Michael Danna brings maximum hustle, versatility to Chiefs defense

ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN - NOVEMBER 30: Justin Fields #1 of the Ohio State Buckeyes tries to get around the tackle of Michael Danna #4 of the Michigan Wolverines during the second half at Michigan Stadium on November 30, 2019 in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Ohio State won the game 56-27. (Photo by Gregory Shamus/Getty Images)
ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN - NOVEMBER 30: Justin Fields #1 of the Ohio State Buckeyes tries to get around the tackle of Michael Danna #4 of the Michigan Wolverines during the second half at Michigan Stadium on November 30, 2019 in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Ohio State won the game 56-27. (Photo by Gregory Shamus/Getty Images)
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MOUNT PLEASANT, MI – SEPTEMBER 1: Mike Danna #57 of the Central Michigan Chippewas sacks Ben Cheek #8 of the Presbyterian Blue Hose in the second half at Kelly/Shorts Stadium on September 1, 2016 in Mount Pleasant, Michigan. (Photo by Rey Del Rio/Getty Images)
MOUNT PLEASANT, MI – SEPTEMBER 1: Mike Danna #57 of the Central Michigan Chippewas sacks Ben Cheek #8 of the Presbyterian Blue Hose in the second half at Kelly/Shorts Stadium on September 1, 2016 in Mount Pleasant, Michigan. (Photo by Rey Del Rio/Getty Images)

With the fifth round pick in the 2020 NFL Draft, the Kansas City Chiefs selected EDGE Michael Danna out of Michigan. Danna’s tape shows exactly why the Chiefs picked him up and what he is bringing to the franchise.

The Kansas City Chiefs went into the 2020 NFL Draft with 20 of the 22 starters in the Super Bowl returning. Returning that many starters allowed the Chiefs to make picks in draft with the intentions of upgrading the team rather then filling needs. The Chiefs may “need” a second tight end to line up opposite Travis Kelce, but drafting a three down running back makes the explosive offense even more explosive.

The Chiefs still managed to fill any “needs” they had, but made massive upgrades at several key positions which includes their fifth round pick, edge rusher Michael Danna.

Spending time at Central Michigan University before transferring to Michigan for his senior year, Danna showed talent and aggressiveness on the edge and power in the trenches, making him a key player to line up anywhere the Chiefs want to use him. His film shows exactly what he brings to the table and where the coaches are going to have to work with him once practice facilities open up and teams can meet up.

Strength: Versatility

Coming into a year at Michigan, Danna had largely been tasked with gaining weight (up to 270 from his playing weight at 255 at Central Michigan). The goal was to rotate him inside, too, because that’s what Michigan tends to ask of their linemen. Yet at CMU, he was lighter and was a threat off the edge every time.

In the footage above, you can see Danna’s performance again Iowa, where he bounced outside and inside with regularity. Danna spends time with almost every single one of Iowa’s linemen, and has a highlight against every them all, bull rushing down the middle to collapse the pocket, or rushing off the edge and in blitz schemes to quickly make his presence felt by the QB and force hurried passes.

With this versatility and Chiefs’ defensive coordinator Steve Spagnuolo’s spastic and unreadable blitz patterns, Danna is could quickly find success in the Chiefs’ system.

Strength: Hustle

In high school, our coaches use to get under us if we “loafed,” which is what they called it when, after the play is no longer within range for you to have an effect on, you stopped rushing to the ball and took a breather or walked to where you needed to be. For every “loaf” our coaches saw on tape, the skill players would run another suicide, and the linemen would do another shuttle.

“Loafs” are completely normal to see in the NFL, especially by offensive and defensive linemen. They are not catching up to a skill player running at full speed in the middle of the field, so once they are more then ten yards down the field, why waste the energy? Quarterbacks are actually the most notorious about “loafing,” typically checking out of a play the moment the ball is released from their hand. Games are long, and you might need that energy you wasted in a vital moment later on.

In college, “loafs” are less common, but they still exist due again to the preservation of energy. Quarterbacks are still the worst about them, but you will see it occasionally from an offensive lineman or slower defensive tackle.

However, Michael Danna does not “loaf”; rather, he will stay in every play until the very end. Specifically in this tape, we are looking at the final play on the footage (starts at 5:29), where the Iowa Hawkeyes have a 4th and 10 with 49 seconds left and need a touchdown to tie the game.

This has been an exhaustingly long fourth quarter for the Wolverine defense, with the Michigan offense doing absolutely nothing to help put this game on ice or even get the defense a rest. But the defense, specifically the defensive line, has put in the work and has kept Iowa out of the end zone. After so much effort and with so little energy left, the defense is one play away from putting this one on ice and going home with a win over a higher ranked opponent.

Here, Danna puts in an effort that would make any coach extremely happy.

The ball snaps, and immediately the offensive line blows its blocking assignments and the defensive ends are in Nate Stanley’s face. Despite being dragged down, Iowa’s quarterback commits the cardinal sin of throwing the ball while going to the ground (with his left hand no less). This prayer is surprisingly caught by a running back who had missed a block and gotten lost in the backfield part of the flat because of it, and he tries to make something happen with it to keep the Hawkeyes in the game. He is stopped just inches from the line of scrimmage by a linebacker, and the Wolverines get the ball back with the ability to end the game.

Despite the play switching positions and a skill player running with the ball in the end, Danna, who lined up at inside for this play, stayed on top of the ball carrier at all points. Just a yard from Stanley when he is being dragged down, he quickly shifted his body and momentum to get after the running back the moment he saw him catch the ball. He stayed after him and being only an arms reach from him at the end of the play.

This hustle may not have an immediate effect on his success in the NFL, but when it is needed, like the fourth quarter of a close game, or when the team needs a momentum shift, Danna will be running hard to finish the play.

You can also see a great example of this on a screen play in this highlight video, or on the next slide.

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