Michigan 33, Florida 17 Comment Count

Ace


Ty Isaac repeatedly broke into the open field. [Chris Cook]

The score doesn't do it justice.

Outside of two no good, very bad plays, Michigan put it on Florida. The Gators offense had no answer for Don Brown's defensive strategy, which was to bring heat from all angles around a three-man line, eschewing a DT in favor of speed an unpredictability. Two first-half pick-sixes by Wilton Speight, a bizarre illegal formation penalty that negated Michigan's first touchdown, and a blocked punt not only kept Florida around, however, but allowed them to take a 17-13 lead into halftime.

Eventually, the score reflected Michigan's dominance. The offense turned up the tempo on their opening drive of the second half, springing Ty Isaac free for 18 yards on a fourth-and-one to set up a Karan Higdon touchdown plunge. While the offense could only muster two Quinn Nordin field goals—and two Nordin missses—after that score, the defense hardly required help. They held the Gators to a total of 192 yards and capped the scoring when Noah Furbush dove on a fumble forced by Chase Winovich in the end zone.

Yes, the defense technically returned only one starter, and that starter, Mike McCray, missed a couple series early for reasons unclear. They hardly missed a beat, stiffening up in the red zone to hold Florida to a field goal on their first drive of the game, then outscoring UF's offense 7-0 the rest of the way. Maurice Hurst, Rashan Gary, and Chase Winovich made a three-man line feel a whole lot like a four-man line to the Florida offensive front; linebackers Devin Bush and Khaleke Hudson often flew into the backfield unimpeded; the young secondary didn't let anything get over the top. Michigan finished with six sacks, 11 TFLs, four forced fumbles (one on special teams on a great rip by Ambry Thomas), and five pass breakups. They were aggressive. Florida had problems.


Chase Winovich's strip-sack effectively ended the game. [Cook]

The offense would've fared nearly as well if not for those two Speight interceptions; the first bounced right to Duke Dawson off the hands of Kekoa Crawford, and the other sailed over an open Grant Perry into the hands of CJ Henderson on the ensuing possession. The next two drives were turned over to John O'Korn, who could only get Michigan into position for a 55-yard Quinn Nordin field goal.

Save for that stretch, Michigan moved the ball with regularity against a strong UF defense. Running back Ty Isaac put forth the best performance, rushing for 114 yards on only 11 carries, repeatedly breaking into the secondary as the coaches dialed up running plays on passing downs. With sacks removed, Michigan ran for 6.1 yards per carry, which kept the offense moving despite an uneven day in the passing game.

We saw flashes of what the aerial attack can look like. Tarik Black exploited a Florida bust for his first career receiving touchdown in the first half and added an impressive catch from O'Korn down the sideline; Grant Perry had a couple tough catches over the middle; Sean McKeon picked up a couple first downs on catch-and-runs; Nick Eubanks had a big play up the seam late to help seal the game. There are a lot of weapons, and while many of them are still getting acclimated to college ball, it's easy to see the potential.

Michigan overcame some self-inflicted adversity to get past their first of four major tests slated for this regular season. The next one, at Penn State, doesn't occur until mid-October. If the Wolverines hold this form while cleaning up some of the more heart-stopping mistakes, they have a great chance of heading into that game 6-0. Consecutive home games against Cincinnati and Air Force should allow them to carry this momentum into conference play.

Comments

XiX

September 2nd, 2017 at 10:14 PM ^

O'Korn is the backup. I understand there's always a love for the backup QB but now it's the backup's backup. Both Speight and O'Korn would have to go down before Peters even sniffs the field. And as quickly as he faded in camp I am more afraid to see him have to play than Speight.

YooperWolv

September 2nd, 2017 at 8:16 PM ^

Loving the D.  Props to the O-line especially in pass coverage.  I couldn't help but think what a guy like Peters could do with that kind of time to pass.  I know it's a dead horse but Speight keeps bringing up the topic when he plays like this.  

dragonchild

September 2nd, 2017 at 9:16 PM ^

Lordy I hope not.  If I was to sum up this game in one word, it'd be "promising".  There was a lot to like. . . but the only reason Florida was in the game at all was some spectacular breakdowns on offense.  The offense certainly hasn't hit their ceiling, which is the fun part, but they have some very obvious problems to fix.

Despite what he said, I'm curious about how much of this was anticipated.  You can expect things to get a bit weird when a young team's first major playing time is at a high-profile neutral site, but (for example) Grant Perry's antics. . . that guy is NOT one the true freshmen.

thespacepope

September 2nd, 2017 at 8:26 PM ^

Florida is just another exposed team in the Saban Envy Conference.

I hope we never have to hear about how this game would've been completely different if those 10 players had been available for Florida.

WolverineHistorian

September 2nd, 2017 at 8:29 PM ^

I'm a pessimist, so even with the defense playing like they did, I didn't allow myself to be happy until we got to Zaire in the end zone.  Then it was like YES!!!!!!!!!  And I did the Gator chomp at my TV screen.

I'm very happy right now.  My oldest nephew lives in Gainsville.  I texted him and told him to rub it in to every Gator fan he comes across.  He told me Florida fans talked a lot of shit this week.

 

 

stephenrjking

September 2nd, 2017 at 8:34 PM ^

Crawford's hands are clearly an issue and cost us a pick-six on a fine pass, in addition to a couple of other drops. The problem is that DPJ doesn't appear to be ready, from a schematic standpoint, to be a fully integrated part of the offense.

dragonchild

September 2nd, 2017 at 9:21 PM ^

If you need good passes, you're not a reliable WR.  A Div.III walk-on can catch a pass if the QB drops it in his lap.  You want a QB that can make the throws, but at increasing levels of competition, a WR's value is in his ability to catch despite adversity.  That certainly wasn't the toughest throw Crawford will see, or will even be expected to bring in.

Gulogulo37

September 3rd, 2017 at 12:25 AM ^

Your post literally says nothing about Speight's throw. That's what I disagreed about. I said Crawford should have caught it.

It should have been caught and it was a throw that was a little off. Both of those things can be true. I'm not calling for Speight to be benched or anything, but he didn't have a great game.

stephenrjking

September 2nd, 2017 at 8:32 PM ^

This is the kind of game that great programs come in and win comfortably even in transition years when they're not national title favorites. That is exactly what Michigan did. We were the better team in every facet of the game against a team with a very solid defense that has won two SEC division titles on the trot. Man I'm hyped for the rest of the year.

mgobaran

September 2nd, 2017 at 8:38 PM ^

Amazing Defense. Let's give the offense a couple games before we tear into them too much. I'm even including Speight. Get used to the line weaknesses and where to expect pressure to leak through. Get used to the talented Freshman WRs. Etc. 

Dominant win over an SEC team, 1-0. That's almost muppet worthy! 

Go Blue!

SD Larry

September 2nd, 2017 at 8:44 PM ^

down for Michigan.  Second one was a bad throw, and there were a lot of overthrows.  QB Whisperer will coach him and O'Korn up based on film of this game and there will be improvement.  T. Black was amazing in his first college game vs. Fla at Jerry World.  Our tight ends rule and I expect Wheatley to have big games soon.

Perkis-Size Me

September 2nd, 2017 at 8:53 PM ^

I hope I'm wrong, but I feel like at this point Speight is what he is. I'm sure there will be some form of improvement, but the same problems he had last year were there tonight. He just couldn't consistently get the ball to his wideouts.

They were getting separation and he was either throwing it high or throwing behind them. Crawford was wide open on that last series and Speight just threw it out of bounds. Wasn't even in the neighborhood for Crawford to make an attempt to grab it.

I want Speight to prove me wrong. I hope he makes me look like a jackass but I didn't see a ton today that encouraged me about his progression.

Mongo

September 3rd, 2017 at 12:49 PM ^

On the overthrow INT he did a great job side-stepping the pressure and worked to the correct open guy, but his throw mechanics failed him. This isn't a new issue for Wilton, he just needs to work on it extra hard in the coming weeks. Also, the second half play calling was much better and fit what Wilton is as a QB ... excellent game manager. Gets the ball quickly into the hands of his weapons - RBs, TEs and WRs on designed roll-outs, slants, digs, etc. Once in a while take a shot deep from an early down, but not at 3rd and 7 because our OL isn't good enough to keep him clean long enough and he is no gunslinger on the run.

MikeInA2

September 2nd, 2017 at 8:43 PM ^

Michigan's front 7 was just AWESOME!  The running backs found the lanes but made many plays with great effort.  Speight had the one bad pick 6 and the other was off his receivers fingertips.  Anyway, very pleased with all the freshmen and only 5 returning starters.  Go Blue!