Michigan 59, Central Michigan 9 Comment Count

Ace



Eric Upchurch/MGoBlog

The feeling was boredom, interspersed with brief moments of Norfleet-related anticipation that ended an ankle-tackle away from being actual excitement.

Boredom, in this case, was a great feeling—a pleasant return to normalcy for Michigan. A home opener against a directional Michigan school, a 50-point lead heading into the third quarter, a fourth quarter spent looking up numbers of various freshmen and walk-ons while fretting about burned redshirts; this is how it's supposed to go, fergodsakes.

The Wolverines got on the board before the Big House crowd even got a chance to see the much-anticipated new offense, as freshman defensive back Dymonte Thomas screamed off the edge to block a Central Michigan punt on the opening drive of the game; senior receiver Joe Reynolds scooped up the loose ball and took it 30 yards to give Michigan a 7-0 lead.

A muffed punt by Dennis Norfleet, recovered by Delano Hill at Michigan's seven-yard line, led to an inauspicious start for Devin Gardner; after his first pass of the season was dropped by Devin Funchess, he telegraphed a quick out to Drew Dileo, and CMU's Jarret Chapman jumped the route for an easy interception.

Michigan's defense held strong, though, forcing the Chippewas to settle for a field goal. Gardner was in fine form on the subsequent drive, picking up a first down with his legs, then buying time for Drew Dileo to find a wide open hole in the Central defense on a 3rd-and-4 for a 36-yard catch-and-run. On the very next play, Gardner stood tall in the pocket, couldn't find an open receiver, and waltzed untouched into the end zone for a 22-yard score (right, Upchurch).

From there, the Wolverines didn't look back. A 38-yard run on a Dennis Norfleet reverse set up a one-yard touchdown run for Fitz Toussaint, who looked back to his old self—aside from missing a couple open cutback lanes—in rushing for 57 yards on 14 carries. After another Gardner hiccup—an overthrow to Gallon that resulted in his second interception—led to a second Jason Wilson field goal, cutting the lead to 21-6, the redshirt junior quarterback roared back with an 11-play, 76-yard drive capped by a 16-yard touchdown pass to his favorite target, Jeremy Gallon. After Raymon Taylor jumped an Alex Niznak throw to the perimeter, nearly taking the interception back for a touchdown, Gardner finished the first half with a four-yard scoring run, again making his trip to the end zone look downright easy. Despite the pair of turnovers—and a punt block for a touchdown that didn't count towards the yardage numbers—Michigan held a 243-139 edge in total offense and a 35-6 halftime lead.

The onslaught didn't stop there. Michigan's opening drive of the second half featured a 45-yard play-action pass from Gardner to Reynolds; two plays later, Toussaint tallied his second score of the day from two yards out. After another quick defensive stop, freshman running backs Derrick Green and De'Veon Smith combined to run on each of Michigan's ten plays, including a 30-yard Green scamper on a zone stretch and the five-star's first career touchdown on a goal-line scrum.

Sacks by Brennen Beyer and Mario Ojemudia forced another three-and-out, and from there the backups took over. Freshman quarterback Shane Morris quarterbacked the next drive, completing a 36-yard pass to Devin Funchess before Thomas Rawls rumbled into the end zone from five yards out, giving the Wolverines a 56-6 lead as the third quarter expired.

The rest, as they say, was academic. The fourth-quarter monotony was broken briefly by a 36-yard punt return by Norfleet, who was one man away from scoring; a Morris interception on a tipped pass; and a forced fumble by freshman cornerback Channing Stribling just two plays later, recovered by Delonte Hollowell. That third play led to a 30-yard Gibbons field goal—his 14th consecutive make, tying a school record held by Remy Hamilton*—that gave the game its final margin: 59-9, Michigan.



Funchess sporting his new Ron Kramer Legacy jersey (Bryan Fuller/MGoBlog)

Aside from the two picks, Gardner looked like the superstar he's expected to be in his first year as the full-time starter, averaging 10.8 yards per attempt and rushing for 52 yards on seven carries; CMU couldn't keep him in the pocket and couldn't stop him when he escaped, including one play in which Gardner comically olé'd an awaiting defender hoping to hit him on the sideline.

His ESP-level connection with Gallon showed, as well; Gallon caught four passes for 47 yards and had a second touchdown catch wiped out when Taylor Lewan wandered downfield illegally rode his donkey too far even from the generous blocking zone they give linemen on play-action these days. Funchess and Reynolds both impressed, as well, and while each left the game due to injury, those dings appeared minor. Brady Hoke said after the game that Funchess left the game due to a cramp (an unfortunately-placed one, given the rather sensitive area he clutched after his long catch), while there was no report on the status of Reynolds.

Defensively, Beyer was a consistent presence in the backfield as a lineman in Greg Mattison's nickel package, tallying a sack and another TFL. Cam Gordon, playing in place of the injured Jake Ryan, looked fantastic in tallying a pair of sacks among his 2.5 TFLs, lining up at both strongline linebacker and defensive end and playing both well. Desmond Morgan took to his new position as the MIKE with aplomb, leading the team with seven tackles despite heavy rotation in the front seven. While the much-balleyhooed Frank Clark recorded a lone QB hurry, his backup, Mario Ojemudia, came up with a sack and looked like a very solid option at weakside DE.

Of the true freshmen to see their first action—and there were many—it was Stribling who impressed the most; he was Michigan's field corner when they went into the nickel package, and while he gave up a couple catches, he showed off his playmaking ability by stripping CMU's Andrew Flory after one of those receptions. Linebacker Ben Gedeon also played well in his first career action, tallying four tackles; "The Freak" didn't look out of place at weakside linebacker.

The only major points of concern were Gardner's two picks—hopefully those can be chalked up to opening-game rust, as he otherwise looked like a Heisman candidate—and the play of the safeties. Jarrod Wilson and Josh Furman blew a couple assignments, though there's a good chance that neither is starting by mid-September—strong safety Thomas Gordon sat out the game for a "violation of team rules" and Courtney Avery could factor in at free safety when he recovers from knee surgery, hopefully in time for next week's game but more likely for Akron. The offensive line had its moments, good and bad; Al Borges called for a lot of zone running plays instead of asking for his two new guards, Kyle Kalis and Graham Glasgow, to pull; Kalis played a very solid game, featuring a bone-crushing body-slam on Gardner's first touchdown run, while Glasgow and center Jack Miller had their ups and downs.

Michigan's fans trickled out of the stadium throughout the fourth quarter, content that their team took care of a MAC opponent like Wolverines should: devouring them alive. There was little reason to stay, more competitive football games to watch, and celebratory beers to drink. Cheers to a new season, a 1-0 record, and zero heart attacks.

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*If you've just woken up from a three-year slumber, this is somehow not a joke.

Comments

Rocking Chair

September 1st, 2013 at 8:53 AM ^

Apologies if this has already been noted, but I just read that CMU's big tailback (and best offensive player) broke his ankle on the 3rd down play after Gardner's early interception at the 6 and their starting QB broke his collarbone shortly thereafter in the 1st Q. 

Big price to pay for a big paycheck.

 

 

Danwillhor

September 1st, 2013 at 10:29 AM ^

Gardner picks are nothing to worry about. First was in the scripted play set and he made the mistake of starting down the WR on an out route. Stupid mistake he won't make again soon. The second was getting hit as he threw. Gallon was actually open as the route was a combo deep under (a throw not meant to lead the WR, a Packers staple) and to the inside as there was no safety help. Great play call and Gallon was in position but the hit on the throw pushed the ball high and to the sideline. You could tell because Gallon wasn't expecting the ball to be where it was. Fitz ran well and Drake looked like the typical speed back on his one run that he bounced and went untouched for about 9 yards. I will say that I am now officially on the "Green needs to get down to 225-230 lbs until the OL is more consistent" crowd. Sugar coat it all we want but, as I rooted in a board thread about his weight worry a couple weeks ago, Green was already a guy that takes getting to the 2nd level to get going and is not effective I'd touched before then. He does absolutely, at this stage in his career (lol), go down easier than a boxer in a rigged fight if there is no good and he has to get what he can. We NEED this OL to be more consistent on pulling and power runs. Not pitting them but Smith is what was advertised and also needs the same OL consistency. Love how Smith requires multiple defenders to bring down on even a 1 yard run. His legs just don't stop churning. Green has a short, choppy running style. Give both the OL we could become later this year and will come possibly as soon as next year and both are terrors so we need to let true freshman be that. The OL is what I stated above in the run game and slightly more (often much more) consistent in pass protection (especially on the left side lol). The defense played fast and physical but I was a bit concerned of the inconsistent ability to get pressure with the front 4. Sometimes a poor CMU OL would have multiple UM DL on the ground or completely out of the play within a couple seconds. Then, we'd come with 3 and get at the QB. We cannot go through another season where we have to blitz, sometimes multiple guys, to get pressure. We can't and expect to beat teams like nd and almost all of November. The LBs played very well! Down to a true freshman even. The secondary was off and on but we were missing some guys and played off WRs for the most part. They went at Countess early and often (I assume to see if he trusted his knee) and only a mistake our two were made all game after essentially missing an entire year of real football. He played well as did just about all outside of the safeties, who weren't terrible but played below average in one players case. I think the special teams units were fine and just about all true freshmen played everywhere from great to what one would expect from a good true freshman. None looked like their redshirt was a waste. Finally, we also NEED Morris to get as much real, throwing the ball on legit defense/route reading plays as possible in garbage time. I liked that he didn't just go in there to hand the ball off. Run the score up if you have to as the kid needs to be ready to play big-time ball at any time. Great win. Not much can be set in stone week one so many need to relax but we do have some concerns. We play like this next week (bad pulling by OL, bad safety play, WRs not getting separation, no pressure with front 4 more often, etc) and we could have issues. But good first game. GO BLUE!!!!!

maize-blue

September 1st, 2013 at 10:46 AM ^

I really like our freshman. I think Gedeon is indeed going to be a beast. Deveon Smith looks to be a tough son of a bitch to bring down. I like the Green/Smith battering ram duo. Even though we won easily I still believe we are pretty rough around the edges. ND will throw the ball all over and I'm a little worried about the pass rush without the blitz. At this moment I would guess if we slow their passing attack we will win.

On the positive side Gerry DiNardo called us the best team in the conference after 1 game.

zachary_carson

September 1st, 2013 at 11:27 AM ^

This penalty was outrageous. Hey guys, let's toss the yellow hankie because that OL isn't allowed to drive his assignment greater than five yards downfield. Efff that.



Also, the overall concern for me was actually the penalties. We need to limit those mistakes once we start playing the big boys.

wayneandgarth

September 1st, 2013 at 12:03 PM ^

Agree on both.  Let's make this ineligible downfield bs practical.  He beat the crap out of his guy and he isn't suppose to stop before the whistle.  Crazy rule.

 

Yep - mistakes are difference makers against quality opponents. (I know - big revelation).  The guys played very well for the 1st time out; even considering the top two offensive players for CMU were out early.  Cut down on the mental errors and we should beat the domers by 10+.  The line should be interesting - should be about 3 1/2 I'd think.

CompleteLunacy

September 1st, 2013 at 4:10 PM ^

But I don't understand the purpose of the rule. Especially since it had nothing to do with the outcome of the play. He was engaged the whole time. I guess I could understand it if he suddenly disengaged and ran a route, looking for a pass. But otherwise...I don't get it.