Best and Worst: NW

Submitted by bronxblue on

[Ed-Seth- I may start bumping this every week]

Best:  The Never-Ending Serene Story

Depending on your metric, I’ve either been writing these game recaps in 2010 against Iowa (with a heavy reliance on a cliched movie poster gimmick) or 2012 (which featured a picture of former Fig Things QB/Men’s Health cover model Brady Quinn and Poison lead singer/searcher-of-love Bret Michaels).

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Needless to say, it’s been quite a long time.  Over that span, I’ve seen UM attempt to transition to a run-first spread offense populated by mighty mite slot receivers and uber-mobile QBs, then back to whatever Al Borges thought he was running, to the Wreck of the Devin Gardner, to to current Stanfordization happening under Harbaugh.  I’ve also seen UM field some of the worst defenses in their history, then a succession of good-to-competent ones, and then to the raging hellbeast that is the current incarnation under Durkin and Mattison.  I’ve been writing about the highs and the lows, trying to make sense of the inherently unreasonable nature of college football, to determine if there is some unified theory, some midi-chlorian (ugh) connection that binds these games, these seasons together.

What makes it hard to thread these years together isn’t just that the authors keep changing, but also the readers and their expectations.  While UM’s history pre-RR was marked by stability and consistency at the top, the year-to-year fluctuations still existed and made every season feel fresh and new.  As I mentioned last week, the main difference under Harbaugh is that fans can safely return to the heightened, sometimes-unrealistic expectations of the past.  But the more I’ve thought about it, I’m not sure “expectations” is the right word.  Every fanbase has outsized expectations for their team because of how intimately they are attached to that squad; you always figure your middling LB or questionable RG is going to be better than anyone else’s question marks, that the breaks will go your way in the turnover battle, that every toss-up goes for the good guys.  It’s human nature, this illusory superiority that manifests along the banks of Lake Wobegon, and it’s why college football has such an illogical hold over large swaths of the population.

[After the jump: Serenity; when is too soon?]

No, what this season has given UM fans isn’t renewed expectations of future success, but a serenity, a confidence that it’ll all work out.  It’s that ephemeral confidence that your team is in good hands, that they won’t beat themselves or subconsciously try to break your heart.  Not that they’ll win every game; the nature of the sport requires that sometimes you’ll win and lose games regardless of your best efforts.  It’s why “Sparty No!” hasn’t been uttered much these past half-dozen years, or how Dabo Swinney rightfully bristled at the notion of “Clemsoning” after yet another dominant performance. 

That hasn’t been the case for years now; it’s why Brian stopped doing the UFR after the umpteenth time UM coughed up a game to Iowa, or why these columns became increasingly melancholy as last year crumbled.  There are 12-13 Saturdays a year when UM plays football, and the worst feeling these past couple of years has been turning on the game and hoping, praying Michigan won’t gack it up for 3 hours.  Sports, at their core, should be entertainment, and yet for years it felt as much a chore, a sense of duty and responsibility, like going to the dentist or filing your taxes.  I was raised Roman Catholic and my wife is Jewish, so we’ve had bags packed for guilt trips since the moment we could walk.  And watching UM play football at times felt like that, an act of contrition you needed to suffer through to absolve you of the hubris and other poor decisions you made in your life. 

But really this entire season, watching this team has been a joy not just because of the sterling wins, but also because they just look like a professional, competent team.  And that hasn’t been the case for far more years than I’d like to remember, where even some of the wins felt like dubious twists of fate.  Hell, the loss to Utah felt like a better, more coherent performance than any of the 5 wins last year. So yeah, MSU is coming to town and this rivalry brings out all the ghosts and phantoms of idiocy past, and there are other games on the schedule where crazy things might happen, but I have this serene sense that when the Wolverines run onto the field, they will do so with a plan that can be realized. 

Worst:  The 100-ish Yard Streak is Broken

Come on Durkin and Mattison, get your heads in the game.  I mean, MSU is going to pose a pretty big threat…

Nevermind…

Best:  Thesaurus.com Don’t Fail Me Now

Another week, another P5 offense ground to a fine powder.  I’m honestly running out of superlatives to describe this defense.  I mean, UM hasn’t given up a score in its last 41 defensive series, has given up 7 points total since the first drive against Oregon State, has posted 3 straight shutouts (including 2 against ranked opponents), and came within a couple of pinpoint throws by UNLV of 4 straight.  To put this in perspective, UM’s defense has scored more points in the last 3 games than the combined offensive output of BYU, Maryland, and Northwestern (7-0). 

On the ground, NW had under 40 yards total rushing, but even if you exclude sacks the Wildcats could only muster about 50 yards on 16 carries, with 15 of those yards on a Jackson run that (probably) was due to a hold.  Now, Jackson being the #3 rusher in the conference was more a product of volume versus overall talent (his average of 4.6 ypc puts him decidedly in the middle of the league), but he’s still a guy who averaged 4.8 ypc last year for over 1100 yards.  He’s probably not going to win a Doak Walker award, but he’s another solid college RB who UM absolutely demolished.  And really, outside of Elliott at OSU, there isn’t a back on the schedule who should give them any trouble.

Clayton Thorson broke 100 yards passing against UM, which is more than any of the four previous QBs had done, so that’s…something. 

Of course he also threw a pick-6 and averaged less than 4 yards an attempt, which is something else.  And he was battered all day, with UM recording 4 sacks (2 by monster-of-the-week Willie Henry) and another 5 QB hits, I keep hearing how Connor Cook is the best QB in the conference and a clear first-round draft pick, but MSU’s offensive line isn’t particularly good/healthy right now, and he’s going to have a hell of a time finding open WRs with Henry, Wormley, Glasgow, and assorted other large, angry men bearing down on him.

Both Bolden and Morgan had solid games, as did Ross before his ejection.  I’ll be the first to admit that it is difficult to tell when a LB really “screws up” when the opposing offense barely averages 2.9 yards per play, but nothing broke big and outside of the one long-ish Jackson run it didn’t seem like anybody took bad angles or missed too many tackles.  And perhaps due to NW starting a redshirt freshmen, we didn’t see a particularly dynamic or innovative offensive scheme compared to former NW squads, which further played into UM’s hands in the front 7. 

The Ross ejection was probably the correct call according to the rule but didn’t feel particularly malicious or “target-y” compared to some of the other hits you see during a football game.  Heck, the two flags they picked up against NW for targeting and a personal foul seemed just as egregious.  This remains a lingering issue with a rule designed to punish the actus reus while inferring mens rea, but it does feel like it has noble intentions, which is a departure from most of the stupid rules you see passed in football.  What will suck is that he has to sit out a half against MSU because of it.

Peppers as an HSP/mini linebacker had an up-and-down game, making some nice tackles in space and basically shut down Christian Jones, but was also beat by Austin Carr for NW’s longest completion of the day and had a couple of slants that were incompletions but would have been for first downs had the thrown been a bit better.  These are minor gripes, though, as Peppers has been a revelation at the position and helped solidify how this team handles spread offenses.  His ability to consistently shed blocks and tackle ball carriers in space just evaporates those cheap 3-4 yards teams like NW used to get against UM on short WR screens and delayed handoffs.  And defending slot receivers may be the most difficult task for a modern defense, especially when you are also tasked with keeping an eye on the backfield.  The fact he’s playing this well as a freshman portends great things in both the near and more distant future.

And then we get to the secondary.  Lewis is playing like an All-American, full stop, especially now that Ziggy and Al are telling him he can’t quantum leap from this astral plane until after the season.  That pick-6 showed amazing patience, composure, and athleticism; he ran the WRs route for him, then made a great play on the ball.  In fact, he was almost to the endzone before half of the Northwestern sideline knew what happened.  On the other side of the field, Clark had another nice game and, while certainly not a shutdown corner, has absolutely surprised me with how competent he looks in coverage.  He’s a great complement to Lewis both in terms of size and function, and further handcuffs teams who think they’ll be able to get easy yards with big, leapy guys.  And while it’s usually not a great sign that a safety led the team in tackles (Wilson had 7), none were on anything you’d call a “busted” play, and a couple were usually as both he and the corner converged on a WR.

Again, this is an unprecedented defensive performance by UM, both from a historical perspective as well as a “feelingsball” one.  Yes, they haven’t played a truly elite offense yet, and yes it’s still got some weak spots that could be (slightly) exploited by certain teams, and sure, they won’t pitch a shutout the rest of the way.  But if you’re an offense and you step onto the field only to be greeted by the sight of the winged helmets standing across from you, there has to be a tiny voice in your head that is:



Best:  Decided Schematic Advantage

Charlie Weis, college football’s walkin’, talkin’ STD in that he f’ing lingers over your programs long after he’s departed, was infamous for saying he expected to dominate college teams because of the “decided schematic advantage” he brought from his time as an OC in the NFL.  Stop me if you’ve heard this before, but the rationale was that because the NFL was so much better and more innovative than the college game, an offense run like an NFL unit would fluster and mystify college defenses used to, I don’t know, the wishbone.  It’s like in a movie where the big-city attorney shows up in the small town and expects to razzle-dazzle the imbeciles in the court room on his way to victory.  Well, we all know how those movies turn out, and we also know how Charlie’s Weis’s “advantage” played out for the Domers.

There are a litany of reasons why Charlie Weis didn’t enjoy a particularly successful run in college (a different type of player turnover vs. college, inferior talent, limited practice time, obscene levels of arrogance), but one of the biggest reasons was that he seemed unwilling/unable to accept the reality that defenses could adapt to his offense.  Like a certain era of coaches, he seemed to buy into the notion that if you execute properly, the defense won’t be able to stop you consistently.  And in a vacuum, that is probably true; the offense typically has the key advantage of knowing where the play is supposed to run, while defenders have to react. 

But college coaches and defenders work just as hard to muck with offenses, to constrict passing windows and crush running lanes, and that truly great offenses are ever-evolving, introducing wrinkles just to iron them out 2 weeks later and start anew.  It’s how Urban Meyer has won basically everywhere he’s been, it’s how teams like Oregon and Baylor have dominated college defenses with video game-like performances, and how Jim Harbaugh took a bunch of of guys who probably looked at half the Ivy League as safety schools and won a billion games[citation need] with them.

Michigan’s offensive playmakers aren’t particularly dynamic; Jake Butt has always looked like a stud, but up and down the roster you don’t see an abundance of NFL-level talent as in years past.  And yet, every week you look up and they are putting up close to 400 yards of total offense and averaging around 28 ppg.  Their worst performance was their first game of the year against a top-5 Utah team, on the road, when they netted 355 total yards on 4.9 ypp.  Compare that to last year, when UM cracked 300 yards 7 times but did so against some truly terrible defenses (App St., NTM, IU) and were generally bottled up by any defense with a pulse (ND held them to 289 yards, Minnesota 171, MSU 186).  And because of the dominant defense and (recently) insurmountable halftime leads, UM has let up on the gas in the second halves a bit, content to work out the kinks and run the clock out for stretches.  Last year’s S&P offensive efficiency was 82nd in the nation, just ahead of Purdue, NTM, and South Alabama.  This year they are 53rd (incidentally, one below OSU) and trending up, mostly held down by some early struggles in the passing game. 

They are making these strides in part because of natural player development, but mostly because the playcalls and the overall offensive philosophy is just immensely improved.  Every week, we see this coaching staff pick away at the edges, introducing new playcalls and formations, showing one thing on film and countering the counter before the opponent even knows what hit them.  They are finding ways to win with the talent they have, not just install the system they want and expect the players to be at that level, and after crunching one of the better defenses in the country, it’s hard to imagine any team being able to truly shut them down in the way we’ve seen in years past.  Plus, every week in practice they are playing a truly elite defense and, seemingly, holding their own and learning from it.  That’s a hidden advantage that great teams benefit from, that practice against an elite opposing unit, and it’s why when one part of the team struggles that can migrate to the other side of the ball (witness MSU’s offensive challenges as their defense has come back to earth).

On paper, this offensive philosophy isn’t particularly novel; UM isn’t rolling out 5-wide with a mobile QB, calling plays at hyper-speed, or going with anything you’d hear bluebirds refer to as “gimmicky”.  But they are rolling out an offense that wouldn’t look out of place 30 years ago, yet with so much minor tinkering, so many deft changes, that it doesn’t feel remotely anachronistic but, instead, unconscionably lethal.  And it is working largely with an island of mismatched toys at certain positions. 

I’ll be interested in seeing how the RPS score comes out this game, as it felt like NW had no idea what was happening for long stretches of that first half, even when they were able to stop UM.



Best:  My New Favorite Play

This might seem like a trivial thing to be excited about, but I am in love with UM’s emerging usage of FBs in the running game, especially in short yardage.  One of the things that used to drive me crazy under Hoke (and really most offenses) was the idea that only the RB or your QB could be used to get you a yard or two on short yardage.  I don’t know how many times you’d see Gardner line up in the shotgun, take the ball, and immediately dive at the line to try to convert on 4th down, with all 11 guys on defense diving toward that same spot because it was the most obvious playcall in the world.  Or a QB taking the ball, turning around, and asking his RB to run 3-4 yards into the line and, hopefully, get you the necessary yards. 

But UM doesn’t seem to do that, or at least not with such regularity.  Both Houma and Kerridge had fantastic first-down runs where Rudock took the snap, immediately slammed the ball into their arms, and they were across the line before the LBs could even get there.  It’s a play that wouldn’t seem out of place in the 1960’s, but right now it feels as sure a play as any you’ll see out of the offense, and most teams seem to be unable to really gameplan around it specifically because it limits the time the defense has to react.  It’s about as simple a football play as you can draw up, and yet I’m guessing ever defensive coordinator on the schedule is losing sleep trying to figure out how to handle all of these backfield options. 

Best:  The Untouchable

Another week, another dynamic TD by Jehu Chesson.  The kickoff TD run was a thing of beauty, a play you could see forming as soon as Chesson started streaking across the field and a hole the size of Ypsilanti opened up on the right side of the field.  I’m not sure there was a Wildcat hand within 3 feet of him at any point during the return.  The Stonum comparisons have bee steadily gaining traction, and if he’s able to continue to be a credible threat in the passing game he’ll be able to take advantage of the elite speed you see on these sweeps and kickoffs. 



Meh:  The Running Game

Even though the team put up another 200 yards on the ground, I’m not sure there is much to take away from this performance than we already kind of expected.  Smith and Johnson are the two best backs on the roster, Green and Isaac alternate between effective and virtually invisible, and there is still some uncertainty about who gets the ball after the top 2 guys.  Smith is also emerging as a bit of a receiving threat, as he pulled in a deflected ball from Rudock for a first down and picked up rushers well on passing downs.  Green looked fine running the ball, but he still averaged 3.9 ypc and did most of his damage on that final scoring drive.  Isaac seems stapled to the bench until he regains the coaches’ trust, which makes some sense.  The fact they pulled the redshirt off Higdon makes me think they don’t trust their running back depth.  Karan did show some flashes of intensity and decisiveness in his runs, the type of bruising north-south style you read about when he signed away from Iowa.  I can see him getting more carries as the season progresses, especially if Smith continues to have lingering ankle issues.  MSU’s defensive line doesn’t look nearly as dominant against the run as some would lead you to believe – Rutgers just put up about 160 yards on them if you throw out sacks – but if there’s ever a game where MSU will throw the kitchen sink to take away the ground game, it’ll be against UM. 

Best:  The New Normal?

At this point, I’m not sure how to grade Rudock’s performance anymore.  He is the definition of game manager in this offense, but that isn’t intended to be nearly as pejorative as it has typically been used.  He isn’t a star but he also isn’t asked to be that, and right now he isn’t costing this team any games or, at this point, even points. 

After his 3-INT game against Utah, he’s only throw 3 more this year, and last week’s one was, at worst, half his fault (you shouldn’t throw against your body, but he also hit his FB in the hands).  In this game he completed about 74% of his passes for 7.8 ypa, decent numbers against one of the better pass defenses in the league.  He spread the ball around like he normally does (7 players caught at least 1 pass, with his two TEs Williams and Butt leading the way), and outside of 1 or 2 passes generally threw the ball on point and away from danger.  And, yes, I do wish he wouldn’t tuck and run as much as he does with the ball, but that seems to be the gameplan at this point.  Outside of the OSU game, I think this Rudock wins UM the rest of their games, and that’s all you want or expect out of a 5th-year transfer.



Best:  Quick Hits

Here are a couple of minor points I wanted to make that don’t really justify a whole section.

  1. I have been trying to figure out who Jourdan Lewis reminds me of as a college DB, and the name I keep coming back to is Dre Bly.  He won’t have the same gaudy stats, but both are about the same size (both listed at 5’ 10”, though Bly was a bit heavier at 186 lbs compared to Lewis as 178 lbs) and have that type of athleticism that lets you run the receiver’s route and still out-jump guys 5-6 inches taller for the ball.  And despite his size, Lewis makes solid tackles, something else I remember Bly being decent at.
  2. Kenny Allen hit a 47-yard FG, another data point in the “he might be competent” argument that felt like the ceiling this year.  At some point UM will need him to hit a longer FG, and you hope this success gives him some more confidence.
  3. Matt Millen, during one of those moments when the gerbil in his head went on auto-pilot, opined after Chesson (?) was tackled by his waist towel that he used to tackle guys however he could, sometimes in ways you can’t talk about on TV.  Ignoring the fact you can say some pretty gross stuff on TV as long as you wrap it up in a serialized crime show, the idea of Matt Millen tackling someone by his balls is the most Matt Millen thing in the world.  He’s the Vinnie Jones of mindless college broadcasters.

Best:  Never Change, Jim

Jim Harbaugh has one speed, and that is flabbergasted.  I can absolutely see how his relentlessness can drive certain NFL-types crazy, but in college it is perfect.  Up 31-0 and with NW failing to convert on 3rd-and-13, you’d assume Harbaugh would be happy, maybe just walking the sidelines and taking in another dominant performance, perhaps finally looking a bit ahead to next week’s showdown with MSU.  Those are all reasonable expectations for most human beings, and also why you’d be absolutely wrong about how Jim Harbaugh.  This was Coach Harbaugh after that failed pass attempt.

The utter look of shock, the screaming, the hat yank, everything is perfect.  It’s a man who cannot for the life of him understand how his defensive player being interfered with wasn’t called, and is going to vent his frustration with whomever is stuck on that side of the field.  I honestly thought once the hat came off we’d see a reenactment of “Turn Down for What”.  And perhaps unsurprisingly, the referee seemingly acknowledge Harbaugh was right, which should just be the default position for all college refs going forward with UM.  Not only should Harbaugh never leave college, I’d love to see just his reactions farmed out to other teams’ sidelines, like a Tupac hologram in an old Bo hat pointing out terrible decisions made by others.

Best:  Rivalry Week

I honestly don’t know if UM will win this game, but they sure as hell look like the better squad.  And that’s a huge improvement over the last 7-8 years of this rivalry.  If MSU has been sandbagging this whole season up to this point, it is the craziest long-con in history, and led to a bunch of headaches and a couple of pretty serious injuries. 

If UM can get out to an early lead and continue MSU’s struggles running the ball (Allen got hurt toward the end of the Rutgers game, and both Conklin and Kieler probably won’t be 100% when they play UM), Cook is going to be under sustained pressure to a degree he hasn’t been thus far.  And like most MSU QBs under Dantonio, once that rush starts getting home the decision-making does with it, and bad things can snowball.  I don’t think UM will have a great deal of success running the ball, but MSU’s secondary is quite vulnerable and you have to imagine a couple of times Butt or Williams will get the ball in space.  Combined with the elite defense, this feels like a game the Wolverines should win, perhaps even a bit comfortably near the end.  At the same time, if there is any guy in the Ingham County prison with eligibility, my guess is he’ll suit up for the Green and White.

It won’t be a shutout because MSU has some competent offensive players, but despite being undefeated MSU is clearly the one scuttling heading into this game, and I don’t see how they’ll shore up their systemic issues in a week.  It’s going to be a fun week, to say the least, and I hope next week’s diary let’s me unleash the full celebratory gifs I have been chilling for just such an occasion.

Go Blue!

Comments

DrAwkward

October 11th, 2015 at 2:59 PM ^

Yes, I am confident that the football program is in good hands, but I certainly hope that confidence is not ephemeral.

No offense intended, but I hope the confidence lasts for a long time.

Blueroller

October 11th, 2015 at 3:22 PM ^

I can't recall a better-written diary from you that this. The bit about guilt and obligation for watching games is brilliant.

The other thing I would add about Harbaugh's offense is what Brian says in the UFRs: it's fascinating. The tweaks they keep coming up with, the debut formation in just about every game, the sometimes wild unpredictability of it… It's genius at work, and for the first time since, well, I honestly can't remember, Michigan is doing it to opponents instead of them doing it to us. It's a beautiful thing to watch.

bronxblue

October 11th, 2015 at 8:24 PM ^

Thanks.  

Yeah, I've been reading through the UFRs and checking out the little video snippets, and each time you see this little nuance or slight tweak that you just didn't see under Hoke and, to a lesser extent, under RR and Carr.  It's true; UM's offense is messing with opposing defenses in addition to trying to beat them, and it is a sight to behold.

shoes

October 11th, 2015 at 3:25 PM ^

It has been great to see our effective utilization of fullbacks, with more rushing attempts than I can remember since the days when our fullback was essentially a tailback that we wanted to get on the field. From a recruiting standpoint, I would think that would make Mich the school of choice for top HS fullbacks. But, what rough percentage of college fullbacks played that position in HS? Does anyone have a feel for this?

M-Dog

October 11th, 2015 at 7:57 PM ^

I know in my local high school district, save for a school or two, they don't even have any fullbacks.  They all run some kind of zone read spread because of player size / talent / numbers limitations.

Harbaugh will have to sniff out his own guys and turn them into fullbacks (which he is good at). 

bronxblue

October 11th, 2015 at 8:31 PM ^

I'm not sure, but I'm guessing that you'll see a lot of LB/RB types who don't quite fit either mold getting pushed to the FB spot, or maybe some of those hybrid H-backs you can double as a TE if needed.  There are FBs out there; Rivals has a top-5, but it feels like Harbaugh will just pick through undersized DEs/LBs and and slower TEs and put a couple nice players in that spot.  Because unlike on a lot of teams, it has some glamour to it, and the NFL certainly does have a need for the position.  So it's not like a kid switching to it would be giving up on being an effective member of the offense.

bigpatky

October 11th, 2015 at 9:13 PM ^

BYU has had a lot of success over the last decade with Polynesians as either the FB or the secondary "bruiser back" that come from the intermountain west or Pacific islands. They are big, tough and grow up playing rugby - knowing how to deliver hits. They're out there. They would fit perfect in this offense. More Sione Houmas (he's out of Salt Lake himself). 

turtleboy

October 11th, 2015 at 3:26 PM ^

This diary is a thing of beauty. So was the offensive line run blocking. Much improved after last week. Also saw improved decision making from the rbs. Not great, but definitely better than we saw against Maryland.

bronxblue

October 11th, 2015 at 8:32 PM ^

Thanks.  I agree the blocking was better, though again it's hard at first blush to tell how many yards the backs left on the field, if any.  I mean, NW is a decent enough rushing defense that unlike, say, Maryland last week, they might have played the call fine and the 3-4 yards was all it was going to get.

Sione's Flow

October 11th, 2015 at 6:23 PM ^

I love seeing Kerridge and Houma plowing into opposing defenses. Those guys have worked their butts off at UM. I was ecstatic when Houma got his first TD. It would've been even more awesome if he had got it against Utah in his home state.

bronxblue

October 11th, 2015 at 8:35 PM ^

That's what I love about it.  It's a super-simple play that works because defenses are conditioned not to be ready for it.  And because UM has enough playmakers at other positions, defenses can't really dedicate much time to stopping it.  Basically, if Glasgow and whichever guard the ball is going toward hold up, it's a given 3-4 yards.

EGD

October 11th, 2015 at 4:12 PM ^

Yeah, Millen talking about tackling guys by their junk is one of the strangest things I've heard a sports broadcaster say. Probably second to Musberg checking out AJ McCarron's GF in recent memory.

Unfiltered Manball

October 11th, 2015 at 4:24 PM ^

eligibility.

Totally agree with the fullback usage.  It's a great call that mixes things up a bit.  

It's also a great display of the improved O-line play.  Those fullback runs don't happen if the O-line isn't opening a hole for them.

It will be tougher to run against State's D-line- but Kerridge and Houma can just lower their helmets and soften up some ribs.  2-3 quarters of that should pay divedends for the rest of the running game in the 4th quarter.

bronxblue

October 11th, 2015 at 8:44 PM ^

Yeah, it really was weird when Winston basically got released from Ingham County and played that weekend.  Honestly, had it been a couple years later, I'm not sure Twitter would have contained itself.

State's D-line is solid but it also feels a bit predictable at this point.  Under Hoke I'm not sure UM would be able to take advantage, but at this point UM has faced a decent collection of defenses and seems to figure them out pretty quickly.  And if UM can get some screens going early, that should loosen up the line a bit and give the backs some running lanes.  But this feels like a game where UM's offensive line can lean on MSU's much better than in years past, and especially if MSU can't keep sustained drives going, might be gassed by the 4th quarter.

charblue.

October 12th, 2015 at 10:42 AM ^

and their secondary is kind of a hot mess. Rutgers had three TD passes on Saturday night on various routes in the red zone and outside it.

With this staff, you really have no worries about what they'll come up with. Even against Utah, in the end, it was more about lack of execution than it was about game plan as to why the team didn't finish.

I've never felt this comfortable watching Michigan perform and knowing that they are fully prepared and are hungry to get better. I mean I watch these kids play, and then afterward you hear them talk as if they've been programmed, but you know it's all genuine.

I tell this Harbaugh and his staff have just brought out the best in these guys because they tapped a spirit and a desire that was in this team all along and just need to be tapped. Now, I want to make one point about competition that has also been borne out and isn't just talk the way it always seems about practice, that practice makes perfect, and more perfect practice makes more perfect game plans and performance. And that point is this, this team is playing for each other because everyone is getting a chance to contribute. And when you feel part of something that is a team, the team, the team, the team, then you see what it can produce.

Harbaugh has magically gifted his team with ther spirit of Bo. There is no doubt in my mind.

SoccerDancer

October 11th, 2015 at 11:35 PM ^

Northwestern was the #1 scoring Defense in the nation, and we punished them.   People are over the moon about the job the D did, but let's be real, Northwestern's offense is mediocore at best.  This was not an offense that was expected to be able to do anything.   I think the dramatically more surprising event is that we quietly put up 38 points on a defense that was expected to shut us down. (yes, yes, 14 from special teams & D).  I'm personally more impressed by what the offense did this week than the defense.

charblue.

October 12th, 2015 at 10:49 AM ^

But you never know what a team is capable of until it does it. I mean I don't think the feeling inside the locker room is that they are going to shutdown every offense they face, but their mindset takes that approach on the field in terms of execution.

As for the offense, Harbaugh is in charge of it. You can see weekly growth and improvement. And it's a function of trial and error, correction and adjustment to personnel and development of improved performance. This is the way we all respond to strong leadership and motivated desire to succeed as a group. It always takes the offense longer to find its way when things are new than it does the defense.

I'll tell you my appreciation for coach Mattison has grown this season. His Dline guys are just terrific.

UmichFord

October 11th, 2015 at 4:48 PM ^

Pretty crazy reading through this best/worst, and then going back just one year and reading through last season's Minnesota best/worst. My oh my. Talk about a complete 180

Njia

October 11th, 2015 at 4:49 PM ^

Strikes me as that uncle who comes for family events and starts spouting off every non-PC thing in the world while the rest of the family is alternately setting their ears to ignore and loading another helping of grandma's dry-as-a-bone turkey into their maws.