Jerry Jeudy leaves very little margin for error. [Patrick Barron]

Alabama 35, Michigan 16 Comment Count

Ace January 1st, 2020 at 5:44 PM

It went a hell of a lot better than the last time.

That may sound derisive; it's not meant that way. When these programs played to open the 2012 season, they didn't appear to belong on the same field. In closing the 2019 season, Michigan showed they've covered a lot of ground since. These teams played an evenly matched contest until Alabama salted the game away late and it's fair to say the Wolverines left a lot of yards and points on the field.

Early on, it looked like the game might go the way of 2012. After Michigan got the opening kickoff, Shea Patterson and Nico Collins couldn't connect on two potential big plays, leading to a three-and-out. Alabama took all of one play to take the lead; Mac Jones found future top-five pick Jerry Jeudy one-on-one with a safety and hit him for an 85-yard touchdown. The next Wolverine drive also ended with an off-target throw and a punt. It felt inevitable that the Tide would break the game open.

Instead, a banged-up defense starting a walk-on and a true freshman at defensive tackle bore down. Lavert Hill broke up a third-down throw on a well-timed changeup to cover two from the usual man coverage, forcing Bama to punt it back.

Hassan Haskins had some punishing runs. [Barron]

Josh Gattis drew up an excellent gameplan and it finally paid off on the ensuing drive. The offensive line started opening up holes for Hassan Haskins and Zach Charbonnet, who both were plenty capable of grinding out extra yards against Alabama's five-star-laden defense. Gattis schemed up a big play on a direct snap to Haskins that turned into a flea flicker with Shea Patterson throwing to a wide open Donovan Peoples-Jones. The next two plays beautifully played off each other; first, a split zone to Haskins with jet motion netted a first down, then they faked the same play with Nick Eubanks leaking wide open into the flat for an easy seven-yard touchdown catch.

After the defense got another quick stop, Gattis drew up another long gain, this time using Giles Jackson as a running back on a play-action wheel route. Patterson couldn't squeeze in a third-down corner route to Nick Eubanks, who had a step on his man, and Michigan settled for a Quinn Nordin field goal.

Nearly the same sequence capped the first quarter and opened the second. Another stop. Another Michigan drive with multiple first downs stalls out in Bama territory, this time when Ronnie Bell steps out of bounds before catching a would-be conversion. Nordin kicks a 42-yard field goal. While the Wolverines owned a 13-7 lead, it felt like they should've been up 14.

That's a dangerous way to play against a team as talented as Alabama. On the next drive, Lavert Hill had to take a defensive pass interference to prevent another Jeudy touchdown, and Najee Harris hurdled over Josh Metellus for a touchdown two plays after a questionable roughing the passer flag on Aidan Hutchinson extended the drive. Michigan once again worked their way into scoring territory to end the half, only for poor clock management and a sack on Patterson to force a 57-yard field goal attempt by Nordin that eked over the crossbar as the half expired.

Second-half mood. [Barron]

In the second half, the missed opportunities continued, and those from the first half began to sting more. A perfect throw-and-catch from Jones to DeVonta Smith went for a 42-yard touchdown on the half's opening drive. Then came an extended staredown; neither team could crack the other's defense for the next five possessions. Patterson missed a couple more deep passes, this time in the direction of Ronnie Bell.

The proverbial dam broke in the fourth quarter. After two long completions to Jeudy, who finished with 204 yards on six receptions, Jones tossed a score to little-used tight end Miller Forristall when two defenders went with Harris on a wheel route. Forristall hadn't caught a pass since October. Michigan's next drive ended on—guess what—an overthrown deep ball to a well-covered Mike Sainristil.

The defense gave Patterson one more chance to lead an unlikely comeback. That ended in one play. Eubanks appeared to break his route upfield in anticipation of a Patterson scramble drill; instead, Patterson lofted a ball well short of Eubanks and directly into the hands of Shyheim Carter.

Alabama then ground away nearly the entire rest of the game clock, and could've kneeled it out completely, but Nick Saban instead let Harris run in another score—which, fair enough. My only complaint is it made the final score less resemble the closeness of the game.

Michigan belonged. But where Bama scored touchdowns, Michigan managed field goals, and while Mac Jones was money when his receivers were open downfield, Shea Patterson was not. The Wolverines finish the season a disappointing 9-4. Still, it wasn't hard to see the potential in this program today; with a few more on-target throws, this is a dogfight with the Crimson Tide. May next year's quarterback hit them, because it sure looks like they'll be there.

[Hit THE JUMP for the box score.]

Comments

Hotel Putingrad

January 1st, 2020 at 11:18 PM ^

A large portion of the Michigan fan base has checked out from Jim Harbaugh and Don Brown. Maybe not a majority, but a sizeable amount.

Apathy should be a real concern for Warde and the Board of Regents. When you lose all the games you're expected to lose, even when you win all the games you're expected to win, what's the point of tuning in?

LabattsBleu

January 1st, 2020 at 5:55 PM ^

First time i've seen a 19 point loss characterized as 'belonging on the same field'...

A win would have been nice, but in fairness, they were playing Bama's backup sophomore QB playing in his 6th start... not exactly capital A Alabama we are talking about here...

blue90

January 1st, 2020 at 5:55 PM ^

Still waiting to see one of Harbaugh's teams keep pace with other good teams, I've seen it about 5 times out of the 50 games he's coached for us. Back-up three-star QB tore us apart against a five start senior QB, how much longer do we have to wait? Some optimism but not much going in to next year.

BlueTimesTwo

January 1st, 2020 at 7:11 PM ^

I thought the same thing.  It’s not hard to coach when your two deep is almost entirely five stars.  Their QB did a good job of getting the ball to his NFL receivers.  Jeudy won the Biletnikoff last year and will be a top five pick this year, and Harris is a beast.  We gave ourselves a chance to win and (aside from Shea and some receiver dropsies) didn’t play badly.

mitchewr

January 1st, 2020 at 9:44 PM ^

The only one peddling bullshit is you. 
 

He WAS a three star recruit and he was the 18th best Pro Style QB in his class. 
 

Also, besides the Bama offer (cause everyone needs a backup in case of emergencies) his best offers were Okie State and Texas A&M, among others. Not exactly lightning up the recruitment boards for top teams which means he wasn’t that highly coveted which means he wasn’t viewed as all that great. 
 

It really isn’t that difficult to Google a player’s 247 recruiting profile: https://247sports.com/Player/Mac-Jones-80433/high-school-139423/

jmblue

January 1st, 2020 at 5:59 PM ^

Definitely did not expect us to outrush Bama or gain more first downs.  Wish Shea could have been a little more accurate.  The plays were there.

stephenrjking

January 1st, 2020 at 6:01 PM ^

Just not enough.

The offensive gameplay was terrific, and the defense played as well as I could have possibly hoped. We were starting Jess Speight at DT!

Bama only had 28 points before the meaningless closing TD. I’d have taken that before the game began, easily.

But the offense simply didn’t make enough plays. It’s telling that Bama’s hyped receiving class makes tons of plays, while ours barely gets touches. Seriously, DPJ was every bit the recruit that the Bama guys are. Yet they’re running open and catching passes, and DPJ was invisible.

And a lot of this comes down to coaching. Bama isn’t just more talented, they develop the guys that they have. Their routes are better. And their 3/4 star backup QB outplayed our 5-star transfer.

And, ultimately, that’s the difference. Shea is a decent QB, but he was never elite. Gattis gameplanned open receivers and Shea missed them. Particularly deep.

We’ve waited for five years for a Michigan QB to consistently hit deep passes. We’ve waited for a QB to step up and be elite. We’ve waited for a QB to be the difference.

The problem, in my opinion, is that we have a HC who considers himself a QB guru who isn’t a good QB guru. Michigan QBs have trouble with progressions against zone defenses. They tend to go through periods where they get the yips, fearing negative plays. And, for whatever reason (harder to see this as a coaching issue but who knows) they are inconsistent at best throwing deep.

I would love for DCaf to be the answer. If at least one of our junior receivers returns, particularly if Ruiz (man, not good to hear that he’s leaning toward leaving) comes back, I have a deceny level of confidence in Gattis and our talent.

But not in the QBs Harbaugh coaches.

Bama this season is a program that teams can score against. Michigan needed to score points to overcome the plays we KNEW their talent would make.

And we failed.

Not a shock. This is who the team is this year. It wasn’t embarrassing. I’m already over it.

It is what it is. And what it is isn’t elite. Especially at QB. 

M-Dog

January 1st, 2020 at 7:11 PM ^

He probably was in a pro style system.  He did OK with Rudock. 

But he is not a difference maker in a modern college system.  I think he actually confuses his QBs to the point where they play tentative and slow.

He needs to get a legit run-threat QB, and let him play free and lose.  

funkywolve

January 1st, 2020 at 7:51 PM ^

DPJ is fast but I dont think he's that quick and doesnt seem to have have a quick burst.  You time DPJ in a straight line 40 yd dash or 100 meter run and he's going to have a darn good time.  However, on a football field where he has to cut, slow down and speed up, rarely does he get to his top speed.

MGolem

January 1st, 2020 at 7:51 PM ^

I typically agree with virtually everything you post but not on this one. Harbaugh has a years long track record of improving QB results wherever he goes. Luck was not some sure fire five star. Alex Smith was on the trash heap. Kaepernick was not considered much of an NFL prospect. Rudock was cast aside by middling Iowa.

Wilton Speight was never a Michigan level QB and neither was Okorn. And the little good in Speight was lost to injury. Shea was the same QB at Ole Miss. A lot of wow plays and a lot of shit. Sometimes you can’t coach that out of someone.

Yes Harbaugh shops for the groceries but he started at Michigan late and subsequently was behind in QB recruiting which most agree starts earlier than other positions. We finished top 2 or 3 for Josh Rosen, Jarrett Stidham, and KJ Costello. Guys who may not be NFL studs but are better than what we have had. Any of those guys comes here and our results are likely better. It sucks that it didnt happen that way but Harbaughs ability to coach and identify QB talent is pretty damn solid. 
 

Cranky Dave

January 1st, 2020 at 8:29 PM ^

I agree that Harbaugh has done well with Smith, Kaepernick, Rudock. But Harbaugh's been in place 5 years so the “he started late”  is irrelevant now.  Finishing in the top 2 or 3 for elite QB recruits is nothing to brag about.  The fact is Harbaugh hasn’t produced a QB that defenses are scared of either running or passing. 
 

 

stephenrjking

January 1st, 2020 at 9:08 PM ^

Have to disagree. Michigan QBs are as likely to regress under Harbaugh as improve.

Speight? Yeah, lower ranked. But what happened to him in 2017? He got hurt against Purdue, but he was playing AWFUL football leading up to his injury. OKorn stepped in and played well, and then... he’s the starter, gets Harbaugh’s attention, and gets bad.

People wanted Peters. Peters wasn’t ready, got on after weeks of cramming and was... ok. He was barely utilized and used a wafer-thin vanilla playbook.

This year the team struggled a great deal on offense. Your argument is that Shea just isn’t that good, but... he was a top prospect and he never lost his job. So Michigan does not have someone better behind him.

The results speak for themselves. 5 years, and the “QB whisperer” hasn’t produced a single season of QB play that even tops the conference, much less the nation. It’s on Harbaugh at this point.

And, to the argument about other QBs he has coaches: for starters, Andrew Luck was indeed a surefire prospect that spent years in an offense that ran 70% of the time before being unleashed late. Kaepernick regressed through much of Harbaugh’s tenure.

And for each of Luck, Kaep, and Alex Smith, there is another individual for whom a compelling case may be made that he is the party most responsible for their success: a man who also turned Tyrod Taylor into a decent starter in Buffalo. A man who has harnessed the natural talent of Lamar Jackson and produced an MVP season and an offense that has taken the NFL by storm, much like his offense in San Francisco.

I think the best explanation for Harbaugh’s limited past success with QBs is that Greg Roman was his OC. Roman seems to remain productive. Harbaugh has given us five years of “maybe next year our QB will finally turn the corner.”

MGolem

January 1st, 2020 at 10:00 PM ^

I also think Greg Roman is great but you are either ignoring, or unaware of, some other coaching accomplishments.

Harbaugh was the QB coach for Rich Gannon the year he won the MVP. Rich Gannon. He also coached Josh Johnson at San Diego to back to back 11-1 records and Johnson, despite playing in a league that doesn’t even award scholarships, still gets cups of coffee in the NFL. 

Andrew Luck was the 61st ranked prospect in his class. Behind such luminaries as Dayne Crist, Blaine Gabbert, and Mike Glennon. He was not some sure thing. Harbaugh identified him as a star to be and helped mold him into said. 

Shea may have been a top recruit but again, so was Dayne Crist. Sometimes the “experts” get the rankings wrong. It seems likely that Shea may have been replaced by Dylan had he not been seriously concussed. He would have at least gotten a long look. I think we will see improved QB play from Dylan next year and that will once again get things moving in the right direction from the QB point of view. 

btn

January 1st, 2020 at 6:02 PM ^

Is there a QB on our roster that would even make the team for Bama or any of the playoff teams?   

You can complain about the talent gap, but it’s Harbaughs fault at the end of the day.

 

Teeba

January 1st, 2020 at 6:02 PM ^

The Gattis love is out of control. 16 points makes for an “excellent gameplan?” You gotta be fucking kidding. Let the Shea-haters bitch and moan all they want. He was atrocious. But who was calling the plays forcing Shea into low percentage downfield fades? That was Pep-esque in its incompetence. And where was Harbaugh for the halftime interview? MIA as usual. He can’t even be interviewed after a decent half of football. He sure wasn’t spending halftime making any decent adjustments. 9-4 (give or take a game) is our new reality. 

jmblue

January 1st, 2020 at 6:06 PM ^

And where was Harbaugh for the halftime interview? MIA as usual. He can’t even be interviewed after a decent half of football

Would you feel better about the game if ABC had interviewed him?  They normally only interview one of the two coaches coming off the field.

UMVAFAN

January 1st, 2020 at 6:44 PM ^

Why doesn't he do on camera halftime interviews or onfield post victory interviews? He's never done either one at Michigan. It's odd and I've never seen an explanation for it. He's the only coach to my knowledge that does this. Does the B1G Conference fine him for this? I get he hates the media, but I've always wondered how he gets away with this. 

snarling wolverine

January 1st, 2020 at 6:10 PM ^

We bitched all year about a lack of downfield shots and then when we finally throw a bunch, I guess we need to bitch about that too?

Your starting QB has to hit some of those.  He can't go 0-fer on a bunch of opportunities in single coverage, and just plain miss (or not even throw it to) guys that are open.