[Patrick Barron]

Michigan 52, Minnesota 10 Comment Count

Alex.Drain October 8th, 2023 at 12:08 AM

Michigan will keep control of the Little Brown Jug for another season with yet another beatdown of an overmatched opponent. Tonight it was the Minnesota Golden Gophers in Minneapolis, who were thoroughly destroyed by the mighty Wolverines. A few stats to showcase that crushing: Minnesota passed for 52 yards, while Michigan scored 52 points. Michigan's defense outscored Minnesota's offense. Michigan scored seven touchdowns, Athan Kaliakmanis completed five passes total. Michigan gained 7.7 yards per play, Minnesota gained 3.0. Yowza. 

Minnesota got the football first and on the second play from scrimmage, Kaliakmanis misread the coverage and sailed the throw intended for Daniel Jackson, intercepted by Will Johnson and returned down the sideline for a touchdown. Minnesota's second attempt at offense was nullified by a pre-snap penalty that set the Gophers behind the sticks, a drive ending on a 3rd & 3 incompletion from Kaliakmanis. Michigan took the football and started running the ball, picking up a 4th & 1 with a pretty play-action pass to Kalel Mullings. McCarthy passes to Cornelius Johnson and AJ Barner got Michigan into the red zone, but Johnson dropped an easy ball that would've converted a 3rd down and possibly a TD. Michigan kicked a field goal and led 10-0. 

Minnesota's next drive was one of their two good ones, utilizing pre-snap motion to toy with Michigan's linebackers while their offensive line got good push up front against Michigan's second-team defensive tackles. The Gophers picked up a 3rd & 2 once they got into Michigan territory, but the drive was turned upside down on one of multiple series-wrecking plays that Mason Graham would make on the evening, a -4 TFL where he exploded into the backfield. Michigan forced the Gophers to kick from 54 yards away and kicker Dragan Kesich drilled it through, 10-3. 

[Patrick Barron]

Michigan took the ball and drove just inside Minnesota territory, but opted to punt on 4th & 3 after JJ McCarthy's scramble came up just short of the sticks. Tommy Doman punted the ball inside the 15 and after a holding call on 1st down, the Gophers were backed up near their own goal line. As usual, Minnesota and its anemic passing offense was unable to dig out of that hole and Michigan's third drive started promptly. Blake Corum broke down the sideline for ___ yards and two plays later, a Roman Wilson reverse got Michigan inside the ten. It took three plays, all of which seemed like they earned a touchdown, to earn the approval of the referees, but Corum was eventually credited with a one-yard TD run. 17-3. 

The Gophers went three-and-out on their ensuing drive, ending in a Josaiah Stewart sack of Kaliakmanis, and Michigan was right back on offense. Donovan Edwards made his mark with a nice catch-and-run and then JJ McCarthy connected with Cornelius Johnson deep down field for a gain of 49 yards. On 1st & goal from the five, McCarthy pulled the ball and ran it in for a TD, narrowly inside the pylon. 24-3. 

That touchdown was scored with 5:50 to go in the second quarter and the next Minnesota drive would eat the remainder of that drive. For much of it, Minnesota was playing like Army, gaining 3 yards a time on the ground, seemingly with the sole goal of ending the first half. They picked up two 4th & shorts and spiked the ball at Michigan's 35 with just 15 seconds left in the half. Some thought that Fleck was planning to line up for a field goal, and he probably was. Their one deep shot to the end zone caught Michigan in man coverage and WR Daniel Jackson with a step on Mike Sainristil. The ball needed to be perfect and it was, a dime from Kaliakmanis to Jackson in the end zone and Minnesota closed the half down 24-10. 

[Patrick Barron]

Minnesota built on their momentum out of the locker room, forcing a three-and-out that concluded with a Donovan Edwards drop, but couldn't keep the offense's half of the deal. Their second down pass was bated down and Kaliakmanis' attempt to so scramble on third down was stopped short by Derrick Moore. Michigan took the football back and quickly restored the three score lead. McCarthy rekindled his connection with Roman Wilson on back-to-back passes to get Michigan deep in Minnesota territory before Kalel Mullings showed some legit sizzle with a nice cut to pick up a 3rd down. McCarthy paid it off with his legs again, another pull and scamper into the end zone. 31-10. 

Minnesota's offense was nonexistent for the remainder of the second half after this point. They went three-and-out again on their next drive after another holding call set Minnesota back and Graham sacked Kaliakmanis to end the series. Their drive after that ended when Keon Sabb intercepted Kaliakmanis and ran in for Michigan's second pick six of the game. And the drive after that one was another three-and-out. As was the next drive after that. Woeful. 

In between, Michigan's first team offense scored a TD on their final series, running it with Kalel Mullings right down the throat of the Gophers and ending in a Colston Loveland TD catch. That made it 38-10, a margin bumped up to 45-10 with the Sabb pick six. By the time Michigan got the football next, Jack Tuttle and the second-team offense was in, but they notched a TD of their own. Tuttle looked solid in this appearance, slippery on a 17 yard scramble to convert a 3rd down of exactly that distance. Leon Franklin trudged into the end zone from three yards out and Michigan now led 52-10. At this point there was 9:21 left in the game and both teams were content to run the clock out. Michigan's final drive saw Jayden Denegal take over at QB but found no traction, while Minnesota's kept the clock moving until there was 0:00 on the clock.

[Patrick Barron] 

Just as last week, this was a total domination. Michigan was vastly better, outgaining Minnesota 432 to 169. JJ McCarthy was 14/20 for 219 yards (11.0 Y/A), 1 TD. Kaliakmanis was 5/16 for 52 yards (3.3 Y/A), 1 TD to 2 INT. Minnesota had a little traction on the ground early, but still ended up finishing at just 3.0 YPC. Michigan, on the contrary, gained 5.8 YPC on the ground. Defensively, Michigan recorded two takeaways, two sacks, and seven tackles for loss. Michigan outscored Minnesota 24-10 in the first half and 28-0 in the second half. This game was not remotely competitive and I'm running out of ways to phrase that. 

Michigan is now 6-0 on the season and bowl eligible. They've been bowl eligible in every full season under Jim Harbaugh, with 2020's COVID-shortened (fake) season as the lone exception. Their 6-0 record has now been achieved four times in the Harbaugh era, each of the last three seasons + 2016. Next week's contest should be even easier against Indiana, a woeful squad who has struggled mightily this season. That game is in Ann Arbor and is scheduled for noon EST, broadcast on FOX. 

[Click the JUMP for the box score]

Comments

Buy Bushwood

October 8th, 2023 at 10:24 AM ^

Is holding Minny to 52 yards passing and scoring 52 points a passing Rutger?   Does a tie count as a Rutger?  It should, since their passing had 2 pick-sixes meaning that all passing yards were erased by UM taking two passes the other way.  In fact, that should count against a QB's passing yards.  

AlbanyBlue

October 8th, 2023 at 12:04 PM ^

This is an excellent point. Also, as I recall, there was some sort of issue with Jim's moods / speculation about meds, etc. during some of the pre-2020 times. Also, to my reckoning anyway, there were definite culture / locker room issues before 2020. Those intangible things, as well as the Don Brown stuff / OL getting up to speed stuff, were contributing factors.

I feel like the turning point was getting rid of coaches like Don Brown / that guy that never showed up in person, and bringing on Sherrone Moore, later on Clink, etc. I can't hardly believe how fantastic our coaching staff is now.....

schreibee

October 8th, 2023 at 2:53 PM ^

Your points are accurate Buy, but the question remains why it took JH so much longer to get the team fully activated in his image compared to with Stanford or the Niners? 

Obviously the horrendous officiating in Cbus 2016 was a major setback, but there were many, many unimpressive performances scattered throughout the pre-2021 tenure. 

How did this team flip a switch so dramatically between the wiscy & psu games in 2020 to the Washington game in 2021.

I can't really think of very many precedents in Michigan or any team's past, when the players & coaches were largely the same (obviously excepting Don Brown).

Whatever the reason, I'm sure glad it happened! 

McSomething

October 8th, 2023 at 11:17 AM ^

People really need to throw that season out as a massive outlier. For everyone. When assessing teams, it really should go from 2019 straight to 2021. Otherwise there's a massive blip in the middle that will skew everything. No, Michigan is not terrible all of a sudden. Neither is Penn State. No, Indiana is not a potential 9-win team. Hell, Indiana is still only at 8 wins since the start of 2021. Texas A&M is not a team that wins 90% of their games. Among many, many other examples.

None of those things are true, yet people acted as if they were between the 2020 and 2021 seasons. Take all of 2020 out of your consciousness and the last 2.5 seasons, while still surprising to some degree, weren't outside the realm of possibility after 2019.

J. Redux

October 8th, 2023 at 5:10 AM ^

Is it a Rutger if you tie a stat?  Michigan’s 52 points exactly matches Minnesota’s 52 passing yards.  Is that a half-passing Rutger?  Or maybe that’s a Rutgers, because you only take their ‘s’ if you exceed them in the stat?

These are the important questions.

Ballislife

October 8th, 2023 at 12:23 AM ^

There’s only one word that can describe a performance like that: Evisceration. All three phases looked locked in this week. Onward and upwards to the Hoosiers. 

Go Blue Beat T…

October 8th, 2023 at 12:29 AM ^

Just to be asinine, isn’t the kickoff out of bounds an illegal procedure? I think we should count that as a second penalty for a total of 25 yds. NBC missed that, too. 
 

Ohio minus marvin Harrison jr is a really average college offense with a plus defense

willirwin1778

October 8th, 2023 at 10:30 AM ^

They did acknowledge the kick out of bounds.  But then they forgot about it when we got the holding call later in the game.  They called the holding our first penalty of the game (1st since three games back), which wasn't exactly correct but made a good point nonetheless.    

It's not a big deal.  

greymarch

October 8th, 2023 at 12:35 AM ^

Damn good sign UM is playing even better on the road than at home. PSU and Maryland fans have to be nervous.

 

I think we are now seeing the correct Tier 1 teams: Georgia and Michigan. Everyone else is Tier 2 or worse.

 

#GoBlue

1VaBlue1

October 8th, 2023 at 7:58 AM ^

UMD fans aren't nervous about playing Michigan - they know what's coming.  Seriously, when the Terps are 6-3 or 7-2 when UM rolls in, you'll still be able to buy tickets on gameday to get in.  The better tailgate scene will have Maize & Blue signage.

Terps fans know who their team is, they know they'll get rolled by Michigan.

stephenrjking

October 8th, 2023 at 1:27 AM ^

So far, so good: I want to not get tired of absolutely destroying overmatched teams at least until Michigan wins a national title, if not longer. I don't want to get spoiled. I've wanted to see Michigan play this consistently well for a long, long time, and now it's here.

Winding down after the drive home. Delightful time at a Michigan game tonight with my son. We warmed up last night with highlights of previous games, including 2015 which was nerve-wracking from beginning to end. We listened to "The Victors" while I hunted for parking. We said "Go Blue" a few dozen times as we passed Michigan fans or said hi to people we've never met before at tailgates. Even ran into a lurking mgoblogger at the stadium. 

What we saw: One of the best Michigan teams of my lifetime, as far as I can tell. Hopefully the best (results in January very much relevant to this evaluation). In a year when a lot of other "top" college football teams have some serious questions to ask, our questions all get answered within a week, or sometimes in the same game. 

And there are some serious players on this team. My son just got out of a cast for a broken wrist this week, and so I pointed Mason Graham mid-game, he has a hurt hand too, he's got it wrapped, just like you.

Then Graham just started destroying people. "The guy with the bad hand like you just made the tackle!" "Look, the guy with the bad hand just got the sack!"

The defense may not have everything sorted out yet, but when you have weapons at DT like this, a lot of things can work themselves out.

I feel like there's a ton of stuff the offense just hasn't bothered to use yet. They show signs of it, but it's not like you need to fully deploy your spread packages with Donovan Edwards, because by the time you get to that page in the playbook, you're up by three scores. So they dip their feet in the water and then go to something else. 

The only real challenge offensively appears to be that there are too many weapons for any one player to make a Heisman push. Blake Corum got 9 touches, Edwards 8. JJ threw all of 20 passes (11 ypa!). 56 total plays, 52 points. There just isn't a lot of time in these games to really pump up statlines. 

Except for the W column, which grows by one each week so far. 

 

DelhiWolverine

October 8th, 2023 at 7:52 AM ^

Mason Graham was a one man wrecking crew. I was wondering how he would do with the club on one hand and it was like it wasn’t even there. My son is in the 7th grade and is playing tackle football for the first time and is a DT and LT on his CYO team. I was saying the same things to him about Mason throughout the game.