Act Of God Comment Count

Brian

10/17/2015 – Michigan 23, Michigan State 27 – 5-2, 2-1 Big Ten

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[Eric Upchurch]

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via Matt Hinton

So I was trying to come up with a clever thing for this post and started Googling "Act of God." Folks in contracts who are beset by improbable occurrences regularly petition the courts for forgiveness since, you know, things. And stuff. I mean, seriously. That thing, that was a pretty unlikely thing. Cumong man.

The courts have generally gone along with this. If you are beset by a plague of locusts and boils and rivers of blood and the like, the courts are generally like "God's bad, yo" and then they let you go.

Anyway. I'm scanning, scanning, trying to find something apropos, and then

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I AM NOT ON THIS LIST

NOR ARE THE HUNDRED THOUSAND STRUCK DOWN JUST THIS SATURDAY

WHAT KIND OF RATIONAL WIKI DO YOU PURPORT TO BE

IF SERIOUSLY I MEAN I AM NOT ON THIS LIST, NOR IS MY UNCLE OR MY COUSINS OR VARIOUS STUDENTS AND ALSO JIM HACKETT AND JIM HARBAUGH AND PROBABLY LIKE 1500 OTHER JIMS IN THE STADIUM

OH I'M NOT RATIONAL, RATIONALWIKI?!?!? IIIIIIIII'M NOT RATIONAL?

Fine. Okay. Yeah. Okay. You're right. It's cool, RationalWiki. Keep on being mean to anti-vaxxers. It's cool. I am perfectly calm, RationalWiki. Calmer than you are.

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This is the section inspired by the brain above. It's a pretty impressive brain, all up in some parentheses that probably mean something to people who took their discrete math class seriously instead of asking my friend to drop off my homework because 8:30 on North Campus just wasn't happening, man.

So. In about 10 months Jim Harbaugh erased the physical gap between Michigan and Michigan State. Michigan didn't run roughshod; both teams struggled to get yard one on the ground. Injury whinging is out of the question: both teams were down one starter on the line when MSU was on the field.

In the absence of a physical advantage either way, the game came down to the fact that Michigan State spawned a generational quarterback from a three-star recruit at the same time they had disastrous special teams. Michigan's special teams were amazing until they were… not amazing, and Brady Hoke hired an offensive coordinator whose 30-year career has seen one quarterback he recruited ever—everrrrrrr—start. (That guy was Indiana's QB as a sophomore; the next year he was a tight end.) Jake Rudock is a smart dude who I am grateful is at Michigan; he is not a guy who Harbaugh has chosen and developed.

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[Bryan Fuller]

When Cook had an opportunity to hit a receiver who'd gotten over the top of Jeremy Clark, he did so. He nestled the ball in there with the care and precision of a watchmaker. If there was a job where you had to throw babies at titanium bassinets inside a volcano, I would be comfortable giving Connor Cook that job. Rudock hit some intermediate passes but he did not take advantage of his opportunities to hit touchdowns.

Thus a game that was close enough for God to do some serious smitin'.

So, that sucks. It sucks that happened. It sucks that the kind of trash program that would run all the way across the field to taunt the Michigan student section after being handed a gift gets to feel like they earned something this morning. They're planning on nicknaming it, as if they earned something. That is why Michigan State will always be Michigan State. That is why "little brother" stuck: because it is the truest thing ever said about the attitude of that program.

But I've seen worse. I've felt worse. I have a big ol' callus. It's clear the direction this is going, and it's not a loss to Rutgers. The juggalos will get theirs as soon as Harbaugh flips the QB matchup. That's the undercurrent of their relief. They're already celebrating like underdogs who fluked it out.

See you next year.

AWARDS

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[Fuller]

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Known Friends And Trusted Agents Of The Week

you're the man now, dog

#1 Jourdan Lewis had 6 PBUs, wasn't beaten clean without offensive pass interference, and shut down Burbridge enough that MSU was behind despite a monster game from their QB.

#2 Jabrill Peppers had three excellent returns, was important in limiting the MSU ground game, caused MSU to freak out and burn consecutive timeouts late in the first half, and set up a Michigan touchdown with an end-around.

#3 Willie Henry had two sacks and was in MSU's backfield for most of the fourth quarter.

Honorable mention: rest of the front seven, Kenny Allen.

KFaTAotW Standings.

9: Jourdan Lewis (#1 UNLV, #1 Northwestern, #1 MSU)
6: Jabrill Peppers(#2 BYU, #2 Northwestern, #2 MSU)
5: Chris Wormley(#2 Utah, #1 Oregon State)
3: Jake Butt (#1 Utah), De'Veon Smith(#2 Oregon State, #3 BYU), Ryan Glasgow (#1 BYU), Desmond Morgan (#1 Maryland),
2: Ty Isaac(#2 UNLV), Maurice Hurst (#2 Maryland), Willie Henry(#3 Utah, #3 MSU).
1: AJ Williams (#3 Oregon State), Channing Stribling(#3 UNLV), Blake O'Neill(#3 Maryland), Jake Rudock(#3 Northwestern)

Who's Got It Better Than Us Of The Week

This week's best thing ever.

Michigan's defense boots MSU off the field on fourth and nineteen to win the game, until they did not win.

Honorable mention: 80 yard punt. Peppers on the loose.

WGIBTUs Past.

Utah: Crazy #buttdown.
Oregon State: #tacopunts.
UNLV: Ty Isaac's 76 yard touchdown.
BYU: De'Veon Smith's illicit teleporter run.
Maryland: Jehu Chesson jet sweeps past you.
Northwestern: Chesson opening KO TD.
MSU: the bit where they won until they didn't.

imageMARCUS HALL EPIC DOUBLE BIRD OF THE WEEK.

This week's worst thing ever.

Obvious.

Honorable mention: N/A

PREVIOUS EDBs

Utah: circle route pick six.
Oregon State: Rudock fumbles after blitz bust.
UNLV: Rudock matches 2014 INT total in game 3.
BYU: BYU manages to get to triple digit yards in the last minutes of the game.
Maryland: Slog extended by deflected interception at Houma.
Northwestern: KLINSMANN OUT
MSU: Obvious.

[After THE JUMP: Jourdan Lewis targeted again. It goes okay to well.]

OFFENSE

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[Bryan Fuller]

Why it was close enough to turn. Jake Rudock couldn't hit a deep ball. He missed Jehu Chesson long; above he missed Jehu Chesson way short and to the inside; he underthrew Amara Darboh after Darboh had beaten MSU's coverage by five yards. Darboh caught the ball, but instead of a touchdown it was 32 yards and Michigan had to settle for a field goal. Remove the Jabrill Peppers sweeps that are inanely credited as passes in the NCAA rulebook and Rudock was 13/23 for 140 yards—6.1 an attempt.

Rudock hasn't hit a deep pass for a touchdown seven games in, and it cost Michigan. Especially frustrating was a the play after the (phantom) holding call inside the redzone; he had Jake Butt as M hit the play design, but he didn't throw it. Rudock generally avoided challenging the weakest part of Michigan State's defense. At his point it's hard to see that improving.

On the other hand, good enough to win.

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[Upchurch]

Run game: nope. It was blocked better than it looked at first glance, with a number of opportunities to pick up solid yardage that went awry because of the backs. The above shot was one of them; Michigan had creased the MSU defense just to the right of where Isaac went. You can see Cole burying a guy—the crease was over there. Higdon fell down on a promising opportunity late, and there were a couple others from Smith.

Michigan remains pretty bad at adapting to a changing situation in front of it. Both lead blockers and the backs were stymied when MSU would shoot a guy inside what was supposed to be a kickout block; they did not adapt to that and hit the gap outside. By the time I saw Stanford do that a lot they'd had Harbaugh for three years. It is a work in progress.

They did hit their long run. It's just that it went to Sione Houma, and he got caught from behind after bursting past the entire MSU D.

Arrrgh. After the Butt play mentioned above Michigan had second and goal and f-ing had it, man, on a clever Tiny Screen on which Smith ran an angle route and Glasgow released downfield. Glasgow was about to cut off the only guy between Smith and the endzone when the ball got batted down at the line.

Enter the Peppers. The insertion of Jabrill Peppers on offense freaked MSU out to the point where they called consecutive timeouts at the end of the first half. Michigan ran something that looked odd; Butt fell down and then got up; MSU got a lot of pressure and Rudock just threw it away. Often TEs falling down in those situations are making a bid to be forgotten about; MSU did not bite.

When Peppers did finally get the ball on offense he immediately outran an angle to the corner for a near-touchdown. I'd like to see him continue in this department, because he is a good football player in any situation.

DEFENSE

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[Bryan Fuller]

The other 19 guys were almost incidental. Run for two yards, throw at Jourdan Lewis covering Aaron Burbridge, repeat. Burbridge was targeted 19 times. Burbridge had nine catches (one of them was against Jarrod Wilson as he and Lewis swapped coverage on the first drive for reasons unknown); Lewis had 6 PBUs. There was maybe one Burbridge catch on which he had gotten any separation. Most saw Cook launch a laser-guided munition, often under pressure just over Lewis's head.

All three gentlemen in this matchup made themselves a lot of money on Saturday, except Jourdan Lewis is obviously too small for the NFL until 2017, when he will be quite excellently sized.

Was this a good idea? Michigan's defense gave up 328 passing yards and 58 rushing yards. 74 of those passing yards were on the fullback thing on which either Ross or Hill—I think Ross—busted. Outside of that RPS play Cook had 6.7 YPA.

Meanwhile Burbridge was averaging ten yards a target coming into the game; when matched up against Lewis he managed 5.8. Lewis was up to the task, and the configuration Michigan was in helped them limit the MSU ground game to 3.1 YPC once sacks and TEAM are removed.

Also, Cook was straight dealing. I can't imagine there were any other approaches that would have made it more difficult for him. Michigan gave him windows that were more like arrow slits and he delivered. Looking forward to seeing Not Connor Cook as MSU QB.

Henry beast mode. This is the game that's going to get Willie Henry his double-digit UFR day. Two sacks, a few other hurries, and yeoman work on the ground game.

The personal foul was unfortunate. I looked at it and it seems to happen simultaneously with the whistle, but it is a belly flop onto a pile of guys that is unnecessary. That was the only blemish on a day that was probably his best as a Wolverine.

Runs: stuffed. MSU rushes went nowhere. They had a long of 11 on the day, that on a play on which the pulling guard wrapped both arms around the body of Royce Jenkins-Stone. Virtually all other runs were downs set on fire.

The fullback wheel. It was either on Hill or Ross. If I had to guess I'd say Ross. Excellent design there, though—reminiscent of the Butt screen against Maryland with the multiple fakes opening up an unexpected blocky/catchy guy. Michigan did have some ripostes of their own but they did not come off due to bloody-minded fate.

SPECIAL TEAMS

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[Fuller]

Why they won until why they didn't. Michigan killed it in this game. O'Neill hit an 80 yard punt, placed two others inside the 20, averaged 45 yards a kick, and didn't have a touchback. RJ Shelton had 4 return yards on those punts. MSU averaged 37 yards a punt and put zero inside the 20, instead banging a ball eight yards deep into the endzone.

Peppers had a 34 yard punt return and a 49 yard kickoff return; Allen hit his field goals while MSU chose two attempts to convert fourth and long instead of fairly makeable field goals.

Michigan also covered and then stuffed a fake punt, with Desmond Morgan getting over to put Tyler O'Connor on the ground. Jourdan Lewis covered the pass option—Michigan had their defense on the field. Until the thing at the end this was an unbelievable blowout.

Field goals. None were particularly long but Allen was 3/3 and is now… reliable? Can we say he's reliable? He seems fairly reliable, knock on wood. I abjure and reject thee, #collegekickers.

Kickoffs: let's stop bothering with them. Kenny Allen can put the ball in the endzone whenever he wants; Michigan keeps trying to pop it up short in case they can get the guy down short of the 25. The upside there is low and the results have been mediocre to date. I'd rather save the wear and tear.

MISCELLANEOUS

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seems legit [Fuller]

We got boned. This was as bad as that Oklahoma State-Texas game that sent most of the Texas fanbase to the tinfoil hat shop. Flagrantly wrong calls against Michigan in this game:

  • They missed an obvious offensive PI on Peppers on MSU's drive from the 1 after the 80 yard punt.
  • The holding call on Jourdan Lewis (or "86," whatever) was vaporware. Feet got tangled and the WR stumbled into the umpire.
  • The targeting call on Bolden was roundly denounced by the entire world; that moved MSU from third and four at the 40 to the 25.
  • Royce-Jenkins Stone was put in a bear-hug on the ensuing MSU TD.
  • Michigan was about to have second and goal on the four when a phantom hold on Braden sent them back to the 18.
  • Rudock had his head damn near taken off after he caught his own pass on that bizarre deflection, but no facemask was forthcoming.

Add in the ludicrous number of replays because these guys couldn't get the call right on the field and this was 1000% clownshow. Oh and the block in the back call they picked up after someone was like "is the side of the guy the back of a guy?" and they managed to figure it out.

It happens, I guess, and Michigan had won anyway until you know what.

Game theory bits. The "what if" afterwards is inevitable. This one is pointless. That loses you a game about once every 125 years. The absolute worst case there should have been O'Neill falling on the snap and giving Michigan State a shot at a Hail Mary.  Other options are at least as risky.

The only thing I might have done differently is align in whatever formation you'd use for a punt when you're backed up on your own goal line. Michigan surely has one of those, and this would be a situation to use it.

Stat business. MSU fans will point at the yardage in an attempt to claim that it was some sort of fluke that they were behind, as if special teams doesn't count. FWIW, Bill Connelly's numbers had Michigan a very healthy favorite given the way other games with that statistical profile went. Michigan was winning because they should have been winning.

HERE

Best And Worst:

Best:  Jourdan MF Lewis

Nothing was more entertaining than seeing MSU fans complain about Lewis “mugging” Burbridge throughout the game on his way to 6 pass breakups and a pretty decent effort against MSU’s sole real passing threat.  Lewis, of course, is just playing the same type of physical, grabby defense MSU introduced to the conference some years back, just perhaps at a better level than either Waynes or Dennard every did.  Being a shutdown corner doesn’t necessarily mean that the guy you cover never catches a ball, especially when the opponent doggedly targets him because they literally had no other competent options (Burbridge was targeted 19 times in this game).

Instead, it means making it as difficult as possible for the offense to consistently complete passes to your side and limiting the damage when they do, and Lewis did that in spades.  Even though Burbirdge finished with 9 catches for 132 yards, he only had 3 catches after halftime, and at least two of them were just great plays by him despite great coverage by Lewis.  Lewis was also the victim of a pick play in the 2nd quarter (I believe) that Brandstatter called out immediately when it happened.  Overall, he played like the All-American he’s being touted as and performed well in a tough matchup against a good receiver.

Inside the Box Score:

* Jake Rudock was once again, 2 for 3 on my efficiency metrics, going 15 for 25 (60%, passing, but just barely) with zero turnovers, but missing on the YPA by averaging 6.7 per attempt.
* Early on, someone said my YPA was not sufficiently difficult. I checked the stats this week and saw about 84 QBs average at least 7 YPA. There are 128 FBS teams, give or take, so that doesn't seem like a high bar. However, I want my efficient QB to do this AND this AND this. Of all those QBs, only 60 throw for 60% or more with 7+ YPA and 1 or fewer TOs per game. I'll take that. Either you are efficient or you are not. If ~1/2 of the QBs pass my test, I'd say my WAG at efficiency is close to the mark.

Craig Ross posts a list of Historical End Game Debacles if you'd like to compare and contrast.

ELSEWHERE

Shamepaint, naturally. This week's edition has minimal phalluses.

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Marc Tracy nails it in the NYT:

In contrast to the title of their fight song, the Wolverines were not the victors. Nor are there moral victories in football, particularly at programs like Michigan’s: There are just too few games, and too many other teams competing for the final four playoff spots, to take much heart when it says “L” instead of “W” next to a given game on a schedule.

But there is such a thing as appropriate perspective. This will not be Michigan’s year, but it was never supposed to be. After all, Michigan’s last seven seasons involved two failed coaching tenures and an overall 46-42 record. In those seven seasons, Michigan was 1-6 versus Michigan State.

Even had they won Saturday, the Wolverines would not have looked like a championship team. On offense, they converted only four of 16 third- and fourth-down opportunities and amassed just 230 total yards.

But what is true — not in a hazy, sentimental sense, but in a real one — is that Michigan’s football team is back. And one byproduct of the revival is that the Michigan-Michigan State game was again at the epicenter of the college football universe on a midseason weekend.

“This time last year, no one was talking about this game,” the ESPN analyst David Pollack said Friday. “It was, ‘How bad will Michigan lose?’ ” (The answer last year was 35-11.) Michigan defensive end Willie Henry, a senior, said after the game that this traditional rivalry felt different this year.

“Both teams were winning,” he said. “Everyone thought it would be a great game. It was a great game.”

Matt Hinton on the immediacy of the moment in college football. Bill Connelly.

Comments

MGoBlue Eeyore

October 19th, 2015 at 12:59 PM ^

I wondered how you would approach this game recap. But I think you nailed the sentiments that many of us are feeling, and you managed to create a perspective that makes me (marginally) more accepting of things than I was on Saturday.

Vandigg

October 19th, 2015 at 1:01 PM ^

Trash program? Apparently he missed the part where Michigan fans threatened their own punter.....  Beyond and lower than trash right there.

Stu Daco

October 19th, 2015 at 1:10 PM ^

Or maybe he thought that a handful of teenagers out of a few million fans don't represent the program. Your coaches and players, however, do represent your program, and calling them trash is being kind.

Reader71

October 19th, 2015 at 2:11 PM ^

First, no one in the world uses "program" in the way you are proposing. The program refers to the coaches, players, trainers, strength staff, managers, equipment men, academic support, and maybe a few others whose jobs are to run a football program. Fans are not a part of the program, according to the usage of all of humanity. Second, to answer your question, yes. There is a program without fans. D-III schools regularly have a few hundred people in the stands, mostly friends and family of the people actually in he program. Fans are fans. They are important. They are decided not part of the program. Congratulations on your win. I would have loved to have won that one. I would never, ever, ever confuse your stupidity with the stupidity of someone in the program you cheer for. I wouldn't have to. Your coach is a petty man who taunts opposing fans. He runs a garbage program.

BlueinLansing

October 19th, 2015 at 1:03 PM ^

all hail Jourdan Lewis.

 

Last year at the Utah game his brother told us the DB coaches didn't coach them and that Lewis was better than all of them but wouldn't play him because.....Jr's/Sr's.

 

 

FredSDTW

October 19th, 2015 at 1:06 PM ^

I'm surprised that I haven't seen anything that talks about this game being the reverse of the 2007 "Little Brother" game.

2007 was a game that MSU probably should have won.  They did everything but win and ended up losing to a team that, although talented, was harder, more battle-tested, and simply found a way to pull something out of nothing. The events that spun afterward are the things that have propelled MSU to the position they're in today.

As much as UM's program is on a positive arc - the challenge for the players and coaches will be laying the groundwork to use this as the event that fuels tomorrow's champions.  In my opinion, Harbaugh has handled this perfectly - no crying, shake it off, "welcome to football", "steel in our spines".  Nobody in this group is going to forget what happened - ever.  They have the opportunity to use this as the event that brings it all together.  

Think about it - for all the pain and suffering - we may have just witnessed the thing that 10 years from now will be heralded as the event that started it all (the thing that is MSU's "Little Brother Game"):  a devastating loss that galvanized the whole thing.

Time will tell...

mbee1

October 19th, 2015 at 1:06 PM ^

Both coaches made mistakes toward the end. First, MSU should have punted on 4th and 19. Pinning Michigan back, with at that time 2 timeouts left, gets them the ball back in good field position with a minute left. It shocked me they went for a low chance 4th and 19.
U of M should never have been in position to have to punt on 4th down. Each play Michigan ran only took 5 seconds. If each play could be 7 seconds (like run a stretch play instead of power), take delays instead of calling TOs burns another 2 sec, that's 8 more seconds off the clock. Now on 4th down there's only 2, maybe 2 seconds left. Easy to kill just running a normal play, instead of trying to punt.
I realize how fluky that last play was, but when you're dealing with 20 year old kids and an odd shaped ball, fluky things can happen

bklein09

October 19th, 2015 at 4:18 PM ^

Here's the thing though, you're playing for a first down to end the game. You don't tell your players to run long developing plays to try to run out the clock. That sounds like a recipe for disaster. Imagine we tried that and while our guy is scrambling around he fumbles on our 25 yard line? They kick the game winning field goal. That would have been even worse because we were asking for it.

You go for the first down using the best plays possible. When you don't get it, you punt and end the game. Just didn't work out that way.



Sent from MGoBlog HD for iPhone & iPad

HimJarbaugh

October 19th, 2015 at 1:06 PM ^

I am genuinely curious what MSU fans think about their team. Do they really think they will run the table? Do they think they could do anything in the playoff if they do? 

7-0 never seemed to stand on shakier ground. It is pretty obvious that Indiana, Nebraska, and OSU could all beat them. 

matty blue

October 19th, 2015 at 1:23 PM ^

ohio state, sure, but also penn state and nebraska.  they've already struggled to beat two terrible teams in purdue and rutgers.  if they think they're out of the woods until ohio state, they're even dumber than i thought.

...and not to go all pollyanna here, but we might run the table from here.  if we do, and sparty loses twice?  looks like an iowa - michigan B1G title game!  i'm not serious.  not really.  okay, a little.

Magnus

October 19th, 2015 at 1:19 PM ^

If we're being honest, they'll be a favorite in every game except perhaps against Ohio State. It's certainly a viable possibility that they end the season 12-0. I'm not saying it will happen, and they clearly have flaws, but their fans aren't crazy to be thinking about an undefeated season.

ak47

October 19th, 2015 at 1:08 PM ^

I'm a little less happy with the offensive performance than you I think Brian,
I get why the yardage totale isn't a great stat but we started with the ball on their side of the field 3 times in the first half and had 10 points to show for it. We started a drive in the 4th quarter on their 27 and kicked a field goal.  That is 4 times starting on the opponents half of the field and coming away with 13 points.  That just isn't good enough, we could have ended the game in the first half with a good offesnive showing and ended it in the 4th quarter with a competent offense.  This is a defense that has been shredded in the passing game this year, not taking advantage of that is dissapointing and upsets me more going forward than the last play.  I'm not entirely convinced we beat PSU since theoritically they will kick field goals and kickoffs.

BlueinLansing

October 19th, 2015 at 1:29 PM ^

explained it, we simply cannot hit the deep pass.

 

If we do that just once in this game 1) we likely score another TD  2)  State (and everyone else) has to start playing us more honest and we can run the ball better and control the clock better.

 

Having a strong down field passing game is worth like 10-14 points per game.  That's what we are missing.

markusr2007

October 19th, 2015 at 2:00 PM ^

Even Rutgers - pathetic Rutgers - led most of the game as Michigan did vs. MSU.

Except Rutgers gained 349 yards total offense vs. Michigan State, including 141 yards rushing. Just like Michigan, Rutgers sucked on 3rd down conversion, while MSU lit it up. What does Rutgers have?  A Sophomore quarterback named Chris Laviano (184th ranked by ESPN) and an NFL bound flanker named Leonte Caroo. And not much else.

Aside from an end around jet sweep, Michigan effectively has no homerun hitting play  on offense that has worked well. After seven games and with five left to play Michigan has no reliable deep threat at WR, and even if they did, Michigan's QB can't get deliver the ball downfield with any consistency.

So with zero homerun hitters, all Harbaugh can do is just get lots of base hits, load the bases as methodically as possible, hope that base hits send some of the runners home,  and that nobody flies out quicking during the offensive innings. 

Meanwhile the UM defense has been pitching shutouts against inferior teams, crushing decent opposing rushing attacks (Devontae Booker, MSU backs) and slowing down otherwise lethal QBs-WR combos. 

That's the best Michigan can do in 2015.

Disappointing? Perhaps yes. But worlds ahead of where Michigan was last year.

Bring in a Michigan QB with field awareness and a laser-guided Howitzer arm and Michigan is back in business. Wolverines will probably feature a 1,000 yard rusher again as a result of safeties and LBs having to play honest.

Kermits Blue Key

October 19th, 2015 at 1:14 PM ^

As my mother-in-law said to the State "assholes" flexing their muscles at her work, "You have every reason to be happy, but no reason to be proud." Can't wait to start smashing those clowns again next year.

smwilliams

October 19th, 2015 at 1:13 PM ^

The funny thing is going to be next year when they don't have Cook and Michigan waltzes into Spartan Stadium and wins 45-0. And then in 2017, when they get the shit beat out of them again.

It's amazing to me that a fan base can be so cocky after winning on a dropped punt that's brought back for a TD with no time left.

Also, how do people like Jemele Hill get hired by major media outlets? I won't link to it, but you'll see the video if you go to ESPN.com's front page and scroll down.

Maizen

October 19th, 2015 at 1:25 PM ^

Don't forget about the phantom personal fouls that kept MSU drives alives (there were 3 of them on 3rd and 4th down) and the Jake Butt catch that was ruled incomplete. Oh, and the long snapper getting destroyed on the last play of the game.

 

100000% clownshow. Michigan got screwed big time.

Girlbleedsblue

October 19th, 2015 at 1:18 PM ^

MSU would be lucky to be considered our little brother.  That means they come from the same quality stuff that makes up UM.  They're just not.  And they don't act like little brothers, they act like the stalker ex-boyfriend who keys your car and calls you a whore, but secretly wants you to take him back.  That's why you get this stuff - 

http://www.lansingstatejournal.com/story/sports/columnists/graham-couch…

What is it that MSU wants from us?  To put up a statue of Sparty on campus?  To rename our University?  To have Harbaugh say he's proud of them?  Seriously, I can't think of any other team that has so thoroughly dominated a series, yet is constantly asking for respect from the people they brag about beating into the ground.  

 

#bizarre

 

 

 

yefonovesu

October 19th, 2015 at 1:20 PM ^

 
Start   working at home with Google! It's by-far the best job I've had. Last Wednesday I got a brand new BMW since getting a check for $6474 this - 4 weeks past. I began this 8-months ago and immediately was bringing home at least $77 per hour. I work through this link, go to tech tab for work detail
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