Michigan 59, Maryland 3 Comment Count

Ace


Whether passing or running, Wilton Speight dominated the air. [Bryan Fuller]

Dominance is the new normal, and this team knows it.

"There's no feeling like the feeling we have right now, and I'm not going to take that for granted," said De'Veon Smith, who rushed for 114 yards and three scores on only 19 carries.

"The yards he got after contact were real eye-opening. He's real tough to get down," Jim Harbaugh said, in perhaps the understatement of the season thus far.

Even with that production, Smith accounted for a mere fraction of Michigan's total output. That total: 660 yards on an even ten per play and a few more entries in the program record book. Wilton Speight broke a school record with 292 passing yards in the first half; he'd surpass his career high less than five minute into the third quarter. Speight finished with 362 yards and two touchdowns through the air and added a ten-yard scramble capped with a leap into the end zone.

"Statistically and just the eyeball, that's the best half of football I've ever seen a Michigan quarterback play," said Harbaugh. "Moving and throwing and accuracy and just extending plays, all of the above. I don't know how you play better."

"There was one throw that wasn't a great throw. Other than that it was a perfect game."

"Wilton had an unbelievable game today," said Jake Butt. "He keeps coming through for us when we need him most."

Butt made some history himself. On a five-catch, 76-yard day, he surpassed Jim Mandich as Michigan's all-time receiving leader among tight ends. Butt said it was "hard to take in" that he broke Mandich's record.

"You talk about [Ron] Kramer and Mandich, [Eric] Kattus, some tremendous tight ends have come through here. I know I'm leaving some out," said Harbaugh. "Most catches, most yards for a Michigan tight end is a great accomplishment."

Jehu Chesson, meanwhile, had a bounce-back game, hauling in five catches for 112 yards and one of the easier touchdowns he'll ever have when Maryland let him slip behind the defense. That was a bit of a theme; Michigan's first score came when Amara Darboh was all alone on a post route, and when the backups took over, Kekoa Crawford found himself similarly forsaken and caught his first career touchdown for the final score of the day.

Harbaugh was "bewildered" by the call marking Chris Evans short of the end zone. That's one word for it. [Eric Upchurch]

For the offense, there was little to complain about, save a couple calls that didn't go Michigan's way. Drake Harris had a long catch negated by a ticky-tack offensive pass interference call, and Chris Evans got marked just short of the goal line after a spectacular juggling catch and weaving run through the Terrapin defense.

"It offends my football sensibility in all ways that he didn't get a touchdown," said Harbaugh, who threw his hat several yards in the air after the call. "I think that would offend the football gods, as well."

Michigan mostly didn't need offensive contributions from Jabrill Peppers, but they got an early highlight when Peppers took a pitch, then threw it back to Speight, who launched a 40-yard bomb to Chesson. Peppers had a couple carries for 19 yards and added another TFL to ever-rising tally on defense. Asked after the game if he was trying to bolster Peppers's Heisman candidacy with "flashy" plays on offense, Harbaugh said he's simply utilizing Peppers as he should be utilized.

"It's just happening organically. It happens au naturale. He just does so much," said Harbaugh. "It doesn't have to be a forced thing. Au naturale." With a chuckle, Harbaugh added that his quarterback should perhaps be under consideration for the Heisman, too.


Whether on offense or defense, Peppers's contributions are "au naturale." [Fuller]

Despite holding Maryland to 367 yards, there were some worrisome moments for the defense. The Terps had a clear gameplan to test Michigan on the edge with outside runs and tunnel screens, and those plays found success—Mike McCray and Channing Stribling, in particular, had tough games holding trying to hold those plays down. Maryland nearly had a touchdown on a tunnel to DJ Moore at the very end of the first half, but Dymonte Thomas kept the play in front of him long enough for McCray to chase him down from behind; the clock expired with the Terps on Michigan's one-yard line.

Those deficiencies will get plenty of attention over the weeks to come, and Ohio State's coaching staff surely took note. That shouldn't totally overshadow an otherwise dominant outing from the defense, though. Maryland averaged just 2.7 yards per carry; the non-screen passing game was non-existent; the Wolverines had three sacks and ten additional TFLs. As in seemingly every other contest this year, Michigan knocked the starting quarterback out of the game, and Caleb Rowe was a clear downgrade from Perry Hills—he threw two interceptions to Delano Hill that Hill deemed "gifts" after the game.

A road night game at Iowa awaits. While that looked like a huge test entering the season, it now appears to be another golden opportunity for Michigan to make a statement to not only the conference, but the entire country. They're two more dominant outings away from having everything to play for in The Game.

Don't take it for granted.

Comments

1VaBlue1

November 5th, 2016 at 10:33 PM ^

No, not crazy at all.  But they are two different players playing two different offenses - neither would see the field as a QB in the other's offense.  I don't think they can be compared.  Which one runs thier offense better?  I dunno...  But I think Harbaugh could make better use of Barrett than Meyer could make use of Speight.

The FannMan

November 5th, 2016 at 10:46 PM ^

Dominance

I'm in my mid-40s, and have been a Michigan fan as long as I can remember. I can't recall a team this dominant. They have played 9 games, and only 1.5 of them (Wisconsin and the first half of Colorado) have been actual competitive games. The rest have been curb-stompings.

I love this team.



Sent from MGoBlog HD for iPhone & iPad

Njia

November 6th, 2016 at 8:59 AM ^

They lost at Iowa that year but held the Chuck Long-led team out of the end zone (Iowa won on 4 FGs). Michigan scored the game's only TD. Iowa went on to get curb-stomped in the Rose Bowl. Michigan went the rest of the way undefeated, beat Nebraska in the Fiesta Bowl, and finished the year ranked #2 in the country.

PapabearBlue

November 6th, 2016 at 12:00 AM ^

"Don't take it for granted"

No matter what else happens this season, this is the most fun I've had watching Michigan play football  

mgoblue98

November 6th, 2016 at 1:23 AM ^

need to watch the game again, but in addition to Stribling and McCray having tough games, I think Gedeon got burned a number of times in pass coverage.

I recall the running back beating him on what I believe was a 4th down play, but the Maryland QB inexplicably decided that it would be a really good idea to throw at Jourdan Lewis instead.  He was wrong.

treetown

November 6th, 2016 at 10:34 AM ^

Once upon a time, back in the single platoon days, the RBs were the LBs so covering each other wasn't a problem. But of course teams didn't throw much then. Now RBs as you note are typically much faster and it is the rare "3 down" linebacker who can still out there even in obvious passing downs. 

It may be more than just the rush but an isolation effort. When Maryland fipped the strength of the formation at times, Michigan would flip their LBs - so it tipped off who had what assignment. 

mgoblue98

November 6th, 2016 at 4:18 PM ^

are not always going to get beat by running backs.  In the play that I described, which is similar to the play that MSU ran with Scott in their first series (maybe I should have given more info on that), the LB needs to hit the RB and stay engaged with him to knock him off of his route or at least stay with him and hold it down.  Otherwise, yes in most cases the RB will beat the LB (unless the LB is a Peppers type guy).  The pass rush is not always going to get there. 

Farnn

November 6th, 2016 at 7:29 AM ^

This is why Michigan needs to get LBs like Browning and Gay.  They would be terrors in this defense.  The coaches put Bush in to increase athleticism at LB and those two would kick it up another notch.

war-dawg69

November 6th, 2016 at 7:44 AM ^

Gedeon is left alone on backs a lot. He needs to stuff the running back at the line of scrimmage to disrupt timing. I am no better than anyone else on here and want total domination with our defense, but really they contest everything and hardly give up any points. The tunnel screen was killing us and then in the second half it wasn't. Adjustments were made. If speight continues to play the way he is, I see no worries. We have the most complete team in college football and should win the national championship. To me it really is obvious, but will see.

autodrip4-1968

November 6th, 2016 at 8:48 AM ^

maybe, just maybe the offense is the strength of the team. The defense is still one of the best. Wilton Speight is the best qb in the Big Ten. He was spectacular in yesterday's game.

Drbogue

November 6th, 2016 at 8:58 AM ^

I like the game summaries with the player/coach quotes. I'd rather read a quality summary a few hours later than a quick read immediately following the game. Good write up



Sent from MGoBlog HD for iPhone & iPad

Nate

November 6th, 2016 at 12:29 PM ^

This is stating the obvious, but Harbaugh is an incredible QB coach. The transformation of Rudock last year and Speight this year -- taking both guys from not-going-to-see-the-field-or-really-ever-play-meaningful-football-again players to likely NFL QBs -- is remarkable, and worth literally (sorry to use it, but true) millions of dollars to those players in future earnings (I'm assuming Rudock makes the transition from the practice squad, and Speight at least sticks around on an NFL roster for a few years). If you were a high school QB why would you go anywhere else? And are there any other industries where getting taught by one person allows you to pursue a career that would otherwise be inaccessible? Getting in to a great medical school -- like, say, Michigan's -- certainly increases earnings and could get you a good position, but if you went somewhere else you could still be a doctor. Just amazing to see how these players -- most the same ones who found little success under Hoke -- are now crushing the competition each week. And also makes me sick for PoorDevinGardner...he should be in the NFL right now, not Japan.

meeeechigan78

November 6th, 2016 at 2:21 PM ^

Up voting this when I get to my laptop (on iPad now). Especially love that part about Gardner, Harbaugh could've had Gardner drafted by the 3rd round. He's truly the QB whisperer.

Even though he did wonders wth rudock, I'm still amazed at speights progression. I know he only played Maryland, but his mobility (can't believe I'm using that word with speight) impressed me. He's slower than the Brady Hoke making second half adjustments but he somehow makes people miss. Hope that's more his progression and not the level of competition. I need him to have a big game vs Iowa

Bertello NC

November 6th, 2016 at 5:19 PM ^

I wonder if deploying Bush more against teams of spread/zone read nature would be more beneficial. I thought he did a solid job in spot duty for McCray yesterday. He just seems to have more suddenness to him. Lateral speed. I know the downside might be his ability to shed blocks in certain situations but with the D line playing the way they do it seems like he'd be freed up to chase lot more sideline to sideline with his athleticism.



Sent from MGoBlog HD for iPhone & iPad