Agreed, but I'd argue that NEARLY every one of the original defenses that OAM highlighted was at a talent level relative to their typical competition that it was similar to a hopeless MAC school lining up against them, most weeks.
Many of them had strong rush defenses because they also had offenses that put up tons of points and teams were playing catch-up.
My response to OAM was basically the same as yours--if the defense sells out against the run you SHOULD throw the ball, and if it sits in coverage to snuff out your pass game you SHOULD run the ball.
But if the defense is so good that you can't do either, well you're screwed.
I recall that this was one of the issues that Purdue ran into as the B1G started going more spread-heavy and started recruiting to shut down passing offenses. In the 2005-2008 period, late Tiller era with Curtis Painter as QB, Purdue was just absolutely shredding our non-con patsies and middling B1G teams. But every time we got up against a big boy defense, they just walked their DBs up in press man coverage and defended us one on one, and we had no answer. We couldn't run because they weren't selling out against the pass. We couldn't pass because we didn't have the talent to defeat their DBs one on one. So, we took a lot of Ls against those big boy teams.
Most of those defenses on his list are that good, so it becomes a moot point. You're not going to be successful doing anything against them, no matter what you think they are "giving you".
To kinda buttress your point, according to ESPN, in 2006 Michigan gave up 516 rushing yards on 278 attempts but get this: 187 of those 516 yards (36%) were against one team and came on just 29 attempts (6.4 ypc). If you back those out, the remainder is 329 yards on 249 attempts (1.3 ypc). So yeah, most of their opponents were completely hopeless.
Even the Buckeyes (the team that had 187 yards on 29 attempts) weren't able to consistently rush against them and didn't try all that much. Antonio Pittman and Chris Wells each had a 50+ yard rushing TD in that game but those two runs alone accounted for 108 of tOSU's 187 rushing yards. On the other 27 attempts the Buckeyes managed just 79 yards (2.9 ypc). Those two long TD's accounted for well over half of tOSU's rushing total that night and an astounding 21% of the TOTAL rushing yards given up by Michigan all season.
The Buckeyes' response was to not try to rush all that much. They only had 29 attempts compared to 41 passes and remember that sacks and QB scrambles count as rushes. Troy Smith had four carries for 12 yards and I frankly think that all four were called pass plays so in terms of called plays I think the Buckeyes had 25 runs and 45 passes.
On top of that, Ohio State only trailed from the end of Michigan's first possession until the end of Ohio State's first possession (Michigan got the ball first and both teams scored on their first possession). Then the game was tied until Ohio State scored their second TD with 12:22 to go in the second quarter. For the rest of the game Ohio State was protecting leads of:
- 7 from 42:22-36:01
- 14 from 36:01-32:33
- 7 from 32:33-30:20
- 14 from 30:20-27:12
- 7 from 27:12-23:25
- 4 from 23:25-23:04
- 11 from 23:04-14:41
- 4 from 14:41-5:38
- 11 from 5:38-2:16
- 3 for the rest of the game 3 rushes for 16 yards
Preserving the lead and keeping the clock spinning was at least somewhat of a consideration for the Buckeyes (especially considering that remember this was Tressel) whereas none of Michigan's previous opponents had been in that position.
Still, Michigan's 2006 Rush defense was amazing. Compared to the rest of the league they were:
- Best in ypc by almost a full yard 1.9 for M vs 2.8 for #2 PSU. To get an idea of how big of a difference this is, #2 PSU was closer to #6 IA (3.6) and almost as close to #7 MSU (3.8) as they were to #1 M.
- Best in yards per game by giving less than half of #2. M gave up 43 ypg while #2 PSU gave up 87.8. Once again #2 PSU was about as close to #6/7 IA and MSU as they were to #1 M.
- Best in rush TD's allowed with just five.
In passing they were pretty good but not great even by the standards of just the league that year:
- Statistically tied with PSU and tOSU behind UW in ypa at 5.7. UW was #1 at 4.7.
- 7th in YPG at 211.1.
- 6th in passing TD's allowed with 15.
- 4th in passer rating allowed.
- 1st in sacks but it was close. M had 42, PSU was #2 with 38, tOSU was #3 with 37.
All-in-all, Michigan's pass defense was good but it wasn't all-time great like their rush defense. I still say that unless you are just god awful at passing I'd rather take my chances against Michigan's pretty good 2006 pass defense than against their all-time great 2006 rush defense.