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Brian

11/25/2017 – Michigan 20, Ohio State 31 – 8-4, 5-4 Big Ten

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[Bryan Fuller]

John O'Korn sat in a press conference on Saturday and broke down. He blamed himself, and himself alone, for Michigan's latest loss to Ohio State. And he was correct. I don't think I've ever seen a Michigan-Ohio State game so clearly decided by one guy's inability to hack it.

Previous terrible individual performances have been given in concert. The 2007 game featured Chad Henne without a throwing arm, but it also featured an offensive line that had to drag Alex Mitchell out of retirement midseason and the infamous picture that resulted. Nick Sheridan averaged 3.6 yards an attempt the year after, but nobody missed the forest for that particular tree as Michigan finished a 3-9 season with a 42-7 loss. And so forth and so on. The sad fact of the last decade of Michigan football is that when Michigan gets in a competitive game against Ohio State it's usually because someone is playing over their head.

This was different. This was Michigan feeling like the better football team except for one glaring black hole at the most important position on the field. The crowd felt the agony of this keenly with every errant pass or unnecessary sack. O'Korn was not booed, per se, but the desperate groans that issued involuntarily from the assembled masses were almost worse. There's a certain tenor of "ohhhawwww" a crowd can issue that is the pure, distilled sound of frustration. I have memorized this after Saturday, and find it replaying in my head whenever there's a spare neuron not playing Baby Signing Time songs. (This is rarely.)

Even after all those moans Michigan had not one but two shots to go ahead very late. Those ended with back-to-back throws that are burned into the retinas of every Michigan fan and will be replayed when "John O'Korn" is mentioned. Possibly even corn. Or Korn. I can't mention my Pandora station ever again on this website. Those throws were a fourth and four pass that went yards over the head of a screamingly wide open Chris Evans and an interception on which two Michigan receivers were open, and not within 20 yards of the ball.

That is O'Korn's football gravestone, chiseled, checked, and done.

O'Korn knows it, and wasn't going to offer up any bullshit platitudes afterwards. Say what you want about his play—although I can't imagine there's any excoriation in any language that hasn't already been delivered—but the guy did not shy away from the enormity of the thing that had just happened to him, a living, breathing human who has to go through the next sixty years introducing himself to people and hoping they've never heard of the most popular sport in America.

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

At about the same time O'Korn was breaking down in public, someone logged on to this website and typed "fuck John O'Korn," into it, posted it, and then got a bunch of upvotes. A guy who started arguing with the various toxic manbabies in this thread that O'Korn was a virtually unpaid person thrust into a position he should never have been in was consistently downvoted.

After taking down several threads and banning a dozen people I yanked commenting for about a day. Naturally, this resulted in these same people fleeing to twitter to tell me it was PATHETIC that I COULDN'T HANDLE NEGATIVITY, because I didn't want them throwing their poop in a place I feel responsible for. And I didn't want to wonder what they were saying while I was doing anything other than commenting on Michigan football. Also, I hate them.

If you're one of these people reading this column I'd like to make it clear that there is something wrong with you. The vast majority of people who come to this site don't post on it, because it is like every other website in the world. Those that do are split between normal people with something to say, and you, the person too dumb to know you shouldn't say anything. You are a tiny minority of this fanbase that gets outsized attention because you're dumb and loud, and most people are willing to throw away the good parts of the comments because of you:

Next football season will not be like this, because you will be gone from this website. If you have any doubt in your mind whether I'm talking about you, yes, I am talking about you. If you're mad at Ace for saying the fanbase is the worst part of his job, I'm talking about you. Because he's not talking about 90% of the fanbase, he's talking about you.

No one needs to yell at John O'Korn, who clearly understands the implications of what just occurred in ways you do not. Nobody needs to say anything to John O'Korn ever again. Dude needs a hug and a Malaysian passport. And even though O'Korn just set a winnable Ohio State game on fire in a way that has probably never happened before or will happen again, I care a lot more about his feelings than some jabroni on the internet who doesn't have to introduce himself under his screen name.

That's it. There's no big sweeping theme here, nothing about the direction of this program or where this fits in the historical firmament. Just an incredibly obvious black hole...

...and a bunch of people who are incapable of seeing it.

AWARDS

Known Friends And Trusted Agents Of The Week

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

#1 Rashan Gary. Finally got a little sack luck, as Devin Bush flushed Barrett to him on one of his two sacks. He added a third TFL amongst ten tackles, which is a very large number for a DE, especially because he missed a big chunk of OSU's first TD drive with a recurrence of the shoulder stinger (or similar injury) that he's been battling all season.

#2 Mike McCray. Eight solo tackles and two TFLs as McCray was a major factor in Michigan's ability to keep OSU to under 200 yards of offense until a late fade, none of which was on him. He didn't get edged, and managed to survive the return of Oh No Mike McCray On A Flanked Out Running Back without getting targeted.

#3(T) Chris Evans and Karan Higdon. Michigan's tailback duo had 165 yards on 28 touches, 5.9 yards a pop. Evans caught five passes as Michigan finally paid off on that preseason hype; Higdon was able to get the corner a couple times as well. If the offensive line can come together next year one or both are candidates to have All Big Ten season... or at least they would be if they weren't going to cannibalize each others' carries.

Honorable mention: Mo Hurst and Devin Bush turned in excellent performances; Michigan's cornerbacks again almost pitched a shutout, albeit with the aid of a couple drops. DPJ set up Michigan's second touchdown. Mason Cole had an edge two for one that sprung Crawford early in the third to get Michigan's third TD.

KFaTAotW Standings.

9: Rashan Gary(T2 Indiana, #1 Rutgers, T2 Wisconsin, #1 OSU).   
8:
Devin Bush (#1 Florida, T2 Cincinnati, T2 Air Force, #1 Purdue), Mo Hurst (#1 MSU, #2(T), Indiana, #1 Wisconsin),  Karan Higdon (#1 Indiana, #2 PSU, T2 Minnesota, T3 OSU).
6: Mason Cole (#1 Cincinnati, T2 Rutgers, T3 Minnesota), Chase Winovich(#1 Air Force, #2a Purdue, T2 Wisconsin),
5: Khaleke Hudson (T2 Cincinnati, #3 PSU, #1 Minnesota), David Long (T3 Indiana, #1 PSU, #3 Maryland)    
4: Chris Evans(T2 Minnesota, #2 Maryland).   
3: Ty Isaac (#2, Florida, #3 Cincinnati), Lavert Hill(#2 MSU, T3 Indiana)), Josh Metellus (#1 Maryland), Mike McCray(T2 Air Force, #2 OSU).
2: Quinn Nordin (#3 Florida, #3 Air Force), John O'Korn (#2 Purdue), Sean McKeon(T3 Purdue, #3 Rutgers), Mike Onwenu(T2 Rutgers),
1: Tyree Kinnel (T2 Cincinnati),  Zach Gentry (T3 Purdue), Brad Robbins(#3 MSU), Brandon Watson (T3 Indiana), Ben Bredeson(T3 Minnesota), Donovan Peoples-Jones (#3 Wisconsin).

Who's Got It Better Than Us Of The Week

The entire first quarter? Yes, that.

Honorable mention: Oh man I should not have used up the whole first quarter before the honorable mention section. That was a real good first quarter. Oh: Kekoa Crawford

imageMARCUS HALL EPIC DOUBLE BIRD OF THE WEEK.

Of the two chiseled, checked, and done plays the Evans miss stands out since it was a wide open guy less than ten yards downfield.

Honorable mention: Various other things that happened when Michigan dropped back to pass. I could tell you about them, but you know. Metellus gets lost on two late drag routes. Watson misses a third and thirteen PBU. Nordin misses an XP.

[After THE JUMP: less than usual, i tellya]

OFFENSE

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open guys everywhere [Fuller]

That gameplan, man. The number of wide open receivers Michigan was able to scheme truly boggled. McKeon on a wheel route in the endzone; DPJ running an out well past the LB's zone drops on a rollout; Hill in the flat a couple times; Ty Wheatley on the first snap as Michigan revived that double fake screen play from a couple years back; Evans on infamy play. Harbaugh and the offensive braintrust could not have given Michigan a better shot at this game.

There will inevitably be complaints about a run-pass ratio of 29:39, but I don't know, man. If you've given your QB a wide open guy to throw to a few yards downfield and he doesn't do it, I don't know what to do with that. O'Korn performance in this game was so far beyond even his bad performances earlier in the season that I don't think it's reasonable to gameplan around that. Or even if you can. OSU entered this game with the #2 rush defense in the country; it's highly likely that a heavy run, I-form big gameplan is worse than what Michigan managed.

The silver lining. That last interception gave us some insight into the details of the offense since the post-game discussion of it mentioned that Crawford had correctly cut off his route and O'Korn misread it. Michigan's using various option routes in their offense; I know that Michigan has varied between that NFL-style approach and a simpler paint-by-numbers scheme over the past decade. It's not a surprise that Harbaugh and Pep Hamilton are using the former. Another reason the WRs' youth was a big problem.

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[Fuller]

Chris Evans, space merchant. After a rough first half of the season, Chris Evans had an outstanding close. Michigan got better at getting him the ball in space to operate and he consistently made the most of those opportunities. He was repeatedly able to edge Ohio State back seven players, and while those guys may be a bit iffy at reading defenses they're amongst the best athletes in the country. Evans thus established he is, too.

In this game he was able to set up Michigan's first touchdown by turning a flare screen into a first down on third and twelve. The playcall got him about seven of those yards as Evans's motions bought him a major lateral advantage on a guy trying to cover him in man; Evans was able to dodge that guy and spin through a second to convert and get down to fullback territory.

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[Fuller]

Higdon was about as effective in his time; in the shot above he's just turned the corner on Jordan Fuller, that near five-star S out of NJ Michigan lost to OSU late a couple cycles ago. He's amply demonstrated his top-class athleticism late this season.

Full circle. Your right tackle for most of the second half: Jon Runyan Jr. This of course brings the position all the way back to where it was this spring, when Runyan started the spring game and was the presumed leader through most of fall camp. Nolan Ulizio emerged literally the last week before the season, struggled, and got replaced by Juwann Bushell-Beatty. JBB was a clear upgrade for most of the year but still seemed very iffy in pass protection; he was one of many Michigan blockers who met a brick, Badger-shaped wall last week.

Runyan seemed no worse, certainly, and I'd venture that most of the five sacks O'Korn took were on him for not getting rid of the ball. I wonder what happened in practice for the sudden switch and Runyan's move to guard. Any deficiencies Runyan had relative to the other guys were probably a mirage.

Ruiz is just starting? Onwenu got a couple snaps last week and warmed up like he was completely healthy this week... on the second team line. Cesar Ruiz continued to start at RG. He's played well for the most part but struggled against Wisconsin; I'm surprised that Onwenu didn't reclaim his job.

That's probably a distinction without a difference moving forward since Ruiz is as holy a lock to start at center next year and that should find Onwenu back in the starting lineup.

DEFENSE

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[Fuller]

Backs broken late, as per usual. Ohio State started with 5 three and outs on 7 drives and had 126 yards of total offense halfway through the third quarter. From there: 78 yard TD drive, 47 yard FG drive, 34 yard missed FG, and a three-play, 66 yard TD drive that was a four-minute drill that got out of hand.

How much of that is Michigan getting tired and how much is a couple of individual bad plays and dumb luck in OSU's favor is in the eye of the beholder. The first TD mentioned above featured a third-and-thirteen conversion that Haskins threw into coverage, but Brandon Watson whiffed on his attempt to PBU. That's pictured above; it is just a dumb thing that happened. Haskins then broke the pocket and ran for 22 yards to set up the TD.

Both of the following drives saw Michigan give up a big chunk of yardage on a basic drag route that Metellus was unable to contest or even tackle on, thus setting up the field goal attempts. Then Michigan stiffened and got stops; it was enough to give the offense two shots at a comeback.

The insult-to-injury TD drive at the end was academic. And who wouldn't be out of fight at that point? Before that business at the end OSU had under 300 yards. That's enough for a Speight or Peters offense.

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[Fuller]

FFFFFFFFFFFUUUUUUUUU. JT Barrett delivered the above ball directly to Josh Metellus, who read it and pulled off his receiver to go intercept the ball. He did not intercept it. OSU scored a couple plays later to turn 14-0 to 14-7; if Metellus clears the first level of defenders Barrett's probably putting him out of bounds at the 30 or 40 or even midfield. This is the standout play that coulda shoulda won the game even with the QB play.

Scrambles. Other than the Metellus drag routes mentioned above Michigan's biggest problem on defense was a bunch of man coverage against mobile quarterbacks and broken pockets. Mo Hurst was frequently very close to sacking the opposition but pushed just past the QB. At that point he's past the QB and there's a huge gap up the middle. Barrett and Haskins were both all but invited to rip off somewhere between 9 and 20 yards and did so. I don't think many, if any of these events were actually holds—unless we're using the "Ben Bredeson on a pull" standard the refs used against Michigan—but just Hurst gambling he could make a play and not making it.

The other main thing. OSU found its footing in the second quarter by using a lot of empty backfield runs for Barrett; most of these were QB power right at Winovich, who got washed down the line consistently. Michigan seemed to adjust after OSU's first two TD drives, or OSU just went away from it in anticipation of an adjustment.

A big play; a big bust. Khaleke Hudson had a monster TFL on the edge where he blew through two tacklers and all but ended an OSU drive in the first quarter. He also seems like the guy who blew an assignment on the wide open TE touchdown in the second quarter.

OSU would come back to that later in the game and Hudson forced Barrett to try to fit it in a tiny window that he missed. Up and down day for Hudson, but that'll happen when you are starting a ton of underclassmen. Michigan's defense was good for one or two of those a game this year—thus their tendency to dominate opponents except for ten points worth of offense. 

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[Eric Upchurch]

Ol' Woods. J'Marick Woods only made a cameo in this game since he was knocked out shortly after Kinnel was, but that was enough time to flash his talent, and establish why is non-nickname is "Woods," for Perd Hapley reasons. OSU broke JK Dobbins into the open field; Woods came up and stopped him dead at about six yards. I'd venture that nobody has been able to stick the slippery Dobbins like that all year.

He did something to his back while doing this and was thus unable to follow up on an impressive start. Still, he's had a few of those this year and nothing alarming in various snaps spotting dinged up starting safeties. He's on track to be a backup everyone's comfortable with next year and has emerged as the clear favorite to replace Kinnel in 2019.

SPECIAL TEAMS

For a small fee, I will be publicly skeptical about punt returns weekly. Just five dollars to see me humiliate myself on a weekly basis by asserting that Donovan Peoples-Jones shouldn't be returning punts.

Blocked extra point. Another missed XP doesn't exactly soothe #collegekickers concerns entering bowl prep.

MISCELLANEOUS

Let's get the ref bonin' talk right. I haven't had the stomach to go back over the game in detail yet; I've seen enough on the internet to think that yes, Michigan got absolutely boned by the referees. But let's get something straight. This item I've seen being passed around is not holding against the guy trying to block Hurst. At least, if I saw this called during a UFR I would be shocked:

Hurst puts himself on one side of that OL and tries to get around him. OL is trying to block and suddenly has Hurst at a 90 degree angle; he's grabbing but ends up pushing Hurst upfield, past where he wants to go. You almost never see pushing called a hold. Pulling, yes. Pushing, even while grabbing a guy, is almost always legal.

HERE

Best And Worst:

With Michigan within striking distance in the 4th quarter, I saw people complain that Michigan went away from the running game. But if you look at the playcalls, that wasn't the case. After O'Korn got sacked and then completed a nice little screen to McDoom for the first, Michigan ran the ball for 9, 3, and 9 yards again. On the next play, O'Korn was trying to hand the ball off when he was stepped on by one of his linemen; that probably would have been for another first. On the next two downs Michigan threw the ball, but they still tried to engage the backs. Evans was wide open on that 4th down, and could have easily busted it for a big gain had the ball gotten to him. For the game, Evans led all receivers with 5 catches (3 if you ignore the last two on the final, meaningless drive), including a great catch-and-run in the redzone that set up Michigan's first score. Going forward, I hope the recent uptick in Evans's receptions (11 receptions in the last 6 games after having 3 previously) is a sign he'll provide that element to the offense going forward. And Higdon, despite some clear limitations due to lingering injuries, ran the ball aggressively and effectively. He should probably be the feature back next year, with Evans providing some change-of-pace plus good hands out of the backfield, and guys like Samuels and Walker grabbing carries as needed.

And credit should go to the offensive line's run-blocking efforts. That Wisconsin game looks more like an outlier than a harbinger of doom, as Michigan was able to get a consistent push against a talented OSU front. Like the rest of the team, they've made strides being legitimately good at opening holes for these backs, and while losing Cole will hurt that effort next year, we've seen enough from Ruiz, Onwenu, and JBB to have some confidence the interior of this line will be able to move bodies effectively going forward.

A look at some rebuilding seasons:

As Brian succinctly stated in his season preview, "This is a transition year between The Year and The Year, unless it isn't." And while many fans donned their maize-colored glasses in the preseason prediction threads, hoping for the lucky breaks to go our way en route to another 10-win season, the fancystats suggested that it was more likely to be a rebuilding year. Bill C. prognosticated before the season that "this program is probably a year away from ignition."

"They'll have to get lucky on a couple freshmen and one right tackle, but teams have been luckier. Just not Michigan." -Brian Cook

For innumerable reasons (some within and many out of the team's control), alllllllll of which have been very clearly hashed out on this site, this was, in fact, a rebuilding season. The issue now becomes whether or not this was a "successful" rebuilding season. The MGoStaff posed themselves the question "are we on track?" The answers ranged from "mostly, yes" to "of course, yes." Ace compared the roster this year to the projected one for next season and concluded, "This year hasn’t been very fun. Next year will be."

Comments

Bigly yuge

November 27th, 2017 at 2:07 PM ^

I couldn’t believe the number of people calling for Harbaugh to be fired, and comparing him to Jeff Fisher. Those people are why the guillotine was invented. Do those people not remember the 8 years prior to Harbaughs arrival? Glad Brian is bringing out the ban hammer on these clowns.

Lawyer12

November 27th, 2017 at 2:09 PM ^

I couldn’t agree more about the posting and the minority of asshole fans. It’s not just this website, but all Michigan pages; and it’s more than irritating. I’m all for critiquing play and evaluating performances as that’s part of the fun of being a fan. I’m not a fan of O’Korn as a player, but it’s not like the kid didn’t put forth the effort or made some moral misstep. The vitriol against young amateur athletes is absurd. Go Blue.

Blue Vet

November 27th, 2017 at 2:09 PM ^

Thank you, Brian.

When I first encountered MGoBlog, I considered it a bright beacon in blogland.  Naively, I continued to believe that, despite the growing feeling that my experience was turning sour.

Why did people not recognize these are young men, students, contributing to Michigan? What was I missing? In Comments, downvoting seemed to have less to do with teh substance of what anyone said than immature ego wanting attention. Was it me, unable to handle the rough-and-tumble internets? Was it trolls?

It was trolls, and I'm glad you're dealing with the problem.

dragonchild

November 27th, 2017 at 2:09 PM ^

I care a lot more about his feelings than some jabroni on the internet who doesn't have to introduce himself under his screen name.

Yeah leave it to the Ohio States or Penn States to be terrible people when young men playing a sport fails to meet fan expectations.  Get that nonsense out of here.  I wish Michigan had won, but sometimes the importance people place on a sport gives me a sickening loss of faith in humanity.  At the end of the day, JOK affected his own life way more than those he upset.  And no one bad-mouthing him would dare trade places with him, even if it's the one thing they all richly deserve.

4roses

November 27th, 2017 at 2:10 PM ^

I actually avoided this blog in the aftermath for reasons Brian alluded to. Sure there may be decent content to look at, but no matter how hard I try I just can't stop myself from clicking on those threads with the triple digit comments and before I know it I've spent 15 minutes getting all worked up over somethig I shouldn't. So when I did finally stop by and noticed a distinct lack of these "Hot Take" threads I instantly knew exactly what had happened. While in some regard it may suck that a part of this Blog has to be shut down, that fact is outweighed by knowing that the proprietors are level headed, sane, and generally good human beings. Thanks for running a first class joint. +1 to all the 90%.

GO BLUE    

jalenwestman

November 27th, 2017 at 2:10 PM ^

Needs to get a lot better or we need to find a replacement there. His angles are terrible, his coverage is poor, and he's not very good at tackling either.

That game was the best play calling (on offense) since Harbaugh has been here. Really did a beautiful job calling plays.

Excited about the squad next year!

Michigan4Harbaugh

November 27th, 2017 at 2:12 PM ^

2018 needs to be a year where Michigan rises above, and just crushes all the bullshit in their way. I'm talking about tough schedules, road games, night games, poor officials, weather, negative media/fans, poor record vs the rivals, injuries, etc. Crush the bullshit. I'm in the camp that believes they can.

Carcajou

November 28th, 2017 at 1:17 AM ^

Although I am not sure the Michigan fan base deserves such success yet. Harbaugh talks about moving forward with "humble hearts"- and you would think after the lean years of the last decade the fans would be better able to put things in perspective and act like decent human beings, but apparently not yet.

Erik_in_Dayton

November 27th, 2017 at 2:13 PM ^

...will have lived a good life if the worst thing you can say about him is that he played poorly in this game.  I love Michigan football, but it's good to remember that it's a little nuts to be happy or sad because a bunch of 18-22 year olds won or lost a ball game.  If John O'Korn made you miserable, the fault lies with you.  And I say that as someone who couldn't help but groan during several of his bad plays.

maize-blue

November 27th, 2017 at 2:11 PM ^

I'm hoping that OSU Chris Evans will be the Chris Evans we see moving forward. I think that was the toughest I've seen him run while here. If that keeps up, he and Higdon will develop into a handful.

True Blue Grit

November 27th, 2017 at 2:57 PM ^

I'm a little baffled why the coaches didn't do more with Evans earlier in the season as far as throwing to him in space.  He's a fantastic player when he gets space in front of him.  His elusiveness and speed make him a real threat every time he gets the ball in those situations.  Higdon is clearly better between the tackles though.  

stephenrjking

November 27th, 2017 at 2:14 PM ^

Sometimes Charles Woodson enters the biggest game of the year and wins it single-handedly with a catch to set up a TD, a punt return TD, and a pick in the endzone. And sometimes Mike "Supertoe" Lantry has two chances to win OSU games and the refs rule them no good. O'Korn has to live with this, and I feel bad for him. What's remarkable is that Michigan played this well and he didn't play the game of his life. It was just Michigan being good. And the QB not getting it done in the end. * Note: I think comments should be killed after losses like this more often.

Indiana Blue

November 27th, 2017 at 2:42 PM ^

for those of us at THE GAME, Mike Lantry was honored as the Veteran of the Game on Saturday.  And some 40+ years later, no one was thinking of those missed kicks (although I wiill always remember them) - but I stood and applauded as did 112,000 other fans and patriots.

Just something else that TV viewers didn't see ....

Go Blue !     

mgobaran

November 27th, 2017 at 4:04 PM ^

This blog is founded on fact based opinions, in-depth analysis and a commenter base that is here because we are sick and tired of beating our heads against the walls trying to have a discussion with other "fans" who won't listen to reason because their feelings are hurt. It'd be fine if it was just blowing off steam and reverted back to normalcy, but that vile and spiteful attitude sticks around 7 days a week until the next loss comes around to "prove their point."

Maybe if the comments sections are closed for 36 hours those people will find some other site to have season long meltdowns on. That type of behavior isn't welcome here.

mgobaran

November 27th, 2017 at 2:14 PM ^

The last person that was on was the kicker. Two guys got thru practically unblocked. The guy who blocked it stole the block from a guy in a better position to do so....

Indiana Blue

November 27th, 2017 at 2:37 PM ^

Nordin hits 80% of his PAT's over the net at Michigan ... in the last 20 years we NEVER had a kicker that could even get 1 PAT over the nets.  You're crazy if you think he kicked it low.  It was right in front of me (Section 11 row 40) and 2 guys got through untouched and one of them deflected it.  The kick only went about 2 feet before it was touched.  Low kicks are blocked by the linemen, not the outside gunners.

Go Blue!      

CTG

November 27th, 2017 at 2:17 PM ^

Good write up. These "Fans" need to get better persoective and/or find a hobby.  These kids are clearly trying their best, no matter.  Many wanted Malzone, a kid that's never taken a meaningful snap.  The outcome does not change a fan's life whatsoever.  Fortunately, some fans will improve.  Unfortunately, many will not.  I can only hope for the former.  

I thoroughly enjoy many on here that do not take personal attacks (of the players) or criticize every chance they get.  Thank you to those people.

Reader71

November 27th, 2017 at 2:17 PM ^

We hated Hoke for saying it, but fans are fickle. I’d bet anything most of the people making personal attacks on O’Korn were the same ones who were certain he was better than Speight both this year and last. Some people refuse to believe the truth, and lash out because sometimes the truth kinda sucks. If I’m Harbaugh, I use our own fans as a motivational ploy all offseason.

RedRum

November 27th, 2017 at 2:54 PM ^

for their own ego. When the greatness doesn't live up to the ego's demands, dung gets flung.

Truth be told, when I was in college, through 25 or so, I would have been putting my emotional butt-hurt on the board. As I have aged, when the sting of loosing fades, I'm always proud of our University and the players that put it all on the line to compete. We are not going to win every game but I'm proud to be a Wolverine! The collective of the University is powerful and awesome, I am glad to say that for four years, the University let me stumble around Ann Arbor and, thank GOD, leave with a degree. Go Blue (and back to work!)

BlueMan80

November 27th, 2017 at 2:17 PM ^

We'll play OSU with an experienced (JR/SR), first string, healthy, starting QB.  I think Denard was the last to qualify in 2011.  O'Korn tried and he wasn't up to the task.  The first pass miss to TJ Wheatley made my heart sink.  JOK probably wasn't going to rise up and play his best game as his last game as a starting QB.  That play would have set the stadium on fire if he had hit it.  He tried and he made it very clear after the game he knew how much of the loss was on him.  You have to respect that.

TSimpson77

November 27th, 2017 at 2:18 PM ^

If I saw JOK at a bar, I'd still buy him a beer. None of the losers that post crap like that on here would've even cracked the scout team at QB on a Division 3 team but know all about playing QB at Michigan. To that I say F you! I'm not concerned about Michigan going forward, Jim is the best coach in America hands down, we'll win more than we lose and at some point the winged helmets will be playing for a National Championship. Until then, Go Blue!

Glennsta

November 27th, 2017 at 2:18 PM ^

I can't criticize a player who is giving it his all.  I certainly can't boo a player who is giving it his all.

O'Korn wasn't up to the task. I never saw that he had the ability for the job and it's not his fault that he lacks ability.  Leave the guy alone.

Heisman212

November 27th, 2017 at 2:20 PM ^

You go to the game because you have to. You sort of know what’s coming. You don’t want to be there and you don’t want to sell the tickets to bring anymore red into the stadium than there already was. You get through the greatest quarter against OSU in 10 years and you start to fill like it might happen. You see it not because of one position. You walk out of the stadium it doesn’t hurt like you planned on it hurting. It is actually frustrating because you outplayed them again and still came up a few plays short. You red the blog and it’s filled with such hate and assholes that it gets shutdown. For the first time I felt like 2018 is the year we should roll. Many people compare Harbaugh to the other coaches year two year three agenda. Well guess what year four is the year. After watching this game I am convinced it will be a special year in 2018.

Rufus X

November 27th, 2017 at 2:36 PM ^

You absolutely nailed the human debris that is on this message board and twitter that wants to be a big tough guy and castigate a real live person who failed in front of millions (and owned it) while they hide behind their clever screen name that they spent hours trying to perfect so that people that they don't know will "like" them.

To hell with those of you in this communuity that Brian describeld to absolute perfection. You know who you are. And you will downvote this post too.  To hell with you.

Go blue. 

Heptarch

November 27th, 2017 at 2:20 PM ^

Thank you, Brian, for taking the stand you're taking. If you watched John O'Korn in his press conference and thought anything worse than, "Jeez, I know he played like crap, but I feel for that guy." then Brian is talking about you. I was frustrated with his play, too. But we should all hold ourselves to a standard of human decency that didn't exist on this blog Saturday afternoon.

MGoBlue24

November 27th, 2017 at 2:26 PM ^

John O'Korn was the goat in a game that we were otherwise in contention for, but he doesn't deserve our scorn:  none of us were in the arena with him.  I wish John well in all of his future endeavors.

Clarence Boddicker

November 27th, 2017 at 2:23 PM ^

Yeah, the board was toxic after that game. It was bad. Smiling Monocle and others put up a good fight, but the hate that started flowing for that poor kid was sickening. You needed to shut that shit down and I applaud you for the swift action.

Larry Appleton

November 27th, 2017 at 2:22 PM ^

This made me so happy:

"After taking down several threads and banning a dozen people I yanked commenting for about a day. Naturally, this resulted in these same people fleeing to twitter to tell me it was PATHETIC that I COULDN'T HANDLE NEGATIVITY, because I didn't want them throwing their poop in a place I feel responsible for. And I didn't want to wonder what they were saying while I was doing anything other than commenting on Michigan football. Also, I hate them.

If you're one of these people reading this column I'd like to make it clear that there is something wrong with you. The vast majority of people who come to this site don't post on it, because it is like every other website in the world. Those that do are split between normal people with something to say, and you, the person too dumb to know you shouldn't say anything. You are a tiny minority of this fanbase that gets outsized attention because you're dumb and loud, and most people are willing to throw away the good parts of the comments because of you:"

 

And then THIS made me dance in my seat:

"Next football season will not be like this, because you will be gone from this website. "

matty blue

November 27th, 2017 at 2:27 PM ^

it's implied, but not explicitly stated - the option routes are (i'm guessing) extremely dependent on the qb and receivers having good chemistry - the receiver knowing that the qb will see the same thing he does, and vice versa.  if that's the case, the like the bad offensive line play not only kept us from having good passing game when the quarterbacks had no time to throw, but kept us from getting a rhythm even when the protection was good.

as has been said - offensive line play was (well, IS, since the season isn't over yet) the original sin of this team.

bigger picture, i literally could not agree more with the 'out with the trash' approach.  there are some (many) people that literally ONLY show up to troll.  as i've said to a few of them this year, congratulations - you are the canonical example of a person that NOBODY wants to sit near at a game.  please post your seat locations so i can be sure to be as far away from you as possible at the next game.

Space Coyote

November 27th, 2017 at 3:22 PM ^

This isn't the "option route" that is often being made by many in the slot at the NFL level, they are typically two options, often called "route adjustments" that are made and wasn't read here.

The route on the INT was a vertical option. If there is no safety in the center of the field, you run a post. If there is, you curl or dig into the void underneath. JOK read the safeties pre-snap, likely relied on some level of film study, and assumed the post pre-snap and threw it up as soon as he got pressure. It wasn't a complicated read, but JOK made it worse by failing to read the defense at all. Not to pile on the guy, but it's obvious that was his problem (pre-determining where throws were going to go).

umchicago

November 27th, 2017 at 7:25 PM ^

that is my opinion too.  JOK decides where he wants to go before the snap.  late in the game he took a sack inside our 10 on a rollout to the right where DPJ had a 10 yard drag route and a TE was about 15 yards deeper.  both were wide open on that side of the field right in front of JOK.  JOK, however, watched a covered mcdoom the whole way in the other direction, then got sacked.

Carcajou

November 28th, 2017 at 12:49 AM ^

I haven't gone back to look, but what I seem to recall is, as you say, the coverage moving after the snap- rotating up to that middle position.
So we can guess that what JOK saw pre-snap was a middle-of-the field-open, was supposed to confirm that post-snap, and for one reason or other, didn't/couldn't see it.

Easy on paper, and even in 7-on-7, but sometimes a different matter with a pass rush in your face.

matty blue

November 28th, 2017 at 8:37 AM ^

...i appreciate your expertise.  i do think the line issues leading to a rotating qb had some impact in terms of passing game chemistry, fwiw.  i generally don't get much into feelingsball, but it sure seems like the more reps you get with a guy, the more trust you have that that guy will be where you expect, and vice-versa; if you make this cut, the ball will be in your chest.