Sunday, March 17, 2024

2024 Spring Football Preview: Offensive Line

 

Myles Hinton (image via MLive)

2023 Starters: LT La'Darius Henderson, LG Trevor Keegan, C Drake Nugent, RG Zak Zinter, RT Karsen Barnhart
Losses: Barnhart (NFL), Henderson (NFL), Trente Jones (NFL), Keegan (NFL), Nugent (NFL), Zinter (NFL)
Returning players: Myles Hinton (RS Sr.), Jeffrey Persi (RS Sr.), Raheem Anderson (RS Jr.), Tristan Bounds (RS Jr.), Greg Crippen (RS Jr.), Giovanni El-Hadi (RS Jr.), Dominic Giudice (RS Jr.), Andrew Gentry (RS So.), Connor Jones (RS So.), Nathan Efobi (RS Fr.), Amir Herring (RS Fr.), Evan Link (RS Fr.)
Newcomers: Josh Priebe (RS Sr.), Blake Frazier (Fr.), Jake Guarnera (Fr.)
Projected starters: LT Hinton, LG El-Hadi, C Crippen, RG Priebe, RT Persi

Michigan went from having a terrible offensive line under Brady Hoke to a decent offensive line at the beginning of the Harbaugh era to one of the best in the country at the end of Harbaugh's tenure. In two of Harbaugh's final three seasons, Michigan won the Joe Moore Award for the best offensive line in the country; in the third season, they lost the award but won a national championship. And now most of the key pieces to those awards and accomplishments are either in the NFL or heading there soon.

Much like the quarterback position, nobody really has a great idea of how the position group will shake out. Will it be as good as it was in 2021-2023? That's unlikely. Could it still be a solid conglomeration? Sure. Four of the starters above (Hinton, El-Hadi, Crippen, and Persi) were 4-star prospects or better, and the only 3-star (Priebe) is a multi-year starter coming from Northwestern. Furthermore, they are all veteran players in at least their fourth year of college.

At offensive tackle, Hinton started one-third of the season before ceding his spot to Barnhart in 2023, so he seems like the most likely to start. On the right side, it could be a battle between Persi and Gentry. Both have looked somewhat rough in limited time, but Persi has two years of experience on Gentry, whose footwork still looked pretty sloppy in 2023.

At the guard positions, El-Hadi is another player who has some starting experience a couple seasons ago as an injury fill-in, so he seems likely to slide right in this season. Priebe is a veteran starting presence who should be able to fend off most contenders, if not all of them.

Word coming out of Ann Arbor about Crippen has been that he's a potential All-American, but he's just been blocked by two really good players in Olu Oluwatimi and Nugent over the past couple years. I have some doubts because I'm not sure why the coaching staff would recruit over him if he was that good, but he's also two years older now than he was when Oluwatimi swooped in, so perhaps his improvement in that time has been significant.

Despite losing six offensive linemen to the draft, Michigan goes into spring with 15 other scholarship linemen on the roster. That's somewhat mind-boggling to consider, since a team might have carried just 13 linemen a few years ago. In that bygone era of like 2019, we would be looking at 7 returning players and 6 true freshmen arriving sporadically in January and then June. Instead, there are 12 returning players, a transfer, and 2 early enrollee freshmen available for the spring, not to mention further reinforcements arriving this summer.

Some projected backups to keep an eye on are Raheem Anderson, who was reportedly ahead of Crippen early in their careers but has since appeared to be more of a factor at guard; Gentry, who could potentially start at tackle over Persi; and Herring, who's a powerful offensive guard option that looked good in the spring game in 2023. Aside from Gentry possibly starting, Anderson and Herring are almost certainly backups for this season. Another players I'll also be watching closely is Tristan Bounds, a behemoth of a player whose balance has been questionable in limited field time.

4 comments:

  1. I'm excited about OL. El hadi is one I look forward to, and Crippen has my interest ... the Left Tackle battle is another

    As great as 2o21 finished, I think this OL - if everything goes ideally - can match that group: rough at times (Rutger) and then a strong November. We'll need it

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  2. The Gentry/Persi battle should be a highlight of camp and we'll get a preview of it in the spring. Still seems like Hinton fits better at RT than LT but what do I know.

    Priebe is probably going to start but he also doesn't sound quite as impressive as some of the recent additions like Henderson, Nugent, Olu. I think Anderson has an outside shot of passing him.

    Seems likely that we still have about 7 options who are capable of starting in the big 10. We tend to need that depth over the season.

    IMO the key is that they get the line settled quickly so that the top guys get reps beside each other. We won't have the luxury of treating the first half of the season like an extended camp like in 2023.

    I wouldn't doubt Crippen. He was younger than the other guys and you don't turn your nose at a top 5 player at a position, even if you have a top 20 guy waiting behind him. He maybe the higher drafted player than Olu and Nugent when it gets to that point. The recruiting profile and consistent insider buzz are reassuring, along with the context of how good the starters have been. It would be a leap for a guy who has started zero games to be an all american caliber player, but it's not totally crazy given the circumstances here.

    Put it another way - would you rather have Crippen or the guy OSU pulled away from Bama? PSU and Oregon have solid options - but not necessarily more impressive than Crippen. It would be a surprise to me if Crippen wasn't an all conference player.

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  3. All new guys BUT, they are grown ass men, that have been around for years. All highly rated, getting great coaching, playing behind NFL bound lineman. There should not be much of a drop off after they learn to play with each other in real games. The first month might be shaky, but by the time the end of the schedule rolls around we should be paving people.

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    Replies
    1. Indeed MM. Age matters. A lot of work put in the weight room everyday and on the practice field too. IYKYK.

      Chemistry, familiarity, timing - however you want to frame that stuff is going to be the key with so many new faces on the first team. With Newsome and Moore sticking on staff -- they'll get there.

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