going up [Bryan Fuller]

Michigan 45, Notre Dame 14 Comment Count

Ace October 27th, 2019 at 12:23 AM

Perhaps Brian Kelly should've thrown a towel.

Michigan ran over, around, and past Notre Dame, breaking out their best offensive performance of the year in a steady rain against a top-ten team. Josh Gattis's offense embraced a run-pass distribution that could've raised Bo Schembechler from the grave. Kelly, meanwhile, ran Kelly's offense.

One of these things was a good idea. Michigan's offensive line bludgeoned the Irish front, opening space for backs Hassan Haskins and Zach Charbonnet to accumulate 142 combined yards by halftime. Notre Dame quarterback Ian Book, meanwhile, spent much of his night on the run from Dr. Blitz's angry horde of defenders.

The Wolverines took advantage of a break on their first offensive drive when an Irish player inexplicably tried to recover a blocked Will Hart punt, allowing Dax Hill to jump on the ball and gain 20 yards in the exchange. While that drive would stall out at the two for a Jake Moody chip shot, the offense had begun to set the tone on the ground, and that continued when they got the ball back. The next drive was mean, muscular, and magnificent: eight plays, all runs, for 59 yards, capped by a seven-yard Charbonnet touchdown.

Cam McGrone (12 tackles) led an overwhelming defensive effort. [Patrick Barron]

The defense forced a three-and-out when Aidan Hutchinson batted down Book's third-down pass. Michigan got right back to it, needing three chunk plays—a Haskins run in which he hurdled a safety, a Patterson third-down throw to Mike Sainristil, and an arc keeper Patterson took 22 yards—to set up another Charbonnet score at the goal line.

Despite trying a fourth down only to be rebuffed by Jordan Glasgow, Notre Dame couldn't break through for the rest of the half. Michigan went into the tunnel with four pass attempts and 34 rushes; the Irish were at 13 and 15, respectively. The Wolverines led, 17-0, and perhaps I'm being too harsh on Kelly for his playcalling, as ND's 15 run plays had netted a grand total of 20 yards.

The game slowed to a halt in the third quarter before infamous referee John O'Neill decided it was time for a signature blunder. Book forced a ball downfield to Chase Claypool into double coverage; Brad Hawkins intercepted the underthrow, only for Khaleke Hudson—who did not so much as touch Claypool—to get hit with defensive pass interference. Five plays later, Book found tight end Cole Kmet all alone on a goal line throwback, and what had been a romp felt like it could turn into a fight, a feeling stoked by the students tossing towels onto the field in protest.

But when Michigan hit back, Notre Dame folded. After a 49-yard run by Haskins, who finished with a game-high 149 yards on 20 carries, Patterson absorbed a hit from Asmar Bilal and got enough mustard on the ball to get it to a sliding Donovan Peoples-Jones in the end zone. A few drives later, the blowout resumed in earnest when Nico Collins pulled down a fade for Patterson's second touchdown pass.

There was little slowing any of M's running backs. [Fuller]

Tru Wilson and Mike Sainristil would tack on touchdowns, the latter in spectacular jitterbug fashion, to extend the lead out to 45-7 before a perfunctory 14-yard toss from backup Phil Jurkovec to Javon McKinley provided the game's final score.

Michigan needed to show a lot heading into the final stretch of the season, and tonight they checked pretty much all the available boxes. The playcalling matched both the situation and the personnel, with the offense churning away at 6.2 yards per play. The defense was hellacious, erasing the Irish run game and forcing Book into a horrible stat line: 8-for-25 for 73 yards. When faced with a moment of potential crisis, both units stepped up.

The Wolverines are now 6-2 and the team has taken an apparent U-turn since halftime of last week's Penn State game. They can build on this next weekend at Maryland, take their second bye week, and hopefully head into the home stretch of MSU-Indiana-OSU with more confidence and competence than they've shown all year.

[Hit THE JUMP for the box score.]

Comments

J.

October 27th, 2019 at 10:47 AM ^

There are some things that you don’t joke about.  I doubt the kid’s family wants to be part of a ND punch line.

(And, FWIW, Brian Kelly didn’t “willingly sen[d] a kid to his death.”  Carelessly, perhaps negligently, sure, but he wasn’t thinking “hey, let’s send somebody up there to die.”

Newton Gimmick

October 27th, 2019 at 3:30 PM ^

Really, that's what you're worried about?  The kid's family might see this and misinterpret it?  You think it would pain them more than seeing, on TV constantly, the well-paid and well-praised coach who negligently killed him, and continues to represent a university obsessed with maintaining a patina of virtue?

Well if that's the case and the family is reading this, I hope you found some solace and closure in J.'s much more well-intentioned comment.  I have no doubt he's a better person than I am anyway.

But at least I didn't kill anyone, like some people I know of.

maize-blue

October 27th, 2019 at 12:51 AM ^

If they bring similar effort and focus to their upcoming games I see no reason to not be 9-2 rolling into the OSU game. And hopefully be playing their best football.

MSU will be charged up but will fold quickly once down. I don't know if a bye week is good or not before that one. (ND just came off a bye week, UM had a bye before Wisconsin, MSU had a bye before PSU. All resulted in terrible flat performance)

Indiana is playing good ball. Trap game.

1VaBlue1

October 27th, 2019 at 8:39 AM ^

This is a valid concern - coming out of bye #2 flat.  But I think MSU is the perfect opponent to come out of it with.  They're not good enough to win the game, even if they fight for a bit.  But, as a rivalry the entire team will want to demolish, they'll help get the energy level back up.    I think it sets up well.

Squad16

October 27th, 2019 at 10:32 AM ^

We should easily handle Maryland, they have imploded and that stadium will be a neutral site environment at worst. 

MSU will be a dogfight, at least for a half, as it always is. But Michigan looks so much better than them, we really should win. 

@Indiana could be scary. They'll possibly even be fringe Top 25 if they beat Northwestern and then lose a close one @PSU! It's also the epitome of a trap game in between MSU and OSU. 

As for OSU, I really would love for them to drop an inexplicable, close game against Penn State to be eliminated from Indy. Then come to Ann Arbor and have them lose their last shot at the playoffs. 

DaftPunk

October 27th, 2019 at 12:53 AM ^

Watching ABC instead of Fox, after a kickoff or punt or other change of possession, the lack of timeouts was wonderful, as was the Michigan effort. Go Blue!

ca_prophet

October 27th, 2019 at 12:55 AM ^

The ND Kmet throwback was a sweet play.

That was about the only time I feel like Brown got got.  Everything else looked like it was either doomed from the get-go, or rescued by an ND receiver making a tough catch.

The offense definitely looked ready for blitzball linebackers and was taking advantage of it.  There were QB runs, downfield throws and solid to great blocking.

Go Blue!

1VaBlue1

October 27th, 2019 at 8:45 AM ^

Yeah, that play was sweet.  McGrone...  Got DAMN!!!!  That man has grown to make us 'forget' Devin Bush quicker than anyone thought possible!  And even if Glasgow got whipped on that TD, he played a pretty good game.  What an effort!

One thing I'll say is that Grey looked like a true freshman trying to guard Claypool, and that's fair.  He was always in a good spot, but just couldn't seem to get his head around.  He'll get that figured out with experience and will be a pretty good corner.

RAH

October 27th, 2019 at 11:41 PM ^

That seems to always be the case with him. He is almost always in reasonably good position but I don't think I have ever seen him get his head around. He's still young though and may develop that skill. If he can stay close to receivers and does get his head around he could be good.

Zopak

October 27th, 2019 at 1:25 AM ^

A special, heart-felt 'Go Fuck Yourself' to John O'Neill. May you be afflicted with vicious shingles, directly on your balls. Otherwise, jesus that was a therapeutic game lol

micheal honcho

October 27th, 2019 at 1:31 AM ^

How is it possible for a QB and an offense to go from lost in the woods to executing on all facets within a game & a half? 

I beat up Shea with the rest over these weeks but not because I didn’t believe he could do it. I just started to think we had broken him. This game showed 90% of all we could have hoped he would be. Let me congratulate Shea loud and clear. That was one hell of a game young man.

1VaBlue1

October 27th, 2019 at 8:49 AM ^

Absolutely, he made a bunch of read errors!  But in the context of the game they were no big deal.  He's not good at reads, but he is good enough to do that to a top 10 team.  Was it a 'last year' performance effort?  Probably.  Which is okay because the pass game is starting to be much more coherent and appropriate as compared to last year.

J.

October 27th, 2019 at 10:53 AM ^

I saw one — if it was a read (it’s hard to tell).  There will probably be a couple more in UFR.

The guy behind me thought he saw several, but each time he said something about it, I’d watch the replay and the EMLOS would be spying Shea, making a give correct. The mere fact that nobody is near Shea at the end of the play doesn’t mean that he should have kept the ball; it may just mean that the defense saw that he gave the ball.  (Perhaps he needs to work on his fakes).

freelion

October 27th, 2019 at 9:38 AM ^

He was also still panicking in the pocket including the infamous backwards throw that could have been disastrous. He also threw it right to ND defenders a couple times but luckily they dropped it. This was one of his better games this year but by no means did he play well. I would give him a B which is much better but not good enough to beat OSU.

wolvmar

October 27th, 2019 at 1:48 AM ^

Was at the game and, even with the rain, it was electric. Only negative, besides John O’Neill (Irish?) was the lame student section. Not close to being filled in the first half and about 1/3 filled after halftime.  The kids who stayed did make noise at least so hats off to them.