One of Michigan's open assistant slots is already filled, as Brady Hoke will bring offensive coordinator Al Borges along with him. Borges has been a college offensive coordinator for just under a billion years and in that time he's coached everywhere from Portland State to Auburn and UCLA, with varying levels of success. He's now 55 and looks like the dad from Arrested Development:
So that will be terribly exciting for the subset of the population that will not shut up about Arrested Development no matter how many times you ask them to.
Numbers
His last decade by the numbers follows. Lines in italics are stats from the season before Borges arrived.
| Year | Team | Rush | YPC | Pass | Pass Eff | YPA | Total | Scoring | FEI |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2000 | Cal | 80th | 3.4 | 76th | 95th | 6 | 93rd | 80th | ? |
| 2001 | Cal | 87th | 3.4 | 53rd | 96th | 5.9 | 77th | 104th | ? |
| 2001 | Indiana | 4th | 5.5 | 95th | 72nd | 6.9 | 19th | 51st | ? |
| 2002 | Indiana | 93rd | 3.2 | 33rd | 84tth | 6.8 | 69th | 95th | ? |
| 2003 | Indiana | 59th | 3.4 | 101st | 105th | 6.1 | 98th | 114th | ? |
| 2003 | Auburn | 29th | 4.4 | 83rd | 43rd | 7.8 | 61st | 66th | ? |
| 2004 | Auburn | 29th | 4.3 | 40th | 2nd | 10 | 25th | 18th | ? |
| 2005 | Auburn | 25th | 4.8 | 70th | 37th | 7.6 | 37th | 30th | ? |
| 2006 | Auburn | 47th | 4.1 | 88th | 37th | 8.0 | 76th | 56th | ? |
| 2007 | Auburn | 53rd | 3.8 | 103rd | 90th | 6.5 | 97th | 84th | 24th(!!!) |
| 2008 | SDSU | 117th | 3.1 | 42nd | 95th | 5.9 | 99th | 104th | 104th |
| 2009 | SDSU | 116th | 2.9 | 30th | 73rd | 7.1 | 86th | 85th | 93rd |
| 2010 | SDSU | 48th | 4.8 | 12th | 20th | 9.0 | 16th | 19th | 26th |
For the record, Borges's 2000 season with UCLA saw the Bruins finish 100th in rushing offense at a miserable 2.5 YPC, 23rd in passing offense and 19th in efficiency. Borges's tailback was a junior DeShaun Foster; his quarterbacks anonymous journeymen.
Notes on the numbers:
- Antwaan Randle-El was a senior in 2001 and in the NFL in 2002, explaining the Indiana collapse. Borges split the offense between two horrible pocket passers; it's unclear if he had anyone else. The Indiana offense got even worse in year two and then Borges somehow got the Auburn OC job.
- At Auburn he was installed once the Tigers fell to a moribund 8-5?the numbers that year are propped up by monster games against ULM (73 points), WKU(48), Vandy(45), and Mississippi State(45). Auburn didn't put up 30 on any real opponent and failed to score ten four separate times. This was with a junior Jason Campbell and both Ronnie Brown and Cadillac Williams. Whoever Auburn's OC was in 2003 was an idiot.
- So Borges took this and went vertical wih great success for the only single-digit performance of his aughts.
- The popular conception of what went down with Tommy Tuberville is he let his neanderthal offensive assistants undermine his offensive coordinator whenever he threatened to deviate from extreme MANBALL, and I believe it. Until the bottom fell out in 2007 Auburn was a pretty efficient passing team that ran all the time despite not really getting anywhere.
- The FEI rank for Borges's last year is so wacky and out of sync with how the world perceived it?Borges was shoved out the door and Auburn was desperate enough to import spread guru Tony Franklin?that is probably exposes a flaw in the methodology more than anything else, no offense to Mr. Fremeau.
- As far as running quarterbacks go, current SDSU starter Ryan Lindley had ?162 yards in two years under Borges, and his other guys were Brandon Cox, Kyle Boller, Horrible Indiana QB Du Jour, and Jason Campbell. None of these guys would win a foot race with John Navarre save Campbell, and he would only tie. Campbell had 30 yards rushing as a senior.
The NCAA's online stats don't go back far enough to capture the most successful period of Borges's career, the five year run at UCLA during which he convinced the NFL that Cade McNown was a viable quarterback and was twice a finalist for the Broyles award.
Style
As you can probably surmise from he numbers above, Borges is a traditional pro-style guy. Rodriguez has DVDs about the spread offense; Borges's is titled "Coaching the West Coast Quarterback." Smart Football on what Michigan should expect:
The rumor is he?s bringing Al Borges with him to be offensive coordinator; I?m already getting lots of questions about his so-called ?Gulf Coast Offense.? I don?t know where that name came from, but as far as I can tell he?s a pro-style guy: nothing too exotic. But he?s been an offensive coordinator for a long time (close to two decades), in two major conferences (the Pac-10 at UCLA and Oregon and the SEC at Auburn), and when he?s had first-round NFL talent (Cade McNown at UCLA and Jason Campbell, Ronnie Brown, and Cadillac Williams at Auburn in 2004) he?s had elite offenses.
I think that sounds about right. Michigan?s coaching search was explicitly about someone who wanted to build the program, not hiring the next offensive genius. And I can?t really argue with that ? the Rodriguez thing ended badly. That puts on the onus on Hoke, however, as he must recruit and build the program from the ground up; there won?t be any reliance on a decided schematic advantage to win. But is that a bad thing?
He also links three minutes of a hypothetical scrimmage between Borges and the Michigan secondary:
Generic pro-style against a bad defense.
As for the "Gulf Coast" thing, it appears to be some jibber-jabber from when he was freshly hired at Auburn and people were like "lol Auburn's not on he west coast." Apparently it consists of?
- west coast principles (short passes, backs, YAC)
- post-snap route reads by the receivers
- lots of formations
- run-pass balance
- tight ends
?ie, it's a generic pro-style offense that has a more advanced concept of routes than either Rodriguez's or Carr's offense did. It does appear that Borges leans towards throwing over passing when given the option but most of his rush offenses were mediocre. It's hard to tell what would happen if he actually had a good running game.
Well?
Michigan's new offensive coordinator has no experience working with a running quarterback and has pretty mediocre results over the past decade. The "elite" offense cited by Smart Football was 25th in total offense, though I'm sure FEI would look kindly on it because of SOS. The rest of it is bleah aside from the encouraging two-year development by SDSU. In Borges's defense he's been saddled with horrible quarterbacks for most of a decade and made good use of the one competent guy he did have. (Note: Kyle Boller may have been a first round pick but even the year after Borges was broomed with the rest of the staff he did not put up efficiency numbers any better than above.)
Borges looks like just a guy by the numbers, and he's just a guy who seems like the worst possible fit with Denard. Jason Campbell ran more when he got to the NFL. Hopefully there's some more flexibility in this offense than it appears at first glance, otherwise it's a fourth straight year with a new, underclass starting quarterback.
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