Michigan 32, Michigan State 23 Comment Count

Ace


[Bryan Fuller/MGoBlog]

You reap what you sow.

Facing a fourth-and-goal down 20 points in the fourth quarter, Mark Dantonio went the James Franklin route and called for a field goal. The football gods did not look kindly upon this act of cowardice; Michael Geiger missed the 34-yard attempt.

Dantonio almost certainly regretted that decision when the Spartans cut it to a two-score game midway through the fourth. Instead of having a shot at a miracle, they ran out of time—a Donnie Corley touchdown catch with a second remaining on the clock only brought the deficit to seven. To keep up appearances, or something like that, Dantonio called for a two-point conversion.

This also backfired, and in spectacular fashion. Jabrill Peppers capped a game worthy of a Heisman contender by returning an MSU fumble 98 yards for two points. The subsequent onside kick that didn't matter bounced harmlessly out of bounds, and Peppers got one final opportunity to display his athleticism when, perhaps as an homage to Braylon Edwards, he backflipped following the victory-formation kneeldown.


[Fuller]

While it wasn't the blowout most expected, it wasn't as close as the final score indicates, either. Michigan absorbed MSU's best shot on the opening drive, a 12-play, 75-yard march featuring 11 LJ Scott touches capped by a five-yard TD run. The Wolverines hit back by going 80 yards in eight plays with Eddie McDoom's 20-yard jet sweep setting up a three-yard Jabrill Peppers keeper to even the score. They gained the upper hand on the ensuing possession when Maurice Hurst slashed into the backfield to force Gerald Holmes into the unforgiving grasp of Peppers on a fourth-and-one.

From that point forward, Michigan was in command. Two De'Veon Smith touchdowns—one featuring a delighful smashing of Riley Bullough at the goal line—and a Kenny Allen field goal were the result of the next three Wolverine possessions, and MSU could only muster a field goal in the interim; Smith's second score gave M a 24-10 lead with 33 seconds left in the half, and it seemed safe to assume that would be the halftime score.

Tyler O'Connor had other plans, which quickly went awry. Instead of running out the clock, O'Connor heaved a pass towards RJ Shelton while under heavy duress from Taco Charlton, and Jourdan Lewis got his hands under it for the pick. Michigan got off four plays in 27 seconds; Amara Darboh, who had a career-high 165 yards in his best game as a Wolverine, drew a pass interference in the end zone to set up a chip shot Allen field goal as the half came to a close. Suddenly, it was a three-score game.


[Patrick Barron/MGoBlog]

The 27-10 halftime margin would hold for the entire third quarter due to the goal-line heroics of the defense. In an otherwise stellar game, Wilton Speight made a significant error to open the second half, failing to see MSU corner Darian Hicks while targeting Karan Higdon on a wheel route. Hicks cut off the throw for an interception, and within two plays the Spartans had a first-and-goal.

Michigan State ran seven plays inside Michigan's ten-yard line on that possession, getting second life when Peppers was hit with a pass interference flag on third down. On play seven, Lewis crashed down on a fourth-down pitch to Scott and upended him in the backfield, ending the drive with authority.

After Kenny Allen struck a 45-yarder true to begin the fourth quarter, MSU went into desperation mode, inserting Damion Terry at quarterback on the ill-fated field goal drive, then switching to Brian Lewerke after a Michigan punt. The offense couldn't quite put the Spartans away, however, and Lewerke had a chance to make it a one-score game on fourth down with a little under two minutes on the clock.

The defensive line got serious heat on Lewerke, however, and Peppers cleaned up with a crushing sack. Michigan wore down some clock before MSU's desultory final drive while Jon Falk brought the Paul Bunyan trophy back to its rightful place in the Wolverine locker room.

Michigan State has lost six in a row. Michigan is 8-0 with one rival in the clear and three games to get through before a potential Big Ten East title game. While it took one year longer than any of us wanted, the in-state rivalry is, at long last, as it should be.

Comments

NateVolk

October 30th, 2016 at 10:11 AM ^

Which second half did you watch?  

You are taking the two throwaway touchdowns where a desperate and higly motivated opponent made a couple plays trying to save some face, and calling that being outplayed?

Michigan won every key play for over two quarters, and ran out on a 30-3 run on the opponent's home field. 

If you watched that game start to finish and felt any anxiety past the point of Michigan's quick answer to MSU's impressive first drive, there is nothing anyone can say to calm you down.  

When Michigan knew it had to answer it did. When it knew it needed a stop it got one.  Those moments are part and parcel of any great team's season. 60 minutes of dominance is an ideal, not a common reality. It happens against Rutgers level opponents and teams that have totally quit. And nowhere else.

M-Dog

October 30th, 2016 at 12:56 PM ^

A perspective from 1997:  We played on the road at Wisconsin the week before the Ohio State game.  We were heavily favored after having just crushed #2 Penn State, but we struggled until late with an energized motivated Badger team.  We all freaked out a little bit.  "How are we going to put away Ohio State if we have trouble putting away Wisconsin?"

But we know how that turned out.  You are going to have some tough games in a championship run (the '97 team could have easily had 3 losses), but that does not mean you are not a championship caliber team.

I'd be nervous going into Columbus without us having some tough punch-in-the-mouth games under our belt like the MSU and Wisconsin games.  I don't want to win every game by 30 heading into The Game.

 

 

plamonge

October 30th, 2016 at 12:06 PM ^

I watched this whole thing again. **At no time did MSU have a chance to win this game.** Our coaching new this, and managed the clock masterfully. I think we're all having PTSD from coaching nightmares past. 

M-Dog

October 30th, 2016 at 12:53 PM ^

OK folks, before we do this all over again . . .    we are not going to just waltz into Iowa for a night game and dominate that either.  No matter what their record is or how they look before we play them.

Get that out of your heads right now.

Repeat after me: "Any win at Iowa at night is a good win, and I will be very very happy the next day after it happens."

 

Bertello NC

October 30th, 2016 at 1:05 PM ^

I was actually very surprised with the way staes o line played. Granted we did not blitz exceedingly but I thought our d line would have been caving them in more. But all in all this is staes super bowl and they game plan all year for this game so I'm happy with the way we dominated them for the most part. We knocked their qbs around all day long.



Sent from MGoBlog HD for iPhone & iPad

mishler3

October 30th, 2016 at 8:24 PM ^

For a rivalry game, the vibe during the tailgate was pretty subdued. I didn't come cross a Sparty fan who didn't think they were going to get blown out. In my AC #1 jersey, didn't hear anything negative while walking around with my Sparty wife. No "you suck" or "f--- Michigan". Anticlimactic almost like the game.

Glad to be 8-0 but a lot of work needs to be done on both sides of the ball. Lots of missed tackles, shaky secondary play. No sense of urgency offensively in the 2nd half.

So freaking glad Harbaugh is our coach. Go Blue! No cupcakes the rest of the way.

rkjjeep

October 31st, 2016 at 8:40 AM ^

They're 8-0.  They just beat their in state rival and a large recruiting  and coaching gap will put MSU back where they belong.   UM has arguably the best head coach and coaching staff on the planet.  Think about it - Michigan will enter all near future games with MSU with more talent and better coaches.  Hmmmmmm. 

I think the turnaround is even bigger than the record indicates.

Next.