go in the top 10 in 2022.

While Hutchinson’s compatriot in fellow edge rusher David Ojabo still has yet to make a decision of whether or not he will return for his fourth year or leave Michigan early, McShay has offered him a compelling reason to be an early entrant. In the same mock draft, he has Ojabo going at No. 10 overall — which, certainly would make leaving a no-brainer for the talented edge rusher.

Projecting him to the Eagles, Ojabo could be the heir apparent to the aging former Michigan defensive end who’s already on the roster in Philadelphia.

10. Philadelphia Eagles (via 6-7 MIA)
David Ojabo, DE, Michigan*

Philly jump-starts its three-pick Round 1 party with an explosive pass-rusher. Ojabo’s first step is lightning fast, and he closes on the QB extremely well — his 11.0 sacks and 14 tackles for loss this season prove it. Brandon Graham will be 34 years old and returning from an Achilles injury next season, and only two teams have fewer sacks this year than the Eagles’ 21. And while they would love see Hamilton fall to them, the Eagles get a defensive upgrade with Ojabo. Michigan has had multiple first-round defenders only three times (1972, 2017 and 2019), but here it sends two to the top 10.

Quarterback is obviously a question mark, too. If the Eagles decide to move on from Jalen Hurts, they could deal some of their first-round picks to upgrade. But I can’t see them gambling on a weak crop of QB prospects if they can’t solve the issue by trade or free agency.

Either or both could cement (or tank) these projected draft numbers in a few weeks, when Michigan takes on Georgia in the College Football Playoff semi-final in the Capital One Orange Bowl on Dec. 31.

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2022 NFL mock draft roundup: Eagles land top WR on board, star QB from SEC

2022 #NFL mock draft roundup: Philadelphia #Eagles land top wide receiver on the board in Todd #McShay’s early predictions, #SEC Quarterback #FlyEaglesFly

As the Eagles begin preparation for a huge Week 15 matchup with Washington, eyes in the front office are now starting to seriously shift towards the NFL draft.

Philadelphia has personnel needs all over the depth chart, and discussions about the franchise quarterback are forever ongoing.

Tuesday is mock draft day around the NFL, and ESPN’s Todd McShay dropped a prediction that could have Eagles fans salivating for the start of the 2022 training camp.

3 things we learned after Michigan defeated PSU

What a wild win for Michigan!

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Michigan traveled to Penn State on Saturday for a noon matchup — with a ton at stake. A win would keep the Wolverines alive for a Big Ten championship and keep them in reach for a playoff berth.

The dream is still alive: The maize and blue pulled off a win, 21-17.

The first half was pretty dormant for the offense. The first two drives were three-and-outs, but the Wolverines had a 15-play drive that ended with a 21-yard touchdown pass to Roman Wilson. The defense did its job, for the most part, the Wolverines had five sacks in the first half, but Michigan still allowed the big plays that resulted in two field goals for the Nittany Lions.

Michigan went right down the field on its opening drive of the second half when McNamara hit Wilson for a 1-yard touchdown, but PSU took the momentum late in the fourth quarter. It tied the game at 14 on a drive that featured it converting three fourth-down attempts. McNamara had a late fumble that put the Nittany Lions up, 17-14.

The next two drives were the deciding factors: McNamara hit Erick All for a touchdown, and the defense followed with a turnover-on-downs.

Here are three things we learned from the Michigan win.

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Michigan football players: ‘We’ve got everything in front of us, we’re gonna win out’ put MSU loss in past

They’re absolutely focused and locked in, no matter what happened this past Saturday.

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ANN ARBOR, Mich. — Everything is still in front of the Michigan Wolverines, despite the loss on Saturday to Michigan State.

Now ranked No. 7 in the country according to the only rankings that matter — the College Football Playoff rankings — the Wolverines have their loss to No. 3 MSU, but also have a win over No. 21 Wisconsin. They have games against unranked Penn State and No. 5 Ohio State coming up.

Though there’s much consternation amongst the fan base, the team is regrouping and galvanizing, knowing that they can still win the Big Ten and more, so long as they don’t let one loss turn into two. On the heels of a player-led meeting on Monday, the team is determined to not make the same mistakes that plagued it on Saturday in East Lansing.

“Took away that we’re moving on,” second-year right guard Zak Zinter said. “It didn’t ruin our season, we’ve got everything we want in front of us. We’re gonna win out and let it be the past. It’s a tough loss, moving on. We can’t do anything about it.”

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The team made it back to the practice field on Tuesday, and it was like nothing changed. Yes, the team is studying what it did wrong on film and is working to correct it, but the players aren’t lamenting their misfortune and dwelling on the past in that manner.

Instead, they’re remembering what got them to 7-1 and focusing on doing what they can to get back to their winning ways, starting with Indiana this Saturday night.

“The energy’s still up — no different energy,” third-year outside linebacker David Ojabo said. “We’ve still got each others’ backs. Can’t have anybody hanging their head low. We’ve just gotta bounce back. Everybody can’t point no fingers, can’t blame the official, can’t blame anybody. We all we got — just keep pushing.”

But why are they so confident that they can still do something special?

The consensus amongst the frustrated is that this is the same old Michigan — beating lesser teams but struggling in big games. Bowl projections have the Wolverines outside of the New Year’s Six and likely to go to a second-tier bowl like the Citrus Bowl or Outback Bowl — despite it being just one four-point loss to the now-No. 3 team in the country.

In short, this season isn’t like those before it, at least not in the locker room.

“We’ve been saying from the beginning that this team is special — it’s been all sunshine and rainbows since the beginning,” Zinter said. “I think what will make everyone see that this team is special is something didn’t go right, we had a tough loss — the ability for us to turn around and finish off the season strong.”

So the feeling is much different than a year ago? They really aren’t pointing fingers after this game, when there certainly could be fingers pointed?

Zinter says no, they remember what it was like last year, and where did it get them? Above all, the team leaders are holding everyone accountable and ensuring that the players really do move on with Indiana on-deck on Saturday night.

“I would say definitely. I would say last year, we took a loss, and it affected us going into next week,” Zinter said. “This year, it’s different. The ability of the leadership on the team has been able to help everyone to move on and help us get ready for this week.”

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Undaunted through early tests, Michigan still not satisfied with torrid start

‘We haven’t done anything yet,’ might as well be the team motto.

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MADISON, Wis. — Death, taxes, and Michigan football excelling early before falling apart late — these things have become sureties in life.

In recent memory, we’ve seen even bad Michigan teams thrive in the early going. Twice, Rich Rodriguez started 4-0 before ultimately falling apart in Big Ten play. The 2013 team led by Brady Hoke celebrated a big Week 2 win over Notre Dame before falling off a cliff, really starting the next week when it held on to beat lowly Akron. Just last year, Michigan opened the season with an emphatic win over Minnesota, garnering national praise following a thorough and methodical domination of the Gophers, before it fell apart the next week, en route to a 2-4 campaign.

From the outside looking in, these Wolverines have, by and large, been soft. The 2015 and 2016 teams being outliers, at the first sign of adversity, oftentimes the maize and blue would fold. But the 2021 team, one that no one believed in before the season, starting unranked in all of the polls and only climbing in at No. 25 once it took down Washington in Week 2, isn’t letting the past define it.

So, even though it appeared on paper that the 4-0 Wolverines should be able to come into Madison and dominate 1-2 Wisconsin, the national story remained: Michigan hadn’t beaten the Badgers in Camp Randall since 2001.

Wisconsin was favored, despite its only win coming against fellow Washtenaw County compatriot Eastern Michigan. Michigan showed little against Rutgers, jumping out to a 20-3 lead before sputtering in the second half, holding on to win 20-13. This was to be the first road game and if the maize and blue wanted some respect, it was going to have to go into hostile territory and pry it from the Badgers’ cold, dead hands.

And that’s exactly what it did. Even after an early 10-point lead was cut to three just before the half, there was a different resolve by these Wolverines. They took some hits, but they hit back harder, emerging with a 38-17 win that wasn’t even that close.

“The last few years, we’ve done enough flinching, so by the time (this season came) we didn’t want to feel that way anymore,” safety Daxton Hill said. “Come in, do whatever we have to do to win, and stop the entire team. That’s what we did.”

“Overall, this team has been through a lot,” quarterback Cade McNamara said. “There’s a lot of guys that were young two years ago that gained a lot of experience — not even play. And I think we’ve taken control this year and we made the change that we want to be different. We know that it’s not gonna be easy to be different. But, so far, what you’re seeing right now is just a reflection of what we’ve preached, everything we’ve tried to make a difference for in the offseason.”

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Now at 5-0 and heading into another winnable road game in a daunting environment in Nebraska this next week, you’d think that Michigan would at least feel like it’s accomplished something. Getting the first win at Wisconsin in 20 years is certainly a laudable achievement, regardless of what the Badgers have done to date or what they’ll do next. This is also the first time since 2016 that the Wolverines have won the first five games of the season — that year, they won the first nine before stumbling at Iowa en route to a 10-3 finish.

But no, the players refuse to acknowledge their achievements thus far. Because what matters isn’t each game in and of itself as much as the cumulative won-loss numbers at the end of the season. And in order for this team to reach its goals, the former must be much, much bigger than the latter.

“We can’t think that way,” Ojabo said. “We have big goals. You can’t come one game and get all complacent because we have, what? Six, seven left? So it’s day-by-day, week-by-week. We can’t be high-fiving each other thinking we won a championship or something. We haven’t done nothing yet.”

Wide receiver Cornelius Johnson concurs.

You can say what you want about Wisconsin this year, but it’s had a brutal schedule thus far. Three ranked opponents in four weeks, which included a tight, close season opener against Penn State, a game that got away from it in the fourth quarter against Notre Dame at Soldier Field in Chicago, and now this one.

Had Michigan entered the game on Saturday feeling like it was the bigger, badder team and hoping that the Badgers would lay down — like we’ve seen some previous iterations of the maize and blue do — Wisconsin could be a respectable 2-2 right now rather than 1-3, and the narrative would return to how the Wolverines can’t do anything against a team with teeth. So they entered this contest not thinking about how good they can be, instead taking each week at a time, each day at a time, each drive at a time, each play and snap at a time.

And that method is paying off.

“We have a lot of respect for the Wisconsin program,” Johnson said. “They’re always a tough team to come in, especially on the road with fans now, with however many fans they had. There was definitely something where we were stacking days. Like David said — it’s day-by-day and we want to make sure going into our next opponent and our opponent after that, we’re getting better. Because if we go in and dissect the film, we can see a lot of corrections we can do as a team, score more points, stop them on defense. Stuff like that. We’ve really gotta make sure we go in there and nitpick, make sure we improve and not get too complacent at the moment.”

The Wolverines cannot celebrate even for a moment. Up next is a night game at Nebraska, a team that’s 3-3 on the season, but is particularly dangerous on offense if it can keep out of its own way. That game will kick off at 7:30 p.m. EDT on Saturday and will be nationally televised on ABC.

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3 Wolverines that teammates expect to breakout in 2021

The first one is particularly tantalizing! #GoBlue

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INDIANAPOLIS; DETROIT — Every year, unless something goes horribly awry, every college football team will have at least one player by the end of the season that fans didn’t know much about who will become something of a household name.

While it’s always something of a mystery — sometimes it’s a true freshman who arrives on campus during the summer, thus there’s little prior knowledge as to their in-season ceiling — usually, we can gather some kind of idea, based on the hype they’re getting in the offseason. That’s because the work is put in the spring and summer months, and it shows come the fall.

“I feel like we’ve won half the battle. Now we’ve gotta win the second half of the battle,” Michigan head coach Jim Harbaugh said at Big Ten media days. “I always look at an offseason that way. The offseason is half the battle, you gotta win that, you gotta get your best possible team to training camp and then you go about winning the second half of the battle.”

With that in mind, when WolverinesWire asked Michigan LB Josh Ross and EDGE Aidan Hutchinson at Big Ten media days, as well as OT Andrew Stueber at the TUFF event in Detroit, all three said some common names as to who they anticipate will be shining stars by the end of the 2021 season.

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