Always go for two in that situation
(I wrote two this week. Second, longer one will post tomorrow)
Whether Michigan was correct to go for two to make it an 18-point game with over 20 minutes to play against an opponent with a top-15 offense is an argument best left for people who care if a team runs up the score.
HOW Michigan got its two-point conversion however is much more of mystery, thanks to ESPN's director failing to capture the play until a second after the snap, or show a review. I thought it highly unfair that Ryan Day gets the all-22 of this while Michigan fans never get to find out what happened. So I watched it a lot. And I'm pretty sure here's what happened:
Michigan used the old swinging gate tactic, caught at least one IU player (the WLB) napping, and ran a QB sprint option with the snapper as pitch-man and a travel pass option (plus two pick routes).
[After THE JUMP: How it worked, and how is it legal?]
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