Utah 24, Michigan 17 Comment Count

Ace


Bryan Fuller/MGoBlog

A coaching change can only do so much.

Michigan flashed their potential to turn the corner. De'Veon Smith had some punishing runs. Jake Butt couldn't be covered. Amara Darboh and Jehu Chesson consistently got open. The alignment of Chris Wormley and Willie Henry looked like a stroke of genius at times. Jourdan Lewis locked down one side of the field. After an up-and-down first half, Jabrill Peppers looked like a five-star talent in the second. Blake O'Neill had that punt.

But the mistakes were numerous. Jake Rudock's first interception looked to be the fault of freshman slot receiver Grant Perry, who hitched when Rudock expected him to cut outside. The next two Rudock picks, both thrown in Perry's direction, looked to be the fault of the quarterback; the third proved especially costly when Utah's Justin Thomas jumped a throw to the flat and took it back 55 yards for a score, giving the Utes a late 24-10 lead. Rudock also missed a few open deep throws that could've changed the outcome of the game; he finished with an underwhelming 279 yards on 43 attempts and didn't tally his second touchdown until desperation time.

The errors weren't limited to Rudock. Michigan's second cornerback spot is far from settled; neither Channing Stribling nor Jeremy Clark stood out there. Joe Bolden missed a handful of tackles on slippery Utah running back Devontae Booker. The offensive line got manhandled in the run game, losing leverage and missing assignments. Smith offset many of his broken tackles by failing to hit the correct hole. Kenny Allen pushed a 44-yard field goal wide right, after which Jim Harbaugh could clearly be seen muttering "I should've gone for that."

There were flashes, chief among them Peppers' second-half TFLs and Jake Butt's spectacular third-quarter touchdown catch to briefly pull Michigan within seven.

But on the road against a decent team, Michigan simply made too many mistakes, big and small, to expect to come away with a victory. They'll be better than they looked tonight, there's little doubt of that. There'll also be rough patches. Home games against lesser teams lie ahead until BYU comes to the Big House, by which time the Wolverines should look more impressive.

At least there was Harbaugh, a sensible gameplan, and a solid outing from the defense. That's something to build on. If this turns out to be an anomalous performance from Rudock, this squad still could be very good. After all the offseason excitement, it's painful to wait through the development process, but even tonight it wasn't hard to see that the process is underway. It just might take a little longer than we had hoped.

Comments

Bertello NC

September 4th, 2015 at 12:54 AM ^

Uh.. Can you envision Brady hoke coaching this game? The score would've been 40-3 Utah and Morris would've endured his second concussion. Little battles were won people. Did we give up a sack? Receivers catching passes. It's one game. Let's wait to throw the baby out with the bath water after we see this team make corrections after playing in an actual game. JH is building a foundation. We didn't open up against mid level MAC school at home here.

McFate

September 4th, 2015 at 3:23 AM ^

I suspect Hoke would have had about the same result, but that does not mean that JH is an equivalent coach.

JH hasn't been a "gets big results in year one" guy in the past.  His first year at San Diego (7-4) wasn't better than the prior year (8-2).  His first year at Stanford (4-8) was better than Walt Harris' last year (1-11) but winning one-in-three games isn't much to write home about.

SHub'68

September 4th, 2015 at 3:20 AM ^

The running game didn't go backwards.  The offense didn't consist of the QB running for his life and heaving the ball into coverage.  There were 11 guys on all special teams plays.  No one got concussed and went back into the game.  No one quit in the fourth quarter.  The gameplan made sense and looked comprehensible.  The defense didn't give up ridiculous broken plays.  Special teams didn't allow the return-man 20 yards of space in which to catch the ball.

OC Alum91

September 4th, 2015 at 12:33 AM ^

nice writeup, Ace.

Typical opening game for both sides.  They mades some mistakes, also some good plays (the zone read Wilson touchdown, the interception, good run defence, and some 3rd down conversions)  as did we.  We could have won if we connect on a few more throws downfield, we also could have lost bigger had we not got a few breaks on late hit penalties.

I thought both sides called good games.

Team has good base to build on.  We were in it, we had our chances.   Let's see what this team is made of--hopefully, better than the last few years.

GoBlueBrooklyn

September 4th, 2015 at 12:37 AM ^

There just seems to be, at crucial moment, someone popping up and making a vital mistake on offense; Perry on the hitch in the red zone, Rudock not seeing Ty Isaac uncovered and wide open on the slant on the pick six, Kalis pulling past his block on 4th &1, Smith missing a cut to the left that would have made the chase for 1st down irrelevant, Darboh cutting inside on the screen, Rudock not being able to lay a deep ball in to Chesson who was wide open all night, a missed field goal, two poor onside kicks-- everyone at a vital moment made a crucial mistake that tipped the scales. It was *there* for us. It was *there*. You could see it. Which is what makes it hurt more.    

KodiakGT

September 4th, 2015 at 12:33 AM ^

I'm pretty happy with the team tonight, despite the loss.  I really doubt Rudock will have as many INTs the rest of the season, seemed like 2 of them were just timing/route issues between him and Perry.

I expect this team to be 5-1 heading in to MSU week.

bluesparkhitsy…

September 4th, 2015 at 12:59 AM ^

I'm with you, and I'm someone who generally is very bottom-line oriented.  To me, this looked like a different team from last year's -- almost radically so.  The running game didn't open up big breaks, but there were numerous occasions where runners gained an extra yard or so after essentially being wrapped up.  The offensive line held up -- impressively so, sometimes.  Lots of players made mistakes, but they kept pushing after those mistakes in a way I don't think would have happened last year.  And the playcalling made sense throughout.  

Had I known in advance what the final score would be, I would expect to be devastated.  But though I'm disappointed in the result, there frankly was much here to like.  Utah deserves crazy credit, but I feel more confident than I have in ages that we are headed in the right directon.  For now, that will have to do.  

CoverZero

September 4th, 2015 at 12:34 AM ^

The Pick 6 was Grant Perry's fault.  He broke his route off and circled towards the sideline. It should have been run flat because it is a fucking FLAT route!

The ball was where it should have been on both outs that were picked.  Grant Perry needs to sit.

Pumafb

September 4th, 2015 at 12:53 AM ^

I've read this way too many times tonight in every thread. The 3rd pick was absolutely on Rudock. The route was what we call mesh return. Perry could have possibly taken another step on the mesh before breaking back out, but overall it wasn't a bad route. Rudock first made the wrong read. Pre-snap he should have seen the soft coverage on Ty. A quick or hitch and that's an easy first down. Post snap, he stared Perry down. He also left that ball a little inside. That was an easy pick for any reasonably competent corner. Perry was 100% not at fault.

stephenrjking

September 4th, 2015 at 1:29 AM ^

No matter how many times you say this, no matter how many caps or exclamation points you use, you are still 100% dead wrong. The moment before Rudock winds up to throw the ball, Perry has already made his break to the sideline and begun running in that direction. It is a quick out--he runs forward, feints a stop or inside break, and breaks outside. He runs toward the sideline, maintaining his relationship just past the line to gain. And while the route he ran is a bit sloppy, he ran the route as it was designed. And Rudock saw him make the break. And he threw the ball to exactly the place that Perry was running to--it is headed directly for Perry's hands. The only possible way Perry can prevent the pick is by running back toward the line of scrimmage, which would be stupid given the distance needed and virtually impossible given the timing and his momentum. Rudock saw Perry break, he threw to where Perry was going, and he failed to recognize the defender. Perry was fine. Rudock will be ok. You need to sit.

Esterhaus

September 4th, 2015 at 12:35 AM ^

 

Against a physical opponent where the game was played hard over all four quarters. The team had their collective heads in the game the entire time, there was minimal slop as compared with prior years. 

I believe we'll see continual improvement as the season progresses and more of the play book is internalized. This game certainly wasn't what I had hoped for, but at least the team has majority of the fundamentals mastered.

It'll be worthwhile to watch Meechigan Football again. I'm looking forward to it.

MgoDlu

September 4th, 2015 at 12:48 AM ^

Except Drake Johnson, maybe can't always count on the OL to make things happen for you and have a RB that can make something happen for himself instead of running into a wall of defenders. I'm not even that mad about Smith not being able to bounce it outside anyways since he's probably too slow to take advantage of that. 

I just want Drake to hurry up and get better

realfootballfan

September 4th, 2015 at 12:41 AM ^

Smith was horrible. He had a few second half moments but his night consisted of running into a pile in the middle when there was a lane left, running into a pile in the middle when there was a lane right, and breaking two tackles for a two yard loss. I actually missed Mike Shaw's bounce bounce bounce. He would have messed around and had 150 yards rushing tonight.



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misterpage

September 4th, 2015 at 12:37 AM ^

Team is clearly better coached. It will be interesting to see how we improve week to week. Rudock is an average qb at best and we knew that coming into this one. I think the defense will find it's stride and be our strong point this year.



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cp4three2

September 4th, 2015 at 12:37 AM ^

We are the Joker. OSU are Batman. I hate it, but it's true. Woody had 5 titles, Bo had none. Urban has 3, and two other undefeated (including a 6-6 OSU team going 12-0).

We looked good, and we're going to be good. But, unlike
Alabama, etc, we have to compete with another crown jewel.



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UMForLife

September 4th, 2015 at 9:52 AM ^

OSU lost the home opener last year. Against a team that did not fair well during the year. They went on to win the NC. While I don't see us winning NC, I certainly see us being good by the time we see MSU. We will be even better when we see OSU.

Fan base -- M has one of the best fan bases in the country. Even with a 5-7 last year.