Review of 2006 Recruiting: The Linebackers

Tag: Obi Ezeh


13Oct 2011
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Review of 2006 Recruiting: The Linebackers

Sean Weatherspoon could have been a Wolverine.

Obi Ezeh
High school: Catholic Central High School in Grand Rapids, MI
Ratings: Rivals 3-star, #51 RB;
Other notable offers: Eastern Michigan, Indiana, Western Michigan
College: Michigan
Scoop: Ezeh redshirted as a true freshman in 2006, but leaped onto the scene as a redshirt freshman in 2007. He started ten games at middle linebacker, was a Freshman All-America, and made the Freshman All-Big Ten squad due to his 10 starts, 68 tackles, 4 tackles for loss, 2 sacks, 1 interception, 3 pass breakups, and 1 forced fumble. He followed that season with perhaps his most productive year – 98 tackles, 7 tackles for loss, 1 sack, 1 interception, 3 pass breakups, and 1 fumble recovery. After that his career seemed to progressively deteriorate. Ezeh held onto the starting middle linebacker job for most of his redshirt junior year in 2009, making 69 tackles, 5 tackles for loss, 2 pass breakups, and 1 fumble recovery; however, he played sparingly late in the season while losing time to Kevin Leach, a 210 lb. former walk-on. Those struggles continued into 2010, when Ezeh was displaced by redshirt sophomore Kenny Demens halfway through the season. Statistically, his fifth-year senior campaign was his worst, as he finished with 58 tackles, 3.5 tackles for loss, and 1 fumble recovery. (Text taken from Ezeh’s senior profile, which was posted in April.)  Ezeh went undrafted in the 2011 NFL Draft; he signed with the Washington Redskins as an undrafted free agent but was cut prior to the season.

Cobrani Mixon
High school: Colerain High School in Cincinnati, OH
Ratings: Rivals 4-star, #8 ILB;
Other notable offers:
College: Michigan Kent State
Scoop: After redshirting as a freshman at Michigan in 2006, he transferred to Kent State University and sat out the 2007 season due to transfer rules. He had 73 tackles and 2 sacks in 2008 as a redshirt sophomore. By 2009 he was an All-MAC linebacker, racking up 108 tackles and 3 sacks. As a senior in 2010, Mixon made 82 tackles, 6.5 sacks, 11.5 tackles for loss, and 1 interception; he was also named a team captain and was named First Team All-MAC at linebacker.  He went undrafted in the 2011 NFL Draft.

Jonas Mouton
High school: Venice High School in Venice, CA
Ratings: Rivals 4-star, #3 S;
Other notable offers: Cal, LSU, Nebraska, Oregon, Texas, USC
College: Michigan
Scoop:  Mouton arrived at Michigan and almost immediately became a linebacker. He redshirted as a freshman in 2006 to learn the position and add some weight. After the redshirt year, he backed up Chris Graham at weakside linebacker in Ron English’s 4-3 system. That year (2007) he made 5 tackles at linebacker and on kick coverage. Once Graham graduated following the 2007 season, Mouton backed up Marell Evans for one game and then earned the starting WILL job in the second game against Miami (OH). He finished the season with 76 tackles, 6.5 tackles for loss, and 1 sack. As the incumbent in 2009, Mouton had a subpar year. The defense was abysmal, and the inside linebackers – Mouton and Obi Ezeh – constantly looked lost. Mouton ended the season with 66 tackles, 3 tackles for loss, 2 interceptions, 1 fumble recovery, and 4 pass breakups. As a fifth year senior in 2010, Mouton led the Big Ten in tackles with 117. He also had 8.5 tackles for loss, 2 sacks, 2 interceptions, 3 pass breakups, 1 forced fumble, and 2 fumble recoveries.  (Text taken from Mouton’s senior profile, posted in February.)  Mouton was drafted in the 2nd round (#61 overall) of the 2011 NFL Draft by the San Diego Chargers; however, he suffered a knee injury and has not played yet in the NFL.

Quintin Patilla
High school: Carman Ainsworth High School in Flint, MI
Ratings: Rivals 3-star, #26 OLB;
Other notable offers: Bowling Green, Central Michigan, Indiana, Toledo
College: Michigan Grand Valley State
Scoop: After redshirting as a freshman in 2006, he played sparingly as a fullback and on special teams in 2007. Patilla transferred to Grand Valley State University prior to his redshirt sophomore season and did not play that year. When he got to GVSU, he played defensive end at 6’3″, 255 lbs. However, I cannot find any stats for his 2009 season and he did not return to GVSU in 2010. I’m assuming his football career is over.

Thaddeus Gibson
High school: Euclid High School in Euclid, OH
Ratings: Rivals 4-star, #9 OLB; Scout 4-star, #9 LB
Other notable offers: Penn State, Tennessee
College: Ohio State
Scoop: Gibson redshirted as a true freshman in 2006.  He played in 9 games as a redshirt freshman in 2007, picking up 11 tackles, 3 tackles for loss, 1 sack, 1 forced fumble, and 2 pass breakups.  In 2008 Gibson had 26 tackles, 9 tackles for loss, 5 sacks, 2 forced fumbles, 1 fumble return for a touchdown, and 1 pass breakup.  As a redshirt junior in 2009, Gibson had 45 tackles, 13 tackles for loss, 4 sacks, 2 forced fumbles, 2 fumble recoveries, 1 interception, and 3 pass breakups.  He left Columbus with one year of eligibility remaining and was picked in the 4th round (#116 overall) by the Pittsburgh Steelers in the 2010 NFL Draft.  He has since been signed by San Francisco and now the Washington Redskins, but his only official appearances came in two 2010 games with 49ers, where he notched 3 tackles and 1 forced fumble.

Akeem Hebron
High school: Good Counsel High School in Olney, MD
Ratings: Rivals 4-star, #4 OLB; Scout 5-star, #5 LB
Other notable offers: Ohio State, Oklahoma, Virginia Tech
College: Georgia
Scoop: Hebron redshirted in 2006 and played for Georgia Military College in 2007, picking up 25.5 tackles, 3 tackles for loss, 2 sacks, and 1 forced fumble.  Hebron played in six games in 2008, picking up just 1 tackle before fracturing his ankle.  As a redshirt junior in 2009, he had 3 tackles.  In his senior season of 2010, Hebron made 6 tackles, 2 tackles for loss, and 1 sack.  He went undrafted in the 2011 NFL Draft.

Michael Morgan
High school: Skyline High School in Dallas, TX
Ratings: Rivals 4-star, #5 OLB; Scout 4-star, #34 LB
Other notable offers: Florida State, Oklahoma, Texas, Texas A&M
College: USC
Scoop: Morgan redshirted as a true freshman in 2006.  He was a backup strongside linebacker as a redshirt freshman in 2007, picking up 9 tackles.  Once again a backup in 2008, Morgan had 24 tackles, 5 tackles for loss, and 1 fumble recovery.  He started 9 games as a redshirt junior in 2009 and finished with 50 tackles, 13 tackles for loss, and 1 pass breakup.  In his senior season of 2010, Morgan had his best season with 57 tackles, 3 tackles for loss, 1/2 a sack, 8 pass breakups, 1 forced fumble, and 1 fumble recovery.  He went undrafted in the 2011 NFL Draft.

Toryan Smith
High school: Rome High School in Rome, GA
Ratings: Rivals 3-star, #15 ILB; Scout 3-star, #52 LB
Other notable offers:
College: Notre Dame
Scoop: Smith played as a backup inside linebacker during his freshman year, racking up 9 tackles on defense and special teams.  A backup once again in 2007, Smith had 14 tackles and 1/2 a tackle for loss.  As a part-time starter in 2008, he notched 18 tackles, 1 pass breakup, and 1 fumble recovery.  As a senior in 2009, Smith had 15 tackles, 3.5 tackles for loss, 1 sack, and 1 fumble recovery.  He went undrafted in the 2010 NFL Draft.

Joshua Tatum
High school: McClymonds High School in Oakland, CA
Ratings: Rivals 4-star, #3 ILB; Scout 5-star, #7 LB
Other notable offers:
College: USC Missouri
Scoop: Tatum redshirted as a true freshman in 2006.  He fell off the face of the earth in 2007, but at the City College of San Francisco in 2008, Tatum had 120 tackles, 15 tackles for loss, 7 sacks, 7 pass breakups, and 1 interception returned for a 93-yard touchdown.  He then transferred to Missouri, where he suffered a back injury in spring 2009 and sat out the following season due to the injury.  As a backup linebacker in 2010, Tatum had 7 tackles, 3 tackles for loss, and 1 sack.  He was not drafted in the 2011 NFL Draft.

Biggest miss: Michigan doesn’t seem to have done too poorly with the 2006 linebacker class.  Sure, two of the four guys left early in their careers, Ezeh regressed throughout his career, and Mouton was the best of the offerees, based both on his production and getting drafted in the 2nd round of the NFL Draft.  But the kids who went elsewhere were just as disappointing.  Gibson seems to be the choice for “biggest miss” based on his 10 career college sacks and 4th round draft status, but I’m not that disappointed that he went elsewhere.

Biggest bust: It’s between Akeem Hebron and Joshua Tatum for this title, but at least Tatum had success at his junior college – 120 tackles, 15 TFLs, 7 sacks, 7 pass breakups, a 93-yard INT return are a big deal at any level.  Hebron never amounted to much of a football player at Georgia after being a 5-star to Scout and the #4 outside linebacker to Rivals.

Best in class: Sean Weatherspoon was the #19 overall pick in the 2010 NFL Draft by the Atlanta Falcons. Lots of schools missed Weatherspoon, whose choice of Missouri was arguably his best offer over the likes of Iowa State, TCU, and Tulane.  He made 111 tackles, 14.5 tackles for loss, 4.5 sacks, and 1 interception as a senior in 2009.  And that was actually a dropoff from his junior season, when he had 155 tackles, 18.5 tackles for loss, 5 sacks, and 3 interceptions.

7Jul 2011
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2006 Offer Board

QUARTERBACK (9)
David Cone – Statesboro, GA (Michigan)
Mitch Mustain – Sprindale, AR (Arkansas)
Neil Caudle – Hoover, AL (Auburn)
Tim Tebow – Ponte Vedra Beach, FL (Florida)
Matthew Stafford – Dallas, TX (Georgia)
Pat Devlin – Exton, PA (Penn State)
Dexter Davidson – Coconut Creek, FL (Pittsburgh)
Nick Stephens – Flower Mound, TX (Tennessee)
Taylor Potts – Abilene, TX (Texas Tech)

RUNNING BACK (6)
Carlos Brown – Franklin, GA (Michigan)
Brandon Minor – Richmond, VA (Michigan)
Cameron Smith – Snellville, GA
Knowshon Moreno – Middletown, NJ (Georgia)
Aaron Gant – Orchard Lake, MI (Ohio State)
Chris Wells – Akron, OH (Ohio State)

WIDE RECEIVER (9)
Greg Mathews – Orlando, FL (Michigan)
Damian Williams – Springdale, AR (Arkansas)
Chris Slaughter – Fort Valley, GA (Auburn)
Percy Harvin – Virginia Beach, VA (Florida)
Tony Wilson – Daytona Beach, FL (Georgia)
Derrell Johnson – Youngstown, OH (Iowa)
Robby Parris – Cleveland, OH (Notre Dame)
Chris Bell – Norfolk, VA (Penn State)
David Ausberry – Lemoore, CA (USC)

TIGHT END (6)
Dedrick Epps – Richmond, VA (Miami)
Will Yeatman – San Diego, CA (Notre Dame)
Jake Ballard – Springboro, OH (Ohio State)
Andrew Quarless – Uniondale, NY (Penn State)
Nate Byham – Polk, PA (Pittsburgh)
Dorin Dickerson – Imperial, PA (Pittsburgh)

OFFENSIVE TACKLE (9)
Perry Dorrestein – Plainfield, IL (Michigan)
Stephen Schilling – Bellevue, WA (Michigan)
Alex Stadler – Bealeton, VA (Alabama)
Jim Barrie – Tampa, FL (Florida)
Marcus Gilbert – Fort Lauderdale, FL (Florida)
Daron Rose – Tampa, FL (Florida State)
Bartley Webb – Springdale, AR (Notre Dame)
Connor Smith – Cincinnati, OH (Ohio State)
Sam Young – Fort Lauderdale, FL (USC)

OFFENSIVE GUARD (3)
Justin Boren – Pickerington, OH (Michigan)
Justin Anderson – Ocilla, GA (Georgia)
Joe Thomas – Parma, OH (Pittsburgh)

CENTER (0)

DEFENSIVE END (8)
Greg Banks – Denver, CO (Michigan)
Brandon Graham – Detroit, MI (Michigan)
Adam Patterson – Columbia, SC (Michigan)
Quintin Woods – Flint, MI (Michigan)
John Paul – Immokalee, FL
Micah Johnson – Fort Campbell, KY (Kentucky)
McKenzie Matthews – Syracuse, NY (Pittsburgh)
Jason Adjepong – Carteret, NJ (Virginia Tech)

DEFENSIVE TACKLE (8)
John Ferrara – Staten Island, NY (Michigan)
Jason Kates – Harrisburg, PA (Michigan)
Marques Slocum – New Berlin, NY (Michigan)
Corey Peters – Louisville, KY (Kentucky)
Dexter Larimore – Merrillville, IN (Ohio State)
Jason Pinkston – Pittsburgh, PA (Pittsburgh)
Butch Lewis – Aurora, CO (USC)
Neil A’asa – Big Rapids, MI (Utah)

LINEBACKER (9)
Obi Ezeh – Grand Rapids, MI (Michigan)
Cobrani Mixon – Cincinnati, OH (Michigan)
Jonas Mouton – Venice, CA (Michigan)
Quintin Patilla – Flint, MI (Michigan)
Akeem Hebron – Gaithersburg, MD (Georgia)
Toryan Smith – Rome, GA (Notre Dame)
Thaddeus Gibson – Euclid, OH (Ohio State)
Michael Morgan – Dallas, TX (USC)
Joshua Tatum – Oakland, CA (USC)

CORNERBACK (3)
Jai Eugene – Destrehan, LA (LSU)
Ken Tinney – New Berlin, NY (Michigan State)
Darrin Walls – Pittsburgh, PA (Notre Dame)

SAFETY (8)
Steve Brown – Columbus, IN (Michigan)
Jamar Hornsby – Jacksonville, FL (Florida)
Myron Rolle – Princeton, NJ (Florida State)
Asher Allen – Tucker, GA (Georgia)
Reshad Jones – Atlanta, GA (Georgia)
Taylor Mays – Seattle, WA (USC)
Antwine Perez – Camden, NJ (USC)
Franchot Allen – New Berlin, NY (West Virginia)

KICKER (1)
Bryan Wright – Salem, OH (Michigan)

2May 2011
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NFL Draft Review: Michigan-style

Why do I have a picture of Joe Cocozzo?

2ND ROUND
#61.  Michigan linebacker Jonas Mouton was drafted by the San Diego Chargers.  Mouton was the first Michigan player chosen by the Chargers since offensive guard Joe Cocozzo in 1993, who was selected in the third round (#63 overall).

3RD ROUND
#74.  Arkansas quarterback (and former Wolverine) Ryan Mallett was drafted by the New England Patriots.  He has first round talent but an undrafted free agent level of maturity, so he probably couldn’t have asked for a better situation.  Sure, I bet he would have loved first round money, but now he gets to sit behind and learn from Tom Brady for a few years.  If he learns well, he could become a franchise quarterback when Brady moves on or retires.

6TH ROUND
#201.  Michigan offensive lineman Steve Schilling was drafted by the San Diego Chargers.  This is the first time multiple Michigan players have been chosen by one team since . . . 2008, when the Miami Dolphins picked offensive tackle Jake Long in the first round and quarterback Chad Henne in the second.

UNDRAFTED
DT Greg Banks, OG Justin Boren (Ohio State), OT Perry Dorrestein, LB Obi Ezeh, OG John Ferrara, DE Eugene Germany (Central Washington), LB Kevin Leach, LB Cobrani Mixon (Kent State), FB/LB Mark Moundros, DE Adam Patterson, CB James Rogers, DT Renaldo Sagesse, TE Martell Webb

27Apr 2011
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NFL Draft Preview: Michigan-style

Jonas Mouton (#8) should be one of just two Michigan players drafted this weekend

The NFL Draft has always been a fun time for me, because I would always sit around and wait for the next Michigan player’s name to get called.  Between watching for a Michigan player to get drafted and waiting for the Lions to pick, one Saturday in April was perhaps the most exciting day of the football off-season.  But Michigan’s production of NFL players has waned in recent years.

Ever since six players were taken in the 2008 draft – four in the first three rounds – the Wolverines have only been able to muster five total draft picks in 2009 (4th round: Terrance Taylor; 6th: Morgan Trent) and 2010 (1st: Brandon Graham; 5th: Zoltan Mesko; 7th: Steve Brown).  That’s an average draft position of the 4.6th round.

By contrast, 60 players were taken from 1995-2007, an average of 4.62 per year.  On average, those players were drafted in the 3.68th round.  Not only has the number of Michigan draftees been lower in the past couple seasons, but they’re getting picked lower, too.

That average draft position might rise slightly this year, but there will probably only be two Wolverines chosen this coming weekend:


Jonas Mouton – Linebacker
Mouton measured in at the NFL Combine at 6’1″ and 239 lbs.  I think he could play a couple positions, either as a weak inside linebacker in a 3-4 or as a weakside outside linebacker in a 4-3.  He’s pretty solid in coverage and changes direction well (video here, senior profile here).
Projection: 5th round to the Patriots


Steve Schilling – Offensive guard
Schilling measured in at the NFL Combine at 6’5″, 304 lbs.  He had a pretty good Combine performance, but nothing stellar.  He played a lot of offensive tackle at Michigan, but I think he’s strictly a guard at the next level.  Four years of starting experience should help him (senior profile here).
Projection: 4th round to the Browns


Undrafted: DT Greg Banks, OT Perry Dorrestein, LB Obi Ezeh, OG John Ferrara, LB Kevin Leach, FB/LB Mark Moundros, DE/DT Adam Patterson, CB James Rogers, DT Renaldo Sagesse, TE Martell Webb


I do think there is a remote chance that two other players get drafted late – Obi Ezeh and Martell Webb.  Ezeh was, for all intents and purposes, a four-year starter at middle linebacker.  That might be worth something to a team late in the draft.  And Webb turned into a very good blocker.  If a team is looking for a cheap blocking tight end in the 7th round, they could do worse than picking a 6’4″, 268-pounder with decent athleticism.

5Apr 2011
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Obi Ezeh, #45

Middle linebacker Obi Ezeh

2010 Countdown: #14 Obi Ezeh

HIGH SCHOOL
Ezeh was offered scholarships by Eastern Michigan, Indiana, Michigan, and Western Michigan, but chose the Wolverines in December 2005.  He signed with Michigan in February 2006.  Contrary to the popular belief held by Michigan fans, he was projected as a linebacker in college, not a fullback.  He did play running back at Grand Rapids Catholic Central (Grand Rapids, MI) and was the school’s leading rusher, but not many schools are interested in 6’2″, 219 lb. running backs who don’t have blazing speed.

COLLEGE
Ezeh redshirted as a true freshman in 2006, but leaped onto the scene as a redshirt freshman in 2007.  He started ten games at middle linebacker, was a Freshman All-America, and made the Freshman All-Big Ten squad due to his 10 starts, 68 tackles, 4 tackles for loss, 2 sacks, 1 interception, 3 pass breakups, and 1 forced fumble.  He followed that season with perhaps his most productive year – 98 tackles, 7 tackles for loss, 1 sack, 1 interception, 3 pass breakups, and 1 fumble recovery.  After that his career seemed to progressively deteriorate.  He held onto the starting middle linebacker job for most of his redshirt junior year in 2009, making 69 tackles, 5 tackles for loss, 2 pass breakups, and 1 fumble recovery; however, he played sparingly late in the season while losing time to Kevin Leach, a 210 lb. former walk-on.  Those struggles continued into 2010, when Ezeh was displaced by redshirt sophomore Kenny Demens halfway through the season.  Statistically, his fifth-year senior campaign was his worst, as he finished with 58 tackles, 3.5 tackles for loss, and 1 fumble recovery.

CAREER STATS
293 tackles, 19.5 tackles for loss, 3 sacks, 2 interceptions, 8 pass breakups, 3 fumble recoveries.  He is #10 on Michigan’s all-time career tackles list.

AWARDS
Freshman All-American in 2007 . . . Freshman All-Big Ten in 2007 . . . Roger Zatkoff Award (U of M’s best linebacker) in 2008 . . . Honorable Mention All-Big Ten in 2007

SUMMARY
Ezeh had one of the more curious careers of any Michigan player in the last decade.  Prior to the Rich Rodriguez years, it took a rare talent – or injury problems –  for a freshman to start.  It seemed that Ezeh’s career was off to a fast start in 2007, and many Michigan fans were looking forward to the years to come.  Lots of people thought he would follow in the footsteps of David Harris, another lightly regarded recruit who developed into a very good middle linebacker at Michigan, a player good enough to be starting at inside linebacker for the New York Jets.  I can’t help but feel that Ezeh was one of the casualties of Rich Rodriguez and his staff.  The linebacker play was so atrocious in Rodriguez’s first two seasons on the job that his linebackers coach, Jay Hopson, was the only staffer to get axed after 2009 was completed.  By all accounts Ezeh was a very high quality individual.  He never got into trouble off the field, was well spoken in interviews, and was just a good representative of the university.  I wasn’t in practice every day, but it seems like a kid with his qualities would have nowhere to go but up.  Instead, his play got so bad that he was an afterthought by the end of his career.  He was slow to read plays, let blockers get into his chest, and just seemed to lack aggression.  Those were things that didn’t seem to be issues earlier in his career.  One of the lasting images of his career was in 2010, when after a long run, a shot of Rich Rodriguez seemingly had him tearing into defensive coordinator Greg Robinson for not having inserted Kenny Demens.  And despite the fact that Demens started less than half the games, he finished with 24 more tackles on the year (82 to 58) than Ezeh.

PROJECTION
While I have no reason to believe he lacks intelligence, the general downward spiral of Ezeh’s career makes me think he struggled to adjust to new concepts and defensive schemes.  His solid redshirt freshman season was his second year in defensive coordinator Ron English’s system; there were inklings of trouble under Scott Shafer in 2008; things got worse in Greg Robinson’s 4-3 in 2009; and the switch to the 3-3-5 in 2010 really seemed to befuddle him.  NFL players need to adapt quickly to new schemes, and Ezeh hasn’t shown the ability to do so.  He also doesn’t have great athleticism, which can sometimes make up for a lack of mental adjustments.  Ezeh was not invited to the NFL Combine, and I do not expect to see him playing at the next level.