The Most Unrelenting Stretch of Dong Punches in CFB History? A Look Back at the Bad Beats of the Gary Moeller Era

Submitted by Collateral Whiz on July 25th, 2022 at 11:58 PM

First, I want to lead off by giving props to Gary Moeller.  He became coach at Michigan when I was 10 years old and I was a big NFL fan, but college football had yet to capture my imagination.  Moeller's teams quickly changed that.  They ran the ball down people's throats, then they got you off balance with their beautiful screens and draw plays, and finally they'd hit you over the top to a blazing wide receiver with a phenomenal name.  Mercury Hayes, Amani Toomer, Desmond Howard, Derrick Alexander, Jon Vaughn, Tyrone Wheatley, Tim Biakabutuka and Elvis Grbac are just some of the names he helped propel to superstar status during his tenure. For my money there hasn't been as aesthetically pleasing of an offense at Michigan since the Moeller era, and if I want to watch some football highlights that will put me in a good mood, 1990-1994 is my go-to.  Rest in peace Gary, and thank you for helping to ignite my passion for Michigan football.   

In addition to being awesome to watch, Michigan football was 44-13-3 under Moeller, won or shared three conference championships, and according to College Football Reference's ranking system (SRS) never finished a season outside the top ten in his five years - it was undeniably a great time to be a Michigan fan.  With that being said, holy shit was his tenure a mine field of gut punch losses.  Despite having experienced this era first hand as a fan, looking back through old box scores I couldn’t help but be slack jawed at how many losses came in the most agonizing way possible.  Apparently, I had repressed the memories.  The Harbaugh era has had its share of tough losses, but I don't think it can hold a candle to what Moeller's teams endured in that era.  So, with Moeller's passing, I think it's a good time to relive his tenure, unfortunately highlighting the losses that were such a big part of his time at Michigan.  

For this post I'm going to examine all of Michigan's brutal losses or ties under Moeller, and rank them on how soul crushing they were. Quickly, I think it's worth going over what makes a loss more devastating than others:  1. Stakes - Michigan in this era was pretty much always ranked somewhere in the top 10 and was always in the Big Ten title and national title hunt, and any loss could wipe that away.  Therefore, we can just always assume every game had the highest stakes possible.  2.  Feeling like your team should have won - this can come down to statistical dominance or blowing a lead late in the game. (Think OSU 2016) 3.  Unlucky shit happening to your team - bad calls by the referees or fluky plays that led to the loss. (Think every Michigan loss to MSU in the Harbaugh era).  4.  The game being close - It sucks to lose in a blowout, but in a way it's relief as you don't dwell on it as much as you feel like the better team won.  Generally, the losses that stay with you are games it felt like your team could have pulled out.  So, for this exercise we're just going to focus on the close losses (7 points or less).  Let's get to it!  

 

1990 Overview - Michigan went 9-3 to take a four way share of the Big Ten title along with MSU, Illinois and Iowa.  End of season SRS ranking 5th.  They were 2-3 in one score games.  The losses: 

Notre Dame - Wow, what a ball breaker to start Moeller's career.  Probably should have been a sign of how things would go.  This checked all the boxes of a devastating loss.  Michigan was #4 and Notre Dame #1 coming into the game.  Michigan should have won and outplayed Notre Dame outgaining them 443-399, with YPP being 6.3-5.3.  Michigan blew a 10-point 4th quarter lead, and it required an incredibly fluky play by Notre Dame to win:  

That play happened on 3rd and 15 from the Notre Dame 15-yard line late in the 3rd quarter with Michigan up 10.  If it falls to the ground like it would have 999 out of 1,000 times if you replayed that deflection, Notre Dame punts, Michigan gets the ball at midfield and likely scores to seal the game.  Instead, the Irish score a touchdown on that drive to make it a 3-point game and pull it out with a 4th quarter touchdown, winning 28-24.   

Dong Punch Level - 12/10.  Like sticking your genitals in a blender and turning the level to frappe

Michigan State - Another cruel loss.  This was a back-and-forth game, but Michigan was the slightly better team outgaining MSU 389-365 to a tune of 5.7 YPP - 4.9.  Michigan also had a Desmond Howard kick return touchdown on top of that, so it's hard to believe they lost.  I'm sure even those of you who were too young to experience this game know how it ended - with perhaps the worst refereeing decision in the history of college football.  Down 28-27 with 6 seconds remaining and having just scored a touchdown, Michigan elected to go for 2 to win the game instead of tie:

Incomplete pass.  No flag.  Game over.  

Dong Punch Level - 13/10.  Complete injustice.  If I had been 8 years older and had a flame thrower East Lansing would no longer exist (although that city had probably evolved to be flame retardant by that point?!)

Iowa - Not a ton to say about this game.  Iowa scored to take the lead with 1:09 left in the 4th quarter to seal the win 24-23, but they had been the better team for the second half and it was a slight miracle that Michigan still held the lead at that point.  Still rough cause it cost Michigan an outright Big Ten championship.  

Dong Punch Level - 8/10.  Like getting kicked in the nuts five seconds after having just taken a shot there with a baseball bat.  It hurts but you're pretty much already numb to the pain.  

So, yeah, 1990 was a rough start for Moeller.  Three losses by a total of 6 points, making it quite easy to envision a more fortunate Michigan team playing for a national championship in that season rather than the Gator Bowl.  

1991 Overview -

Michigan went 10-2 to win an outright Big Ten title, but lost handily to the top two teams in the country in Florida State and Washington.  They had zero one score games and they ended the season 5th in SRS.  Great team, but clearly a notch below the steroid abusers - er, best teams in the country rather.  Let's move on as they were no heart breakers this year.  

1992 Overview -

9-0-3 record, outright Big Ten title, ended 5th in SRS.  2-0-3 in one score games. These will get slightly lower dong punch scores because ties are slightly easier to swallow than losses. Let's take a look at those ties: 

Notre Dame - This was pretty much a toss up to the stats, Notre Dame outgained Michigan 398-378, but Michigan was slightly better on a per play basis, 6.0-5.8.  This was hard result to take because Michigan again led by 10 going into the 4th quarter, and when Notre Dame had the ball deep in their own territory with a couple of minutes left in the game, Lou Holtz decided to kill the clock instead of going for the win, thus ensuring the 17-17 tie.  It was in stark contrast to Moeller's 2-point decision two years prior against MSU, and exposed Notre Dame as the chickens they continue to be.  Somehow though, Michigan was the team to get the fluky plays as they recovered three Notre Dame fumbles, but couldn't capitalize on that turnover advantage.  

Dong Punch Level - 8/10.  Like getting emotionally invested in an argument with an obvious imbecile in the YouTube comments section, you can't help but lower yourself to their level and it just ends up embarrassing you while keeping you up at night.  

Illinois - This was a game Michigan completely dominated to a tune of 523 yards - 314, and a YPP differential of 6.9-4.2.  They blew the game on the back of 10 (!!!!) fumbles, 4 (!!!) of which Illinois recovered.  Michigan actually needed to kick a field goal with sixteen seconds left just to salvage the tie, 22-22.  

Dong Punch Level - 9/10.  Like losing the argument to the moron in the YouTube comments section.

Ohio State - Michigan was outgained by nearly 100 yards, but still was better than OSU on a per down basis.  Michigan blew another 10-point fourth quarter lead in this game, already the third such occasion in Moeller's tenure.  The game ended 13-13. 

Dong Punch Level - 9/10.  Like washing your pants that had note in a pocket with a really hot girl’s phone number written on it - feels like a pretty big missed opportunity.      

1992 - three ties, three blown fourth quarter leads (they led Illinois going into the 4th quarter), no shot at the national title come bowl season. 

1993 Overview – 

8-4 record, 0-3 in close games.  Finished the season ranked 9th in SRS. 

Notre Dame – Michigan was the statistically better team in this game, but I’m assuming a big part of that was because Notre Dame stormed out front and Michigan was playing catch up in the second half.  Michigan needed a final minute touchdown just to get the game within four, and Notre Dame won this 27-23. 

Dong Punch Level – 6/10.  Like being tied to a chair and being forced to watch daytime television.

Illinois – Michigan was slightly outgained by Illinois, but held a hefty YPP advantage of 6.7-5.7.  This was another big fourth quarter lead blown by a Moeller team, this time 11 points, and Illinois took the lead with 41 seconds remaining by converting on a 4th down and 6 from Michigan 15-yard line.  Illinois 24-21.  Brutal, and holy shit was Illinois a thorn in Moeller’s side as the following year Michigan dominated them again but had to sweat out a 5-point win.  I guess this is the era that Illinois being Michigan’s rival became a thing permanently entrenched in Illinois fan’s minds.        

Dong Punch Level – 11/10.  Like being tied to a chair by Red Dragon who forces you to watch replays of your most embarrassing moments in high school, while repeatedly asking, “Do you see?” 

Wisconsin – Michigan won the yardage battle 359-343 and 5.7-4.9 but were undone by losing the turnover battle 3-0.  Wisconsin recovered all three fumbles in the game, two of their own, and one of Michigan’s.  I don’t remember this game at all, but it looked quite boring based on the box score and I’m sure the fans in Madison were unbearable about it.  The 13-10 loss dropped Michigan to 4-4 on the season, and they would be unranked for the first time (and for the last time following their subsequent four game win streak) in the Moeller era.   

Dong Punch Level – 7/10. Like spilling scolding hot coffee on your crotch while sitting in the middle seat on an airplane.  Every second you’re left to stew in it feels like an eternity. 

So, 1993, another tough season for Moeller.  Finished 8-4 when they really should have been 10-2. 

1994 Overview – 8-4 record, 2-2 in one score games, finished 7th to SRS. 

Colorado – You’d guess based on the stats that Colorado deserved to win this game.  They outgained Michigan 511-415, to a tune of 6.8 YPP to 6.4.  However, that was because Michigan spent most of the 4th quarter trying to kill clock rather than put the game away.  Following Michigan’s fullback (on his only touch of the game no less) fumbling the ball at the Colorado 15-yard line with 11 minutes left in the 4th quarter to give Colorado life, Michigan held a 26-14 lead with a 415-280 yardage advantage, and a YPP edge of 7.2(!!!)-5.5.  You probably know how this one ended – with Colorado’s Kordell Stewart completing a 65-yard hail Mary as time expired to win 27-26.  Michigan had held a 12-point lead just two minutes and 16 seconds of game time prior to that miracle. 

Dong Punch Level – 15/10.  An all-timer.  Like the worst thing that’s happened to anybody in the history of everything – not being able to find the TV remote when the Pitbull Dr. Pepper commercial comes on. 

Penn State – PSU outgained Michigan 444-437, but Michigan dominated on a per play basis 7.2-6.0.  Penn State also got an awful call in their favor when Michigan safety Chuck Winters ripped the ball out of PSU running back Kijana Carter’s hands while he was still standing, but the refs decided to call him down. (See 40:46 at this link for video of the play: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M2OihwT_iDc)

 

You can’t say this call was a definite game changer as Michigan still stopped PSU on that drive, however they would get the ball at their own 14 instead of their own 38, and proceed to go 3 and out after having scored TDs on 3 of their 4 previous drives.  So, it did seem to change the momentum a bit.  Plus, it was just a blatantly obvious missed call which makes it harder to stomach.  Penn State would take the lead 31-24 on a 16-yard TD reception on 3rd and 11 with 2:53 remaining in the game.  Michigan would stall out on their ensuing possession despite having a 3rd and about an inch at the PSU 41 with a minute and a half remaining; first, by getting stuffed on a 3rd down handoff, then throwing an interception on 4th and 1.  I remember the following Monday at school my friend being incensed at how a coach couldn’t just call two QB sneaks in a row at that situation of a game, as it seems almost impossible not to pick up one inch with two opportunities at it, and it’s hard to argue with his reasoning.  Penn State would hold on to win 31-24 and finish the season undefeated (but end up second in the polls). 

Dong Punch Level – 9/10.  Like flushing the toilet at a party and having it overflow, and so everyone at the party judges you, when in fact it was the guy in front of you who took the massive shit that clogged the toilet. 

That was 1994.  An 8-4 team that was probably more deserving of being 9-3 or 10-2.  And that was it for the Moeller era as he resigned following an embarrassing incident in May of 1995. 

 

TLDR version – Moeller’s Michigan went 6-8-3 in one score games during his five-year tenure.  That may not sound so awful, but for a consistently top ten team it’s quite remarkable to be under .500. For comparison’s sake, D’Antonio was 34-23 in one score games at MSU over his 13 years, and evil incarnate (AKA Urban Meyer) was 21-3 (!!!) during his seven seasons at OSU.  In five of the 11 losses/ties, Michigan was leading by 10 or more points entering the fourth quarter.  Of Michigan’s six wins, you could argue they were fortunate to win in two of them (1990 OSU and 1993 Notre Dame, both games they won on last second field goals), but those were both basically 50/50 games and they deserved to win all the others.  In their 11 losses/ties I would say there were actually two they deserved to lose (1990 Iowa and 1993 Notre Dame), four were coin flips, and five were injustices of the highest order (1990 Notre Dame and MSU, 1992 Illinois, 1993 Illinois and 1994 Colorado).   So, basically with any modicum of luck, Moeller would have been at worst 11-4-2 in these close games, thus possibly playing in multiple bowl games with national titles at stake, and would be remembered with much more reverence by college football fans.  Here’s a chart combining statistics from those 17 close games that further shows Michigan’s poor fortune in them:

My first thought when reviewing all these brutal losses was to ponder if this is what caused Moeller’s drunken outburst that led to his resigning.  For me personally, when I get one bad beat in a poker game with a $10 buy in, I feel like the universe is against me and I spend the next week in an existential crisis wondering what the point of this whole life thing is.  With all these bad beats in such a high-profile high-stakes position, it had to have an effect on Moeller’s mental state and makes me wonder how much it contributed to his drunken behavior.  Probably not as much as I think, alcohol makes you do weird and stupid things, but it’s probably not nothing either. 

Questions I have for the board:  Has any other team that was consistently a preseason national title contender suffered so many rough losses over a five-year period as this? Did OSU under Cooper come close to this? For people who are a bit older than me and probably remember the games in more detail than me, how much of these late collapse losses fall on Moeller’s shoulders?  (I didn’t rewatch full games other than the Colorado game, and he turtled up pretty good in that one. Basically, one first down in the final ten minutes would have sealed that game and Michigan ran nine times for three 3-and-outs over that stretch.  It still took a miracle for Colorado to win, but Moeller’s play-calling left the door open.)  I’d also just love to hear people’s memories who were at some of these games and memories of the Moeller era in general. 

 

All stats via the Bentley Historical Library - http://websites.umich.edu/~bhlumrec/athdept/fbstats/

One final note - I haven't listened to the MGoPodcast that covered Moeller, so hopefully this isn't just retreading something they went over in that.  

Comments

HighBeta

July 26th, 2022 at 1:41 AM ^

Honestly? Revisiting mental diseases, abuse, and soul crushing losses is about as functional and pleasant as trying to have a nice lunch with a loving partner while hearing the loud geriatric crowd sitting at the next table discuss their various ailments, illnesses, surgeries, bio-failures, amputations, defects, etc. Where am I? Miami Beach?

Why would you deliberately subject yourself to documenting and reliving misery, in great detail, of any kind?

You are not invited to my next party. Nope.

😉

(Full disclosure: ageism. I am old and quite busted but I keep it all to myself. And, great work, BTW)

Collateral Whiz

July 26th, 2022 at 4:38 AM ^

Ha ha, I did have a hard time pulling the trigger to actually post this.  Wasn't sure if it was going to come across as too negative or not.  I went ahead though cause even though it focuses on negative stuff, it brought back a lot of good memories for me as well, and hopefully it will do that for others.  

Davy Found

July 26th, 2022 at 2:42 AM ^

Great analysis!

Moeller era was when I was in high school and college at UM, and I was at most of these games.

What stands out for me is what a dominant, golden era it felt like for UM, even with all these tough luck losses. I think my expectations were in a good place and I just enjoyed the big wins, Desmond's Heisman season, and all the rest.

I mean, the Hail Mary was awful, and I remember the dead silence that came over the stadium and how everyone, shocked, stayed in their seats for like 20 minutes.

But I feel like somehow the other tough losses didn't sting as much, maybe because it was an era before social media and constant replays. If we lost, we felt bad for a day or two, and then moved on, without constantly rehashing everything.

Miss those days, thanks for the memories, even the sour losses have a bright shine for me because they bring back a fun era in my life!

Collateral Whiz

July 26th, 2022 at 4:47 AM ^

Glad you enjoyed it and like you I have mostly fond memories of this era despite all the heartbreak!   It does feel to me too that it was easier back then to get over games, but that may be recency bias.  Being from West Michigan there were a lot of Notre Dame and Michigan State fans who liked to rub salt in the wounds throughout the school week following those brutal losses.  I do think as a kid though it is easier to let those losses go after a bit of time, whereas now I'm still expecting kharmic retribution for things that happened years ago (we're still owed a shitload of make up calls for 2016 OSU and last year's MSU game).   

BlueFront89

July 26th, 2022 at 6:57 AM ^

John Cooper says "Hold my beer."

I am not going to do the game by game analysis of his games v. Michigan throughout the 90's, but they were glorious.  

 

Buy Bushwood

July 26th, 2022 at 7:49 PM ^

I dunno about the OP.  We earned some of those losses and better teams do lose games due to mistakes.  Also, we remember "fluky" things that hurt us, but easily forget fluky plays that benefit us. It's confirmation bias, the bias the human brain is most susceptible to.  Here's the way I remember a few of these:

ND 90: We were driving to score and go  up 31-28, late, and Grbac threw an absolutely abysmal interception to bohunk LB Michael Stonebreaker in the ND end zone.  It was so underthrown that had Stonebreaker not intercepted it, the DB behind him would have. I also think Grbac had 3 or 4 int's so we earned that loss.  The MSU game you're right about (and you failed to mention that due to us kicking UCLA's and ND losing, we were #1 going into that game.  That was a painful end, and I think that loss torpedoed the season for the team.

1991: Nothing to say. Spanked by two superior teams.  But, with FSU, not so fast. Despite having thrown a dreadful pick-6 on play #2, to the best DB in the country, we actually almost tied the game at 25 before half, but we missed the 2-pt conversion.  We were running it down their throats, but our D was horrible.  They stopped us twice inside their 25 in the second half. We gave up a fake FG TD, and another pick 6 late on a sack.  It wasn't a 20 point thrashing, more like 8-10.  I don't think they were far superior. I think we beat them 2-3 times out of every 10.  

1992: ND.  We were again driving to win, kicking their ass, and a CB blitzer came free and torqued Grbac just enough to make his pass fly out to BFE where a ND dude was just standing twiddling his thumbs.  But.....we had a good lead and many chances to put the game away and didn't.  

OSU that year, we were far superior and got out to a 13-3(?) lead.  But Grbac got hurt and had to leave.  Moeller completely turtled, despite having a decent back-up in Collins.  Very unlike Moeller.  He just turned it over to the D to hold on for a tie.  That was a terrible feeling.  

In 1993, ND was just a better team and came in and clocked us.  But we were a deeply flawed team that year.  This year was saved by crushing an undefeated OSU team.  

In 1994, the combined CO and PSU games, with so much at stake early in the year, turned to heartbreaking losses at home, just killed the season and we ended up losing two more to inferior teams. But, some confirmation bias at work here in quoting that Che Foster fumble late.  Because I'm pretty sure Kordell Stewart fumbled on our 2 yard line earlier in the game, wiping a likely 7 off the board for Colorado. The PSU game was lost fair and square, as the OP recounts, with horrible play calling on 3rd and 1 in PSU territory.  Moeller used a 1-back set with only one TE and tried to run off guard.  I remember jumping up before the play started and saying where the F's the fullback.  PSU blitzed a CB on our weak side, no TE, no FB, and he nailed the back for a 3 yard loss, untouched.  That brought up 4th and 3 and the game was lost.  We earned that with horrible play design.

Nonetheless, I'm right there with the OP describing Moeller as something of the awakening of UM football in scheme and recruiting.  We reaped that fruit until the RichRod era. There was one point in the 2000's where if you had started a game as a UM QB over the previous ~12 years, you were in the NFL.  Grbac/Collins/Dreisback/Griese/Brady/Navarre/Henson/Henne.  Gary Moeller made UM QB Univ for more than a decade.  RIP Coach 

 

befuggled

July 29th, 2022 at 5:09 PM ^

I agree with you about that FSU game. Michigan was definitely outplayed, but also threw two interceptions for touchdowns, two more interceptions in the red zone and lost the ball on downs twice in the red zone. If they clean up the mistakes that game is at least closer.

The Rose Bowl against Washington, though--that was a beating. Only twenty points but Michigan could get almost nothing going against their defense (and they ran out the clock with the ball inside the ten). The lone bright point was a long run by Wheatley in the fourth quarter. 

Pity Emtman's career was derailed by injuries--I thought he could have been a monster in the NFL. He did have a long pick six against Dan Marino, though.

Rufus X

August 1st, 2022 at 11:44 AM ^

You are right on the details of the FSU game... but I was there, on the field, as student manager, and I had the opposite FEELING (for what its worth - not much).  They just seemed way faster than us, especially defensively. When T-Buck took that first pass to Desmond to the house, it felt like the field was slanted in their favor on both sides of the ball the rest of the way.  They just seemed to jump every route and ran down Rickey Powers on every outside run.  I feel like we would actually have lost 7 out of 10 against them. I think we just saw it differently.

Carpetbagger

July 26th, 2022 at 8:08 AM ^

Some people remember all the details of where and when and all that when Kennedy or Reagan were shot. Or 9/11, or any number of other worldly things.

I remember that Kordell Stewart Hail Mary like it was yesterday. I can still picture the painted concrete floors, the bodine running in the background like any other perfect machine, immune to external events, and can still hear the human silence for almost a minute after the radio flatly and belatedly announced "Touchdown Colorado".

NeverPunt

July 26th, 2022 at 8:19 AM ^

It's funny because I was coming of age during this era of Michigan football so I grew up only knowing dong punches as an occasional way of life. I do wonder what it was like to come up as a fan in earlier years. I can imagine those in the post-Carr years think of these as the good ol' days but it was always so annoying to lose these handful of games that seemed winnable each year.

St Joe Blues

August 10th, 2022 at 10:35 AM ^

I do wonder what it was like to come up as a fan in earlier years.

Have you ever seen Charlie Brown try to kick the ball with Lucy holding it? That's what it was like as a fan in the earlier years. No matter how well Michigan played during the regular season, you just knew they would lose the bowl game.

Other than that, the Bo years were quite glorious.

Don

July 26th, 2022 at 8:22 AM ^

I’d still like to know why Michigan’s defensive staff had slow-footed LB Steve Morrison on the field for Colorado’s last play. Did they think the Buffaloes were going to run the ball or throw a short pass to a TE? Might have been good to have another DB on the field instead.

Sam1863

July 26th, 2022 at 8:26 AM ^

I remember the Eddie Brown trip of Desmond not just because it was so obvious, but because it was also my birthday. So an otherwise joyous occasion was shot to hell.

Not that I hold a grudge or anything, but I still believe that Brown and the back judge who swallowed his whistle should be deep-fried in lava.

Maybe one day I'll think that's an overreaction, but that day isn't here yet.

Grampy

July 26th, 2022 at 9:16 AM ^

TL;DR. Can't say I was interested in reliving those games.  The FSU game in '91, while not a Dong Punch game, was still one of the most disheartening games I ever saw.  So much excitement having #1 FSU vs. #3 UM in the Big House, and Terrell Buckley jumps a quick out route to sail into the end zone on our second play from scrimmage.  The rest of the game was no better.

Other Andrew

July 26th, 2022 at 10:22 AM ^

Worthwhile diary, CW.

From my own memory:

- '93 ND was the moment Michigan became more important to me than I ever expected (freshman year). And made me hate ND that much more than I always had.

- '93 Illinois a late fumble killed us in this one, too

- '94 Colorado - My friends and I were planning our rosebowl trip in the 4th quarter. Wise fools indeed!

- '94 PSU - Best football game I've ever seen in person. Too bad we lost.

 

I know this is a "what might have been..." post, but worth also celebrating:

- '91 The Game beating 8-2 OSU 31-3

- '93 Rose Bowl Wheatley has a hyperdrive game

- '93 The Game beating undefeated and #5 in the country OSU 28-0

- '94 ND - giving them a helluva gut punch

 

rc90

July 26th, 2022 at 10:23 AM ^

In five of the 11 losses/ties, Michigan was leading by 10 or more points entering the fourth quarter.

Geez. Ugh. Blech.

My memory of that era was that in general Mo opened the offense up, but, yes, when Michigan had a 10-14 point lead in the 4Q, Bo would take over the play-calling.

I remember reading a stat Lloyd Carr's teams did better when they trailed at the half by a TD or less than when they led at the half by a TD or less. Who knows if that was true, but it's certainly the way it felt during the Bo years and the Bo's Tree years, that Michigan would turtle up just enough against other top teams to let their talent win the day. That's a much older BPONE tradition, and it's definitely part of what made the 4Q of 42-27 so much fun. There were a lot of demons that were exorcised that day.

AlbanyBlue

July 27th, 2022 at 3:06 PM ^

This is easily the most frustrating part of Michigan's on-field performance in my nearly 40 years as a fan. The prevent offense. Playing scared. Seemingly kicking ass on the field and then turtling/letting up. And we did it so often/regularly that the other team knew we would do it, rendering the strategy even less effective. 

befuggled

July 26th, 2022 at 10:49 AM ^

One thing you didn't mention in both the Notre Dame and Ohio State games in 1992 was Elvis Grbac's health. Against Notre Dame, it was knotted up at 17 and Michigan was driving. Then on the same damn play Grbac throws an interception and gets injured. Todd Collins started the next couple of games.

Grbac also went down early against Ohio State, and Todd Collins had to come in and wasn't effective. At the end of the game, Mo didn't trust Collins to guard the ball and kept running Wheatley. While in general this was a good idea, it was frustrating to watch since he didn't let Collins take a shot down the field until the clock had almost run out.

drjaws

July 26th, 2022 at 11:57 AM ^

1992 Illinois game was frustrating as all get out. JUST HOLD THE BALL.

I knew i hated illinois from some reason ... 1992-1993 is the reason 

ST3

July 26th, 2022 at 1:00 PM ^

The Illinois/Moeller rivalry goes back before he became Michigan’s head coach. He was Illinois head coach from ‘77-‘79. After they fired him, Schembechler never turned down an opportunity to take Illinois behind the woodshed. In ‘81, he hung 70 on them.

From my experience with Illinois fans, they also hate us because of the ‘89 basketball team ruining their best chance for a national championship. They also feel that as a Chicago native, Juwan Howard should have gone to Illinois. And there were some nasty recruiting shenanigans that went on, from their perspective.

Vasav

July 26th, 2022 at 1:10 PM ^

First off, great post, and painful just reading it. Secondly, I do not remember this era - I am too young.

Finally - I know not all 1 score games are created equal but...6-8-3 seems kinda fair? Especially damning to me is that so many of these games we had double digit leads heading into the 4th and still lost. Luck is real, but 6-8-3 means it near evened out, and if you give up a 10 point lead, that may be something of a flaw in your game strategy.

1990 does seem unlucky, as was 2016. 1993 actually seems, kind of, lucky?

The part about D'antony-oh and Urban is interesting. I do wonder if some coaches are better at winning 1 score games and why that may be - luck or some sort of skill. I remember the damned punt game from 2015, and thinking to myself we shouldn't have been running out the clock.

<ducks>

jmblue

July 26th, 2022 at 3:20 PM ^

We're about the same age.  The Moeller years were likewise my formative ones as a Michigan fan.  This definitely stirs up some long-repressed emotion.  At least we had 1997 to banish some of the demons.  (Last year wasn't bad either.)

I was at the '92 Illinois game.  It was really, really cold.  I remember Pete Elezovic coming out for that last field goal, and the fans booed - it was like a 45-yarder and Elezovic was not the most reliable kicker.  But he made it, and it clinched the Rose Bowl, although it also knocked us out of the national title race.  Ties were weird.

In '92 OSU, Elvis Grbac was knocked out of the game.  Todd Collins played decently in his absence, but we probably would have won with Grbac in there.

IIRC, in the 1993 Illinois game we had the ball in the final couple of minutes and fumbled (Ricky Powers?), giving them that final chance.

I forget the details of '93 Wisconsin, except that there was a fan crush at the end of the game when UW fans tried to storm the field and a lot of people were injured.

The 1994 team was absolutely stacked.  I've always thought the Hail Mary took the life out of the team.  If not that, the PSU game did it.  We limped to the finish after that and lost to UW and OSU teams that we were probably better than.

Germany_Schulz

July 26th, 2022 at 3:56 PM ^

Thanks for posting. 

I thought this post was a buckeye in wolverine pelt at first. 

This is meaningful beyond the context in that I do feel rather strongly that Michigan has a rightful claim to conspiracies against them by refs, home field clock operators, etc. 

Sometimes, it was just lack of execution on Michigan's part - we take those. 

Sometimes, it was a bad coaching decision or too conservative approach - we take those. 

Sometimes, Michigan football was either purposely or subversively put to a loss - we need retribution for those.  

Isn't it ironic how many times Michigan athletics has been 'screwed' by refs, scheduling, etc.? 

This should be the first in a series called "how the Big Ten and NCAA job Michigan".  

Go Blue. 

Wolverine 73

July 26th, 2022 at 5:39 PM ^

The two games that absolutely infuriated me were the MSU Desmond trip and the Colorado Hail Mary.  I was beside myself both times.  An unusually high percentage of losses to MSU seem to come in almost inexplicable ways—thinking the punter dropping the ball and not having the sense to just fall on it, or tuck it away and run a few steps, whatever.  Spartan Bob and the clock that wouldn’t start.  There surely are others I have mercifully forgotten.

Eng1980

July 26th, 2022 at 9:53 PM ^

1991 Both losses were without All-American, All NFL Rookie, Steve Everitt.  The only games he misses that year.  

Michigan had multiple plays in both games where a few more inches keeps them in the game.   Basically, Everitt in the game allows Michigan to get a 5th year senior on the other team's All-Amerian D-lineman.  (Michigan's o-line wasn't deep but was very strong with its best five.  I think the back-up guard (guard moves to center) was a freshman or sophomore)

Major dong punch for woulda, coulda, shoulda.  But the best teams are deep too.

Number 7

July 27th, 2022 at 11:59 AM ^

Great post.  The humor provided was badly needed in light of some of those soul-destroying highlights.  The Desmond trip is the worst for me (because staee) and I take solace in that fact that the reel looks worse than ever.  Could it be that in a decade or so we won't even be able to use YouTube to convey that it happened?  (Will we rely instead on oral tradition?)

uminks

July 27th, 2022 at 8:01 PM ^

I was getting kind of down on his last season, since he lost to OSU and had 4 losses.  Carr seem to be the same but a bit more conservative play calling.  But at least he beat OSU in 95 and 96. Then it happened a perfect season! These were Mo recruits but Carr did a good job. You would think Michigan would become world beaters after '97 but they had some big losses even though Carr had the best talent in the country.

truferblue22

July 28th, 2022 at 2:24 PM ^

Moeller was an excellent coach and was hard done by at both SE Michigan head coaching jobs he had. 

Unfortunately it seems like LLLLoyd inherited the "can't hold a lead" trait from Mo. 

Soulfire21

July 29th, 2022 at 9:51 AM ^

This was a good read, even though it also kind of sucked to read. I wasn't a Michigan fan until I went to school though, so the crushing losses of the 90s don't weigh too heavily on me.

The 2016 weighs pretty heavily on me, though. In all 3 losses Michigan led before the final play of the games. Sigh.

KC 97 03

July 29th, 2022 at 1:17 PM ^

Shouldn't the RichRod era be the longest stretch of dong punches.  I know we weren't jobbed by refs, but we shouldn't have won less than 6 games in any of those years.

Rufus X

July 29th, 2022 at 3:27 PM ^

I was a student manager for the football team from 1991-1994, and was on the field for just about about every game you mentioned except for year 1990. Out of all of them (besides Colorado) the one that I remember most was 1993 at Camp Randall because it was Halloween, and as a student manager I was excited to be able to go out on State Street in Madison, which has a reputation for madness on Halloween eve.  The game sucked - it was cold, wet, and a funeral procession slog of 3 and outs and fumbles. We deserved to lose the game because we were so much better than them and we let them hang around the whole game. 

But the most memorable part was when the students rushed the field afterwards, or attempted to.

The thing to remember was at this point in history Wisconsin was a complete pushover in the Big 10.  This was their super bowl. As I was on the field packing up the headsets, etc., looking up into the stands, the entire top half of student section in the corner was empty, as students rushed down to get on the field...  but no one had actually gotten on the field yet.  The rush down the steep stands at Camp Randall pushed the first 20 rows of students so forcefully against the tubular-steel-anchored-into concrete fences separating the fans from the field, that they couldn't move away from the fence enough to jump over.  I'll always remember the words of the PA announcer that there were pulseless students on the field and that everyone should make way for the ambulances and medical professionals to get down to help. There was one student that had made it onto the field and climbed up onto the crossbar of the goalpost, and the PA announcer implored him to "stop making love to the goalpost" and get down so no one else would get hurt LOL.

In the end it was remarkable that no one died.  As I recall they changed the architecture of all the field/seating separation fences around the country to prevent this kind of thing.  Here's an article with pictures - you can see the fences that eventually were ripped away from the concrete due to the force pusing on them. You can imagine what it must have been like to have been crushed up against the fences... 

https://madison.com/news/local/remembering-the-1993-camp-randall-stadium-crush/collection_92dc8083-0af6-5226-80c7-5f741eac8cdc.html#9

Epilogue - Halloween night absolutely sucked on State Street because there was a depressed pall over the entire campus because of the craziness of the injured students.  I still got hammered though.

Also, Fuck Notre Dame.

 

 

EDIT:  Found this article too, which captures the day even better:

https://www.thebozho.com/camp-randall-stadium-stampede-25-years-later/

 

potomacduc

July 29th, 2022 at 4:10 PM ^

I am not sure if analysis will back me up, but to be completely honest, with the exception of 1997, it seems like 90% of the seasons from Bo through Carr were similar to Moeller's tenure. Michigan was always the 8-4 team that should have been 10-2 or the 10-2 that should have been undefeated. 

Newton Gimmick

July 29th, 2022 at 8:14 PM ^

Great diary.  I'm the same age and have the exact sentiments about the Moeller era.  The 1991 team was the one that made me a lifelong rabid Michigan football fan.

As for measuring dong punches, it's hard to put me in the dongs of another fanbase.  The recent (particularly last year's) sequence of Nebraska losses comes to mind.  No those weren't elite teams that blew chances at championships, but they were decent teams that had one incredible loss after another.  

The Deer Hunter

July 29th, 2022 at 10:51 PM ^

First thanks for the memories, nicely done. I am on step 7 of acceptance.

Every one of these games are seared into my subconscious. The only dong punch I still have trouble with is the "trip". I absolutely hated MSU after this travesty and still do because the dong punches kept coming after this game with MSU. 

Some will point to the Colorado game but hey shit happens. Two legit NFL players pulling off a Hail Mary is going to happen once in a great while. 

Durham Blue

July 30th, 2022 at 9:59 AM ^

My freshman year at Michigan, 1990, was THE most frustrating season of college football I've ever seen.  At least in 2008 we knew were were going to be bad.  Not so in 1990.  Dong punched is right.  Thanks for the post.