[Patrick Barron]

Frank Sinatra Takes Two Steps Comment Count

Brian September 26th, 2022 at 1:51 PM

9/24/2022 – Michigan 34, Maryland 27 – 4-0, 1-0 Big Ten

Blake Corum hopped outside because he had no choice. There he met a Maryland safety, who deposited his shoulder in Corum's midsection. A defensive end shed Luke Schoonmaker and jumped on Corum from the side. Corum was still a half-yard short of the first down. He wore one 260-pound Terrapin like a cape; the second was trying to break him in half.

Corum took a step. He took another step. Tilted forward at a 45-degree angle, he looked like an Scandinavian World's Strongest Man competitor who has been tasked with dragging a semi the length of a football field—minus 150 pounds, a foot, and a beard you could knit a suspension bridge out of. He took two more steps, each of of them a Xeno's paradox approaching the first down marker, until finally that impossible line was breached. Eventually the whole thing collapsed into a heap, and Michigan's offense got to keep playing football.

image

On the sideline, I imagine Mike Hart muttered something like "ok, son" to himself. Maybe he cocked an eyebrow. In the booth upstairs, Fred Jackson left the planet for several seconds, returning only so he could proclaim the prophecy had finally come true. The tether back to this world from the astral plane whispered "you told them so," and brooked no references to Avery Horn.

It is in this way scripture is written.

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

This year's preview clucked about exactly one Blake Corum thing:

CORUM DOES LACK ONE HART TRAIT. That would be the ability to drive a ruck of Penn State defenders six yards at a time. This is a tradeoff we'll make for the ability to dust anybody in the country not named Nakobe Dean, but it is an important thing to note in the context of this year's team.

We spent an awful lot of time slotting linebackers and other large persons into a short-yardage role. Meanwhile Corum was silently squatting several times a day until his legs could be used to hold up buildings. Once after a WTKA podcast Sam mentioned that Corum was upset that people thought he could not handle the job on third and one. Message received. Doubts removed.

But of course, the above was not the only thing Corum did in short yardage situations.

He added another long bounce touchdown on third and four, and when Maryland did set the edge he went to work inside. He has the vision to pop outside, the discipline not to do it when it's not there, the long speed to dust safeties out of position, the jitter to dust safeties in position. He is also a very nice person.

On a day where Michigan faced an actual opponent and could have had things go the wrong way, Corum put them in front and then gave them breathing room in the fourth quarter. Several people on Twitter were complaining that Joel Klatt was saying things like "take away Blake Corum and this team would be struggling," and, well, yeah. Take away the Mona Lisa and the Louvre is just a collection of guys in silly hats. "Michigan has the best back in America is not a bug," it's a feature.

At some point opponents are going to freak out about Corum and weight will shift back to JJ McCarthy's shoulders, and that's fine. Saturday clarified exactly what is line 1 on the opposing scouting report. If McCarthy corrects from last week's wobble it's all on the table.

AWARDS

Known Friends and Trusted Agents Of The Week

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

#1 Blake Corum. See above. Numerically: 30 carries, 243 yards. That'll do.

#2(T) DJ Turner and Gemon Green. Stared down the second-best set of receivers they'll see this year and roundly defeated them. Rakim Jarrett and Dontay Demus totaled 24 yards between them. Jeshaun Jones had 48. Everything was contested. Turner had an absurd interception-type substance. Test: passed. Full points for both.

#3(T) Luke Schoonmaker, Joel Honigford, and Max Bredeson. This space speculated in the game preview that Maryland did not have the personnel to match up with Michigan heavy sets, and it appeared that the coaching staff came to the same conclusion. This resulted in a ton of two and three TE sets that sent Blake Corum off tackle as the tight ends neutralized the playside end and then dumptrucked the second level. Two points each.

Honorable mention: JJ McCarthy did complete 69% of his passes and this is the internet. Mike Sainristil just about got in the cornerback party at #2 but he did have a critical error on Maryland's second TD drive. Otherwise, exceeding all reasonable expectations and then some. Mazi Smith had a key TFL and came on late. RJ Moten had a key interception. Mike Morris was relatively effective as a rusher and had a sack and a thumping hit.

KFaTAotW Standings.

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

18: Blake Corum (#2 CSU, #2 Hawaii, HM UConn, #1 Maryland)
14: JJ McCarthy (#1 Hawaii, #2 UConn, HM Maryland)
11: Mazi Smith (#1 CSU, T3 Hawaii, HM Maryland)
10: Ronnie Bell (HM CSU, HM Hawaii, #1 UConn)
6: Gemon Green (HM UConn, T2 Maryland)
5: DJ Turner (T2 Maryland), Kris Jenkins (#3 UConn, T3 Hawaii)
4: Junior Colson (#3 CSU, HM UConn)
3: Mike Morris (T3 Hawaii, HM Maryland)
2: Roman Wilson (HM CSU, HM Hawaii), Max Bredeson (T3 Maryland), Luke Schoonmaker (T3 Maryland), Joel Honigford (T3 Maryland)
1: Braiden McGregor (HM CSU), Eyabi Anoma (HM CSU), Derrick Moore (HM CSU), Jaylen Harrell (HM CSU), Rod Moore (HM CSU), Makari Paige (HM Hawaii), Rayshaun Benny (HM Hawaii), Mason Graham (HM Hawaii), Cornelius Johnson (HM Hawaii), Donovan Edwards (HM Hawaii), AJ Henning (HM UConn),  Caden Kolesar (HM UConn), Mike Morris (HM Maryland), Mike Sainristil (HM Maryland), RJ Moten (HM Maryland).

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

Corum inserts the dagger on third and short.

Honorable mention: Corum inserts another dagger on fourth and short. McCarthy finally hits that deep ball to Bell. Turner and Moten pull off excellent interceptions, mostly. Smith consumes RB in backfield for TFL.

imageMARCUS HALL EPIC DOUBLE BIRD OF THE WEEK.

First drive of the third Q: McCarthy misses an RPO pull read on third and four, Isaiah Gash gets two yards, and Michigan punts on fourth and two in plus territory. An all-around recipe for frustration.

Honorable mention: Two Maryland fans six rows in front of me are wearing absurdly oversized baseball caps that make me irrationally upset. CJ Stokes fumbles his only carry. JJ McCarthy does a lot of running around inadvisably. Taulia Tagovailoa sits in the pocket and enjoys afternoon tea.

[After THE JUMP: bumps]

OFFENSE

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[Fuller]

Well, I mean, Zaphod's just this guy, you know? JJ McCarthy was not perfect and did a number of frustrating things. Also he was 18/26 for 220 yards and was one deep ball away from averaging 10 YPC. The duality of man, man.

I completely understand the rabbling here. There was a lot of alarming wandering around in the backfield, particularly two plays that were very Early Devin Gardner. One was the world's longest QB scramble and an important first down. One was an absurd Ishtar journey that resulted in a fumble (sort of*) and third and twenty-five. This is not ideal.

I don't know. McCarthy's first real bad play was another capital-j Journey on which he had Blake Corum on a wheel route against a defensive end and did not pull the trigger:

Blake Dang Corum

This turned me into Jesse Pinkman. BRO. BROOOOOOO. BRO. Whichever guy called that play was hopping up and down and eating his hat when McCarthy didn't throw that.

Decisions kind of snowballed from there. There were certain points where I was crabby in the stands because I thought Michigan's playcalling wasn't helping matters and then you hop to the tape and that run up the gut to Isaiah Gash is an RPO that sends AJ Henning into the flat against a corner blitz:

Hat is vomited up so someone else can eat hat. Wither the guy who pulled it against Hawaii and rifled in a touchdown to Ronnie Bell?

And then well whatever I just do this:

It's amazing how all that just melted away in the face of some bad decisions and missed deep balls. Yeah, this was probably a bad JJ McCarthy game. If this is a bad game, ok.

*[McCarthy was clearly in possession of the ball and throwing it forward. For review not to overturn that was absurd. That actually helped Michigan since the throw was intentional grounding and the fumble-type substance was a few yards closer to the sticks, but it was very wrong]

On the other hand. Maybe Cornelius Johnson should have caught that ball?

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[Barron]

We never got a replay but it did not feel like the defensive back got a hand on it. I kind of feel like if you get sproingled in your motte and bailey that you should catch the ball. NFL types wanted to see some contested catches from him this year; this was a missed opportunity.

One frustrating item. Just last week we saw SMU's Rashee Rice repeatedly dunk on Maryland defensive backs. Rice is a big leapy guy in the vein of a couple of Michigan receivers and other than the unplanned chuck above we did not see Michigan test anyone on a back shoulder fade or other Nico Collins go-get-it special.

DEATH TO WING TIGHT END BLOCKS ON SHORT YARDAGE. I understand that you've got to do some things to preserve a bit of mystery when you're doing the football. But if you're just going to do the obvious thing, for the love of God let your inline tight end be in line. The whole reason the column leads off with Blake Corum heroically lifting two Terrapins six feet is because Michigan motioned Luke Schoonmaker across the formation and asked him to block a DE with an inherent disadvantage:

TE motioning to bottom

That not an L for Schoonmaker, it's a stalemate. If that stalemate is at the line of scrimmage Corum just burrows inside of it and doesn't have to clean out the stables. I cannot tell you how many times I have seen wing TEs asked to do things against DEs who are bigger and stronger than them and—since the TE is not actually inline—have an inbuilt ability to set the block in the backfield.

Your inline TE will have a tougher time pulling across the formation and may be covered up and unable to go downfield. On short yardage, so what? Argh!

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Preferred deep guy. Michigan has targeted all of their top three guys deep but it feels like Roman Wilson is the preferred option there, because he's super fast. Here he got three targets and was very open on two—the third saw a safety able to impede his path to the ball a little bit.

Making Wilson your preferred guy puts a premium on putting the ball right on your dude because his advantage is getting past the guys, not putting them on a poster on an underthrown ball. So your risk level is lower but the rate of downfield successes probably lower.

Totally fine. Gio El-Hadi got a start against a Big Ten team and that was just fine. Michigan is notably right handed on the ground, though, and when things did go over the left it was often one of those 3TE sets—El-Hadi and Hayes did not get a whole lot of gradable blocks.

The OL also gave up minimal pressure. That's necessary but not sufficient since Maryland does not have an edge guy of note and loves dropping eight.

DEFENSE

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uncommon [Fuller]

Call it even? Two main developments. One: the secondary got a stiff test and passed it with flying colors. Two: Michigan got very little pressure from its front four. Overall, a push? I would feel much better about this assertion if Michigan hadn't given up a ton of big chunk plays on Maryland's last, relatively futile drive. Before that you were looking at 300 yards and 20 points—six of them on 50+ yard field goals—for what looks like the second or third best offense in the league outside of Michigan.

DE measuring stick acquired. Mike Morris was about what we thought: reasonably good Wormley-esque rusher and very good run defender. He was Michigan's most effective DE in this game, which is good for him. It is less good for Michigan. Rivals's Trevor McCue notes that Morris generated six pressures, a hurry, and a sack in this game. Thumbs up. The rest of the cast did not keep pace:

Jaylen Harrell kind of disappeared in this one. He only won against his blocker 11% of the time against Maryland, bringing his season number down to 17%. … Taylor Upshaw continues to struggle at the other EDGE spot. … The only player with a lower pass rush grade than Upshaw is George Rooks.

Around these parts we were somewhat hopeful but mostly skeptical either of the veterans would turn the corner, metaphorically or literally, and while Harrell did blast the right tackle over on one play that was about his only impact. (The facemask flag is whatever; it happens.)

The guys in the "wildcard" section of the season preview are faring better, but in limited snaps. Okie has just 26 on the season; Moore and McGregor are flashing erratically but just not deployed enough to really get a read. It's like Uche got split across three guys. We just don't know what it looks like if one of them gets the bulk of snaps. Okie did flush Tagovailoa into his most Taulia moment of the day, the near INT to Sainristil. Speaking of…

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on you [Fuller]

Best late-career position switch ever? The only thing separating Mike Sainristil from the Known Friends section was the pass that set up Maryland's second touchdown:

You can see him go "oh crap" one second late.

Other than that, yow. He had the crucial stop that set up Michigan's two-minute drill touchdown when he thunked a TE and then tackled the Maryland Five Star WR Du Jour:

And even when Jarrett did get a majority of his receiving yards in this game this is how he did it:

If you told me that Rakim Jarrett would fare worse as a (mostly) slot receiver against Mike Sainristil than Dax Hill I would not have believed you. Draftable? Feels draftable.

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[Fuller]

Being in position is half the battle. Gemon Green spent much of his early career in Channing Stribling Hell where every time he was near a receiver he'd phase out of existence at the critical moment. This space has always advocated for cornerbacks who are right in the grill of their man, because "now hit the ball" is a much easier fix than "get three yards closer." Green did not exactly hit the ball in this game but he did enough to make Maryland deep balls nigh impossible. He's keeping Will Johnson on the bench.

Linebackers: oof. Junior Colson did not have a good game at first blush. He shot some gaps he shouldn't have, had some tackles run through, and his positive plays are unlikely to outdistance the negative ones. The most painful goof was the Tagovailoa scramble, where he passes his guy off to a cornerback and then stays super deep until it's almost too late, then gets beat when he does come up:

Shortly thereafter he was very passive on the goal line while unblocked and Maryland scored from the two.

Meanwhile Kalel Mullings got run over by the Maryland backup RB. That guy is a hoss, but so is Mullings. I was a little frustrated that we never saw anyone flash into the backfield despite Michigan holding up pretty well against doubles and keeping that linebacker level clean. Maybe Nikhai Hill-Green comes back next week and is a major upgrade; other than that I think we're stuck with a pretty meh group.

Young guys flash. Rayshaun Benny couldn't quite make this play but man is it encouraging all the same:

I'm not going to get on a guy for tackling up high when he's just swum past an OL and is not fully balanced. My man need some help, and the guy he needs help from is Eyabi Okie. Okie has a corner blitz outside of him and has no force responsibility. Shed at all costs, drive at all costs. Do something. Anything. Any bit of robbed momentum there is fourth down.

Not even mad. Love me a good shovel pass, particularly when paired with a jet sweep threat the other way:

Now, the formation tips this. But still, that's a counter step from the TE with that jet fake, and then a speed option threat. It's real nice.

SPECIAL TEAMS

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not even momma is gonna love you after this one [Fuller]

Vestiges of Weird Maryland. Credit to the Terps for mostly not being Weird Maryland—maybe it's too early in the year for that—but doinking the opening kickoff off your facemask such that the opposing team actually recovers it is an all-timer.

We had an extensive discussion on the podcast about ways you could score a touchdown faster than Michigan did in this game; suffice it to say that we had hard time coming up with even outlandish scenarios that could top this. I'm surprised we haven't seen official recognition this was the fastest TD in Michigan history.

KEEP DOINKING HIM? Very disappointed that Michigan's next kickoff was deep in the endzone and Felton could just fling his hands in the air. Another muff is absurdly unlikely, but you've got to give them the chance. See above about Weird Maryland.

Not often Moody gets out-Moody'd. Two 50+ yarders from Maryland versus Moody hitting 2/3 with one 50+ and one miss from 43.

MISCELLANEOUS

Mary Sue U. FULL ALONZO HIGHSMITH FROM MARY SUE COLEMAN

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"please don't do anything rash, ma'am" –Ronnie Bell [Barron]

DEVASTATING.

What was with the weird QB substitution? Taulia Tagovailoa takes a big hit and briefly exits the game. He comes back. He plays fine. Corum inserts the dagger to give Michigan a two-score lead with a few minutes left. This game is mostly out of reach but not entirely. So why does Maryland put their backup in? I wonder if Tagovailoa had a borderline concussion.

Perspective. Here's some opponent-adjusted EPA/play for you:

 epa per play

Maryland might actually be pretty good, Michigan is 4th nationally based on (admittedly squiggly early-season) opponent-adjusted number crunching, and ye gods Iowa.

Dude. We had our first mind-bending fourth down decision in this game when Michigan punted on their first drive of the second half, in plus territory, on fourth and two, while Corum was on a heater. I can only assume that disappointment on the missed RPO read influenced that decision? I guess? I am stretching for something because otherwise that does not compute.

Obligatory officiating discussion. Maryland entered this game as the second-most penalized team in the nation and exited it with one call for five yards. The officials missed an egregious ineligible man downfield call and ignored holding both ways in a manner that facilitated offensive football but did not strike me as entirely fair. Also, I mean… the DJ Turner interception wasn't even worth a booth review? I have bad news for people who thought John O'Neill retiring was going to make things better.

HERE

GIFS:

Best and Worst:

So yeah, looking at the final score this was a 7-point game, but once Michigan pulled ahead in the 4th it never felt THAT close.  Before that last drive Maryland had 127 yards in the second half to Michigan’s 229, and Michigan was finally starting to get some pressure on Maryland’s QB and shutting down Maryland’s running game – they only had 33 yards rushing in the second half before that last drive.  Maryland didn’t really have an answer for Corum on the ground and had McCarthy just thrown the ball to his open receivers with a bit more consistency this game would have likely been the double-digit one we all expected.  That isn’t intended to take away from Maryland – they played really well and look improved on both sides of the ball compared to last year.  But this wasn’t even like the Rutgers game last year where the Scarlet Knights outgained Michigan and generally controlled the second half; this was more one of those games where a limited number of possessions led to a tightening at the end of the game that hopefully shook some of the rust off the team but doesn’t portend bad times ahead.

SP+ had a 94% win expectancy, FWIW.

State of our Open Threads:

It was a stark change from the UConn game - UConn saw all of nine fucks given and twelve shits given. Indeed, it was barely a thread at all. This week, we were a bit more stressed, as you might imagine. We gave 153 fucks and 118 shits. The parallel to last season's Rutgers game was fairly evident too - after giving a mere eighteen fucks and twelve shits against Northern Illinois, we jumped to 176 fucks and 76 shits for the Rutgers game. Like most seasons, the start of conference play brings hypertension and headaches in the Big Ten.

Anyway, here's the "fuck" / "shit" chart to date:

For a game like that, the "fire" talk was fairly restrained.

Comments

Carpetbagger

September 27th, 2022 at 4:06 PM ^

Early in the game when Maryland when I noticed how much their defense was almost disregarding the run entirely I made the comment they would NEVER have done that with Haskins. By the end of the game Maryland was pretty committed to stopping Corum, but there is still a difference.

I like Corum, but I liked Haskins better.

Champ Kind

September 26th, 2022 at 3:46 PM ^

He's listed either 7th or 8th in all the Heisman odds I've seen today, so he's already being noticed by those outside of the M fandom.

These are the current players listed with better odds on FanDuel: CJ Stroud, Bryce Young, Caleb Williams, Hendon Hooker, Stetson Bennett, and Jalon Daniels. Stroud (+125) seems to be a strong favorite at the moment according to the current odds. Corum is tied with a couple others at +4000

VintageRandy

September 26th, 2022 at 2:22 PM ^

I posted this in the podcast thread but since Brian clipped it I figured I might get an answer from someone who can read the play better than I can:

 Maryland 3rd and 4 in the 3rd quarter around the Maryland 35 or something. Sainristil is covering Jarrett in the slot and gives a 7 yard cushion. There’s only one covering safety behind Sainristil and then Turner above him, but it’s a moot point because Jarrett runs a quick curl at 5 yards and gets the first down. Any QB could see that 5 free yards on 3rd and 4 is your pre-snap read.

Was this Sainristil’s fault? If not, why play so soft? Seems like you should be able to play prevent defense without handing out free first downs.

VintageRandy

September 26th, 2022 at 3:58 PM ^

Most of the reason I ask is it seems like this game is the best blueprint for what we’ll roll out against Ohio State, so I’m curious to get the big brain takes on whether this is an effective approach.

Part of the meta game last year was that playing prevent against OSU limited the number of their offensive possessions while our running game burned the clock on the other end. This may be blasphemy but I’d almost rather risk the big play vs OSU if it means better chances of getting third down stops, since this feels like a year where you’d want to maximize the number of our offensive possessions.

NotADuck

September 26th, 2022 at 5:04 PM ^

If you watched the OSU game against Notre Dame this year you'll see the same thing.  Notre Dame was comfortable giving up short gains in the passing game and covering the long routes like white on rice.  It was effective for the most part until they gave up a couple long connections late in the 2nd half.

So far that seems like the blueprint to beat OSU.  Of course I think Michigan's pass rush needs to improve before they can do the same thing and expect a similar level of success.

G. Gulo of the Dale

September 26th, 2022 at 8:40 PM ^

It's astonishing to think that "27 for 27" somehow wasn't the nadir of UM's ability to run the football in 2013 since at least Gardner improvised for over 100 yards on the ground that game...

... and then (*gulp*) two of the next three weeks--against MSU and Nebraska (!)--we finished with negative yards in the ground game. 

That season, it's like we sent out the varsity squad against CMU, Notre Dame, Minnesota, and OSU, and the JV team against almost everyone else.  Football in the Age of Hoke, I guess.

Yinka Double Dare

September 26th, 2022 at 2:35 PM ^

It was certainly good to get at least one game in against athletic WRs and a cromulent-plus QB in if for nothing else than OSU prep. The corners were very good, even better than last year. The pass rush is gonna need to find something to reproduce last year's result. 

Sainristil is a Football Guy. Even if he isn't drafted he either sticks on his first team because the coaches fall in love with him (the effort, the smarts, all of it) and he plays special teams and 6th or 7th defensive back on the roster, or someone else picks him up on their practice squad and he makes the team during the season when injuries require. Convenient to have a guy who can credibly play on either side of the ball, and picks up things lightning-quick, gonna be a future coach too if he wants to be. 

BlueAggie

September 26th, 2022 at 2:38 PM ^

One of the refs fell in an inadvertent collision with a Michigan player, jammed his shoulder, and had to be subbed off.  Were there any penalties or reviews after that?  Maybe the rest just kind of went on strike? Or whatever the kids call it these days...quiet quitting?

matty blue

September 26th, 2022 at 2:41 PM ^

KEEP DOINKING HIM? Very disappointed that Michigan's next kickoff was deep in the endzone and Felton could just fling his hands in the air. Another muff is absurdly unlikely, but you've got to give them the chance.

completely, totally, agree.  as you say, it's unlikely to happen again, but you have to at least make him make a play after that.  you never know about opposing player's confidence, but it doesn't hurt to poke at it and see what happens.  the risk is most likely not much more than a few yards of field position.

it's like swinging at the first pitch after back-to-back walks, or to a reliever coming in from the bullpen in a pressure situation.  make him throw a strike.

make felton catch the ball.

kyle.aaronson

September 26th, 2022 at 4:25 PM ^

I wonder if they should always give the returner an opportunity. Michigan has been dynamite at every facet of special teams, so why can't they be dynamite at kickoff coverage? If Moody can take 10 yards off the ball and put more arc on it for more hang time, is it not reasonable to suspect that most of the time the opponent would have to start within their own 25, and maybe within their own red zone? I understand this is a "Why don't we play more like Iowa?" take and that players get hurt on kickoffs, but...

J. Redux

September 27th, 2022 at 1:42 AM ^

They can.  However, if they don't catch it cleanly, they can end up with terrible field position, like in last year's OSU game (which Michigan won, 42-27).  Or if they try to return it, then they may muff it like Maryland did.  Certainly after he muffed it once, you'd expect they'd keep trying until he caught one without drama.

Unless you just don't trust your coverage team, I'm aiming for the 1-3 yard line every time.

tybert

September 26th, 2022 at 2:41 PM ^

Was actually happy (after the fact) that Maryland did score late and get the 2 pt on a great play call (Mike did make a fine tackle but not before the guy could break the plane). We needed a game where an OS kick had to be handled smoothly. Iowa - a place where we are 0-4 since 2005 and have lost by combined 14 points - is ALWAYS up for a big game vs. Michigan. Last time we crushed them was 2012 under Gardner, before he tanked starting with the 2013 Akron game. 

This schedule is setting up well if we avoid the ambush this Saturday and just take care of business vs. Indy. The PSU game is now shaping up to be a Top 10 HUGE showdown. Win that, and the bye week beckons. If MSU keeps playing like they did vs. Minn we could give them a 2002-style beatdown. 

Realistically, the schedule is good for JJ if he navigates Sat in Iowa City with a win. Get past PSU, and it's off to 11-0.

Not sure what to expect vs. Ohio but we have the rest of the year to get better and more consistent. The secondary definitely looks up for the challenge. If we can't make it two in a row vs. Ohio, we will likely get the USC-Wash winner in the Rose, which is not a bad year.

M_Born M_Believer

September 26th, 2022 at 3:14 PM ^

Nice summary and I agree, next week at Iowa and PSU coming up in 2 weeks are the games that are standing out.

Yay, yay, yay I know all about Sparty but the way their season is going, that game on the 29th will truly be their Super Bowl cause they are getting nothing else out of this season.  But it is becoming very apparent that we are the much better team, go out there and prove it.  This game should not even be close.  They can't run the ball, their WR are ok at best, their Run defense is NOT superb and the pass defense is terrible.  They made Tanner Morgan look like Joe Montana, that takes some doing...

And yes,  a nice consolation prize would be a trip back to the Rose Bowl.

TBlue

September 26th, 2022 at 8:44 PM ^

A 2002 style beatdown of Sparty would be great, but I won’t ever count on anything against them.  Last year we had the play reviews from Hell.  And it goes all the way back to Sparty Bob - it’s always something.  (I’m not even going to get into that horrible punt fiasco - oops, sorry.  I did)

MadMonkey

September 26th, 2022 at 2:48 PM ^

MGoBlog Readers are not performing at Big Ten levels.  Hard to believe no one has yet commented on this little gem:

I kind of feel like if you get sproingled in your motte and bailey that you should catch the ball.

WTF, I found it funny even though I had no idea what it meant and sent me scrambling to Chrome to search what I was missing .

 

[EDIT:  From Wikipedia for those who don't have time to search the reference:

Philosopher Nicholas Shackel, who coined the term,[1] prefers to speak of a motte-and-bailey doctrine instead of a fallacy.[3] In 2005, Shackel described the reference to medieval castle defense like this:[2]

A Motte and Bailey castle is a medieval system of defence in which a stone tower on a mound (the Motte) is surrounded by an area of land (the Bailey) which in turn is encompassed by some sort of a barrier such as a ditch. Being dark and dank, the Motte is not a habitation of choice. The only reason for its existence is the desirability of the Bailey, which the combination of the Motte and ditch makes relatively easy to retain despite attack by marauders. When only lightly pressed, the ditch makes small numbers of attackers easy to defeat as they struggle across it: when heavily pressed the ditch is not defensible and so neither is the Bailey. Rather one retreats to the insalubrious but defensible, perhaps impregnable, Motte. Eventually the marauders give up, when one is well placed to reoccupy desirable land. ... the Bailey, represents a philosophical doctrine or position with similar properties: desirable to its proponent but only lightly defensible. The Motte is the defensible but undesired position to which one retreats when hard pressed.

Shackel's original impetus was to criticize what he considered duplicitous processes of argumentation in works of academics such as Michel FoucaultDavid BloorJean-Francois LyotardRichard Rorty, and Berger and Luckmann, and in postmodernist discourses in general.[2][4]

 

J. Redux

September 26th, 2022 at 2:49 PM ^

BTW, regarding the facemask doink -- the reason that people watching at home were saying it took only 3 seconds was that FOX appeared not to have bothered syncing with the in-stadium clock feed, and whatever intern they were paying to start the clock didn't.  It still said 14:57 until they returned from commercial, IIRC.

The only realistic way to have a faster touchdown is what somebody said on the podcast: a fair catch / kickoff out of the endzone -- maybe with a penalty on the receiving team for good measure -- and then an immediate defensive touchdown on the first play.

The safety that Peyton Manning took in the Super Bowl happened 12 seconds into the game, but there was a 7 second kickoff return.  So I could imagine something like that -- touchback (no time off the clock), snap over his head into the end zone, Michigan wins the race to the ball.  That would probably be less than 8 seconds.

The only other thing I can think of is a kickoff return touchdown when the kicking team decided to go for a surprise onside kick, so Michigan is returning it from their 45 instead of the goal line.  I can't imagine that's something that happens a lot.

Yinka Double Dare

September 26th, 2022 at 3:40 PM ^

Fair catch/touchback, then a corner jumps an out route for a pick six could work. Would basically be a direct route to the end zone from about the 30 yard line, and those are usually thrown after 2-3 seconds, could potentially be only 6 or 7 seconds? And yeah on an onside kick, even a surprise one, guys usually are going to just fall on the ball as they're taught. You have great field position, job one is to ensure you have the ball and not worry about running with it. 

plaidflannel

September 26th, 2022 at 2:54 PM ^

My two cents on the Taulia injury:

  • Injured his ribs/back (doesn't really matter which, but not his head) on the Mike Morris hit
  • Was hurting for the rest of the game, probably told the coaches that he could tough it out (and did for a good chunk of the second half, but most of his passes were short ones or floaters, not long passes)
  • Badly underthrew Moten's interception due to the injury, and either he or the coaches decided to pull him at that point because a 100% backup is better than 60% Taulia

WFNY_DP

September 26th, 2022 at 4:50 PM ^

Klatt pointed out on his INT to Moten that Taulia missed a WIDE open guy in the middle that would have gone for a huge gain and instead forced it into double-coverage.

Maybe Locksley was actually waving the white flag and didn't want his starting QB getting killed or making another bad decision and just oopsed his way into a great drive from his backup QB.

bronxblue

September 26th, 2022 at 5:44 PM ^

I agree he seemed beaten up after that throw.  I do think they pulled him more because of the game situation and knowing UM was going to be taking runs at the QB.  It wasn't like Maryland's offense was on fire on that last drive; they had multiple long conversions on sorta crazy plays that I doubt Locksley anticipated.

AlbanyBlue

September 26th, 2022 at 2:55 PM ^

A part of superior writing is the ability to take the reader on a visual journey, and for this, the Xeno's Paradox reference was spot-on. Chapeau for that one, Brian! Then we have "sproingled in your motte and bailey" (Picture provided but unnecessary). I laughed. 

Not sure if it's Harbaugh or other parts of the offensive braintrust, but that part of the staff does tend to outsmart itself at times. Like the wildcat snaps in years past that just did the same thing almost all of the time, asking Schoon to make a weird, disadvantageous block is the staff going "hey, let's look like we're going to do this or this, but we're really going to do THAT". Problem is, the THAT is predictable and the frippery has put some of our personnel at a disadvantage. Now, if there's a different play off of that look later in the season, I'll be happy to eat the proverbial lemon.

Another excellent write-up, Mr. Cook. Overall, I'm glad we got the win. JJ apparently self-diagnosed something about his deep ball delivery, so I'm hopeful that corrects. As many have said, if even a couple of the missed deep balls were completed, the game is a lot easier on our nerves.