Michigan 27, Indiana 20 (OT) Comment Count

Ace


Tyree Kinnel's fourth-down interception (finally) ended the game. [Bryan Fuller]

Stop me if you've heard this one before: Indiana put a harrowing scare into Michigan, only to lose in heartbreaking fashion.

A game that initially looked like it'd result in a comfortable Wolverines win got increasingly distressful. Two Quinn Nordin field goals and a 12-yard Karan Higdon touchdown run got Michigan out to an early 13-0 lead. While the Hoosiers netted a field goal shortly before halftime, the game felt fully in M's control; they held a 166-112 edge in total yardage and had a huge advantage on the ground. Sure, you could complain about the 11 penalties and the underwhelming passing attack, but the Hoosiers were having trouble just moving the football downfield.

Whatever was said at halftime, however, should probably never be spoken again.

An ugly Michigan three-and-out, capped by a John O'Korn completion to Jim Harbaugh, gave IU the ball with a chance to cut it to a one-score game. They did just that on a drive in which Mike DeBord and his offense utilized tempo to lock backup defensive linemen Aubrey Solomon and Carlo Kemp on the field in place of the dominant duo of Maurice Hurst and Rashan Gary. Hoosiers running back Morgan Ellison rushed for 45 yards on the drive, going virtually untouched on an eight-yard touchdown.

The game slowed to a slog. O'Korn missed a golden opportunity on the ensuing drive when Zach Gentry broke open downfield on a two-man route; O'Korn instead chose to throw at a well-covered Kekoa Crawford, and two plays later Michigan brought on the punt team. That'd become a familar sight for both squads; the next seven drives, four for IU and three for M, went three-and-out.

Higdon, who had a star-making afternoon, finally broke the drought when Michigan went to a ground-only attack. After four rushes gained a pair of first downs, the coaches broke out a slick new counter play to spring Higdon for a 59-yard touchdown early in the fourth quarter.


Dare I say Woodson-esque? [Fuller]

With Michigan now holding a 20-10 advantage, it looked like they'd ice the game when Lavert Hill intercepted Peyton Ramsey on a play reminiscent of the great Michigan cornerbacks of my lifetime. Indiana had already burned two of their timeouts on defense. A first down would've effectively put it away, but the offense bogged down, and the game suddenly turned sphincter-tightening when J-Shun Harris nearly housed Robbins's punt. Josh Metellus made a desperation tackle at the 16-yard line, but six plays later Ramsey hit Whop Philyor (a real name, that) for an eight-yard score.

Then things got really wild. With no timeouts left and 3:28 on the clock, Indiana went for an onsides kick, which took a high bounce that eluded Kekoa Crawford and went straight to IU's Simmie Cobbs for an apparent recovery. Cobbs, however, bobbled the ball ever so slightly as he stepped out of bounds, which the officials spotted live and upheld upon review—Michigan ball.

That allowed Higdon to run the clock down to 1:11, but he didn't convert a first down, and IU got the ball back on their 30-yard line after Michigan's school-record-setting 16th penalty added ten yards to a Robbins touchback. Two big pass plays by Ramsey, one to Luke Timian and the other to Cobbs, gave kicker Griffin Oakes a shot to send the game to overtime; his kick snuck just inside the right upright.


When Karan Higdon saw paydirt, he wouldn't be denied. [Marc-Gregor Campredon]

But Indiana remains Indiana. Michigan started with the ball in overtime and the Hoosiers initially stymied the first play. Higdon, who finished with 200 yards on 25 carries, eluded a defensive lineman in the backfield and bounced to the backside, gaining the edge and bolting down the sideline for his third touchdown.

"He was phenomenal," said Harbaugh. "I don't know how many yards he got after contact but those were tough yards. It looked like there'd be a tackle for loss, a small gain or no gain and he found a way to get four of five yards out of it."

The Hoosiers quickly worked their way to first-and-goal from the three. Gary surged though the line for a tackle for loss on first down, and after Ramsey missed J-Shun Harris in the end zone, he combined with Noah Furbush to stymie a Ramsey keeper. With the game down to one play, Chase Winovich put Ramsey under immediate pressure, and a desperation heave to Cobbs ended up in the hands of Tyree Kinnel. For the second time in as many trips to Memorial Stadium, the defense won the game with a goal-line stand.

"We were going to have to dig down deep to do it," said Harbaugh. "We responded with two tackles for loss, incompletion and an interception on the quarterback option route. It was a great four plays for us."

It sure wasn't pretty, and for large swaths it sure wasn't fun, but Michigan found a way to hold on and move to 5-1 on the season. Next weekend's trip to Happy Valley looms large, however, and could ugly fast if the Wolverines can't get a whole lot more out of John O'Korn, who managed only 58 yards passing on 20 attempts and had a horrible interception negated by an iffy pass interference call. Harbaugh probably has to stick with O'Korn at this point lest he want to throw a redshirt freshman QB behind a porous offensive line on the road against a top-five team. One way or the other, winning at Penn State is a tall order. For the time being, though, Michigan can at least enjoy the ride home.

"We move on to a big road game next week," said Harbaugh. "But this was a big game for our team. Mistakes were made, but it's something we can really grow from."

Comments

Squash34

October 15th, 2017 at 1:28 PM ^

It's weird people seem to be so used to the line being the main issue that they blame them when they played really well. You don't go for like 3 bills rushing with shit line play. They seem to be gelling and not misidentifying their blocking assignments as much.

TrueBlue2003

October 16th, 2017 at 12:24 AM ^

this is a good run blocking line. It's not great in pass pro, but it's only part of the problem for the woeful passing game.  QB is only part of the problem too.  WR/pass catchers are a much bigger problem than people think.

They're having a hard time getting separation and they're not helping the QB out, AT ALL, on tough, but within reach catches.

Amaznbluedoc

October 14th, 2017 at 5:56 PM ^

You'll be down voted but unfortunately you are right.  There are serious problems in this club house.  JH went 10-3 his first two years with Hoke's kids.  This year we're told it is a rebuilding year and the team is struggling.  Much of it I put on Drevno and Pep.  We need to go out and find the best darn OC in all of CFB like we did with Don Brown.  Then all will be fine.  It's been a really tough past 10 years.

getsome

October 14th, 2017 at 6:12 PM ^

not sure about all that.  but they should try to find the best possible OC - small complication could be harbaugh is offensive guy with very strong ideas about his teams scheme and identity and he ultimately has final say on hiring, scheme, personnel, play calls, etc.  they could hire the sharpest available O mind but he and harbaugh must be able to work together and produce.  not as simple as determining don browns the best available DC, then signing him, giving him all necessary resources and allowing him to do what he does best with little interference from HC

Mpfnfu Ford

October 14th, 2017 at 7:39 PM ^

They ditched Greg Frey's useless inside zone crap and went back to Drevno's run game and it just resulted in 200 yards+ rushing. Drevno looks like a guy unfairly maligned right now, and Harbaugh's decision to hire Frey looks really bad after this game compared to the rushing games the weeks before. 

I wonder how much of Michigan hiring Frey was to keep him away from Ohio State. There's some value in that I reckon, but his zone running game looks useless and M junking it won this game. 

Squash34

October 15th, 2017 at 4:18 AM ^

Have you by chance seen the amount of underrated 2* lineman Frey turned into AA and early draft picks? It's not really that hard to understand. Harbaugh clearly won't to do both blocking schemes. Frey is very good at one that takes more time to master. Drevno is good at the other. They will get the zone scheme down. Gotta give it time

Squash34

October 15th, 2017 at 4:12 AM ^

I would not call the zone uselrss, nor would I say it was dropped. They used it today. The reason harbaugh hired him was because he wants to implement that into the offense and run both schemes. Zone is much more complicated than gap and takes more time to master but once you do it adds a bunch to the offense. And will make the offense harder to prepare for. Basically, you are saying the scheme and hire are bad because the line is not very good at blocking the more complex scheme yet. I agree that drevno gets unjustly slammed. However, I think you are doing the same to Frey who is a very very good oline coach.

lhglrkwg

October 14th, 2017 at 10:33 PM ^

I was watching JBB all game and he seemed to be a clear upgrade from Ulizio. Run blocking was good, pass blocking seemed fine. O'Korn just can't go through a progression and is causing most of the havoc in the passing game all on his own by a) not being able to find an open receiver, b) holding onto the ball for forever praying his 1st read comes open and then c) getting sacked too often because he panicks or holds the ball for 5 seconds

BuckNekked

October 15th, 2017 at 12:49 AM ^

The line definately looked better this week with JBB. And Okorns struggles with reading defenses and  a seeming inability to move off his first read is  major ongoing issue. The defense may have to pitch a shutout next week.

Our special teams play, with the exception of Nordin, lurks in the background as a big weakness.  

buddha

October 15th, 2017 at 2:39 AM ^

Somewhat revisionist. At the time Walker ran his play, NONE of our running backs were running the ball well. It wasn't until later in the 2nd quarter and - really - the second half when Higdon separated himself from the pack.

stephenrjking

October 14th, 2017 at 5:28 PM ^

A win is a win. Not thrilled with gagging away a late 10 point lead, but Higdon and (finally) the D bailed us out. And style points really don't matter at this stage. Get Ws. It looks like Tresselball from here on out, which means that the mistakes need to be fixed. Get well soon, Wilton.

Walmart Wolverine

October 15th, 2017 at 10:38 AM ^

Not sure how this is debatable.

This team misses Speight terribly.  Probably cost us the MSU game.

Speight does exactly what Harbaugh wants; not make mistakes.  He isn't prolific, and hardly one of the better QBs in the conference right now, but definitely heads and shoulders above O'Korn who neither plays with Speight's decision making nor display's Speight's football IQ

bluepalooza

October 15th, 2017 at 4:15 PM ^

If Speight has yesterdays oline, this game isn't even close.  Yesterday was the first day the Oline looked cohesive and made a nice pocket for Okorn MOST of the time.  Yesterday's Oline performance is one of two reasons I am somewhat optimistic for next Saturday night. 

Speight was under siege in pocket from Florida right through the Purdue game.  In fact, he is on sidelines right now due to a sack and a dirty hit by Purdue.  Yes, WS had some issues, but most of it was caused by lack of pass pro.

macdaddy

October 14th, 2017 at 5:29 PM ^

Don't get me wrong - I'll take the win but this appears to be yet another year of lions in September, lambs thereafter. It would be nice to beat the teams we're supposed to beat without struggling.

Esterhaus

October 14th, 2017 at 5:30 PM ^

Like we have nothing to lose. Because we truly have everything to gain. If our starting QB can find his TEs routinely for a change  instead of checking short or lobbing long, we in bidness ladies and gentlemen.