Michigan State 14, Michigan 10 Comment Count

Ace


The final play. [Bryan Fuller]

Death by a thousand self-inflicted cuts.

Michigan State's offense didn't look like it belonged in the same league as Michigan's defense, which forced eight three-and-outs, added a turnover on downs, and didn't allow a point after the 8:07 mark of the second quarter. By those numbers, you'd think the Wolverines would've won this game in a blowout.

But the offense, well, it all went wrong with the offense. They turned the ball over five times: a Ty Isaac fumble that killed any momentum from a promising start, a Sean McKeon fumble when they were driving at the end of the first half, and three John O'Korn interceptions. O'Korn's picks came on consecutive second-half possessions as rain fell from the sky in sheets; the coaches continued to call passes despite O'Korn's struggling and the receivers having a tough time hanging onto the ball.

That was it, really. State needed only one long touchdown drive and another on a short field to get the win while Michigan found new and demoralizing ways to shoot themselves in the foot.

After the game, the quarterback dismissed concerns about the playcalling and the weather, instead putting the loss on his own shoulders.

"I take full ownership for this loss," said John O'Korn. "You can't turn the ball over and expect to win and you can't give them great field position all game and expect to win."

"You've got to execute the plays that are called regardless of the conditions and we didn't do that tonight."

His head coach had a different take.

"Yeah, you can criticize that," Jim Harbaugh said about the playcalling. "We were trying to run the ball. We were trying to piece drives together."

It was a depressingly familiar script. Michigan State had the better, more cohesive gameplan, highlighted by their second touchdown, a gorgeous slip screen off a fake end-around that caught the entire defense on the wrong side of the field. Michigan's pass protection repeatedly broke down; Juwann Bushell-Beatty replaced Nolan Ulizio at right tackle midway through the game with little positive effect. The late-game plays didn't break the right way; MSU all but iced the game when Brian Lewerke dropped a third-down snap, frantically scrambled, and somehow rolled over two players to get the first down before touching the ground.

Another familiar sight—stupid Michigan State penalties—gave Michigan a final shot late, first when a holding call stopped the clock on MSU's final drive, then when senior linebacker Chris Frey committed an obvious late hit on Karan Higdon. Yet again, Michigan committed an unforced error. O'Korn found Eddie McDoom wide open around the MSU 30, only for the ball to clang off McDoom's hands. A couple plays later, O'Korn's Hail Mary heave hit the rain-soaked turf.

The bitter taste from this one is going to linger. Michigan could—should—be 3-0 against MSU under Harbaugh. Instead, they're 1-2. This time around, it was the struggling offense finally costing the team a game this season. Even if we knew that was coming this year, it won't sit well that it happened against the Spartans, especially given the preceding bye week and questionable playcalling.

It's going to be a long week for a lot of people.

Comments

DairyQueen

October 8th, 2017 at 6:06 AM ^

100%

Dabo was reguarly criticized as being a choke artist, for never being able to win "the big game", etc.

"Clemsoning"

And now he's building a monster down in South Carolina. Perenially competing with/beating Bama.

Those two teams are in another echelon. And neither look to descend any time soon.

These things take time.

I'm impatient too.

Harbaugh will absolutely have his way.

SC Wolverine

October 8th, 2017 at 12:06 AM ^

You are of course right about Harbaugh being a great coach.  We know that and remain extremely grateful that he is our coach.  And the Clemson/Swinney point is on target.  Yet, this did not reflect Harbaugh's ability.  Something is wrong.  It's one thing for youth to make mistakes.  But the offense shows no fire and has no single striking competence.  Where's the desperate passion with this team?  Harbaugh needs to find it. Show me one guy on the offense who plays like Winovich?  Yeah, this is just one bad day.  But this offense -- and therefore team -- is in serious trouble.

stephenrjking

October 8th, 2017 at 12:16 AM ^

"No fire/no passion" arguments are so vacuous. Who, specifically, foiled a play because they didn't have enough "fire?" Was it Mckeon, struggling for extra yardage when he fumbled? O'Korn scrambling and trying to make a play only to be picked off? What is it? The offense was bad. Suggesting that the issue was a lack of passion is weak sauce. There are specific problems. There are remedies. But Michigan doesn't magically score an extra TD if they just care a little bit more.

bo_lives

October 8th, 2017 at 1:28 AM ^

On MSU's muffed punt some idiot Michigan player shoved the MSU guy instead of actually, you know, DIVING FOR THE FUCKING BALL LIKE HE WANTED IT. Ball proceeds to bounce into MSU player's hands as he's falling to the ground.

I don't think the play mattered but there's my example. U-M players have no fire at all.

TrueBlue2003

October 8th, 2017 at 2:30 AM ^

- when the ILB sticks with a play to reach back and rip the ball out of of Issac's hands.

- when the DB runs his butt off to hit McKeon from behind to make a play.

- when the OL springs London for a 50 yarder.

- when the OL prevents us from recording a single sack.

This OL owned us despite a massive differential in talent.  How else to explain it other than fire/passion? We sleep walk through this game, they play it like their Super Bowl and are that focused.  We can make fun of that all we want, but maybe caring about a game helps?

Lil boy blue

October 8th, 2017 at 12:23 AM ^

Something is wrong- 5 turnovers is a good portion of that something. Play calling has sucked but come on people .... is that an indictment of the staff or the personnel? Did our play calling suck the 2 years prior? What's changed? It isn't the damn coaching staff. Who else are we gonna get? Stop hating and just embrace (as shitty as it is) what we are. Mediocre. I love UM football as much as anyone else and am just as pissed (and presently drinking) as anyone else but slow the damn roll on fire everyone. I trust Harbaugh and his decision making more than any coach we have ever had and if you think you're observations on the couch or in the stands is better than his you're dead fucking wrong Editable omission: the one change is Pep to coaching staff. I know this and am confident he isn't the issue

Lil boy blue

October 8th, 2017 at 12:47 AM ^

Apples and oranges. Are Speight or O'Korn Rosen? That said UCLA is 3-2 with a high volume offense full of turnovers. Our game is supposed to be low risk and allow our D to kick the ass they kick. Fisch was an outcast prior to his time with us but all that said it's a good point and maybe his departure is the result of our poor execution. Just don't know why Harbaugh wouldn't have spotted that and paid him more rather than paying Pep what he did. Unless of course it remains an issue of personnel vs strategy - again trust Harbaugh over our MMQB observations.

Yo_Blue

October 8th, 2017 at 1:16 AM ^

Dude, quit drinking and go to bed.  First of all, it's JEDD Fisch, not Jeff.  Second, he was not our OC, he was the passing coordinator, the same as Pep Hamilton this year.  If you can't bring anything to the table beyond whining, then quit it.

sharklover

October 8th, 2017 at 2:55 AM ^

Yep, most of the problems in this game stemmed from offensive line play. There were other issues, but that was by far the biggest. And it was why we had to stick with the passing game in the middle of a deluge

SC Wolverine

October 8th, 2017 at 12:00 AM ^

You are dead right about MSU's game plan being better -- and this coming off a bye week!  At no point did you get the sense that Harbaugh had something to spring on them.  And this was such an exploitable defense!  Harbaugh is not coaching with the desperation that this team needs.  I love Harbaugh as much as the next guy, but this game does not reflect his ability as a coach.

stephenrjking

October 8th, 2017 at 12:09 AM ^

Curious: everyone wants the crazy stuff again from last year. Fair enough: it was fun and effective. But do people really trust O'Korn to throw deep down the middle? It doesn't look like the playcallers do. Or, I think that's the case, but O'Korn went back to happy feet O'Korn today and never really stuck through multiple reads. There were routes downfield, but he couldn't hit them. This is, after all, our backup QB. We saw why today. And we definitely have OL problems. But what, exactly, do you do with those problems? "Something" is not an answer. What are the calls? Make suggestions. It's an ugly, dispiriting loss. But I'm not sure what you do with JOK and the revolving door at RT right now.

SC Wolverine

October 8th, 2017 at 12:15 AM ^

I agree that Harbaugh seems to have no confidence in O Korn or the offense.  But that is not a winning leadership strategy.  You've got to play to win, not to mitigate problems.  And O' Korn has ability.  If you're going to play him, you've got to at least pretend you have confidence in him.  The opposite was the mess we saw tonight, and the lack of inspiration with this offense is part of it.  And there are ways to scheme around O line problems for more than 10 points.  But what scheme did we show tonight?  I didn't see one.

ST3

October 8th, 2017 at 3:55 PM ^

If that is true, end arounds and deep throws down the middle should have worked. I think we ran 1 end around for 6 yards. It seems the coaches wanted to prove JOK can throw sideline patterns OOB just as well as Speight. Does that shit work in practice? I just don't understand why they keep going back to a dry well.

YouRFree

October 8th, 2017 at 12:17 AM ^

our biggest problem is still the OL. Even Tom Brady is the QB, it won't help. WRs are also dropping ball. It turns out Black's injuries affect our passing game a lot. 

And the rest of WRs are not good. Our entire Offensive coaching staff are not up to the standard. the one who were are gone (weatley and Jed Fisch), not a good sign.

I Like Burgers

October 8th, 2017 at 12:34 AM ^

I feel like the WRs are as bad as the OL at this point. And honestly maybe even worse. Especially if you don’t count the tight ends and focus on just the WRs.

Perry is fine and that is all. Everyone else is incompetent.

MFanWM

October 8th, 2017 at 12:17 AM ^

Most of the fist half was dink and dunk from what could be told.  The lack of trying to hit anything deep between the numbers is absolutely confusing.  All long passes appear to be designed to be thrown down the sidelines toward the sideline.  Only a few passes all year long between the numbers and this seems to be a perfect game to target the 10-15 yd pass in the center of the field with the LBs crashing.

Instead, throw short flat crossing patterns in front of the LBs and Safties all first half.

stephenrjking

October 8th, 2017 at 12:23 AM ^

There's a lot of data we don't have. We almost never see what caused JOK to leave the pocket so many times, but on the few downfield views we had there were often receivers running deep routes. Why didn't we hit them? Maybe they weren't the first reads. Maybe JOK wasn't confident he could make the plays (especially in high winds). Maybe JOK broke too early. The one pass he did hit deep center was a TD, called back on a legit hold, that he broke e pocket to find. It's hard to hit guys deep middle when your QB won't stay put. Of course it's hard for him to stay put when our OL is getting eviscerated.

TrueBlue2003

October 8th, 2017 at 1:12 AM ^

to throw deep down the middle, but yes, I would like to do that. If the protection is there, why not?

It's better than running into a pile.  It's better than throwing a pick short.  It's better than throwing your guy out of bounds.

Absolutely, if you can buy the time (which I don't think we can do), throw it deep down the middle. Worst case, it's a punt anyway.