three! three Nico Collins touchdowns! ah ah ah! [Patrick Barron]

Michigan 39, Indiana 14 Comment Count

Ace November 23rd, 2019 at 7:41 PM

Today presented many of the requisite elements for a Stupid Indiana Game. The dreary, cold weather eventually turned to snow. The officiating could be described as uneven. Michigan's coaches screwed up the end of the first half, again. The ESPN broadcast was barely paying attention to the game, which didn't impact the outcome but added to the potential distress. And, of course, there was the presence of one of the better football teams in IU history.

The Hoosiers even struck first. After IU took the opening kickoff, quarterback Peyton Ramsey led a methodical ten-play, 75 yard drive capped by a one-yard Stevie Scott touchdown dive. Shea Patterson hit right back, finding Giles Jackson out of the backfield for a 50-yard wheel route before connecting with Ronnie Bell from six yards out for the sophomore receiver's first touchdown catch of the season.

DPJ's touchdown featured ludicrous body control. [Bryan Fuller]

That's when the game threatened to go off the Bloomington rails. Daxton Hill, starting in place of the injured Brad Hawkins at safety, intercepted a Ramsey pass greatly impacted by both Carlo Kemp and Aidan Hutchinson. With a chance to take an early lead, however, Michigan went backwards, and Patterson took an intentional grounding on third and 20. Will Hart's ensuing punt traveled only 31 yards. Seven plays later, Ramsey sneaked into the end zone for a 14-7 Indiana lead.

In past years, or even earlier this season, this becomes a campy horror movie of a football game, with Michigan narrowly yet predictably surviving in the end. Instead, the carnage was limited to the Wolverines tearing Indiana's secondary limb-from-limb.

Donovan Peoples-Jones knotted the game with a remarkable diving grab after Patterson had failed to complete two should-be touchdown passes earlier in the drive. A few drives later, Patterson completed all three of his throws to Nico Collins, who finished the drive with an unguardable 29-yard fade for the go-ahead score. After some strange end-of-half decisions, Michigan took a 21-14 lead into the locker room.

please be 100% next week [Fuller]

The third quarter was everything Michigan fans have wanted to see. They came out aggressive, with a 41-yard bomb to Peoples-Jones setting up a short Quinn Nordin field goal. The defense got the ball back when Mike Dwumfour shot a gap on fourth-and-one, drawing a holding flag and forcing a punt. Two plays later, Collins snagged a post route, made a safety miss, and outran the IU defense for a 76-yard touchdown. Dylan McCaffrey ran in a two-point conversion to make it 32-14. Why and how? No idea. ESPN missed the play and never showed a replay.

Any chance at a silly finish evaporated at the end of the quarter. Josh Uche, who'd been dominant off the edge all afternoon, beat his blocker clean for the pass-rush hat trick of a sack-strip-recovery on Ramsey. On the very next play, Patterson found Collins running free in the end zone, and a conventional extra point gave us the game's final score of 39-14.

The fourth quarter passed without incident beyond an injury scare to Uche, who went down with an apparent leg injury but walked off under his own power. At the time of publication, there wasn't an update on him, though Michigan made him available to the media after the game, which is a very good sign.

didn't catch him [Barron]

The numbers look very, very nice. Patterson threw for 366 yards and five touchdowns on 32 attempts with one late, meaningless interception. Collins pulled in six of his seven targets for 165 yards and three TDs; the lone incomplete target should've been another long touchdown. Peoples-Jones added five receptions for 73 yards and a score. Michigan's rushers were chipping along at around five yards per carry before short-yardage and garbage-time carries took that down to 3.9 on a day the ground game took a back seat. Indiana scored on two of their first three drives; their next six full drives went for a total of 50 yards.

Next week is The Game. A juggernaut Ohio State squad, arguably the best team in the country and perhaps even recent Buckeyes history, will take the field at Michigan Stadium. An upset felt like an impossible dream mere weeks ago. Now, with Patterson dealing downfield to his incredibly talented group of receivers, there's a real glimmer of hope.

[Hit THE JUMP for the box score.]

Comments

jmblue

November 23rd, 2019 at 8:53 PM ^

At the time I wanted to go for it, because our offense was rolling.  But I can see the other side of it.

It's 4th down at what, the 42 yard line?  If you don't get it there, IU gets the ball with about 50 seconds to work with, probably enough time with their very accurate QB to get into FG range.  Whereas if you punt it, you probably just kill off the half, and you're getting the ball next.  You'll still have a chance to go up two scores.

I still leaned toward going for it but I don't think it's a slam dunk.

Harlans Haze

November 23rd, 2019 at 9:57 PM ^

Not going for it on 4th was maybe a 50-50 call (one I would have advocated for, given the circumstances). I thought the curious call was on 3rd and 4. If you're not thinking about going for it on  4th, why run the ball there, especially with your 3rd string RB (Wilson)? With the way the passing game was working, it seemed like about the 10th best play call. The time management issue was after the punt...on defense. They still had all 3 time outs and never made Indiana punt. For some reason they elected to cal a TO when a player was hurt, to avoid the 10 second run-off, which would have taken it from 25 to 15 seconds. It just made no sense.

Aside from that it just seemed strange that this was the game where the passing game (especially Collins) was just unleashed. The week before OSU seems strange. And, why even bust out a 2 point conversion in a meaningless situation? You don't want to save that for when it's needed? And, most of all, why was Patterson even in there to throw that interception? Not to mention Hudson, Metellus, McGrone and Thomas being in there until the very last snap? No one's ever been hurt against Indiana before.

AlbanyBlue

November 24th, 2019 at 12:52 PM ^

This is a bad take. JH is way too conservative at the end of the 1st half most every week. Our pass game was destroying them - and then we run it with our 3rd string RB on 3rd and 4?

First, if you're gonna run, use ZC or Haskins. Second, if you figured you weren't going for it on 4th down, then a pass should have been called. The only reason to run there is if you know you're going for it anyway. Third, they should have gone for it. Their D had no answers.

Modern football is aggressive, and we don't play that way enough. \

But this is nit-picking. Great game all around. Destruction of a good team on the road.

Redfive

November 23rd, 2019 at 8:31 PM ^

It's great to see this team performing so well after the slow start learning the new offense.  They really kicked the s*** out of ND and MSU.  I'm hoping for competitive game that they can be proud of next week and then maybe they'll actually show up for the bowl game.

spiff

November 23rd, 2019 at 8:53 PM ^

I think the INT was 100% Shea just not wanting to get hit by the blitzed. He kind of spun away from the guy and just chucked it so he wouldn’t get hit. No reason to take a hit/risk in that situation. 
I hope next week he’ll stand in there and deliver the pass next week, though. 

jmblue

November 23rd, 2019 at 9:00 PM ^

Michigan has scored 45, 38, 44 and 39 points in its last four games.  Over the same timeframe Maryland has scored 10, 7, 14 and 7 points - and their seven against us weren't scored by the offense.

So, Gattis vs. Locksley?

SwaggLikeUs

November 23rd, 2019 at 9:25 PM ^

I didn’t get to watch the game but listened to it on mgoblue radio so I got to hear DPJ’s catch. Dierdoef was raving about it. After seeing the pic of it at the top of page...dammmmn. When the new rule kicks in DPJ prolly just made some $$ of his likeness today. I had to zoom in to make sure it wasn’t an EA sports promo, kudos to you Bryan Fuller for an incredible shot. And while I’m at it you too Barron and Upchurch. Appreciate the work you guys put in for the blog 

uminks

November 23rd, 2019 at 9:39 PM ^

I was at the game down on the 20 by the closed endzone. IU looked surprised when DMAC came running on to the field, then a quick snap and DMAC was running right into the endzone. I wonder if they were testing some plays with DMAC running the ball from in the redzone against OSU?

Sopwith

November 23rd, 2019 at 9:41 PM ^

I think we got ourselves a chance next week. Not a great big one, but an existent one. 

My biggest worry is that OSU identifies the weak points and just hammers, hammers, hammers it. That looks a lot like attacking our DTs, and lots of fades.

Fades are the new crossing routes.

uminks

November 23rd, 2019 at 9:44 PM ^

Uche was on the ground for a while but got up and walked off the field under his own power. I did not see him limp and thought it may be a hip bruise or lower back strain? If it was his leg it looked very minor by the way he walked off the field.

burtcomma

November 23rd, 2019 at 9:55 PM ^

Well boys, 50 years ago an OSU team that was supposed to be invincible wandered into A2 after putting up 50 pts against us in a Columbus shellacking the previous year with ole Woodrow Hayes going for two “because he couldn’t go for 3.”  Time to awaken the echoes and beat the bastards again!?

LabattsBleu

November 23rd, 2019 at 10:12 PM ^

if Shea is on his game and the Defense is able to defend against Field scrambling to keep drives alive, they definitely have a chance at home

Michigan always had unbelievable talent at WR; team is finally using it

Todd92

November 24th, 2019 at 8:09 AM ^

UM must have had a discussion with the Big 10 after the State game that bicep flexing is NOT unsportsmanlike conduct, based on the amount of bicep flexing in this game.

MRunner73

November 24th, 2019 at 9:46 AM ^

This was one of the best road wins under Harbaugh. The team had poise on both sides of the ball. I liked how they answered being down 7-0 and 14-7. Took the lead for good before halftime then wasn't scored upon second half.

albapepper

November 24th, 2019 at 9:59 AM ^

How about superstar NT Jess Speight!?

 

I had no idea what was going on when number 67 ran in and started playing defense. Lo and behold, it was the younger Speight, and he played pretty well!

Mongo

November 24th, 2019 at 11:08 AM ^

A win is great, but being out gained on the ground by IU is dissapointing.  

We can't block inside / outside Zone worth a damn.  I guess the strategy is to use the scheme to set up chunk RPO pass plays, but man that is an ugly looking run game.  Had we gone with Power we could have curb-stomped IU probably just like that ND game.  This IU game felt more like the disjointed Maryland effort. 

I have come to the conclusion that our lineman are just not long-limbed enough to create the leverage needed to open zone creases.  They are all OG-shaped and best suited for Pin/Pull using their athleticism and size to blast people out of a gap.

OSU isn't great against the run.  PSU showed their weaknesses via optioning the crap out of Young ... traps, counters, arc, etc.  If we try to rely on the pass game like at IU, it is going to be a long frustrating day versus Young's pass rush.  That guy is unblockable.  

Mongo

November 24th, 2019 at 12:03 PM ^

Yup - you clearly did not watch the game.  That backup QB led a power option run attack that created the 2nd half comeback.  In the pass game, Young was unblockable and sent the starting QB to the sidelines.  Clifford was 10/17 for 71 yards and was sacked 5 times.  PSU's pass game basically netted about 25 yards for the game.  OSU's pass rush is basically unblockable.