South Carolina 33, Michigan 28

Tag: Drake Johnson


2Jan 2013
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South Carolina 33, Michigan 28

Denard Robinson had a solid final game as a Wolverine (image via AnnArbor.com)

Thanks to the seniors.  For the most part, this group of seniors is made up of stellar kids.  I really like Denard Robinson, Jordan Kovacs, Craig Roh, Vincent Smith, Patrick Omameh, Roy Roundtree, etc.  That group of kids entered school around the time that I started this blog and really started concentrating on evaluating players and such, so it’s odd to see them graduating.  They accomplished some great things, and I’m looking forward to watching some of them on the next level.

J.T. Floyd really hurt his team.  I never really cared about the suspension of Hagerup.  It was a dumb move on his part, but I really think that Matt Wile is just as talented, if not more so.  But Floyd, a fifth year senior, hurt the team in more ways than one.  I’ve said all along that Floyd was susceptible to the deep ball because of his lack of speed, so I don’t know that he would have been able to curtail the deep throws that beat Raymon Taylor, Courtney Avery, and Jarrod Wilson.  What I do know is that the re-shuffling of the defensive backfield due to Floyd’s absence hurt the defense numerous times.  Avery is a pretty good slot corner, but he struggles every time the team puts him on the outside.  With Floyd out, Avery moved to the outside, safety Thomas Gordon moved down to the slot, and freshman Jarrod Wilson came in to play safety.  Floyd’s suspension not only hurt the team at his cornerback spot, but it diminished the quality of play at slot corner and safety, too.

Hooray for Al Borges.  I didn’t agree with every play call or personnel decision by Borges, but he came out with a quality game plan and plenty of wrinkles.  Unfortunately, Michigan lacked the horses and the execution to get the job done.  There was a Statue of Liberty hand-off to Denard Robinson and a fake jet sweep screen to Devin Funchess; Borges moved Denard Robinson around to QB, RB, FB, and WR; and there were some funky special teams plays concocted by the coaching staff to get first downs.  Overall, the players just didn’t execute.  South Carolina got steady pressure on Devin Gardner, Jadeveon Clowney made a couple key plays, and Gardner missed some open receivers.  You can blame some of that stuff on the coordinator, I guess, but a lot of it is on the players.

Holy hell attrition. Out of 24 starters to begin the season, Michigan was missing 5 for the Outback Bowl.  Cornerback Blake Countess, Floyd, middle linebacker Kenny Demens, running back Fitzgerald Toussaint, and Hagerup were all out for this game, along with a solid special teamer in Brandin Hawthorne and part-time fullback Stephen Hopkins.  Running back Thomas Rawls also missed the game, and quarterback Denard Robinson could muster only one measly pass attempt because of his elbow injury.  I know excuses are lame, but the Outback Bowl squad was really just a shell of what it was on September 1.  South Carolina was banged up some (their starting running back and right tackle), but their losses were fewer.  In a game decided with 11 seconds left, it’s quite possible the outcome would have been different if a couple of those guys were still available.

Denard needed new cleats. Robinson has always tested the laws of gravity with the way he leans to cut back, but I didn’t see anyone else having a problem with the footing yesterday.  I’m not sure why he struggled so much, but there were some plays available that he just didn’t make because he slipped and fell.  I thought they had the issue fixed after a couple carries in the second half, but then he want back to looking like he was playing football on ice.

Penalties were a problem.  Michigan only had four penalties, but they netted South Carolina an additional 55 yards.  These weren’t 5-yard offsides or illegal procedure calls.  Taylor Lewan took two big penalties, Joe Bolden made a silly late hit on Connor Shaw, and Ricky Barnum grabbed a defensive lineman’s facemask and held on for the duration of the play.  Lewan was a penalty machine in 2010, got rid of those tendencies in 2011, and seems to have regressed now in 2012.  I like Lewan a lot and I know he’s probably gone for the NFL, but I think he had a better season last year.

Running back is a gaping void.  There has been some recent buzz about Drake Johnson, who redshirted this season, but otherwise, the running back position is wide open for 2013.  Running backs Vincent Smith and Justice Hayes combined for just 8 carries and 6 yards; Rawls didn’t play at all; Toussaint will be coming off a nasty broken leg..  Johnson is a bit of a wild card, but none of these guys look like starter material except a healthy Toussaint.  Wyatt Shallman isn’t the answer, either, so I’m hoping DeVeon Smith is better than I expect or that Derrick Green commits in the next month.

Greg Mattison has had better days.  He was sort of hamstrung by a lack of personnel, but I wasn’t a fan of Mattison’s strategy late in the game.  He was sending blitzes because he realized that his defensive backs aren’t very good, but Michigan appeared to be doing better when they rushed two or three guys and put eight or nine back in coverage.  It was a mistake to count on his young cornerbacks and athletically limited safeties to hold up when they’ve been burned again and again.  If it’s me in that situation, I put four guys deep, rush three, and hope that South Carolina can only complete a short pass.  They were 0/2 on field goals up to that point, and that kicker’s confidence had to be waning.  Make them complete something short, and then force them to chuck something into the end zone or try a pressure-packed field goal.

Overall, a slightly disappointing season.  The schedule was tough.  Michigan’s four regular season losses came against teams that were 46-4 prior to yesterday; two of those teams are playing for the national championship, and another went 12-0 but was banned from the postseason.  But Michigan had very real chances to beat Notre Dame, Nebraska, and Ohio State, and couldn’t pull out any of those close games.  The season ended with another close loss to a solid but flawed South Carolina team.  I predicted a 9-3 year, and I predicted the loss to South Carolina, so my projection would have been 9-4.  Not a huge difference from 8-5, but five losses is too many.  Next year should be better, though.

7Jun 2012
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2012 Season Countdown: #84 Drake Johnson

Drake Johnson

Name: Drake Johnson
Height: 6’1″
Weight: 206 lbs.
High school: Ann Arbor (MI) Pioneer
Position: Running back
Class: Freshman
Jersey number: N/A
Last year: Johnson was in high school.

Final TTB Rating: 65

Johnson put up some mind boggling numbers in high school, not just as a running back but as a hurdler, too.  Regardless of what happens at Michigan, he will long be remembered in track and football circles for his high school exploits.

Those accomplishments don’t necessarily translate to college, though.  Johnson racked up big numbers running the ball, but the consensus seems to be that he doesn’t have much wiggle and will struggle to find creases in Michigan Stadium.  Johnson has good speed and a big frame, and he plans to be 220-225 lbs. by the time he becomes an upperclassman.  Hopefully he can parlay those qualities into being a good college running back.  With the backfield pretty set, Johnson’s best chance to get on the field this fall would appear to be as a kick returner; his speed and power could be a nice combination.  However, with another player (Dennis Norfleet) having been brought in for the express purpose of returning punts and kickoffs, Johnson might find his pathway to playing time blocked there, too.

10Apr 2012
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Drake Johnson Answers Your Questions

Ann Arbor (MI) Pioneer running back Drake Johnson

Although Drake Johnson attended Community High School, located in the Kerrytown district of downtown Ann Arbor, he wore a Pioneer uniform and tore things up on a football field located in the shadow of the Big House. During his senior year, Johnson scored 37 touchdowns and rushed for an eye-popping 2,805 yards (8.2 yards per carry).

Drake was nice enough to talk with me on a recent Friday night following his track practice when he spoke on a variety of topics and answered several reader questions.
Speed: “A lot of people have timed me in the forty. I mean, my track coach has, my football coach has – I’ve had multiple people do it. It’s always in the 4.36 – 4.38 range, and I ran the 100 [meter dash] in 10.7 flat. I’m trying to improve to a 10.6 flat. Sometimes people think that just because I’m not taking insanely fast, short steps, I’m not as fast as someone else. But if some runners take five steps to cover ten yards and I’m taking three steps, then if I’m covering that much ground, then I’m going to beat you.”

Weight: “Right now, I’m 206 pounds. Once track season starts I lose a lot of weight because I’m more focused on the running aspect as opposed to the strength aspect. And then once track ends, it’s back to more of the football aspect as opposed to the track aspect. . . . I think Coach Jackson wants me to [eventually] be at max 220 pounds.”
Committing to Michigan: “It wasn’t so much pressure as it was expected because my whole family’s gone to Michigan. It runs in my family to go to the university. My mom is the head cheerleading coach (Pam St. John). My dad went there; my grandfather went there. My step-dad played quarterback at Michigan (Tom Slade). . . . Yeah, he’s my step-dad and he passed away almost six years ago, coming up. . . . When I was really young, my mom used to be really afraid of me going to games because there was like 110,000 people walking around and she didn’t want me to get lost, but then at like age 13 I’d go to maybe four or five games a year.”
Another position of interest? “Well, I’ve always been a really good receiver. I think my junior year I had like 600 receiving yards – it was in a more spread-type offense so I had more like 1,400 rushing yards instead [of 2,805] – and I also had about 45 catches. I’ve always been good at catching the ball. It’s nothing that I particularly had to develop; it’s just kind of a natural ability to catch the football. So if I switched positions I would like to go there, I guess, but it’s my preference to stay at tailback, of course. . . . I played outside linebacker last year [junior year] and learned about how to play against a tailback, so having that knowledge makes it easier to get past them. The front seven, I’ve gotten a lot of the gist of what they might do.”
Running back competition: “They’re all really good backs, so it would be unfair for me to say that any one of them is more competitive to me than any other one of them. To get to that point, they’re all really, really good. They had to be to go to Michigan.”
Staying prepared: “The coaches haven’t really talked about how they want to use me yet, but Coach Jackson has been telling me what he wants me to do to be prepared. . . . Normally, I’ll wake up and run two to three miles. If not, then I’ll go up to the weight room or do a track workout.”
A happy roommate: “I don’t know who I’ll be rooming with, but whoever I do will probably be a very happy person, though. I have a ton of electronics, which I’m sure anyone my age would like.”

Thinking ahead: “I’m going for Psychology, so I can be a Psychiatrist. Since I’m getting a degree from Michigan, I might as well pursue it for what it’s worth. I know that a Michigan degree is worth a lot. So Medical School wouldn’t be free because that would be past the four or five years or whatever it [the scholarship] is worth, but it [Medical School] would be a lot easier to pay for with just the normal [undergraduate] tuition gone.”
28Mar 2012
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Ask a Question: Drake Johnson

Image via AnnArbor.com
Drake Johnson amassed 2,805 rushing yards and 37 touchdowns during his senior season at Ann Arbor Pioneer, and in a few months, he will graduate and walk across the intersection of Main Street and Stadium Boulevard to play in the Big House. I’ll be talking with Drake after his track practice this Friday, so leave a question for him in the comments section if you’d like, and I’ll try to address it in the interview.

13Feb 2012
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Norfleet, Johnson, Godin to take part in 2012 Michigan HS East West All-Star Game

Dennis Norfleet, Drake Johnson, and Matt Godin are scheduled to compete for the East squad in the 32nd annual Michigan High School East West All-Star Game. The contest is set to be played on June 30th at CMU’s Kelly/Shorts stadium in Mount Pleasant. Mike Giannone of Macomb (MI) Dakota HS will coach the East, and Jerry Rabideau of Spring Lake (MI) HS will coach the West. Last year, Desmond Morgan, who recorded 6 tackles in the game, was U of M’s only representative, although Thomas Rawls was also originally scheduled to play. The complete 2012 roster was released late last month and includes a few other names that Michigan fans might be familiar with, including Aaron Burbridge (MSU), Eric Wilson (Northwestern), and Kevin Buford (Iowa).