The bees are still dying at an alarming rate. [Patrick Barron]

Punt-Counterpunt: Penn State 2021 Comment Count

Seth November 13th, 2021 at 7:21 AM

PSU Links: Preview, The Podcast, FFFF Offense (chart), FFFF Defense (chart)

Something's been missing from Michigan gamedays since the free programs ceased being economically viable: scientific gameday predictions that are not at all preordained by the strictures of a column in which one writer takes a positive tack and the other a negative one… something like Punt-Counterpunt.

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PUNT

By Bryan MacKenzie
@Bry_Mac

This column varies in how easy it is to write. Nebraska was really easy, because HOLY CRAP HAVE YOU SEEN NEBRASKA. Northwestern was harder because, holy crap have you seen Northwestern. But strangely, despite what you may have expected given this matchup, I have absolutely nothing interesting to say about this game. And I struggled all week to figure out why.

Sometimes a game lacks an interesting story line because of the quality of the opponent (see: Rutgers), the nature of the opponent (see: Army) or both (see, again: Northwestern). But this doesn’t fit those categories. Penn State is a good team; they’re ranked #23 in both polls, and the the advanced statistics like them even more than that. They went the distance with Ohio State, something Michigan hasn’t done in years.

Sometimes it’s the stakes. Playing an SEC school in a national showcase game might seem important in the abstract, when Michigan played Florida in the Peach Bowl, it could scarcely have felt more unimportant. But here? This game has serious implications for the conference title race and the college football playoff.

[After THE JUMP: What to do when you’ve already blown most of your season narratives in the first half of the season and are still planning on a blowout for the finale. Also how to get around OSHA]

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Sometimes it’s because there are just too many football unknowns to get any sort of feel for the game, like first-time starter at quarterback or significant injury uncertainty. But we have nine games of evidence for both of these teams, and aside from a few unclear injury situations, they are known quantities. Sean Clifford is good but limited based on being tenderized by Iowa. Jahan Dotson is really good. Penn State’s offensive line and defensive tackles are really not. Michigan’s defensive ends are rampant. Hassan Haskins is going to hurdle fools.

So why does this game feel so much less climactic than it should?

My best guess: it doesn’t really fit with any of the narrative lines of the season, or of the Jim Harbaugh Era. It’s not a traditional rivalry game. It doesn’t directly factor into the buildup toward the season finale against Ohio State. It doesn’t fall into the usual talking points of “games Michigan should win vs. games where Michigan is an underdog,” as the line is basically a pick ‘em. And while two months ago it may have felt like a really important game for Harbaugh to keep his job, even if they lose in Happy Valley, Michigan is looking at a 9-3 season.

In short, it’s a bottle episode.

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Most of you probably know this, but a “bottle episode” is the term for an episode of a television series that is very narrow in scope and cast. It’s usually shot in one or a small number of settings, involves a small number of cast members, and involves mostly dialogue. They are cheaper to film and easier to write and produce in a short period of time. In short, it’s a self-contained operation that may or may not relate to the broader context of the season itself.

Bottle episodes can be great. Seinfeld as a whole has aged really, REALLY poorly, but the Chinese Restaurant episode was remarkably innovative for the time, and is still relatable today, even after 73 years. Bottle episodes can also suck; some people love the Fly episode of Breaking Bad, but it is the lowest rated by fans of the show, most of whom were used to, you know, action and things happening and stuff. But bottle episodes don’t drive the plot. They literally don’t take the viewer anywhere.

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The purpose bottle episodes DO serve is that they allow character development for the sake of character development. They give us a glimpse of what our heroes might do when we return to the main quest. Perhaps some dark secrets will be revealed. Perhaps a glimpse of some inner strength or a pool of steely resolve. We will know significantly more about the team by 3:30 today than we knew at noon, even if the practical differences between 9-1 and 8-2 are negligible.

No, this week, the game is important primarily because of the game itself. It should be a good football game between two good teams. It will likely be a close game. There is plenty of history between the teams, and enough story lines in the quasi-rivalry itself to keep things humming. There was the goal line stand in 1993 and Judgment Day and Touchdown Manningham and Michigan throttling Big Ten Champion Penn State in 2016 and Penn State throttling Michigan the next year and Michigan Revenge Touring Penn State the year after that.

This is a series that thrives on balance, and I think the forces of balance are calling for a Michigan win that everyone largely forgets in the grand scheme of the season.

Michigan 27, Penn State 20

 

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COUNTERPUNT

By Internet Raj
@internetraj

I once heard a story from the world of oil and gas construction about a lesson new safety engineers are taught early on in their careers:

“Always keep a bottle of Jack Daniels in your trunk.”

Why? Because inevitably, someone on the construction site will suffer an injury while on the job. And since oil and gas construction sites are often in the middle of nowhere, it’s up to the safety personnel to drive the injured worker to the nearest hospital. While en route to the hospital, the safety engineer is instructed to casually comment on how long the commute will be, pause, and then nonchalantly offer “hey, if you’re in a bit of pain you can take a swig of this Jack, it’s all I got.” The injured worker will almost always accept this offer. At the hospital, the doctors will run blood work, detect the alcohol, and voila – the company is no longer required to report an accident. Instead, the “accident” has been magically transformed into “operating under the influence”, which is great news for the company. The “It’s been X days since the last accident” sign will not have to be updated, the company’s safety statistics will be boosted, and the company’s next contract will no longer be in jeopardy.

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There’s a very remote, but non-negligible, chance Michigan and MSU meet again in the Playoff, in which case, give me 47 of these.

This is an instructive (and particularly nefarious) example of how narratives can be massaged and gamed, something that is far from confined to the world of oil and gas construction. We saw it play out last week in the sports world, when the College Football Playoff Committee ranked Michigan ahead of Michigan State a mere two weeks after the Spartans beat the Wolverines on the field. Committee Chairman Gary Barta came on the television screen, offered the nation some Maize-fermented Jack Daniels, mumbled something about “Michigan being the more complete team” and, voila, just like that, Michigan became the better team.

Another much more long-standing narrative—one that has been pushed, pulled, rolled and kneaded by all sides—is that of Jim Harbaugh and the Big Game.

It’s often joked that every game is the biggest game of the Jim Harbaugh Era, unless he wins it. Harbaugh supporters often underscore that Michigan is one missed fourth down spot and a defensive scheme capable of handling crossing routes away from two Big Ten championships and Playoff appearances. Harbaugh’s detractors, meanwhile, point vigorously at his record against rivals and his futility against ranked opponents on the road. The truth, as usual, probably falls in the middle, but that of course is no fun.

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Inconvenient counterpoint: this is the third time in seven tries that Harbaugh has Michigan squarely in Playoff contention in mid-November

There’s a lot of Narrative™ swirling around today’s Penn State game. A loss is yet another bullet in the chamber for Harbaugh’s detractors, yet another stumble against a marquee road opponent. A win, meanwhile, keeps Michigan’s conference title and Playoff aspirations intact, and would likely set the table for a winner-take-all showdown against the Buckeyes. It will also most likely push #23 Penn State out of the rankings, thus rendering it, like their 38-17 victory at Wisconsin earlier this season, “Not a big game.”

I want to believe that this team is different, will snap our two-game losing streak against Penn State and take care of business in Happy Valley. Unfortunately, we’ve been down this road too many times before. Harbaugh supporters—and I count myself within this group—better have some Jack Daniels ready because the “It’s been X days since the last time Jim Harbaugh lost a big game” sign is on the verge of being updated.

Michigan 20, Penn State 21

Comments

Blue Vet

November 13th, 2021 at 7:43 AM ^

Even if uninspired, you continue to inspire.

Mac: Wonderful explanation of "bottle episode" and its application here.

Raj: Wonderful Jack Daniels insight, and a reminder that we don't always know jack.

Both: a reminder how much sports are ruled by narratives, that is, stories about sports.

EDIT: And football, with fewer games, is more prone to narratives.

GoBlue1969

November 13th, 2021 at 8:19 AM ^

One 4th down spot and numerous missed holding calls against the buckeyes from 2016 B1G championship. Numerous failures by the defense on slants AND RB wheel routes in 2018. 
 

what will be the failure this year. 
 

Go Blue- beat the Frames Janklin Lions. Give us some hope before The Game.

TheKoolAidGuy

November 13th, 2021 at 8:24 AM ^

Hopefully Field Goal James leaves A2 on the bus with the team and stays in Happy Valley with Frames. Make Clifford uncomfortable and execute in the red zone and I like our chances!

If not, pick something better than Jack to dump in your Kool Aid, kiddos

Quadrazu

November 13th, 2021 at 9:10 AM ^

With all the talk of bottles, it seems like we should be playing for the Little Brown Jug.  Alas, Penn State is not Minnesota.

This game is like finding an unlabeled opaque bottle in the liquor cabinet.  You're not sure exactly what it contains, it's probably good, but the only way to find out is to give it a taste.  

Here's to hoping it tastes good today, and we go three-for-three this weekend in Happy Valley.

P.S. I could have done without the image of Finebaum.  His voice grates like a broken glass bottle in my ears.

Blue@LSU

November 13th, 2021 at 9:18 AM ^

Seinfeld as a whole has aged really, REALLY poorly

Love your writing Bryan, but I have to disagree here. Seinfeld is still great and I'll fight anyone who says otherwise! 

IDKaGoodName

November 13th, 2021 at 9:36 AM ^

Finebaum easily has the most punchable head in all of the heads in the world. And I do want to point out, I realize the classic phrasing is that someone has a punchable face, but in this case it's important to point out I mean, literally, his head. It's not just his stupid face. It's the shape of his head, his ears that are trying to pry themselves away from his dumb fucking face, his classic horse-shoe-George-Castanza hair style that he can't pull off, and the way his glasses and pursed lips make him look like a pissed off blue hair at Sunday church in the 1940s, judging the loud kids and cursing their souls for interrupting her sabbath and prayers

Catchafire

November 13th, 2021 at 9:46 AM ^

I want us to win, but we haven't found that 5th gear under Harbaugh just yet.  That college football killer instinct that never loses to MSU, that never gets blown out by PSU or OSU just isn't there.

When was the last time we exploited a teams weakness and successfully pressured ours against an opponent with a pulse?

Love the team.  Go Blue.

snarling wolverine

November 13th, 2021 at 11:38 AM ^

I don’t know.  Under Harbaugh we periodically blow the doors completely off some good teams:

2016 PSU

2018 Wisconsin

2018 PSU

2019 ND

2019 MSU

2021 Wisconsin

IMO that’s more of an example of killer instinct: finishing a team off when it’s on the ropes.

Our problem has been more about winning the games that are true 50-50 coin flips.  I’m not sure if “killer instinct” is the way to describe that.  Clock/game management, maybe.  But we’ve also just had some weird shit happen.

bluewave720

November 13th, 2021 at 9:51 AM ^

P/CP is such an oasis. It’s a small, protected part of the internet where “the moral arc of college football is toward derangement” is French-pressed through a filter of intellect, wit and insight. 
I love these posts. I love the comments. 
As always gentlemen, cheers to providing such a wonderful addition to Saturday mornings in the fall. 

brad

November 13th, 2021 at 10:05 AM ^

Love you both!  Great metaphors as always.

But having had a cup of coffee in the roughneck world, I can think of one other reason a guy will drive around with a bottle of Jack in his glovebox.

BlueHills

November 13th, 2021 at 10:17 AM ^

Reading Punt/Counterpunt is significantly more enjoyable than watching the actual games.

I should just stop doing anything related to watching Michigan football on Saturdays once I've read Punt/Counterpunt, and walk around with the smile you gentlemen put on my face for the rest of the day.

Harbaugh4TheWin

November 13th, 2021 at 10:46 AM ^

Loved the content, gentlemen.   MGoBlog never fails to educate and entertain.  I was never aware that a "bottle episode" was even a thing.  Now I am.  Thank you, Brian.  And thank you Raj.  You pulled me into a heartwarming story of an industry showing compassion and responsibility towards an injured and suffering employee, just before twisting the plot and revealing the true motive: protecting the bottom line.  Now with that cold splash of water to the face, I am hoping for more of a Hollywood ending to today's football story.  One where the wounded BLUE-collar star of the show battles the hostile work environment, struggles through the strife and refuses to fall victim to the trick play.  In the final scene, the good guy overcomes his injuries and overwhelmingly wins the case, and receives his fair settlement in the court of college football justice.  The jury's decision:  Michigan 27- PSU 10.  GO BLUE!!!         

LabattsBleu

November 13th, 2021 at 10:58 AM ^

Good stuff guys. Always enjoy your thoughts game day mornings

even if the practical differences between 9-1 and 8-2 are negligible.

I would disagree with Bryan on this - the "practical" differences is actually massive, as one still provides the roadmap to actually winning the B1G East finally, and the other does not.  I'm going to quote Herman Edwards here: "You are what your record says you are." 

A loss to PSU on the road isn't a indictment of the "functional" quality of the team, however, results matter and in this case are very important - that is, If winning the B1G is actually the goal.

gbdub

November 13th, 2021 at 11:55 AM ^

I was gonna say - the practical differences are probably bigger than the narrative implications. Practically, a win keeps the title hopes alive (they still have to beat OSU, but that was always the case). 

“No practical difference” treats a loss to OSU as a fait accompli and I’m still not quite that far gone. 

txgobluegirl

November 13th, 2021 at 11:03 AM ^

I would be astonished if Paul Finebaum ever created an opinion of his own, instead of gratingly parroting the easy commentary of the day. He’s a bow tie-wearing talking head. 
 

 

MadMatt

November 13th, 2021 at 11:13 AM ^

I close my eyes

Only for a moment, and the moment's gone

All my dreams

Pass before my eyes, a curiosity

Dust in the wind

All they are is dust in the wind

Same old song

Just a drop of water in an endless sea

All we do

Crumbles to the ground, though we refuse to see

Dust in the wind

All we are is dust in the wind

Oh

Now, don't hang on

Nothin' lasts forever but the earth and sky

It slips away

And all your money won't another minute buy

Dust in the wind

All we are is dust in the wind

(All we are is dust in the wind)

Dust in the wind

(Everything is dust in the wind)

Everything is dust in the wind

The wind

 

Penn State 35 Michigan 15.

AlbanyBlue

November 13th, 2021 at 11:37 AM ^

I have to disagree a bit on this one. This game absolutely factors into the buildup for the OSU game. If we assume that MSU will lose a game, then winning here and @MD sets up a showdown for the East division title. The stakes are pretty high in that sense.

The Jack Daniels thing is very scary, but it doesn't surprise me that a workplace would do this.

Nice job, gentlemen. Beat Penn State.