this TD Gray gave up in the 2018 spring game is now against a Nebraska walk-on[Patrick Barron]

This Battlestar Galactica Analogy Is Neither Tortured Nor Labored, Thank You Comment Count

Brian November 2nd, 2020 at 12:04 PM

10/31/2020 – Michigan 24, Michigan State 27, 1-1

At some point over the weekend I was hungry and not in the mood to do something that required time, so I smeared some cream cheese on a heel of bread. When I bit into it, it was vastly more stale than I expected. But it is what I had signed up for. So I ate it.

It was unpleasant, but eventually it was over. And then I did something else. Silver lining: column theme.

I appear to be over it. This is not a decision I've undertaken, it's just what happened after the game: not much. I have become the popular internet meme.

tenor

We're at the Final Season Of Battlestar Galactica stage of Michigan football. (Spoilers for the aughts reboot of Battlestar Galactica follow.) Things really started to go off the rails for Battlestar when the season four finale dramatically revealed five main characters as secret Cylons without any setup, explanation, or plan. They just heard "The Joker and The Thief"—a song that does not exist in their society—and were suddenly activated. Then Starbuck blew up in a plane and mysteriously returned, again without explanation.

I kept watching, but my previous enthusiasm for the show waned. Eventually I was just watching out of habit and hoping against hope that somehow the people writing this suddenly absurd show could pull a rabbit out of their butt. Instead there's like a mystical piano(?) Starbuck plays that leads them to a prehistoric Earth. Then she pops out of existence. Literally! One minute she's talking to Edward James Olmos and then she says some sort of koan and disappears.

There were some poignant moments in there but when it was over I experienced relief that I didn't have to pay attention to it any more. I groaned "oh, come on!" on a weekly basis. This analogy is airtight.

--------------------------------

So the Black Pit Of Negative Expectations was ephemeral. Mad during game; as soon as it was over* apathy set in. This is for the best.

We're in year six of Jim Harbaugh, who has done well enough that no one would ever fire him lest the Curse of Frank Solich descend upon them as it has Nebraska. Harbaugh has done progressively worse against Ohio State, getting nuked the last two years, and is now set to go up against Justin Fields and a zillion five star receivers with one decent cornerback and four guys who run like Wario. He just lost to MSU as a more than three-touchdown favorite. Damning stats follow him around. This was a new one I saw this week: 1-9 in the final two games of the season.

People can talk about firing coordinators or even the head coach. The former won't matter; the latter won't happen. I picked the GIF version of the meme above because it repeats infinitely, one reset after another, an endless weary parade of going again.

*[Actually it turns out before it was over: I turned the game off after MSU recovered the onside kick because I thought Michigan had two timeouts and there were 37 seconds left. It turns out Michigan got bailed out of their initial timeout by the officials? This was not explained, and the chyron said two timeouts.]

[After THE JUMP: press cover defense with nobody who can run]

AWARDS

Known Friends and Trusted Agents Of The Week

you're the man now, dog

-2535ac8789d1b499[1]#1 Giles Jackson. Just 58 yards on his seven catches but had a lot of tough ones in their, none more than the third down conversion where he got lit up. Also had a kickoff return almost to midfield. Just eight targets. Established himself as a receiver in this one.

#2 Dax Hill. This isn't about Hill's statistical impact but the impact of Jayden Reed, who had one catch. Reed looked like MSU's most dangerous receiver by some distance against Rutgers, and the few times MSU tested Hill he was up to the task.

#3 Joe Milton. I guess? Milton had his issues but Michigan put it all on his plate when their run game checked in nonexistent; he was able to zip in a bunch of slants in tight windows and dealt with a lot of pressure.

Honorable mention: I had a hard time coming up with three. Roman Wilson, Kwity Paye, and Hassan Haskins poked  their noses out.

KFaTAotW Standings. (Scoring: 8 points for first, 5 for second, 3 for third, 1 for HM. Points from ties adjudicated by an ankylosaur named Sharon.)

11: Joe Milton (#1 Minnesota, #3 MSU)
8: Giles Jackson(#1 MSU)
5: Dax Hill (#2 MSU)
4: Kwity Paye(T2 Minnesota, HM MSU)
3: Aidan Hutchinson(T2 Minnesota), Michael Barrett(#3 Minnesota)
2: Hassan Haskins(HM Minnesota, HM MSU)
1: Ben Mason (HM Minnesota), Jaylen Mayfield (HM Minnesota), Ronnie Bell(HM Minnesota), Roman Wilson (HM MSU)

Who's Got It Better Than Us(?) Of The Week

Made pancakes before the game. Seriously, folks, Kenji Lopez-Alt's pancake recipe is the truth. Yes you gotta whisk the egg whites. I didn't do it, and then I did, and I was mad that he was right. You can skip that step. I did it for you. (Mostly: you can get away with soft peaks.)

Honorable mention: Michigan never led against a three-touchdown underdog. So no.

image?MARCUS HALL EPIC DOUBLE BIRD OF THE WEEK.

A rich symphony to choose from but this space takes the deep bomb on a double move that Gray didn't even bite on.

Honorable mention: several other bombs on which Michigan could not contest. Several other passes, many of them into the sideline, on which their interference was undeniable.

OFFENSE

Fool's gold. A sense of foreboding descended as Maryland eviscerated Minnesota to the tune of 675 yards on Friday night. Maryland put up 3 points on Northwestern. They put up 45 on Minnesota and it should have been worse. And then.

image

Filiaga did not pass off his guy and also got knocked over by him

So much for the pickups. MSU repeatedly got pressure on basic DE/DT twists. These led to a discussion on the broadcast about how MSU was nerfing attempted Milton QB draws, but to my eye those were Milton bugging out because he got pressure immediately. He went up the middle, probably because those DE/DT twists were driving the guards back so far that exiting left or right was not an option.

This is a thing I have to sit down with in more detail before making a proclamation but this is likely to be a straight-up protection disaster.

Meanwhile on the ground Michigan was constantly blowing run IDs, doubling DEs who were plunging inside and allowing linebackers free reign. I'm at a loss. MSU being able to hold up better is one thing. Michigan being unprepared for the obvious response to their approach in week one is another.

Milton: limited. Joel Klatt was on point when he said that everything Milton throws is driven. That's why Michigan's offense is currently so slant-dependent. He's had two downfield attempts this year. Both were posts that were literally 10-20 yards off. He has not thrown a lofted fly route. There was a downfield zing to Wilson, but this too is driven:

Once MSU figured out he wasn't going to go downfield they started playing a compressed cover three that made his windows extremely tight. He was able to whistle it by a few linebackers, but all the easy stuff from last week was suddenly throwing into NFL level windows.

image

threading the needle

Unless Milton shows that he can hit the deep sideline that's going to be the rest of his year.

You have a wildcat quarterback, he is your quarterback. Michigan got too cute by half when they went wildcat on two goal-to-go snaps in the second quarter. The second was a throw that Antjuan Simmons got a hand on; Carter Selzer was open in the back of the endzone but Haskins threw it too flat. Because he's a running back.

Michigan did not run Joe Milton until a third of the game was gone, and I'm not sure they had more than one or two pure QB runs in the game. They played off the pin and pull by giving a touch pass to Mason going the other way and throwing slants off that action; they never actually ran Milton. You don't have to run pin and pull that they've prepped for, there are other things to do.

Haskins and Corum looked good, at least. Neither was given a ton of opportunities because of the blocking and Michigan's platooning but Corum dusted a guy on the edge—this was not repeated—and Haskins ran through some guys authoritatively.

The five minute drill! Michigan got the ball back down ten with 5 minutes left. They took over four of those scoring one (one) touchdown and were forced into an onside kick. Milton kept checking down. This was not entirely his fault because his protection was bad, but at some point you have to unleash the dragon, man. This more than anything else makes me think Milton is hesitant to throw deep because he keeps missing.

This continues a theme under Harbaugh: deeply incompetent clock management. They didn't screw it up last week against Minnesota, but I mean… we now know some more things about Minnesota.

DEFENSE

image

You run a press man defense and haven't recruited corners who can run for three years. 80% of the loss right there. Michigan's corner recruiting has been abominable and Michigan just reaped the whirlwind. Selected highlights from the recruiting profiles of folks in the conversation this offseason:

  • VINCENT GRAY: "Gray's ability to run is in some question. Upward mobility in the rankings was all but impossible after a 4.76 40 at an Opening regional last April."
  • JALEN PERRY: "UGA wouldn't let Perry enroll early and wanted him to play safety … Lacks top-end speed and agility to be a cover CB at the next level." (There were a couple of more positive takes from earlier in his recruitment cycle; the overall picture was not "unquestioned burner.")
  • SAMMY FAUSTIN: "… doesn’t have great makeup speed. He doesn’t seem to be a difference-maker from an athletic perspective at the next level … He is not the most explosive kid and can work on his flexibility"
  • DJ TURNER: "ESPN's listed combine numbers for him are solidly in the "meh" department, with a 4.63 40 and several other numbers that were middling for cornerbacks .. Even [his] top 20 SPARQ at the Opening didn't see Turner get out of the 4.6s in his 40."

The one exception? Gemon Green:

makes up ground in a hurry and plays the ball well. … Because he is so athletic, he's been known to overreact and overcommit to well-run routes .. He can also get on the hip and stay with the fast receivers on long routes.

Green got hit with one bomb but on that play he got a hand in on the ball. Gray… did not. And nobody else on the roster is likely to be better except for Andre Seldon. Darion Green-Warren is a top 200 corner who also has a bunch of people dumping on his athleticism.

Jeff Hecklinski, the Hoke-era WR coach infamous for saying "speed can be taught", may as well have put together the corner room.

So they grabbed. Klatt spent much of the game questioning the calls Michigan was picking up in the secondary. He is correct that Michigan is very grabby and that normally they get away with a lot of it. He was incorrect that the kind of grabbing Michigan was doing against MSU was similar to the grabbing they've done in previous seasons. There are grabs you can get away with, like Delano Hill against BYU:

21751074741_20b177df18_k

subtle, crafty [Bryan Fuller]

Michigan's penalty issues in this game came because they were making arms-extended yanks that are not shielded from view. They were not tools being deployed by a craftsman who knows how to get an extra edge. Most were full-on panic. Green reached over the shoulder of a WR and pulled him back in full view of a side judge. At one point Gray attempted to yank a WR's arm out of the socket on a ball that sailed.

(No, it wasn't  uncatchable enough to be ruled uncatchable. If there's a chance the Charles Woodson MSU interception might happen they don't call it uncatchable. That ball lands inbounds.)

My reaction to almost all penalties was outrage, replay, "ah, shit."*

The one outrage on the day was on Mike Sainristil, who got mugged on third down without a call. That was neither subtle nor crafty, but it didn't get called. Ah, shit.

*[Entertaining subplot: when I tweeted something about none of the calls being borderline some of the internet's best and brightest told me I should stop complaining about the officials.]

The 3-3-5 still doesn't work as a run defense. The Florida game where Michigan first broke out the 3-3-5 was the first game of the 2017 season. Don Brown has had three full seasons to observe the performance of his 3-3-5 on standard downs and is still running it out there. Here a converted fullback gets his blitz picked up and gets ejected across the formation:

This didn't work last year when your SAM was Josh Uche and the DT situation was much more dire. Continuing now is stubbornness completely unconnected from hundreds of snaps of reality.

Meanwhile in pickups. On the other side of the stunt pickups: Michigan barely got through against a team down its starting center and, eventually, a guard. Michigan's DEs went from supermen against Minnesota to anonymous. I have not seen a clear hold on either, just a lot of borderline stuff that almost never gets called.

Much of the rest of the stuff that happened in this game is extremely disappointing but at least makes sense. We knew corner was an issue; we knew there were a lot of new starters on the OL; we knew Milton was going to have some issues. Kwity Paye and Aidan Hutchinson getting shut off by Michigan State's OL is bizarre. Absurd. Despicable. I'm going full Jackie Chiles about it.

SPECIAL TEAMS

Well? Giles Jackson had a 38-yard kick return and a 32-yard punt return? Caveat: that 32-yard punt return was fielded at the two, briefly entered the endzone, and was almost down at the three. Good job, never do that again.

The only other thing of note was a big gap in raw average between the punters. Bryce Baringer averaged 54 yards a kick; Michigan split duties between Hart and Robbins, apparently using the latter as a pooch punter, and got about 40 total. Robbins (and Jake McCurry) did drop one at the two.

MISCELLANEOUS

Some weird decisions in this one. This game was one play—a review of that third down conversion or a missed 51-yard field goal—from being in overtime, or even a Michigan win, and at that point several bizarre decisions by Mel Tucker get a lot more scrutiny: setting up a fourth and two by running on third and six and then attempting a 40 yard field goal, which missed. Doing that a second time. Running on third and long when Michigan's corners are a walking PI/holding flag.

The signals were disconcerting. The "MOVE" gambit from the Army game last year got flagged. You can hear McGrone bark something very close to "HUT" as Michigan's line shifts:

Michigan is clearly hoping this happens—there is immediate we-got-em clapping. McGrone tries to play it off; the intent is clear, and that's a flag.

Blindside block calls are out of control. This MSU screen got called back because the WR blocking down on Ross catches him unaware and puts him on the ground:

LB #12 to top

That's a good block. It's not the WR's fault that Ross's awareness is poor on this play. This isn't the kind of violent cheapshot that this rule was initially supposed to address. Those feature two guys running full bore, usually on special teams. This is a WR hitting a stationary linebacker.

Michigan was the beneficiary of a similarly iffy call against Minnesota. I understand the intent of the rule but it's expanded past protecting players from dangerous hits.

ELSEWHERE

As is tradition after crushing losses I haven't been on the internet, so we'll try to wrap some links into UV tomorrow.

Comments

abertain

November 2nd, 2020 at 1:24 PM ^

Haskins deserves more credit here. He got 8 carries, and he bulldozed, juked and stiff-armed dudes on two of them. He looks like the 1 with Corium as the change of pace back. 

I didn't think Milton would be great. I was more camp Brian. He's been better than I expected, but he's also not looking like a world-beater. 

As for Harbaugh, my God it was terrible under Hoke and RR. Harbaugh has been mostly good to very good, and he's changed at OC when he had needed to. Sadly, we all thought we were getting a great college coach, and we had one for 2 years. The last four haven't been the same, but it's crazy to say he should be fired. 

 

gruden

November 2nd, 2020 at 5:04 PM ^

You certainly don't have to agree that he should be fired, but I don't see how it's an irrational position to want Harbaugh gone.  We've lost three home games to MSU with Harbaugh, all of which featured a lot of questionable decisions and strategies from the coaching staff.  We are no longer competitive against OSU.  We haven't won a single B1G championship or even been in the game. 

While Harbaugh leaving won't necessarily make things better, there's definitely a rational argument many have made here for him not being kept around.  There's just no progress or consistency.

micheal honcho

November 2nd, 2020 at 1:26 PM ^

What I see. 
MSU isn’t as bad as their worst game(Rutgers).and isn’t as good as their best(I think that was Saturday)

Michigan isn’t as good as their first game(best? I don’t think so) but likewise is not as bad as their worst(Saturday? I think so) 

This leaves me asking , other than the evil Michigan hating football Gods, why did it converge on Saturday in a game that should have both sides at or near maximum focus? 
 

I can only guess complacency. Our team spent an entire freaky off season hyper focused on all the standard and unusual obstacles in front of them, held their breath awaiting the chance to show their work, got that chance on national TV and looked like it all paid off. How would you react internally in the week following that? 
 

If I’m right we grease Indiana on Saturday with a renewed focus from everyone. All is OK. Not great or even very good. Just OK. In 2020 I’m grabbing OK like the last of the pizza. 
 

 

Mongo

November 2nd, 2020 at 1:41 PM ^

Yes, I think the prep in their first real game week was likely soft due to the Minnesota blowout.  I guarantee you it won't be soft this week.  Also, there was a fair amount of in-game momentum type killers ... getting beat deep by poor CB play, questionable PI calls, or just the circus catches on shitty arm punts.  Snake bit is one way to describe it, but sometimes "bad luck" follows the ill-prepared. 

gruden

November 2nd, 2020 at 5:09 PM ^

If I’m right we grease Indiana on Saturday with a renewed focus from everyone.

Not sure about the source of your optimism.  Indiana is a better team than MSU, and they are always prepared for M.  I can almost guarantee they will throw lots of long balls.  How optimistic are you the defense will do anything better?  Grab that pizza fast.

Wolverine 73

November 2nd, 2020 at 1:27 PM ^

Personally, I went from angry to just depressed.  We hire a proven winner, pay him a huge salary, he recruits well, has six years to build his program, pick his coordinators, and we go out and lose to a POS State team that just got destroyed by Rutgers.  Why is this so damn hard?  We ought to be winning 10-11 games a year, beating OSU every now and then and curb stomping MSU yearly.  

Dean Pelton

November 2nd, 2020 at 1:28 PM ^

I said if before but this was 2017 all over again. Michigan got a win over a team that was thought to be good going into the season. There were some issues but everyone wanted to gloss over those. MSU turned the ball over a bunch of times and lost in what seemed like convincing fashion but actually didn’t play that bad. Both times Michigan came into the game against MSU flat and unprepared. Do the coaches even watch film? MSU actually didn’t play that bad against Rutgers and moved the ball well at times. Rutgers got some very short fields because of turnovers. It was the same in 2017 the ND vs MSU game. MSU turned the ball over 3 or 4 times and but other wise played well. I didn’t watch the game but it sounds like Michigan went away from everything that worked against MSU last year. The whole team from the coaches on down seemed like the didn’t prepare at all. I said 3-5 before the season but I will be surprised if Michigan wins another game. 

Mongo

November 2nd, 2020 at 1:31 PM ^

When I watched the OSU v PSU game, the man coverage was just the way Michigan played it.  Lot's of hand fighting but no PI calls.  Both sides did it in man and it looked fair to me.  Here, the calls were not equatible and that cost us real points.  But I agree, with Ambry opting-out this year there is a big hole in the CB room.  Gray is not the answer and the others, like Green and Seldon, are just too young and a year away from functional.  I guess that is a recruiting issue, but maybe just bad luck due to Covid.  If Ambry was in this game, much of that stuff would have been shutdown and we win the game comfortably.  

As far as holding calls, MSU always gets away with murder.  It will be interesting if Brian's UFR reveals the reason MSU's mediocre OTs could shutdown Hutch and Paye.  Seems highly unlikely it was their athletic prowess, but that is just a guess.  Fox just stinks in re-plays and football analysis, being more interested in cuts to the faces of the players / coaches to get at the "feels" of what is going on in the drama.

Overall, the UM OL was awful.  Here I thought MSU was really well coached in the run defense and Simmons was always in the right gap.  Our OL looked lost and on their heels.  MSU has a good front DL and it showed we don't (yet) have a good OL.

MGoBlue96

November 2nd, 2020 at 1:38 PM ^

Yeah, count me in the skeptical camp that MSU did not get away with at least a handful of callable holds on Paye and Hutchinson. There were at least a couple on Paye that caused him to be a half a second late that I saw. But honestly at this point we know UM doesn't get hold calls, as it is a 5-6 year trend at this point. Unfortunately their only option is to fight through and find a way to get there still.

It does piss me off when people make excuses for officials because of how one team played, because no matter what they should call a fair game. It obviously does not excuse UM's piss poor performance though.

MGoBlue96

November 2nd, 2020 at 3:16 PM ^

Eh, that is not technically true, their winning score ends at their 15 if the non catch is reviewed. Though who knows if UM comes down and scores the winning td after still. UM played badly and the officials were piss poor and did have some impact, both things can be true. Replay official in particular has no excuse for not reviewing that one. 

MGoBlue96

November 3rd, 2020 at 10:22 AM ^

How is saying a replay official should review a call that impacted a scoring drive incorrect? There is literally nothing that can logically be argued against that.

You want to know why the Big Ten officials are shitty ever year? Because people always find a way to make excuses for them and not hold them accountable. 

This is not a UM issue, this is a Big Ten officials are consistently god awful every year issue and they do in fact impact games. Again it is not either or, we can acknowledge that a team played and coached poorly, while also acknowledging that officials did have an impact.

MGoStrength

November 2nd, 2020 at 1:39 PM ^

People can talk about firing coordinators or even the head coach. The former won't matter; the latter won't happen. 

Why, why, why?  Why wouldn't changes coaches or coordinators matter?  Are we saying UM is doomed to be a 3-5 loss team every year no matter what?  I don't believe that.  I don't believe that if hypothetically Urban Meyer or Nick Saban somehow miraculously became our next head coach or that Brent Venables & Joe Moorehead weren't our coordinators they couldn't do better, recruit better, be better schematically, and win more. 

AlbanyBlue

November 2nd, 2020 at 1:39 PM ^

Wow, no wonder I enjoy this site so much -- I feel essentially the same as Brian.

I have pulled back and pulled back more during the RR / Hoke / Harbaugh years. Especially since the story just keeps repeating and repeating. I will always love Michigan football, and M sports in general, but I've had to protect my psyche.

I've said most of it already, but in the Harbaugh era, it's either the stubbornness - running into stacked boxes over and over -  or the vague feeling that the coaches are trying to out-smart the other side, but just end up being obvious. The best example is the wildcat formation. You have an effective dual-threat QB, but you want to be cutesy, so you put in a smaller dude to essentially function the same way that your more effective QB would. And it gets crushed. Twice. Because that shit is obvious.

You could give to the really talented dude who scored from 8 yards out using his speed. Nope, run a fucking play that's on tape multiple times, so MSU knows exactly what you're going to do.

But I'm to the "eh" point. It's over. And this is how it's going to be. We're going to win some games, but these types of losses will persist. And we'll continue to lose our last two games. Rinse. Repeat.

Eh. Bring on basketball.

 

MGoStrength

November 2nd, 2020 at 2:00 PM ^

It makes it hard to be an engaged fan.  I'm at the point where I have to DVR every game, wait until it's over to see the score, and then only watch the games we win.  Against OSU I don't even bother to do this.  This is a terrible way to be a fan, but it's all I can do unless I want to get super frustrated and ruin my Saturday afternoon.

AlbanyBlue

November 2nd, 2020 at 6:18 PM ^

100% exactly. Watching football is supposed to be fun. Michigan football is not fun to watch, and it hasn't been for a while. The most frustrating part is trotting out a scheme that utilizes our talent well (Minnesota) and following it up with a sludgefart. That's why I say Jim had his hand in it. That game plan has him written all over it.

bronxblue

November 2nd, 2020 at 2:17 PM ^

The frippery continues to drive me crazy, mostly because it doesn't seem unnecessary anymore.  I absolutely get not wanting to throw tiny Shea Patterson at the goal line, but Milton is the size of a tall fullback and runs like one PLUS he is a very credible pass threat.  Putting in a RB for a direct snap makes the defense's job easier, and that's not remotely a good idea.

Anyway, yeah, I'm sorta there with you.  I watch the games and they're fun, but Brian is around my age and life stage and you can tell that the passion you need to be perpetually aggrieved by mediocrity has faded a bit.  I guess this makes the blog enjoyable for me and my sensibilities but I assume others find it less so.

jimt1023

November 2nd, 2020 at 1:44 PM ^

At this point, the only "hope" I have left is the belief that at some point we've got to get insanely lucky and just accidentally beat Ohio State.  If it happens in the next 50-60 years I might even be alive to see it.

lhglrkwg

November 2nd, 2020 at 2:08 PM ^

Weird how much Don Brown's star has faded. In some ways I feel like the game passed him by. Maybe this hyper-aggressiveness and all costs worked wonders against smaller schools where the QBs are terrible. It worked for us when we rolled NFL guys 2-deep at both CB and the entire D-line. Now we have bad corners and a bad D-line and we're just gonna keep doing this no matter how bad it goes. Maybe Don literally has no other solution? Has the OSU game ever felt like as much of a guaranteed loss as this one is?

It's a little depressing that firing Harbaugh seems to be completely off the table. I know you're wishing to Nebraska yourself, but Nebraska also doesn't have the same foundation that Michigan has. They're in a talent wasteland and they really don't have the Brand Power that Michigan has. That might upset some Huskers but it's true. If firing Harbaugh is off the table, then this program is basically setting its ceiling at 2nd or 3rd in the east and playing for a NY6 bowl here and there. There's no hope of ever overcoming OSU unless Ryan Day leaves and OSU shoots themself in the foot by making an awful hire

Mgoczar

November 2nd, 2020 at 2:21 PM ^

I believe at the end of the season Brown leaves. I have no "source" or anything but Harbaugh is not stupid. All of the blogship groupthink and still he is a coach. People can debate his merit but guy knows football. I think bringing in some of these "new" coaches etc who are zone guys is start of transition. I think that will be the news at the end of the season. 

But yea, Harbaugh isn't getting fired. 

M Squared

November 3rd, 2020 at 9:28 AM ^

Re: your curiosity about Don Brown, during his early success at Michigan, I always felt that Greg Mattison didn’t get enough credit. Our d-lines were game changers. 
 

The year that Mattison left, our d-line started to deteriorate immediately.  Mattison was a difference maker, and it shows with Don Brown’s declining success. 

KC Wolve

November 2nd, 2020 at 2:21 PM ^

So basically Brian and current Jim Harbaugh are the same person? Makes a lot of sense as apathy has apparently taken over both of them. 

I didn't get get to watch and am very glad as it apparently wasn't much fun. I too am indifferent for the most part as I have no idea what can be done to change things. To me, it all comes down to one question? Where did 2016/2017 Jim Mother Fucking Harbaugh go? He was/is the person needed to fix this shit in my opinion and he just fucking disappeared out of nowhere and hasn't been seen in 4 years. If he is truly gone forever, I'm cool with current Jim moving on and trying something else, but who gives a shit at this point?

pdgoblue25

November 2nd, 2020 at 2:37 PM ^

I almost feel like Dax needs to play corner after what I just saw this past saturday. 

Something needs to be done if Don Brown is going to continue sitting around trying to fuck a door knob.

BlueinLansing

November 2nd, 2020 at 2:54 PM ^

Harbaugh era is only marginally better than Hoke era.  We don't look like a clown show most of the time, even pound teams into oblivion who are terrible.  We're one play of the century and 2 inexplicably dumb performances on our own field against MSU from completely owning them under Harbaugh.

We are not in Ohio State's league and will not be for the forseeable future.

However, if JT is short the entire narrative of this tenure is different.  Harbaugh know that too, his soul has been in shock since that moment and he's never looked the same.

 

Its been disappointing but jesus, can this program catch one god damn break.

LKLIII

November 2nd, 2020 at 5:47 PM ^

This is baffling to me.  They're identical twins.

I know the other one got an injury & missed a year of HS football. I'm sure that set him back in terms of strength/development, but that was a good 3 or 4 years ago. You'd think with dilligent injury rehab, the identical twin would be at least in the ballpark of his brother, but I've never heard a peep about the guy in terms of practice buzz, challenging for a spot on the 2 deep, etc.....

Blau

November 2nd, 2020 at 3:20 PM ^

Hmmm... Brian mentions that this game was a few plays away from a tie or even UM leading at some point. While that may be true in some context, we were much closer to losing by 2 or 3 TDs no problem.

The final score of this game is deceiving to say the least. At no point past the 1st quarter should’ve anyone associated with Michigan football have felt comfortable with the direction of that game.

Chork

November 2nd, 2020 at 3:22 PM ^

I like that Brian's first response (as an internet personality) is to stay off of the internet when UM shits the bed.  Perfect MGoBlog status.

nerv

November 2nd, 2020 at 4:03 PM ^

Ok, but I really didnt mind the final season of Battlestar Galactica. In fact I would much rather discuss that then Michigan sports.

BradyIsNumberT…

November 2nd, 2020 at 5:09 PM ^

omg.  we have free football we were not supposed to get.  This year will be crazy.  We will beat teams we should lose to and lose to teams we should beat.  i am just glad i have something to get so upset about again.

LKLIII

November 2nd, 2020 at 5:44 PM ^

The Offensive UFR from Minnesota was pretty glowing about Vestardis in terms of line calls & blitz/stunt pick-ups.  

Did we just have an incredibly small sample size Minnesota gave us? Or were their blitzes & stunts comically simplistic or telegraphed or something?

Because I find it difficult to believe that Vestardis was screwing up all of that against MSU if he was grading out super well on similar activity against Minnesota.

Or were all those calls & pick-ups done correctly BOTH games by Vestardis, but one or more of the OL just played like total ass (Filiaga? Hayes?) and blew all the assignments Vestardis was correctly calling?