[Patrick Barron]

Could Have, But Did Not Comment Count

Brian November 1st, 2021 at 11:59 AM

10/30/21 – Michigan 33, Michigan State 37 – 7-1, 4-1 Big Ten

Any close game is going to have its share of coulda-shoulda-woulda moments. There's always missed free throws or shots that hit the post, etc. Saturday's game will stand out in my memory for sheer quantity in this department. It felt like every third play was a Fateful Moment, from Andrel Anthony ripping through the MSU secondary for 93 yards to Blake Corum dropping a swing pass with almost nothing but grass in front of him to David Ojabo's sack-strip touchdown to having that taken off the board by the replay official.

The previous sentence didn't get out of the first half. Also it could have included several other items. You see what I mean. This game was jam-packed with stuff. Bombs! Exciting runs! Special teams disasters! Aztecs invading Europe! Four straight field goals from the same guy at the same spot on the field! Boggling attempts to substitute while the other team was going up-tempo!

Unfortunately for Michigan, the most fateful thing was the backup quarterback coming in and having a mutual misunderstanding with Corum about who was supposed to have the ball. Michigan was up three and at their 45 with seven minutes left. They had almost 500 yards of offense at that point. JJ McCarthy had already fumbled, and so there is nonstop rabbling in the Michigan fanbase this day. Ah well.

--------------------------------------------------

Here, as always, the particular Michigan mania sets in to ruin everything. This is a team with a more-or-less first year starting quarterback that could bring back literally everyone on the roster except for Andrew Vastardis and Brad Hawkins. Even when you account for likely NFL departures like Aidan Hutchinson and Dax Hill, this team looks more like a team building towards a peak roster year than something for the here and now. Anthony is breaking out on offense; Ojabo is breaking out on defense.

To many programs that would feel pretty good. There are scattered outposts of Michigan fandom attempting this zen even now.

To me it's difficult to get there because this is year seven of Jim Harbaugh and it seems like the error rate is baked in at this point. Michigan took three illegal substitution penalties and failed to get lined up on several other plays because of basic college crappe like "sometimes we use tempo." When Michigan tried it themselves they ended up asking AJ Henning to block a linebacker. Then they false-started on a fourth and one attempt and the punter did not get a punt off.

You could ascribe some of that to a near-complete staff reboot. I'm not particularly inclined since this is a program that has made shooting itself in the foot in miserable fashion a trademark. Sometimes they're pretty talented and it doesn't matter until they get to the games where the opposition is capable of matching them. When they are, though, it's always Michigan turning around to hand the ball off and failing to, you know, do that.

This does not have to be fate. LSU just won a national championship with a coach they'd fire less than two years later because he is excessively horny. Whatever Ed Orgeron's assets are, they do not include "is organized" or "suitable for indoor use." But man am I inclined to jump off the moving car that is football season as soon as this stuff rears its head again. It doesn't feel like Michigan is building to anything except another Michigan Football Season where they win enough games to make you think they're going to win the important ones and then don't.

So when McCarthy's in the game because Cade McNamara is briefly in the injury tent it doesn't feel like a weird one-off that you can shrug about and leave in the past. It feels like something that's going to happen against Penn State, and Ohio State, and so forth and so on. Maybe that's irrational. At this point, expecting Michigan to do something other than one-up themselves in late game failures seems more irrational to me.      

AWARDS

Known Friends and Trusted Agents Of The Week

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[Fuller]

-2535ac8789d1b499[1]you're the man now, dog

#1 Cade McNamara. My pregame take was that I thought Michigan would probably win if they got equal QB play but I was very nervous about that. McNamara blew expectations out of the water with a 383 yard, 8.7 YPA day where he was lasering in pinpoint passes while under some duress.

#2 Andrel Anthony. Hello Mr. Anthony. Randy Sklar lands the second-best Hot Take of all time by predicting Anthony would break out as Michigan's #1 receiver by next year; that took about a game to seem true. Anthony outran the entire secondary on his 93-yarder, had a Braylon/Terrell leaping TD later, had the wherewithal to get out of bounds on a late first half catch, and nearly made another spectacular leaping grab late on. It's not just the catches, it's the way he made them. Looks like a future star. Maybe a current one.

#3 Aidan Hutchinson/David Ojabo. Three sacks and one erroneously deleted touchdown between them. Generally unblockable. Three points each.

Honorable mention: Erick All had ten(!) catches, building on last week, and looks like he's emerging into the kind of dual-threat weapon Michigan fans had envisioned from him for years. Dax Hill forced an INT with a PBU, had another one, and tracked down a would-be TD, for all the good that did. Jake Moody was 7/7 on field goals, four of which counted.

KFaTAotW Standings.

(points: #1: 8, #2: 5, #3: 3, HMs one each. Ties result in somewhat arbitrary assignments.)

31: Aidan Hutchinson (HM WMU, #2 Wash, #1 Rutgers, #1 Wisc, HM Neb, #2 NW, T3 MSU)
18: The OL (#1 Wash, #1 NIU, HM Neb, HM NW)
17: Hassan Haskins (HM WMU, T3 Wash, T2 NIU, #2 Neb, T1 NW), Blake Corum (#2 WMU, T3 Wash, T2 NIU, HM Neb, T1 NW)
8: Ronnie Bell (#1 WMU), Brad Hawkins (#1 Neb), Cade McNamara (#1 MSU), Dax Hill (#3 WMU, HM NIU, HM Rutgers, HM Wisc, HM Neb, HM MSU)
6: Nikhai Hill-Green(HM NIU, #2 Rutgers), Jake Moody (HM Wash, HM Wisc, #3 Neb, HM MSU)
5: David Ojabo (#2 Wisc), Brad Robbins (HM Wash, #3 Rutgers, HM Wisc), Josh Ross (HM Wash, HM NIU, HM Rutgers, HM Neb, HM NW), Andrel Anthony (#2 MSU)
4: AJ Henning (HM WMU, #3 NIU)
3: Donovan Edwards(T2 NIU), Roman Wilson (#3 Wisc), DJ Turner (#3 NW)
2: Cornelius Johnson(HM NIU, HM Wisc), Erick All (HM NW, HM MSU)
1: Andrew Vastardis (HM WMU),Mike Sainristil (HM WMU),  Mazi Smith (HM Wash), Gemon Green(HM NIU), Chris Hinton (HM Rutgers)

Who's Got It Better Than Us(?) Of The Week

Anthony takes a crossing route 93 yards to paydirt.

Honorable mention: Sack-strip by Ojabo; the other sack-strip by Ojabo; McNamara threads a needle to convert on a crossing route to All.

image​MARCUS HALL EPIC DOUBLE BIRD OF THE WEEK.

The fateful fumble.

Honorable mention: Corum drops that swing pass; various tempo follies; TD taken off the board wrongly by replay official; Johnson drops a back shoulder bomb; no PI on fourth down; more tempo follies; false start on fourth and one; subsequent punt dorf; I could keep going but will not.

[After THE JUMP: ack]

OFFENSE

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[Barron]

Star? Looks like a star. To reinforce the comments above, here's the not-quite catch:

The body control, range, and ability to go high-point a ball outside of his frame are all very enticing, especially when he is also capable of putting distance on an entire secondary like he did on the 93-yarder. This seems more likely to be announcing a new talent than a flash in the pan.

Aaargh. McNamara obviously had a great day but man this would haunt me if such things were capable of haunting me any more:

For one, that is an MSU defensive back bashing Johnson off his route with the ball in the air. That is a penalty. It is a very obvious penalty that very obviously should be thrown. I do not like that it was not thrown.

But also for two, why are we running a pick route against man coverage and then not throwing to the wide open guy created by the pick? Is this not supposed to be a pick route? If not, why not? I have so many questions.

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[Fuller]

The Erick All we were promised. 10 catches, 98 yards, no drops, mismatch against linebackers, dogged blocker who may be a little light but gets after it. All was plagued with drops for the first couple years of his career, albeit on limited opportunities. The last two weeks he's been a critical, reliable option on third down. I think that will continue as well; the guy pops out as different whenever you see him run drills.

Pass protection accomplished. Michigan didn't take a sack. McNamara did have to stand in the pocket and deliver in a few uncomfortable situations; given the number of throws and the number of obvious passing downs that seems like a best-case scenario. MSU DE Drew Beesley did return for this game, as well, so that was some version of full strength. Should still be noted that MSU's gaudy sack numbers are largely a function of facing a billion passing attempts, so shutting down Georgia this was not.

DEFENSE

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[Barron]

Rotation gets got. The above is the long MSU rushing TD, and Kris Jenkins has just finished going upfield of his guy on a zone stretch. Jenkins was a guy to check back in on this year with a view towards being a starter-level guy next year and beyond; here he made a devastating mistake. You have to wonder whether this is another NFL transition thing; in the NFL your backups are all, you know, NFL players. So they don't do stuff like the above. Michigan's frequent DL rotation was a huge problem even when they weren't failing to get set on easy touchdowns. Michigan does not need to substitute on nearly every snap.

I mentioned the substitution penalties above. I cannot think of any other game I've seen involving Michigan or not where one team regularly attempted to substitute when the opposition wasn't doing so. In the NFL their leisurely approach to spotting the ball makes this feasible. It's hard not to draw a line straight from "new defensive coordinator who has little college experience" to the loss.

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[Fuller]

Arriving. That is two consecutive games in which David Ojabo looked pretty analogous to Aidan Hutchinson. Ojabo's still not on his level as a run defender—he did give up one of those Walker runs which bounced outside, IIRC—but dude was still supposed to be pupating after picking up football in 2017. He even got stuck in Scotland for much of last year because of COVID. His improvement trajectory is one that points towards an all-conference DE next year.

DTs make no impact. Michigan did an okay job bottling up the ground game outside of tempo instances and missed tackles, but this was vastly different than MSU's game against Nebraska where their LOS was getting reset constantly. Michigan DTs did little of note here, getting stalemates against single blocking and not shedding. The starting DTs combined for one tackle. Tackles aren't everything at that spot, but they are an indicator.

Weird stuff. Michigan's first snap was a 6-1 with Ojabo and Hutchinson as "OLBs" on the line of scrimmage and four DE/DT types between them. Michigan frequently went to more guys on the LOS in this game—probably more DE/DT snaps here than any other game by a wide margin and relied on those guys to make it work; therefore there was often little or no second level when that did not work, because Ross was the only linebacker in the game. That proved costly, IMO: as mentioned the DTs weren't making good use of their single blocking and there were multiple instances where breaking through the first line of defense meant nobody else was available.

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[Fuller]

Revenge of the slot fades. Another Fateful Moment occurred above, when Thorne nailed Reed on a fourth-down slot fade. Hill got caught in man coverage again and you can see how close he was to making a play, but he's a step out of phase and therefore his arm is not in a spot he can contest the ball. Michigan's attempt at a slot fade on third and three was well overthrown.

SPECIAL TEAMS

Missing Peppers. AJ Henning did not field MSU's punt after the overturned sack/strip, that turned into a 66-yarder, and Michigan ended up kicking a field goal from the 21. Their previous two plays were fade attempts because that was the thing that made sense to do given the situation. Slash 15-20 yards off that punt and Michigan has an excellent chance of getting those four points back.

Henning did make up for that a bit by ripping off another 50 yards in returns.

Moody, the mood. After the timeout sequence:

I enjoyed that. I did not enjoy Moody going 4/4 on field goals with a long of 38, because that is how you put up 550 yards and pick up two turnovers and lose a game.

MISCELLANEOUS

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[Barron]

Gone. The goal of replay is to correct obviously wrong calls on the field. It is not to see that a ball is definitely moving as soon as Ojabo hits the QB and to go over it frame by frame until you can convince yourself that there is a whisper of control while a shin may or may not be on the ground. The overturned fumble was the very definition of a situation where you shrug and say "call stands."

But also. Many, many complaints about every video review in this game going MSU's way, but other than the above and maybe the Reed catch he may or may not have taken off the turf I don't think there was much to complain about there.

I guess this isn't a problem since people don't turn it off. FOX was scrambling to insert every possible commercial they could. Action would stop suddenly, key moments would not be replayed, and there were multiple instances of commercial-kickoff-commercial. It took ten or fifteen minutes to be informed that the replay official did look at DJ Turner nearly ripping the ball out on an MSU two-point conversion.

Lord knows how long Jalen Nailor had been out, sporting a neon-green cast on his hand, before anyone at FOX noticed.

So at the same time all the whiz-bang was going on it was still frustrating and boring. I'd like to imagine there's some sort of breaking point at which people put their collective feet down and say no more insurance commercials, but it doesn't seem like that's coming.

Joel Klatt can be on our podcast. Because he's not very good at pronouncing names. Very good at other color commentator things, but not so good with the names.

HERE

Best And Worst:

Worst:  Making Plays

I’ve always been annoyed with the idea of “making plays” as an idiom surrounding sports, especially those so reliant on teamwork and synchronicity like football.  It always feels like post-hoc analysis, divining merit and morality from accomplishment when oftentimes it’s simply the binary result of any football play – a team picks up more or less yards than they needed, someone did or did not catch the ball, etc.  It’s a zero-sum game, and while it’s human nature to find narrative structure in the ebb and flow of a game sometimes there really isn’t one.  Cade McNamara “made plays” all day against the same MSU secondary that decidedly did not “make plays” until Charles Brantley “made a play” by picking off a pass.  Kenneth Walker and Andrel Anthony “made plays” more consistently (but even there you have Anthony only snagging 28 yards after halftime and Walker picking up 32 yards on 10 carries in the 1st and 3rd quarters combined), while Payton Thorne and Cornelius Johnson struggled  “making plays” but then still had moments (Thorne on his dime to Reed in the 3rd, Johnson with his 4th-down reception in traffic).  R.J. Moten “made a play” on his first-quarter interception and then didn’t “make a play” on a dropped pick in the second half, while Quavaris Crouch “made a play” on Robbins’s fake punt but was also picked on all day by Erick All.  This doesn’t mean players didn’t stand out or have atypical performances that had outsized impact on the game, only that the idiosyncrasies of the game don’t lend themselves to a tight narrative of “players” and “scrubs”.

The State of Our Open Threads:

There were 476 fucks given in yesterday's open thread, which is far and away the most this year, with the next highest total being 299 fucks given during the Nebraska game. In a diary that you'll see in December, we will discuss "The Fuck Differentials", which will highlight differences in usage frequency across wins and losses, even down to margin of victory / loss (there is a "Fuck Curve", and you will see it). For now, we'll talk about yesterday - 476 fucks is not the highest we've managed in a game against MSU, but it does signal the most engagement we've had with a game in general in a long time actually.

It's companion word - "shit" - returned to a level of usage seen at Nebraska, and then exceeded that ever so slightly. There were 124 shits given, which is actually lower than I thought we would see, but compared to only 42 for the Northwestern game, it was a big jump week over week. There were 117 shits given at Nebraska and 88 at Wisconsin, so it has remained somewhat elevated throughout much of the conference schedule, as you might expect.

Here is the summary comparison of the two:

We reached a high for the season to date when it came to "fire" as well - there were 87 instances of this word, and it was the usual mix of targets as well, with Harbaugh figuring into it a little more heavily this time.

Comments

The Homie J

November 1st, 2021 at 1:52 PM ^

We didn't lose on Saturday.  When you lose by 4 because refs incorrectly take 4 points off the board, that's not a loss.  Don't legitimize that farce of a refshow.  We should be 8-0 right now if not for the incompetent stripes.  But for now, we're 7-0-1 for all intents and purposes.  Don't give Sparty the satisfaction of pretending that win was in any way legitimate.

Mgoczar

November 1st, 2021 at 12:27 PM ^

I can see Brian's point but this is just another way of saying BPONE. I disagree and remain confident that Michigan is about to go on a run we haven't seen before. 

BuckeyeChuck

November 1st, 2021 at 12:27 PM ^

I was definitely impressed with Anthony's breakout performance. He's the playmaker you've been looking for since Bell went out!

And it's fitting that the dude wearing one has the name Anthony.

(...Xavier who?)

Hannibal.

November 1st, 2021 at 12:28 PM ^

Against MSU, OSU and in bowl games, Harbaugh has been in seven one score games.  He has lost all seven.  If you add in ND, he has lost all 8.  

0-8 in one score games against rivals and bowl games.  That's incredibly pathetic.  Harbaugh wins the tight ones against shitty teams like Army, Minnesota, Rutgers and Indiana, but he absolutely chokes in any game that means something.  We blew back-to-back double digit leads against OSU in 2016 and 2017, and we have blown a 9 and a 16 point lead in close losses to MSU.  We lost to PSU in 2019 because an easy pass was dropped in the end zone.  We lost to MSU in 2017 because we went -5 on turnovers.  We blew a 16 point lead to a South Carolina team coached by Will Muschamp.  His teams are mentally soft and they wilt under the pressure of a tight contest every time. All of those games have been there for the taking and have been choked away.  

Rabbit21

November 1st, 2021 at 1:02 PM ^

Exactly, there's just something about this team that CANNOT handle pressure and it has put a lid on my enjoyment of it.  If I KNOW they're going to collapse the moment they're challenged then there's no reason to watch the games.  I keep asking myself why I'm not like this with other teams I follow and its because those other teams don't ALWASY crumble in big moments the way Michigan football does.  It would be nice if they could get some of the mojo from the basketball program but I know it doesn't work that way.  

Angry-Dad

November 1st, 2021 at 2:08 PM ^

It is frustrating to watch them lose close gamesbut I would argue Harbaugh teams have handled pressure and won it's share of one score games as well.  The wins don't stick with you as much as the loses. 

With the exception of a few OSU blow outs at least Harbaugh's teams are put under pressure of close games.  RichRod and Hoke teams rarely had to worry about the stress of close games. 

UofM Die Hard …

November 1st, 2021 at 2:26 PM ^

Cheers to that. 

Its football, and weird stupid crap happens (and yes it seems to happen to us a lot it seems), but I'd rather just focus on what good could happen going forward. 

If not, then really what is the point of watching?   Sans Alabama, undefeated season's just dont happen too often, and especially not for us.   So onward

 

Hail

ERdocLSA2004

November 1st, 2021 at 12:32 PM ^

Pretty much perfectly summed up, Brian.  
 

Maybe that's irrational. At this point, expecting Michigan to do something other than one-up themselves in late game failures seems more irrational to me.

yup.

imafreak1

November 1st, 2021 at 12:33 PM ^

Watching football without a DVR is just not possible for me any more. When the game starts do something that takes an hour or two. Start late and skip commercials. This also presents a good strategy for Michigan fans to avoid killing your entire day being tortured by watching the slo-mo self destruction complete with commercial breaks. Once I get that here we go again feeling. Stop watching but keep DVRing. Wait until the game has been over for 30-45 minutes and then check mgoblog. If the site is down. Michigan lost and you can erase the recording. If not you can watch and enjoy.

Now, clearly this robs you of the joy of the miracle win. But how many of those do we get these days? Most recent miracle wins were just relief at avoidance of total fall apart and not any kind of sublime moment. There are virtually no sublime moments for Michigan football any more. In terms of joy lost versus pain avoided, this strategy puts very much on the good side thse days. 

socalwolverine1

November 1st, 2021 at 1:53 PM ^

Same. Life is too short to dedicate four-plus hours watching mostly commercials and hot takes from former jocks on live TV, given that the game consists of four fifteen minute quarters. Being at the game is a different story, it's an immersive experience that includes many other in-stadium activities. But I live 2255 miles from Ann Arbor, so recording it on YouTube TV and watching it a few hours later is the only way I'll watch at this point, with or without a media blackout. Against Sparty, an old high school buddy from metro Detroit broke my media blackout when he texted me a poop emoji four hours in, thereby signaling another Wolverine failure in a rivalry game, news that didn't surprise me one iota. But having watched the game soon afterwards, I came away impressed by our effort, especially the great individual performances by McNamara, All, Anthony, Hutchinson, Ojabo, Moody, etc. But the great stuff we did on the field was overshadowed by the mistakes and turtling we did in the fourth quarter, when once again the wave of defeat broke over us in a rivalry game. 

Seven years into the Harbaugh era, the best word for my mental state while watching Michigan football is detachment, "...experiencing our feelings without allowing them to control us." I was a mouth-breathing Wolverine fan for forty-five years who, during most games, my wife could not be in the same house with, but no more. Now I watch after the fact and, whereas I still enjoy our modest successes, I no longer have any expectations that we will win games against our biggest rivals (OSU, MSU, ND), or against any team with a winning record, especially on the road. Harbaugh's teams simply don't rise to the occasion in big games, which is an established fact with seven years of data to back it up. Back in the 20th Century, we used to count our B1G championships and Rose Bowl appearances. Now we're a second tier program that reliably beats up on third tier programs but realistically no longer competes for our own division championship, let alone for our conference. And please spare me the rankings, as our annual trip to the gallows awaits us on November 27. 

Michigan Arrogance

November 1st, 2021 at 4:01 PM ^

Exaclty this. I do it for hoops too mostly bc EOH situations are awful in hoops, but the commercials in football are NUTS now. I had a solid 50mins saved up and that only got me to the end of Q3.

It was a 4 hour game, exciting, scoring, passing, running. But like Brian said, it was somehow still boring b/c of the breaks.

Have to save up 90mins for games on Fox I guess

tjohn7

November 1st, 2021 at 12:33 PM ^

This loss didn't hurt as much as I feel like it should have. Maybe that's because I have a young son and re-evaluated my priorities after he was born. Maybe it's because previous seasons destroyed my ability to be emotionally invested in Michigan Football. Maybe it's because both teams played quite well and Mel Tucker isn't the easily hatable Mork Dantoni. I dunno.

Either way, I feel optimistic about the rest of the season for the first time all year. Need to curb stomp Indiana to sustain that feeling for me, but if that were to happen then all bets are off.

uminks

November 1st, 2021 at 11:59 PM ^

I agree with you, I do not take Michigan losses as poorly as I did when I was young and single. My senior year at Michigan was quite depressing, since I was so much into Michigan football, even before I came to Michigan through the 70s as 2nd grader through High School.. It was '84 and happen to be Bo's worse season at 6-6. We were so use to Bo  having teams competing every year for B1G championships, then the injury bug struck and the backups were not up to winning much. I remember going to a game since I did not have work that Saturday and Iowa completely destroyed us 26-0. I probably just went through the fall semester of my senior year in shock and it probably cost me a quarter point off my GPA. I was taking a grad level ME course and a finite calculus class that I wanted to get an A in but I was so depressed over the state of the team that  I only got a B.

MGoBlue96

November 1st, 2021 at 12:39 PM ^

I am neither satisfied or dissatisfied right now with this season. I think the I am still thrilled right crowd honestly was using last year as their most relevant data point for expectations. I always thought that was silly, last year was just a stupid throwaway year honestly for alot of teams. Michigan still had top 15 type talent entering this year. I honestly expected a normal Harbaugh type year so 9-3 or so with a loss to OSU and a couple of other games they lose despite feeling like the better team. On the positive end they did win a game against Nebraska when things were going completely sideways and handled Wisconsin easily in Madison, on the flip side this MSU loss is the prototypical we were the better team and lost game. So to me it is just kind of a normal Harbaugh so far. Pick up the pieces and win out till OSU and be competitive against OSU and I would probably have at least some optimism that next year's could  potentially fully break the pattern we have seen under Harbaugh though. But it is hard to fault having the feeling that we have seen this song and dance before too many times, because we have. And it is in fact tiring to have the same discussion over and over most years.

Go Blue Beat T…

November 1st, 2021 at 12:39 PM ^

Ya. Game of inches. 
 

sucks to see M on the wrong side of so many classics. 
 

Under the lights was good while it lasted….

 

I think we see out the JJ McCarthy era with Harbaugh and then see where it goes  

 

we knew there would be coaching transition costs and we’re pleasantly surprised it hadn’t cost us a W thus far.

just so happened to have done so on the worst possible day in the worst possible way  

I think there is a blueprint to beat Ohio  

i think this team can do it 

the talent is there; hopefully they don’t tank the rest of the season a la the fanbase and just go out and get better

would we turn down an 11-1 conference champ or runner up? 
 

no one would have bought that coming into the season  

 

shifting goalposts man. They’ll get ya 

 

 

 

Goggles Paisano

November 1st, 2021 at 12:47 PM ^

I don't like anything about FOX and their authoritarian ownership of B1G football.  I do not recall a replay of the 4th and 1 MSU converted in the 2nd qtr, which then led to a tempo play for a TD.  I was waiting for it....and nothing.  From the shitty game times, to the shitty studio crew (does anyone really give two fucks what Brady Quinn or Reggie Bush think?), to the fourteen pronunciations of Ojabo, to the eleventy-billion commercial breaks, it has just been a shitty experience.  I'm not even going to start in on Gus Johnson because I could rip him a new one all day long.   

lhglrkwg

November 1st, 2021 at 12:47 PM ^

Hell i missed that look on 4th & 3 there live. Considering Corum is taking his guy in on a slant there too, if McNamara hits Sainristil there that is a walk in touchdown….sigh

ONEarm

November 1st, 2021 at 12:51 PM ^

In isolation, is this team better than I expected this year? Absolutely.

But, watching the same, seemingly easily correctible errors again and again is just nauseating. Running a zone read running game with a QB who doesn't keep, and EVERY defense knows this. Running said play on 3rd and 1 "with tempo" when the other team gets lined up and KNOWS WITH 99.9% certainty this play is coming (as did all of us fans) is not an advantage. Yardage lost, possession over.

Inability to deal with tempo. It's the eighth game of the year. MSU does this, it's on tape. Getting burned once, fine. Twice without burning a timeout? Dumb. Three times? Incomprehensible. 

I'm not a football x's and o's aficianado, but you can see so much of this coming a mile away just as a casual fan. I would love to be in the film room when they look at that hurry up third and one play. If they can watch that without immediately agreeing to light that play call on fire then the cognitive dissonance is beyond repair. 

The fact that it's still in the playbook shows that it's already beyond repair in my humble opinion. Continuing to run shit that has never been successful continues to happen with inexplicable frequency.

In better news, I was able to clean most of the old beers out of my fridge on Saturday as I was drinking them at a rate of about three per commercial break.

Spitfire

November 1st, 2021 at 12:54 PM ^

I don't know. This one hurt me more than most as I felt we had the better team most of the day but the typical shit that has happened way too much during Harbaugh's time here came home to roost. I had a bad feeling when Sainristil did the Paul Bunyan pose after his touchdown and I kind of knew in the back of my head the football Gods weren't going to look too kindly on that one. Sadly I was right. We'll see how this team bounces back in the next few weeks. I don't take a lot of solace in the idea we may be better next year as things can happen. Gotta take advantage of chances when you get them.

Hail2Victors

November 1st, 2021 at 12:56 PM ^

Totally agree that this game was a woulda coulda shoulda won.

I'm still mystified how the defensive TD was taken off the board.  Never should have happened.  I didn't count, but every single controversial call went MSU's way.   It was ridiculous.   But alas, the TD should have counted.

I used to like Gus Johnson's broadcasts but after this week, I can't him.  I really felt like he and Klatt were totally rooting for MSU.  Heck, MSU's radio broadcast aren't as big homers as Johnson and Klatt were.  Fox's coverage sucks overall.   Too many damn commercials, they didn't Cade going into the tent, they didn't mention the light rain until McCarthy's fumble.  

Personally, after his first fumble, I wouldnt have let McCarthy back on the field.   But maybe they did because Cade was in the tent? IDK.   

My hats off to Cade -- I thought he played a fantastic game, except for the INT.  Hope he can work on his deep throws now that Andrel seems to be a viable deep option.   A lot of teaching moments in this game.   

As much as I hate MSU, Walker is a really good back.  I get the hype.  Just hoping they fall on their faces this week at West Lafayette.   Wish that was the night game instead of IU - UM.

MGoBlue96

November 1st, 2021 at 1:14 PM ^

The broadcasting was definitely grating, it really did feel pro MSU. And then they kept repeating the Tucker quotes about toughess, etc to the point of being ridiculous. Johnson even said it after an MSU score going into a commercial break like he was almost stating it as a fact. Not to mention the general terrible quality of Fox's broadcasts on top of that.

los barcos

November 1st, 2021 at 1:22 PM ^

Yes, FOXs broadcast was awful.  Commercials, announcing, lack of replays, the whole thing was just terrible.  

The thing is, I would be fine to start the game an hour later and just FFWD through commercials, but part of why I watch is for the community aspect - watching a big play live then checking on twitter or MGOBLOG, texting friends, etc.  Just seems like it's so lose-lose.

1145SoFo

November 1st, 2021 at 12:56 PM ^

All the at first annoying, now depressing network stats about Harbaugh's record against AP top 10, road ranked games, rivals, etc seem to be building a statistically significant case. How in the world can so many separate teams & coaching staffs fall short in similar yet unique ways?

Surely there is an overarching in-game coaching component, a lot of which Brian documents above like tempo issues. And this unique blend of a cursed game seemed more heavily seasoned with said blunders than others.

By about the 3rd time hearing Gus repeat Tucker's Heavyweight boxing analogy and lining up a fork to drive through my cornea, I was hypnotized into wondering if that stuff really works for college athletes? Harbaugh surely has his own bag of cliches he pulls from all the time, but idk could we imagine a Harbaugh team having the swagger and focus to cleanly execute a 16pt second half big-game comeback? Despite everything Harbaugh does right as a coach, I'd find it hard to believe a Tucker or Frames who we all roll our eyes at wouldn't win 1 or 2 or 4 more of those big games.

I know it's a bad, fan-speculative hot take, but I'm not sure what else we have to go on after 7 years of prime time dong punches.

JamesBondHerpesMeds

November 1st, 2021 at 12:58 PM ^

At this point, expecting Michigan to do something other than one-up themselves in late game failures seems more irrational to me.      

This is not endemic to the Jim Harbaugh era.

In 1999, Michigan dorfed opportunities at Michigan State and lost to a meh Illinois team.

In 2000, John Navarre threw an interception to seal the UCLA upset and Michigan blew leads to Purdue while also pretending Damien Andersen didn't exist.

In 2005, Chad Henne fumbled the ball on the goal line against Notre Dame.

In 2006, Shawn Crable (goddammit).

In 2008, Rich Rodriguez fired Scott Shafer, and do we want to speak about Michigan's overall unpreparedness on the defensive side from there on?

In early 2011 an inept AD hired an inept football coach.

....so, I'm not one to pin this squarely on the shoulders of one Jim Harbaugh. This has been Michigan's MO for the past twenty years, and perhaps our reticence to admit this is a bigger issue is part of the dubious discourse.

SDCran

November 1st, 2021 at 1:15 PM ^

I remember an article, I believe it was Jason Whitlock (am I remembering that correctly?), at the AA news that was the first real BPONE description I had read about UM.  Something like, ‘every year the team looks good enough to win it all, but alas a disappointing loss in late September just makes the rest of the season seem hardly worth playing….”

it goes back a LONG way 

lunchboxthegoat

November 1st, 2021 at 1:03 PM ^

I was pleasantly surprised by the OL in this game. I expected Panasiuk to give us hell and he was basically invisible. 

Also pleasantly surprised by the DBs. Nailor going out puts a minor 'incomplete' on the grading but Reed didn't torch us and he's a legit B1G player. 

I'm sure hoping the game plan adjusts and we have more than Ross and air on the 2nd level for OSU or else Henderson may do us even worse thank Walker.