come and get it [Eric Upchurch]

Preview: Minnesota Comment Count

Ace October 23rd, 2020 at 9:35 AM

Essentials

WHAT Michigan at Minnesota

WHERE Information Entropy Stadium
Minneapolis, MN
WHEN 7:44 PM ET
Saturday, Oct. 24
THE LINE Michigan -3 (Vegas)
Minnesota -3 (Bill C.)
TELEVISION ABC
PBP: Chris Fowler
Analyst: Kirk Herbstreit
Reporter: Maria Taylor
TICKETS not this year
WEATHER

high-20s(!), cloudy,
~20% chance of snow(!!)

Overview

PJ Fleck's squad narrowly avoided some potential embarrassing losses early, found their groove midseason, and beat Auburn after late-year stumbles against Iowa and Wisconsin to finish 11-2 in 2019, tallying the most wins in program history since 1904. They ranked tenth in the final AP Poll (their highest finish since 1962) and 13th in SP+.

While the Gophers lost most of their defensive stalwarts, they return a possible first-round wide receiver, one of the steadier quarterbacks in the country, a proven bruiser at running back, and almost the entire offensive line. ESPN's Bill Connelly projects them to finish 16th in the country and win this game by three points.

Meanwhile, the Vegas line opened at Minnesota -1 and jolted over to Michigan -3 with alacrity. A six-point difference between the computers and the gambling sharps doesn't occur often. What gives?

Maybe there's an answer in Minnesota's projected depth ch--

Ah.

There are rumors flying of various starters not being available for the Gophers. This is not the case for Michigan, which as of the most recent Jim Harbaugh press conference claimed zero players are absent because of a positive Covid test, and there haven't been any rumors to the contrary.

We're not going to have a clear idea of who's taking the field for Minnesota until they, er, take the field. Welcome to week one of the 2020 Big Ten season. It's already weird.

[Hit THE JUMP for who knows, honestly]

Run Offense vs Minnesota

can Feldman Freak Boye Mafe hold up against the run? [247Sports]

While both teams have a lot of turnover up front in this matchup, Michigan should be able to move the ball on the ground. We've discussed at length how the Wolverines offensive line has ready-made replacements for their departed starters; it's not clear if the Gophers can capably fill their holes up front.

Although the Minnesota run defense performed well on a per-carry basis last year, they could be pushed off the ball in short-yardage situations, and their back seven did yeoman's work preventing long run plays. That will be tougher to pull off this year with one returning starter on the defensive line and their best playmakers departed from the back seven. They bring back just two of their top eight tacklers and only one of their top seven leaders in tackles for loss is expected to be in uniform Saturday night.

There's some meat to hold ground. Fifth-year senior Micah Dew-Treadway, the only lineman with more than one career start, is a 315-pound plugger, and he's backed up by a couple 310-pounders. Projected three-tech Keonte Schad is a 295-pound senior. Strongside end Esezi Otomewo is 6'6", 285, and in his fourth year on campus. Weakside end Boye Mafe, as will be discussed more in the next section, is a certified Feldman Freak who can power clean 400 pounds; he may weigh 265 pounds but he's stronk. Depth may be an issue, particularly on the edge, even before accounting for pandemic-related absences.

I'm not sure where the playmaking comes from outside of Mafe, however, and even in his case that's mostly projected to come from rushing the passer. DE Carter Caughlin and safety/slot Antoine Winfield Jr. were hugely impactful playmakers that offenses had to scheme around; ILB Thomas Barber was a steady run defender. The second level, in particular, is looking mighty shaky; I had the Gophers last in my linebacker rankings of teams on the schedule:

The Gophers lose nearly all of their linebacker production from a 2019 group that was merely decent statistically despite the presence of two (departed) all-conference LBs.

Now the most experienced player in the group is Raphael Sori-Marin, who had seven spot starts last year and didn't play very well. The early projected starter at WILL, Braelen Oliver, suffered an undisclosed spring practice injury that apparently is serious enough to put his season in jeopardy. That leaves a couple sophomores who were middling recruits that haven't seen the field and a couple true freshman who are higher-rated but true freshmen to fill that role.

Oliver is not expected to play this weekend. Sori-Marin is being discussed as one of the key pieces on the defense even though he struggled until flashing in the bowl game. Whoever lines up at the WILL is going to be young and inexperienced. Defensive coordinator Joe Rossi is throwing out such platitudes as "has played this sport before" for the new guys:

We've got a group that Mariano is the guy with the experience as he played all three spots last year. Josh (Aune) has played some football and then really the rest of the group are very young. They're made up of a lot of true freshmen and redshirt freshmen, but they work their butts off. I couldn't speak highly enough about how hard they work, study and prepare. And that's a testament to Mariano and that's a testament to the guys who were here last year. Because they created a culture where the guys really prepare hard.

I've been excited about what we see when the young guys and they have athleticism. They've got length for the most part and they can do some things. They have some specific skill sets that I think are exciting for people. With that being said, they're freshmen. They're redshirt freshman, and there's a process to it.

Even though Michigan has simplified their run game some since Ed Warinner came aboard, they should be able to get linebackers filling the wrong gaps on occasion—particularly if, as expected, Joe Milton is better at making reads in the run game than Shea Patterson. Add a healthy Zach Charbonnet leading arguably the team's strongest position group and the offensive braintrust may be able to ease Milton into the season without asking him to do too much through the air.

KEY MATCHUP: MICHIGAN OL vs WEEK ONE NEW STARTER STUFF. When an offensive line replaces four starters after a not being able to get in a full offseason of practice, you can expect the occasional assignment mixup and targeting problem. Michigan's backs will have room to operate so long as there aren't too many errors up front.

Pass Offense vs Minnesota

if only Benjamin St-Juste were still wearing this uniform [Bryan Fuller]

The attrition may hurt Minnesota even more against the pass. Winfield was a playmaker in a secondary otherwise bereft of them; he recorded seven of the team's 14 interceptions while no returning player had more than one. If Oliver is out, they return 5.5 sacks from their team total of 28 last season. (If he's in the lineup, move that all the way up to 8.5.) This wasn't a havoc-producing defense even last year outside of Winfield and Coughlin.

It's a good matchup for Michigan's O-line to gel as pass protectors. Most of the rush is unthreatening and Rossi isn't usually inclined to blitz a lot. The main threat is a defensive end who'll have to match up against Jalen Mayfield and Ryan Hayes, both expected to be high-level pass blockers. That threat is Boye Mafe, who made it to #5 on Bruce Feldman's annual freaks list:

Inside the Gophers’ program, they’re expecting a big year from Mafe, who had flashed some of his potential in 2019 (3.5 tackles for loss and three sacks). Very few guys his size can jump the way the 6-4, 260-pounder can. His vertical is 40½ inches. That’s 4½ inches higher than any defensive lineman at the NFL combine this year. He can touch the top of the square on a basketball backboard.

But it’s not just his vertical. All of his numbers that are head-turning. Mafe has broad jumped 10-6. He has run a 4.57 40. His 10-yard split is 1.58. His short shuttle is 4.3. He can power clean 400 pounds and squats 653. It’s just a whole lot of wow stuff.

He's explosive. He's started to translate that athleticism into production and he's getting a legit-sounding level of practice hype. But if he gives the tackles trouble, Michigan can probably chip him with a back or tight end and forget about it; it's hard to generate consistent pressure with one impact pass-rusher.

Cornerbacks Coney Durr and Benjamin St-Juste—yes, the lanky Canadian who Michigan was going to put on medical scholarship—are both solid Big Ten starters. They each broke up ten passes last year; they also combined for one pick. They're more steady than spectacular and they had some trouble against better competition last year.

The nickel position, a starting role in Minnesota's 4-2-5 alignment, is looking like a potential problem spot; the competition to replace Chris Williamson is ongoing. Justus Harris is a senior who's been mostly limited to special teams; redshirt freshman Solomon Brown was ranked outside the top 1000 as a recruit.

Jordan Howden was a better run defender than cover safety last year playing across from Winfield. Sophomore Tyler Nubin was a top-400 recruit who generated excitement in limited time last year, but Rossi wants to make it abundantly clear that expectations are not for him to be a one-for-one replacement for Winfield:

"Coach Fleck says all the time that comparisons steal your joy. We're not going to worry about Winfield. We're looking at Tyler Nubin and we're going to worry about Tyler Nubin. And Tyler Nubin is a really talented football player. Tyler Nubin has coverage ability. He has physical ability in terms of playing in the run game, and so we're very excited about his upside and his future. He's one of our hardest workers. I know you guys haven't been able see it, but take my word on it. When he practices, he's at 100% all the time.

That being said, he hasn't started a game before and he's never had to be the guy.

This is another spot where a missed assignment or two could open up some big plays. Expect Michigan to target the intermediate areas and deep seams to see if they even need to test Durr and St-Juste on the outside.

KEY MATCHUP: JOE MILTON vs THROWING IT TO THE RIGHT TEAM. I'm on board the Milton hype train but I still very much want to see him make it through a game clean before I turn up my expectations to truly ridiculous levels.

Run Defense vs Minnesota

Mohamed Ibrahim is a load to bring down [Brad Rempel/GopherSports.Com]

Pardon me for quoting myself:

When the one-two punch of Rodney Davis and Shannon Brooks was lost to injury in 2018, then-freshman Mohamed Ibrahim rescued the running game by averaging 5.7 yards on 202 carries, showing pile-moving power and the durability to be a featured back. The return of both Smith and Brooks ate into his workload last year but didn't dull his effectiveness; now those two are out of eligibility.

While losing two members of a three-headed backfield usually leaves a thin depth chart, the Gophers have a ready-made backup available in redshirt sophomore Bryce Williams, who was the #2 back in 2018 before redshirting last year when Davis and Brooks were available again. A few youngsters will push Williams for carries; PJ Fleck has a way of unearthing overlooked talent and freshman Ky Thomas, who put up absurd high school stats in Topeka, fits the bill.

As Seth mentioned in a Neck Sharpies you should very much read, Minnesota's 2019 squad may have been known for its vertical passing game but they ran at the rate of a classic MANBALL squad. There's no reason not to believe Ibrahim will be every bit the productive workhorse he was in 2018. Ibrahim will run right through arm-tackles and defensive backs; you need to get your front seven on him with force.

The Gopher line was expected to be one of the best in the conference after returning four starters from the Big Ten's #3 unit in line yards. That is no longer the expectation for Saturday. Gopher247's Ryan Burns has all but confirmed rumors that mammoth Aussie RT Daniel Faalele and 345-pound right guard Curtis Dunlap are out this weekend; Faalele may have opted out after offseason leg surgery while Dunlap, who entered and exited the transfer portal, has reportedly battled injuries in fall camp.

There's still plenty of experience along the line but being able to smash behind those two was going to be a big part of the running game. A reconfigured line likely shifrts projected starting left guard/utility lineman Blaise Andries out to right tackle and projected center Conner Olsen to left guard while inserting John Michael Schmitz, a solid fill-in starter last year, at center and either Axel Ruschmeyer or Austin Beier at right guard. While that combination should be decent, it loses a lot of oomph on the right side, and whoever lines up at right guard will be getting some of their fi.

The quarterback running game is all but absent in Minnesota's offense even though they run a lot of run-pass options. A disciplined rush should be enough to limit any scrambles.

KEY MATCHUP: THE DEFENSIVE TACKLES vs HOLD YOUR GROUND. We don't know who's playing on the Gopher O-line but said persons will be large. If the tackles can stand up to those guys without letting them reset the line of scrimmage near the linebacker level, it'd go a long way towards winning this game and be a nice step towards assuaging fears about the interior of the defense, especially if they do it without too much schemed-up help from the ends crashing inside.

Pass Defense vs Minnesota

Rashod Bateman is one of the best WRs in the country [Minnesota Athletics]

This is the section that's going to give you the heebie-jeebies. Ready or not, here we go:

We nearly avoided this: Rashod Bateman initially opted out of the season to prepare for the NFL Draft, for which he's vying to be one of the first receivers off the board, before returning to the fold when the Big Ten announced it would play. Bateman put up spectacular numbers in 2019: 60 receptions for 1219 yards (20.3 YPC) and 11 touchdowns. While he's more than just a deep threat, he's also an extremely dangerous deep threat. I suspect Gray is going to get a little help from safeties playing over the top.

They'll be better-positioned to give that help than last year's Minnesota opponents, which also had to fend with Tyler Johnson, a fifth-round pick in this year's draft. Johnson led the team with 86 catches, 1318 yards, and 13 TDs, providing a reliable intermediate target while Bateman lifted the top off. His replacement is senior Chris Autman-Bell, a perfectly decent second option who's probably not going to get a look from the NFL. If Autman-Bell, who had some separation issues last year, is consistently getting open against the #2 corner, we're going to continue to feel alarmed about that spot; if he's not, it sets an acceptable baseline.

It's unclear who'll get targets beyond those two. It may not matter too much: 146 of Minnesota's 212 completions went to their top two receivers last year, and Fleck's offense isn't designed to feature tight ends and running backs in the passing game much at all. The two most likely players to emerge in the 2019 Autman-Bell role (28 catches) are fifth-year senior Seth Green (NTSG), who's been mostly utilized as a wildcat quarterback and caught one pass last year, and four-star true freshman Daniel Jackson.

Quarterback Tanner Morgan went from "lost a position battle to Zack Annexstad" to second-team All-Big Ten in one year that saw him rewrite the Minnesota record book. Fleck's offense allows him to make simple reads while still pushing the ball down the field. Again, read Seth's Neck Sharpies, there will be a quiz:

Minnesota's passing game is extremely simplified. The idea is to have so many RPOs that you get sick of letting their running game churn you down the field, start diving after it, and open up leverage for those dangerous receivers. ...

This is how PJ Fleck can run an extremely simple offense from lots of different looks: everything's in the same place—just getting there from different places—and the guy a defense would want to use to punish that is getting pulled in opposite directions by the RPO. If you sit back underneath anyways you're playing a man down in the run game against that big offensive line and tough running back. The ball's out too fast to blitz it to death. And the minute you stop covering those receivers with the respect they command, they're going to arrive to a spot Morgan's practiced throwing to 100,000 times. It's really effective.

We'll get a better idea whether Morgan is a really good system QB or a legit NFL prospect this year. While the overall numbers were really good, he ranked 82nd out of 130 qualifying FBS QBs in turnover-worthy plays according to PFF's season preview, and the Gopher offense funnels passes into the intermediate-to-deep middle of the field—a high-reward area that also comes with greater risk. Losing Johnson's ability to quickly separate in that area is going to lead to some tighter windows.

Adding to the turnover potential is the offensive line turmoil; this was a bad pass-blocking line before any attrition. Minnesota ranked 106th in sack rate and even worse on passing downs, per Football Outsiders. That's despite the offense's RPO-heavy design helping to get the ball out quickly and force defensive linemen to respect the run.

I haven't even mentioned a very important bit of offseason movement: Minnesota lost Fleck's longtime offensive coordinator, Kirk Ciarrocca, to the same position at Penn State. They replaced him with Mike Sanford Jr., whose track record as an OC is inscrutable because of short stopovers and a failed stint as head coach at Western Kentucky. I've waited this long to mention the change mostly because I expect Fleck and Sanford to let Ciarrocca's offense ride this year; we'll have to see if there's any impact on playcalling acumen.

So long as the cornerbacks can stay over the top of their matchups, Minnesota's passing game mostly avoids Michigan's projected weaknesses. They tend to roll the pocket away from the DTs and try to force DEs into the wrong decision; Aidan Hutchinson and Kwity Paye are tough to fool. Their throws are projected to go into the area of the field where Dax Hill, Brad Hawkins, and Cam McGrone will be roaming.

But, yeah, Bateman is terrifying.

KEY MATCHUP: VINCENT GRAY vs RASHOD BATEMAN. Don't get destroyed in this matchup and force some difficult catches. I'm not going to ask for much more. Hopefully Don Brown is able to slide some safety help Bateman's way without sacrificing too much elsewhere. If Bateman doesn't have a blowup game, Minnesota could have a hard time keeping up.

SPECIAL TEAMS

The Gophers have a new Aussie punter, so I have to assume he'll be good. Their primary kicker, Michael Lantz, made 8/11 field goals as a freshman last year before getting hurt; his replacement, Brock Walker, went 3/4. College kickers and all, but it looks like their situation is solid. They'll have all new return men; we'll all get to learn who they are together on Saturday night.

Michigan is similarly strong in the kicking game. This looks like a wash unless, say, Giles Jackson breaks a return into the open field.

KEY MATCHUP:  AHHHH YOU PUT IT THROUGH THE UPRIGHTS

INTANGIBLES

CHEAP THRILLS

Worry if…

  • Rashod Bateman is hand-wavingly open 20 or more yards downfield
  • Michigan's offensive line isn't creating lanes against this defensive front
  • Joe Milton is throwing the ball to the wrong team

Cackle with knowing glee if…

  • Tanner Morgan spends most of the night running for his life
  • Charbonnet and Co. repeatedly find themselves in the second level of the defense
  • Milton throws a ball to the moon and a receiver catches it in stride

Fear/Paranoia Level: 7 (Baseline: 5; +1 for Rashod Bateman, +1 for Rashod Bateman versus This Secondary In Week One, -1 for Lost The Jug Four Times Since 1967, +1 for General First Game Weirdness, -1 for That Gopher Defensive Front Looks Mighty Pliable, -1 for What Can This Year Do To Us That Hasn't Already Been Done To Us, +1 for Road Game At Night, Fans or Not, +1 for Your Author Is Confident Michigan Will Win But Couldn't Add This Section Up Correctly The First Time Around)

Desperate need to win level: 8 (Baseline: 5; +1 for It's Too Early for BPONE, +1 for We Have No Idea How Many Games Will Be Played So The Early Ones May Take On Outsized Importance, -1 for Non-Divisional Opponent, +1 for But It's Conference Season, +1 for JUG, -1 for Does Anything Really Matter, +1 for This May Be All We Have)

Loss will cause me to… recalibrate expectations for the offense and probably question why any of this is happening

Win will cause me to… JOE MILTON GO VROOOOOOOM ALL OVER SPARTY, BROTHER

The strictures and conventions of sportswriting compel me to predict: 

I'll come right out and say it: I thought Minnesota was a bit of a paper tiger before the rumors of multiple absent starters began making the rounds. So long as Bateman doesn't run rampant, Michigan's defense should be able to get stops by holding the edges and getting to Morgan.

Meanwhile, I'm not sure the Gophers can stop the ground game, and Milton may be able to ease into the season with a lot of simple stuff against the inexperienced linebackers and iffy nickel corner before unleashing the bombs. We're living in a very strange time where it feels like the college football world writ large is overestimating Minnesota and underestimating Michigan. I sure hope I'm right about that.

Finally, three opportunities for me to look stupid tomorrow:

  • Zach Charbonnet breaks 100 rushing yards
  • Dax Hill picks off Morgan twice
  • Michigan, 32-23

Comments

MGoBlue96

October 23rd, 2020 at 12:02 PM ^

No I'm more saying I don't care as much about results in a year where results are heavily influenced by who avoids covid the best, who is sitting out/opted back and where traditional home field advantage doesn't really exist. This is bonus football we didn't even think we were going to get is how I am looking at it. Great results would just be a bonus on top of it. And barring complete disaster I am certainly not going hold this year against any coaches. Just give MSU another ass kicking please.

Mgoczar

October 23rd, 2020 at 11:14 AM ^

So glad football is back. 

 

However, this place is gonna explode after the game. And not the good kind. Remember Shea start against ND ? Yea it'll be worse for Joe. Guilty until proven otherwise. Milton hype is probably just hype IMHO (hope I am wrong). 

A good strategy would be - and Minnesota is about to blitz the crap out of Milton to rattle him - would be to have designed QB runs and rely heavily on run game. If they back off then easy dink dunk passes. 

Just win. 

Montana41GoBlue

October 23rd, 2020 at 11:19 AM ^

I bet that is the exact strategy in below freezing conditions.  Also use RPO with Chris Evans out in open spaces from the backfield, short passes. My concerns would be first start from Milton and the challenge to throw a catchable short/intermediate pass in 20 deg. weather (possibly snow too ~30% chance).  Should be interesting!

1VaBlue1

October 23rd, 2020 at 11:28 AM ^

I'm not as concerned about the defense as most seem to be.  I see Minny's offense being somewhat limited, but strong where Michigan is strong.  Aside from Bateman, I don't get the concern.  In the running game, the DE's and linebackers Michigan will field are among the best in the B1G, and the safeties will be one of the B1G's better groups, also.  Those are who stop the run game.  They are also fast enough enough to cover the middle fairly well against a group of non-OSU, pedestrian footballers.  I have little concern that they'll hold up well and put a stop to any dangerous running and intermediate passing plays.

Covering Bateman is a matter of keeping up with him.  Bracket him with a corner and a safety, hope for the best (ie: force Morgan into a good throw), and let the other 5 LBs/CBs/S's sort out the rest.  I think Michigan's defense is athletic and talented enough to deal with them quite nicely.

Offensively, I'd like to see the return of the run game Gattis employed against Alabama.  And by that, I mean send Murderface through the line somewhere to murder a LB.  If that works against Alabama, it should do okay against Minnesota.  Give Milton a bunch of easy throws and dump offs to get acclimated with game speed, no need to look for big plays right away.  I don't believe Michigan will need them, yet.

gobluem

October 23rd, 2020 at 11:51 AM ^

Fully agree that our DEs and LBs and safeties are great.

 

The concern is that CBs and DTs are mediocre at best, most likely. 

If you're bracketing WRs with safeties, that diminishes run stopping ability of said safeties and can open up the middle of the field.

If there's no pocket collapsing, and suspect corners, that isn't very confidence inspiring for stopping the passing game. 

 

I think it's going to be a real bumpy year on defense. A rollercoaster. There's a lot of pieces but it may be hard to paper over some of the holes

MGoStrength

October 23rd, 2020 at 11:40 AM ^

Benjamin St-Juste—yes, the lanky Canadian who Michigan was going to put on medical scholarship—are both solid Big Ten starters

Why now did we wan to medical him?  It seem like we could use a solid B1G starter next to Gray, no?

oriental andrew

October 23rd, 2020 at 11:51 AM ^

Don't know that it's ever been officially revealed. He did graduate in 3.5 years, though, so it seems he thought he was well enough to overcome whatever injury or medical history he had to continue playing, and that the UM docs/staff may have disagreed. 

And until Ambry Thomas opted out and decided to stay opted out, we did have another solid B1G starter at CB. 

MGoStrength

October 23rd, 2020 at 12:32 PM ^

And until Ambry Thomas opted out and decided to stay opted out, we did have another solid B1G starter at CB. 

Good point.  But, he could still be the nickel, but he would have waited to play this year which if he stayed I believe his eligibility would be used up versus playing last year and this year at Minney.

AlbanyBlue

October 23rd, 2020 at 11:41 AM ^

Thanks for all the content this week!!

Nervous as hell about this one. With the bad weather forecasted, I can see a 2019 Notre Dame like gameplan on offense. With 4 new OL. Also, I would feel better if I was confident we could limit Bateman. We'll see.

Perkis-Size Me

October 23rd, 2020 at 12:10 PM ^

I'm not sure how well Michigan is going to be able to run the ball tomorrow. At least not at first, anyway. That's not to say anything on the OL or the RBs, both of which are either deep or at least have plenty of experience. But Minnesota knows this is Milton's first start. He's never played meaningful snaps and didn't even get that much garbage time. I won't be surprised to see them stack 8-9 guys in the box and dare Milton to beat them through the air. I won't be surprised to see Minnesota try and put as much pressure on Milton as possible. 

If Milton can consistently hit his receivers and force Minnesota's D to back off the LOS, then sure, I can see the ground game having a great night. But Milton hasn't put anything on tape (yet) that suggests he will be effective in the passing game, so I bet we see the game start off with Minnesota stacking the box and stuffing the run game more than we'd like to see. At least until Milton shows he can handle getting the ball to his receivers. 

As for the defensive side of things....yeah Bateman is going to get his and the guy is going to rip off some plays. It's just going to happen. But if Brown can at least prevent him from having a Herculean night and make someone else beat them too, then you've got to like Michigan's chances. Tomorrow's a game where you just have to hope Daxton can start living up to that 5* billing. 

Hannibal.

October 23rd, 2020 at 12:21 PM ^

A couple of things I like in this game:

1. First game offense for us -- I think that this is a plus, and not a minus, because Minny has absolutely no idea how to prepare for us.  I expect Milton to look a lot like Devin Gardner looked in his first few starts.

2. Overall talent disparity -- it takes a lot more than two studs on offense to win a game.  Were that not the case, RichRod might still be our coach.  The best that Minny has done recruiting-wise so far since 2017 is ninth in the B1G.  Their 2017 class was ranked 12th in the B1G.  They are consistently worse than MSU, a team that we are pointing our finger and laughing at for their recruiting having clearly fallen off.  Without doing any deep research, I would say that Harbaugh hasn't lost to any teams with this low level of talent yet in Ann Arbor, except for maybe 2015 Utah.

 

We might be one and whatever in our last whatever+1 road games against ranked teams, but I'll bet that this game resembles the circumstances of that one win more than the circumstances of the losses. 

HooverStreetRage

October 23rd, 2020 at 12:57 PM ^

I haven't even mentioned a very important bit of offseason movement: Minnesota lost Fleck's longtime offensive coordinator, Kirk Ciarrocca, to the same position at Penn State. 

I have no idea what football impact this may have, but unless he's getting a serious raise in pay, not sure why someone would leave a program on the rise (and a young head coach on the rise) and life in a vibrant metropolis for the backwater of State College and the baggage of Penn State.

 

 

bronxblue

October 23rd, 2020 at 2:04 PM ^

Glad to see the game preview.  I'm still not super-excited about this disjointed season, but it'll be fun.

Minnesota does feel like a bit of a paper tiger; they went 2-2 against ranked teams last year and that Auburn team wasn't particularly good.  I think Fleck is a good coach but every year there's some team people are super-high on based on how the last season ended and then they struggle to meet those expectations.  Last year it was Nebraska and Purdue, and while Minnesota is better than either of those teams coming into the season they've got a lot of unknowns and a ton of unproven guys to step into the breach.  This is one of those games I'm much happier to be playing early than late.

zapata

October 23rd, 2020 at 2:14 PM ^

Speaking of things getting back to old traditional ways, Bruce Springsteen has a new album out, I think today is the first day. Feels like old times.

UofM Die Hard …

October 23rd, 2020 at 2:24 PM ^

Two things:

1. I honestly thought to myself, "Why is Brian showing a picture of the nittany lion?"   its basically the same mascot as above

2. If Dax picks Morgan off twice, put him in the heisman race at that point. 

gary3

October 23rd, 2020 at 6:00 PM ^

We're living in a very strange time where it feels like the college football world writ large is overestimating Minnesota and underestimating Michigan. I sure hope I'm right about that.

No offense to us, but what reasons have we given the world to back us in this one? Minnesota won more games last year than we have since 2011. Maybe it's just the BPONE talking, but I don't find it so strange that the outside world views it this way, as I sort of do, too. 

4th phase

October 23rd, 2020 at 11:14 PM ^

Is their sack rate so bad because they are constantly run blocking for passes in the RPO?

Last year they had 2 NFL receivers and now they have 1, who is more deep threat than shifty. Seems like they should have the LBs step forward on the RPO to have Minny favor the pass. Take away the run and make them throw. People are worried about the CBs but if the line is shaky, Michigan won’t have to cover long anyways. 

DeathofBrutus

October 24th, 2020 at 5:54 PM ^

I'm simply ecstatic that College Football is back in the B1G 10 and love the MGoBlog flavor of coverage. However, I do miss the "Fee Fi Foe" article for both the offense and defense of both teams before the game. Nevertheless, keep up the good work and don't forget to Cue the Muppets when you create your fist post after the Win.