Report: Michigan State to hire Kansas State defensive coordinator Scottie Hazelton

Mel Tucker has reportedly finalized his on-field coaching staff

Mel Tucker’s on-field coaching staff has reportedly been finalized.

According to Riley Gates of GoPowercat.com–the Kansas State 247 Sports page–Kansas State defensive coordinator Scottie Hazelton is expected to accept the defensive coordinator position on Mel Tucker’s staff.

Gates’ source says that while a deal hasn’t been finalized, K-State is expecting Hazelton to leave for East Lansing, citing an offer that Kansas State “can’t match.” Hazelton was paid $550,000 for his work last year at KSU. Former Michigan State defensive coordinator Mike Tressel was paid $725,000 last season to run the Spartan defense. The salary of new Michigan State offensive line coach and run game coordinator Chris Kapilovic has been reported as $700,000 per year.

Hazelton has only been the defensive coordinator in Manhattan for one season. In 2019 under Hazelton the Wildcats ranked 27th in points per game given up, up from 49th in 2018. KSU also improved from 61st in SP+ defense in 2018 to 47th in 2019. Before KSU Hazelton was the defensive coordinator at Wyoming from 2017-2018 and oversaw massive improvements in the Cowboy defense. In 2015 and 2016 Wyoming ranked 101st and 102nd in points per game allowed respectively and ranked 119th and 116th in defensive SP+. In Hazelton’s two seasons Wyoming ranked 9th and 29th in points per game allowed and 36th and 42st in defensive SP+.

Prior to Wyoming Hazelton was an assistant linebackers coach with the Jacksonville Jaguars. He was the defensive coordinator for Nevada in 2013, the linebackers coach at USC in 2012 and was the defensive coordinator for North Dakota State from 2010-2011 and won an FCS national championship in 2011.

If the hire eventually is finalized Hazelton with be the tenth and final on-field assistant on Mel Tucker’s staff. You can read a roundup of all of his hires here.

Five Most Important Players: MSU Basketball vs. Iowa

Michigan State basketball is facing another great Big Ten team in the Iowa Hawkeyes this week. Here are the 5 most important players.

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Another Big Ten matchup is here. This time, Michigan State basketball plays against the Iowa Hawkeyes. Iowa is ranked no. 20 in the nation and features one of the best Big Ten players in Luka Garza. Michigan State must play their best game this year to beat the Hawkeyes.

Here are the five most important players in this game:

1. Cassius Winston

Normally, I do not include Cassius Winston on my 5 most important player lists but this game is really important. Thus, Cassius must lead the Spartans to victory against Iowa. MSU needs at least 23 points from Winston. Furthermore, he must trim down the turnovers. He averages 3.2 so far this season and must turn the ball over less than three times against the Hawkeyes.

2. Marcus Bingham Jr.

As I’ve said before, Iowa boasts an elite talent in Luka Garza. Garza is 6’11”, the same height as Marcus Bingham Jr. So Izzo will likely put Bingham Jr. on Garza during this game. Bingham has faired well against Big Ten big men including Kofi Cockburn. Garza is a different kind of animal though. Bingham’s defensive performance will dictate the outcome of this game.

3. Xavier Tillman

Luka Garza is not just an offensive monster, he is a really good rebounder. So naturally, Xavier Tillman is also one of the most important MSU players in this game. Tillman is a defensive anchor who can help out against Garza in the post. Furthermore, Tillman swallows up rebounds at an impressive rate. He will have to play aggressively and intelligently against Iowa.

4. Aaron Henry

I will never ever take Aaron Henry off this list. He can swing just about any game with an efficient offensive performance. Likewise, his good defensive performances go a long way for the Spartans. 15-plus points from Henry can do a lot for Michigan State against the Hawkeyes. Especially if another key Spartan player shows up…

5. Gabe Brown

Gabe Brown went crazy against Nebraska with 17 points, shooting 63% from three-point land. Can Brown do this again on Tuesday against Iowa? Yes, he certainly can. Will Gabe Brown score 17 points or more? Only time will tell. One fact remains, he is immensely important to Michigan State’s success.

Watch the game live on ESPN2 this Tuesday, on Feb. 25 at 7 P.M.

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Michigan State offers number one junior quarterback in Texas Kaidon Salter

Kaidon Salter is the fourth quarterback Mel Tucker has offered in the class of 2021.

Mel Tucker and company are not wasting any time pursuing the quarterback of the future at Michigan State.

Less than a week after offering three different class of 2021 quarterbacks, Tucker has offered the top-ranked junior signal caller in the State of Texas Kaidon Salter.

Salter, out of Cedar Hills, Texas, is rated by 247 Sports as the No. 4 dual-threat quarterback and No. 89 prospect overall in the 2021 class. The 6’2 185 lb. quarterback currently boasts offers from a dozen power five schools including Auburn, Baylor, Tennessee, Ole Miss, and Utah.

According to a breakdown of Salter after the latest 247 re-rank, Salter, “led the (Cedar Hill) Longhorns to a 9-3 record and a second-round playoff appearance in the Texas Class 6A Division II bracket. Salter accounted for more than 3,100 total yards of offense and 38 total touchdowns. He threw for 2,550 yards, 28 TD’s, and six interceptions on a 60.8 completion percentage. He added 616 yards and 10 scores on almost 6.2 yards per carry.”

Salter is also a standout track and field athlete at Cedar Hill.

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Michigan State reportedly hires Ross Els as special teams coordinator

Els would be the eight assistant coach on Mel Tucker’s staff.

More reinforcements for Mel Tucker’s first coaching staff are on their way from Boulder, Colorado.

According to Colorado bear reporter Brian Howell, Colorado linebackers coach and special teams coordinator Ross Els will be going the Michigan State staff.

As Howell alludes to their are still roles to be sorted out among the defense–most notably with former MSU defensive coordinator Mike Tressel whose role has yet to be publicly announced–but Els looks to be headed for the special teams coordinator role.

Els was the special teams coordinator under Tucker in 2019 and Colorado improved form 89th in special teams SP+ in 2018 to 43rd in 2019. Els was also ran special teams for Nebraska from 2012-2014 and those years the Cornhuskers finished 32nd, 8th, and 51st in special teams SP+.

Els has also coached special teams at New Mexico and Ohio University, in addition to being the defensive coordinator at Purdue in 2016.

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Former Michigan State linebacker Darien Harris returns to MSU as part of Mel Tucker’s support staff

Harris was a four-year player for Michigan State and co-captain of the 2015 College Football Playoff team.

An all-time Spartan Dawg is back to work in East Lansing.

In addition to the hiring of tight ends coach Ted Gilmore, Michigan State and Mel Tucker also announced the hiring of a few support staff members on Friday. Among them was new Director of Player Engagement Darien Harris.

Harris played linebacker for Michigan State from 2012-2015 and was a captain on the 2015 team that won the Big Ten and made the school’s only appearance in the College Football Playoff.

“Darien Harris is an outstanding role model for our current players,” said Tucker in a release from the school. “He was a captain on the Big Ten Championship and College Football Playoff team in 2015 and has demonstrated incredible leadership and mentoring skills. He’s a very good communicator and will be able to connect with our team. He recently completed his master’s degree and is ready to mentor our players during their time here on campus.”

Harris collected 154 tackles, including 13 for losses (28 yards), in 54 career games with 25 starts; the 54 career games played is tied for the most of any Spartan player in Michigan State history.

Following his Spartan career, Harris spent time in the Canadian Football League with Ottawa and served as an analyst for the Big Ten Network while finishing his master’s degree at MSU. He has also been an assistant coach at Walled Lake Western High School in Michigan.

Michigan State also made official the hiring of Geoff Martzen as Director of Player Personnel and Cody Cox as Director of Football Operations. Martzen served in that same role under Tucker in Colorado and Cox is entering his fourth year in administrations for Michigan State football. He was the Director of Executive Football Operations in 2019 and the Assistant Director of Football Operations and Camp Coordinator from 2017-18.

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Connor Heyward withdraws from transfer portal, returning to MSU

The junior running back returns to Michigan State after entering name in transfer portal last fall.

I did not have this one on my Michigan State football offseason bingo card.

Junior running back Connor Heyward has announced that he is withdrawing from the NCAA Transfer Portal and returning to Michigan State.

“It has been a long process, but I know this is home in my heart,” Connor Heyward wrote on Twitter in his return announcement.

Heyward will return to Michigan State as a redshirt junior. He suited up for four games in 2019 before announcing his intention to transfer. Heyward entered the 2019 season as the starting running back, but lost the gig to redshirt freshman Elijah Collins in week two and saw his role on the team greatly reduced thereafter.

Heyward has carried the ball 145 times for 618 yards and five touchdowns in his two-plus seasons at MSU.

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Michigan State hires Jay Johnson as offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach

Johnson is the second assistant to follow Mel Tucker from Colorado to East Lansing

Mel Tucker is bringing another Colorado staffer with him to East Lansing.

After it was reported a few days ago that former Colorado offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach Jay Johnson would be coming to Michigan State, the school made his hire official on Thursday.

Of Johnson, Tucker said via an official release, “Jay is an experienced play caller and an expert quarterbacks coach. He has a very innovative offensive mind. I was with Jay when he was at Georgia and really got to know him well there. He’s had success in the Big Ten before, calling plays at Minnesota. He runs a multiple offense with an emphasis on physicality, and he’s an aggressive play caller.”

Prior to joining Tucker in Colorado, Johnson was a quality control assistant with Georgia in 2017 and 2018. He was the OC and quarterbacks coach at Minnesota in 216 and held the same roles at the University of Louisiana (formerly known as UL-Lafayette) from 2011-2015.

Earlier this week, Chris Kapilovic joined Tucker’s staff as the offensive line coach and run game coordinator and Courtney Hawkins was named the wide receivers coach. Tucker previously announced that Mike Tressel and Ron Burton will be back on the defensive staff for the Spartans.

You can read a breakdown of what to expect from Johnson’s offense by clicking here.

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Michigan State vs. Nebraska statistical preview

A look at how the Michigan State men’s basketball team matches up with the Nebraska Cornhuskers

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No. 25 Michigan State hits the road to Lincoln to take on the lowly Nebraska Cornhuskers Thursday night (8:30 FS1). Michigan State needs to get over their road woes and make sure they don’t end up in a hotly contested game against a team that is in the early stages of a program reset under first-year head coach Fred Hoiberg.

Let’s take a look at how these two teams match up from a statistical standpoint and where edges can perhaps be gleaned.

Advanced stats and ranks courtesy kenpom.com.

Overview

Michigan State: 17-9 overall, 9-6 Big Ten

-No. 11 in adjusted efficiency

-No. 18 in adjusted offense

-No. 15 in adjusted defense

-No. 102 in adjusted tempo

Nebraska: 7-18 overall, 2-12 Big Ten

-No. 136 in adjusted efficiency

-No. 141 in adjusted offense

-No. 157 in adjusted defense

-No. 32 in adjusted tempo

I’ll try to be as kind as possible to Nebraska while writing this. They consistently are competitive and occasionally put a scare into good teams. That said, the Cornhuskers are really struggling this year. They have lost nine straight games and haven’t won since January 7. Less than two weeks ago they went on the road and put a scare into Maryland, having a chance to win the game with a last-second shot. They followed that up by getting blown out by 17 at home against Wisconsin. Fred Hoiberg is in his first year in Lincoln and the Cornhuskers are one of the youngest teams in the country. I’m sure the plan is to take some lumps this year and next, with the promise of Hoiberg’s past paying dividends down the road. I expect them to be a legitimate player in the Big Ten in pretty short order, it’s just not happening for them this year. Still, they have the ability to punch above their weight and Michigan State can’t coast through this like Nebraska is a middling mid-major team.

Let’s dive into some specifics.

A note: Four factors is something you will see in these posts a lot. They are four statistical categories that heavily dictate good basketball vs. bad basketball. They are: effective field goal %, turnover %, offensive rebounding %, free throw rate (FTA/FGA). If a team is good at these four things, they are good at basketball.

When Michigan State has the ball

Michigan State Offense four factors: No. 81 in eFG% (effective field goal), No. 97 in turnover %, No. 49 in Oreb%, No. 206 in free throw rate

Nebraska defense four factors: No. 236 eFG% against, No. 170 in turnover %, No. 336 in Oreb%, No. 4 in FTR

OK. So, Nebraska is one of the worst rebounding teams in the country on both sides of the ball. Defensively they allow their opponents to rebound a third of their misses. That is a lot. I don’t feel like this is even a particularly bold prediction, but MSU is going to absolutely crush Nebraska on the offensive glass in this game. This will be a great chance for Aaron Henry and Gabe Brown to get some good mojo going in that aspect of their games. Tom Izzo has been crushing them over their rebounding and this could be a chance for them to feast. One thing Nebraska does shockingly well is not foul. They are fourth in opponent free throw rate, which is obviously excellent. That’ll be interesting to watch, because one of the under-discussed reasons MSU has been struggling lately is their inability to get to the free throw line. As discussed a number of times in this space, free throws are a great way to generate efficient offense and MSU’s free throw rate has been in a steady decline for more than a month. It doesn’t appear as though Nebraska is the team to help them fix that. Still, MSU has massive advantages in two of the four factors and a sizable advantage in a third.

When Nebraska has the ball

Nebraska offensive four factors: No. 238 in eFG%, No. 8 in turnover %, No. 329 in Oreb%, No. 254 in FTR

Michigan State defensive four factors: No. 3 in eFG% against, No. 319 in turnover %, No. 69 in Oreb% against, No. 105 in FTR

I think I wrote something similar about Northwestern’s offense, but imagine if Nebraska couldn’t protect the ball. They might be one of the worst offenses in college basketball if they couldn’t. Fortunately for them, they are, and that means Nebraska will take full advantage of their possessions during a game. That helps because if you can’t rebound, shoot, or get to the free throw line, you need as many chances at the basket as possible. MSU has struggled a touch on the defensive glass, but Nebraska doesn’t pose much of a threat there. A ranking discrepancy of 235 spots in effective field goal percentage doesn’t bode particularly well for the Cornhuskers either. My non-expert opinion is that Nebraska’s best bet is slowing the game down and trying to bog down the MSU offense while hitting a few extra threes. That’s just not how the Cornhuskers play, as we’ll get to.

Other key numbers

Nebraska is one of the fastest offenses in the country. They rank 10th in average possession length on that side of the ball. They go, go, go and go some more. There should be a number of fast-break chances for both teams in this one.

Nebraska ranks 196th in three-point shooting and they take a decent amount of them. 40% of their shots are from deep, yet they only hit them at a 32.7% clip.

Nebraska ranks second-to-last in minutes continuity. Nebraska only has 4% of its minutes from last season played by the same player in a similar role.

Nebraska is the third-worst free throw shooting team in the country, making only 60% of their attempts from the line.

Nebraska is the fourth-worst team at getting their shots blocked. A staggering 13.1% of Nebraska’s shots get blocked. For a team that takes 40% of their shots from three, that is a shocking stat.

Conclusion

Folks, Nebraska is bad. They just are. They sit with Northwestern as by far the two worst teams in the Big Ten. In their last four home games they’ve kept the final margin in single digits just one time, an eight-point loss to Indiana. They haven’t won since January 7. A win against Michigan State would make their season and I’m sure Fred Hoiberg would love to get one over on his friend Tom Izzo. Michigan State is far and away a superior team, but if they come out flat and struggle to get the offense going on the road, they could easily end up in a dog fight. Rebounding alone should give them enough of an edge to get through this without an A or B game, but it’s probably time for them to start rounding into postseason form. Struggling to a win against Nebraska won’t be doing that. KenPom has this as an 80-70 win for MSU, with an 82% chance of victory.

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What to expect from Michigan State’s new offensive coordinator Jay Johnson

A deep dive into Johnson’s career as a play caller and offensive coordinator

“What is the offense?”

This would be both a correct response to a Jeopardy! “answer” that read something along the lines of, “What is the biggest thing ailing Michigan State football?” AND a general thought a Michigan State football fan might have had at any given moment during the last few seasons in East Lansing.

The Spartans finished 105th in points per game in 2019, a nice improvement from them finishing 126th in that same stat the year prior. The 2017 team wasn’t much better–despite winning ten games–as they finished 96th in points per game. Of course the 2016 season–which saw MSU go 3-9 directly off a College Football Playoff appearance–wasn’t any better; 105th in points per game was the final rank that year. Sure, points per game isn’t the most accurate representation of the quality of an offense, but I don’t need to dig any deeper with those stats. Four years of a team finishing 96th or worse in average scoring equates to a bad offense. Full stop. It’s no question (or answer?) that fixing the offense is one of the most important things Mel Tucker and his staff need to accomplish to get MSU football back to where it was in the mid-2010s.

With that as the backdrop, a lot of attention was given to who Tucker might bring in as his first offensive coordinator at Michigan State. Tucker has a background in defense, making his choice to run the offense that much more important. He ultimately went with someone close to him, bringing Jay Johnson–his OC and QB coach from Colorado–to East Lansing to fill those very same roles at MSU. He is also bringing former Colorado offensive line coach and run game coordinator Chris Kapilovic with him.

To some, it was an underwhelming hire. Colorado’s offense wasn’t exactly dynamic last season and Johnson isn’t a household name, or a young up-and-comer; the next big thing. I’d argue most of those thoughts stem from who Jay Johnson is not, rather than who he is or what he has done. Prior to last season Johnson was a quality control assistant with the Georgia offense for two seasons. Before that he was the offensive coordinator and QB coach at Minnesota for a single season in 2016. He got to Minnesota via Louisiana (back when they were known as Louisiana Lafayette) where he was the offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach for five seasons.

Some important context on his career: Johnson was only the OC at Minnesota for one season, because PJ Fleck was hired there at the conclusion of the 2016 season and he brought in his own staff. And we’ve already covered why he only had one season at Colorado.

I say that to say this; it’s really hard to know how effective Johnson has been as an OC at the power five level. In Minnesota he was hired as OC under Tracy Claeys who took over when Jerry Kill abruptly had to retire due to medical concerns. Claeys got to coach the entire 2016 season, but it was a lame duck year, bridging the gap to the Fleck era. In both Minnesota and Colorado he was running an offense with players he didn’t recruit or that weren’t recruited for his offense. As we’ll get to, for this offense, that can really matter. I put more stock into what he did in Louisiana, but even that was Sun Belt football, five plus years ago.

It takes a few years to really know if an OC is good at his job and the stretch of football Johnson is about to embark on will be the first legitimate power five sample size to judge him on. That is if he stays in East Lansing for more than a season.

When figuring out how I wanted this post to go I struggled, because Johnson is a bit of an enigma. He has a lot of experience, yet I’m not sure how applicable any of it is to the job he has now. So we’re going to go through a ton of stats from his offense and then I’ll get into some film work of what the offense will look like and what it is designed to do. There won’t be an opinion on whether or not this is a great hire, because I genuinely don’t believe I have enough information to make that call.

Let’s get into the numbers.

A note: You will see me reference SP+ in this post. From the creator of the stat ESPN’s Bill Connelly, “What is SP+? In a single sentence, it’s a tempo- and opponent-adjusted measure of college football efficiency.”

You’ll also see “Tempo” stats measured in seconds per play. For reference, Michigan State ran a play ever 25.9 seconds in 2016, 2018, and 2019. They were a little slower in 2017 and 25.9 seconds is a below-average pace. You can read more into that here.

Colorado 2019

  • Points per game – 100th
  • Yards per play – 81st
  • SP+ offense – 51st
  • Tempo – 25.3 seconds per play

Minnesota 2016

  • Points per game – 63rd
  • Yards per play – 105th
  • SP+ offense – 76th
  • Tempo – 26.6 seconds per play

UL – Lafayette 2011-2015

  • Points per game – 32nd, 24th, 34th, 61st, 83rd
  • Yards per play – 40th, 5th, 47th, 47th, 94th
  • SP+ offense – 94th, 41st, 76th, 59th, 98th
  • Tempo – 23.7 seconds per play, 25.4, 25.5, 26.5, 24.8

OK. So that’s a lot of numbers, ranging from elite to terrible–hence the “hard to draw a conclusion” thing.

First, the advanced numbers liked the Colorado offense a great deal more than their production suggested. Finishing 51st in SP+ offense is, by definition, above average. So why the disconnect between their efficiency and the ability to translate that to points? Well, the first thing to point to is usually luck. Luck plays into football a tremendous amount and can take an above average offense and make them score like a bad offense. Luck can show itself in a number of ways: officiating, fumble recovery rate, dropped (or not dropped) interceptions, injuries, etc. The divide can also be explained by football reasons, like if a team is great at getting to the red zone, but can’t seem to score touchdowns when they get there. That can be a personnel issue, a play calling issue, a luck issue, or a number of other things. I’m going to get much more in depth on the Colorado offense, but just wanted to point out that their offense, while certainly not good, wasn’t as bad as counting stats might indicate. Points per game is also a team stat, with defense and special teams having impact on field position and non-offensive touchdowns.

The opposite can be said for Johnson’s time in Minnesota. The offense was below average in SP+, but finished 63rd in scoring. Again, these were both one-year stops with somebody else’s players. It’s tough to make any sweeping judgements off of these numbers.

Johnson had far more success in Louisiana, even helping his 2012 offense finish 5th in yards per play that season. That is an elite stat. Yards per play is a pretty good stat to determine the quality of an offense and finishing top five in the country is obviously great. An offense can’t really fluke its way to that. Johnson’s Lafayette offenses were generally pretty good with the exception of the 2015 season. And not to totally excuse that year, but n 2015 UL-L was replacing a three-year starter at quarterback and ended up using three different signal callers en route to a 4-8 season. It was a complete mess.

As far as tempo goes, Johnson’s teams don’t play that fast. Some of his UL-L offenses were on the faster side, but even then they were probably hovering around average. I’ll get into more specifics on tempo when I get into 2019 Colorado.

Overall the numbers aren’t much to write home about, although there are certainly some good things to point to during the UL-L years. As I mentioned above however, that was in the Sun Belt and five to ten years ago, so take it with a grain of salt. There is some information to glean from those seasons that might be more indicative of what the Jay Johnson offense is, compared to last year in Colorado.

So let’s get to that.

Schematics

Jay Johnson’s offense, from personnel and formation, looks a lot like what Michigan State did when Brad Salem took over as OC in 2019, with a few tweaks. I would identify their base personnel as something like this:

Colorado was in 11 personnel (1 running back, 1 tight end, hence “11”) a ton last season. Quarterback Steven Montez spent a lot of time in the shotgun, or pistol formations (pistol pictured above) and would dip under center from time to time. In 2019 Michigan State ran almost exclusively out of the shotgun or pistol (with a heavy lean to shotgun), but used 12 personnel (1 running back, 2 tight ends) a lot more often than Colorado did.

So, from a foundational standpoint, Colorado in 2019 was slightly more spread out than Michigan State, but used shotgun a little bit less.

Both teams operated without a huddle and I’d expect that to continue. Colorado’s tempo was slightly faster than MSU’s last season and the buffaloes deployed it in a different way. Michigan State generally played at the same pace over an entire game, with the exceptions being game management situations; i.e. two-minute drives, bleeding clock, etc. On the other hand, Colorado–multiple times a game–would go into lightning tempo and be ready to snap the ball right as it was set. They used tempo like a pitcher might use an off-speed pitch; as a way to keep a defense off balance. Again, it was only a few plays a game, but they definitely used tempo as a weapon more than MSU did.

Colorado also showed a more diversity in formations than MSU did. Like I mentioned above they mostly prefer 11 personnel, but certainly used two-back sets and multiple tight ends. They might line up in the shotgun with four wide receivers and then next play they’d look like this.

That is an offshoot of the old double-wing formation a lot of us ran in high school. It’s basically the same except the H-backs are lined up parallel with the line, as opposed to slightly angled towards the center.

You see, at its heart, this is an option offense.

A real quick Jay Johnson history lesson. At UL-L Johnson was the OC under head coach Mark Hudspeth. Hudspeth is an option guy. He was the OC at Navy for a year and ran a number of option variations while head coach at North Alabama and during his time at UL-L.

Why does this matter? Well, option offenses are based on very simple math. It’s a constant game of getting a numbers advantage, by formation, motion, shifts, tempo and–most importantly–a running quarterback.

With that in mind, let’s talk about scheme.

Scheme

As hinted at above, Johnson runs a modern version of an option offense. It is built upon inside and outside zone as base run plays with a billion different ways to run them with different formations, motions, personnel groupings, etc.. From there it builds out to zone read (aka “read option”) and those new fangled RPOs that nobody can seem to properly identify.

Here’s a standard outside zone play Colorado ran against Utah last season. Because of the formation Colorado gets a 4 v 4 blocking situation on the play side and all the back has to do is find the open space, which he does to the tune of seven yards. Pretty simple.

Outside zone was used somewhat sparingly by MSU last year. It’ll be used more often by Johnson in 2020.

Here’s a good look at inside zone read. The backside defensive end is left unblocked and the quarterback reads him while the front side of the play is a standard inside zone run. The threat of QB run neutralizes the backside DE, the QB makes the right read and hands it off to the back who is running behind a 5 v 5 blocking situation.

We saw a fair amount of this play in East Lansing last season.

The threat of QB run is tremendously important to this offense. If you don’t believe me go back and watch Steven Threet try and run Rich Rodriguez’s offense that first year at Michigan.

That detail is pertinent to evaluating Colorado’s offense in 2019. For all of the things Steven Montez can do–and he was a solid college football player–he wasn’t built for this offense. It was a round peg, square hole situation. There was no shot Colorado could go with anybody other than Montez at QB last year. He was a three-year starter with NFL potential. Johnson’s offense had to adapt to the guy running the plays. And it did. Montez had 44 non-sack carries in 2019. Of those, a number were scrambles, not designed runs. For comparison, Terrance Broadway, Johnson’s QB from 2012-14 at UL-L had non-sack carry totals of 106, 104, and 121 in chronological order. Mitch Leidner, his 2016 QB at Minnesota, had 104 non-sack carries.

That’s an average of 6-8 fewer QB runs per game with Montez compared to Johnson’s other quarterbacks. And I think it’s fair to assume that a higher percentage of Montez’s runs were scrambles, compared to the other guys. While 6-8 plays in a game might not seem like a lot, it’s ~10% of a teams total plays. And that number doesn’t factor in plays where a zone read is called but the quarterback gives the ball instead of keeping it. Flatly, Jay Johnson’s play calling, and the design of the offense, were impacted greatly by having a non-runner at quarterback in Steven Montez.

Let me show you a specific play that illustrates this point further.

Here’s a still frame:

This was Colorado’s first drive of the second game of the season. An inside zone read that set up easy for Montez to keep the ball for an easy first down. And he doesn’t get it. If there were any questions about whether or not Montez could be an effective runner, I think they may have been answered on this play.

Montez was a legitimate productive runner in four games in 2019. In those four games Colorado went 3-1, averaged 204.5 yards on the ground and scored 29.75 points. It’s a funky sample size because they put 52 points up on Colorado State, but I thought it worth mentioning.

The main point is this type of offense just operates better with a quarterback that can run and Colorado didn’t have that last year. That, again, makes it hard to judge.

Let’s lastly look at the mindset of the offense and then I’ll sum this all up.

Mindset

I would classify Jay Johnson’s offense at Colorado as on the conservative side. At UL-L it was an interesting mix. For two seasons the Ragin’ Cajuns were incredibly explosive and for two seasons they were much more efficient. I’d say Johnson, and by extension Mel Tucker, like to run and possess the ball, but aren’t tied to that concept like Mark Dantonio was at Michigan State. There will almost certainly be more deep throws in Spartan Stadium in 2020 than there were in prior seasons. Johnson’s offense isn’t as much run-run-pass as MSU has been in the past. From what I saw, and it admittedly wasn’t everything, 2019 Colorado was a little too conservative for my liking on offense.

But . . . but . . . there is a little bit of friskiness in Jay Johnson. Let me show you a couple of examples.

In this first play I would like you to notice, the down and distance, time left in the game, score and play call.

I, and many Spartan fans, have been aching for a better late-game offensive approach. Too often MSU would try and start bleeding clock halfway through the third quarter, just hoping to get to the finish line before they run out of gas. Throwing an intermediate route on first down with a lead and less than three minutes left was unheard of during the Dantonio era. At the very least, we know Johnson (and Tucker) are capable of (and cool with) calling that play at that moment.

Here’s another bold play. I’m not sure what to make of it honestly, because it’s kind of insane. But I just wanted to make sure it was out there.

That’s just your casual, run-of-the-mill 96-yard flea flicker while down ten in the fourth quarter.

Like I said, it’s a generally conservative offense. In 2019–factoring in sacks– Colorado ran the ball 402 times and passed it 431 times. They took some deep shots, but more often played in a shorter box–much like MSU used to do under Dantonio–preferring to make their hay on the ground and pass when needed.

Conclusion

The Michigan State offense in 2020 will look different than the 2019 version and much different than any previous version. It will be more spread out than Michigan State ever was during the Dantonio era, and given MSU’s strength at receiver, that’s probably a good thing. The run concepts will be similar to 2019, although with less gap (or power) scheme and more outside zone. QB run will absolutely be a factor and the use of a second tight end will be diminished.

There should be more aggression in the pass game, but not too much more. There will be more motion and shifting pre-snap. It will be a modern take of an option offense that works to get a numbers advantage wherever it can. Ball control and defense will probably still be the name of the game in East Lansing, but hopefully some more juice on the offensive end comes with it.

Last point. Almost all of the numbers used in this story, whether they’re good, bad or in-between, are better than the numbers the MSU offense has produced in the last four years. The Michigan State offense under Jay Johnson, quite literally, cannot get much worse.

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Rivals: MSU, Mel Tucker will hurt Michigan in recruiting

The two most prominent recruiting experts anticipate the new Michigan State coach to give the Wolverines a run for their money on the trail.

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Rivals national recruiting guys, Mike Farrell and Adam Gorney, are both personalities we’re big fans of, and we definitely value their opinion on all things college football.

That said, they joined together to do their regular ‘fact or fiction’ piece, and asked the question: is Michigan State’s hiring of Mel Tucker something that should concern Michigan and Jim Harbaugh?

While Wolverines fans are quick to dismiss MSU no matter the circumstance, the two recruiting experts anticipate that Tucker could be bigger thorn in Harbaugh’s side than his predecessor Mark Dantonio.

And it all starts with the recruiting trail.

Farrell’s take: FACTMark Dantonio was a great coach and did an excellent job at Michigan State before things unraveled. So why would I think Mel Tucker is a bigger threat to Jim Harbaugh? Because of the way Tucker recruits, especially in the Southeast. That’s the key to getting to the playoff out of the Big Ten, especially in a division with Ohio State, Penn State and Michigan. Tucker’s ability to recruit will only hurt Michigan and make the Spartans stronger. Ohio State is still clearly the best team in the Big Ten and that won’t change anytime soon, but this is a good hire for Michigan State.

Gorney’s take: FACT. Michigan State needed a refresh as things got stale in recent years under Dantonio with back-to-back 7-6 records and an offense that was not inventive. On the field and especially in recruiting, Tucker was the right choice for this job because he will be relentless and give Michigan State a fresh start while keeping true to what works in East Lansing. All that makes it harder for Harbaugh on the recruiting trail because Tucker will focus on in-state talent and hitting the Southeast for elite players.

For us, we’re in wait-and-see mode. Tucker did an excellent job in many of his recent stops, whether it be bringing in the No. 32 class in 2020 to Colorado, per Rivals, or being a solid recruiter in his tenures at Alabama under Nick Saban or as the defensive coordinator of Georgia under Kirby Smart.

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However, considering that he hasn’t been at a program in awhile that’s had to play second-fiddle to another in its own state, we can’t quite believe the hype until Tucker manages some recruiting wins over Harbaugh. Still, there’s promise, even though MSU has become a shell of what it was through the middle of the last decade, that the rivalry could see some interesting battles in the near future.

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