Michigan 29, Air Force 13 Comment Count

Ace


Quinn Nordin got his second school record in three games. [Eric Upchurch]

Michigan had their J. Walter Weatherman game today.

You could practically hear "...and that's why you don't schedule Air Force" echoing through the stadium as early as the first quarter, when the Falcons somehow used 6:13 of game clock to drive 24 yards in 12 plays for a field goal to knot the game at three apiece.

While Michigan's defense played up to their lofty standard, Air Force lingered in a contracted game that featured only 11 full drives from each team. The Wolverines could only move the ball in fits and spurts, generally going in the right direction until they hit the red zone, where all-too-familiar problems from the season's first two games cropped up again. Whether it was blown blocks, conservative playcalling, or missed opportunities, those problems forced Michigan to settle for field goals on all four of their trips to the red zone.

"They were doing a really good of disguising coverages, disguising blitzes," quarterback Wilton Speight said, noting Air Force did a particularly good job in the red zone.

"They had a better call than we had most of the time down there in the red zone," said Jim Harbaugh. "We'd like to score more touchdowns in the red zone. I think that'll come. We're moving the ball."

Speight finished an underwhelming 14-of-23 for 169 yards in what's become a typically uneven performance. He had a few excellent throws and lost some yardage to drops—most notably on a third-down pass that clanged off Kekoa Crawford's hands in the fourth quarter—but also missed a couple open receivers and couldn't lead the offense to a touchdown until the game's waning minutes.


DPJ couldn't be stopped once he got his eyes on the end zone. [Upchurch]

Fortunately for Michigan, while the offense found their footing, the other two units were rock solid. Quinn Nordin tied a program record with five field goals in five attempts, including a 49-yarder with room to spare to give Michigan a 9-6 halftime lead.

After the defense forced a three-and-out on the opening possession of the second half, it looked like Michigan would finally break the game open. Donovan Peoples-Jones fielded a Charlie Scott punt that outdistanced the coverage, sprinted past the first wave, reversed field, and then tightroped the sideline for a 79-yard touchdown, the first of his Michigan career.

"My punt return team did a great job of blocking," Peoples-Jones said. "It made my job very easy. It just opened up like the Red Sea."

"I feel like great things are going to happen for Donovan Peoples-Jones," said Harbaugh.

Air Force countered with a rare explosive play, however, as receiver Ronald Cleveland got a step on Tyree Kinnel and took at third-down slant 64 yards to the house only four plays later.

That proved to be Air Force's only completion of the afternoon.


Somewhere in there is Air Force's quarterback. [Upchurch]

The defense, and the defensive line in particular, controlled this game. Against an offense that avoids negative plays at all costs, Michigan recorded nine tackles for loss and had three sacks on just 12 Air Force dropbacks. The three-man line of Rashan Gary, Mo Hurst, and Chase Winovich controlled the A- and B-gaps, allowing the back seven—led by Devin Bush and Mike McCray, who both finished with a team-high 11 tackles—to flow to the ball unencumbered.

By the second half, they were kicking the Falcons off the field with ruthless efficiency. Gary damn near beheaded quarterback Arion Worthman while forcing a third-quarter fumble the Falcons were fortunate to recover, inducing a roar of bloodlust from a previously stagnant crowd.

Their dominance meant two more field goal drives, plus a miss from Air Force's kicker, were enough to all but put the game away. Michigan was in clock-killing mode when Karan Higdon broke down the left sideline for a 36-yard touchdown with 1:02 to play.

"They play a brand of football that I really like, which is keep jabbing away," Harbaugh said. "They make you go beat them. They don't beat themselves."

That held true in this game. Frustratingly, it took the offense far too long to put the game away and still have fans feel comfortable heading into Big Ten play. Next week's trip to Purdue, a reinvigorated program under first-year coach Jeff Brohm, is looking far more perilous than it did a few weeks ago.

"We'll keep forging ahead, keep making improvements," said Harbaugh. "I like where this team is at right now."

Comments

J.

September 17th, 2017 at 1:26 AM ^

My immediate thought on that one was that Black ran the wrong route.  It wasn't sailed five feet over anybody's head -- it was dead on to the wrong spot.  Maybe Black was supposed to run a curl and he ran an out instead?  (Guessing here).

Mongo

September 17th, 2017 at 11:01 AM ^

OL couldn't handle their 7 man rush, so we were stuck in heavy protect, leaving two targets that were covered like a glove ... AF's game plan worked. Speight had limited options who were covered. At least he didn't throw any picks and we get the 5 FGs to live another day. But we need to get better - play calling, OL play, WR play, QB play all need to improve - it is not going to magically happen by changing to a different QB ... in fact it likely gets worse. Unfortunately, we are watching the profile of a young offense with growing pains. Good thing we got a strong kicker to get points in the redzone.

myislanduniverse

September 16th, 2017 at 8:45 PM ^

Honestly, I think he had about an average game. He managed the offense, limited his mistakes (no turnovers despite one really questionable toss). He had a couple over throws, but about the same number of passes dropped off the gloves of receivers, and still finished above 50% on the day. Honestly, the ball moved down the field just fine. It was in the red zone where I think that the OL's youth is getting exposed as the main weakness. They're not able to exert their will the way you'll need to there.

Perkis-Size Me

September 16th, 2017 at 4:44 PM ^

Why do you think we beat Purdue? Their offense is completely revitalized after one offseason with Brohm, and Michigan still can't stop getting out of its own way after three years in the same system.

I'd still favor Michigan next week due to the defense, but it wouldn't shock me if Purdue pulled the upset next Saturday.

mgoblue98

September 16th, 2017 at 11:39 PM ^

the secondary is a dumpster fire.  Just look at how bad they have been so far this year.  Just today they gave up one pass completion on 9 attempts.  Last week they gave up 15 completions on 40 attempts.   There would have been fewer completions if the refs would have called offensive PI.  Florida went 14/26.

Dana Dane

September 16th, 2017 at 4:17 PM ^

This is the first game I haven't been able to watch in the last three seasons and I'm actually glad that was the case.

The DPG punt return was a nice turn of events for the young man so I'm happy for him but we've got to figure the offense out stat.

One Armed Bandit

September 16th, 2017 at 4:18 PM ^

Does it only pertain to practice? I'm reserved to the fact that we're going to ride or die with Speight regardless, but I mean how can you know what you have if you don't allow somebody else to take the reins of the offense during a game? Shouldn't that be the true meritocracy?

Goggles Paisano

September 17th, 2017 at 6:43 AM ^

Isaac had two td's called back.  One by a pinky toe hitting the white and the other on a questionable holding call.  AF converted that 4th down in the 1st qtr on route to their first FG by an inch on what was likely a bad spot.  Those three plays really change the outlook of this game.  We dominated this game far more than the score plays out.  Speight was decent in this game.  

Fezzik

September 16th, 2017 at 10:31 PM ^

Today both Owenu and Evans got pulled for on field errors. Evans and Owenu probably had a better week of practice than Higdon and Runyan yet they both came into the game to replace them. This is meritocracy working on game day. Speight can make errors and will not miss snap.

No I am not saying Speight was the only problem today. Unless both O'Korn and Peters are lightyears behind Speight, the back up QB should see some time if the starter is struggling. We needed a spark on offense that never happened. Unless you count the Higdon TD but that was after the game was already over.

mgoblue98

September 17th, 2017 at 7:49 PM ^

pretty clear that O'Korn is very far behind Speight, which implies that Peters is as well. 

Speight was pulled in the Florida game.  Outside of one nice fade route, that didn't go particularly well. 

Onwenu was pulled when the game was already over as well. 

Evans isn't the starter, hence he rode the pine after fumbling.

StephenRKass

September 16th, 2017 at 5:19 PM ^

Tell Harbaugh. Just like Wojo asked in the press conf last week. Somehow, you need to get the word to Harbaugh. Just explain to Harbaugh that he doesn't know what he's doing. That the team would be much better with Peters in there getting reps instead of Speight. I mean, who does Harbaugh think he is? Why does he keep on running Speight out there? You go on and make sure Harbaugh knows he is doing this all wrong.

xcrunner1617

September 16th, 2017 at 4:18 PM ^

While the offense does have it's share of issues, at least it seems like the Defense and Special Teams are going to be elite units this year. I would like to think that given all the young talent on offense and Harbaugh's track record, that side of the ball will improve. And with those two elite units, we just need to be average (maybe slightly above average) to have a shot at winning every game on the schedule.

Blue in Paradise

September 16th, 2017 at 5:23 PM ^

AF is going to get some nice runs against any D so that wasn't too concerning. Their offense is set up to do that with all of the misdirection. The long pass was a concern because it was a coverage bust. But like I said, it would have been a heck of lot harder to make the throw if Solomon is in the QBs face. The OL had two fists of jersey with one pulled up over Aubrey's shoulder pad right in front of the QB. How the hell do the refs miss that?

J.

September 17th, 2017 at 1:33 AM ^

I'm convinced the referees are transfixed by Michigan's helmets and therefore don't ever* see Michigan players get held, picked, or interfered with.  They do, somehow, see everything that Michigan does, though -- like phantom defensive holding on run plays (huh?) and holding, downfield, behind the play, on what looked like a clean block.

I've just decided Michigan needs to win every game by an extra touchdown to make up for the slanted field.

* Air Force did actually get called for holding once, late in the third quarter.  Perhaps that was a make-up call for the one they missed on the touchdown. :)

EGD

September 17th, 2017 at 6:06 AM ^

The call on Winovich was legit; the broadcast crew caught it. Winovich was falling down so he just grabbed an AFA blocker and pulled him down with. That probably happens all the time and rarely gets called but c'est la vie.

Mongo

September 17th, 2017 at 11:24 AM ^

inside 5 yards of the line of scrimmage, especially related to an ineligible lineman. You can grab whatever you want except a face mask or horse collar. Shit it happens every play - DL grabs arms, hands, jersey, shoulder pads of OL - every single play of every single college football game in every state of this union. That was such a terrible call. Thought the entire day was "military appreciation day" from an officiating standpoint ... AF was called for only two penalties. I can't recall a college football team that was penalized less in a game where they were so physically outmatched at the point of attack. And that cut back stuff is often illegal when not executed perfectly - the OG stands up the DT and the OT cuts him down at the knees. In a number of cases I saw the OG was still engaged with the DT when the OT cut him down. That is a 15 yard penalty in football. The OG has to have fully released the DT before the cut block. That happened only about 50% of the time that AF cut our DT. Not once was it called.

schreibee

September 16th, 2017 at 4:19 PM ^

Welp, like Coach, I like where the team's at - which is 3-0. Not liking the offense much at all, though! Where's the TE in this O? The play to Gentry has gone for big gains 2 games in a row. Why not more of that? And where's Wheatley, Bunting, McKeon? I mean, i know they're on the field cuz I see them whiffing on blocks... but let's maybe try throwing to them more?

freejs

September 16th, 2017 at 4:20 PM ^

during the 4th quarter. That was a bummer. 

Gah, this game overall was a bummer. Hate looking forward to Saturday so much and then watching a performance like that. 

 

Blue in Paradise

September 16th, 2017 at 5:32 PM ^

You are not going to completely shut down a precision triple option team. Their offense has been tailored over the decades with so much misdirection that they will find some holes. AF is not a bad team and looked like solid today. The continued miscues on offense and the coverage bust/missed holding call kept the game close. That is a bit concerning. Overall, survive and advance! Clemson looked like shit against Troy last year and lost to a mediocre Pitt team. But they got to the playoffs and got hit at the right time. That is all that matters. Hopefully Isaac and Mettelus are ok for next week.

AJDrain

September 16th, 2017 at 4:24 PM ^

But the offense's miscues to me, are the result of bad play calling and youth. Speight had a pretty solid game today, but he was under a lot of pressure and there were a number of inconvenient drops. Still looking for the offense to click and get some consistency. But hey, the defense and special teams are elite and that will give the offense a few more weeks to get on the same page

mgoblue98

September 16th, 2017 at 11:50 PM ^

tend to agree with you.  The offense dong punched itself quite a bit with penalties, fumbles and missed assignments.  I can't see the receivers on TV, but it didn't seem like there were a lot of guys open. 

At first glance, it seemed like AFA had a lot of perfectly timed blitzes.

ED...I don't necessarily agree on the issue of play calling.  There is one play call I don't like regardless of what team runs it.

stephenrjking

September 16th, 2017 at 8:56 PM ^

I have to come down now and say that my hype regarding the receivers was premature. Don't get me wrong, Black and DPJ have both been very good and neither can possibly be described as "disappointing" by any standard.

But I was hoping that they'd come in with Crawford and seamlessly replace the production we lost from Darboh, Chesson (who I've been hard on) and Butt. And it hasn't happened.

In part this is because it takes time to learn the nuances of the routes and the playbook. DPJ has, by most accounts, started from a deficit in that he didn't learn a lot of routes in high school. His relatively small presence in the downfield passing game suggests that he's still working his way up to speed here. 

It's also in part because these guys just don't have experience in a lot of the small areas that help receivers succeed beyond athleticism. Remember when Speight rolled out to the left and tried to flip the ball to Crawford near the goalline? After the pass was batted down, Speight was motioning that Crawford should double back deep, gain some separation from the defender, make the defender choose either to cover Crawford or attack Speight.

Crawford's a true sophomore. Speight's scramble passing stats have been paltry so far this year, and I think a lot of that is because the receivers don't yet know how to find places to get open. Speight was really good throwing on the run last year, and if that asset is limited by inexperience, that's a significant negative.

The good news is that it's early. These guys have a lot of learning to do and a lot of time to do it.

Mongo

September 17th, 2017 at 11:37 AM ^

he nails it. Time on task. It is going to be painful to watch, like watching a toddler learning to walk. Just need to keep' em trying and pick' em up when they fall. Eventually, they get it.