This week's Haskins Hurdle™ [Patrick Barron]

Michigan 29, Indiana 7 Comment Count

Alex.Drain November 6th, 2021 at 11:27 PM

This one was a sleepy game, and by sleepy, I mean that I almost fell asleep watching it. Between a lack of wake-you-up plays, long injury-related timeouts, and the typical deluge of excruciatingly long commercial timeouts at the behest of our corporate sponsor overlords, this one trudged along at the meandering pace of a 160-year-old tortoise. It was never in doubt, but it was not a total blowout until the fourth frame, hence the sleepy nature of the contest. Indiana, very good at not being competitive, but also not being run off the field, did the same in this one. Maintaining their pride, but never really within striking distance. In the end, Michigan claimed a 29-7 victory, and moved to 8-1 on the 2021 season. 

Speaking of injuries, this one was rough for both sides. Your author summed it up at one point accordingly: 

For Michigan, the list of casualties was long, including (but not limited to) Blake Corum, AJ Henning, Andrel Anthony, and Gemon Green, while Cade McNamara spent a series in the tent. Indiana's list was probably even longer, but I don't track that because I am not paid to write about Indiana football. At one juncture it seemed like both sides may have just preferred the game to end prematurely, rather than risk losing any more bodies. 

The game started out with Indiana stitching together a decent drive before succumbing to a punt. Michigan's first drive was uninspiring but their second series went much smoother. A 4th down sneak kept the chains moving, and another 3rd & short conversion by Haskins got Michigan firmly into Hoosier territory. A 34-yard FG by Jake Moody got Michigan on the board, and they led 3-0. 

You don't want to see David Ojabo bearing down on you [Bryan Fuller]

As I predicted in FFFF, the Hoosiers were not particularly interested in letting freshman QB Donaven McCulley air it out much, leaning on his legs as a major component of the offense. When they did let McCulley throw, the pressure came in a hurry. While Aidan Hutchinson is the name everyone knows, David Ojabo had a monstrous effort to continue putting his name out there. Your author is begging that NFL scouts are not some of the people who learn about Ojabo's name. The Scottish DE delivered a thundering strip sack of McCulley on IU's third offensive series and after Chris Hinton recovered it, the Wolverines got great field position. A Hassan Haskins hurdle and then a goal line dive later, Michigan led 10-0. 

Indiana's next offensive series was their best. A trick play ended in a pass from McCulley to TE Peyton Hendershot, and then a long McCulley run on 3rd & 5 after Junior Colson lost contain put the Hoosiers at the goal line. Davion Ervin-Poindexter scored from a yard out and Indiana trailed only 10-7. 

Any thought that the game might be a fight was quickly erased by a 62-yard Hassan Haskins run through a huge hole opened by Ryan Hayes and Trevor Keegan. That put the Wolverines in the red zone, and a Cade McNamara roll out pass to Luke Schoonmaker put the ball in the end zone, and Michigan led 17-7. That play in particular seemed to be a savvy call from Josh Gattis, as Michigan had issues picking up IU's varied blitzes. McNamara faced considerable heat, and a QB rollout pass was an astute counter that worked out. Both teams traded punts before the first half ended. 

Cade McNamara was very solid, per usual [Bryan Fuller]

The second half was far more one-sided. Though Michigan's first drive ended in disappointing fashion, the next three Wolverine possessions ended in points. A JJ McCarthy-led drive got Michigan a FG off of Jake Moody's foot, and then a McNamara-led drive tacked another FG on the board after Hoosier pressure stalled it short. Red zone (in)efficiency remains a bugaboo for the Michigan offense. They did cash in on their next red zone trip, though, as Cade McNamara's best deep ball since Wisconsin landed in the arms of Cornelius Johnson for a 50 yard gain, setting up a TD pass to Luke Schoonmaker. At that point, it was 29-7 Michigan. 

Michigan was able to build such a large lead because Indiana's offense flopped around like a fish out of water in the second half. The Indiana offensive line was predictably unable to block Michigan's pass rush whatsoever, limiting their downfield passing attack and shutting down any hope of moving the ball on the ground. In totality, Indiana ran 24 plays in the second half, and gained 53 total yards, scoring 0 points. Their first four drives were three-and-outs, while the fifth drive (then against a mixture of reserves and starters for Michigan's defense) came to a close rather deep in Michigan territory after a Vincent Gray PBU on 4th down forced a turnover on downs. JJ McCarthy and Michigan's offense (also a mix of reserves and starters by then) drained most of the fourth quarter on the subsequent drive, and that was more or less all she wrote for this one. 

Hassan Haskins was Michigan's biggest star offensively, rushing 27 times for 168 yards and 1 TD. After Corum exited the game with an apparent lower body injury, it was all Haskins on the ground for Michigan. No other player attempted more than three rushes for the Wolverines. McNamara was rather quiet but effective, going 10/18 for 168 yards, 2 TDs and no turnovers, dodging pressure, taking care of the ball, and moving Michigan down the field. McCarthy was more erratic, 5/10 for 55 yards and an interception, showing that there remains a real gap between the two on the depth chart.

Luke Schoonmaker had a nice game [Patrick Barron]

Cornelius Johnson hauled in 5 catches for 108 yards, including the 50-yard deep shot. Luke Schoonmaker had arguably the best game of his career, catching two TD passes out of his three total receptions. Roman Wilson, finally working back from his wrist injury, made three catches of his own and carried the ball on an end around. The offensive line had a spotty day, struggling at times with Indiana's complex blitzes, but also opening several notably big holes to allow Haskins to gash the Hoosiers on the ground. 

Defensively, it's hard to argue with the results. IU gained 202 yards on 3.4 yards per play, scoring 7 points. Michigan held McCulley to 11/25 through the air on a pitiful 3.6 yards/attempt. Taylor Upshaw, who had a strong game, added Michigan's only sack outside of Ojabo, but the story was Michigan's ability to generate pressure, even if few plays ended in a sack. Junior Colson led Michigan with eight tackles, narrowly ahead of Josh Ross and Dax Hill, who had seven. It was a strong bounce back effort for Mike Macdonald's crew after last weekend's disappointing loss to Michigan State. 

Michigan moves to 8-1 on the season and their B1G hopes are still alive, thanks in part to MSU's loss this afternoon to Purdue. If the Wolverines win the next two weeks, and Ohio State beats Michigan State, then The Game on November 27 in Ann Arbor would be for the B1G East title and a trip to Indianapolis. Of course, the first part of that sentence is a rather sizable "if". Michigan has to go to Penn State next week and face a Nittany Lions team that, while struggling offensively, is playing great defense. The Wolverines have not won in Happy Valley since 2015, Jim Harbaugh's first season as head coach. A game time has not yet been announced for that one. 

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Comments

LabattsBleu

November 7th, 2021 at 11:38 AM ^

Michigan is 85th in the nation in red zone efficiency....This isn't a case of people bitching for the sake of bitching...

You can skate by bad/average teams with FGs instead of TDs, but you aren't going to be good teams like PSU and OSU by leaving points on the field

The MSU game already showed that...If Michigan scored one more TD instead of a FG they would have won that game.

Hotel Putingrad

November 7th, 2021 at 12:03 AM ^

I could complain (about the commercials, injuries, red zone struggles, etc.), but after seeing most of the top-10 look really unimpressive today, I figured I should just stop and appreciate the progress this team has made in 365 days. Michigan is a good football team. They look herky jerky on offense whenever they try anything other than a handoff to Haskins, but they put up points and have really figured things out in the defensive backfield. Credit to the coaching staff for getting them to 8-1, a rather welcome surprise after last season.

MGoBlue96

November 7th, 2021 at 12:07 AM ^

Last season was a weird inexplicably bad year, I really wish people would just throw it out as a measuring stick,data point etc. UM still has top 15 talent according to the composite recruiting rankings on the team. I know people keep saying nobody could see this coming but this is simply a return to a normal Harbaugh team playing like a team with top 15 talent. Can they do any better now is the only question.

stephenrjking

November 7th, 2021 at 12:15 AM ^

You can't, though. Last year was awful, an embarrassment. The starting QB was a Harbaugh project and allegedly forced a transfer of a guy we thought was going to be a future star. The defense was awful, which forced the firing of a guy that just a couple of years earlier was producing defenses that were ranked #1 in the country for most of the year. The team didn't just lose, either; they flat-out quit against Wisconsin and were dominated by Indiana and Penn State.

That year happened. A lot of these players were on that team. 

So it says something that the team is coherent, that they're winning, that they bounced back from a gutting loss last week and played well. 

It looks like the rehabilitation project undertaken in the offseason is paying dividends. Supposedly, guys like Warinner were tough to work with for the players. Michigan's staff is young, apparently good at connecting with guys. The fact that the team has held together after last year suggests that there is accuracy to that.

And so we can be grateful that the team isn't embarrassing, that they're winning. And, as fans who want to decide whether things are good or not, we can recognize that at least some of the re-adjustment in the offseason has been working. 

Plus, we can start to maybe a little bit think positively about the future.

TIMMMAAY

November 7th, 2021 at 1:38 PM ^

Stephen... you're better than this. I know, because I have seen you be better than this. Normally I just don't have the energy, or time to respond to your lengthy comments, but this kind of thing is getting under my skin, and I'm a lazy shit on Sunday, so here we go. 

The "Harbaugh project" starting qb last year, that "we" thought was going to be a future star... isn't one. That happens a lot, to a lot of players and coaches not named Harbaugh, it's just how it goes. You continually ignore the huge neon "context" sign that's flashing when referencing last year. Which guys sat out again? How many key injuries were added onto the list of guys who opted out? Early NFL entry? The fact that every conference (and even individual schools within them) treated their covid protocols differently? How many weeks of lost practice, vs other teams, and the respective time-frames? Does any of that matter? Should it? You don't even mention it, any of it. 

The defense suffered just as badly to all of the above, as did the offense, and "Harbaugh project future star" qb (that isn't). 

Yes that year happened. So did all of the stuff I mention above, and a lot of other "stuff" that I didn't mention. It's just plain unfair to continually sling mud, as you do every damn week. You are being unfair, not using the critical thinking skills which I had believed you to possess. You should try to do better, man, you're just upping the noise/signal ratio (on this controversial issue), even though your posts are very verbose, and otherwise thoughtful. And it hurts the team, in some small, mean way, that bothers me too. 

We had a bit of a talent gap open up in the past two years, which can fairly be blamed on recruiting under Harbaugh. But what you keep doing is not fair, in my opinion. I wish you would step back and rethink things. Harbaugh has proven at every level that he is an elite coach. That doesn't mean he is above reproach, but be fair. 

OSU put themselves in an unprecedented position, through recruiting, and winning during a period which Michigan was in the doldrums. MSU and PSU capitalized during that time as well. Since his hiring, Harbaugh has been slowly getting Michigan back to their historic norms, above them even. It isn't his fault the conference restructured in a way that makes winning the B10 much more difficult, at the same time OSU was dominating, when Harbaugh was brought in. 

He is winning the "right way". He has shown constant ability to self reflect, and change with the times. The new staff is focused on the major weak point, recruiting. The team seems to like him, still. We won the damn game in EL, as far as I'm concerned. 

Give the man the props he deserves. 

JBlitz1

November 7th, 2021 at 12:11 AM ^

I think part of why this felt like a clunker was because the other team was Indiana.  If a game vs Penn State, MSU or OSU played out exactly the same way we’d all think it was a great game…maybe  ? 

Erik_in_Dayton

November 7th, 2021 at 12:21 AM ^

Michigan's was a businesslike effort. It's nice to put away a Big Ten team with so little drama. I already don't remember much of the game. Todd Collins threw a couple of touchdown passes?

Dr. Funkenstein

November 7th, 2021 at 12:27 AM ^

good effort in what must have been a slog for the players too, knowing bigger stuff coming down the road...I wonder if Edwards was hurt or if his fumbling issues earlier in the year kept the staff from going to him on what looked like a rainy night (I watched on stream, was hard to see if it was raining hard or just poor stream quality)....

XM - Mt 1822

November 7th, 2021 at 1:08 AM ^

Point of clarification so we all remember:  McNamara‘s first three passes were all incompletes but everyone of them was at least a catchable ball or dead on. The three receivers simply dropped the ball. At a minimum he should be 13 of 18.

Don

November 7th, 2021 at 1:59 PM ^

"Unreal."

If in 2000 you had told fans of Miami, FSU, and FL that in 25 years all three would be also-rans and nowhere near the national title conversation they'd have laughed you out of the room. You can add USC to that list, too.

Eventually this will happen to Ohio State

dcmaizeandblue

November 7th, 2021 at 1:01 AM ^

I'd have loved one more TD but man I'll take a boring win against Indiana after the last several games. Hope the injuries aren't major and there's everything left to play for.

 

Jonesy

November 7th, 2021 at 1:16 AM ^

while a win against psu would be nice we're going to get crushed by OSU as usual so nothing we do matters in terms of the big ten race as we have no shot at winning it.

GoBlue96

November 7th, 2021 at 7:35 AM ^

Attending a game on fox is brutal. There was one drive where they broke onto a five minute commercial break in the middle of a drive with no injuries or timeouts. Just announced a media timeout. What the hell was that? 

SD Larry

November 7th, 2021 at 7:58 AM ^

Hassan Haskins, a good defensive effort and an improving passing game.  Heal up fast guys.  Think Eric All and Donovan Warren will play next week.  Fingers crossed for AA, AJ, and G. Green.  Heal up fast guys.