AIL M& 0 a M a For Devin Funchess, a move out wide and into football's future By ZACH HELFAND Daily Sports Editor When Devin Funchess wasn't busy leading his high-school team to a Michigan Division II state title, he was driving his coaches crazy. On the field, Funchess was budding into the versatile, multi- purpose weapon that the Michi- gan football team began to see midway through the 2013 season. But when he got to the sideline, his mind would seem elsewhere. After a series, John Herrington - the coach of Harrison High School in Farmington Hills, Mich. - says that he'd mug for the cheer- leaders. When the play called for Funchess to block, Herrington never knew what he would get. "When he wanted to, when he wanted to block, he could come down and could really block," Her- rington said. "When he wanted to. He envisioned himself as more of a split end, to be honest with you." It took years, but Funchess finally has his chance at Michigan. The depth chart says he's the start- ing tight end, but Michigan coach Brady Hoke allows that he's "not yet a traditional tight end." More often than not, against Minnesota and Penn State, Funchess was split out wide as a receiver. Funchess himself has pretty much stayed loyal to the company line. He has been pressed, but he has refused to say he prefers one position to the other. "Personally, I just wanna help the team," he has said. Whatever he has become, this much is without dispute: Funchess has emerged as one of Michigan's most dangerous offensive weap- ons. Opposite fifth-year senior Jeremy Gallon, he provides a big presence and another top option for redshirt junior quarterback Devin Gardner. Funchess is listed at 6-foot-5 and 235 pounds, but that's likely an underestimate. Hoke recently described him as 6-foot-6 or 6-foot-7. In the two games he primar- ily played split wide, Funchess has 11 receptions for 263 yards and three touchdowns, stretch- ing the defense in the process. Against Minnesota, he gashed the secondary for a 46-yard reception. Against Penn State, he beat the safety for a 59-yard score. The success has made the move seem obvious. As a blocker, Funch- ess still needs time to mature. He had become a burden to the run game and a liability in pass pro- tection. He is not yet big or strong enough, Hoke said, and "you don't want to puta square peg in a round between tight end and receiver. What they all share is a freak- ish athletic ability - big enough to be adequate blockers yet fast and nimble enough to beat any defender in the secondary. And so NFL teams began cherry-picking college basketball players who fit that mold. point stance any more. Everyone's spread out." "We're starting to inherit a dif- ferent type of athlete from the college ranks," Barone said. "It isn't like the old days when those guys were big, thick, square-body blockers or guys that maybe played linebacker in high school and col- said. But by then, his position had already begun to change. Funchess played on defense, mostly at defensive end. On offense, he played at traditional tight end on occasion, but he often split out in what Herrington called the "slot loose" formation. From there, Harrison would throw to him on a backside seam. When Harrison split out four receivers, Funchess was one of them. Near the goal line, Her- rington would put Funchess wide on one side and Aaron Burbridge, now a Michigan State receiver, on the other. Either way Herrington called, Harrison would have an easy fade. "He was really tough to cover as a tightend when we sent him down the field, you can imagine, against a linebacker," Herrington said. "Really no one at the high-school level could defend against him." The idea, then and now at Michigan, is the same one behind the new wave of NFL hybrid tight ends. Against linebackers, Funch- ess is too fast. When split out wide, cornerbacks give up upward of five or six inches. In fact, Hoke said Funchess matches up best against a corner- back or safety. Against Minnesota, Gardner boxed out a defender six inches shorter than him for a touchdown. On a 46-yard comple- tion to Funchess later in the game, Gardner easily threw over a cor- nerback five inches shorter than Funchess. "It's kind of like pick your poi- son," said fifth-year senior safety Thomas Gordon, who has the occasional pleasure of defending Funchess in practice. That suits Michigan just fine. When sophomore receiver Amara Darboh suffered a season-ending injury in the preseason, the Wol- verines scrambled to find a No. 2 option. After six games, the run- ning game has failed to establish any continued success. And so more recently, the big plays have come over the top to Funchess. In the end, when he has streaked past safeties for easy scores, it doesn't matter what posi- tion you call him. Information from Arnie Staple- ton of The Associated Press was used in this report. ADAM GLANZMAN/Daily Sophomore tight end Devin Funchess has 11 receptions for 263 yards and three touchdowns in two games as a split wide out. hole." But as a pass catcher, Funch- ess has always excelled. So whytry to make him something he's not? In reality, though, the wheels of change began lurching forward when Funchess was still in pee- wee, playing in the same league as Gardner - his future quarterback. As the National Football League shifted to smaller, faster players, hybrids have gained popularity. Tony Gonzalez, who debuted in 1997, when Funchess was just 3, changed the perception of the tight end position. After him, Antonio Gates and, more recently, Jimmy Graham have blurred the line And sure enough, Gonzalez, Gates and Graham all played hoops in college. (Gates spent time at Michigan State for football and basketball, and Eastern Michigan for basketball before settling at Kent State.) Soon, the prototype of the modern hybrid tight end trickled down to the collegiate and high-school levels. The NFL this year, through the first five weeks, had the most catches, yards and touchdowns by tight ends ever. In college now, said Clancy Barone, the tight ends coach for the Denver Broncos, "It's hard to find a tight end in a three- lege." As Gates had transformed into the best tight end in the league for the San Diego Chargers - and one of the best offensive players overall - Funchess entered high school. Back then, like the new wave of tight ends before him, Funchess was a basketball play- er. Herrington remembered that Funchess thought of himself pri- marily as a basketball player. Basketball better fit his body type. When Funchess arrived at Harrison, he was a lanky teen- ager who was "not very strong, to tell you the truth," Herrington 4 FootballSaturday - October 19, 2013