Profile of Michigan assistant Conor Ford

There was change in the coaching staff in Ann Arbor, just as there was in Detroit. The Wolverines’ is a little more straightforward, an offensive coordinator swap.

Michigan lost top assistant Ryan Danehy to an opportunity with 3D Rising, but the Maize and Blue managed to snag a strong replacement in Drexel’s Conor Ford. Ford’s offenses with the Dragons were good, but just how good?

The Profile of Output

We begin with his most recent tenure, at Drexel. He has spent the past five years there. The seaosn before Ford’s arrival is noted in italics, those for which he was coordinating the Dragons’ offensive unit in bold.

Year Record Possessions Goals Efficiency
2009 7-8 472 123 .261
2010 10-5 490 159 .324
2011 8-6 449 158 .352
2012 8-8 479 151 .315
2013 11-4 501 182 .363
2014 13-5 631 209 .331

So, that’s a marked improvement in the first year, more improvement the next year, before settling in around the mid-.350s or so. It is worth noting that he wasn’t the only new coach at Drexel in 2010 – the whole staff turned over, with new headman Brian Voelker taking over. Still, the offense was Ford’s domain, and it was good. The Dragons were in the top-20 offensively (when adjusted for strength of schedule) each of his seasons, with two top-ten finishes.

Prior to Drexel, Ford was an assistant at Penn, where again he was the offensive coordinator. The Quakers don’t have archived stats back that far, unfortunately, so another data point (where he was again coaching under Voelker) is unavailable.

Getting it Done

How has Ford been successful? Let’s look at who his top individuals have been.

All-conference selections during his time at Drexel include Nick Trizano (attack), Ben McIntosh (midfield), Ryan Belka (midfield), Aaron Prosser (midfield), Robert Church (attack), Kyle Bergman (midfield), Scott Perri (attack), and Colin Ambler (attack). That’s a nice distribution across the two units.

Indeed, that’s been the case in individual years, with leading scorers across both positions. Of note, he doesn’t seem to ever have a true feeder – and the offense isn’t particularly assist-heavy in general – so that’s one important stylistic note. Does a team like Michigan with less talent than many of its opponents have the opportunity to win with one-man offense like that? Or is Ford’s offense more adaptable to the talent? Those are two quaestions that can’t be answered until we see the product on the field.

His MGoBlue profile points out his man-up success in a couple places, but from looking at the five-year track record, it’s been good-not-great on average. There have been strong years, and some lean years, like many teams.

Recruiting

Ford has a pedigree as a player (both collegiately at Hopkins and professionally in Philly and New Jersey) that gives him a wide range of connections that could be of assistance in getting recruits out of some major hotbed areas. Along with Long Island/Upstate New York, that’s basically every territory you could want to cover when it comes to the traditional talent pools.

Michigan has seemed to focus more on Baltimore/DC than Long Island/Upstate New York in that region of the country, and they’re also doing well nationally. Ford’s presence on the staff only helps there.

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6 Responses to Profile of Michigan assistant Conor Ford

  1. AndyD says:

    I’m excited about Ford. I just hope he stays awhile. 3 coordinators in 4 years is not the best situation.

    As far as recruiting, I doubt he’ll make a major impact. Michigan was already doing very, very well. They are also starting to make an impact on Long Island. Sutherland’s switch from Maryland plus the guys they have gotten in the 2017 class are evidence of that.

    • Tim says:

      I think Michigan has accepted that, until the program is more established, they’re going to be a stepping stone when it comes to that top assistant role. It’s just a way of life, and (unlike something like football, where there can be radically different schemes), most offenses are going to have some extremely similar elements, with terminology, etc. being the biggest change.

      • AndyD says:

        I don’t know about that. Everything I’ve heard about Lattimore was that he wasn’t a good fit, and his departure was as much JP’s decision as his. Danehy didn’t leave for another coaching job. He followed the club money. If 3D doesn’t come knocking with a huge paycheck he’s still at Michigan.

      • DCLaxFan says:

        Leaving an improving Drexel program to come to UM is a sign of the respect that the lax community has for the future of the Michigan program.

  2. AndyD says:

    Any reports from scrimmages this past weekend aside from what’s on Inside Lacrosse? Anyone there?

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