[Marc-Gregor Campredon]

I Don't Trust It But It's Still There Comment Count

Brian September 20th, 2021 at 1:39 PM

9/18/2021 – Michigan 63, Northern Illinois 10 – 3-0

Fortunes change quickly in MAC (and, er, Pac-12) bodybag season. The aftermath of last week was a lot of people pointing and yelling about one half of an equation when both halves were true. The aftermath this week is a lot of people considering maybe thinking about proposing to run at the football Lucy is holding. Transitive football has been invoked.

You see, Rudy: Michigan hammered Northern Illinois like it was not there, and Northern Illinois beat Georgia Tech, and Georgia Tech was a yard and a two-point conversion away from overtime with Clemson. Therefore Michigan should be a ~53 point favorite over Clemson. It's science.

Add in Washington getting off the mat and Western Michigan beating Pitt and things get stupid fast.

You probably skipped over the "no predictive value" bit as you look longingly at that football poised under the girl in the blue dress's finger. Even if you did, it's little defense. The things that are supposed to have predictive value are also inviting you to have a run. SP+ with priors—ie, Connolly's baby—has Michigan sixth. ESPN's other predictive ranking system, FPI, puts them at the same spot.

This is a far cry from rampant 7-5 predictions preseason. MVictors' "Mood" has shot up in a few short weeks:

imageI'm not going to tell anyone how to feel. I am merely going to suggest that you are all fools and we are doomed. Okay, yeah, Blake Corum. Okay, yeah, Ohio State's running around demoting their defensive coordinator mid-season. Okay, sure, the defense is checking in well above expectations.

A rational person would be experiencing cautious optimism at this point… if he could block out the entire recent history of Michigan football. A rational person who cannot do that would measure the potential upside of investing versus the downside and hoard all his emotional chips on the sideline. Or maybe whatever, life's for living. Let's open up the possibility of ruining a weekend again. Maybe that is your decision, if you are a fool. A person with no ability to judge risk. A straight-up innumerate weirdo.

Yes, I'm talking myself out of it.

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

Even your author—high up on the list of skeptical Michigan fans and thus high up on the list of skeptics worldwide—has to admit there is a tremor in there.

You can get a sense of how much stupid your team contains even against the dregs of college football—ask FSU. Every college team has some, just waiting for the right moment to come out of its cage and do just fine in its quest to make heads explode and surrender cobras bloom like so many wildflowers. Nobody is immune; some teams veritably drip with it. Many Michigan teams of recent vintage have.

To date, Michigan's level of stupid is shockingly minimal. There have not been guys handwavingly wide open. The running backs are perfect metronomes. They haven't turned the ball over. The punts are fair caught. The kicks go in the endzone. The offensive line has been creepily efficient at preventing opponents from blitzing into the backfield.

This is coming off a season so rife with stupid stuff that the NIU quarterback, who had 18 passing yards for most of this game, had 323 in his Michigan State incarnation, more than half of them to a guy who was also in a famous Vine. They deep-sixed the defensive staff and made Sherrone Moore the OL coach, displacing Ed Warinner with a guy who'd never officially coached the spot. One of the new, touted defensive coaches left for Buffalo a couple weeks into his Michigan career.

In short, this makes no sense. No amount of offseason turnover should result in this drastic reduction in stupid, let alone the seemingly chaotic turnover of 2021. So I don't trust it. But I am, like, looking at it. I look at it and I see it and I wait to be informed I am on an acid trip and the squirrel is actually a fox.

antichrist

I look at it, and don't trust it, but it is there. Resolving into something. Maybe this is a weird season and Michigan will benefit. In a year more reminiscent of chaos seasons of 15 years ago than the usual Alabama trudge of late, Michigan looks remarkably unchaotic. For now. I'm still squinting.

AWARDS

Known Friends and Trusted Agents Of The Week

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hey let's make pancakes [Campredon]

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

 

#1 Your Offensive Line. I mean, four different backs averaged at least 6.2 YPC. McNamara was not sacked and had eons of time to hit Johnson on the long TD. OL got out in front of Henning's edge plays, and obliterated everyone on the interior.

#2 Hassan Haskins, Blake Corum, and Donovan Edwards. Combine for 267 yards on 30 carries and you might make it up in this section. IMO Corum remains a nose or six ahead of the pack but the ability to keep everyone fresh and not make anyone in particular Chris Perry in that one MSU game is hugely valuable. 3 points each! Sure!

#3 AJ Henning. 70 yards in punt returns and two explosive offensive touches slides him in front of a couple other candidates.

Honorable mention: There was so much rotation on the D that nobody got a ton of time to stand out, but both Nikhai Hill-Green and Josh Ross came up with sticks; Gemon Green grabbed a deflection; Dax Hill had a drive-ending PBU. Cornelius Johnson's double move was rad.

KFaTAotW Standings.

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

16: The OL (#1 Wash, #1 NIU)
11: Blake Corum (#2 WMU, T3 Wash, T2 NIU)
8: Ronnie Bell (#1 WMU)
7: Hassan Haskins (HM WMU, T3 Wash, T2 NIU)
6: Aidan Hutchinson (HM WMU, #2 Wash)
4: AJ Henning (HM WMU, #3 NIU), Dax Hill (#3 WMU, HM NIU)
3: Donovan Edwards(T2 NIU).
2: Josh Ross (HM Wash, HM NIU)
1: Andrew Vastardis (HM WMU),Mike Sainristil (HM WMU), Brad Robbins (HM Wash), Jake Moody (HM Wash), Mazi Smith (HM Wash), Nikhai Hill-Green(HM NIU), Gemon Green(HM NIU), Cornelius Johnson(HM NIU)

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

Michigan executes a two-minute drill with one 87-yard pass to Cornelius Johnson, adding another data point to the "Cade McNamara has a deep ball" column.

Honorable mention: More or less any running play. Michigan forces a turnover.

image​MARCUS HALL EPIC DOUBLE BIRD OF THE WEEK.

The one drive NIU had in the competitive section of the football game.

Honorable mention: Uh, Henning let a couple punts bounce? The holding call that brought back Franklin's touchdown.

[After THE JUMP: more SP+ madness]

OFFENSE

Ask again later. We knew going into this one that the NIU defense was bereft of talent, played pillow-soft coverage, and had been paved by lesser lights. This is going to be one of the worst defenses in the country. The things GT did are the things Michigan was going to do. This from the first drive was more or less lights out. Watch #86 Schoonmaker to the bottom of the line completely wipe a purported DE:

He had a good game but the opponent had a ton to do with that.

Caveats aside, there are some things you can take from the game. Let's sift some sand:

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zip zap [Campredon]

Blake Corum, yeehaw. There were three or four runs in this game where I involuntarily cocked an eyebrow: Corum slipping through two ankle tackles and keeping his balance, Corum patiently waiting for a gap and then exploding into it, Corum finding a cutback lane on a play designed well away from his eventual destination.

He WOOPED a linebacker at the line of scrimmage in a hole that didn't look like it had enough room for that sort of thing. And yeah dart is on the table:

Corum came in 3rd nationally in PFF RB grade this week, FWIW.

AJ Henning is fast. Henning got the punt return job in this game and looks set to keep it since when he lets a ball bounce sometimes he takes it back 30 yards. (Still advisable to catch the ball.) Henning was two ankle tackles away from long touchdowns on his two offensive touches and Michigan should probably be crafting ways to get that touch count up to 4 or 5.

AJ Henning's bro is Andrew Vastardis. Vastardis displayed impressive mobility in space on both of Henning's touches. Here he gets accidentally chipped by a DL and that's probably the only thing separating him from enough of a block on a safety that Henning goes the distance:

On the jet he pulled from C and got in a thump:

He's been impressive.

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[Campredon]

Donovan Edwards is also fast. The pause here and then the burst:

Normally we'd be talking about how to get him more carries but from where?

Another day almost totally lacking in OL mental issues. Seth with have to confirm this but I'm not sure we've seen a DL or LB get a free pass to the backfield more than a couple times this year. Even good OLs will occasionally have a mental biff that gives a front seven player a free TFL. Here NIU got two, one of which was a freebie when McNamara fumbled the snap. Washington had three but two of those were from secondary members on bubble/swing screens. WMU had two; one was from a corner. That's one front-seven TFL per game so far. We've also seen approximately no pass rushers come in clean.

Despite being very bad, these defenses are stunting and blitzing and doing things that they hope will confuse Michigan's OL on a regular basis. Bad defenses might do it less as they try to get the basics down, but everyone has tricks up their sleeve. Michigan has not been vulnerable to them yet. Here's Keegan, one of the greener guys playing for Michigan, calmly identifying a LB blitz and dealing with it:

LG #77

A passing game. Another game with only 11 throws from the starting QB, so data remains thin on the ground. This was more encouraging, obviously, with McNamara looking confident and polished. There was the TD, of course, but he also hit a TE seam:

Big difference between this D and Washington.

Meanwhile in JJ McCarthy: he looked very viable as an occasional runner on the keep he got inside the five, and there is a certain je ne sais quoi about the ball he throws.

DEFENSE

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[Campredon]

Possibly meaningful result given the opposition. The one thing NIU was doing really well over the first two weeks was run the ball, particularly with Harrison Waylee. Waylee got banged up and left early, returning a bit later. That limited his impact somewhat; even so 34 yards on 12 carries (2.8 per) might mean something. His compatriots didn't do much better.

Michigan did this without leaning too heavily on its starters. Michigan substituted rampantly even in the first half: Jenkins, Jeter, Whittley, Mullings, Colson, Morris, and Harrell all got significant numbers of snaps, with no or little discernible dropoff.

File in the same bin the OL is in. Aside from one obvious coverage bust—probably Josh Ross not following the TE in the flat—on the NIU FG drive Michigan got through another game without seemingly like they were higgeldy-piggeldy because they're implementing a new system.

The limitations of the NIU passing game factor in here, but I mean… Rocky Lombardi seems about as likely to hit a 30 yard pass as a 7 yard one so unless the NIU gameplan was real bad I'd imagine the lack of any shots anywhere beyond the sticks was at least partially a function of the defense disguising what they were doing and forcing checkdowns. I'm still concerned about what's going to happen when Michigan runs into some top-shelf wide receivers, something that might not happen until… Penn State?

Lombardi did Lombardi things. He dropped down the MAC level because he's not at all accurate, and he missed a half dozen relatively easy throws that could have set up third and short. This was a relief in the moment but makes discussion of the pass defense difficult because there wasn't a whole lot to go on, coverage wise, outside of a few well-defended slants.

Harrell's got to check his six some. He seems to be too eager to get after the running back; the early Lombardi keeper on the FG drive was an easy read with Harrell turning his hips and flying into a blocker at high speed.

SPECIAL TEAMS

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[Campredon]

All right yeah you can keep doing this. AJ Henning has the job:

If M can take punt return back to a strength this could be the top special teams unit in the country.

Congratulations Brad Robbins. I think 0/0 is infinity so congrats on the best punting game in the history of football.

Boo! One point to the crowd for vociferously booing NIU fair catches on kickoffs.

MISCELLANEOUS

On the move up. Michigan's surge in the ranking systems is unusual. Here's a list of risers and fallers:

Note that there's a huge gap between Michigan's preseason rating and anyone else on this list. The #2 team here by preseason expectations, Kansas State, ranked 61st. Michigan was 17th. It's a lot harder to exceed expectations by that much when your expectations are already pretty high.

What are we doing here? You're NIU, you've given up 50 points to Wyoming, it's 7-0 against Michigan in the first quarter and you've got a fourth and two from the three. Go for it! You're not here to put up a first quarter Sad Field Goal (TM Dave). I mean, you are. But you shouldn't.

I was going to have a second rant after NIU pulled out the ol' Do A Bunch Of Motion And Then Call Timeout play, but they went for it afterwards.

HERE

Alex's game column:

The only other notable storyline in this game was Michigan's use of a laundry list of reserves. JJ McCarthy took over at halftime with the rest of the first string offense. He went 4/6 for 42 yards. The rest of the second string offense came on shortly after, including a backup offensive line of Karsen Barnhart, Chuck Filiaga, Greg Crippen, Reece Atteberry, and Trente Jones (left to right). Donovan Edwards had 8 carries for 86 yards and two scores. Christian Dixon had one catch for seven yards. On defense, such names as Makari Paige, Michael Barrett, Rod Moore, Taylor Upshaw, George Johnson III, and Caden Kolesar got extensive time, before even more obscure walk-ons took the field in the fourth quarter.

Best and Worst:

And yet, after approximately one quarter of the college football season has been played, Michigan is currently 6th in the nation in yards per play, sporting an impressive 7.88 average.  That ranks ahead of of the likes of Florida, Oklahoma, and Alabama.  And they’re 4th in the nation in plays of more than 40 yards and #1 in plays over 50 yards, 60, 70, and 80 yards.  And they’re only 3 yards to Johnson away from being #1 in plays over 90 yards.  By any metric, this is one of the most explosive offenses in America, highlighted this week by Michigan scoring touchdowns on their first 9 (!) drives of the game, 8 of them on the ground.

Anatomy of the double move. State of our open threads.

ELSEWHERE

Bill Connelly put out a bold predictions post that reads like his version of our RAW TAKE podcast segment (selections: FSU is going 2-10, Washington will win the Pac-12, etc.). Michigan shows up in an assertion that two non-OSU Big Ten teams will make the playoff:

The Buckeyes still enjoy the highest SP+ ranking in the conference and have a 9% chance of finishing 11-1 or better.

Odds of finishing 11-1 or better, per SP+:
Penn State 20.1%
Michigan 19.4%
Iowa 13.6%
Ohio State 9.0%
Wisconsin 4.3%
Maryland 0.9%
Michigan State 0.8%
Minnesota 0.6%

The Buckeyes clearly are still good. But while all of these rousing stories were taking shape on Saturday, the four-time defending Big Ten champions were seriously contemplating losing to Tulsa. … But after allowing 6.9 yards per play to Oregon, the Buckeyes allowed 6.1 against Tulsa. They have slid to 39th in defensive SP+, and with a large number of strong (read: better than Tulsa) teams remaining on the slate, SP+ indeed gives them only a 9% chance of getting to 11-1. Those are almost equal to their odds of going 7-5 or worse.

Also, we've got a potentially historic version of GopherWatch this year as UConn competes with a couple of teams from the 1920s to be the worst D-1 school ever.

Also in (slightly) historic:

Maize and Blue Nation. Maize and Brew. MVictors on Jerry Green.

Comments

1VaBlue1

September 20th, 2021 at 3:05 PM ^

"No idea how the rest of the season will play out, but this is easily the sharpest, most consistent, and best-coached I remember a Harbaugh team looking early in the season."

Good coaching results in a team that is sharp and consistent.  And sharp, consistent teams win games.  Keep this up, and big games will be won...

jmblue

September 20th, 2021 at 3:43 PM ^

 2015, 2016 and 2018 we toasted the mid.majors

In 2015 we had a 28-7 win over UNLV.

In 2018 we blew out SMU but looked vulnerable defensively.  Ominously, we had trouble defending crossing patterns, which came back to haunt us at season's end.

2016 is the closest comparison to this year so far. 

Carpetbagger

September 20th, 2021 at 4:33 PM ^

I believe SMU was mostly quick slants or quick ins. But yes, it really was the first time someone had found a chink in Brown's defense and he had to make adjustments. The first adjustment away from attacking at all costs and towards papering over an unsound scheme.

Indiana expanded the Ins/slants to crosses, but wasn't quite talented enough to pull off the upset. Ohio State most certainly was talented enough the following week. And even worse, coached well enough to anticipate Brown's primary adjustment, and attack that too (corner routes and outs, no help). Brown had nothing after that. 

njvictor

September 20th, 2021 at 3:01 PM ^

adding another data point to the "Cade McNamara has a deep ball" column.

I'm kinda shocked this hasn't been talked about more on this blog. Cade has a legit very good deep ball that when he throws a deep ball, I expect it to connect and when it hasn't, it's more often than not been the receiver's fault. I haven't felt this confident about our QB's deep ball since probably 2016 with Speight throwing to Darboh and Chesson

Wolverine In Exile

September 20th, 2021 at 3:03 PM ^

This is ostensibly what I think Michigan signed up for when hiring Harbaugh: fundamentally sound, limited mistake, physical football team on both sides of the ball. Essentially Wisconsin with faster RB's and potentially a game breaking QB every few years. I'd take that in a heartbeat. 

MFanWM

September 20th, 2021 at 3:04 PM ^

There is a noticable energy & continuity with this group of players and coaches that simply feels different than the last 2-3 seasons. 

Three games in and the continous bone-headed penalties and obvious missed-assignment mistakes have not crept into the games.  The complete lack of energy to start games and the second half of games have not been a thing that I have noticed either.

I see players engaged, excited and actively supporting both sides of the ball - coacing is constant on the sidelines and it just feels like the younger coaches and energy there have made light-years of difference in how the players are carrying themselves.

If they can maintain this level of effort and growth - not only should a good to very good season happen, but I would argue that the very apparent team culture challenges have been overcome which is probably one of the most critical barries to success this team has displayed for the last several years.

Some much more difficult opponents are coming - but think the overall seasons for WMU/UW/NIU may be a bit better than expected too.

oriental andrew

September 20th, 2021 at 3:10 PM ^

there is a certain je ne sais quoi about the ball he throws

If you listened to the radio broadcast, you'd know it is what we in the biz call "arm talent." Brandy and Dierdorf couldn't stop talking about JJ's "arm talent" in the 2nd half. 

carolina blue

September 20th, 2021 at 3:50 PM ^

Yeah. It was rather annoying. Dan is good color, Brandy is almost unbearable as PBP. He went on about something in the first half and promised to deliver on some obscure reference he was making. Dierdorf said, without hesitation, “you don’t actually think anyone is interested, do you?”  
I nearly lost it. Dierdorf just delivering the line just straight to the jugular. 

BoFan

September 20th, 2021 at 3:13 PM ^

Brian, you should name each member of the OL and give them full points. OLs always have to live in anonymity and here is a chance to give them the notoriety they deserve.   Also Vastardis, since he has a point, will stand out slightly.  But, thats ok since he calls the line plays and has also been called out for doing some other worldly things. 

Eyzwidopn

September 20th, 2021 at 3:26 PM ^

Rocky Lombardi isn't the best gauge, but these qoutes from him, included in an article by Andrew Kahn @ MLive, are an interesting perspectve on the defense from an opponent's view.  https://www.mlive.com/wolverines/2021/09/northern-illinois-coach-on-michigan-they-built-their-team-to-beat-ohio-state.html

“They run a completely different scheme (than last year),” Lombardi said. “They looked better on film than they did last year. The scheme helps them out. They’re much softer now in coverage. They don’t like to give up many deep shots. They were giving us a zero box so we should be able to run the ball, and we did sometimes.”

“They do a lot better job this year of disguising things for sure,” Lombardi said of Michigan’s defense. “They’re not a very blitz-heavy team. When they do disguise, I think they do a good job because they play base so well.”

stephenrjking

September 20th, 2021 at 4:07 PM ^

It’s a trap.

This team will not win a national title this year.

So, that out of the way: we know that there are losses to come. Maybe fewer than originally thought, maybe not. But, since they’re coming, since we know the team has flaws when compared to the elite of the sport, we know that some problems will arise.

Thus, it is important to remain, at the least, safely within a gray pit of realistic expectations. It’s not as dramatic (and the acrostic “GPORE” doesn’t have the same ring to it) but it will help evaluate the team on a reasonable basis when stuff goes wrong.

Because if this team is good enough to go 10-2, win a couple of big road games, and finish with a good ranking, that’s as much as we could expect from the season, changes the narrative, and builds for next season when significant components of the offense should be back and as good as ever.

And we should keep that in mind. 9-3 or 10-2 are reasonable objectives. And remembering that can help when the team loses by a couple scores in a tough road game when the passing game doesn’t click, or gets edged in a track meet against a mid-level B1G team because we had an exploitable issue in the secondary. Realism. We’re not 1995 Nebraska. It’s ok if not everything is in place yet. 

DonAZ

September 21st, 2021 at 8:40 AM ^

My checklist:

  • Beat the teams we should beat -- check
  • Win some of the games where the match-up is more even -- TBD
  • Play competitively in the games where the other team is simply better -- TBD

The Rutgers game is the first bullet.  Rutgers is a better team than in past years, but there is no good reason why this Michigan team should not beat them, at home, and beat them going away.

The Wisconsin game is the second bullet.  Wisconsin is not a soul-crushing football machine.  Michigan has the tools to beat Wisconsin.  If they do, then the second bullet becomes a "check."

The last bullet is there for Ohio State and, if we were to somehow get into the playoffs, Alabama.  This year it's yet unclear if OSU is the OSU of the past few years.  If they are, then if Michigan can stay with them even in a loss, then the third bullet becomes a "check" and is a stepping stone to next year.

Yinka Double Dare

September 20th, 2021 at 4:11 PM ^

I am both enjoying what they're doing and also in "let's see what they do in Madison" mode. 

But not before TOP 5 MATCHUP WITH RUTGERS (for a specific top 5 definition).

3 weeks is too early to start talking résumés? Absolutely! But let's do it anyway for one specific reason!

RESUME SP+ TOP 10:
1 Georgia (+9.7 PPG)
2 Mich +9.5
3 Ole Miss +5.5
4 Iowa +0.3
5 RUTGERS, BABY +0.2
6 Bama +0.0
7 Cincy -2.0
8 Penn St -2.8
9 Oregon -3.3
10 Auburn -3.4 pic.twitter.com/aq7IC1G1aT

— Bill Connelly (@ESPN_BillC) September 20, 2021

jimmyshi03

September 20th, 2021 at 4:11 PM ^

I’ll admit to being nervous about this game going in, and then during the second NIU drive, mostly out of bad memories of the 2013 season, which had eerie parallels to this one at the start (win over MAC state school in opener, raucous UTL crowd against national power suffering a let down year in week 2, MAC in week 3, east coast team in week 4). But by the end of the first quarter any notion of an Akron game was gone. I’m tempting myself with hope as well, while remembering ITHTKY.

imafreak1

September 20th, 2021 at 4:13 PM ^

This is a season to enjoy one game at a time. Which is, unfortunately, not how college football fandom trends towards. Particularly for Michigan fans given how the schedule is structured. But it also a problem for all of college football.

I cannot recall a Michigan offense doing what this one is doing. Running through teams at will. Passing just because. But only occasionally. The homerun threat in the running game is also a rarity. Not since Denard and then Wheatley can I recall players with this explosive potential in the running game. I don’t recall anything like this in the Carr or Hoke era. As a result, these pavings feel different from the pavings of recent decades.

I am concerned that this appears to be a Harbaugh offense not a Gattis offense. It seems that Harbaugh has converted Gattis rather than Gattis modernizing Harbaugh.

On the one hand, we had thought from long experience that run first teams would run into trouble in the important games. Even Alabama modernized their offense. But on the other hand, the Saints went to the Super Bowl with a wacky run heavy offense. Maybe this offense is wacky and different enough to pull it off. Certainly, as long as you score with high efficiency, it does not matter how you are doing it.

It is certainly best to assume that the defense will eventually be eviscerated and the running game stoned. Those things are unquestionably likely to happen against OSU. But hopefully, we can enjoy the season up to and despite that certain outcome.

saveferris

September 20th, 2021 at 4:18 PM ^

Maybe this is a weird season and Michigan will benefit.

This is where my head is currently when we ponder as a collective as to whether or not we are for real.  I'm not convinced we are a playoff team, but maybe this is our 2015 MSU moment where stuff just bounces our way and we wind up there anyway.  

SHub'68

September 21st, 2021 at 2:31 PM ^

Mike Hart was excellent in pass-blocking from the RB position. In all the praise going his way as a coach, I haven't seen this mentioned. I also haven't looked very closely. Nor have I looked to see how the RBs are doing at it. Maybe because there haven't been a ton of plays where our RBs haven't had the ball.

Anyhow, if our RBs are suddenly excellent at blocking, it's another feather for Hart, IMO.

UofM Die Hard …

September 20th, 2021 at 4:42 PM ^

lol, great column Brian. 


Sums up that I think we are all watching this current 3-0 team through a view like this... 



i.e. This team looks like something we haven't seen in a long time. This for real?

harmon98

September 20th, 2021 at 5:09 PM ^

That  je ne sais quoi from JJ looks an awful lot like elite pop when the ball is released. Receivers are going to have to get their hands up a beat quicker to catch that ball. 

 

markusr2007

September 20th, 2021 at 5:23 PM ^

"They all think it's there, and I don't think it's there. I'm alone in this. I don't think it's there...... I'm not gonna say "I don't think it's there", that's too strong. Let me just say I'm reserving judgment until all the facts come out."  - Dave Chappelle

Michigan annihilated 3 overmatched football teams, including what is going to be by any and all historical measures the worst Washington Huskies football team since the Tyrone Willingham era.

I like what we all see unfolding with Michigan football 2021. It's way better than the 2020 start.  But let us be fair. We won't understand whether it's Fool's Gold until the 4 road games which happen to be against all ranked BIG10 opponents this fall:

  • Oct 2 at Wisconsin
  • Oct 30 at Michigan State
  • Nov 13 at Penn State
  • Nov 20 at Maryland

There's also the game at Nebraska, which will probably be played at night.  As penalty-ridden and mistake-prone as the Huskers still are, they are improving, so if anyone is looking for a "stupid game", then that just might be it in my opinion, instead of the typical nail-biter vs. Indiana in Ann Arbor.

And that's all before Michigan's annual secondary pantsing by Ohio State crossing-routes in the finale. But now even that outcome is no longer a foregone conclusion either with Mike McDonald at the helm. So I really don't know what in the hell to expect anymore. And that is what makes college football so damn interesting.

 

 

RJWolvie

September 20th, 2021 at 5:58 PM ^

Missed Epic Double Bird Honorable Mention, I’d suggest, to the missed DPI on what should have been Cade’s first TD pass or anyway have him at 8 for 10 instead of 8 for 11 on the day

hurryup

September 20th, 2021 at 6:07 PM ^

Yeah, that's about where I am. I'll celebrate a great season after we've had one. Couple very peripheral comments on your article. The hold that got Franklin's TD called back was also the hold that enabled Franklin to score the TD. NIU's punter has a good leg, but he averaged 48 yards on 7 punts by outkicking his coverage, which gave Henning some juicy opportunities. 

 

Eye of the Tiger

September 20th, 2021 at 7:20 PM ^

This is a good offense, and I can see it getting better as the young receivers develop. I'm still not sure how I feel about the defense. Good so far, but not exactly a murderer's row in non-conference play. But I've upgraded my expectations from 8-4 to 9-3. 

AlbanyBlue

September 20th, 2021 at 9:02 PM ^

I look at it. I don't trust it, but it is there. Yep. How I feel in the span of twelve words. Good to have you back and contributing mightily, Brian. I hope you're finding some solace somehow.

That holding call on Franklin's TD -- the only true tragedy of the game. Felt bad for both young men.

bronxblue

September 20th, 2021 at 9:05 PM ^

Assuming UM beats Rutgers this weekend they'll be standing at 4-0; while this site gave UM a chance at starting 4-0 it definitely was of the "I guess we'll see if everything breaks right" variety.  Wisconsin will be a test but they absolutely don't look all that good, and we're now on year 2 of that being the case.  And some of these road games will absolutely trip UM up; this isn't a team poised to go undefeated or anything.  But I'm pleasantly happy with HOW they're winning these games; they are steamrolling teams with pulses to a degree we haven't seen in a long time.  I'll take that.

mooseman

September 20th, 2021 at 9:35 PM ^

Twice this year (maybe more that I've missed) I've seen safeties come up and badly misjudge the angle due to underestimating Corum's speed. It's pretty impressive.