May 18, 2013

2013 Returning Experience: Tight End

Cooper and Ford

Previously Posted Positions: Quarterback Offensive Line Running Back Wide Receiver

Tight end is a position the Tigers haven’t had to worry about for several years. From Michael Palmer to Dewayne Allen to Brandon Ford, Clemson has been blessed with athletic and skilled players at the position. The first two are in the NFL and Ford has an opportunity to make it three in a row.

On the surface things look like they may not be as rosy this year.

Sam Cooper gained valuable experience in 2012 and enters 2013 as the veteran of the group. Cooper is solid, if unspectacular, but doesn’t possess the athleticism of his immediate predecessors.

Stanton Seckinger has packages designed to highlight his skill set and performed admirably in limited snaps (88) in 2012 and I think he’ll be a solid contributor when called upon.


2012 Tight End Experience Final

Eric Mac Clain is cross-training along the offensive line and at some point will no longer be listed with the tight ends.

Not listed above is redshirt freshman Jay Jay McCullough.

There is some concern on my part that this position will not be as strong in 2013 as it has been in the last 4 years.

A Peek at 2013

Chad Morris

Chad Morris

By and large Clemson fans and some of those that write about Clemson assume that 2013 is likely to be the Tigers year – the year the youth of 2011 matures, the year with a senior quarterback who will be in his third year of starting, the year of 4 returning starters on the offensive line and the year that the young defensive line of 2012 becomes a force with some key additions.

I look at it another way, albeit the glass half empty way. I see 40% of the snaps on the offensive line (Dalton Freeman), 70% of the running back snaps (Andre Ellington), 67% of the tight end snaps (Brandon Ford) and, assuming Nuk Hopkins turns pro, 56.3% of the wide receiver snaps departing.

While you can never overestimate the value of a veteran quarterback with nearly 2,000 career snaps under his belt, the questions remain about who is going to carry the ball and can Charone Peake and Martavis Bryant step up from role players to capable replacements for Nuk Hopkins and, to a lesser extent, Jaron Brown.

% of Snaps Returning and Lost in 2013


Returning Snaps
The coaches rave about Ryan Norton at center, but with 277 career snaps (the equivalent of about 3 games) under his belt he has yet to prove himself on the field against ACC level competition – not to mention the likes of Georgia and South Carolina.

The loss of Freeman also means the dean of the offensive line becomes Brandon Thomas who has 1,461 less career snaps than Freeman does.

Sam Cooper performed admirably in spot situations in 2012. It’s difficult to imagine Cooper or Stanton Seckinger being as athletic as Ford, so many fans assume that the coaches will turn to redshirt freshman Jay Jay McCollough. The problem with that is, of course, McCollough has 0 snaps of experience.

Many feel the defense will get better with addition by subtraction, getting better simply because many players perceived as unproductive will be moving on. The Tigers lose only Mallaciah Goodman along the line and players like Grady Jarrett, DeShawn Williams and Vic Beasley gained valuable experience this season.

At linebacker Clemson loses the sparingly used (in 2012) Corico Hawkins and the productive Tig Willard. That’s 53.6% of the Tigers career linebacker snaps between those two.

The defensive backfield has been an enigma all season long. The Tigers lose 6,689 snaps of experience, but you’d be hard pressed to find anyone despondent over the individual losses as the DBs were the focus of busted coverages, long plays, poor angles, bad tackling and general failure of the defense.

Just know this – whatever group takes the field in the Clemson defensive backfield in 2012 is going to be thousands of snaps less experienced than those that took the field this past fall. That’s not necessarily a bad thing, just an observation.

Chandler Catanzaro has me feeling good about the place kicking duties, but there will be zero experience behind him.

Bradley Pinion punted only 9 times in 2012 and was inconsistent in that role much as he was on kickoffs – both areas that need improvement in 2013.

The numbers in the defensive backfield juxtaposed against their 2012 performance shows that evaluating returning starters can be overvalued in some instances.

On the other hand, a similar argument can be made against trumpeting “4 of 5 starters returning on the OL” when the one starter you lose has more snaps than any offensive lineman in school history, accounts for almost 40% of the line’s total experience and makes the offensive protection calls.

These numbers don’t include the inevitable attrition that happens every year during the offseason.  Guys transfer, give up football, face academic or life problems and sometimes get injured (Tony McNeal anyone?).

As with almost every analysis we do here, this should be used as one part of evaluating Clemson’s 2013 returnees with the main point being you can’t just look at numbers (i.e. “4 of 5 offensive linemen returning” or “only lose Jaron Brown and Nuk Hopkins from the WR corps”) and get a full picture of the returning (and departing) talent.

Receiving Stats Through 5 Games

Amid all the deserved hype of Nuk Hopkins incredible season, the solid workman-like production of Brandon Ford is being overlooked. Many, myself included, wondered about the drop-off from Mackey Award Winner Dewayne Allen to converted wide receiver Ford. Worry no more.

Five games into the 2012 season Ford has 18 catches for 213 yards (11.8 average), 4 touchdowns and a couple of circus catches. Extrapolate this out to 12 games and theoretically Ford could end up with 43 receptions, 511 yards and 9/10 touchdowns. And those are just Ford’s numbers. Sam Cooper caught a touchdown pass against Boston College and Stanton Seckinger has begun to contribute.

Who knows if Ford reaches those numbers because it’s likely that Sammy Watkins is back in the lineup with some regularity over the next 7 games and there’s only one ball to go around.

But, if you’re a tight end on the Clemson roster or one considering Clemson, you have to like what you have seen of the Chad Morris offense over the last 1.5 seasons.


Receivers-Game 5

Dropped Passes

Even in 2012 there are stats in college football that aren’t tracked well or consistently from team to team and stadium to stadium. Dropped passes are one of those stats.

Clemson threw 525 passes in 2011 and the official play-by-play logs show a total of 13 drops. I know the Clemson wide receiving corps is good – I would say top 3 in the nation – but 13 drops out of 525 attempts seems a bit low to me. Thirteen drops and 311 receptions sounds like a more reasonable ratio, but it still seems a bit low to me. One drop per game. Surely, there was more than that.

My guess is, this stat, like an error in baseball, is a judgment call. Some scorers are tougher than others. How do I know this? It’s just an educated guess and noting that 10 of Clemson’s 16 (62.5%) official drops for 2011 happened at Death Valley, which is counterintuitive to where you would think most drops would occur. Add in 3 official drops in the Orange Bowl and that means the Tigers had only 3 official drops in 5 true road games in 2011.

Nevertheless, the chart below which includes returning players shows that the Clemson running backs have some work to do in the receiving department. My eyeballs have told me that one of the biggest dropoffs from the Davis/Spiller era is receiving out of the backfield and this chart supports that theory.


Drops
Andre Ellington’s drop percentage is alarming. Most of the passes to Ellington were short passes out of the backfield that should be “easy” completions and the fact that Ellington had 22 receptions and 5 drops speaks volumes.

On the other hand, I’m not as worried about Martavis Bryant’s drop percentage. As you’ll recall, 7 of 9 of Bryant’s receptions were for 14 or more yards (several were far down field) and in these instances a drop or two is to be expected. Still, 9 receptions and 2 drops is something to keep an eye on heading into 2012.

Analyzing Clemson’s 2012 Tight End Experience

At first glance it’s disconcerting to realize that the Tigers have less returning snap % wise at tight end than they do along the offensive line considering that, as we saw last year, the tight end can play a huge role in the Chad Morris offense.

But, all is not lost here as Brandon Ford showed athleticism, talent and good hands last season, even making a few spectacular receptions.


Tight End Experience

That optimism should be tempered with the fact that some of the 373 snaps Ford has logged over the last 3 years have been at wide receiver, so the experience factor is actually lower than the chart shows and that there is virtually no experience behind Ford.

Once again we find ourselves calling the Tigers “thin” at a position and that’s not a good feeling.  Sam Cooper’s 54 snaps are enough to lead the reserves and that’s telling.

Perhaps redshirt freshman Eric MacClain (2 receptions in spring game) or true freshman Jay Jay McCullough will contribute.  That said, this series is about returning experience and there simply isn’t much here to work with the exception of Ford.

Third Down Targets

Sammy Watkins

In previous weeks we’ve chronicled Tajh Boyd’s third down passing.  In this post we take a look at who Boyd’s throwing to on third down and who’s catching it, scoring, getting first downs and making explosive plays.

We’ve also chronicled Jaron Brown’s play over the last couple of weeks, so that should be no big surprise. 
 
Watkins and Hopkins being targeted the most should also be a surprise to no one and the same goes for the explosiveness of Sammy Watkins compared to DeAndre Hopkins.  Clemson needs both, but they are different receivers, with different skill sets as these (and other) numbers illustrate.  24.4 yards per catch on third down is pretty good.  5 touchdowns on 16 catches is even better.
 
Name
Target
Rec
%
Yards
Avg
TD
TD%
FD
FD%
Exp
Exp%
Brown, J.
7
7
100.00
78
11.1
0
0.00
6
85.71
2
28.57
Peake
1
1
100.00
17
17.0
0
0.00
1
100.00
1
100.00
Watkins
16
12
75.00
293
24.4
5
31.25
11
68.75
6
37.50
Hopkins
16
12
75.00
157
13.1
0
0.00
11
68.75
3
18.75
Ellington
11
8
72.73
44
5.5
0
0.00
1
9.1
0
0.00
Allen
15
10
66.67
165
16.5
3
20.00
7
46.67
3
20.00
Bryant
1
0
0.00
0
0.0
0
0.00
0
0.00
0
0.00
Cooper
1
0
0.00
0
0.0
0
0.00
0
0.00
0
0.00
Bellamy
1
0
0.00
0
0.0
0
0.00
0
0.00
0
0.00
McDowell
1
0
0.00
0
0.0
0
0.00
0
0.00
0
0.00
Throw Away
3
0
0.00
0
0.0
0
0.00
0
0.00
0
0.00
Interception
1
0
0.00
0
0.0
0
0.00
0
0.00
0
0.00
Totals
74
50
67.57
754
15.1
8
10.81
37
50.00
15
20.27

Position Outlook: Clemson Tight Ends

Dwayne Allen
Allen is an All-American candidate waiting for a quarterback to happen.  Allen virtually disappeared from the Tigers offense for parts of last season and ended up with 33 receptions for 373 yards and a touchdown.  He can be a longer threat, a medium threat and a short threat.  Over 27% of his receptions were explosive (16+ yards) and almost 60% were effective (first down, in position for first down, or touchdown).  Great numbers for a tight end.
 
Though he occasionally drops a ball, it doesn’t happen that often and the potential payoff is worth the gamble.  Allen is rugged, tough to tackle and has a nose for the yard markers as his effective play percentage shows.

Clemson fans are expecting:  An NFL caliber TE.

Clemson fans will get:  To be determined.  Originally unhappy with the hiring of Chad Morris, Allen eventually got on board.  The question is how will Morris use him in the “smash mouth spread”?  Or better yet, will he use him?  Tulsa’s TE’s last year?  Six receptions for 64 yards for the season.  Not a great omen if you are Allen.  Will Morris change the offense to get Allen more involved?  That remains to be seen.

The season will be a success if:  Allen is included in the offense as the threat he is and remains content.

Seldom Used April Guestimation: 20 catches, 225 yards.  

 
Brandon Ford
The good news for Ford is that the Morris offense employs quite a bit of two tight end sets.  The bad news is they are hardly ever thrown the ball.  Ford came on as last year  progressed and ended the season with two touchdowns in the bowl game.

Clemson fans are expecting:  Continued development, solid blocking.

Clemson fans will get:  A solid TE, who will catch an occasional pass and block well enough.

The season will be a success if:  Allen remains healthy and Ford fits his role in the offense.

Seldom Used April Guestimation: 5 catches, 90 yards.

  
 
Sam Cooper
Redshirt freshman scheduled to back up Allen. Have seen little to none of him on film, but you have to wonder what his role will be in an offense that didn’t use the TE all that much in the past.

Clemson fans are expecting:  Not much.

Clemson fans will get:  Not much, it’s Allen and Ford with perhaps a sprinkling of Cooper.

The season will be a success if:  Allen remains healthy, Ford fits his role in the offense and Cooper develops.

Seldom Used April Guestimation: 1 catch, 9 yards.