in this metaphor i guess the nebraska safety is the ball? [Patrick Barron]

Buckner vs Buckner Comment Count

Brian October 11th, 2021 at 1:27 PM

10/9/2021 – Michigan 32, Nebraska 29 – 6-0, 3-0 Big Ten

At the end of seminal 1998 poker movie Rounders, Mike McDermott walks back into the underground club where he lost his whole bankroll years before. He says he "feels like Buckner walking back into Shea." I watched Rounders again a couple months ago because having something on to pay attention to is helpful when your personal life is spiraling towards divorce.

I came to regret this, because the phrase would not leave my mind.

In my current situation, Shea is damn near everywhere. The park I walk through to get my kid from school was  the site of a couple other walks, late night ones. The little court I cut through to get there is one letter off the name of the town we stayed on an anniversary trip that felt like it would be the end of the bad times and the beginning of the good ones, until it wasn't. I've lived in the same town—the same part of the same town—for 15 years. Everything and everywhere reminds me of the state of things.

Buckner walking back into Shea, if Shea was the Big Bang. Or, no: more like that episode of The Next Generation when Beverley Crusher gets stuck in a universe that keeps getting smaller.

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

Consider two football teams, now. Both are ancient and dignified and scattered apart on the sands of what used to be a championship-level program. Both are run by former quarterbacks from the glory days. Neither has broken through in the way their large, absurdly devoted fanbases want. One constantly shoots itself in the foot just on the verge of poking through. The other does the same thing but somehow one feels more like a Three Stooges movie and the other a Lars Von Trier joint. Which is which depends on which team you're a fan of.

History has decided that these two teams are going to play each other, and that it's going to be close. Inevitably whatever happens now will go in the collective psychosis of the loser. The winner? Dopamine hit, sure. But if Bill Buckner walked back into Shea and fielded a routine grounder it wouldn't change a whole lot. Damage is quick, recovery is long.

If you ignore the jersey color of the winner, then, the result here was foreordained. More mania for Nebraska fans looking at a punt that went the wrong way and a late fumble and oh God whatever it takes to lose to Illinois. More caution for Michigan fans who do not trust that anything can be good. One fanbase spirals down, the other barely increments up. The moral arc of college football is always towards derangement.

After the game Cade McNamara stood in front of a reporter and told her that "previous Michigan teams lose this game." He prefaced that with a "no disrespect" gesture. That hit in the same way any "I'm not an X, but" statement does. There must be a German word for it, the phrase that disclaims the thing you're about to do and only intensifies how hard you're doing it. That was disrespect—disrespect that was on some level deserved. Previous Michigan teams have lost this game and others like it.

This Michigan team is probably going to as well, because that's what happens in college football unless you're one of the elites living in the recruiting arcologies Alabama, Georgia, and Ohio State have built. And in this weird post-covid year, even two of those three. The Revenge Tour team that did seem like a playoff team lost a cosmically dumb and stupid and dumb game against Iowa, and then ate The Spot a couple weeks later. There's no shame in being caught up in the tides of college football.

I don't trust it and probably won't trust it until long after it is reasonable to do so. But okay. You went into Shea—in this case a road game against an approximately top 25 team per the fancystats—and fielded a grounder. A tricky one, even. A cool tile has gone down over some lava. Trust comes back one tile at a time, and maybe this time the Michigan team won't lose those games. And when they do maybe it won't feel like another in a long line of errors.

AWARDS

Known Friends and Trusted Agents Of The Week

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[Barron]

-2535ac8789d1b499[1]you're the man now, dog

#1 Brad Hawkins. The crucial strip and recovery to set up the winning points, plus an equally critical fourth down stop on Nebraska's first drive. I can't say for certain that he wasn't part of some of Nebraska's big plays but I'm pretty sure none of them were on him; he in fact had to clean up one when he came over to tackle a wheel route that (probably) Green busted on. Almost knocked that ball out for another turnover on downs.

#2 Hassan Haskins. The hurdle, of course, and several other grunting runs where he makes four or five yards after contact with his combination of power and balance. 5.9 YPC against a real defense despite frequent short yardage deployment.

#3 Jake Moody. More than just a guy who makes field goals. He's a guy who makes field goals in the same exact way, casually drawing them in from the left hash mark. Kick goes up, kick looks slightly wide, have now been trained to interpret that as a sign something good is going to happen.

Honorable mention: Uh Aidan Hutchinson was PFF's defensive player of the week again so I guess he should get an HM. Dax Hill turned in one spectacular INT and several other plays. Blake Corum had 18 touches that averaged 7 yards each. Josh Ross delivered several thumping tackles. The OL checks in here with special mention to Stueber, who was paving.

KFaTAotW Standings.

(points: #1: 8, #2: 5, #3: 3, HMs one each. Ties result in somewhat arbitrary assignments.)

23: Aidan Hutchinson (HM WMU, #2 Wash, #1 Rutgers, #1 Wisc, HM Neb)
17: The OL (#1 Wash, #1 NIU, HM Neb)
12: Hassan Haskins (HM WMU, T3 Wash, T2 NIU, #2 Neb), Blake Corum (#2 WMU, T3 Wash, T2 NIU, HM Neb)
8: Ronnie Bell (#1 WMU), Brad Hawkins (#1 Neb)
7: Dax Hill (#3 WMU, HM NIU, HM Rutgers, HM Wisc, HM Neb)
6: Nikhai Hill-Green(HM NIU, #2 Rutgers)
5: David Ojabo (#2 Wisc), Brad Robbins (HM Wash, #3 Rutgers, HM Wisc), Jake Moody (HM Wash, HM Wisc, #3 Neb)
4: AJ Henning (HM WMU, #3 NIU), Josh Ross (HM Wash, HM NIU, HM Rutgers, HM Neb)
3: Donovan Edwards(T2 NIU), Roman Wilson (#3 Wisc)
2: Cornelius Johnson(HM NIU, HM Wisc),
1: Andrew Vastardis (HM WMU),Mike Sainristil (HM WMU),  Mazi Smith (HM Wash), Gemon Green(HM NIU), Chris Hinton (HM Rutgers)

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

Hawkins's late strip and recovery sets Michigan up for a chip shot to win.

Honorable mention: Sainristil lays out for a long ball. Haskins hurdles a dude. Corum zips through an insert iso for a touchdown-creating chunk.

image​MARCUS HALL EPIC DOUBLE BIRD OF THE WEEK.

McNamara throws a terrible interception immediately after a Nebraska TD, setting up their go-ahead score.

Honorable mention: Illegal formation TD, various missed deep shots, Nebraska quackery getting Michigan's linebackers running after ghosts.

[After THE JUMP: hello ground game]

OFFENSE

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[Barron]

Live by the deep ball, die by the deep ball. McNamara's deep shots in this game were not on point. Even the one he hit to Sainristil took him off his feet, which ended up taking four points off the board when Michigan couldn't punch it in from the five. Other opportunities were largely uncatchable. At times I was reminded of Wilton Speight against Iowa in Kinnick, when hitting any one of five or six shots would have been enough.

But he did hit the one, even if it required a circus catch, and Michigan moved the ball pretty well. I feel conflicted about McNamara's overall performance to date, performance in this game, performance against Wisconsin, etc. I am wishy-washy about all of it.

Leak. Michigan did this three times:

That's gonna be some RPS, dinking to your TE for critical third down conversions.

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[Barron]

The run game returns. Wisconsin may be that good on the ground and Michigan may be quite good when they're not disrespecting Rutgers. Michigan ran a lot of successful gap stuff, some insert iso, some split zone (which felt pretty meh) and got two big plays in which they blocked a for a bunch of yards and then their backs went and got some more. (The third big play, Corum's TD, was bash on which the OL was not relevant.)

This is a defense that shut down MSU by shooting Spartan OL back on a down-to-down basis. This performance is a major boost to the idea that Michigan's ground game is potent even against good teams. Now if you can work in some more RPO/keeper stuff based on that. However…

Short yardage is a problem. Particularly when the field gets compressed. Bill Connelly on Michigan's fatal flaw:

Michigan's goal-to-go touchdown rate is just 77%, and their red zone TD rate is 62%. Both rank 68th in the country.

This is quite a comedown from the days when the crowd was outraged when Michigan did anything but give the ball to Ben Mason on a FB dive, and that's despite having a mooseback like Haskins available.

Michigan did have an unfortunate occurrence in this game when McNamara got stepped on and his knee hit the ground an instant before he handed the ball to Haskins for a walk-in TD, but the overall picture is a little concerning. Michigan does not have a manball short yardage package and they don't have a mobile quarterback to make up for it. Even McCarthy, the nominally mobile guy, is just an average-sized dude who happens to be fast and not a short-yardage bulldozer type.

I don't know if there are good solutions available; this feels like a thing that's going to remain a problem.

51574525006_d1f5124a7e_k

[Barron]

Baldwin can go. Baldwin took a nothing hitch and broke out 10-15 YAC, which he's done in a couple other games. Michigan didn't seem to have any WR issues even down Bell and Wilson, and I wonder if he's still acclimating to major college football and has some rapid improvement left in the tank. He certainly seems like he's got the physical package.

I'll allow it. This looks more like attempting to unscrew the top of a thermos than eating corn but if  you're fast enough to outrun a pretty good DE despite a cutback to him you get to celebrate however you want.

Corum also added to his "Mike Hart but fast" reel by spinning through two tacklers and toughing out a first down after receiving a dink pass.

McCarthy's got to be able to throw Denard stuff. McCarthy's one throw in this game was a dink to the flat that was dropped. Seems like you'd rather take shots with him since he's dropped in two beautiful bombs to Baldwin already and he's currently the stunt casting running QB who should be sucking up safeties.

Self scout the late QB runs. Michigan turned to QB runs on critical downs late a few years ago. At this point that tendency has been scouted into the ground. Witness Rutgers's QBR blitz that ate up McNamara and McCarthy getting swarmed just before the winning field goal in this game.

DEFENSE

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ope [Barron]

Alas, no-bust season, we knew thee well. Nebraska was always going to be the most serious test of Michigan's spooky ability to not let guys run willy-nilly, uncovered, despite transitioning to a new defense. Nebraska has a running quarterback and does a bunch of cool stuff. They love them a throwback because frontside action against a guy like Martinez has to be respected, and one of the best ways to detonate a young linebacker is a throwback. Check:

That's so confused that I'm not sure who's supposed to have the running back, Ross or Hill-Green. Looks like both and neither.

Later Nebraska went with an end around fake that stopped and turned into a swing pass.

image

The guy in man to man coverage on that receiver? #4, who's standing on the ten yard line, barely in the frame. That's going to be a big minus for Gray but also a big RPS win. Nebraska does cool stuff.

51573571127_00092ef9ab_k

[Barron]

But also Michigan got some of theirs. The fourth and two stop on the initial Nebraska drive looks like a scouting win to me. When Nebraska motions in their WR, Mike Morris puts eyes on him, expecting a crack block that comes. He dismisses it. Then the guy replacing is not a cornerback but Hawkins, because Michigan literally has no corners on the field:

So Morris strings it out, Hawkins sheds the lead block, and Michigan gets off the field.

Okay: I believe in the DTs about 64%. For one, I should apologize to Mazi Smith since I claimed that the DTs didn't do anything in pass rush. Smith was about an instant away from causing another turnover:

They didn't do a lot. They did something.

More notable to me: Michigan stuffed Nebraska on two key third downs with Jenkins/Speight/Jeter on the field. One was the third down right before the play embedded in the above bullet; the second was a  third and one where Jenkins shed the LT and stood up the RB with help from a linebacker. Personally I would not have had those guys on the field on key third downs, but I mean… okay.

The one contain blip. Michigan has two DEs who are edge rushing around the corner, and this can be a problem against a guy like Martinez. This third and eleven was about to be a punt when Hutchinson went around the edge, but there was a huge gap because Ojabo did the same thing, less effectively, and zip zap zoop:

Mike Morris also has some responsibility there as he tries to drive inside and cannot react. If Michigan can delay Martinez at all before he exits the pocket the linebackers can rally and hold this down. When you have Hutchinson going up against a true freshman you should be assuming that the QB is going to flush up in the pocket. Michigan did a good job of this the rest of the night but this was killer because Nebraska's illegal formation touchdown was right after.

This is our concern. Michigan took a couple of egregious PI/holding calls in this game that were bad echoes of last year:

Turner had another one on Oliver Martin, who is Nebraska's #4 receiver and a guy who had to transfer twice to get on the field, that was just as bad.

Nebraska is the first functional passing game to roll into town, and they've got a couple of athletic guys. I am concerned that guys like Jahan Dotson, anyone on Ohio State, and that one guy who did the thing for MSU last year and then evaporated are going to be a problem because Michigan's CB play isn't meaningfully improved against non-meatballs.

SPECIAL TEAMS

Henning shorts out. Rough, rough day for him as he 1) lost three yards on a return, 2) let a punt bounce at the ten and was fortunate that Nebraska let it slip into the endzone, and 3) muffed a second punt. Caden Kolesar briefly getting the job now makes more sense even if he was letting a bunch of them drop.

Robbins right turn. Brad Robbins had another punt hit close to the endzone and then take a 90 degree turn. I fear this man.

MISCELLANEOUS

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[Barron]

When taunting is encouraged. The above got flagged as a dead ball foul after a turnover on downs, which meant exactly nothing. In these situations the flags that come out are more like little festive party favors.

Oblig referee complaining. This is not a legal formation:

image

There's been a lot of discussion about whether the bust was induced by the fact that you can't do that and coverage rules aren't written to deal with four eligibles to one side of the formation. It seems like the answer could well be yes since you get these trips formations with a covered TE a ton and defenses must be used to ignoring that guy as an eligible WR. But also that guy is way off the LOS, so I don't know.

One thing I do not buy is the Q-Anon level conspiracy theorizing that Nebraska lined up in an obviously illegal formation and hoped they'd get away with it so they could score a touchdown. We joke about ref incompetency but how many times do you actually see something like this missed? Five percent tops?

Also in what are we doing here. Hassan Haskins got called down three yards short of where he actually landed on one third and short—overturned on review—, Nebraska was offsides on their interception, and uh yeah that PI Michigan got at the end of the first half was absurd.

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[Barron]

In gamesmanship conspiracy theories I believe. Nebraska substituted late on their final TD drive and got Michigan to sub as well. The officials are supposed to hold for the defense to get ready, but because Nebraska was subbing late that would have resulted in a delay of game call. So they got out of the way and Michigan busted on a third and four Martinez keeper.

Going for two. Michigan went up 19-7 with about 3 minutes left in the third quarter and did not get it. This is one of those controversial things I don't have much of an opinion about. The upside there is that if Nebraska scores two touchdowns you're tied instead of behind. The downside is that if Nebraska scores two touchdowns and gets their own two point conversion, you're down a full 3 points and a field goal only ties it. That latter is what transpired. To me this is close to a wash.

Throwing a fade on the attempt, though… woof.

Computers love us. That Connelly article referenced above has a percent chance all the teams in it make the playoff, as calculated by Connelly's finest computers. Michigan's number is 40%, which struck me as ludicrously optimistic. After considering things it does seem optimistic but there's a window here even if Michigan loses to OSU because:

  • Big Ten teams beat Iowa State, Washington, Miami, and Auburn in nonconference play and seized spots atop the polls despite those teams being not as good as expected.
  • Bama's loss makes a two-bid SEC depend on someone beating Georgia in the title game.
  • The playoff committee might tell Cincinnati to pound sand.

So a scenario like B10 champ, Georgia, Oklahoma, 11-1 Michigan w/ loss to OSU and wins over MSU/PSU is feasible. 40% still seems extremely high.

I've decided I don't want to know. No combination of words would make this better.

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[Barron]

Some would make it much worse. Also here is this guy:

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[Barron]

HERE

The Kicker Loves Smelling Salts:

Have you ever tried smelling salts?  The only way I can describe them is what it must feel like to inhale vaporized moonshine.  They smack you with a strange combo of simultaneous confusion and clarity.  If you have the type of screw loose that is required to play fullback or professional hockey, smelling salts can bring you a clarity of purpose and act as your personal rocket fuel.  On this team, the offensive line loves them dating back to 9-on-7 drills that formed their identify in the off-season.  But because this is an all caps TEAM, the kicker from Northville loves smelling salts too. 

Best and Worst:

Similarly, for all the complaints by Nebraska fans that they were hosed by calls in this game, Michigan was the victim of their fair share of questionable calls.  As noted elsewhere, Nebraska got away with a TON of “college crappe”, from illegal formations to rampant holding to the obnoxious clapping on defense that induced 3 false starts.  The fumble by Martinez looked not unlike Erick All fighting for yards on his 3rd-down conversion the drive before, and the refs allowed him to fight for yardage with the understanding that you have to, you know, hold onto the ball.  That joint recovery was the classic “tie goes to the runner”, and I’d argue Martinez’s first non-fumble-incomplete pass falls into a similar vein.  And honestly, the refs were a mess all day – the constant reviews, the weird flags, them completely missing Haskins getting a first down and Harbaugh having to call a TO to force them to review, and even the sliding foot on a UM run that netted them a first down despite it being clear McCarthy was out of bounds a yard earlier.  So a poorly-called game that was disjointed is naturally going to feel “off” for both teams, and so assuming conspiracy where incompetence applies is usually the wrong play.

Seth's cyan remains a SOURCE OF CONTROVERSY:

Folks…

As I'm sure you all know by now, a terrible sin has been committed.  An atrocious wrong, the likes of which have not been seen since. . . uh, breakfast?  Anyway, I apologize for the disturbing content, but this demands answers:

Gasp!  It's unforgivable.  Inconceivable!  (That word may not mean what I think it means.)  I'm sure Cade's looking at that right now, gripping a loaded revolver, holding a bottle of pills, pressing a cloth-wrapped tantō against his abdomen with both hands (cross-legged and dressed in road whites, of course).

Comments

JBLPSYCHED

October 11th, 2021 at 4:13 PM ^

I'm not so sure about that--I've lived 10 minutes from Kinnick for over 20 years (grew up in Ann Arbor and went to U-M) and I think Iowa's rivalries with Minnesota and Wisconsin are much more intense than with Nebraska. No one here talks about Nebraska other than during game week. Iowa's MSU/OSU level rival is Iowa St. And that Nebraska fan's shirt is downright WEIRD.

blueinuk

October 11th, 2021 at 3:00 PM ^

Brian, I'm not sure if you have to battle a voice in your head saying, 'should I include personal things in my post or not?'  But I think it's great you can share a little snapshot of your reality and in some small way trust this little community enough to be vulnerable.  

Memories are difficult.  Though I haven't gone through a divorce, I found re-writing future anticipated memories was even more difficult whenever relationships broke up.

And speaking of writing.  MAN, YOU'VE GOT to find some other things to write about in addition to Michigan football.  You are so gifted.  And I think you have this 'the world should be better than it is' perspective that - can be melancholic at times - but could also be really powerful.  I'm sure you will not respond to this post, but would love to hear what you would write about if it wasn't Michigan sports.  You already have the platform to get published.  I'd buy it and read it!

robpollard

October 11th, 2021 at 3:14 PM ^

This framing doesn't fit my outlook at all:

Neither has broken through in the way their large, absurdly devoted fanbases want. One constantly shoots itself in the foot just on the verge of poking through. The other does the same thing but somehow one feels more like a Three Stooges movie and the other a Lars Von Trier joint. Which is which depends on which team you're a fan of.

History has decided that these two teams are going to play each other, and that it's going to be close. 

Certainly the first sentence is true. But this heavy implication the Jim Harbaugh experience and Scott Frost experience are interchangeable, between similar programs equally damaged, doesn't resonate with me. Taking just this year: this is the second tough game in a row we've won on the road; Nebraska has nothing like that in Frost's entire tenure. Michigan in 2018 beat 3 ranked teams in a row; for Nebraska, *every* time they have played a ranked team under Frost, they have lost.

And history says "it's going to be close"? Literally our last game against them was a massive blowout, 56-10. I don't have a sense of impending doom or "throw out the records!" against Nebraska. We haven't played them enough. Now, playing at Wisconsin I *do* have a sense of impending doom, because of 20 years of history which include multiple QB injuries, but hey, we just won going away there! Progress!

I thought Michigan would go 9-3 this season, and we very well still might (or worse!). I also wish/hope we win double-digits and beat our biggest rivals. But this has been a football season of enjoyment, just like most earlier Harbaugh seasons (if unsatisfying in the end) have had significant high points (e.g., thumping the bejeezus out of ND; DPJ's Paul Bunyan catch against MSU, etc). I'm not going to go around yelling "Who's got it better than us?" because there are clearly teams that do, which disappoints me quite a bit. But I'm also not going to forget there are dozens of teams who have it a lot worse than us. And one of those teams is Nebraska.

 

Double-D

October 11th, 2021 at 3:23 PM ^

Haskins ability to jump defenders is just awesome to watch.

However, more awesome is his ability to slowly move an entire pile of defenders 4-5 yards for a 1st down.

Just wow. 

StellaBlue

October 11th, 2021 at 3:23 PM ^

I did not know Brian was in or near a divorce.  So very sorry man.  It is a very hard thing to endure.  Way fucking harder than anything short of death of a loved one.   And maybe not even that depending on the circumstances.    So thanks for the write up in spite of everything.    Hang in there.

Spitfire

October 11th, 2021 at 3:29 PM ^

I agree with the weakness of the short yardage/goal line offense. It's been a weak spot all year. Strange as it was always a strength on the earlier Harbaugh teams They need to fix this

jmblue

October 11th, 2021 at 3:31 PM ^

Brian, I don’t know how much consolation this message can offer, but I sincerely hope you can find peace in your personal life.  Hopefully Michigan sports can remain a happy diversion as we continue through the school year.

markusr2007

October 11th, 2021 at 3:46 PM ^

Every Christmas families watch that American classic film "Miracle on 34th Street".

There's this part where Doris Walker (Maureen O'Hara) sheds her frosty shell and imparts upon her her confused little daughter Suzie Walker (Natalie Wood) this important little gem:

Faith is believing something when common sense tells you not to”

Doris Walker's character in this film is 1947's version of a strong, independent, stone-cold, pragmatic, realist - a thundering corporate killjoy when it comes to anything ironic, happy, enjoying the moment, holiday, idealistic, romantic, imaginary or fun. 

Perhaps a product of her own disillusionment after divorcing her husband when her daughter was just a baby, and not finding a suitable step-father replacement ever since.  The world is such an unfair place, and it can jade you sharp if you let it. 

There's clearly this overwhelming dread too within her that her daughter's little heart will break into a thousand pieces unless all of the world's imagination and lies are revealed and disposed of. Her daughter must maintain a death grip on logic, reason and reality, or unimaginable disaster.

Michigan is 6-0.

The road games at MSU, at PSU, and even of course some stupid game at Maryland all loom large for the Wolverines.  The dread in our head is almost certainly more residue from the leftover bad juju from Dantonio, from many stupid night time White Out games in Happy Valley, from dropped passes or just more John Donovan-like Michigan Football Experiences in Dumb . 

So yeah these upcoming games seem like the right opportunities to test and then break little Suzie's heart all over again, and drive the whole plot and sequence of a football season into the same, familiar, smelly, muddy ditch we knew we'd end up in from the beginning all along. 

Because isn't that the part where we'll "feel" vindicated? Man it seems like we just can't wait for that "I told ya so!" in the script.

Whatever. 

Suzie is going to tell them to stop the fucking car, she's going run up the steps and to break and enter into some strange house, and then Doris and Mr. Gailey are going to see the same fat man's cane leaning against the wall.  

Where the fuck are you Lovie Smith and your magnificent beard, your bag of goodies and tidings of great joy!??

AlbanyBlue

October 11th, 2021 at 3:53 PM ^

I hate the obsession with the fades in the endzone. If you're going to go with a shitty 2-PT play, then don't go for two. Thinking, "maybe it will work this time" is silly. Have a badass play call if you're going to go for two.

Sambojangles

October 11th, 2021 at 5:19 PM ^

Somewhat lost in the madness of the Red River Shootout and rest of the crazy day Saturday, is the fact that Spencer Rattler was benched for Oklahoma. But, he did come in for one play, the 2-point conversion that OU had to get to tie the game. Clearly, Riley had a go-to play that he trusted Rattler to run better than the new QB. I wish we had the same. 

bluegoinggray

October 11th, 2021 at 3:55 PM ^

Woof. Memories are interesting, sometimes a double edged sword, but ultimately precious. I hope things get better soon. For you. Michigan football is Michigan football. It will be fine, one way or another. 

Blue Vet

October 11th, 2021 at 3:59 PM ^

First, Brian, most importantly, I'm very sorry about your divorce. Having been through it myself, I know how deeply it sucks. Hell, I even had that anniversary trip to fix things that didn't.

Having been through it myself, I send you good vibes and good wishes.

Communist Football

October 11th, 2021 at 4:01 PM ^

PFF Freshman of the week? None other than Xavier Worthy. Did we ever find out what the hell happened there in the admissions department?

TRUE FRESHMAN OF THE WEEK: WR XAVIER WORTHYTEXAS

Worthy was the Longhorns' No. 2 recruit in the 2021 cycle and the 62nd-ranked player overall in the class. But while he was inconsistent to kick off his true freshman season, the 6-foot-1, 160-pound speedster stepped up in a big way when it mattered most against the Sooners.

The Texas wideout hauled in nine of his 10 targets for 261 yards and two scores in Week 6 — a double-take stat line if ever there was one. Of those nine catches, six went for an explosive gain of 15 or more yards, the most by a true freshman wideout in 2021 and tied for the second-most overall in a single game this season.

His track background showed up on the screen he took 75 yards for a score on the first play of the game.

patrickdolan

October 11th, 2021 at 4:05 PM ^

No disrespect but ...

I haven't read all the comments yet, so if this is redundant, I apologize.

The Germans may have a word for it. The Romans certainly did. I learned it in a Chaucer class at Michigan.

Occupatio: A rhetorical device (also known under the Greek name paralipsis) by which a speaker emphasizes something by pretending to pass over it: ‘I will not mention the time when…’ 

rice4114

October 11th, 2021 at 4:22 PM ^

Did anyone notice on the replay called for after the TD the ball was snapped before the refs blew the whistle. At what point is it past the point of no return? Do the players have to be back on the sidelines celebrating post extra point? Its crazy that teams hurry up to get a play off but this shows it really doesnt matter. Im glad the correct call was made but when is it "too late". Kind of confusing.

Wendyk5

October 11th, 2021 at 4:23 PM ^

I'm not divorced but my parents were, twice from each other, and then my father once again from someone new. My worry as a parent would be the kids but they (we) get through it. It's not as uncommon as when I went through it, and I survived, even thrived. Kid will be ok. So will you. Hang in. 

 

As for the season, hope you all realize that you can't predict anything in 2021. Predictions and 2021 are like oil and water. Or peanut butter and pickles.  

TESOE

October 12th, 2021 at 9:41 AM ^

Detroit has bad cars.

Just sayin' - bad corn is bad.

Nebraska fans are awesome BTW, as are Iowa fans. But nothing is as awesome as slamming other B1G schools.  I've lived on the west coast long enough to miss it.  They just don't get it out here.

I have to say that pic is almost as good as the doctored "Get a Brian Morans!" and near as telling.

Let's get a Brian and eat Bad Corn you Morans!

Beat the real NU first!

 

Blue Vet

October 11th, 2021 at 4:34 PM ^

Off-setting taunting penalties.

Surely someone else has commented on the tauntee—the Nebraska player who got taunted—after the penalty flag putting his finger to his mouth in the keep-quiet gesture, which is ALSO taunting.

taistreetsmyhero

October 11th, 2021 at 4:50 PM ^

I’m an eternal pessimist and understand where Brian is coming from with his gloomy outlook on things. But Saturday was an epic football game and this team is really fun to watch. That’s all I can really ask for at the end of the day

MnB Dave

October 11th, 2021 at 5:22 PM ^

It's been at least 10 years since I wrote anything on Michigan football and probably much longer since I posted on this board.  So long in fact that I had to make a new account to do this.

Good luck Brian.  I know you're going through hell right now.  I just wanted to wish you my best as you go through all of this, and let you know that we hope you'll be able to find peace and happiness out of this difficult time.

Dave

Marvin

October 11th, 2021 at 6:26 PM ^

The term Brian is looking for here is “apophasis.” You disavow the precise thing you’re about to do. “I’m no gossip but I heard Susy is sleeping with Jim” etc. 

treetown

October 11th, 2021 at 8:10 PM ^

I'm sorry to hear about your situation and hope that things work out for the best.

Great pop culture call outs.

On the illegal formation, it is fine to have only 1 person in the backfield, 2 is OK, 3 is uncommon and 4 is normal. But to quote Brother Maynard regarding the Holy Hand Grenade of Antioch "Five is right out." 

Sheesh - does the referee supervisor check on these things or does he/she just assume everything must be fine. Is there really such a thing as a referee review or is this something made up to placate the many frustrated fans?

That feeling of anxiety and dread - that something is looming out about to happen was present throughout the game. In the first half, was the failure to get more than 13 points going to be the moment where things started to go bad? Was the 3rd quarter surge by Nebraska and the interception the moment? Was the amazing run by Blake Corum too soon?

Was Hassan Haskins superb leap and run but the drive petering out to a FG rather than the dagger TD, the moment? Was the strip fumble the moment?

Right up to the end, there was a fear that Adrian Martinez would be for a few plays (just like Graham Mertz for two passes at the end of the first half for Wisconsin werewolved into Aaron Rodgers) channel the spirits of David Humm, Jerry Tagge, Tommie Frazier and Vince Ferragamo and lead a last second winning drive?

Would the game end much like the Lars Von Trier film Melancholia when the planet Melancholia does a loop back after a seeming near-miss to obliterate the earth, humanity, and Wolverine fandom hopes forever?

This awful feeling may be why the AFCA National Championship Trophy is a crystal football.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AFCA_National_Championship_Trophy

Awarded to winning team back in the BCS era and still awarded but elbowed aside by the stouter all metal CFC trophy, the trophy is a Waterford Crystal football. Who designed this trophy you may wonder? Why is a football trophy not tough like the metal football on the Super Bowl trophy - capable to being heaved from boats without risk? Was it some crazy committee decision? Or was it a subtle acknowledgement because it symbolizes how fragile all of the hopes are of the fans and coaches - at any moment, right until the end, the whole season can come crashing down and shatter like a crystal football.

 

tokyowolverine

October 11th, 2021 at 9:51 PM ^

Brian, sorry to hear about the marriage...it's really difficult and sometimes things just don't work the way life planned. I hope you and your family find balance to settle into.

cazzie33

October 11th, 2021 at 11:07 PM ^

Excellent insights, as usual. 

Humble proposal: a tighter definition of “chip shot.”

I’d suggest anything under 33 yards (the NFL extra-point distance). 

Is 39 yards a chip shot? Nah. Especially if it visibly draws (to  continue with golf terminology). 

Bet Jake would agree!

UferTime

October 12th, 2021 at 7:56 AM ^

“Damage is quick, recovery is long” cut to the core. Some things in life just hollow you out and the time to fill are far, far away. But, they do happen. And they will happen for you.

TESOE

October 12th, 2021 at 9:10 AM ^

Thanks Brian. Good Luck.

Be the best Dad you can be. Screw everything else.

... and of course. Beat Northwestern.

We are what we habitually do.

You are a leader and the best.

We will follow.

santosbfree

October 12th, 2021 at 9:31 AM ^

Here are some English words that speak to Cade's comments. I am not smart enough to assign any one of these three specifically. Found on the https://wordsmith.org message boards. Sign up for a word a day emails, my dudes.

cataphasis: a kind of paralipsis in which one explicitly affirms the negative qualities that one then passes over.

apophasis: allusion to something by denying that it will be mentioned, as in I will not bring up my opponent's questionable financial dealings.

paraleipsis: pretended or apparent omission by which a speaker artfully pretends to pass by what he really mentions; as, for example, if an orator should say, I do not speak of my adversary's scandalous venality and rapacity, his brutal conduct...

santosbfree

October 12th, 2021 at 9:44 AM ^

Some German terms that could be applied to many Michigan situations...

Fremdscham, "vicarious shame", the shame felt for the behavior of someone else. To be a Michigan fan during the Rodriguez-Hoke-Harbaugh era is to frequently endure fremdscham about their on-field performance

Verschlimmbessern, “to make something worse by trying to improve it.” Frequently Harbaugh has tried to overturn his coaching staff due to failures in big games, true verschlimmbessern!

Weltschmerz, “mental depression or apathy caused by comparison of the actual state of the world with an ideal state.” The year 1997 was a banner one for Michigan fans, but has led to much weltschmerz as we have endured the subsequent years of mostly mediocre football.

Torschlusspanik, “as one gets older, the fear that time is running out and important opportunities are slipping away.” When I was young, I believed that Michigan was due for so many important victories and certain championships, but now I feel deep torschlusspanik knowing that we may never win a Big Ten title again.

markusr2007

October 12th, 2021 at 12:40 PM ^

There seems to be this overwhelming and incessant desire for Michigan Football to finally furnish and wield an infuriating version of Zak Kustok/McKenzie Milton/JT Barrett at QB. 

You know, the kind that hits all the throws with rockets or finesse, who actually keeps on zone read option plays for 7 to 15+ yard runs, who runs QB draws on 3rd and 9 or 3rd and 12 for a first down to the sound of Microsoft tablets being snapped in half on opponent sidelines.  The kind of kid who refuses to sissy-slide in front of free safeties and linebackers like so many of the overpaid NFL eunuchs now pretending to play QB.

it's seems that Michigan fans way too young to remember him still want their 21st century Rick Leach.