[Bryan Fuller]

Michigan 34, Nebraska 3 Comment Count

Alex.Drain November 12th, 2022 at 7:48 PM

Every year there is one Michigan Football game that, despite watching the entirety of the game, I have no recollection of anything that happened within a few days of its conclusion. I can confidently say that the game against Nebraska that occurred today will be this year's game. There was never a moment where Nebraska felt like they were in the game, Michigan's offense was a mundane mix of ground-and-pound and out-of-sync passing, and the Wolverine defense overwhelmed Nebraska's subpar quarterbacks. This game included very few notable plays, just a routine hamblasting of a bad team by a good one *yawn*. Thankfully, sleepy is good when you're on the right side of it. 

Nebraska got the ball to open the game and on 3rd & 6 during the first series, they got what would be their longest play of the game, a 30 yard pass from QB Chubba Purdy to WR Marcus Washington in between Michigan's CB DJ Turner and S RJ Moten. That play got the Huskers quickly into Michigan territory, but like nearly every Nebraska drive to follow, it fizzled out in the span of a few plays. A false start on 3rd & 1 backed them up, and Purdy was sacked by Junior Colson to end the drive. 

Michigan got the ball and asserted themselves very quickly. JJ McCarthy hit Ronnie Bell for a 25 yard completion and otherwise the drive was mostly on the ground. Blake Corum rushed it six times, Donovan Edwards carried it three times, and a DPI call on Nebraska got the Wolverines to the goal line, where Corum punched it in from two yards out for his 17th TD on the season. Of note on that drive, Michigan was faced with a 4th & 2 at the Nebraska 31 but a Corum plunge up the gut converted it with little trouble. 

The game then entered a dry period, with five drives between the two teams resulting in a grand total of one first down. Nebraska was unable to make much of anything happen, with one drive sputtering after a false start and another ending when Michael Barrett made a nice tackle on a TE just short of a first down. That part was not surprising, but Michigan's offense entering a rut for a few drives was. Michigan's first drive of this period ran into trouble when Garrett Nelson, the only Nebraska player we starred on the FFFF diagram, toasted RT Karsen Barnhart and sacked McCarthy. A blitz on 3rd & 13 got the job done to finish the drive. 

[Patrick Barron]

The second drive of this period of the game merits more discussion. Looking to jumpstart the passing game, Michigan decided to dial up more vertical passes. On first down, McCarthy looked deep for Andrel Anthony but the ball was overthrown (Anthony had little separation too). On second down, McCarthy again looked deep, this time to Cornelius Johnson. It seemed like the receiver had a play on the ball but couldn't come down with it. On third down, McCarthy targeted Ronnie Bell on a crosser that was dropped. A frustrating sequence for a passing attack that has struggled in recent weeks and hasn't found its groove on the deep ball since the non-conference. 

After Nebraska's third drive during this dry period, the game livened back up. To get out of the offensive rut, Michigan returned to its bread and butter on offense, going back to the ground and building the pass off the run. Corum got Michigan going and McCarthy made an intermediate throw to a wide-open Colston Loveland before a play-action TD to Ronnie Bell, also wide open. 14-0. 

Nebraska's best drive of the game came right after. Chubba Purdy scrambled for a first down and then connected with Alante Brown on 3rd & 6 for another pickup. Michigan's Taylor Upshaw would get flagged for a roughing the passer penalty to get the Huskers deeper into Michigan territory and one more Purdy scramble on 3rd down moved the chains again. On that play, though, Purdy awkwardly slid down before taking contact and would be injured, forcing third string QB Logan Smothers to come in. The drive stalled after that and a 37 yard FG barely made it through the uprights for Nebraska's only points of the game. 

Michigan got the ball with just over 4 minutes remaining in the first half and proceeded to go on a methodical drive, staying mostly on the ground again. Blake Corum and CJ Stokes carried the weight, with Donovan Edwards exiting due to an undisclosed medical reason, but McCarthy did make a good throw to Roman Wilson to convert a 3rd down. Michigan showed no interest in picking up the pace despite the clock ticking down, and Jim Harbaugh opted not to use his timeouts. Michigan picked up a 4th & 1 and then dilly-dallied their way into the red zone but ran out of time to get it into the end zone. A 30 yard Jake Moody field goal made the score 17-3 at halftime. 

[Bryan Fuller]

The second half, as in every Michigan game in B1G play this season, was better than the first half. The Wolverines began to eat much more time of possession than they did in the first half and shortened the number of drives. Indeed, there were just seven full drives in the second half, with an eighth beginning with under a minute to go in the contest. The first two were punts, Michigan's ending when McCarthy sacked himself out of field goal range in Husker territory.

That was frustrating but Michigan would get a TD, TD, and FG on its other three drives of the second half. The second Michigan drive saw Ronnie Bell finally make a play, scooping up a diving catch before it hit the turf, and then McCarthy punched in the TD with a 3 yard QB keeper (with an assist to a thunder-block from Corum on the play). The third Michigan drive was when Michigan began to hand off more to CJ Stokes, as well as Isaiah Gash, marching into Husker territory. On 2nd & 6 from the Nebraska 29, McCarthy hit Ronnie Bell, who rushed, spun around, stayed in bounds, then scampered down the sideline to the end zone. But before he could cross the goal line, he fumbled, the ball rolled into the end zone, a mad scramble ensued, and Andrel Anthony fell onto it just before it touched the backline. TD, 31-3. 

Nebraska's drives in the second half were completely forgettable. The visitors had to scratch and claw to get a first down and in total, finished with 43 yards on 22 plays in the latter 30 minutes of play. It was as painful to watch as it sounds. Michigan's defense was a ton better and Logan Smothers could not get the offense going. Perhaps the most notable event on that side of the ball in the second half was Michigan's Mike Morris getting rolled up on and hobbling off to the medical tent. Wolverines fans have to hope he will be back to full strength soon. 

Michigan's final drive of the game was the one with the backups, Davis Warren replacing McCarthy at QB and plenty of other second-teamers making their way into the game. They gained 43 yards on 9 plays, a nice catch by Loveland and some good hard runs from the likes of Stokes, Gash, and Leon Franklin again put Michigan in Nebraska territory before the drive wrapped up. With under 90 seconds to go in the game, Jake Moody lined up from 43 yard away and split the uprights to make the lead 31, a very important number for the betting folk. Nebraska got the kickoff and ran the clock out, leaving the final score at 34-3. 

This also happened [Patrick Barron]

There's really not all that much to say about this game. It happened, Michigan was a lot better, they covered the spread, the end. Michigan dominated in expected fashion, with 26 first downs to 8 for Nebraska. They outgained their opponents 411-146 overall and on a per-play basis 6.0-3.0. Michigan's passing game was disappointing and that will likely incur most of the discussion, but as anticipated, they blew the Huskers off the ball in the running game. Michigan as a team ran it 49 times for 264 yards (5.4 YPC) with 2 TDs. Game, set, match right there. Corum's 162 yards will help further his Heisman case, while Stokes played quite well in backup RB duty. McCarthy was 8/17 for 128 yards and 1 TD, while Warren was 2/3 for 19 yards. Ronnie Bell was by far the most targeted receiver, with eight targets and four catches on those targets for 71 yards and 1 TD. 

For Nebraska, the numbers are pretty grim. Purdy was 6/11 for 56 yards before exiting while Smothers was 4/8 for 15 yards. Purdy was Nebraska's top rusher with 39 yards, while RB Anthony Grant gained 22 yards on 11 carries (2.0 YPC). Total dominance. Washington's one catch went for 30 yards while the other 9 catches went for 41 yards combined. Ho hum. 

Michigan is now 10-0 for the first time since 2006 and thus the first time in the Jim Harbaugh era. They join Ohio State as the only 10-0 teams in the B1G and one of just four in the country (pending TCU's game tonight). The Wolverines are now barreling towards an all-time matchup in The Game, but there is still one more contest in between, as Michigan must take on Illinois next weekend at the Big House. The Fighting Illini's star has faded after back-to-back losses against MSU and Purdue, now 7-3 on the season. That game time is not yet announced. There is no content after the jump. 

Comments

stephenrjking

November 12th, 2022 at 8:00 PM ^

Michigan looked kinda meh, but it’s the kind of meh that you can get when the team isn’t threatened at all and is flatly not going to try anything they haven’t already put on film or risk any injury that they don’t have to.

Rarely have I see such a visible retraction of the throttle. After Nebraska lost their (backup!) QB Michigan no longer had to expend any unusual effort to ensure a comfortable victory. Michigan was trotting out the third and fourth and fifth string RBs in the third quarter of a 14 point game and the outcome was never in question for anyone. A demonstration of utter control and contempt for the other team.

And that’s fine. The season comes down to one game in two weeks. There’s not much to say about this game: Michigan is 10-0 with everything to play for. A wild fantasy two years ago, a reality so familiar we barely blink at it now.

Michigan had little to do today and there was no reason to do anything more than what it did.

Take care of business against Illinois, and then it’s time. 

006BOatman

November 12th, 2022 at 9:16 PM ^

Completely disagree. Lots of reason to do more today than they did, for the passing game.  Today and last week and the week before should’ve been confidence builders for that half of the offense, and instead they’ve seeded doubt. If you think JJ’s confidence hasn’t taken at least a slight dip these past few weeks, you’re crazy. And that’s not good with OSU and the playoffs soon after.

J. Redux

November 13th, 2022 at 11:04 PM ^

So, your theory is that JJ’s confidence is impacted by his lack of ability to hit the deep ball, and therefore the coaches should demonstrate their lack of confidence in him by dialing up screen passes?

JJ doesn’t really appear to be lacking confidence, but if he were, that’d be a really weird way to build it.

micheal honcho

November 12th, 2022 at 10:47 PM ^

Why do we always want to change our teams identity? We are a dominant power running team with a complimentary play action passing game. We play smart and aggressive brand of defense and have excellent special teams. We are Stanford with higher level athletes. We are Jim Harbaugh (finally) and we will go as far as that will take us. I accept that. Hell after a decade and a half in the desert I embrace that. Asking Jim Harbaugh to make his team look like some Mike Leech hybrid is asking for more time in the desert. He’ll fail trying to be something he is not. We cajoled a faction of M fans that they had to embrace RRs identity and style. Even when it was unwatchable. I’ll watch us go 10-0 by methodically mauling opponents and roll the dice on a snowstorm every damn year. 

UMForLife

November 13th, 2022 at 7:30 AM ^

We had two passing TDs and one in last game to WRs. That is a lot more than what they have done in previous few games. Michigan fans have specific criteria that makes them a better passing offense. It has to be thrown to non-TEs and non-RBs. Our WRs are who they are. Michigan is a methodical team. They are not into quick score unless BC and DE rip a long one. 

I am sure they will hit long passes eventually. Let us win against OSU using the identity that has been established. Then there are 4 weeks to work on passing game and hopefully bring along one of the speedster FR WRs. Still this team's identity is established and changing that wouldn't be a good thing.

schreibee

November 13th, 2022 at 3:01 PM ^

Honcho, the fact is people here are very happy to be 10-0, beating teams like Nebraska by 31 with such ho-hum effort we won't even remember this game by next week - as Alex noted. 

But people here want more too! They want to restore balance at the least, if not outright M dominance, to the rivalry. 

Beyond that they want to be competitive with Uga or whoever we might face in a playoff game. 

And the fact is, this style of football isn't gonna get us there! Name the last team with a similar pass/run imbalance to compete for, much less win, a playoff game?

Maybe early days Saban? And look how he's evolved! 

Koop

November 13th, 2022 at 10:20 AM ^

I hope the folks complaining about the passing game got to watch the Texas-TCU game—two teams that struggled to establish the run and lived or died by the pass for most of the game. If one thought the comfortable Michigan wins this year were painful, watching TCU going backwards in plus territory over and over again was excruciating. 
 

That’s TCU, the team ranked behind Michigan and the fourth still-undefeated team, and Texas, an historically proud program featuring one of the best backs in the country. 
 

The coaches called three consecutive shot pass plays against Nebraska. Three times, the WRs let JJ down. Michigan had to punt, and Brad Robbins, whose plant leg got injured when the refs let a personal foul go as “running into the punter,” ripped off his helmet in frustration. 
 

We’re ten games into the season, and this team knows its identity. IMHO, it’s long past time to stop wishing it was something else. If the WRs who are on the field are the team’s best options overall, taking into account blocking and possession catches, that’s what it is. It’ll be enough to beat Illinois and move on to the big test. 

Willie Heston

November 13th, 2022 at 1:52 PM ^

I went to Michigan for undergrad and Texas for my Ph.D.--so, I root for Texas unless they are playing Michigan.

I watched this game and was astounded at the lack of confidence Texas had in their OL to pound it into the endzone using their talented RB Robinson:   pass, pass, pass, pass (turnover on downs); so demoralizing.

Most fanbases would love having a bruising OLine and Heisman caliber RB like we have.  Enjoy it!

Angry-Dad

November 12th, 2022 at 8:05 PM ^

Championship on the line in Columbus no matter what happens next weekend (although I expect them to take care of Illinois).  
Just another smothering beat down of a lesser team.  I think the only question left is can they hang if they get in a shoot out?  I like their chances with the ability to control the clock.  
Just really enjoying this season. So rare to be 10-0. It’s much more fun than not being 10-0. 

AlbanyBlue

November 13th, 2022 at 3:25 PM ^

I'd love to see -- it would mean we beat OSU, got to the CFP, and probably won a 2-3 matchup. Hell yeah.

Anyway, the real question is can OSU stop our running game? If I'm the OSU DC, I'm stacking the box until Michigan shows a competent air attack. That said, I don't think they can shut us down playing straight up.

victors2000

November 12th, 2022 at 8:07 PM ^

The defense put its stamp on this game, as did the running game. It was frustrating to struggle with the passing game yet still gradually build up an insurmountable lead and win going away. Oddly. 

WolverineHistorian

November 12th, 2022 at 8:07 PM ^

Like they said on the radio, this game was just work at the office.  Nothing truly noteworthy.  They got the job done.

Other than wanting to get more of the deep pass going, probably the most frustrating thing was seeing Ronnie lose that fumble before going into the end zone.  You have to put that ball away.  Fortunately Andrel barely saved the ball.  

MGlobules

November 12th, 2022 at 8:10 PM ^

Yeah, even though we were winning, I told my wife that it felt like one of those Lions games we used to watch at my grandmother's after eating Thanksgiving dinner. 

Hotel Putingrad

November 12th, 2022 at 8:20 PM ^

Well, as long as we don't turn the ball over or stall repeatedly in the red zone, I like our chances in Columbus.

Because let's face it, JJ/Weiss/anybody but Schoonmaker or Edwards can't muster a first down through the air, much less a touchdown.

Just hope for the best, I guess!

SiKa7x

November 12th, 2022 at 8:23 PM ^

I just dont think our wide receivers look like they can do much of anything right now, seems like a new direction for coaching there might be needed. I also dont have much to say about Weiss other than if he doesnt come up with one hell of a plan for Columbus then i wouldnt mind seeing his role diminished. JJ looks lost, and he didnt look that way to start the season. I can only look towards coaching for that. The non negotiable running game is so dang impressive. Hopefully the seemingly charmin soft Bucks get popped in the jaw from our OL. Can't wait to see it

rc90

November 12th, 2022 at 8:27 PM ^

How good is the defense? Sure, they were down to their 3rd string QB, but Nebraska looked like one of those teams the SEC schedules for a non-bye bye week. Just no chance at all. We keep seeing some version of this, so are most of the teams that Michigan has faced this year basically as bad as a Brian Ferentz offense? Or is the defense just that good?

J. Redux

November 13th, 2022 at 11:11 PM ^

No, no it isn’t, because those fanbases have the ESS-EEE-SEE “it just means more” arrogance.  Any win over an SEC team is obviously the greatest victory in the history of mankind and simply shows that your program must be elite, whereas losing to an SEC team, while undeniably frustrating, is to be expected once every few years and in no way makes your team anything less than 90x better than even the best team from any other conference.

Hence, “Top 10” Alabama.