Wisconsin 24, Michigan 10 Comment Count

Ace


A somber scene as Brandon Peters was down on the field. [Patrick Barron]

Michigan led undefeated Wisconsin, 10-7, in the third quarter at Camp Randall Stadium. Then Murphy's Law struck.

First, Wisconsin quarterback Alex Hornibrook shook off a shaky start to thread two inch-perfect throws to A.J. Taylor. The first victimized freshman Jaylen Kelly-Powell, who was on the field replacing injured starting corner Lavert Hill. The second was a touchdown up the seam to give the Badgers a 14-10 lead. Adding to the frustration, the drive only stayed alive due to a third-down pass interference call on Tyree Kinnel despite Hornibrook's throw hardly looking catchable.

Then disaster really struck. Facing third down on Michigan's ensuing possession, Brandon Peters took a hard hit from Andrew Van Ginkel, who stunted up the middle unblocked. Peters, who'd shaken off some huge hits in his last couple games, stayed down. As the team gathered around him, Peters took a cart off the field. According to MLive's Mike Mulholland, he was wheelchaired to the locker room, then transported to the hospital via ambulance. In postgame, Jim Harbaugh confirmed Peters has a head injury; he's expected to rejoin the team for the plane ride home.

That took the wind out of Michigan's sails. Wisconsin struck quickly, with a one-handed catch by Danny Davis setting up a 32-yard end-around touchdown for Kendric Pryor at the end of the third quarter. John O'Korn took over for Peters, and the offense never threatened to score. UW's Rafael Gaglianone eventually tagged on a field goal to provide the final margin.


A.J. Taylor's touchdown catch stood as the winning score. [Bryan Fuller]

Before it all fell apart, Michigan hadn't just scraped out a lead, but missed some opportunities to really put the Badgers on their heels. Wisconsin struck first when Nick Nelson picked up a punt off the bounce and worked his way past some poor coverage for a 50-yard touchdown. Peters had a chance to tie it up on the next series, but underthrew an open Zach Gentry, allowing Natrell Jamerson to recover for a pass breakup.

On Michigan's next drive, an apparent touchdown from Peters to Donovan Peoples-Jones was ruled incomplete, and despite replay showing that DPJ's left foot touched inbounds a fraction of a second before his right landed out, the call stood. On the very next play, Peters fumbled while scrambling for the end zone, and Michigan came up completely empty.

The young quarterback bounced back, though. Peters finally connected on a deep ball to Peoples-Jones, getting Michigan out to midfield, then made consecutive sharp throws to Chris Evans and Sean McKeon to set up a one-yard Ben Mason touchdown plunge. That knotted the score at seven heading into halftime.

After Devin Bush picked off Hornibrook to give the offense great field position, Quinn Nordin snapped his cold streak with a 39-yard field goal to give Michigan a short-lived 10-7 lead. Instead of compounding his prior error, Hornibrook morphed into Aaron Rodgers, and everything went terribly wrong in a hurry.

All other concerns at the moment are secondary to the health of Peters. If he can't recover in time to take on Ohio State next week, the odds stack even higher against Michigan unless Wilton Speight can make a remarkable comeback from his fractured vertebrae. As it stands, optimism for The Game is going to be hard to come by.

Comments

Ramblin

November 18th, 2017 at 8:18 PM ^

Watch the replay.  Pause the film when the left foot touches down in the endzone. Is the right foot down out of bounds at that point in time?  If the answer is no, overturn.  That didn't happen and it is not ok.  Can they only slow the film down to a certain rate?

Blue1995nyc

November 18th, 2017 at 5:01 PM ^

Long way to go there.

I am worried about 2018 and the fact we are loaded with "developmental" Tackles and not one 5 star "insta-starter" in 3 years of Drevno recruiting.

Our tackle play is beyond bad and has gotten 2 QB injured.

jsquigg

November 18th, 2017 at 4:59 PM ^

It's a frustrating cocktail of referee incompetence, bad line play against tough defenses, injuries, and just a feeling of blah.  Obviously you can't measure emotion or intensity, but the opposing teams seem to get up for Michigan while Michigan seems more cerebral.  I honestly can't tell if we game plan for the opponent or just rep different things for the sake of being multiple or balanced.  I know all the known issues coming in (youth, injuries, etc.) affect perception, but the offense has been out of rhythm since Iowa last year.  This year running with beef seemed to work, but they didn't commit to it when things got tough because for some reason the coaches still have a need to be multiple regardless of execution.  I know it isn't simple at all, but it's still frustrating. 

erald01

November 18th, 2017 at 5:02 PM ^

This program has been cursed now for a decade. No matter who coaches here or plays here we cant have success. Todays game and some of wiscy throws/catches showed me that everything that could go wrong for a team happened.

Ed Shuttlesworth

November 18th, 2017 at 5:04 PM ^

Yeah, other than the last 28 minutes of the second half when they completely curb stomped us, we totally outplayed them.  

Enough of this.  We did some decent things for awhile, and the defense played a pretty good first half, and then all of that turned completely around and we got smoked.  

YoOoBoMoLloRoHo

November 18th, 2017 at 5:06 PM ^

the offensive design (and even coaches) during the offseason. If UM cannot recruit/develop the OL to control games with the current scheme, then the scheme has to change. The roster also has clear talent/development gaps that make this offense completely unexplosive. Upper classes are ultra thin for offensive talent. We need tackles, WRs, QB depth and even a RB with good speed/power combo. 2018 class has 2 tackles and QBs that have high potential as development projects, but no WR and non-elite RBs. Never have too much explosive talent.

YoOoBoMoLloRoHo

November 18th, 2017 at 6:23 PM ^

last 2 classes caught a pass and Perry caught 1 or it would have been the last 3 classes. Nico has 1 catch this year, Martin 0, and Hawkins is a DB. Black is clearly talented, but his injury decimated the WR group and that shows the thinness. Is the group talented? Yes, but we can use a WR in 2018 so we avoid the gulf like the one between the 2012 and the 2017 WR classes. If Turner or Haskins are elite, then kudos to Harbaugh for spotting elite RBs that were not pursued by the top programs. He hasn't recruited an elite RB yet, so hopefully one of these hidden stars breaks that pattern.

Blue1995nyc

November 18th, 2017 at 5:11 PM ^

Well gotta tell you .... some of these losses makes you wonder.

Iowa (Penalty on punt)

FSU (KR stumble)

OSU (PI plus Spot)

MSU I (Blcoked Punt)

MSU II (why OKorn?)

Today (easily should have been up 17-0)

 

.... I blame Coaching.  Had more than enough talent to win those games

You Only Live Twice

November 18th, 2017 at 8:03 PM ^

No one is in denial.  It's not denial if people don't see it whatever way you do.

If you want to talk "contamination" then I wish you'd have seen the liveblog today.  Contaminated with trolls (guessing more so than usual since sparty's game hadn't started yet) 

blueball97

November 18th, 2017 at 5:09 PM ^

When more than half your coaches are making $1 million+ and the conference commissioner is making a million bucks, and three conference as a group is making tens of millions of dollars, it shouldn't be hard to pony up the dough for full time officials. Three incompetence is astounding

Enjoy the Harb…

November 18th, 2017 at 5:10 PM ^

Don’t get me wrong. Harbaugh is the best Michigan will ever get. But Ann suck arbor will only ever achieve mediocrity in sports. At least we have white collar jobs.

Ed Shuttlesworth

November 18th, 2017 at 5:11 PM ^

Absent a major change in staff and/or philosophy, next year's offense is going to be just like this year's.  Mediocre OL, conservative, few big plays, no margin for error, lots of yards against bad teams, decent chunks of big games where yardage doesn't translate into the number of points it should.  

With a tougher schedule, and no Jim McIlwain.  

Tedbossman

November 18th, 2017 at 5:12 PM ^

The people who never played a snap of football, or just have low IQs, saying the sky is falling. Saying he’s Hoke in a different cloak or whatever, blah blah blah. But I’ll make an actual critique. We stopped Wisconsin like 8 times in a row, forcing them to punt. Im response, they went 4 wide giving them some space and room to maneuver. We have to have that in our back pocket when power football isn’t working. It’s very possible we just don’t have the WRs to do it right now. But in the future, that should be a change up we can throw out there and ride for a few drives.

GoBlue in IA

November 18th, 2017 at 5:15 PM ^

By my count, there were 3 passes Hornibrook somehow put on the money, on-time to sustain drives which lead to points.  Two to Taylor, and one to Davis, I think.  SMH.  Not sure how a person playing quarterback can be so great and so bad all in the same game. 

The O-line has doomed this team's chances all season and for some reason has not improved from the start of the season.  All opposing d-lines need to do is stunt up front and it results in our QB getting drilled.

Not getting my hopes up for next week, sadly.

 

 

swalburn

November 18th, 2017 at 5:17 PM ^

This fan base is insane.  You guys act like we are reloading every year when we are still rebuilding.  Harbaugh's big problem was he won big his first 2 years and was ahead of schedule.  Now everyone thinks it is easy.   We are feeling Hoke's last class and Harbaugh's first class right now.  You have to build a program before you can act like you just reload every year.  Next year we should be better despite the schedule.  Give the guy time to get his players and coach them up.  True Freshman wideouts, young QB's and young lineman are a recipe for disaster especially when it is all in the same season.

swalburn

November 18th, 2017 at 5:58 PM ^

The guy was probably one inch from going to the playoff last year with wins over two teams that ended up in the top 10.  I get your point but I'm not sure we wouldn't have the same record as Miami if we played their schedule.  The MSU loss was bad but losing on the road at PSU and Wisconsin is not crazy.  Yes, I think we will be better next year and I think we will be better the year after that and then we can start really being critical.