With new faces in rotation, Kwity Paye expects DL to be ‘phenomenal’ in 2020

Senior Kwity Paye shares who he thinks will be ready to take a massive step forward in the upcoming season.

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Entering last season, one of the big questions was how a new look defensive line would look under a brand new position coach in Ann Arbor.

It answered the call, exceeding many’s expectations, but things reset year-to-year. Despite returning Shaun Nua as the D-line coach and three of four starters, without an obvious 3-technique defensive tackle now that Michael Dwumfour has transferred to Rutgers for his fifth-year, questions return.

However, if you ask senior end Kwity Paye, there’s no question. The line is going to be good, if not great.

Asked about the state of the defensive line by Jon Jansen on the In the Trenches podcast, Paye shared why he’s enthusiastic about the group, including one who he anticipates to be the new starter in the middle.

“I think our D-line is gonna be phenomenal this year,” “We got Chris Hinton – he started some games last year – but I feel like he’s coming into his own. Being a true freshman as a 3-tech that’s nothing easy, being in the trenches. I feel like him having experience last year and coming into his own this year, he’ll step up big time. Me and Aidan off the edge – arguably the best duo in the country. So we’re just gonna come back and do our thing.

“Carlo Kemp, a leader on the D-line, he’s gonna come in and give it all he got. You saw last year, he played most games injured. There were some days where he was struggling to walk but he still a leader and wanted to come into the game. He gave it his all.”

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But it’s not just the starting caliber players that Paye is eager to see.

Though he never got the glimpse he had hoped to get with spring ball, as it was canceled less than a week before it was set to begin due to the coronavirus pandemic, there are a lot of fresh faces that Paye anticipates will take a massive step forward in 2020. Some are names that have been discussed — at WolverinesWire, we’ve been anxious to see Luiji Vilain take the field, while players midseason often mentioned freshman David Ojabo as coming along nicely. While others he mentions are relatively newer names.

“I’m so excited for our D-line, because we have some ballers behind us,” Paye said. “We’ve got Luiji Vilain, we’ve got (David) Ojabo who’s gonna come off – an athletic freak. Gabe (Newburg)’s huge! I don’t know what he was doing down there in quarantine, but I seen Gabe yesterday and he was just huge. Oh my God! I’m excited for our guys. Mazi Smith. Phill (Paea).

“I feel like with spring ball being lost, it was kind of a bummer, because I was excited for those guys to shine and get some more reps and work on their craft a little bit more. But we’re gonna start a player-led something soon, so we’ll catch them up.”

If the season goes on as scheduled, Michigan football fans will be able to get a glimpse of the revamped defensive line come Sept. 5, when the Wolverines travel to Seattle to take on Washington.

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Who Michigan can expect to see up front defensively in 2020

There are a lot of questions about who the Wolverines will use on the defensive interior in 2020, but Brown feels the whole line is stacked.

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ANN ARBOR, Mich. — If there’s an area of consternation for Michigan fans as the season approaches, the defensive interior is among the chief concerns.

The Wolverines return Carlo Kemp for a surprise fifth-year, but with Michael Dwumfour’s transfer to Rutgers this offseason, there isn’t a known commodity to line up next to him. Plus, the maize and blue didn’t bring in any defensive tackles in an otherwise solid 2020 recruiting class.

That means that Michigan will be relying heavily on a new starter with little experience. But there’s certainly some upside to the players who should be in rotation.

Somehow, many forget about two of the players who will be a large part of what the Wolverines do up front in 2020: former five-star Christopher Hinton and fourth-year tackle Donovan Jeter.

Given that he was an early-enrollee, Michigan native Mazi Smith tends to get the bulk of the attention from the fanbase, but he got little time in 2019. He’ll also be a part of the rotation, defensive coordinator Don Brown says, but with the other two, there’s a lot of reasons to expect them to play a big part this upcoming season. Jeter was highly anticipated as a freshman until he tore his ACL in the offseason. He hadn’t quite returned to form even last year, but he got some playing time. Hinton was worked in slowly and started the bowl game against Alabama with both Dwumfour and Kemp out with injury.

Brown says that late-season experience should help that duo be a major part of what the Wolverines do up front in 2020 — along with the aforementioned Smith.

“When they look back on it, they ended up having to play at the end of the year due to injuries at tackle and at nose,” Brown said. “That’s only gonna end up paying dividends for them moving forward. It would have been nice if we could have had the ability to work in spring practice, but everybody was in that same scenario, so that’s just part of it. But we now have a chance, those guys played in two big games. Obviously, being able to play in a big game is an important piece, now we just need them to take it on an elite level in a big game.

“Christopher Hinton – I’m really excited about his potential. You mentioned Donovan Jeter. Mazi Smith is another guy as well. We think all of those guys, in evaluating and watching them in some of the winter workouts in the conditioning phases, I really feel like they’ve taken their game to the next level in terms of their physical ability, their ability to run.”

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Despite all the hyperbole and expectations out there, Brown looks at the interior defensive line and sees a net benefit.

The push up front, outside of the pass rushers, has been one of the things that Michigan has been somewhat lacking since Mo Hurst’s eligibility was exhausted, though that was one of the central tenets to the Wolverines defensive strategy.

What Brown sees is a group of defensive tackless who now have the bulk to be effective — something that wasn’t necessarily the case in recent years, to go along with the ability. It’s one thing to have solid technique up front, but if you’re undersized, going up against some of the nation’s top interior offensive linemen, it’s not going to do much good.

This group, however, has gotten to where it should be weight-wise, and Brown thinks that will pay dividends come fall.

“Sometimes things get said and the reality is they’re really out of context,” Brown said. “For example: when you have four down linemen, you want each one of those four guys to have the ability to run and hit people. Now obviously, there’s a degree of size in the tackle and the nose scenario. And we have that size. Jeter’s a 300-pounder. Mazi Smith is a 300-pounder. Chris Hinton is a 300-pounder. And all three of those guys are very athletic. We’re excited about them, and obviously we’re very excited to have Carlo Kemp come back because not only will he provide experience, he’ll provide that essence of leadership that we desperately need there. But I’m very confident in the guys we have inside.”

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While Michigan will essentially gain those players via productivity this upcoming season, it also lost a lot on the defensive line.

As mentioned, Dwumfour is gone. So are NFL draftees Josh Uche and Mike Danna — both pass rushers. While they have proven production that made them so successful at the college level, there’s another group waiting in the wings that haven’t had those types of numbers.

Yes, we know about the prowess of starting ends Aidan Hutchinson and Kwity Paye, but Michigan’s success up front has had as much to do with the guys in the middle as it has constantly rotating the starting ends with capable reserves. We saw it in 2016 with starters Chris Wormley and Taco Charlton being spelled by eventual top-end draft picks Chase Winovich and Rashan Gary. The current starters — Paye and Hutchinson — had similar roles in 2018 when Winovich and Gary became the top guys.

Though ‘salt and pepper’ remain, replacing Uche, who was drafted by New England in the second-round this year, means some changes to how the scheme is run. Brown would note that it actually means returning to how the defense was formulated before Uche became a dominant force, which led to more 3-3-5 or 3-4-4 looks, given that he was technically a SAM linebacker.

With Uche’s departure, there are a number of players who are expected to be that next man up. Be it third-year former Florida commit Taylor Upshaw or the re-acclimating Canada native Luiji Vilain — who missed both of his first two seasons due to injury — as well as second-year end David Ojabo, a relative newcomer to football who Brown notes has a lot of similarities to Uche’s skill set.

Brown is excited to see how the group progresses once they’re able to get back onto the practice field given how much talent he has at his disposal.

“Now, last year, we had another set of circumstances,” Brown said. “Well, you’ve gotta play Josh Uche. And in that respect, we needed to play in some of our three-down, 3-3 stack-type structure to get that guy on the field especially on second and third down. And in some of our four down structures, we wanted him in some of the four down guys. I still think our defensive end scenario is really blessed, because we have Aidan, we have Kwity Paye. I’m very anxious to see how Ojabo does. Upshaw – Luiji Vilain in limited reps. I go back and watch Luiji play last year at times, and obviously he was hurt because Mike Danna was there. But, the bottom line is it’s his time now and he’ll have an opportunity to prove what he can do and I think we’re gonna get productive, solid play out of him as well.”

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Don Brown sees group of young players ready for limelight

The Wolverines defensive coordinator shares a couple players who are ready to step into increased roles as starters or in rotation.

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Not only do we not know who will be those to take the mantle for some of Michigan’s departed players, we aren’t sure when they’ll be able to get to work in earnest this year.

Due to the novel coronavirus, the Wolverines were never able to hit the practice field, as spring ball was canceled less than a week before it was set to begin. Though, there was a full period of winter conditioning. So, essentially, guys got into shape, but then could do nothing on the field with it.

Thus, when Michigan does return to State St. and eventually Main St., it’s important, particularly on defense, where there’s a lot of rotation, to get a large number of players right and ready to go in.

And defensive coordinator Don Brown sees quite a few players ready to step up.

The maize and blue lost five defensive starters to the NFL draft, plus Lavert Hill, who was signed as an undrafted free agent quickly after the culmination of the draft. So there are a lot of shoes to fill. Brown told Jon Jansen on the In the Trenches podcast that he’s not only seeing the guys who had started to step up last year take that step forward, but also some of those role players who are up and coming.

“I’ve watched them a lot from afar during winter workouts,” Brown said. “We had one winter workout, and it’s funny how you say, ‘Well, it’s only one work out,’ but you can tell when a guy makes a jump. You just look at his body language. The way he carries himself. He’s not looking all around with nervous energy. He’s much more focused and confident. That’s what you’re searching for out of your young guys, because you know they’re coming of age. You can see that definitely on the horizon for several of our guys in that area.”

Given the lack of spring practice and a likely shortened summer conditioning/fall camp period, Brown notes that it’s pivotal for those role players and new starters to be ready to move in and out of the lineup.

The depth has to be there perhaps more than in some years, given that players won’t necessarily be in the same football shape as they likely would have been. Winter conditioning aside, Brown notes who some of the players are who seem ready to take the mantle this upcoming season.

“Obviously, it’s something we were able pay attention to to some degree last fall where we had some surplus of talent,” Brown said. “For example, the Khaleke Hudson, Josh Uche and trying to keep Uch fresh on some of those big money pass downs that he’s so elite at. So when you have those areas – I see it developing.

“I see the Christopher Hinton. I see the Donovan Jeter. I see the David Ojabo jumping in as a pass rusher. Taylor Upshaw. A lot of these guys are outstanding athletes and we just better make sure we have them ready to compete at a high level and especially mentally for those young guys so obviously we can stay efficient and minimize mistakes.”

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Hinton and Jeter are particularly important as Michigan will be seeking to replace Michael Dwumfour at defensive tackle, as he transferred this offseason to Rutgers. Currently, the Wolverines return the other three starters along the defensive line — ends Kwity Paye and Aidan Hutchinson and fifth-year tackle Carlo Kemp. Upshaw started getting some time late in games, and seems poised to be one of the next men up.

Ojabo is an interesting player, as he didn’t begin his football career until recently. A Scotland native, he moved to New Jersey and managed to become a four-star prospect with little experience. His teammates frequently noted him as a freshman a year ago who was making a strong impression.

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Schemmy Awards: Scout Team Player of the Year Awards

The Wolverines had three winners for each unit.

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The scout team helps the Michigan football team get ready each and every week. Thus, the players who win the Scout Team Player of the Year in each unit are pivotal to the football team’s success.

And it’s big that two of the three winners were true freshmen this year around.

On offense, offensive lineman Zach Carpenter won the award. The winner on defense is fellow true freshman defensive end David Ojabo, who was an early-enrollee out of New Jersey. Jared Davis won the special teams player of the year.

Notable was that Ojabo said his “speed off the edge” was pivotal in his winning of the award.

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Shaun Nua breaks down the progress of his younger defensive linemen

What the Wolverines defensive line coach has seen from the D-line players who haven’t been in heavy rotation as of yet.

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ANN ARBOR, Mich. — After lots of questions coming into the 2019 season, perhaps the most of any position group, the Michigan defensive line group has answered those and more, proving that it can be a dominant unit leading the psyche of the Wolverines defense.

Just two sacks shy of last year’s season total in 13 games — while that’s not entirely on the defensive line, given that the linebackers are also heavily involved — the production is certainly there, with Kwity Paye and Aidan Hutchinson among those leading the charge on that front.

But, what about the younger players on the team?

We know plenty about the aforementioned, but we’re starting to see some of the bumper crop get their opportunities late in games. Defensive coordinator Shaun Nua says that he really enjoys getting to work with the first and second-year players, because they’re eager and putting themselves in a position to be future contributors.

“Yes, yes – Mazi Smith, Hinton, Upshaw, Ojabo, Newburg – all those youngsters,” Nua said. “Because you see the progress. It gets frustrating with them sometimes, because they’re competitors as well. They want to do it right now. But they’re doing a great job and I’m excited. It’s fun.”

Beyond that, here’s everything Nua had to say about the younger generation of players, including Chris Hinton, Luiji Vilain, Donovan Jeter, Taylor Upshaw and David Ojabo.

Chris Hinton

DT Chris Hinton

Often when a team gets a five-star in recruiting, it’s likely that they’ll get into the rotation earlier than later. However, with Michigan having a solid D-line rotation, former five-star Chris Hinton has been able to slowly acclimate, with the coaching staff prioritizing his development.

He’s been in more and more in recent weeks, and notched his third tackle of the season against Michigan State on Saturday.

Nua shared where Hinton is in his progression and development, sharing that he’s not surprised that he’s starting to see the field more often.

“Yes, happy with how he’s progressing, but it’s not a surprise,” Nua said. “He’s a young man that has a good head on his shoulders. And very competitive as well. Not surprised at all. Expectations are still high though, so he knows he’s got a long ways to go as well.”

NEXT: Luiji Vilain