Greatest UM wins vs ND & Bob Ufer

Submitted by massblue on

I did not see this posted.  MGoBlue is going through the top 5 wins over ND and has video clips of the bottom 2.  I was lucky enough to have listened to Bob Ufer and one of the clips is the 78 game with Bob almost crying at the end of the game, though it was not that close.  I think he did cry when AC scored against Indiana on the last play of the game to break a 21-21 tie in 1979.

I wonder which one will be #1: The first UTL or the Catch? 

 

DonAZ

September 3rd, 2014 at 11:09 PM ^

>> That guy was nuts.

Yeah, but what a lovable nut.

I grew up on Michigan football back in the day when radio was the only way to catch games other than being there in person.  The Michigan - OSU game was always televised, but we were lucky to have maybe one other game on TV.  Otherwise, it was radio.  WPAG Ann Arbor carried Ufer.  My little radio could just barely pick it up in Howell.  But I'd sit riveted to the game and Ufer's call.  To this day I can hear snippets of Ufer in my head, and it never fails to bring my thoughts back to fall days in Michigan and college football.

I find it hard to gin up the same feelings here in Tucson.  It was 103 today. :-(

LordGrantham

September 4th, 2014 at 2:12 AM ^

Oh for sure.  The downvoters seem to think I meant that as an insult, which is not the case.  The guy is a legend, and there has never been another one like him.  He was an incredible broadcaster.  Unfortunately, and unknown to most, he was also not the world's nicest person away from the booth.

DonAZ

September 4th, 2014 at 10:47 AM ^

Yeah, I understood what you were getting at with your original post on that.

Your point about whether Ufer would be allowed to broadcast today is an interesting one.

Assuming Ufer was coming in as a new broadcaster ... that is, without all the built-up affection for him from his 40+ years of broadcasting ... would his hyper-partisan style be acceptable?

I think the notion of the impartial team broadcaster went by the wayside many years ago.  Now I think home team broadcasters are expected to be supportive of "their" teams.  The question is then whether Ufer's "over-the-top" style would scare broadcast producers away.

I think probably so for big outlets like WJR.  But not for some local Ann Arbor station.  I think if Ufer was alive today trying to crack into the business he'd find a spot, but it'd likely be a niche spot initially.  Eventually I think he'd move into a bigger role.  Yes, he was "over the top," but in a fairly likeable way.

>> "he was also not the world's nicest person away from the booth"

Really?  I had not heard that.  I was always under the assumption he was well regarded in and out of the booth.

(Ernie Harwell was, I understand, just a total class act regardless of in or out of booth.)

True Blue Grit

September 4th, 2014 at 8:09 AM ^

He was extremely passionate about Michigan and Michigan football, and also highly expressive about his feelings even on the air.  He was clearly a Michigan homer, and by today's journalistic standards maybe he would not be a network's first choice.  But nuts?  No.

LSAClassOf2000

September 3rd, 2014 at 9:53 PM ^

One thing that is interesting in the 1978 clip is that you'e looking at one of the two interceptions of Jerry Meter in his time at Michigan. The other one was against Stanford in 1976. I believe that his 12 tackles in that game were the second most in his career as a Wolverine as well. If I remember correctly, the ND quarterback in this game was some dude named Joe Montana. 

True Blue Grit

September 4th, 2014 at 8:05 AM ^

a Jerry Meter number 46 jersey from 1977 that I got at the sporting goods store on Main St. (may have been M-Den then, not sure).  My friends and I were from the same high school where Jerry M starred (Andover in Bloomfield Hills), and we came up with this scheme as freshmen to get on national TV at the Texas A&M game by all wearing the special-order 46 jerseys and holding up a sign.  Plan didn't work, but I still have the jersey to this day.  

The Geek

September 3rd, 2014 at 10:38 PM ^

The interception by Wolverines co-captain Jerry Meter, whose father played for Notre Dame in the last meeting between the schools in 1943, returning it to the Notre Dame 34-yard line was epic.

Hope to see a lot of those this year!!

DonAZ

September 3rd, 2014 at 11:04 PM ^

I liked that game quite a bit.  I still have a soft spot in my heart for Tate Forcier and the promise he showed.  He masterfully took Michigan downfield in the closing minutes in that game.  Great game, no doubt.  Best ever?  Well, the whole question is debatable (which is why it's so much fun).  Still, great game.

M-Dog

September 4th, 2014 at 9:01 AM ^

What I love about that game is that it was classic Charlie Weis:  You could always count on Charlie Weis to do something stupid to show how smart he was.
 
There are less than 2 minutes left in the game.  ND has the ball, third and long back at their end of the field.  Instead of a running play and a punt to run the clock down so that our freshman QB only has a few seconds left to drive the length of the field, Charlie Weis decides to call a "surprise" pass against our 5-star CB, Donovan Warren.  
 
It's incomplete, of course, and Tater has nearly 2 minutes to work his magic and win the game.
 
Charlie Weis snatches defeat from the jaws of victory.
 
Miss you big guy, XOXOXO
 

DonAZ

September 3rd, 2014 at 11:10 PM ^

Ufer had a similar reaction to the 1976 Purdue game.  Michigan was ranked #1 in both polls and was unbeaten.  They lost to Purdue 16-14 with Michigan missing a last-second field goal.  I can still hear Ufer on the car radio ... "No good.  No good.  No good."

MichiganPhotoRod

September 4th, 2014 at 1:06 PM ^

The words were actually, "runaway in Vienna."

Ufer made many wartime references in his broadcasts.  One of the most famous is the story of the "Bo 'George Patton' Schembechler Scoring Horn." The horn Ufer used was given to him by the nephew of George Patton, which was willed to him.  The horn was on Patton's jeep in the battles through France and Germany. The newphew, who lived in Chicago, asked Ufer if he'd like the horn.  Ufer responded with, "Is the Pope Catholic?  You'd bet I'd like it!" 

Ufer blew the horn after each TD, field goal or extra point.

uminks

September 3rd, 2014 at 11:29 PM ^

Michigan was #4 and ND was #15. I remember turning down the sound on the TV and cranking up Ufer. Hard to believe I was in the 10th grade, wanting to be the next great QB at UM.

WolverineHistorian

September 3rd, 2014 at 11:35 PM ^

Boo to mgoblue for including memorable wins for Notre Dame as well. 

For nearly a decade, we had ESPN Classic to constantly show us Rocket Ismail, the index card game and Mike Gillette missing that last second field goal.  Don't sink to their level, mgoblue.

saveferris

September 4th, 2014 at 7:39 AM ^

The Catch, and here's why.  As great as the UTL I game was, it still was a furious comeback to make up for 2.5 quarters of awful.  The '91 game was a tightly fought contest and Moeller calling for a pass on 4th down clinging to a 3 point lead is one of the gutsiest things I've ever seen from a Michigan coach.

stephenrjking

September 4th, 2014 at 11:27 AM ^

Add to this the fact that we were suffering heartbreak year after year against ND, often in the first game of the season, each year affecting big national title aspirations. It's a big game now, but it was absolutely monstrous in the late 80s and early 90s. And in 1991 we hadn't beaten them in years. And here, in a great game, is a fourth down with a slim lead, Rick Mirer waiting on the other sideline waiting to take the ball and break our hearts yet again. And they snap the ball... Throwing?!? Deep! HOWARD!!!!!! AHHHHHHH LSD{€JKFKIS^#,¥NDIFNNF,?!:IUDNS,6@%UWH If you weren't following the team closely in 91, you just can't understand.

saveferris

September 4th, 2014 at 12:40 PM ^

Four year losing streak.

1987 - Michigan turnover fest in what would prove to be a season-long theme.

1988 - Reggie F*#king Ho, whose infamy is only outstripped by Rob F*#king Houghtlin.

1989 - Stop kicking it to Rocket Ismail!

1990 - All I remember of this game is a Grbac pass glancing off the pads of Micheal Stonebreaker and falling right into the hands of Reggie Brooks to deliver the final dagger.

Three of these games were absolutely winnable and you could easily make the argument Michigan outplayed the Irish in each of them.  My roommates and I were convinced Holtz had sold his soul to Satan.

But you're absolutely right about the elation that came with winning in 1991.  The  younger guys on the board will never understand, but back in the late 80's, early 90's the team that always ruined Michigan's season was the Irish.  Getting over the hump on them in '91 was like Michigan finally beating OSU in 2011, it was that big of a deal.

Big_H

September 4th, 2014 at 7:42 AM ^

The Under The Lights games were great, I got to attend both. However, nothing can beat the two 38-0 beat downs we gave them. Those would have to be my four greatest Michigan-Notre Dame games I will remember.

readyourguard

September 4th, 2014 at 8:11 AM ^

In 86 we went down to South Bend to face new Irish coach Lou Holtz. We didn't force an Irish punt the entire day yet still came out with a win. ND missed a last minute FG. Ugly game but a beautiful victory.

MGoblu8

September 4th, 2014 at 8:29 AM ^

I've never gone insane over the end of a football game like I did for UTL 1. Greatest win? Perhaps not. Most exciting? Definitely in the conversation.

User -not THAT user

September 4th, 2014 at 5:02 PM ^

...because Rick (sorry, "Ricky") Leach over Joe Montana.

2009-2011 might as well be considered a single game because they were all the same script, basically.  I'd include all of them on the strength of Tate/Denard (especially 2010 for Denard...that long run at their joint is still one of myfavorite UM highlights ever)

I'd include 1994 because it was nice to see US winning on a late field goal for once (thank you, Remy Hamilton...and at their joint) for once.

The 2006 game...Lloyd's next-to-last game...that has to be in there.  Thrashing them at their place...I love the 38-0 wins at home, but 2006 was when things started to turn around (seemingly for good) in that series.  And it was past due, to be honest.