Blake Corum was the hero Michigan needed today [Patrick Barron]

Michigan 34, Maryland 27 Comment Count

Alex.Drain September 24th, 2022 at 4:41 PM

Every college football game is its own story, with its own heroes and challenges. You can generalize and expect this guy or that guy to go off, but sometimes they don't. The transitive property of sports doesn't work in college football for this reason. A team can be flat one week and then play up the next week. Michigan fans who have watched the last 15 years of the rivalry with Michigan State should know this all too well. Whether today's game was a subpar effort for Michigan, or an above average performance from Maryland, or perhaps a reflection of who these teams really are, all that will be known in the future. For now, Michigan survived Maryland 34-27 at home and are 4-0 on the 2022 season. That's all we know and no win should be taken for granted. 

The first 10 seconds looked like a romp developing. Maryland's Tai Felton fumbled the opening kickoff and Michigan's Matt Hibner recovered it at the 10 yard line. On the first play from scrimmage, JJ McCarthy found Luke Schoonmaker in the end zone for a TD. Not too often you find yourself up 7-0 eight seconds into the game in a game where you were the team kicking off. Famed author John U. Bacon sent his usual "go mow the lawn" tweet, which typically signifies the game being over, after that opening TD. Technically he was correct in terms of which team won the game, but what it alluded to, a Michigan blowout, was incorrect. 

Maryland made that clear on the next drive. The Terps had a good answer for the Wolverines, driving into Michigan territory and setting up their kicker, Chad Ryland, with a 53-yard FG attempt. The former EMU kicker found himself at home kicking footballs in Washtenaw County, drilling the long attempt. 7-3 Michigan. That drive also began a theme that would persist in the first half: Michigan mistakes. The Wolverines had a chance to get off the field on a 3rd down and got pressure. Jaylen Harrell knocked the RT into QB Taulia Tagovailoa's lap, but then grabbed Tagovailoa's facemask, nullifying a drive-ending throwaway. 

[Patrick Barron]

The Wolverines got the ball for their first proper drive and looked very solid. They alternated between chunk runs for Blake Corum and short stuff through the air via the right arm of JJ McCarthy. Unfortunately, that pattern began to erode when Luke Schoonmaker dropped a ball on a comebacks route. On 3rd & 5 from the Maryland 34, McCarthy was unable to find an open receiver against the Maryland zone, firing the ball to a decently well-covered Cornelius Johnson, which fell incomplete. Jake Moody did his part to add to the stellar kicking by nailing a 52-yard FG. 10-3. 

Maryland's offense continued in rhythm with another answer. They gained solid yardage on the ground and mixed in plenty of neat schematic stuff. Slip screens, RPO slants, and a crafty triple option play which Tagovailoa executed with a shovel pass that worked perfectly. Michigan aided the Terps yet again, though, as Rayshaun Benny's beautiful swim move to set up a stuff on 3rd & 1 didn't come to fruition when Benny was unable to make the tackle. Tagovailoa's legs also came up big on the drive, with the Maryland QB picking up a clutch 3rd & 8 on a scramble to set up first and goal in close. On the second try, Antwain Littleton punched it in and the visitors had tied it at 10. 

The flow of solid offense continued. Michigan marched right down the field on the legs of Corum, but then lifted Corum for a quick breather. On came true freshman CJ Stokes, who fumbled on his first carry, losing control of the ball without a discernible punch and Maryland recovered. A couple sizable gains by the Terps sent them the other way, including a concerning play that saw Kalel Mullings get stomped on by the RB Littleton when in position to make a tackle, but Mazi Smith's TFL ended the drive. Again faced with a 50+ yard FG, Ryland nailed it with little trouble to give the Terrapins their first lead, 13-10. 

[Patrick Barron]

Michigan's offense began to sputter at this juncture. A trick play in which Ronnie Bell was supposed to throw it went awry, and then JJ McCarthy missed an open Roman Wilson for a possible TD. Maryland got the ball back, drove some more, but a phenomenal individual effort from DJ Turner ended the drive with an interception off Tagovailoa. Replays showed that it may not have been a catch, but the play was never formally reviewed. Michigan's took the ball and drove again, in part due to a circus scramble from McCarthy, but that same sort of play hurt the team when he took a devastating -15 yard sack. The sack set Jake Moody up for a much more difficult 43-yard FG, which the normally reliable kicker shanked to keep the score at 13-10. 

The Wolverine defense did their job to force the first Maryland punt of the game and the Michigan offense got a chance to seize a lead, or at least tie it, before halftime. With 1:36 remaining and positioned on their own 30 yard line, McCarthy got himself back in sync with his receivers. He connected twice to Cornelius Johnson and found Luke Schoonmaker once, before another missed deep shot put Michigan in a 4th & 1 situation at the 33 yard line. Blake Corum rose to the occasion, being given a running lane and turning it into a house call. That touchdown with 22 seconds left put Michigan up 17-13 and they'd carry that lead into the break. 

Second half adjustments came for both teams. On the offensive side, Michigan doubled down on their commitment to run the ball, while the defense began to dial up more pressure. The former came with mixed results. Michigan got the ball out to midfield via Corum's legs but a confusing decision to run on 3rd & 4 was unsuccessful and the Wolverines punted. On the next offensive series, they'd run two more times before facing McCarthy with a 3rd & 8 inside his own 20, which the young QB was unable to convert after refusing to pull the trigger and taking a sack. 

[Patrick Barron]

The defensive adjustments had more success. Maryland continued to use their blitz-beater plays, screens and such, but a big hit by Mike Morris on Tagovailoa left the Maryland QB injured and more or less ended the series. Jaylen Harrell got home on the next play against backup QB Billy Edwards and forced a throwaway. Tagovailoa returned for the next series, but again it was pressure that made the difference. Eyabi Okie forced a dangerous throw that was a shoulda-been-INT, dropped by Mike Sainristil. Maryland punted nontheless.  

After each team had had the ball twice, Michigan finally got on the board in the second half. McCarthy continued to struggle with his deep shots, but he was poised and accurate underneath, connecting for 5-10 yard completions to keep the offense moving. He found Roman Wilson open for a 20 yard touchdown to close the drive and Michigan asserted control of the game with a 24-13 lead. 

Maryland answered with a quick score, showing they wouldn't go away. A terrific playcall on 4th & 1 saw the Terps run a screen to the edge that exploited Michigan's aggressiveness trying to stop the run, and then Tagovailoa uncorked his best throw of the game. On the run evading pressure, Tagovailoa flipped his hips and feathered a perfect ball over the arms of Mike Sainristil to an open TE Corey Dyches to get Maryland inside the 10. On second and goal, a mesh concept play resulted in a Maryland touchdown to a wide open receiver. They went for two to cut it to three, but pressure on Tagovailoa forced a risky throw that Sainristil didn't drop. 24-19.

[Bryan Fuller]

At this point, there were just over nine minutes left in the game, and a good Michigan drive could help get the game to the finish line. The Wolverines were quickly in a 3rd & 6 situation but McCarthy finally connected on a deep ball, a bomb to Ronnie Bell that got Michigan into field goal range. The drive would fizzle out after two rushing plays and a near-interception (the Maryland corner came down out of bounds), but Jake Moody drilled a 38 yard FG to put Michigan ahead 27-19 with 6:28 left. 

Though Tagovailoa had played a very good game up to this point, he made the backbreaking mistake that has too often defined his college football career. On 2nd & 4 from the 31 yard line, Tagovailoa missed an open receiver underneath, opting to heave the ball into double coverage that allowed RJ Moten to make a spectacular tip drill interception and give Michigan full control of the game.

The Wolverines began running the ball to drain the clock and force Maryland to call timeouts, eventually resulting in a 3rd & 3 from the Maryland 47 yard line with 3:40 remaining in the game. Maryland had the run between the tackles stuffed but good blocks from Joel Hongiford and Ryan Hayes sealed the left edge. Blake Corum bounced and galloped into the end zone. 34-19 Michigan and the game was more or less on ice. 

Maryland, to their credit, didn't quit until the bitter end. With backup QB Billy Edwards back in the game, perhaps to preserve Tagovailoa's health, they converted two 4th & longs and a 3rd & 21 on a scramble by Edwards. Kalel Mullings got lost in coverage and Maryland scored a touchdown with 45 seconds remaining in the contest. They'd also pick up the two point coverage on a screen to Jeshaun Jones, narrowing the score to 34-27. Unfortunately, they had exhausted all their timeouts and after Colston Loveland recovered the onside kick, two kneel downs ran out the clock for a Michigan victory. 

[AFTER THE JUMP: A quick statistical summary]

[Bryan Fuller]

In the end, Michigan outgained Maryland 463 to 397, though there are some score effects adjustments necessary. Maryland's final drive, a 75 yarder, took place as Michigan was looking to run the clock down and not give up the big play. Three turnovers for the Terps to one for the Wolverines looms large, but so does Michigan's missed field goal, McCarthy's failure to hit an open deep shot until late in the game, and the penalty on Harrell early on. Both teams made pivotal mistakes (to Maryland's credit, they limited the penalties), but the better team ended up coming away with a victory, even if it was tighter than expected. 

Blake Corum was the headliner on offense: 30 carries for 242 yards and 2 TDs is a special day. The offensive line did a solid job to open holes, but Corum found the extra yards as well. JJ McCarthy was decent, 18-26 for 220 yards (12.2 YPA) with 2 TD and 0 INT, but it still felt like an effort that left a lot to be desired. He was jumpy in the pocket and a bit gun shy to pick his spots in the zone. If he hits a couple more deep shots, the entire complexion of the game feels different. That said, if this performance is close to McCarthy's floor as a QB, that is not a bad thing for the Wolverines offense. 

Ronnie Bell and Luke Schoonmaker tied for the team lead in receiving yards with 72, though Schoonmaker did his on a team-high seven catches. Max Bredeson also appeared for two catches, while Cornelius Johnson (3), Roman Wilson (2), and Andrel Anthony (1) all chipped in too. 

[Bryan Fuller]

On defense, Michigan was up-and-down. Rush defense was suboptimal, with Maryland rushing for 4.6 sack-adjusted yards per carry, though the run is built off the pass in an offense such as Maryland's. Organic pressure via four man rushes was seldom seen, but I thought coverage as a whole was pretty solid. Maryland has an exceptionally talented WR room and Michigan didn't get burned over the top for a big play TD, and that's what you want against an opponent with Dontay Demus and Rakim Jarrett.

Maryland did a lot of its work in the intermediate and screen game and to credit Mike Locksley's crew, they drew up a lot of crafty and tricky stuff to keep the Michigan defense off-guard. It remains to be seen how the year plays out, but if Maryland doesn't shoot themselves in the foot and stays on schedule, they may well have the best non-OSU offense on Michigan's schedule. Today, they did pretty well to limit the errors (besides the turnovers) and gave Michigan's defense a hell of a fight at times. 

The Maize & Blue now must switch gears entirely to prepare for Iowa, moving from a team with a potentially scary offense to a team with a morbid offense and a terrifying defense in the Hawkeyes. It will also be the first road game of the season and a test for the young starter in McCarthy. Thankfully for the Michigan faithful, the game is at noon EST and not in the evening. It is slated to be broadcast on FOX. 

Comments

WCHBlog

September 24th, 2022 at 9:18 PM ^

If we want to start playing the 'What If' game, Michigan ended up +2 in turnover margin because they recovered two JJ fumbles, Maryland barely went out of bounds on apotential pick, and Michigan had two interceptions that probably would have been overturned if they had reviewed them.

Luck was definitely on their side today, but a win is a win. 

LeCheezus

September 25th, 2022 at 9:12 AM ^

The returning Groza winner missed a 43 yarder.  We fumbled just outside the red zone.  We stopped a drive that continued because of a truly accidental and unfortunate face mask penalty.  A team that committed 15 penalties last week committed zero live ball penalties this week.  I really think the luck was pretty well balanced in this game.
 

Look around CFB this weekend at the scoreboards everyone, winning is hard.  In conference play, the difference between a comfortable 20+ point win and a 7 point nail biter often comes down to a couple plays.

RAH

September 25th, 2022 at 10:16 PM ^

The Wolverines weren't playing very well but the 3 very uncharacteristic UM mistakes in the first half (face mask, missed field goal, fumble) were the big problem. Without them the whole flow of the game would have changed. Instead of 13-10 it would probably have been at least 20-10 and there's a chance Michigan would have had even more and Maryland fewer. Again, a whole different game.

Papabearblue2

September 25th, 2022 at 1:32 AM ^

I watched this game late. My youtube library recording of the game was playing like crap so after the terps took the lead I decided to just check the score. I got to watch it without my asshole all puckered up.

1) The offense was vanilla as shit and JJ missed his deep shots. That's mostly it. JJ was clearly told not to run, there was multiple comments about him not keeping on a zone read when he was supposed to. Offense spent a lot of the game just smashing corum into the line, it worked, it didn't look the same as haskins doing it, but it worked.

Late in the 2nd qtr JJ ran it a few times and when M took the lead he basically stopped again. I'd be really surprised if he misses that many deep shots again.

2) The defense did NOT look bad. TT hit a few really nasty fast passes and had a few clean pockets. TT also spent a lot of the game scrambling and got lucky shaking a few tackles, kid is good. Terps had 13 points in the 4th qrtr, and scored 20 non-garbage points, M held them to their lowest output of the year.

Mostly, this probably sounded worse than it looked because the refs spent all night talking about how michigans D was garbage, M Spent a whole quarter completely shutting down MD and at one point completely ground them to a halt with a sack some run stuffs and a few hurries and the announcers were still shitting on M's D as a whole. "they can't stop the run, pass rush isn't getting home". "Mother fucker, they have 13 points in the 4th quarter, wtf do you want?

3) My take: The team was a little cocky and got a little surprised when they got punched in the mouth, going up 7-0 8 seconds into the game probably didn't help. This game was called as close to the vest as possible as it seems we'll only see JJ run when it's needed as long as cade is hurt, AND had JJ hit any of those deep shots the final score is a lot closer to 50 and I don't think the terps break 20. Many of you let the announcers get to you.

Also, I honestly think MD has a real solid shot on sparty and if they stay healthy they have a real chance of finishing in the 8-4/10-2 range.

duffman is thr…

September 25th, 2022 at 8:38 PM ^

I agree on Maryland over State, and 8+ wins for them. I don’t think they’re a great team or anything but I do feel like they are a little better than normal. Like…maybe they will be competent at least outside of September. They seemed tougher than other years. I could look myself but I’m not going to…do they have an unusual amount of experience this year? Curious with covid still having an impact on rosters 

Snazzy_McDazzy

September 24th, 2022 at 4:52 PM ^

JJ McCarthy's inability to find anyone open for what seemed like 10 seconds on some plays was truly shocking. Everything else was fine, including some missed deep shots. You would assume our players will tighten things up and fine tune as the season rolls along. But either McCarthy couldn't handle the pressure of the moment, couldn't read the field to save his life, or our talented receivers couldn't get open against an average-at-best Maryland defense because the play calling was atrocious. Hard to tell without the all-22 tape.

Durham Blue

September 24th, 2022 at 9:56 PM ^

On more than a handful of passing downs, JJ held the ball in an incredibly clean pocket for multiple seconds longer than he should have.  There were running lanes that he did not take.  Missed yards that would've extended drives and impacted the butt clenching outcome.  JJ was far too much in his own head today.  He'll figure it out quickly.  Good players always do.

BrightonB

September 24th, 2022 at 10:52 PM ^

I agree and this really was his first true full start where he was the man the entire game (in a game where the team was competitive) and I think it's possible he felt a bit more pressure this time is my only guess because he miss a lot of long balls that normally I would have felt he dropped in there.  Overall I think he did well for his first full game start.  He also needs to just throw it away (which I think he will learn) or take off when nothing is there instead of making something happen. This was a big learning game for him I truly believe and he will calm down as I know the kid has big time confidence in himself and should calm down the more he plays. 

Blake Forum

September 24th, 2022 at 4:59 PM ^

Thanks for this, as always, Alex.

I'd say the defense acquitted themselves pretty well. This might be the second-best offense we face. Taulia's agility and awareness let him narrowly dodge a few sacks that most QBs we play are going to take. The secondary was lights out against a great group of receivers, and it looks like we might finally have DBs that force turnovers at a high rate, a first under Harbaugh. Linebackers have some stuff to work on but hopefully we get NHG back soon. 27 points is more than you'd like to see, but I expected Maryland's undoubtedly good offense to put up ~21 on the assumption our offense would control the ball a lot more than they did, so it's close to expectations.

The offense had some high-impact individual execution errors, such as the fumbles and JJ not hitting wide-open shots downfield. Our receivers were regularly toasting Maryland's DBs to a nicely browned crisp, which is great but only matters if the ball gets there. OL was solid and El-Hadi in particular impressed me given that he's a redshirt freshman.

I continue to have some philosophical differences with Harbaugh. Particularly when it comes to limiting snaps and calling plays conservatively and playing for field position and "trusting the defense" (i.e., asking more of them than you reasonably can in the era of explosive offenses) when you get into a tough game against an opponent you believe to be inferior. If you do that and it's a close score, you're only one high-leverage mistake in any phase of the game away from catastrophe. This is one thing I think Harbaugh and other old-school coaches are simply wrong about, but I'm used to it by now. We saw the exact same thing last year against Rutgers.

All in all, a shaky but not catastrophic performance, early in the season, against a team that absolutely has a pulse and might win 8 or so games. I'd like to see better, but I'll take the W for now. 

Goggles Paisano

September 25th, 2022 at 8:42 AM ^

Those two 50+ yd FG's by Maryland and their lack of penalties really kept them in this game.  They were one of the most penalized teams in the first few weeks of the season and didn't get their first penalty until late in the 4th quarter (a false start I believe).   

With what has been going on in CFB this first month, a win is a win.  Take it, clean up some things, and move on.   

Joby

September 25th, 2022 at 9:05 AM ^

Thanks for pointing that out. That was one of my minor critiques of Alex’s otherwise-solid game recap. The others were:

 

1) The description of Mike Sainristil’s plays in the article belied how awesome he was yesterday. He had an interception, a sack, contained Rakim Jarrett, and had another interception on the 2-point conversion that won’t count in the stats. And on the “shoulda-been” INT, the receiver had to play D and helped break up the pass.
 

2) The lede was buried a bit regarding Blake Corum’s incredible day. Michigan would not have won without him on a day where he actually lowered his season YPC.
 

These recaps aren’t easy to write and publish within a couple of hours of the game. I’m super appreciative of the free, in-depth content here and the discussion it fosters.

njvictor

September 24th, 2022 at 4:59 PM ^

I'm expecting a lot of overreactions to this game, but there is a few things to keep in mind:

  • Keegan, All, Edwards, and Barnhart were all injured
  • First real test for our DC and OCs. Adjustments will be made
  • Maryland is an improved team from last year

We needed a little knock in the mouth to figure out our issues. JJ's issues today seemed very fixable and our defense seemed to come into it's own in the 2nd half. We will make changes and Iowa will be another good test for us

Go Blue!

aiglick

September 24th, 2022 at 5:00 PM ^

Yeah thank goodness next week is not a night game. Overall I think this was a decent showing in the first real game. Will have to play more mistake free to beat PSU and OSU and hopefully beyond but Maryland has to be credited with playing a heck of a game.

CompleteLunacy

September 24th, 2022 at 5:01 PM ^

This game is a consequence of the schedule.

Maryland looks to be much better than anyone thought…especially on defense, although you can also see how potent and dangerous their offense was. This game might have been more comfortable had Michigan faced at least SOME level of resistance in any of the first 3. It felt like a true week 1 game filled with sloppy play and mistakes. JJ was actually challenged by the defense, and made some first time starter bad decisions.. 
 

But, they got through it with a win, and have a lot they can learn from this week. Today was growing pains. The team should improve as the season goes along.