[Patrick Barron]

Preview: The Game 2021 Comment Count

Brian November 26th, 2021 at 1:15 PM

Essentials

WHAT Michigan vs Ohio State rufus-brutus-p1jpg

 

WHERE Michigan Stadium
Ann Arbor, MI
WHEN Noon Eastern
THE LINE OSU –7.5
TELEVISION FOX (Johnson/Klatt)
TICKETS exist
WEATHER

cloudy, low 30s
light snow possible
~5 mph wind

Overview

Well, let's get it over with.

[Hit THE JUMP for words]

Run Offense vs OSU

49147680598_490a77c1e4_k

hmm. good. [Fuller]

It occasionally happens that Ohio State will lose a game early because of some weird thing, like that time they lost to Virginia Tech because VT had a weird line formation that they weren't prepared for. This year that game was Oregon and the weird thing was "we made Kerry Coombs our defensive coordinator." Coombs was then stuck in the box with a headset that's not hooked up to anything and Ohio State entirely remade their defensive approach.

This worked, because of course it did. The OSU defense is up to 14th in SP+ and would be even higher if SP+ was solely focused on what happened after Coombs was given some crayons and a coloring book. Let's see if we can spot the change:

Opponent Att Yards Avg. TD
@ Minnesota 50 203 4.06 3
11 Oregon 38 269 7.08 3
Tulsa 28 73 2.61 0
Akron 40 76 1.9 0
@ Rutgers 31 111 3.58 0
Maryland 36 56 1.56 0
@ Indiana 37 34 0.92 0
Penn St. 29 33 1.14 2
@ Nebraska 34 113 3.32 1
Purdue 19 91 4.79 0
12 Michigan St. 21 66 3.14 0

Ah yes, right there. The only teams to move the ball even a little against Ohio State, post-Coombs, were Rutgers and Nebraska—we're leaving out Purdue here since they barely bother to run the ball. Both of those teams are perfectly happy to slam their QB into the line willy-nilly; Nebraska has built their offense around it. More traditional burly rushing attacks have gotten universally stoned, and while no one is comparing the Maryland/Indiana/PSU rush offenses to Michigan, last week MSU gave it to Kenneth Walker a total of seven times. This was in part because they were busy giving up touchdowns on the first seven OSU drives, yes. Still: Heisman candidate RB, seven carries.

Alex on the front seven:

The defensive tackle spot sees even more rotation, and it's rather curious how often they lift Haskell Garrett off the field, given how good he is. He's the only star at this position, one that sees a full six players get regular snaps. The other players at DT were solid, if unremarkable in the games I saw. Antwuan Jackson is the nominal other starter, but his snap count on the season is almost identical to that of Taron Vincent. Their PFF grades are both similar to that of Ty Hamilton and Jerron Cage, all of whom are mostly just guys (more on that later). Tyleik Williams is the last name to know at the DT spot, and his snap count is rather low, pretty far down the depth chart but still seeing the field each week.

Linebacker, as it has been in the last few seasons at Ohio State, is an area of consternation. The team normally plays with just two traditional LBs on the field at one time, and there's plenty of rotation here too. Cody Simon is the listed starter at the MLB spot, but he is banged up and his status for The Game is unknown at this time. If he is absent, his presence probably will not be missed on the defense, as he's the lone cyan'd starter. It is your author's opinion that Tommy Eichenberg is the better MLB. The other spot sees Steele Chamber get the starting nod, but again you see heavy rotation with Teradja Mitchell, who was very rough in the PSU game that will be dissected for this piece. All four LBs mentioned have played more than 300 snaps and less than 400, with no one really solidifying themselves as the answer, and the position remains a weakness for the defense.

The grades here are not commensurate with the rushing defense's output, especially since OSU is content to run out a 4-2-5 on most downs that nowadays has two deep safeties.

Michigan will hope that this is because teams get down a bunch and the ones that haven't don't have anything like Michigan's ground game. I'm relatively skeptical. Michigan looked extremely mortal against Maryland last week and went an entire half against Penn State doing little until a schematic tweak broke some things open. Maybe Michigan will be able to do this but since OSU has boatraced just about everyone I imagine they've spent more time on Michigan than vice versa.

KEY MATCHUP: HASSAN HASKINS vs PAUL BUNYAN LEGENDARY STATUS. The path to victory likely includes a legendary performance from Haskins and/or Corum and/or Edwards.

Pass Offense vs OSU

51694298656_21103728bd_k (1)

[Sherman]

Michigan can probably make some hay here if Cade McNamara is locked in. With the notable exception of Michigan State last week, functional passing offenses (ie, not Rutgers or Indiana) have continued to put up yards at a reasonable rate against the OSU D. Maryland (7.2 YPA), Penn State (6.9), Nebraska (8.0), and Purdue (7.4) have all moved the ball through the air against the Buckeyes.

Yes, there are sacks, but the desperation mode that OSU puts opposing offenses in means that they come on a ton of attempts. By sack rate the Buckeyes are only middling—56th—and Michigan remains elite at protecting the QB. They're third in sack rate allowed. I'm not banking on the pass rush matchup being that lopsided because many fewer Michigan attempts will be protected by the sheer shock of a dropback, and we did see a couple of high end rushers go to work on Ryan Hayes in the Penn State game.

Meanwhile the OSU secondary is physically talented but devoid of the top-end NFL talent they usually sport. Alex:

I really liked the coverage from Denzel Burke in this game, whose good ball skills in coverage we saw earlier in a Harrison highlight … Cameron Brown had a decent game in both too, but there were still open receivers for Clifford to throw to. Those dissipated a bit for MSU, but it's worth noting that there is a gap in the quality of receiver that Penn State features and Michigan State features considering that the Spartans are without Nailor and Reed appears banged up. The zone was pretty soft at times against the Nittany Lions

Alex also noted that OSU corners have not been very good about getting off blocks when targeted in quick game stuff. Michigan hasn't run much of that this year, at least not with the WRs. With Donovan Edwards's breakout performance and Blake Corum being Blake Corum, Michigan has two different options to split wide, which will help McNamara with his presnap reads. That may be a spot Michigan can get after OSU for small, easy chunks if the ground game isn't firing like you'd hope it would. And then: wheel routes! All the wheel routes.

It should be noted that Michigan has been very explosive this year, trailing only OSU in the number of 50 yard plays they've racked up. OSU has largely tamped down on the busts that littered the first half of their season, preferring a relatively conservative two-deep shell that forces opponents to execute down the field. They're unlikely to deviate much from that unless things are going badly, so I wouldn't expect big passing plays to come from the WRs unless they're managing a catch and run.

The backs, though…

KEY MATCHUP: YEP, MICHIGAN RUNNING BACKS vs OSU LINEBACKERS. They've got some question marks at the spot and Michigan has a couple of guys who can exploit mismatches there.

Run Defense vs OSU

51677472458_ffc2edafe2_k

Ross will be on the spot [Barron]

Well, here we go. If you managed to tolerate the FFFF on this unit you probably noticed that our graphic has a star on every single player except TE Jeremy Ruckert, and naturally this fact caused our Slack to explode with assertions that Ruckert was now destined to go for 200 yards tomorrow.

There's no getting around the fact that by every predictive metric you care to survey this is the #1 offense in the country by a mile. The run half of it is vaguely less terrifying, maybe, but freshman five-star TreVeyon Henderson is still averaging—Jesus—7.3 yards per carry, and his primary backups are averaging 7.6 and 5.3. Henderson has it sort of easy, what with opposing defenses trying to handle three first-round picks at WR; he gets a lot of opportunities to run at light boxes. When he hits a crease he's gone, and he also brings a fair amount of power for a guy most would classify as a "speed back."

The OSU offensive line is virtually all highly-touted recruits playing at a high level, and this is going to be a problem for Michigan. Michigan has a couple of great defensive ends, but only Hutchinson is a consistent playmaker on the ground; meanwhile the defensive tackles have not been playmakers against single blocking this year. With OSU's ability to pull linebackers around with jet fakes and play action, this does not look like a spot where Michigan's going to hold up particularly well—especially if Michigan is rotating as willy-nilly as they have for much of this year. If Michigan's safeties are back, as I imagine they will be given Michigan's approach the last two weeks, it's hard to see Michigan's front six not getting gashed regularly.

KEY MATCHUP: HINTON AND MAZI SMITH vs JUST MAKE PLAYS. Don't really see many good outcomes here that don't include far less DL rotation than we've had thus far and Michigan DTs playing over their heads.

Pass Defense vs OSU

49152822531_771c65f434_k

hmm. bad. [Barron]

The post-hope era of Michigan football began a few years ago, when Michigan brought the number one defense in America into the Game and saw their man coverage utterly obliterated by crossing routes. Up until that point Brandon Watson had been a quality try-hard third corner who used his wits and a lot of subtle holding to keep up with guys who were more athletic to him; in that game he was quickly exposed as a random three star in the wrong place at the wrong time. The guy who exposed him was freshman Chris Olave, who is one of the best receivers in the country and might be the third-best guy on his own team.

The numbers here are absurd:

Opponent Att Comp Pct. Yards Yards/Att TD Int
@ Minnesota 22 13 59.1 294 13.4 4 1
11 Oregon 54 35 64.8 484 9 3 1
Tulsa 25 15 60 185 7.4 1 1
Akron 26 18 69.2 385 14.8 2 1
@ Rutgers 27 18 66.7 333 12.3 5 0
Maryland 38 26 68.4 432 11.4 5 0
@ Indiana 37 28 75.7 352 9.5 4 0
Penn St. 34 22 64.7 305 9 1 0
@ Nebraska 54 36 66.7 405 7.5 2 2
Purdue 38 31 81.6 361 9.5 5 0
12 Michigan St. 43 36 83.7 449 10.4 6 1

Exactly two teams have held OSU under nine yards an attempt: Nebraska and Tulsa, somehow.

There is some hope for Michigan, which has done an excellent job of implementing a new defense without suffering a ton of busts. Michigan has tried to get away from a heavy reliance on cover one that's great when you're better across the board than your opponent and quickly falls apart when you get one consistent mismatch. First they imported Bob Shoop, but Shoop was forced to work "remotely" for obscure reasons. Then they fired Don Brown and imported Mike Macdonald with an intent to change the defense into an NFL-like unit that has "multiple" as its watchword and confuses quarterbacks into holding the ball a fatal second too long.

This has actually happened, for the most part. Michigan's 5.8 YPA allowed is second in the conference to PSU's 5.7. Their 29 sacks are tied for fourth in the conference, and anyone who's watched Michigan games can attest that the QB is under heat on most snaps. Ohio State's line is excellent but they do not have stone-cold killers at tackle. PSU got a similar set of ends and was able to stick in the OSU game for a while by getting pressure. Alex:

Arnold Ebiketie, who you may recall from him brutalizing Ryan Hayes in the Michigan game, got several clean pass rush wins against projected first round LT Petit-Frere. Here's one:

Getting to CJ Stroud is going to be massively important, because Michigan's defensive backs aren't staying with these receivers. Maybe DJ Turner has turned a corner and is a Jahan Dotson deleter now. Okay. Great. Vincent Gray might be a lot better. Great. Dax Hill is a potential slot destroyer. Great. The chances that all of these guys are going to rise to the occasion and demonstrate they are the equals of the dudes lined up across from them is close to nil.

So: Michigan's going to disguise coverages as best they can and hope to surprise Stroud, whereupon he will hold the ball for the extra beat it takes for Ojabo and/or Hutchinson to cave the walls in. When they do that the can get off the field; when they don't it's dirt nap time.

KEY MATCHUP: MIKE MACDONALD vs THE KITCHEN SINK. What do you have? Now is the time to dump it all out.

SPECIAL TEAMS

Ah yup: Michigan is now the #1 team in the country in FEI's special teams efficiency by a full tenth of a point over (naturally) Iowa.

Ohio State is seventh largely because kicker Noah Ruggles is 16/17. He's fourth nationally in FG efficiency. Ruggles does tend to offer up returnable kickoffs—only 24% are touchbacks—but OSU covers those like a team with a bunch of five-star athletes slumming it on special teams.

The other stuff is solid. Punter Jesse Mirco is fine (and has only punted 25 times). Wilson and JSN have done little on punt returns, but that's likely just random chance.

KEY MATCHUP:  AHHHH YOU CONTINUE DOING EVERYTHING WELL

INTANGIBLES

depressed

CHEAP THRILLS

Worry if…

  • Michigan's DEs are anything but rampant.
  • Things are happening.
  • Frankie Collins doesn't get more playing time soon.

Cackle with knowing glee if…

  • OSU gets rattled like it seemed they were in the PSU game.
  • Coombs escapes from naptime and wreaks a hellish revenge!
  • There is no time on the clock and Michigan has more points?

Fear/Paranoia Level: 10 (Baseline: 5; +5 for The Game)

Desperate need to win level: 10 (Baseline: 5; +5 for The Game)

Loss will cause me to… sigh, walk into the woods with a flask, and stare at a battleship-gray sky as snow flurries come down around me.

Win will cause me to… 404 not found

The strictures and conventions of sportswriting compel me to predict: 

I mean, either Aidan Hutchinson wins the Heisman or Michigan loses. This is a good Michigan team going up against a buzzsaw that has virtually no holes on offense and has successfully relegated their dumbass defensive coordinator to the Paterno Zone midseason, because that's what they can do.

Talent is likely to win out here; Michigan has scraped together enough to get by a large number of middling-to-bad teams but this is another level entirely. The elite guys/units Michigan has gone up against this year have generally won out—Kenneth Walker, PSU DEs, the Washington secondary, Wisconsin's rush defense—and now they're playing a team that's mostly elite. The usual pattern here when Michigan is real good is to stick around for a half or so and then get distanced in the third quarter.

Finally, three opportunities for me to look stupid Sunday:

  • Ohio State looks like they've prepared all year for this; Michigan looks like that for about 20 minutes and then runs out of playbook magic.
  • There are more commercial breaks than plays.
  • Ohio State, 40-21

Comments

plamonge

November 26th, 2021 at 3:45 PM ^

I'm going to say this now before the game happens and we all end up losing our minds from a blowout: We should leave the Big 10. Why subject ourselves to this every year? It isn't going to change in the next decade or more. And that goes for the entire Big 10 too--why would Penn State want to always lose to them, etc?

Go blue.

MGoMatt30

November 26th, 2021 at 3:56 PM ^

  • The crowd will have a big impact on The Game.
  • Hutchinson enters the Heisman conversation.
  • Shroud wishes the Ojabo family would have picked a different game to watch their son for the first time.
  • Haskins hurdles a fool.
  • Sparty loses their only tagline - the football program is shutdown.
  • Michigan 37-33

moldee_raspberry

November 26th, 2021 at 4:04 PM ^

To irrationally cite osu’s peak spectacle against Clemson last post season only to appear winded and overhyped going into the NC game against Bama a week later, we could draw an irrational parallel between the disparity of those two osu performances and their peak spectacle performance against msu last week and a gasser against us tomorrow. Yes, if we end up losing on some bullshit I’ll look like an idiot, but if (when?) we win tomorrow then this comment will age as if what I predicted was an inevitability, like the guys who invented Airbnb, or Uber. Except our souls will be enriched, and Jimmy H will emphatically keep his job.

I will be at a notre dame fan’s wedding during the game, but I trust our squad to make us proud. This year I feel a quantum difference in the amount of love I feel for this team and in my relative lack of hatred for osu, which feels good for a change. May we collectively ride this sense of confident affection to a resounding M victory tomorrow afternoon.

Go Blue, forever and always. Excelsior. 

ak47

November 26th, 2021 at 4:13 PM ^

This is an extremely annoying write up. Yes osu is better than Michigan and absolutely is likely to win the game tomorrow. But the talent gap isn’t bigger between these teams than it is between Michigan and msu or Michigan and nebraska, or Alabama and Texas A&M or any number of other upsets that happen every week in college football. And while yes Michigan has struggled to get over the hump most games in Ann Arbor are close, the gap in talent is closer than 2017 with okorn, it’s smaller than in 2014 when Devin Gardner went off, etc. 

Its possible to acknowledge being a less talented underdog without being depressed about the outcome before the game starts. I’m sorry Michigan football doesn’t bring you joy anymore, I’m not even sure a win tomorrow would do it.

ERdocLSA2004

November 26th, 2021 at 11:04 PM ^

You basically summed up Brian’s sentiments.  You got a detailed analysis about how most people think the game will go.  There’s nothing from the last 5 years that would warrant unicorns and rainbows going in to this game.  Especially since we stumbled against an MSU team that they completely dismantled.  3 years ago people would be depressed with a loss.  Now people are apathetic with a loss and have forgotten what winning the game feels like.  That’s just how it is.  You call that negative, some people call it realistic.  

markusr2007

November 26th, 2021 at 4:24 PM ^

"Win will cause me to… 404 not found"

Because by now everyone knows how a Michigan Wolverines' regular football season ends.

The good news is that no one needed to wait for any knot in the stomach to occur in November

The knot arrived early once more for all back in September when Michigan survived Rutgers 20-13 at home. One week later Ohio would carpet bomb the same team with 541 yards, 52-13 on the road.   The knot buckled everyone over again with Michigan 33, MSU 37, followed by Ohio effortlessly embarrassing the Spartans by seven touchdowns, 56-7.

So once again, Mr. knot in the stomach and your two stupid friends, child-like excitement and hope - all three of you a-holes can go buy your airline tickets online today at a discount and head to Cancun or someplace nice and drink mojitos and get gastroenteritis. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Team 101

November 26th, 2021 at 4:25 PM ^

Nice write up Brian.  Especially everything after "Cheap Thrills".  The talent gap is enormous.  I think we want it more but tomorrow is the day the OSU players come to pick up their paychecks.

I still have hope and I am going to be there so I won't miss it if this is the year we break the streak.

Erik_in_Dayton

November 26th, 2021 at 4:46 PM ^

This is a very likeable Michigan team. This season has been a pleasant surprise. The Wolverines are likely going to the Rose Bowl at worst. And while I expect Michigan to lose tomorrow by three touchdowns, the thought of winning doesn't seem entirely outlandish. 

RockRockPlanetRock

November 26th, 2021 at 4:58 PM ^

either Aidan Hutchinson wins the Heisman or Michigan loses

 

Been a fan since Rick Leach's Rose Bowl. Seen every game since. This is what it comes down to. The D line blows it up ala Giants v. undefeated Pats in Super Bowl or this is 40 to 20 and onto the off season. 

 

 

 

 

 

abt424

November 26th, 2021 at 5:24 PM ^

You know, they’ve done studies that show there’s never a reason to be pessimistic.

Studies have shown that people who are pessimistic/realistic to protect themselves from disappointment of an outcome still experience the same disappointment as those who were expecting a positive outcome. 

I always tell myself there’s no reason to go into The Game with a negative attitude because it won’t protect my disappointment.

2018 broke me.

2019 broke me to the point where after the game I said I was done expecting positive things for this program. 

But I’ll be back Saturday hoping for a different outcome. A better outcome. Let’s go blue. 

ILL_Legel

November 26th, 2021 at 7:06 PM ^

2016 broke my optimism for The Game.  I have to read those studies because my defense mechanism worked in 2018 and 2019.  In 2019, I stayed at the game beyond the end and watched the buckeyes celebrate.  My seats were close to the field so I ended up surrounded by buckeye fans.  Didn’t phase me.  I wanted to take in all of there excitement and happiness because one day we will be victorious and I will be way more excited and happy than they were.  I also have to admit that I will relish in their misery.  Not something I normally do or that I am proud of but I have a long and tortured history with buckeye fan.  Go Blue!

AlbanyBlue

November 26th, 2021 at 5:34 PM ^

Yeah, this bears out what I'm thinking. Michigan will need to find a way to sustain drives that score TDs in order to stay in this one. Our defense, as much as it has exceeded pre-season expectations, is still a first-year defense with holes. OSU will score, and while 40 points may not be best-case for our D, it won't be 27 either. Perhaps our D can hold them to 35 or so.

LabattsBleu

November 26th, 2021 at 5:42 PM ^

Its a tough game... Michigan at home has a puncher's chance...

I have been impressed with Michigan this year - they have been much, much better than I had expected or even had hoped.

I am just hoping that Macdonald has been putting together a plan that could befuddle Stroud - as good as he is, he's still a first year starter so maybe Macdonald will have some tricks up his sleeve that will cause some problems.

Michigan is going to have a great game on offense. I am hoping there will be some RPOs, wheel routes, pick and pops that Michigan will have dialed up as I do not think they will be able to simply "out execute" OSU

Feeling hopeful, but definitely not expecting too much. Definitely going to need to win the turnover battle to even have a chance.

But there is a chance, so we'll see

Hab

November 26th, 2021 at 6:17 PM ^

Michigan fandom: prioritizing perceived objectivity and being 'right' since 2006. 

If this is life without hope, I want no part of it.  Go Blue.  UM 31, OSU 30.  Moody with the game-winning kick.

JBLPSYCHED

November 26th, 2021 at 7:03 PM ^

We have more than a puncher's chance. I'd estimate our chances of winning at 20% which is at least double what it would be if the game were in Columbus. They are more talented than us and coached up for this game in a way that we haven't been for a very long time. They are also supremely confident whereas we tend to choke under pressure in big games which begets serious doubt as soon as we make a mistake.

OTOH we are at home and our team is, as someone else wrote, better 'constituted' than in recent years. We aren't confident against OSU, that would be ridiculous, but we are resilient and the team believes in itself.

My personal keys: 1. We can only afford to give up one long TD at most; if they score >1 big play TDs our chances of winning go down markedly. 2. Related to #1 but also separate: we can't fall behind by more than 14 points at any time during the game. We just aren't built to catch up or score a lot of points quickly...plus the doubt problem will kick in. We must keep the score differential under 2 TDs to have any realistic chance of winning. 3. Someone must make a big and timely play a la Woodson in '97. It probably doesn't matter who it is but someone must step up to the moment and create a score where one wouldn't otherwise exist.

I'm old enough to have been alive for 1969's Upset of the Century; I was in the stadium in '73 for the 10-10 tie and cried after the AD's voted OSU to the Rose Bowl. I celebrated the 'dominance' over Cooper's OSU teams and for the past ~20 years I've been incredibly upset and even despondent ('16, '18) at times. I'm not saying we'll win tomorrow but I think we have our best chance in a while.

It probably won't happen but it might. This isn't Shawshank; 'hope' is not dangerous. It's part of college football and a (sometimes) painful part of being a Michigan fan. But I have it nevertheless.

Go Blue!

Newton Gimmick

November 26th, 2021 at 7:20 PM ^

MSU last week 

Hoping OSU keeps hearing how great they are and thinks they can just walk out there and steamroll us the same way.  Then sees the snow falling on their battered QB and realizes they're in trouble

harmon40

November 26th, 2021 at 7:48 PM ^

Sons and daughters of Michigan!

Of Ann Arbor!!

My brethren.

I see in your eyes the same fear that would take the heart of me.

A day may come when the courage of Michigan fails, when we forsake our friends and break all bonds of fellowship, but it is not this day.

An hour of Buckeyes and shattered helmets when the Age of Michigan  comes crashing down, but it is not this day!

This day we fight!

By all that you hold dear on this good earth, I bid you STAND, Michigan fan base!!

(Tolkien, with a few edits)

xgojim

November 26th, 2021 at 8:14 PM ^

I was pleased to see that Angelique Chengelis (Freep beat reporter) picked Ohio State.  She has picked against Michigan's odds in almost every game this season, so maybe it's a good omen for at least a close game (she picks against the odds, not the pure win).  Go Blue!

Durham Blue

November 26th, 2021 at 9:04 PM ^

Nothing that Brian said is not factual.  It all makes sense and the reasonable, rational unbiased college football guy would probably predict about the same final score.

I am just hoping that our interior DL catches some fire and we are able to whip their OL all game long and put sustained pressure on Stroud.  I am hoping for mistakes by the OSU offense as well.  I have this pretty sweet video playing in my head of Hutch and Ojabo getting home in 2 to 3 seconds on every play and just blowing shit up.  And the Michigan offense uses the energy of the crowd to pave and light up OSU.  And Michigan wins 52-24.  And we all bask in the glory of pounding those turds into oblivion after the years and years of pain, anguish and humiliation that we have endured.

Can I get an amen?

DaftPunk

November 26th, 2021 at 9:21 PM ^

As a native fan of Jumbo Elliott's team, I'm approaching this game the way I did Superbowl XXV (damn, I'm old.)

I said to my dad (UM '55) "We need to start the game with a three and out from our D and a long ground pounding clock eating scoring drive." Sure enough, the G-man did just that, and he looked at me like I was psychic.  20-19 would be a shocker, but I can see us keeping them in the 30s.

No expectations, but if we're down 49-0 at the half I'm changing clothes and going shopping.

 

ERdocLSA2004

November 26th, 2021 at 10:38 PM ^

It would’ve taken a victory against MSU to convince me JH has changed.  If he beats OSU, I’ll become a believer.  Unfortunately, for me I’m in full “believe it when I see it” mode.  I love the team but I think preparation for big rivalry games is JH’s Achilles heel.  I’d love to be wrong.

OSU 47-23

WayOfTheRoad

November 26th, 2021 at 11:39 PM ^

Exactly my sentiments and I also have a similar final score. It won't be competitive if the best version of OSU and the best version of UM show up. They're that much better, that much more talented.

If an average OSU shows up and UM plays it's best game? Then you have a shot. A slim shot but a shot.

 

We'll see.

volnedan

November 27th, 2021 at 12:03 AM ^

Unfortunately, 10-2 with losses to OSU and MSU is much worse these days than beating both and losing to other teams. We can't hide from Harbaugh's record against the rivals.

While I do have hope for this game, I think OSU talent and fiece hatred will push them past us in the 4th. 45-37 OSU. 

MGoGrue

November 27th, 2021 at 1:55 AM ^

Brian’s been a Michigan fan and writer for more years than some of his readers have been alive. His work, witty, thoughtful, and funny, has been a light for many fans during this tortuous rebuilding process.
 

He has been honest about his personal life and the pain it has caused him. Given how much pain he is in, and how that has revealed itself in his writing, why ask him to write a preview that is going to cause him more misery? Why damn this man—who has represented this fandom so well for so long—to execute a task he does not have the passion or ability to complete? 
 

This column killed him to write, because he knew he could not reflect the tone and quality of his previous work. We got to see Brian flayed by his own work: his humor covered by grief, his intelligent prose stupefied by insipid generalizations, his tone decimated by deep sorrow. Where is the editor who has the strength to take Brian away from a task that will embarrass him and his readers? 
 

Michigan fans are looking for a community that is informed and passionate and intelligent, honest about our team’s faults yet looking on the bright side of life. Brian has exemplified these traits as a leader during some of our darkest hours. I hope he finds those traits, so essential over the years, again in the near future. 
 

 

MGoGrue

November 27th, 2021 at 1:55 AM ^

Brian’s been a Michigan fan and writer for more years than some of his readers have been alive. His work, witty, thoughtful, and funny, has been a light for many fans during this tortuous rebuilding process.
 

He has been honest about his personal life and the pain it has caused him. Given how much pain he is in, and how that has revealed itself in his writing, why ask him to write a preview that is going to cause him more misery? Why damn this man—who has represented this fandom so well for so long—to execute a task he does not have the passion or ability to complete? 
 

This column killed him to write, because he knew he could not reflect the tone and quality of his previous work. We got to see Brian flayed by his own work: his humor covered by grief, his intelligent prose stupefied by insipid generalizations, his tone decimated by deep sorrow. Where is the editor who has the strength to take Brian away from a task that will embarrass him and his readers? 
 

Michigan fans are looking for a community that is informed and passionate and intelligent, honest about our team’s faults yet looking on the bright side of life. Brian has exemplified these traits as a leader during some of our darkest hours. I hope he finds those traits, so essential over the years, again in the near future.