Jake Moody gets to be the headline image after a tremendous performance [Patrick Barron]

Michigan 32, Nebraska 29 Comment Count

Alex.Drain October 10th, 2021 at 12:27 AM

That was... a lot. In a contest that lasted nearly four hours to finish regulation, Michigan emerged from Lincoln with a narrow 32-29 victory. It was not the prettiest or the smoothest, but it's a win all the same. And it came against a desperate Nebraska program in need of a win and in front of 90,000 angry fans in Memorial Stadium. Cade McNamara said after the game that he believes that many of the past Jim Harbaugh Michigan teams may not have won that game. He might be right. 

The first half was a one-sided effort. After a creative Nebraska drive ended on a Michigan defensive stand at the four yard line, the Huskers sputtered on offense for the remainder of the first half. Meanwhile Michigan cobbled together a couple long scoring drives, and took a free three points after a spectacular Daxton Hill interception. A bizarre sequence saw Michigan twice fail to score a TD at the goal line due to video reviews and forced the Wolverines to settle for a field goal, but the Maize & Blue led 13-0 after two quarters. They had out-gained their opposition by nearly 100 yards and were the clearly the better team. Then the third stanza started. 

The Nebraska Cornhuskers need to beat somebody they normally don't to get to bowl eligibility after blowing two winnable games against Illinois and Michigan State. They needed to topple either Michigan, Iowa, or Wisconsin, three teams who they have struggled against in recent years, to get to six wins- the mark required to perhaps salvage the Scott Frost era. The Husker coaching staff believed that this night, in front of a raucous crowd, could deliver them the marquee win they needed. They came out of halftime with the game plan to try and win the game. 

Haskins had Michigan up early [Patrick Barron]

The third quarter was an offensive coaching clinic put on by Frost's staff. They relentlessly targeted Michigan's youth and inexperience across the defense, getting RJ Moten and Junior Colson (and Josh Ross) to bite hard on a play action TD pass to Austin Allen that went for 46. Then they confused Nikhai Hill-Green on a beautifully drawn up wheel route to Rahmir Johnson that went for 41 and a TD. The Huskers capped it off with another genius screen pass to Levi Falck that resulted in a TD after being handed a short field. Martinez scrambled for the two point conversion and at the end of the third quarter, it was 22-19 Nebraska. 

While the defense was getting clocked in the head repeatedly, Michigan's offense had mixed success in the third quarter. There was a strong TD drive that hinged on a Daylen Baldwin 35 yard reception and was then capped off by a Hassan Haskins TD scamper. But bookending that drive was a 3 & out and a disastrous 3 play sequence that ended in Cade McNamara's first INT as a Michigan QB, which gave Nebraska the aforementioned short field. 

After falling down 22-19, Michigan had a tremendous gut check drive. A key 3rd down conversion to Erick All got it moving and then Blake Corum finished it off with a 29 yard electric TD run to put the winged helmets back on top. Nebraska came back with their own drive. It appeared to be finished early when a seeming interception passed through the arms of Gemon Green and instead was caught by Oliver Martin for 30. Nebraska's up-tempo play, and willingness to hurry up the snap after making a substitution, giving Michigan little time to get set before the play, paid dividends on an Adrian Martinez read option keeper TD that beat Aidan Hutchinson and gave the Huskers the lead back with 7:08 to play. 

Blake Corum broke a long run in a big moment [Barron]

Michigan quickly charged down the field on the back of an incredible Haskins 50 yard run that included a mind-bending hurdle, but the drive stalled out inside the 10 after the boisterous Memorial Stadium crowd caused another Michigan false start penalty. Jake Moody split the uprights to even the game at 29. 

The Huskers got the ball back with 3 minutes to go and quickly faced 3rd & 1. They called a Martinez keeper that got enough for the first down, but then Brad Hawkins made the play of the game and ripped the ball free, recovering it himself all in one motion. It was Nebraska's second turnover, and a backbreaking mistake in a big moment that has become all too familiar for Husker fans this season.

Michigan burned all three Nebraska timeouts, but a pair of questionable playcalls on 2nd and 3rd downs lined Jake Moody up for a 39 yarder— by no means a sure thing for a college kicker— with 1:24 to go. Moody, who has proven time and time again to have ice in his veins this season, banged the kick through the uprights. 

Nebraska got the football back with 84 seconds to play. A quick 25 yard strike to Samori Toure got the Huskers to midfield in the blink of an eye, but then they ran into resistance. A pair of incompletions set up 3rd & 10. Frost and his staff dialed up a screen pass that Gemon Green played perfectly, stopping Rahmir Johnson dead in his tracks for no gain. Nebraska proceeded to strangely hurry up as if they had no time left, despite there being a full 54 seconds remaining in the contest. The rushed 4th & 10 play landed incomplete as Daxton Hill ran step for step with Toure, and Michigan had survived. Two Cade McNamara kneel downs sealed it. 

[AFTER THE JUMP: Some concluding thoughts]

It was a team effort tonight [Barron]

In totality, Michigan narrowly outgained Nebraska 459-431. Penalties were similar, six aside, costing Michigan 55 yards and Nebraska 47 yards. Nebraska's 2 turnovers to Michigan's 1 looms very large in the story of the game, though. This was a tight contest, but Michigan was just a little bit better, especially when it mattered. 

Cade McNamara didn't have his greatest performance, but he also played in by far the most hostile environment he's ever played in. The interception was costly, but a few throws were right on the money too. There will be much debate in Michigan-land over this bye week about who should start at QB in the coming weeks.

Hassan Haskins was excellent at RB, grinding out key yards on the ground after contact, in addition to his gigantic 50 yard run. That hurdle will live on in GIF's for weeks to come. Blake Corum was not as notable, but his 29 yard TD run came at a big moment. Daylen Baldwin had the most receiving yards for Michigan, but also a couple drops. Mike Sainristil made a sprawling catch on a deep bomb, and Erick All springing open over the middle was key to several massive third down conversions. The offensive line struggled against a talented Huskers' defensive front, especially at guard, where Trevor Keegan, Chuck Filiaga, Zak Zinter, and Karsen Barnhart all saw time. Several false starts came at inopportune times too, but that is understandable given the noise being created by the opposing crowd. 

Headin' home happy [Barron] 

For the defense, it was a tale of two halves. The defensive line was consistently excellent, getting pressure and stuffing all runs between the tackles. But the LB's and secondary were significantly worse in the second half than in the first. Some of that may have been great playcalling from Nebraska, as well as strong play from Adrian Martinez. Martinez finished 18/28 through the air with 3 TD's, in addition to 38 yards on 8 carries and another TD there, plus the two point conversion. He tested Michigan's edges and QB contain in the second half, and made some great throws. The turnovers will haunt him, especially the fumble. 

The fumble in particular had to have been sweet for Brad Hawkins. The 5th year safety still has yet to collect an interception in his career, but that individual play—single-handedly altering the game— makes up for any and all INT's he may have missed in his time in Ann Arbor. A signature moment for a senior leader. 

The last individual deserving of recognition on Michigan is Jake Moody. The veteran kicker was money tonight, going 4/4 on his FG's and 2/2 on his XP's. The 39 yarder to win it for Michigan was as high-pressure of a kick as it gets, and he made it look easy. Moody is now perfect on XP's for the year and 8/9 on FG's, and a huge part of the Wolverines' success. 

Michigan now heads into the bye week, still undefeated. It has not been perfect football, and there are elements to improve, but it's hard to argue with the results. The Wolverines are 6-0 for the first time since 2016, and for just the second time in the past ten seasons. For a program that fell short of bowl eligibility a year ago, they have already attained the necessary record to qualify for such a game, only halfway through the season. 

The Wolverines return to action on Oct. 23 against Northwestern at home, which should be the easiest game remaining on the schedule by a wide margin. The time of that game is not yet known. 

Comments

bronxblue

October 10th, 2021 at 12:35 AM ^

That third quarter was a nightmare but this team bounced back and earned a big win against a other good team on the road.

Running game showed up in the second half and that was huge.

Nebraska picked on the LBs and I fear other teams will as well.  They've got a couple of weeks to figure it out at least.

An absurd number of bad calls in this game on both sides, but apparently UM got their one holding call of the year last weekend.

I'll take the negs but I still don't understand the call to replace McNamara.  He's a big reason the offense moved the ball on multiple large drives in that 4th quarter to keep UM in the game.  He's not perfect but neither is McCarthy and there's a world of pain below McNamara in terms of QB play and we have virtually no evidence McCarthy would be any better and historical evidence that true frosh QBs tend to be bad.

Hawkins deserves huge credit for that fumble but Green mad an amazing tackle on that last screen attempt.

6-0 going into a bye week and then NW is far beyond my expectations.

stephenrjking

October 10th, 2021 at 12:44 AM ^

I agree, McNamara is playing fine. He missed some deep balls, but he also hits a lot of them. Yeah, JJ can pull the ball, and he can hit those deep balls better. But Cade appears to do everything else better, and well. The 2-minute drill has had to drive the field a couple of times and it worked well. Yes, sometimes Cade dumps it off to Corum underneath, but dumping it off to Corum underneath is a great play in this offense. He can hit the outs. He rarely (not never anymore, but rarely) makes mistakes.

And he's winning games.

I like that we're giving JJ key game action, though the last run pull wasn't a great call, but Cade is moving the team.

Michigan got punched in the mouth in the second half and responded with drive after drive. I honestly can't remember them piecing together that many must-score drives in a long time. That road win against Northwestern, maybe, but that needed fewer drives. Even Michigan's successful teams under Harbaugh haven't done well in situations like this, and this team did. 

TrueBlue2003

October 10th, 2021 at 1:18 AM ^

Do you really think JJ can hit the deep ball better?  He's done it twice in complete garbage time against a MAC CB and a Wisconsin backup.  Is that all we're basing it on?  This was a strength of Cade's going into the week with a larger same size! 

I don't think we know anything about JJ except that the coaches think Cade is still the starter and that's good enough for me so far.

NotADuck

October 10th, 2021 at 1:48 AM ^

The talent level of the CB's that JJ has thrown against has little to do with why some want him to start.  It also says very little about his ability, which is evident no matter who he's playing.

I think people are pulling for JJ to start for 2 reasons:

1.  His arm talent is clearly higher than Cade's.  Cade has a solid arm and throws a good deep ball but he does have a tendency to dorf it into the turf once in a while.  That's extremely frustrating and would likely stop if JJ had the ball in his hands due to his superior arm strength.

2.  The ceiling of the offense is raised immeasurably if JJ takes the reigns and is as good as advertised.  The ONLY thing holding back Michigan's offense from true greatness is great QB play.  It's clear that Cade is never going to be great and JJ has that level of potential.  But has he reached it yet?

Personally, I think Cade is the starter until his play falls off a cliff or he gets hurt.  The limited action we've seen from JJ has been hit or miss.  The hits are massive (2 long passes to Baldwin for TDs), but the misses have been pretty ugly (multiple inaccurate throws in the WMU game to start the season, often behind his receivers leading to incompletions or tough catches on what should be routine throws).  We also don't know how good JJ's grasp of the offense is yet.  That's massively important.

Monkey House

October 10th, 2021 at 9:18 AM ^

Some on here have a difficult time understanding why some want JJ as the starter. It's not about what Cade is doing, it's they know this is about as good as it gets. The thought is that JJ can Potentially move this offense to a higher level. Right or not. The fact is, is many believe and probably correctly that this level of offense will not get it done to win the big ten. 

JonnyHintz

October 10th, 2021 at 9:39 AM ^

And honestly, if they’re going to make that move at all this year, this is the time to do it. You have a bye week to really get McCarthy prepared and then you play Northwestern. Easily the easiest remaining game. So you have two weeks to get McCarthy ready to be the starter and an easy game to ease him in. 
 

Whether they do it or not, and whether they SHOULD or not, is up in the air. But it it’s going to happen, this is the perfect time. 

JonnyHintz

October 10th, 2021 at 10:30 AM ^

No, it’s completely idiotic to wait until you lose a game when you had the ability to increase the potential of your offense and AVOID the loss in the first place. Clemson didn’t wait for a loss to replace Kelly Bryant with Trevor Lawrence. They got Trevor ready in the first couple games and then unleashed him after a 4-0 start. 
 

The perfect time is when you have already seasoned him in early in the year, have a bye to prepare and a cupcake coming out of the bye. Multiple weeks to prepare him, an easy game to get his feet under him. And have him prepared for the meat of the schedule with multiple weeks of starter reps and a start under his belt. You don’t wait until we lose to MSU and then throw him to the wolves without much real preparation to IU, Maryland, Penn State and OSU. That’s a recipe for disaster. 

Der Alte

October 10th, 2021 at 10:52 AM ^

The question is, When M goes on offense for the first time in East Lansing, do you really want young J.J. under center, or do you want the guy who faced (sometimes insanely) hostile crowds in Madison and Lincoln, and in both cases managed the team to victories? Bring J.J. along --- he might get the chance to play most of the second half against NU, but don't put him in impossible situations, such as that 3rd and whatever late in the game last night when everyone in the stands knew he would keep the ball and attempt to run for a first down. 

But if J.J. shows the kind of game-after game improvement for the remainder of the season that we all hope for, next season's QB duties should be very much up for grabs. Go Blue.

TrueBlue2003

October 10th, 2021 at 1:05 PM ^

My question had nothing to do with whether JJ should be starting.  That's a decision the coaches will make and they know a lot better than me.

I'm only responding to stephen king claiming that we know JJ has a better deep ball.  I'm just not sure throwing two nice deep balls against scrubs in garbage time says much.  I don't think we can conclude that, especially when one of Cade's strengths has been his deep ball.

To someone else that said he missed four deep balls in this game, only one was a true miss (the obvious overthrow of *i think* Baldwin).  He had two that were jump balls that you could argue were a couple feet underthrown but those guys didn't have separation so you're looking at a very difficult window to hit.  When you're guy is bigger, I'm fine with a slight underthrow because it becomes a jump ball.  Baldwin and Johnson need to make some of those plays, IMO.  We were certainly spoiled with Collins who was like automatic on those. 

Indiana Blue

October 10th, 2021 at 9:19 AM ^

TrueBlue .... I agree, but Cade had probably 4 deep balls last night that were poorly thrown.  It seems that he's actually regressed as most were under thrown (and a BAD miss over thrown) plus the only connection was a great play by Sandristil.  JJ's throw vs Wisconsin was the best deep ball of the year and he dropped a dime into the bucket.  

I had been saying that Cade threw a better deep ball ... but I don't think so anymore.  And I'd also rather have JJ's strong arm on those sideline routes ... which was too close last night.  Hopefully JJ would be as gutsy as Cade.

Go Blue!

SituationSoap

October 10th, 2021 at 1:41 AM ^

In Roberson's defense, not a lot of college kids are going to look good against that Iowa defense. They're for real.

 

But you're right. Getting JJ snaps is good for his development now, makes defenses gameplan for him, and keeps him engaged through the season so that he's not thinking of transferring.

Benoit Balls

October 10th, 2021 at 7:35 AM ^

In the age of the Transfer Portal, that last bit is a BIG deal.  It cant always be easy for coaching staffs to do what they have to to win now, while placating teenagers who have likely been "the man" their entire lives. It seems as though this staff has found a good balance.

I also think that earlier in Harbaugh's tenure, that was not always the case.  With guys like Fisch and Hamilton, I think they were banking on the "we've been in the NFL, and we can get you prepared for The League". While this sounds fine, it may not matter to a 19 year old, whose brain is telling him that his actual best shot at getting drafted is on the field. Additionally, in the NFL, players have contracts and very little leverage (unless they're really good). Because of this, coaches dont have to worry about playing to their egos as much.  

My hope (based on the results so far this season) is that this staff has finally realized there is a delicate balance to keeping the next guy engaged so you dont have to keep relying on transfers and graduate students when they want someone at QB who can keep an offense on schedule vis a vis getting in and out of the huddle on time, avoiding dumb delay and formation penalties, and enough maturity to protect the football. The recipre previously always meant there was a 5 star in waiting, continually usurped by an older guy who transfers in, and that led to mixed results (at best). The transfer guys had a definite ceiling (else they'd have been in the NFL), and they younger (likely) more talented guys were left frustrated, and probably met with an attitude of "deal with it" (as is the norm in the NFL)

So far, it seems promising. I hope that is the case and we can start seeing some of these high level QB recruits stay with the program long enough to develop into the upper class, high ceiling guys who can lead the program to another level.

SituationSoap

October 10th, 2021 at 1:41 AM ^

In Roberson's defense, not a lot of college kids are going to look good against that Iowa defense. They're for real.

 

But you're right. Getting JJ snaps is good for his development now, makes defenses gameplan for him, and keeps him engaged through the season so that he's not thinking of transferring.

soniktoothe

October 10th, 2021 at 1:20 AM ^

This game reminded me of the game against the Irish in 2011. It was an intense down-to-the-wire finish that was sloppy at times. 

As much as I didn't love Cade's comment at the end of the game, I also think he was right. It has been a long time since I have seen this team face adversity in a hostile environment and respond in kind.

Great win for the good guys.

1VaBlue1

October 10th, 2021 at 9:45 AM ^

I LOVED that comment!  He's clearly calling out the recent past and addressing it head-on.  I'm good with that.  It tells us that they know what we've been thinking, and they feel it, too.  It tells me that they are playing with a different attitude this year.

If the alums that lost those games don't like it, they at least have to acknowledge that it was spot on - because previous records aren't lying...

XM - Mt 1822

October 10th, 2021 at 1:14 PM ^

i was very impressed with cade's poise and maturity during that interview.  he's what, 20 or 21 yrs old?  talked like he was 40 and that just seconds after the most exciting college game he'd ever played in.  undoubtedly the coaches see the same thing and that intangible is one of the reasons that cade starts and JJ doesn't (yet). 

bsand2053

October 10th, 2021 at 2:04 AM ^

My 2 cents...

His deep ball is one of his best assets but it was gone tonight.  And we all know JJ can drop it in anywhere.  And the running game will continue to be limited by his and/or the staff's refusal to keep. 

It really is bizarre.  Michigan doesn't need him to be Denard or Tate or even junior year Shea.  He can be Stephen Threet and it would still open things up.  He's fast enough to pick up five yards when there's literally no one on accounting for the keep.  Until Michigan makes teams pay for selling out on the give we will not reach our potential as a rushing team, even with a good offensive line and the two best running backs we've had since Mike Hart.  

stephenrjking

October 10th, 2021 at 2:09 AM ^

My current best guess is that you combine Cade's limitations with the risk and the coaches just don't want to do it. And the risk is a huge issue. We likely beat OSU in 16 if Speight is healthy; everyone got hurt in 17 and the season was a bit of a write-off; Shea gets hurt on the first play in 19 and it affects the whole season, and in that season DCaff might have gotten a chance to play and HE got hurt. Milton and Cade both got hurt last year and Michigan was preparing to start Dan Villari against an OSU team that made the national title game.

So fear of injury, combined with a relatively low apparent benefit (Cade can gain like 5 or 10 yards a game with keeps) keeps the shackles on, in theory. 

Still doesn't explain why they don't exploit RPOs, though. 

bsand2053

October 10th, 2021 at 4:00 AM ^

I think Cade can total more like 25-30 yards in a game and that would give Corum and Haskins another 40 or so yards.

Anyway, I agree with you for the most part and obviously the coaches see way more than what I do.  I don’t actually want them to bench Cade but I do want JJ to get actual drives rather than a couple snaps that are accompanied by PROBABLY A QB KEEP in neon letters 

AlbanyBlue

October 10th, 2021 at 1:06 PM ^

This post is spot-on. The RPO thing is baffling, unless Cade just can't execute them -- or the staff can't teach him. This lends some credence to Harbaugh staying in charge of the QBs and not letting anyone meddle -- I don't think he understands ZR and RPO concepts well enough, or just doesn't care enough to teach them.

This all said, I still don't get the (apparently obvious) QB keeper against Rutgers, where he got blown up by the safety. Much more chance of injury there than taking 5 free yards and getting to the ground.

JonnyHintz

October 10th, 2021 at 9:49 AM ^

Steven Threet. But yea, that’s literally all Cade needs to be. Not going to run by anybody but make opponents respect the QB run aspect enough to open holes I’m for the backs and make the linebackers bite enough to open the second level for RPO. 
 

Simply pulling and taking the free 5-7 yards when it’s there would open up so much for this offense. 

TIMMMAAY

October 10th, 2021 at 11:42 AM ^

And we all know JJ can drop it in anywhere.

And how do "we" all know that? From the literal two deep passes he has thrown? I disagree with most of the rest as well. There has been no reason to risk getting our starting QB injured, to please fans that don't actually understand what they're watching... 

1VaBlue1

October 10th, 2021 at 9:53 AM ^

They're already reading Pepcat!  That 3rd down in the 4th, when he was caught 7 yards deep and left Moody kicking from the hashes was read and played perfectly.  There was no give because the DT blew right past Vastardis and would have eaten Corum like a dessert.  Both the LB and Safety read it and crashed wide - the keep was done.  That play is done.  Until he throws it, or does something that isn't a read option, we can just call that JJcat from now on...

For that matter, its now as reliable as late season McDoom jet sweeps after the jet sweep was the only play that he was ever on the field for.

bronxblue

October 10th, 2021 at 9:38 AM ^

Yeah, my issue with McCarthy is they need to let him pass when he's out there.  He's not an elite athlete in the sense he can just Denard his way past defenders even if they know he's running.  The playbook doesn't have to be the same for both him and McNamara but it has to have more parity than it does now.

maquih

October 10th, 2021 at 12:50 PM ^

Yeah there was a sick play where an unblocked linebacker on 3rd and 10 was charging right at McNamara and he didn't flinch threw a good ball at an open right end in the middle of the field for a first down.  Plays like that is why he's the starter and not the freshman, although McCarthy is going to be an excellent player when it's his turn.

taistreetsmyhero

October 10th, 2021 at 1:04 AM ^

McNamara had a good game. The only knock is that he’s immobile. And after playing against Martinez, it shows how much that caps an offense. But he’s done enough in every game this season.

Had we dropped a game earlier in the season, I could understand wanting to play for the future. But I think Cade puts us in the best position to win. And if we can give JJ some more opportunities to make big plays when he comes in, I think it will maximize the offense’s efficiency

S5R48S10

October 10th, 2021 at 8:04 AM ^

Calls for JJ were the last thing I expected to see this morning.  This was the first time I thought the passing game didn't look rickety as hell, even against MAC competition.  The unit is improving every week and you want to switch QBs?  Good road wins have been hard to come by for this program lately and McNamara just gave us a big ol' gut check.  Let him play.