Cam Williams, DJ Campbell and the Cost of Doing Business (DEEP DIG)

Alex Dunlap

Any Updates on Desmond Harrison?
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Jan 18, 2005
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Click Images to Enlarge

Skill Player Snap Counts and Game-by-Game Percentages of Offensive Snaps (Through Week 3)

Deep-Dig-2024-Skill-Player-Participation-2.jpg


***please note that exact snap-count numbers may differ from other sources at times, as the Deep Dig does not count plays as offensive player snaps that are blown dead due to penalty, punts, extra points, field goals, spiked balls, victory formations, kneel-downs, etc.***

Personnel-Grouping Frequency Overall and by Game (Through Week 3)

Deep-Dig-2024-Personnel-Utilization-by-Game-2.jpg


Tight End Total Snap Counts and Alignment Data (Through Week 3)

Deep-Dig-2024-TE-Usage-Chart-3.jpg


Team Target Share By Week (Through Week 3)

Deep-Dig-2024-Target-Share-By-Game-2.jpg



Deep Dig OL Grading Scale (each snap by each player is graded as its own independent event)


OL Grades (UTSA)

LT Kelvin Banks - 52 snaps

No disruption allowed
1 knockdown
DEEP DIG GRADE: 82.86

LG/C Hayden Conner - 36 snaps

1 pressure allowed
DEEP DIG GRADE: 79.16

C Jake Majors - 53 snaps

No disruption allowed
2 knockdowns
DEEP DIG GRADE: 79.77

RG DJ Campbell - 46 snaps

1 QB hit allowed
1 false start penalty
DEEP DIG GRADE: 79.13

RG/LG Cole Hutson - 36 snaps

1 QB hit allowed
DEEP DIG GRADE: 75.56

RT Cam Williams - 53 snaps

1 false start penalty
3 knockdowns
DEEP DIG GRADE: 80.77

Reserves

LT Trevor Goosby - 14 snaps

1 pressure allowed
1 false start penalty
DEEP DIG GRADE: N/A

RG Jaydon Chatman - 4 snaps

No disruption allowed
DEEP DIG GRADE: N/A

C Conner Robertson - 13 snaps

No disruption allowed
DEEP DIG GRADE: N/A

RG Neto Umeozulu - 13 snaps

1 run-stuff, 1 TFL allowed
1 unnecessary roughness penalty
DEEP DIG GRADE: N/A

RT Brandon Baker - 9 snaps

1 run-stuff, 1 TFL allowed
DEEP DIG GRADE: N/A

RT Andre Cojoe - 4 snaps

No disruption allowed
DEEP DIG GRADE: N/A


OL Grades by Week (Through Week 3)


Deep-Dig-2024-OL-Grades-by-Week-1-2.jpg


OL Snaps-per-Disruption Allowed (Through Week 3)

Deep-Dig-2024-OL-Snaps-Per-Disruption-2.jpg


OL Snaps-per-Disruption Allowed BY WEEK - CUMULATIVE Through Season (Through Week 3)

Deep-Dig-2024-S_DIS-OL-BY-WEEK-2.jpg


2024 OL Snaps-per-Disruption Allowed Versus Historical Precedent (Through Week 3)

Deep-Dig-2024-OL-Historical-Comparison-1.jpg




QUICK FINAL THOUGHTS

- What an awesome play here by Juan Davis, helping in opening up a hole on the power/counter concept with a two-bagger block. You have to love his pad level and explosion to the target here. As good as JT Sanders was, this sort of presence as a blocker was never really in his tool bag like it is for Helm and Davis.



- For the first time this season, Cole Hutson came into the game as a rotational player at LG for Hayden Conner as opposed to at RG for DJ Campbell. After two series at LG, Hutson moved over to RG to sub in for Campbell for two series to end the half. In the second series of the second half, Hutson again entered the starting lineup at LG. Just something to note that it's not just Campbell that he's subbing in for through games anymore. Cole Hutson is by far the team's most important depth piece at the guard positions (and, really, center as well) because ...

- It's a good thing that we can trust in the development abilities of Kyle Flood (and we all certainly should by now), because as well as the Texas offensive line has played this year with its starters, we saw versus UTSA that there is a major downgrade to that group when the second unit is called upon. The twos only really played about 14 snaps (outside of Cole Hutson, who as mentioned, played at many points throughout the game).

During that short time, the difference couldn't have been more clear. Trevor Goosby had a penalty and allowed a QB pressure. Neto Umeozulu and Brandon Baker had a bad miscommunication that led to a run-stuff. On top of this, Umeozulu allowed another run stuff and committed a penalty of his own while Brandon Baker tacked on another allowed TFL. We know these guys are still developing, and in watching them, there are some things to like. And it's clearly not a worry for now because we're in the middle of a season where the offensive line looks like a legitimate Joe Moore Award favorite.

The problem with that kind of success and having guys play that well -- well, we saw it last year with Byron Murphy and T'Vondre Sweat. They leave a big void when they go and when they're playing well, it's a lot of attention on them and a lot of things pulling them in the direction to go pro, as will likely be the case with DJ Campbell and Cam Williams. We'd guess as of right now that fans are going to have to sweat an announcement about whether each one of them is staying or going immediately after the season. It would really be quite the luxury to get both of those players back next season -- heck, even one of them. But that's the weird paradigm of having the best OL play we've seen at Texas this season. If they keep playing this well, you might not have everyone for as long as you'd like. It's just the cost of doing business.

- Everyone is going to remember Arch Manning's big run in his second series for the rest of their lives but no one will remember Matthew Golden's blocking on the perimeter. He holds the corner a little bit, but he was smart in keeping his hands inside his chest because those sorts of holds rarely get called.

 

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