Michigan 29 Minnesota 26 Comment Count

Seth

barron

A wall.

Michigan had their hands on it all game, and it kept slipping through their fingers. Peppers dropped a pick-six after jumping a WR screen. Dymonte Thomas and Jarrod Wilson both dropped interceptions they had two hands on (Dymonte’s was then caught by a Gopher). Jourdan Lewis and Jeremy Clark probably could have grabbed a pair of Leidner ducks they played with Connor Cook-level respect. Thomas also let a perfect Blake O’Neill punt bounce through his hands for a touchback. Each time the Gophers capitalized.

For its part, Minnesota held on like men who don’t know what they’d do with their lives if they couldn’t run around in goofy armor for a chance to win some painted old pottery. On 4th and 5 on Minnesota’s last drive, K.J. Maye had one inch to catch a slant against perhaps the best cornerback in the country, and  didn’t drop it. Neither did his receiver mate Drew Wolitarsky, who on the ensuing 2nd down beat Channing Stribling with a double move and hauled in a pass at the 1 inch line.

With the clock running Mitch Leidner moved his pieces around to set up a winning TD, but the Michigan defense chased him out of his pocket. That left 2 seconds for either a field goal attempt to force overtime, or a play to win. An average team against an average defense should get that QB sneak 9 times out of 10. But Minnesota was no average offense; they had a true freshman at center and other replacements all around him. And Michigan was no average defense. For one, Ryan Glasgow was the guy right over the ball. For two, D.J. Durkin was making the calls.

Glasgow won the battle he’d won all game, the rest of Michigan’s goal line defense closed around him, and together they grasped the life out the old rival. For that they get to hold the Jug again.peppers

While the Minnesotasphere will spend the next week replaying final scenarios (and the choice to play for a field goal at the end of the first half), Michigan fans will try to unpack all of the misfortunes and misplays that almost made the Little Brown Jug miss the flight home from its year abroad.

So much about Michigan has changed since then that it’s hard to remember this is still a team put together by Brady Hoke and held together by Harbaugh’s ingenuity. You can’t blame the old coach for everything, but Michigan’s recent history was all over this game.

Those weren’t all bad things. The interior defensive line was its magnificent self. Jourdan Lewis was. Chesson dropped one earlier but held onto his horizontal touchdown, and Darboh’s hands made sure it was 3 points, not 1, that Minnesota needed from our 1.

Hoke also left Jabrill Peppers, who, finally, was the answer one too many of Michigan’s questions. Need an athletic nickel to neutralize the spread? Peppers. Need a strong safety? Peppers. Cornerback. Kick returner. Punt returner. Running back. Slot receiver. Quarterback?

So yeah, this week we’re going to talk about the Morris-or-bust plan, because early in the third quarter Jake Rudock went to slide, and a defender tried to separate his head from his shoulders. It was the third time (the second was earlier in this game) this season he was clearly targeted with no call.

With Michigan down 23-21 at this point Harbaugh inserted Wilton Speight, whose play was about what you expect out of Wilton Speight. He did finally get his feet under him on the final drive, with his last two passes of the game the touchdown to Chesson and the two-point conversion to Darboh. Let that be the final word on wither Shane Morris.

(Rudock was on the sideline trying to throw after being examined and just about everyone noted Michigan informed the press it was a shoulder injury rather than, you know, making it a thing.)

Desmond Morgan did not have a good game, giving up a long run when he got out of his lane, getting caught too far inside on a long wheel route, letting Brandon Lingen sneak behind him for a long pass at the beginning of the 4th quarter, and letting Rodney Smith shuck him to give up a crucial 3rd and 17.

That and the dodgy score and the Halloween candy had Michigan perilously close to vomiting up a Hoke game in 2015. But they ultimately held it down, and the feeling will pass with time.

Comments

Michology 101

November 1st, 2015 at 1:12 PM ^

Yeah, but I seriously doubt that Minnesota would've played that inspired if coach Kill had been out there. I believe him NOT being out there is what motivated them to give us such a close game and even be in that goal line position. Though if giving the same situation, Coach Kill probably would've manage the clock better.

Danwillhor

November 1st, 2015 at 4:27 AM ^

he's not even close to a "special deal/rule". There is no major pro competitor to sign him and, honestly, he has a hard time finishing plays. I think he'll break loose once he makes that first truly great play but he's dropped 3 gimme pick-six TDs this year and punters may have tackled him more than anyone lol. Great player (!) but he's here for another year. However, I do agree that he'd be a top-40ish pick if he could go pro today.

NC Blue Fan

November 1st, 2015 at 12:22 AM ^

I guess its only targeting....when OUR guys do it! Those F'ing Refs sucked.....oh, well....time to look up their home addresses.

I wouldn't want to be the Michigan defense in practice this week...they're gonna get whipped.

chewieblue

November 1st, 2015 at 12:25 AM ^

(or maybe ten) like that after all the bullshit we have endured as a program. We had bad luck, injury, bad calls, you name it and we still came away with it. Every good team wins one a season that they shouldn't have. Maybe this one was ours.

SonofaLegend

November 1st, 2015 at 12:26 AM ^

I haven't looked through the comments to see if this has already been said; but hearty praise from this quarter for Minnesota. In general for a game well played. And specifically for the last play and the balls to go for the win. Ski-u-mah and best to coach Kill

Amaznbluedoc

November 1st, 2015 at 12:33 AM ^

Sure, we were coming off of a bye, the toughest loss two weeks earlier, and we were playing a pretty decent Minn team motivated by their coach retiring, but really? A win is a win but apart from Peppers, Speight (when he was called upon), the receivers who actually caught passes, and Drake's rushing, the team looked flat and a shell of their former selves. There are still a few games left and both IU and PSU are playing well. If the pre-Sparty team shows up these games should be chip shots but after today's performance, I'm not so sure....

M-Dog

November 1st, 2015 at 9:39 AM ^

Yes, in another one of those night games against a big opponent.

DON'T TELL ME that night games against a big opponent are not a competitive advantage.

Hell our own record in night games should tell you that.  We've won 3 night games that we probably would have lost as regular run-of-the-mill day games.

 

M-Dog

November 1st, 2015 at 9:44 AM ^

Lewis is the unluckiest CB in history.  Is there any other CB that has had more plays where he was in perfect position . . . and still had the pass completed against him by 2 inches?

I don't remember any Minny completitions against him where he was actually out of position.

 

Ghost of Hoke

November 1st, 2015 at 12:41 AM ^

Seriously, we fucking won. It's a night game on Halloween on the road. In a rivalry game that means a lot to other team who also just lost their coach. It was always going to be closer than it should be. Stop being a Michigan fan for once and enjoy the victory. It was fucking beautiful.



Sent from MGoBlog HD for iPhone & iPad

schreibee

November 1st, 2015 at 1:30 AM ^

Exactly my guess on your IQ, Friend-O

And correct me if I'm wrong, but it's Halloween for players on both teams,but Minnesota played inspired and impassioned.

In fact the only reason they lost is because their middle aged, over weight temp coach turtled when he had chances both to win and to tie.

Trick or Treat?!

schreibee

November 1st, 2015 at 1:26 PM ^

Friend-O, you go internet tuff guy and call people idiot, then completely ignore that using Halloween as an excuse for why our players might be distracted without explaining why theirs wouldn't - well, you're gonna get called on it.

See, for me I used at night/on the road as an excuse for Utah, and I'd accept that as a valid reason why this game would be tougher than expected.

Like I said - it was Halloween for U22 players on both sides...

All I ever asked in my original comment was the O/U on the age of people mentioning Halloween as relevant to the outcome

Esterhaus

November 1st, 2015 at 12:44 AM ^

 

Much quality Meechigan Football on the road for a time. Consider the Maryland game as an example. Notre Dame played flat on the road against Temple tonight. Perhaps there's something in the way we prepare our football athletes for travel or there is something in the air here. Wish I knew, because if I did I would be on the phone with the AD tomorrow. But we too look flat on the road -- consistently.

SalvatoreQuattro

November 1st, 2015 at 12:59 AM ^

Only in Bizarro World  is that "playing well".  IU will present a challenge because of their offense, but their defense is putrid and their special teams are not so special.

 

Both MSU and OSU struggled with other lesser teams besides IU so it's not a real surprise that they were competitive in both of those games.

maize-blue

November 1st, 2015 at 12:50 AM ^

Need to run the ball better or we may see games like this the rest of the way. OSU will be a very tall task with this current ground game. Johnson needs all the carries. Green and Smith are just too slow.

snarling wolverine

November 1st, 2015 at 12:58 AM ^

Good summary, although I think this bit...

 

With Michigan down 23-21 at this point Harbaugh inserted Wilton Speight, whose play was about what you expect out of Wilton Speight.
…isn't quite fair. Yes, Speight looked a bit overwhelmed at first, but he played the final drive like a seasoned vet - 3-3 passing plus a 2-point conversion. When we needed him he rose to the occasion.

SF Wolverine

November 1st, 2015 at 1:00 AM ^

but take the win, box up the Jug, and get the F out of MN.  Jaysus -- two weeks in a row that just about everything that could go wrong did.  Great to see that we went the full 60:00 this week -- good result.

teldar

November 1st, 2015 at 10:38 AM ^

he means similarity of the play itself. Not the importance to the game.

And as far as that goes, I don't think there's another QB on the roster who makes that throw. I don't think Rudock gets the ball there on time for the TD and I don't think Rudock makes the 2pt conversion throw either. Rudock locks onto a guy and never takes his eyes off him if there is a throw coming no matter what, or if he does tuck it and run, he never makes it into the endzone there. So... I think those throws did win the game. Because, you know... theydid. We lose without two clutch throws on our last posession.

 

 

MC5-95

November 1st, 2015 at 11:09 AM ^

If he's talking about the similarity of the play I think he's wrong too. Henne caught Manningham in stride cutting across the endzone. Speight's throw while also a good throw was aimed high so the receiver had a slight jump ball.