Michigan football avenges red zone woes in the win against Rutgers

Red zone offense was just about perfect against Rutgers! #GoBlue

The biggest thing that hindered Michigan football wasn’t its scoring offense — Michigan entered the game averaging 41 points — or being able to gain yardage at a high level — the Wolverines went into the game averaging 469 yards. No, what hurt the maize and blue was not being able to score touchdowns when it reached the opponent’s red zone.

Michigan entered Rutgers week scoring 28 touchdowns in 44 red zone attempts. Last week, against Michigan State, the Wolverines stalled twice when they took the ball inside the Spartans’ five-yard line. J.J. McCarthy and Blake Corum told us last week that they would be working on the red zone offense this past week to have a better showing against Rutgers.

The Wolverines did just that.

Michigan took the ball inside the red zone seven times on Saturday night. The Wolverines scored six touchdowns and had to only kick one field goal against the Scarlet Knights inside the 20-yard line.

Corum liked the results from Saturday evening. But Corum thinks the offense can continue to get better and he says they will get back to work figuring out how to make the red zone offense even better.

“Better, better, you know, coming off last week, and when all we did was really kick field goals,” Corum said. “To limit that a little bit. It definitely felt good. But you know, we can get better. We can get better at what we do, we get better on the goal line, you know, and in the red zone. So there’s definitely work to still be put in. But when you know, when you go six for seven, it definitely feels a lot better than the previous week. Yes. That’s all you can ask for. You know, now that’s just going back to the drawing board. And seeing how we can get even more.”

It wasn’t all easy for Michigan though. Twice in the first half, the Wolverines pushed the ball inside the Rutgers five-yard line. And twice it took Michigan all four downs to punch the ball into the end zone. Corum gave credit to the Scarlet Knights’ defense. He said the Wolverines expected it to be tough to punch the ball in but in the end, the maize and blue scored both times against Rutgers.

“I mean, Rutgers had a stout defense,” said Corum. “They knew what they were doing in the red zone and the goal line. So you know, kudos to them. I think they had a stout defense, you know, we didn’t expect nothing else. You know, we knew Rutgers was a good team. But we were able to punch it in. But it took some work.”

Jim Harbaugh gave a bode of confidence to Corum and the offensive line by going for it on two fourth-down attempts. After the game concluded, Corum is now tied with Israel Abanikanda from Pittsburgh with 16 rushing touchdowns.

“It definitely gives a sense of confidence, you know, they believe in you they believe in the O-line,” said Corum. “They believe in — just everyone’s gonna come through and do their job. And so when they stop us three times in a row, and we go for it again, a fourth down, you know, it boosts your confidence. That the coaches really believe in you.”

Jeffrey Persi got the nod at left tackle on Saturday with Ryan Hayes out. Persi was a former four-star recruit in the class of 2020. Persi told the media that the offensive line and Michigan love to run the ball. It was a tip of the cap to going for two fourth downs in the red zone.

“As coach Moore would put it ‘smash’ but I mean, we love to run the ball,” said Persi. “We’re confident in the O-line and everyone around supporting and you know, it’s a full-go mindset. We’re getting the first down and that’s the only thing we’re thinking about.”

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The signee Matt Dudek sees as perhaps the most underrated in 2020 class

Why the Wolverines director of recruiting thinks that one of the newest signees is vastly underrated as a prospect.

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Michigan director of recruiting Matt Dudek is the first person who will tell you that staff evaluations matter — not recruiting rankings.

Yes, the two go hand-in-hand in some fashion, given that the recruiting services — 247Sports, Rivals and ESPN — all do their own national evaluations, doing their best to create a hierarchy of the best football players at the high school level across the country. But, they don’t see everyone, and it’s not an exact science.

There are certainly times where the services differ from what a football staff sees. There are times when a recruiting site does a quick evaluation and puts a player in their system as a three-star. But the football staff might see a guy personally at a camp, work him out, and feel like said player has a much higher upside than what the sites say.

For Michigan, such is the case of signee Jeffrey Persi.

The San Juan Capistrano (CA) J Serra Catholic offensive tackle is rated now as a four-star by all of the recruiting services, but he was widely seen as a three-star at the time of his commitment. So, when breaking down the offensive line haul for the 2020 class to Jon Jansen on the In the Trenches podcast, Dudek singled out Persi as being a player who, despite the ratings jump, could vastly outperform his ranking.

“What I can tell you in watching them is that they’re big-body types,” Dudek said. “They fit in with the six guys we brought in last year. They’re gonna look the same way. Persi’s probably the tallest of all nine of those guys over two classes. He’s a big, big guy. But what you’ll see is they’re road graders, but they have athleticism to them. They’ve very strong.

“Jeff Persi – there’s a lot of guys I’m excited about. Let’s talk about all these guys. But Jeff Persi, when he committed to us in the summer, I’m like, ‘Okay. This is the guy! He’s all the way in California. We’ve gotta hold onto this guy for dear life, make sure we’re communicating with him. Gotta make sure we’re doing everything right. We don’t want to lose him to the West Coast.’ Because you get away from Michigan, you kind of forget a little bit. And nobody more solid than him and his family. His dad is an awesome dude. Love talking to him. No bigger guy to mess around with. I call them ‘old Jeff’ and ‘young Jeff.’ But just really good people.

“The fact that he got bumped to a four-star later in the season, the fact that he’s – he’s a top 5 offensive tackle in the country. I’ll say it right now. Everybody: four years from now, feel free to blow me up on Twitter. You can do so anyway, I don’t care. I’m telling you right now: Jeff Persi is a top 5 offensive tackle in the country. And when he gets here and develops under Ed Warinner and under Ben Herbert, I cannot wait to see that guy play.”

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Persi is listed as 6-foot-7, 265-pounds. He has the frame to be a prototypical offensive tackle, but as Dudek noted, he’ll thrive once he adds more weight to his frame as well as technique.

Signed: Jeffrey Persi

Everything you need to know about new Wolverines signee Jeffrey Persi.

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Stars Overall Position State
247Sports 4 278 #26 OT #25
Rivals 4 #33 OT #26
ESPN 4 #34 OT #30
247Sports Composite 4 319 #26 OT #25

Vitals

Hometown San Juan Capistrano (CA) J Serra Catholic
Projected Position Offensive Tackle
Height 6-foot-7
Weight 275-pounds

Recruitment

Another quiet recruitment, in that little was known about Persi and his options.

He had an offer from nearby UCLA, where he was a frequent visitor, but he ultimately chose Michigan after being a part of the big June official visitors group. He made his commitment on June 25.

Readiness Level

Year one redshirt candidate. Possible contributor or starter in years 2-4, depending on depth ahead of him.

Early Enrollee?

Yes

Notes (via MGoBlue.com)

Prep
• Attended J Serra Catholic High School (2020) coached by Pat Harlow
• Helped lead JSerra to a 6-5 record as a senior in the CIF-SS Division 1
• Led the Lions to a 9-3 record and a quarterfinal appearance in 2018 as a junior, losing to Zach Charbonnet’s Oaks Christian school

Key Statistics
• Two-year varsity starter at offensive tackle after converting from tight end

Honors and Rankings
• Four-star prospect in the 247Sports Composite rankings; No. 27 offensive tackle, No. 25 prospect in California and the 319th overall prospect in the country
• 247Sports ranks as a four-star recruit and the nation’s 278th-ranked recruit nationally; rated as the 26th-best offensive tackle prospect and the 25th-best player in California
• Four-star recruit according to Rivals.com; listed as the 26th-overall prospect in California and the nation’s 33rd-best offensive tackle
• ESPN four-star recruit, the No. 30 player in the state of California and the 33rd-best offensive tackle in the country
• PrepStar Magazine Top 350 All-American; ranked as the 35th-best prospect in California, the 35th offensive tackle nationally and the 326th overall recruit in the country
• Earned all-league and all-state honors
• Selected to play for the US National Team in the 2020 International Bowl

Personal
• Jeffrey David Persi was born October 8, 2001
• Son of Jeff and Stephanie Persi

Film (junior highlights)

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