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

umich1

October 10th, 2021 at 6:35 AM ^

My only officiating gripe addition was on the last Nebraska touchdown.  Did they give Michigan sufficient time to substitute?  Nebraska substituted so by rule the head referee should be standing between the ball and the quarterback to give the defense time.  He does so, but only looking back at Martinez and never turns around to see if the defense is set or has sufficient time to substitute.

When the ball is snapped none of our guys are set.  Not a single one.

Perkis-Size Me

October 10th, 2021 at 12:40 AM ^

They took Nebraska’s best shot, on the road, and still won. It was not pretty by any stretch, and Nebraska is a good team that is better than its record, but you have to admit there is something different about this year’s team.

Teams from previous years would not have won this game.

Dean Pelton

October 10th, 2021 at 12:41 AM ^

Conference road games are tough, especially night games. Agree with Cade that previous teams would have folded. A gut check win that hopefully gives this team confidence going forward. 

los barcos

October 10th, 2021 at 12:44 AM ^

Can’t say a single bad thing about that game tonight. Just a gutty, gutty win on the road at night against a madly desperate team.  You think that’s easy - look at what just happened to Alabama.  
 

I was as critical as anyone going into the year, but last week at Wisconsin showed this team was different. Tonight May show they’re special…

 

MGoBlue96

October 10th, 2021 at 12:47 AM ^

Very Jekyll and Hyde halves by the defense. First half besides the opening possession screen they played impeccable assignment sound football. Second before the two late stops was alot of busted assignments. Credit to the offense for coming up with some gutsy drives in the midst of the chaos. McNamara showed guts as well after his INT. The knock on him would be  spotty accuracy at times including on some completions where yac was prevented  and issues with most deep balls not being very catchable tonight

I felt UM did cost themselves with questionable coaching decisions. They never should have introduced a handoff into the equation on the play McNamara tripped on, should have been a sneak. And they are lucky they got away with turtling on their final possession, this whole we are only going to run when McCarthy is in needs to stop, just too predictable.

Anyways some major guts shown for sure by this team, offense and defense late. I mean I would say the QB discussion point is still slightly there but they are also undefeated. Hard to make a change given that and that flaws aside McNamara has still made enough plays to win the last two weeks. McCarthy definitely has the higher upside but for now McNamara is the guy who gives you the best chance to win, and going to trust the coaches since they have even more data from practice, etc.

Also I do think this team is mentally more resilient than the past on the positive side. Quibbles aside that you can not take away from them. McNamara for coming back after the INT to make some needed throws, defense for coming up with the two final drives despite how bad the rest of the half went and the offense for answering Nebraska's scores.

 

KO Stradivarius

October 10th, 2021 at 2:03 AM ^

It seems that JJ has handed off many times as well.  Sure, it's obvious that when he comes in we are more likely to QB run, but at least we add a third option other than just pass or hand off when Cade's in.  We should mix it up more.  Rather than believing JJ's reads are just bad, I believe that McCarthy is told beforehand what to do.  Based on their conservative nature I doubt they would let a freshman make those split second read decisions at this point in the season.

TrueBlue2003

October 10th, 2021 at 1:33 AM ^

I think Nebraska just keyed in on our LBs in coverage being the weak spot and that's what killed us a few times.  RBs and TEs out of the backfield we just had no idea what to do with.  Our LBs just wnat to missile into the backfield every play and it's easy to use that against them.  They need to work on some things.

It's also clear Michigan is still getting the hang of zone defense. But it's super impressive how good they've been despite that.  Bye comes at the perfect time. Work on those things and keep getting better.

aiglick

October 10th, 2021 at 12:51 AM ^

Heal up and get ready for the stretch run. Can’t overlook Northwestern even though we should win it but have got to be happy with winning a game against a quality opponent in a tough environment. Cade is absolutely right these are the types of games Michigan loses in past years despite being slightly favored.

Hoping we can figure out the second half as this is another game where we were outplayed that half but can’t argue with results. This season a loss can happen at any time for pretty much anybody.

Let’s just see what happens during the back half of the season.

caup

October 10th, 2021 at 12:54 AM ^

Here Alex, I fixed it for you:

"There will be much debate by fucking morons in Michigan-land over this bye week about who should start at QB in the coming weeks."

You're welcome.

McSomething

October 11th, 2021 at 8:19 AM ^

1. They didn't do it between games. 2. They were down big when the made the switch. 3. He's been looking awful all season. 4. No, Cade has no looked awful at any point this season. 

So yes, undefeated Oklahoma did make a switch. However, the circumstances of Michigan doing it during a bye week would be massively different. 

Sopwith

October 10th, 2021 at 1:18 AM ^

Well, the 1972 Dolphins had an interesting situation. Bob Griese got injured in week 5, so Earl Morrall came in and led them to a 14-0 regular season and then started two playoff wins, but Don Shula switched starters for the Super Bowl against Washington, which they won to finish 17-0 and complete the NFL's only perfect season.

I Bleed Maize N Blue

October 10th, 2021 at 4:08 AM ^

The thing you left out is that Griese came on in relief of Morrall in the AFC Championship game against the Steelers and led them to victory. It was 7-7 at halftime, and the Steelers got a FG in the 3rd Q. The stats show Morrall threw a TD in the 2nd Q, but also had an INT. I don't remember when that happened, but probably it led to Shula deciding to make the switch. And of course after that, Griese, having shown he was good to go, was going to start in the Super Bowl. He didn't have a big arm, and they didn't throw much back then anyway, but I remember him being a smart field general. It was crunch time, and Griese delivered.

MGoBlue96

October 10th, 2021 at 1:11 AM ^

I mean McNamara has been decent to good even at times but I suppose not  quite at the level to completely squash it. However the coaches do have more data, etc than outside people  so if they think he gives them the best chance to win right now that is most likely true. Also it's definitely not like he has played poorly to straight up get himself benched.

Sopwith

October 10th, 2021 at 1:00 AM ^

Alex, you're not going to mention the decision to go for two with over 3 minutes left in the 3rd and the chance to go up 20-7 with a kick? This isn't a case of hindsight being 20/20, it was a bizarre decision at the time. It actually ended up putting us in a 2 points worse position than we would have been, because N doesn't go for two themselves if the score is 20-20 after their TD. 

As terrifying as I expected. The pregame "what am I missing about Nebraska" people... you are impenetrably dense homers.

Anyway, emotionally exhausting, but what a gutty performance. Cade was 100% right, this is a game recent Michigan teams probably lose.

jmblue

October 10th, 2021 at 1:36 AM ^

I don't know.  I felt like that 2-point decision was 50-50.  It was certainly early, but there's a clear benefit to being up 14 vs. 13 - larger than the benefit of being up 13 vs 12.

 In any event, let's think about what would have happened if we had kicked the PAT, and the next several drives had played out the same way.

Michigan goes up 20-7.

NU gets its two straight TDs, and goes up 21-20.

Michigan answers with Corum's TD to go up 26-21.  At this point I think we probably go for 2, as it's the fourth quarter and the thought of losing by a point has to loom large.

Whether we get 2, 1 or 0 points there, if the next two possessions (Nebraska's TD and Moody's FG) play out the same, that FG will put us ahead (either with 31, 30 or 29 points).  Sounds good, except that it would mean that NU must score on its next drive.   Do they still run three times in a row and end up fumbling?  

Sopwith

October 10th, 2021 at 1:49 AM ^

Yeah I agree, the way it played out it was probably a wash once you hit the 26-21 score, but judging solely at the time, the way both offenses were moving the ball at that point, it seemed very, very early to be going for two. Well into the 4th I'd have had no problem with it.

ERdocLSA2004

October 10th, 2021 at 1:03 AM ^

We won because Scott frost for some reason didn’t encourage Martinez to run in the first half.  The mind numbing coaching decisions our staff makes continues to incite fear.  The McCarthy run on 3rd and long when all you need to do is run the ball with Haskins…?  Idiotic.  The 2pt conversion?  Idiotic.  Not giving the ball to Haskins a lot more because the dude gets positive yards every time he touches the ball? Idiotic.  Not calling timeout when you team is obviously confused before martinez runs it in?  Idiotic.  I love our team, our DBs make some mistakes but overall I’m impressed.  The staff seems to be making a fair amount of consistently bad calls which I don’t understand.  Also, act like you’ve been there before.  I’m sick of the PF penalties for undisciplined stuff.

jsquigg

October 10th, 2021 at 2:33 AM ^

This comment is inane and ridiculous.

The first half was Nebraska running their base option stuff and Macdonald had the perfect defense to force the give and they dominated up front. In the second half Nebraska pulled out all the wacky counters and exposed the linebackers. A lot of the busts featured missed assignments as two LBs went with the flow of the play while a TE/RB ran free on the backside. I have to give Frosty credit for how they went with multiple claps and switched up when they would snap the ball which prevented Michigan from getting a good jump off the ball.

The reason I'm encouraged is that this team seems way more mentally tough and disciplined than prior Harbaugh (and beyond) teams. I hope they get the signature wins they deserve, but the second half of the season is BRUTAL. I hope they stay humble (with swagger) and keep improving.

AZBlue

October 10th, 2021 at 9:03 AM ^

You sir are a prime example of why I cannot come near this blog board after a loss - or even a close win like Rutgers.

I am sorry you cannot enjoy a win.  It was frustrating at times but for the first time in quite a while I found myself saying “this offense/team is kinda fun to watch” in the second half.

Go Blue

champswest

October 10th, 2021 at 1:04 AM ^

It was an exciting game to watch with a lot of big plays. This team has some fight. They have been tested two straight weeks and we’re up for the challenge both times. I like where we are.

BK-bloo

October 10th, 2021 at 1:09 AM ^

phew! an easy win would have been preferable, but so great to see them gut it out after taking some punches, and make the key plays when it mattered. kudos.